.
Aoba Festival --
a yakuta's posh pattern
of sparrows and leaves
Here are the results for the Cities of Green Leaves Ginko No Kukai
A good turnout was had, and votes were well dispersed across the board. I'm not certain of the amount we raised for tsunami relief, although many pledged to contribute funds or their own personal time. Here are those charitable sites again:
Architecture for Humanity
Japanese Red Cross Society
Ngo Jen Official Website
Salvation Army in Japan
Thanks to our many friends in the global haijin community for sharing your poetry with us and helping to make this event a success.
9 points:
Under this bridge
weeds grow from the walls
an old flame
Paul Conneally / England
Spring’s beginning
a violet
the first to know
Lorin Ford / Australia
8 points
kite weather
the wind’s new music
on strings of light
Lorin Ford / Australia
6 points
After the tsunami
a dog comes home
from the sea
Rhonda Poholke / Australia
wide blue sky-
a lone swift traces
the curve of a cloud
Diana Webb / England
visiting each inlet
a monk’s sutra to the sea- -
bird’s return to north
Eiko Yachimoto / Japan
5 points
Suburban ginko
on every mailbox
a tree-cutting brochure
Tzetzka Ilieva
No more leaves
reflected in this pond
the moon
Rhonda Poholke / Australia
green river –
a sparrow flits
from leaf to leaf
Diana Webb / England
4 points
The sacred camphor tree –
The stream glares in the evening sun
Time and place all blur
Masako Fujie / Japan
the spring thaw
awakens primroses
valley dawn
Hidenori Hiruta / Japan
Spring evening
the moon
is my Yoko Ono
John Merryfield / USA
Writing the word
“haiku”
on a haricot bean
Tito / Japan
a breeze -
on the water
sky appearing . . .
under purple irises
Keiko Yurugi / Japan
3 points
spring walk –
four, five, six patches
on my dog’s back
Valeria Simonova-Cecon / Italy
Out of muddy water
iris in thick profusion –
see, the kami smiles!
John Dougill / Japan
Call it an iris or flag,
Elegance blooming
By the pond of singing frogs
Kyoko Norma Nozaki / Japan
Morning sunlight –
the first new leaves ;
on the pollarded Plane
Diana Webb / England
2 points
Thousand prayers drift down
Kashima grows stronger—
each sakura petal
Yousei Hime / USA
Imitating frog croaks
soon, they imitate me:
Green Festival Eve
Mari Kawaguchi / Japan
four bright planets
pulsing in the eastern sky . . .
solo ginko
Barbara A. Taylor / Australia
The rise of full moon –
the May darkness
of my mulberry tree
Eiko Yachimoto / Japan
Portable shrine
beneath a verdurous tree –
the roof decorated
with copper flying swallows
Keiko Yurugi / Japan
1 point
At Ota Shrine
iris bow their pretty heads
while frogs croak prayers
John Dougill / Japan
Rosanjin’s hometown
new green upon the mountains
celadon color
Sharnice Eaton / Japan
seasonal mood swings –
young tea-leaves
in Fukushima
Lorin Ford / Australia
Like a stranger to life :: who will not be renewed :: my green shall be split in two
Grant Hackett / USA
catfish ripples –
one turtle plunges,
one endures
Yousei Hime / USA
Peering through new maple,
sunlight falls on purple flags;
their green blades shake
Michael Lambe / Japan
old ginko tree-
tiny new leaves
a mountain welcome
shanna / USA
In Ota Shrine’s brooklet
tago-frogs welcoming visitors;
“comf, comf, comf!”
Hisashi Miyazaki / Japan
from my land
I walk with you
Japan
Rhonda Poholke / Australia
A single teacup -
winter’s icy breath
through skeletal trees
Barbara A. Taylor / Australia
.
January 24, 2025
During the just concluded annual meetings of the People’s Congress and the
Political Consultative Conference, popularly called the “Two ...
5 comments:
Nice work from everyone, especially our fearless, insane leader. :)
(on behalf of all) thank you for the compliment, Melissa.
Well, well done. And it does take a streak of courage and insanity to pull this off.
Ah, Swede . . .
A lot of thanks to Melissa for the inspiration (equally looney) and to Tito of Kyoto's Hailstone Haiku Circle for his measured, behind the scenes guidance.
g'day Willie
Thanks for this opportunity.
Congratulations to all.
Peace and Love
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