Desert
Brides
June 2017
by Lisa
Fields
Dressed in
creamy lace
High desert
matriarchs
stand tall
and proud
their
sharp leaves warn the browsing deer,
“Don’t
touch my skirt, you’ll cut your tongue!”
then
flicker gentle shadows in the breeze
a gift of
shade for smaller creatures
Morphed
from phallic stalks,
floral bodices
gracefully sway
Some will
dip too low in their dance and break,
scattering satin petals
* * * * *
Here is a
link to photos of some of these desert brides: http://swbiodiversity.org/seinet/taxa/index.php?taxon=2620.
Lisa Fields is a contract agricultural journalist for
Professor Quirine Ketterings, and occasionally others at Cornell University, Ithaca,
NY.
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