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 WHCschools - Hibiscus Petals Treetops

 


 

The Hibiscus School of Western Traditional Haiku announced the addition of our new page in the November, 2001 Hibiscus Petals column of World Haiku Review. Treetops, edited by Ferris Gilli, features selected haiku written by members of the Hibiscus School. On some occasions, a guest editor will be invited to choose haiku for Treetops. Only haiku from poets who are subscribed to WHCschools are eligible for consideration. Selections are made on merit. The number of haiku published are limited and may be dictated by the quality of submissions.

Several of the selections below placed in the WHCschools Hibiscus Petals Thanksgiving Kukai. Click the words "Kukai Winner" to see that winner in the kukai!

 

traces of my perfume
drift from your suitcase
folded pajamas

Debra Woolard Bender
Orlando, Florida, US

 


windy afternoon
a tortoise disappears
into the rock garden

Maria Steyn
Johannesburg, South Africa

 Kukai Winner:


starlings -
plumes of soot
over the rooftops

Carol Raisfeld
Long Island, New York,

 


four shopping days left...
the glitter of Christmas
on cotton snow

Debra Woolard Bender
Orlando, Florida, US


year's end
the cat yawns
and walks away

Debra Woolard Bender
Orlando, Florida, US

 

Kukai Winner:

New Year's day
steam lifts the lid
of the rice cooker

Carolyn Hall
San Francisco, California, US

 


a cord of kindling
the first kitten   
licked dry

Jeanne Marie Booth
Dillard, Georgia, US

 


autumn field
daylight runs
before the storm

Lynne Steel
Hillsboro Beach, Florida, US

 


winter woods
fallen branches
no one heard

Carolyn Hall
San Francisco, California, US

 


darkness spreads  
across the lawn
cicada songs

Mary Lee McClure
Greensboro, North Carolina, US


starry night
a bull's clear call
echoed

Anna Tambour
Nowra, New South Wales, Australia


 


trawler's wake
a curled sand shark
sinks

Anna Tambour
Nowra, New South Wales, Australia

doggie grave --
someone's anguish deep down
in a pumpkin flower

an'ya
Prinville, Oregon, US

 


news of his death--
every black branch
rimmed with fresh snow

Billie Wilson
Juneau, Alaska, US
 

late sun
on a scuffed bloodgum root
the red beads glow

Anna Tambour
Nowra, New South Wales, Australia


mountain retreat
the honeysuckle bounces
with each drop of rain

Maria Steyn
Johannesburg, South Africa

 

 

Kukai Winner:

homecoming . . .
a once-small tree
hides the door

Maria Steyn
Johannesburg, South Africa

 


Thanksgiving Day parade
someone else's child    
on my shoulders

Lynne Steel
Hillsboro Beach, Florida, US

 


their foster child
a rainbow spans
opposite shores

Victor P. Gendrano
Carson City, California, US
 

boundary waters -
ending in the moon the leap
of a rainbow trout

an'ya
Prinville, Oregon, US

 


hilltop clearing
we argue over
property lines

Carolyn Hall
San Francisco, California, US

 

 


first day-
my two cats
still squabble

Dove
Denver, Colorado, US

 


equinox
the rolodex falls open
to the number I need

Carolyn Hall
San Francisco, California, US

 


another leaf falls-
the aspen's crooked trunk
almost sitting on the ground

Dove
Denver, Colorado, US


shriveled berries
on the wild cherry tree ~
factory shadows

chibi
Rome, Georgia, US

 


windchill ~
at the top of many stairs
i notice my pulse

chibi
Rome, Georgia, US

 


lightning
a blue jay mistakes
the window

kirsty karkow
Waldoboro, Maine, US

 


Groundhog Day
the shadow
of a crucifix

Stephen L. Amor
Freemont, Ohio, US

 

Indian summer --
and still mother calls
for her bed warmer

an'ya
Oregon, US

 


lagniappe--
last year's hyacinth
in bloom again

Mary Lee McClure
Greensboro, North Carolina, US


manicured lawn
two old ladies
in slippers

Angèle Lux
Gatineau, Quebec, CA

 

A basketful
of torn Christmas wrappings -
overcast sky

Florence Vilen
Stockholm, SW


twilight gloom
the low sound of the owl
missing

Joyce Maxner
Pennsylvania, US

 


late fall afternoon
a WWII veteran lingers
in MacArthur park

Victor P. Gendrano
Carson City, CA, US

 

  Kukai Winner:

first rain
mother and daughter
toss rocks in a puddle

semi (Terrie Relf)
San Diego, California, US

spring flood
a fencepost joins
the beaver dam

DeVar Dahl
Magrath, CA

 

Kukai Winner:

blue dusk
how snow collects the color 
of the sky

Marjorie A Buettner
Minneapolis ,Minnesota, US

 


flickering fire...
her fingers make
the gold harp sing

kirsty karkow
Waldoboro, Maine, US


colorless sky--
dark water
beneath the ice

Laurene Post
Rockledge, Florida, US

 

approaching sunrise
the thump of his cane
above

Angèle Lux 
Gatineau, Quebec, CA

winter
the solitary hart
moves out of darkness

Laurene Post
Rockledge, Florida, US



a stranger
at the neighbor's door -
autumn rain

Penelope Davis Greenwell
Lexington, Kentucky, US



bitter cold--
we don't chase the lone crow
from the sparrow's food

Billie Wilson
Juneau, Alaska, US

 

 

Guidelines for submitting to TREETOPS:

Submit original, unpublished haiku (haiku that have not previously appeared in print journals or in on-line journals by editorial selection). Poems that have appeared on Internet mailing lists such as haikuforum, WHCschools, WHCbeginners, and the Shiki lists, but have not otherwise been published, are eligible.     

Poets may send up to ten haiku in each submission.

When submitting, put "TREETOPS SUBMISSION" in the subject block of your email.

Follow criteria for haiku according to the Hibiscus School.  Essential elements of haiku:

Focus
Conciseness (clarity, brevity)
Effective juxtaposition
Resonance
Immediacy
Natural syntax
Common language
Balance of humanity and nature
Sense of mood
Sense of season; kigo
Concrete imagery

Freshness of content is desirable. Poems should avoid stale, hackneyed presentations of overused subjects. NOTE: This does NOT mean that familiar subjects and topics are unwelcome. It simply means that whatever the topic, the haiku should present a fresh, different view of a subject or event, and/or offer new insight to the reader.

DEADLINE for TREETOPS SUBMISSIONS for July 2002 Issue:

May 30, 2002

SEND HAIKU SUBMISSIONS to Ferris Gilli hgilli@cfl.rr.com.

(Please do NOT send submissions to the school, or to any other WHC list.)




 Next: WHCschools Hibiscus Petals:  Thanksgiving Kukai

 


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