Dr. Dana K. Wangsgard spent her early life in Fair…
The trails I walk
along the American River Parkway
adjacent to the peaceful riparian zone of the Nimbus Hatchery
where young Chinook salmon swim upstream
between myself and the wild chocolate white capped current.
I commune with elephant-gray hanging trees
Their roots exposed by decades of flooding along the banks,
and metallic striped garter snakes
which swim along the water’s edge,
snakes who hunt frogs or newly deposited salmon eyed eggs in river gravel redd.
– what canyon colored with the paintbrush of the ancients,
what grove of latticed vine,
what strange orchid or splendid crimson carnivorous pitcher plant,
could ever awaken such profound and delicate integrities within my soul as this homecoming stroll?
My heart is again filled with golden poppies,
chartreuse common yarrow,
and brilliant fuchsias;
forgotten memories return
as I catch bird song of the tangerine and raven Orioles
calling from hanging nests atop the tall Fremont cottonwood.
Neglected memories flood my senses.
I take in a large breath
once again taste the airy cotton candy-cloud against endless summer sky.
I smell damp earth
shaded by alders’ canopy;
canopy endlessly guarding thick willow shrub and wild Blue Elderberry bush.
These in turn protecting toyon, forbs, and cattails that follow.
Each sensation sorts temperament and disposition
akin to the erratic sorting between verges
separating aquatic from drier upland –
Such ambles as these are the demon slayers of misremembered and cruel imagination,
Quieter’s of chaotic noise, heavy with abhorrent and deafening raveled struggles,
Reminders of friendships from quickly passing minutes of childhood left behind.
All this flooding back as enchantment in the travel and return of the adult salmon,
Salmon who were so quick to leave,
Who jumped fearlessly along the gravity defying fish ladders
stationed along the highest barriers of the riverbank.
desperate to escape.
It all might be no more than a moment to stretch my legs,
if it were not for the spawning fiery glow along bellies ripe with roe
reminding of the fulfillment and joy that await returning to where I once began.
Dr. Dana K. Wangsgard spent her early life in Fair Oaks California and most recently (10 years ago) moved to Berea Kentucky. Dana, credentialed in mechanical engineering, also has a Doctorate in Education. Dana began dabbling in the arts to balance the technical difficulty of the engineering discipline. Over time her obsession with writing and art has only grown. Along with fine arts college courses, her most recent interest includes authoring and illustrating a youth book, Adi Mae’s Superpower, based loosely upon her bi-racial granddaughter (check it out at www.bocoteart.com) and taking part through essay and poetry in a collaborative anthology with Coming of Age writers (available next month). Currently, Dana is employed as a subcontractor under the Department of Defense destroying aging chemical weapons and trying to make the world a little safer.