Photograph by Scott Perkins

Bald eagles, common as crows

 

 

 

AN ALASKA SAIJIKI

IN PROGRESS

                                                    Photograph by Cindy Zackowitz

 

Cindy's neighbor's yard

 
     
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A "saijiki" is a collection of season words (kigo), references, and inspirations for haiku poets -- and so much more.  When William J. Higginson*, author of the indispensable Haiku World, An International Poetry Almanac (Kodansha International, 1996, ISBN 4-7700-2090-2), suggested that I consider creating an Alaska saijiki, I was intrigued.  When I passed this suggestion along to Cindy, she readily agreed that we should begin.  We will add to this over time, showing both her area of Alaska (central) and mine (southeast) -- since there is often a significant difference.  We will add illustrative haiku and additional detail over time.  Your comments and suggestions are warmly invited.

*It was with such sadness that we learned of Bill Higginson's death on October 11, 2008. His contributions to the haiku community and the haiku tradition will be honored for decades to come.


                                 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                                                                                          Photograph by Scott Perkins

One of the first signs of spring in Alaska.  Skunk cabbage blossoms as beautiful as crocus.

 

     

 

 

SPRING 

 

More Seasonal Haiku  Coming Soon 

 

  SUMMER

     
   

first bear -- early March (Anchorage), mid-March (Juneau)

 

snowdrops -- early March (Juneau)

 

 

 

snowshoe hares turn brown  (Anchorage)

 

first bear--

snowdrops bloom

under a cold sun

 

Billie Wilson

 

first warm day--

the snowshoe hare

speckled brown

 

Cindy Zackowitz

  halibut ready to catch -- late June (Juneau--imagine trying to pull a refrigerator from 100 or more feet off the sea bottom)      
       

                            quiet cove--

                            an eagle plucks a salmon

                            from the clouds

 

                            Billie Wilson

                            Haiku Cycles (2001)

 

coho (silver) salmon start to run -- early July

 

     
    Canada geese return, heading north -- 3/9/05 (Juneau)  

sea-heaved ice

piled along the shore--

wild geese returning

 

Billie Wilson

The Haiku Calendar (2003)

 

magpies fledge -- early July (Anchorage)

 

Sitka roses bloom -- early July

 

     
       

                                        raindrops --
                                        a stinkbug swings
                                        on a half-ripe berry

 

                                       Cindy Zackowitz

 

salmonberries ready to eat -- early July

 

watermelon berries -- early July (Anchorage)

     
    Iditarod dogsled race -- mid-March  

icy trail--

while his sled dogs rest

a musher views the moon

 

Billie Wilson

         
   

tulip shoots -- late March (Juneau), April (Anchorage)

 

 

 

          mid-summer

          the ski run filled
          with fireweed

                                            

           Cindy Zackowitz

 

fireweed blooms -- Early July and all month

fireweed goes to seed -- late August  (Anchorage.  The local story has it that there are 6 weeks left till the first snow once the fireweed has gone to seed).

 

     
    put boat in water after winter storage -- early April (Juneau), May (Anchorage)  

in the drydock sling

the boat lowers to the sea--

a high call of gulls

 

Billie Wilson

Modern Haiku (2000)

 

bore tide -- all summer (Anchorage)

Golden North Salmon Derby -- late August (Juneau)

combat fishing -- All summer  (Primarily the Kenai and Russian Rivers. Rivers so crowded that the fishermen are elbow to elbow.  It is considered polite to shout ("fish on!")  so that others can get out of the way and you can work the fish.  As always, bears have first choice of fish.)

 

     
   

avalanche warnings -- early April

 

crocus -- early April; 3/10/05 (Juneau)

 

an avalanche roars

down Thunder Mountain--

first crocus

 

Billie Wilson

Haiku Headlines (2002); A New Resonance (2003)

         
   

 

first varied thrush April 4, 2004 (Juneau)

 

first robin – April 5, 2004 (Juneau)

 

 

                        tea colored creek --
                        live salmon make their way
                         past the dead

                        

                        Cindy Zackowitz
                        The Heron's Nest  (Oct 2003)

 

 flattened grass

 where the bear slept

 stink of salmon

                 

 Billie Wilson

 The Heron's Nest  (Aug 2002); ; Moonlight Changing Direction (HPNC Two Autumns Press, 2008 - Guest Reader)

  salmon spawn - late summer      
   

first skunk cabbage  -- early to mid-April (Juneau--these bright yellow blooms are as welcome as crocus, and are all over the woods -- frequently also found in yards that vainly sought to triumph over muskeg.  Cindy reports they get "a bit in the mountains.")

April 30, 2005 -- Snow and sleet today -- all over the skunk cabbage blooms.  Spring is dragging its feet.

 

 

                                            Photograph by Scott Perkins

first hummingbird  -- mid-April (Juneau - Cindy reports there are no hummers in Anchorage.  Bummer.)

 

gulls return to Anchorage -- April (Somehow it seems the gulls and the ravens  have some sort of arrangement about living in the city.  The ravens have the run of the city from about Sept. or Oct. to about April or May.  The gulls don't migrate exactly but spend their winters farther down the coast where it is somewhat warmer.  From April or May to Sept. or Oct.  the ravens take off deeper into the woods, I can only guess to raise their families.)

first Winnebago -- April (Anchorage -- We don't get the cruise ships but we sure do get the motor homes...  You know it's tourist season when the people with tans show up.)

ice goes out on the Nenana River -- late April or early May (the Nenana Ice Classic sells tickets every year and the person who picks the closest day and time wins a nice sum of money).

 

             
   

humpback whales return -- mid-April

 

 

humpback whales

home from Hawaii--

the fist cruise ship docks

 

Billie Wilson

Haiku Cycles (2001)

         
    first moose calf -- April (Anchorage) (no moose in Juneau)  

soft rain  --
a baby moose nudges
its mother's flank
 

Cindy Zackowitz

         
   

first mosquito -- April (Juneau and Anchorage) - the size and number of Alaska mosquitoes are things legends are made of

first dandelions - early May (Juneau--a bright yellow trip into town)

Spring King Salmon Derby-- All Month of May (Juneau)

 

             
   

first cruise ship -- early May (Juneau); during the summer, there are often thousands more tourists in downtown Juneau than Alaskans.

 

 

out of the mist

a Tlingit war canoe

filled with tourists

 

Billie Wilson

         
   

songbirds return to Anchorage -- Early May

cherry blossoms -- early June (Juneau)

 

lupine -- early June  (Juneau)

                                            Photograph by Cindy Zackowitz

ground dogwood (bunchberry) -- early June (Juneau)

bunchberries after blooming -- early July (Juneau)

forget-me-nots (Alaska state flower) -- early June (Juneau)

   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

we kiss

in the high mountain meadow

forget-me-nots

 

Billie Wilson

The Haiku Society of America Newsletter XXII:2 (2007)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

         
                   
        [More Alaska fall and winter haiku coming soon]          
   

AUTUMN

[photo coming soon]

     

WINTER

[photo coming soon]

     
    scent of high-bush cranberries -- September (Anchorage)       first snow -- Anchorage 2004, September 25 (a record for early); October 20 (Juneau)      
    humpack whales head for Hawaii - autumn  

migrating whales--

a chilly wind churns whitecaps

in the bay

 

Billie Wilson

HSA Newsletter XX:1 (2005)

         
    termination dust -- the first sign of snow on the mountaintops.  In the early days, when this snow fell it was time to decide whether to stay in Alaska for the winter or go.  Early September in both Anchorage and Juneau
 
 

                                  long winter--

                                  suddenly a redpoll's cap

                                  takes my tears

 

                                  Billie Wilson 

  first redpoll -- Juneau, February 6, 2005 (also spotted in Fairbanks last week, which is early there; redpolls are dying mysteriously there in large numbers, salmonella suspected)      
   

first frost -- although technically a winter kigo, first frost occurs in mid- to late September here.

 

 

first frost--

a daddy-long-legs

skims over bright leaves

 

Billie Wilson

The Heron's Nest (2001)

  taku wind -- Juneau (a hurricane-force wind that tunnels off the Taku Glacier, down the Taku River through Gastineau Channel, causing folks to grab lightposts between downtown stores)      
    first magpie -- migrating from the Yukon, these magnificent birds winter in Juneau (September 22, 2004)              
    last cruise ship -- departs Juneau in late September              
                   
                   
                   
                   
                   
                   
                   
                   
   

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