It’s another night for poetry around here.
It’s a bit cold outside for the past couple of days. That might have been on my mind when I wrote these.
Sorry if I’m not profound tonight
Modern Igloos
Fort Madison, Iowa, 24 January 2026
Frost paint windows off white
The cold invades where you’re closest to the outdoors
Only stone, wood, electrified heat sources, and a cup of tea
Hold off the entropy.
You think back to the old cartoons
Inuit chilling both ways in igloos
And being thankful for civilization
Because you know you couldn’t answer the Call of the Wild.
Didn’t want to do another winter poem, so I combined the cold weather with one of my recent obsessions, the ocean. It’s a weird obsession considering I only lived near the ocean for a very short time in my childhood and for most of my life I’ve never lived closer than 850 miles than the nearest part of the ocean (Gulf of Mexico). But maybe living near the Mississippi River sparked something like it with me. Apologies are likely in order for my parents who once had a catamaran for sailing on the the lakes in Iowa but I was not as enthusiastic about it back in those days like I should have been.
I started thinking about the old sailors who make the trip around Cape Horn in southern Chile. I’ve long heard legends about how challenging the trip was. This is me picturing what it might be like.
Cape Horn Days
24 January 2026, Fort Madison, Iowa
On the bridge, morning watch,
Sealed coffee mug fastened in the holder
Protection from the fifty-foot waves
And the blows of the Horn’s gales.
It’s not like it was with the old clipper sailors.
We have a restaurant-level galley and temperature-controlled cabins,
They had a fire pit, iron kettle, swaddled in wool to keep cold and water away.
We have electronic GPS navigation and radar, WiFi and satellite radio,
They had compass and charts if lucky, the stars and waves if they weren’t.
Steel and polymer vessels are far stronger than
Their wooden clipper ancestors.
But they both had to dodge typhoons and icebergs alike.
The Horn looms in the distance through his binoculars
Its waters wild, beautiful, and treacherous.
Now for a quick commercial break, lol.
If You’re Interested in the Poetry You See Here… You Might Want to Check Out Some More…
My first collection of poetry is out.
Since Substack doesn’t have the setup for this (that I’m aware of), I’ve set up something at my WordPress sister site, Liegois Media. I have my own Internet storefront page where you can order my chapbook for $6 per copy. The link is below.
Hope 2026 is going all right, all things considered. Take care everyone.
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