Blue Linckia Starfish, Great Barrier Reef, by Richard Ling, found on Wikimedia Commons |
I'm participating in Mary Lee Hahn's OUR WONDERFUL WORLD poetry celebration. Today's wonder is the Great Barrier Reef.
Years ago, in Ralph Fletcher's What a Writer Needs, I read these words, "The bigger the issue, the smaller you write." Ralph talked about choosing one tiny detail; for instance, you don't talk about dementia, you talk about how your grandfather, who has always been an impeccable dresser, comes downstairs having missed a belt loop.
The Great Barrier Reef feels pretty overwhelming to me-- visible from outer sapce, longer than the Great Wall of China, home to thousands of species of fish and marine animals. However, we are killing it through global warning, pollution, etc.
When I went looking for pictures on Wikimedia Commons, I found a beautiful photograph of the Blue Linckia Starfish, then noticed that the photograph was about ten years old. I know that the reef was impacted by an episode of Coral Bleaching in 2006 and I wondered, whether I would still see this spectacularly colored creature if were to visit today.
"Blue Linckia Starfish"
Flipping through photos
of the Great Barrier Reef
I find Blue Linckia Starfish
taken by Richard Ling
ten years ago
so beautiful
I had a dress this color once
I wore it until
it fell apart
And then I read
about coral reef bleaching
most recent outbreak in 2006
I read about global warming
those really hot summers
we have been having
and I wonder
if Mr Ling and I
returned to
the Great Barrier Reef
today, ten years later
could we
still photograph
Blue Linckia Starfish?
(c) Carol Wilcox, 2014
And then a list poem.
“Great Barrier Reef”
Thirty species of whales
dolphins, porpoises-
dwarf meinke,
humpback and
fifteen hundred fish,
coral trout, red bass
striped sturgeon
clownfish and
six species of sea turtle—
green, leatherback,
hawksbill, loggerhead
olive ridley and
saltwater crocodiles
sharks, stingray, skates
nine species of seahorses,
seven kinds of frog and
four hundred coral—hard and softFive thousand mollusks
seventeen species of sea snake,
White bellied sea eagle, roseate ternTwenty one hundred plants,three endemic,
Fifteen species of seagrass…
How can we do nothing?
© Carol Wilcox, 2014
The list poem is so powerful. It bears witness.
ReplyDeleteI can imagine the list poem as a video. Perfect for Earth Day, Carol!
ReplyDeleteIt would be interesting to see the difference in ten years time. I'm hoping it wouldn't be too noticeable. Your poem is a great reminder of how important it is to take care of our world.
ReplyDeleteYour second poem was interesting as well. I really enjoy reading, and writing, informational poetry. It's fun to see what can be done when facts and wonderful words weave together.
Cathy