Near our home there is a magic lake.
Not a big lake but a very pretty one.
Two lakes really but once it was one, I think.
More like large ponds set among aspen trees,
willow, popular, birch, evergreens and bushes
of blackberry, salmon berry, Huckleberry
and red current, offering a snack or a bucket full
of jam, once some work has been done, by Nana.
It is a good place to take grand children.
Or should that be, a grand place to take good children
to introduce them to Mother Nature.
Magic, why?
Well it is the sort of lake where happy
stories unfold and birds gather to
build their nests and rear their young.
Owls glide among the trees and
over the paths that ring the lakes.
If you are lucky you may catch a glimpse
of one, having a wash or taking a drink,
the secret keeper of reflections.
We live with magic all around us, every day.
Not the wiz bang type but the quiet moments
when something wonderful happens without
us pressing a button or flicking a switch.
The kind that makes your heart go bumpity bump
or a smile finds a friendly mouth to play with.
A squirrel chunters from a low branch,
A woodpecker plays a deft roll on his drum.
Lilies bow their heads to dance the breeze.
How beautiful nature is, how fortunate we are
to remember it all so clearly,
close your eyes and open your heart.
David Garlick, Sidney, November 2009