Spring Equinox, '26
just a week ago we were
in the overarching black night of Dark Sky country,
now back East, the early morning sky is a bluish wash,
a few stars glinting as if subtle ornaments on a light blanket,
birds increasingly pipe up as if
they're a crowd ready for a show to start,
the world starts to remember color,
branches articulate against the sky,
shapes of chairs and a red wheelbarrow emerge
from out of the forgetfulness night has washed over us,
the sky, it turns out, is hazed with clouds
who slowly awaken into peach,
the dogwood is sharp lines capped with terminal buds,
the oaks are getting going into leaf,
some filling out more than others,
starting to blur sharp lines with soft billows,
a nearby rooster tells us all to get going, so I do,
I take vegetables, some of the turkey I cooked,
and the last of the pie dough,
and make and freeze two turkey pies for the future,
redbuds are luxuriant in their reddish-purple,
yesterday morning the last freeze for a while, I hope,
tempered my plans, but the 15 tomatoes I started from seed six weeks ago
are getting leggy so I planted them yesterday,
watered them well, and today supported them with buoying dry leaves,
I watered the first and second plantings of buttercrunch lettuce,
and the first and second plantings of sugar snap peas,
today, at my old school, is for grandparents and grand friends,
the tradition I started and maintained for decades
of celebrating the Spring Equinox at noon
while chanting: "Equi, Equi, Equinox,
day and night, half and half,"
and giving all who wanted a half chocolate, half vanilla cookie,
such a time is no longer celebrated
for those who own that school world now
are not driven to follow this old way,
at Chaco Canyon today the left two rocks express
a dagger of light onto the small left-hand spiral,
which they're done for a thousand years,
whether anyone notices, or cares,
today is the Spring Equinox, the first day of Spring,
and that reality, for many of us,
does not compete with basketball and March Madness,
let alone the personal stories
of staff, student, and their larger families,
I still, though, want to subsume myself into the celestial today,
the way Sun and Earth react to each other,
the way Father Sky and Mother Earth work together,
as we plant, tend, and harvest as best we can,
both literally and figuratively,
we should acknowledge and celebrate
the grand turnings that allow us to be,
I want to remember and honor
what the ancestral Puebloans worked so hard
to see, to acknowledge, and appreciate,
for truth is not just what we see in the mirror.
by Henry H. Walker
March 20, ‘26












