Let your heart be a portal for the songs of the universe.

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Road To Adventure


Azure drapes the distant mesa
Timeless straw and coyote den
Red dirt road invites adventure
Breath of sage calls cattlemen.

Come and join me for a sojourn across the arroyos and mesas at the southern end of the Canadian River Plain. Behind me are Mesa Redonda and the northern Llano Estacado escarpment. The Kiowa and Apache of our region call the Canadian River goo-al-pah. The river originates in Colorado and flows some 900 miles through New Mexico, Texas, and Oklahoma before draining into the Arkansas River.

- © Ilija Lukić 2013 -


Road To Adventure
Quay County, New Mexico USA

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Poetry Of Wind, Snow, And Light

Cold and restless winter winds
Rouse windswept lovers so sublime
The furious caresses on their minds 
Leave ripples on the fabric of time.

Crystal innocence amid silent screams,
Wind architecture impugns words of plight,
Life goes on, dreams rapt within dreams,
Adrift in the poetry of wind, snow, and light.

- © Ilija Lukić 2013 -



Poetry Of Wind, Snow, and Light

Sturdy Innocence

Full Stride (Jack Rabbit)

A Cold And Restless Wind

Silent Screams

Furious Caresses

Windswept Lovers

Prairie Turnpike

Swift Yuccas

Wind Architecture

Up To My Neck In The White Stuff

Ripples On The Fabric Of Time

Life Goes On

On Wings Of Prairie Winds


Monday, February 25, 2013

Memo To Punxsutawney Phil

Forty miles per hour wind gusts clamor at windows and test the storm worthiness of tree limbs and back yard fences. In brazen defiance of the raw 30ºF temperature and lively winds, Cooper and I cannot resist the allure of extreme weather on the Llano Estacado plain. Once on the prairie I find photographic endeavors nearly impossible. I am content to revel in the power of natural forces and contemplate survival mechanisms of flora. I stop here and there to admire shelter strategies of fauna within this ecosystem. Cooper relents to activities driven by canine genes. He visits burrows and strains his nose into the snow squalls to catch scents of his usual running buddies. But, prairie denizens have hunkered down to ride out the furies unleashed by northerly winds.

Buffeted by frigid winds I roam directionless. Each time I turn into the teeth of the fierce north wind my clothes flutter violently, the gales take my breath away, and progress is at snails pace. Tumbleweeds dance buoyantly across the frozen steppe. With every swing of forward momentum my hiking cane makes a vibrato sound. The wind action across such an airfoil of wood has created a bullroarer. Apaches in this area would call it a tzi-ditindi or sounding wood. Bullroarers are an ancient ritual musical instrument and are useful in communicating over great distances. They exist in contemporary and historical records of many cultures. Best known is the turndun of Australian Aborigines.

As I ramble and snake my way down game trails, the heretofore dearth of snow this winter occupies my thoughts. Our drought conditions will deepen without additional precipitation. Meteorologists continue to paint a bleak outlook.

I relieve the ache in my heart with the promises gusty northerly winds and fluffy wet snows write across my face. The seductive enchantress we call the Llano Estacado beckons with assurances of adventure. Cooper and I cannot resist the cold breath and bewitching wind songs of her shortgrass prairie sirens and head into the snow-covered tablelands. The white shrouds of wind-driven snow part occasionally to permit the capture of fleeting moments on digital film. The hand of God seems harsh. But, closer examination reveals many natural snow caves have formed among grass clumps and bushes. They are cozy, albeit makeshift shelters for Llano wildlife. As the down of angel wings settles gently on receptive flora, it creates a winter wonderland. Cooper rollicks in the knee-deep blanket of snowflakes and playfully investigates snow caves. Punxsutawney Phil is wrong. Spring is not around the corner.



Llano Estacado Trail Head


Portal To Heaven


Captive Sunshine


Russian Thistle Slumber


Facing The Storm (Siberian Elm)


Tempting Scents (Cooper)



Snow Cave Diving (Cooper)


Wild Buckwheat Umbrella (eriogonum annuus)


The Gentle Hand Of God


Now I Lay Me Down To Sleep



Angel Down


Wax Goldenweed Pappi (grindelia papposa)


Shade Tree (Siberian Elm)


Punxsutawney Phil Got It Wrong (Cooper)

Ready To Head Home (Cooper)


The Trail Home (Cooper)


Spring Is Just Around The Corner? (Cooper)


Exit Stage Right (Cooper)


Almost Home (Cooper)



February 2013 Blizzard Rocky


On the heels of a rough night and morning out here on the high plains of Eastern New Mexico, first light peeks through window panes plastered with snow. The blizzard still rages. Cooper and I venture towards the open Llano Estacado.

I pursue the stuff of dreams. Despite instincts to the contrary, Cooper obliges the whims of his foolish human. The raw power of nature heightens my senses and emotions. Disquietude and a reverential awe fill my heart simultaneously. I take a few moments to savor the feeling. Cooper makes a few tentative forays into the prairie and looks back at me signaling willingness to head home. The relentless pummeling by snow squalls soon finds us seeking shelter from the wind-borne furies. The blizzard buries the prairie and our high plains hamlet.




Looking For Adventure (Cooper)



Rocky's Poetry



Whiteout On Putnam Drive



Contemplating A Prairie Adventure (Cooper)



You've Gotta Be Kiddin' (Cooper)



The Home Stretch



Homeward Bound (Cooper)



Neighborhood Home



Intrepid Explorers



Alley Fence



That's Enough (Cooper)



Tea Anyone?



Austrian Pine Bouquet



Snow Kebabs



Water Hose Donut



Our Home Court