My name is Tara, and I was born and raised in Washington State.
In 2010 I married Bill (bmac62) and retired ... two of the best choices I ever made! :)
In March, 2013, we sold our home in Washington and went on the road in our RV full time. What a blast! There is so much world out there to see!
After traveling around the West for a few years, we got rid of the motorhome and are now spending winters in deep-south Texas and summers in Washington State. Spring and fall finds us visiting whichever place strikes our fancy at the time!
If I’m missing from Renderosity from time to time, I’m busy having fun elsewhere.
Thanks for your interest in my work, and for stopping by to learn more about me!
Canon 70D
Tamron 24-70mm f2.8
Canon 70-200mm f4.0
Zeiss 50mm f1.4
Photoshop CC
WACOM Intuos 4
ArtRage
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Comments (9)
Wolfenshire
Very cool poem. I have a soft spot for Grackles.
kgb224
Amazing writing Tara. God bless.
Faemike55
Fabulous image and very cool poem
durleybeachbum
Fab! So enjoyable! I love all the corvids, they seem so intelligent.
Mulltipass
Very COOL!!!!
irisinthespring
Fabulous Grackle dedication, we don't have these in Memphis, TN either and I saw these first when I moved to the Dallas, TX area 4 years ago and I agree these are a neat bird, with lots of personality...:)))
RodS
A wonderful poem and graphic, Tara! Haven't seen any grackles here, just those bloody starlings.....
dochtersions
A wonderful rhythm and rime, Tara. I love it.
anahata.c
This was the next image in-line for me (going sequentially), and I've taken entirely too long to comment on it! I'm very slow with literary uploads, but that's no excuse. This is a beautiful rhythmic piece. First off, you capture a bird-like rhythm---the lines are little breaths, you break up thoughts into component breaths, and it gives the staccato rhythm of birds bobbing, singing, hopping, flitting. I don't know if you meant that intentionally, but you must have felt it deep inside, because the poem is loaded with a delightful staccato rhythm. Example: "At night/Who knows/It's dark/They're dark..." "Faithful as any/Congregation..." "Some find them/Bothersome" "Personally/I like their commitment/Tenacity/Dedication to ritual"---you break up your thoughts, allowing the final word (the big meaning) to drop on us. Ba-boom. I really like that, and how that rhythm feels like the rhythms of birds. I don't think they'd write in long elegiac sentences, if they could write: They'd write like this. (Btw you use "liminal". I just had to say that. Not enough "liminals" these days. And "the liminal hour" is the perfect phrase for that time of day...) I also love how you start at an indeterminate place: They're all over the place, no one knows how many, they could be anywhere: But then the decisive moment comes, and they gather. They fly off to the place chosen before the earth was formed. Really nice motion, sequence, the way you move from that to the grackle-activities of gathering, kibbitzing, chit-chatting away. (Yes, grackles kibbutz. Lotta Jewish grackles.) And I love the repetitions, "SItting shoulder/To shoulder to/Shoulder to shoulder/To shoulder". You cut off the phrase at "to" and "shoulder"---it feels like it is, the random beat of gathering and interruptions. You end various stanzas with the big meaning---"Happy hour is/Wherever there is an abundance/Of lines and signs". In one stanza, you end several lines with time-of-day things---"Singing down the sun/Ushering out the day/Welcoming the night/Every dusk..." (sun/day/night/dusk") And it all ends in a life affirming embrace---"All is right with the world," as the grackles get together and do their thing. Beautiful poem, Tara. I read it when it went up, and I don't know why I took so long to comment on it. Probably because literary comments take me forever, but it deserved a comment the day it went up. Your pacing, your beats, your line divisions, the way you put thoughts at the ends of a phrase, your sounds, your progression (the journey of the poem from start to finish) are all wonderful. Glad you returned to poetry after that long struggle with your eyes. This is wonderful! (Btw: Do you know how tedious it is to quote from poems??? You couldn't have written prose???? I mean with all the freakin' line breaks, the "/"s, the capitalization of every damned line??? Think of your commenters, man! This wasn't easy!) I love the opening too---"they're always somewhere": Takes us right into your journey. Love the poem, a total delight. I actually copied and pasted it to a word processor, so I could see it in a separate window while I commented. Wonderful work, once more!