I attended a writing workshop on January 21 with Winnipeg author Ariel Gordon. She came with a couple of books:

As you can tell — she is passionate about trees! That makes Ariel someone after my own heart, as anyone who reads my blog posts will know. I did a very quick browse, and found some of my past posts on trees:

https://linesfromthecoast.blogspot.com/2020/12/trees-again.html

https://linesfromthecoast.blogspot.com/2022/10/trees.html

https://linesfromthecoast.blogspot.com/2021/10/a-retroactive-thank-you.html

And, back when I lived in the Shuswap, I also posted about trees:

https://shuswapreflections.blogspot.com/2019/09/looking-up-trees-of-downtown-salmon-arm.html

https://shuswapreflections.blogspot.com/2019/03/on-silence-and-trees.html

https://shuswapreflections.blogspot.com/2019/06/to-planters-of-trees.htm

During the workshop, we spent a lot of time outdoors, practising “focussed attention” on one tree of our choice. Gordon emphasized the importance of vivid detail in our poems, and the best way to develop this detail, she said, is through such focussed attention.

The workshop venue was a private home close to the Gorge, so there were trees in plenty nearby. I didn’t take many photos, but here’s one of a multi-stemmed cedar that I spent some time with.

Gordon encouraged us to feel the tree, examine its bark and any damp mosses growing from it, to smell it, to look at its canopy from a distance and then come in close to peer, almost microscopically. I looked at fungi so tiny they reminded me of childhood imaginations of pixies sitting inside little mushroom cups. Then we went back indoors and wrote, triggered by what we’d observed outside.

Back in Winnipeg, Ariel Gordon has initiated public participation projects with trees, inviting people to write short poems of two or three lines and hang them on wool that she wraps around a tree. The photo below, taken from her website, shows the process.

If she’d been here longer, perhaps she could have done something similar here. I like the idea of poetry as a collective action of focussed attention on nature. Each of us has language and music within us; we each can be a poet.

https://www.arielgordon.ca/