Timothy Pilgrim
High on Adventure's Poet Laureate
Timothy Pilgrim

May/June 2024,
OUR 29TH YEAR

 
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ADVENTURE POETRY
By Timothy Pilgrim
 
   
 

La Push

Wend away from Kalaloch, leave miles
of beached cedar logs behind, pass
Ruby Beach, sand there, a gritty cradle

for imagined jewels glittering
in morning sun. Ignore haystack rocks
stretching for sky from Pacific waves

still trying to grind them into powder
after five million years. You have life left,
enough to let such memories fade.

Pass by Hoh River, soggy rainforest
gone moss-insane — two hundred inches
of drizzle tricking huckleberry bushes

into taking root in crook of cedar,
new life fifty feet toward gray sky.
Refuse to be fooled — head north

for Forks. Turn west, make for La Push,
mystic beach, where winds blow through
like a mistral on speed, the pines

bowing down broken in rows of prayer.
Quileute still carve traditional canoes,
totem poles stand here and there

as sentinels waiting for whale-filled boats.
Old canoes decay on the sand,
no tent can remain long, each kited

skyward. Your best bet, the lodge,
no line, check in. Find stairs
to Fifties room half-rotten,

walls, slime green. The curtains,
shredded, each rip a black space
between bony remains of your life.

Sit by the dirty window. Stare
at endless gray before what passes
as anemic sun floats belly up into night.

(published by Windfall)

 

 

 

 

 

Ruby Beach walkerRuby Beach Tim PilgrimKalaloch Lodge
Kalaloch Lodge  Steve Giordano

 
     
  Timothy Pilgrim, a native of Montana and retired university journalism professor living in Bellingham, WA, is a Pacific Northwest poet and 2018 Pushcart Prize nominee. His poems have been accepted more than 500 times by journals such as Toasted Cheese, Mad Swirl, Cirque, Santa Ana River Review, Windsor Review, Hobart, Otoliths and Prole Press in the U.S. Canada, Australia and the United Kingdom. He is the author of Mapping water and Seduced by metaphor: Timothy Pilgrim collected published poems, which the back cover calls “a 10 on any Richter imagination scale.”