Opening Day 2026 Poem One

This post walks through a poem built from an unusual constraint: turning a list of boat names into verbs within a scene about the 2026 log boom, which is an extension to Dock Zero. The unpacking of several invented verbs, translates poetic language into concrete meaning—watching the horizon, tightening lines, chaining logs, riding wind, easing tension, and reflecting on history.

What makes it compelling is the tension between abstraction and realism. The language is playful and surreal on the surface, but every line maps back to very physical, recognizable maritime actions and shared human moments—labor, coordination, memory, and release. It becomes a kind of linguistic choreography, where naming turns into doing, and the reader gets to see how meaning is constructed rather than just delivered.

Snoqualmie Twin Peaks Day

rolling, roaring pouring plunging, tumbling rumbling crashing, gushing, rushing sparkling breathtaking twirling swirling whirling ebb ripple eddy ruffle backwater misting soaking splashing current Just 30 miles east of Seattle sits a little hamlet surrounded by mountains, tall Douglas Fir, and raging rivers. Fans of the 1980s cult classic “Twin Peaks” know all about North Bend and Snoqualmie, two…