Saturday 17 July 2021

Citizen Science Inspired Poetry




Beachcombers, Pukerua Bay

We trawl along the shore
Our nets are tightly woven bags

We comb the pebbles and rocks

Seeking

bright reds and oranges

anything shiny, glinting,

perfectly rounded blues,

shards of bright white.

We lean closer,

Poke through the tangled seaweed

Searching out 

tightly coiled greens,

odd shapes

broken things. 

Gifts of the sea.


Pearly fragments of iridescent shell

Catch my eye

I pick them up, examine them, return them.

They’re not for today’s catch of

Coca Cola cans

milk bottle tops

lolly sticks

discarded balls of fishing line

a left-foot jandal

a deflated balloon

shotgun wads

butts

hooks

and

disintegrating plastic bags.

The beach is swept clean

Until the next tide.


by Gillian Candler























The Volunteer


Empty trap

One weasel

Reset

One rat, snap, snap, empty trap

One hedgehog

Nibbled bait

Walking stick, lost and found

Next month

Another round


by Gillian Candler






























The Bird Count


warm up
get ready
look out the window
one yellow hammer
in a flock of sparrows too many to count

step out
in the garden
two seagulls high in the sky
shadows of starlings and silver-eyes flying through
two resident blackbirds rustling under trees
one fantail flitting
one chaffinch perching
one tui coughing and chuckling
count me, count me


by Gillian Candler



Background:

I wrote the first draft of Beachcombers while taking part in the Lyme Regis Museum at Home project, it was inspired by the image of a fishing net. This final version includes some of the things I find while taking part in Litter Intelligence surveys at home in New Zealand. Read about the Litter Intelligence project in my blog post Counting Litter.


The Volunteer was inspired by a monthly trapping round checking pest traps. My trapping partner lost his walking stick and then found it again. Here's a blogpost about the trapping project.


The Bird Count was written back in 2014 while taking part in the Garden Bird Survey.


Related Blogposts
Not poetry but Citizen Science inspired creative piece here:

And other poetry here:
And why the Reef Heron is a special sighting 

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