Lack of Black
I staggered in bursts
When I first learned to drive
My step-father brought me
to a bank parking lot
and told me to weave
through a bright orange spine
set deep in the asphalt black
and unforgiving as coal
When I first drove the roads
Of the long white cloud
I had to learn again-
Look right then left not left
Then right, but the roads are always green
here in Erewhon
That staggering box
Was an anxious shell
But this,
This machine, whose organs
Are unfamiliar to me,
Is as hollow as water.
Each dusty window
a white rapid slideshow
Only sheep and the rolling hill motion
Of ruts and sprouting tussocks
Surrounded by goldenrod flowers of
Gorse, the thorny invader
That snakes through the shrugging shoulders of grass
While I was traveling, my friend Kristy invited me to stay with her on her family’s farm. They owned a 12,000 acre sheep farm in Taihape. That weekend she took me on a four-wheel drive fundraiser that the community did every year. They paid to participate in a tour of the farm land to raise money for the local schools. It surprised me that native kiwis were so engaged with the land they lived on.