Showing posts with label Saijiki. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Saijiki. Show all posts

11/02/2008

Alaska Saijiki

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Alaska Kiyose

The following list has been kindly provided and will be updated by the Billie Wilson, who takes care of the Alaska Saijiki.
http://home.gci.net/~alaskahaiku/saijiki.html

If you find a word here, go to the link and read more about it, look at some great pictures about the nature in Alaska. If you write a haiku on an Alaska kigo, please send your contribution also to this database, if you find the time.



.. .. .. SPRING

first bear ... ... Snowdrops ... ... Iditarod dogsled race ... ... tulip shoots ... ... put boat in water after winter storage ... ... crocus appears ... ... first varied thrush ... ... first robin ... ... first skunk cabbage ... ... first hummingbird (roufous) ... ... avalanche warnings ... ... gulls return to Anchorage ... ... first Winnebago ... ... ice goes out on the Nenana River ... ... humpback whales return home from Hawaii ... ... first moose calf ... ... first mosquito ... ... Spring King Salmon Derby ... ... first cruise ship ... ... Cherry Blossoms (sakura, Japan) ... ... lupine blooms ... ... ground dogwood blooms (bunchberry) ... ... bunchberries after blooming ... ... forget-me-nots bloom (Alaska state flower)


.. .. .. SUMMER

halibut ready to catch ... ... coho (silver) salmon start to run ... ... Salmonberry ... ... watermelon berries ... ... magpies fledge ... ... Sitka roses bloom ... ... fireweed blooms ... ... fireweed goes to seed ... ... bore tide ... ... Golden North Salmon Derby ... ... combat fishing


.. .. .. AUTUMN

scent of high-bush cranberries ... ... termination dust ... ... first Frost (shimo, Japan) ... ... first magpie ... ... last cruise ship


.. .. .. WINTER

first Snow (yuki) ... ... first redpoll

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http://home.gci.net/~alaskahaiku/saijiki.html

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Cindy Zackowitz
May 28, 1965 - September 23, 2012



It was with great sorrow that we learned of Cindy's death on September 23, 2012. Here are Cindy's words about how much she loved haiku. We are all blessed to be able to have the legacy of that love through the work she shared with the haiku community worldwide.

source : alaskahaiku/cindy.html


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Season: Winter
Category: Heaven

Taku Winds
These winds occur an average of four times a year from October through April in Southeast Alaska. Hurricane force wind gusts (72 mph or greater) occur roughly once every two years during these Taku wind events. Taku winds produce strong wind shear and turbulence that can affect the operation of air transportation in the area. Taku winds can also cause dangerous marine weather conditions. The Taku River, just south of Juneau, was named after the cold t'aakh wind, which occasionally blows down from the mountains.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !



the taku wind flails the bullwhip kelp
Alan Pizzarelli


. WKD : Wind in all seasons .



Nereocystis (Greek for "mermaid's bladder")
is a genus of kelp. It forms thick beds on rocks, and is an important part of kelp forests. There is only one species, Nereocystis luetkeana.

Some common names include edible kelp, bull kelp, bullwhip kelp, ribbon kelp, giant kelp, bladder wrack, and variations on these names.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !
. WKD : Seaweed (kaisoo 海草).


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WKD : North America - Saijiki LIST


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12/29/2006

Kigo used by ISSA

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.. .. .. .. .. .. .. List of kigo used by Issa

The first Kobayashi Issa website was launched in May, 2000 by David Lanoue.
It was created at Xavier University of Louisiana as a rich media project sponsored by the Center for the Advancement of Teaching. In August 2005, with the onslaught of Hurricane Katrina, the university server that housed the Issa archive had to be shut down.
The present website is the archive's new, permanent home.

David Lanoue and the Issa Pages
http://haikuguy.com/issa.html

Sakuo Nakamura paints a haiga for the haiku of Issa and discusses the translations of David here:

Bilingual, mostly Japanese
http://blog.livedoor.jp/sakuo3903/


English Only
http://sakuo3903.blogspot.com/

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Issa also uses a lot of place names, temple names and other words special to Japanese culture. We have explained some of them in the Forum for Translating Haiku, a list for your reference is here !

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..... ..... ..... New Year



Apprentices' Holiday
Dancing Monkey
First Calligraphy
First Drawing of Water
First Dream
First Sky
Kites
New Year's Day
New Year's Greeting
New Year's Pilgrimage
New Year's Pine and Bamboo Decoration
New Year's Present
Picking Young Greens
Spiced Sake


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..... ..... ..... Spring



Baby Sparrow
Bee
Blossom
Bracken
Buddha's Death-Day
Burning Field
Burning Mountain
Butterfly
Cherry Blossom
Departing Geese
Departing Spring
Doll Festival
Frog
Grafting Branches
Heat Shimmers
Horsefly
Kitten
Lark
Long Day
Lover Cat


 Low Tide (shiohi 汐干)

- "tideland at low tide": shiohi-gata 汐干潟 , shio no higata 汐の干潟

Melting Snow
Nightingale
Pheasant
Picking Tea
Plowing Fields
Plum Blossom
Rape Flower
Rice Seedlings
Servants Leave for New Jobs
Silkworm
Spring Breeze
Spring Haze
Spring Mist
Spring Mountain
Spring Peace
Spring Rain
Spring Snow
Swallow
Violet
Willow
Yellow Rose
Young Grass

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..... ..... ..... Summer



Bamboo Shoots
Bat
Buddha's Birthday
Cicada
Cloudburst
Clouds
Cold Jelly
Cooling Oneself
Coolness
Cormorant
Cuckoo
Deutzia
Duckweed
Fan
Fawn
Fifth Month Rain
Firefly
Flea
Fly
Green Rice Field
Heat
Irises
Lotus
Moonflower
Mosquito
Mosquito Larvae
Mosquito Net
Mosquito Smudge Pot
Moss Blossom
Mountain Cuckoo
Parasol
Peony
Pink
Pure Water
Purification Ritual
Rice Dumpling
Rice Planting
Short Night
Siesta
Snail
Summer Grove
Summer Room
Toad
Young Leaves


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..... ..... ..... Autumn

Autumn Departs
Autumn Dusk
Autumn Rain
Autumn Wind
Bird Clapper
Bon Festival Dance
Bon Lantern
Bush Clover
Chestnut
Chrysanthemum
Cold Morning
Cold Night
Cricket
Deer
Dew
Dragonfly
Earthworms Sing
Eclipse
Fireworks
Fulling-block
Geese of Autumn
Harvest Moon
Insect
Katydid
Lightning
Locust
Long Night
Maiden Flower
Milky Way
Mist of Autumn
Moon
Morning-glory
Mushroom
Pampas Grass
Paulownia Leaf
Red Leaves
Rice
Scarecrow
Snake Enters Its Hole
Sumo Wrestling
Tanabata Festival
Wildflower
Woodpecker


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..... ..... ..... Winter


Basho's Death Day
Blizzard
Brazier
Cold
Fallen Leaves
Forgetting the Year
Frost
Gods Depart
Hail
Hunting
Ice
Icicle
Plover
Quilt
Radish
Sled
Snow
Snow Buddha
Snow Pile
Snowball
Soot Sweeping
Ten Nights
Twelfth Month Singers
Winter Moon
Winter Rain
Winter Seclusion fuyugomori
Winter Wind
Withered Field
Wood Fire
Year's End




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Thanks go to David Lanoue
http://haikuguy.com/issa.html

Illustrations by Sakuo Nakamura
http://sakuo3903.blogspot.com/

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Back to the Worldkigo Index

4/28/2006

TEMPLATE topical saijiki

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.. .. .. .. .. .. The area xxx Saijiki

The area in detail


Please add your kigo and information.

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Related Information

with LINK


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The Collection of Seasonal Words



.. .. .. SPRING

.. .. Season

.. .. Heaven

.. .. Earth

.. .. Humanity

.. .. Observances

.. .. Animals

.. .. Plants






.. .. .. SUMMER

.. .. Season

.. .. Heaven

.. .. Earth

.. .. Humanity

.. .. Observances

.. .. Animals

.. .. Plants






.. .. .. AUTUMN

.. .. Season

.. .. Heaven

.. .. Earth

.. .. Humanity

.. .. Observances

.. .. Animals

.. .. Plants







.. .. .. WINTER

.. .. Season

.. .. Heaven

.. .. Earth

.. .. Humanity

.. .. Observances

.. .. Animals

.. .. Plants







.. .. .. NEW YEAR

.. .. Season

.. .. Heaven

.. .. Earth

.. .. Humanity

.. .. Observances

.. .. Animals

.. .. Plants





.. .. .. ALL YEAR - Non-seasonal TOPICS

.. .. Season

.. .. Heaven

.. .. Earth

.. .. Humanity

.. .. Observances

.. .. Animals

.. .. Plants



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8/16/2005

Hot Drinks SAIJIKI

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BACKUP ONLY

The page has changed and is now here

http://washokufood.blogspot.com/2008/06/drinks-winter-saijiki.html


June 2009










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Hot Drinks - SAIJIKI

***** Location: Worldwide
***** Season: All Winter
***** Category: Humanity


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Explanation


Hot drinks are extremely popular during the wintertime, when the warmth of the concoction and the warmth caused by alcohol are both welcome guests.
Hot alcoholic drinks are prepared in heat resistant glasses, and the alcohol must only be heated, but never allowed to boil or else the alcohol will dissipate.
For a more quickly prepared hot drink, alcohol can be combined with hot coffee, tea, hot water, hot wine, hot milk, or hot cream - but even in these concoctions, the liquor should be heated first if time permits.
Find a long list here:
© www.drinkstreet.com/

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Some hot coffee drinks

Belgian Coffee
Café Amaretto
Café French
Café Brulot
Café Caribbean
Café Royal
Coffee Bustamante
Cafe Muerte
Hot Irish Nut
Hot Brandy Toddy
Irish Coffee
Jamaican Coffee
Mexican Coffee
Russian Coffee
Spanish Super-charged Coffee

Almond Hot Chocolate
Hot Buttered Rum
Hot Chocolate Almond

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Chocolate Drinks

champurrado; also chocolate atole (Mexico and Mexican neighborhoods in large cities)
Traditional Mexican hot chocolate (from the Aztecs) flavored with cinnamon and thickened with corn meal; served in winter especially during posadas, a nine-day celebration of Mary and Joseph’s travel to Bethlehem, from December 16 through December 25. Atole is cornmeal mush or thin gruel that is flavored to make a Mexican drink.

hot chocolate also hot cocoa (worldwide)

Ovaltine (Switzerland, USA, and elsewhere) Ovomaltine is a Swiss milk product with chocolate and malt extracts by Wander AG, a subsidiary of Novartis Consumer Goods. It is known as Ovaltine in the USA and various parts of the world.


Coffee and Tea

chai (India and becoming worldwide)
Hot spiced tea blended with milk.

hot tea (worldwide) hot black tea, hot green tea

Irish coffee (Ireland, USA, and elsewhere)
Hot sweet rich coffee and Irish whiskey with cream floating on top.

milk tea (Mongolia)
Traditional drink of tea made with milk, not water. People usually put a little salt into the tea when they drink it. Sometimes, butter or stir-fried millet is added.

mulled tea; also spiced tea (widespread)
Hot tea made with sugar and spices.


Miscellaneous

anijsmelk (Netherlands)
This is hot aniseed milk. With the Dutch, it is as popular as hot chocolate.


hot milk (worldwide)
Milk which is simply heated; especially good with Christmas cookies.
Perhaps not a kigo for winter since it is used year round to promote sleep.

mulled cider; also hot spiced cider (USA and probably elsewhere)
Non-alcoholic cider heated with sugar and spices.

Mulled Wine
Wine heated with sugar, herbs, spices, and/or fruit. It is often fortified with other alcohol.

bisschopswijn; also bishop's wine (Netherlands)
Traditional beverage for Dutch Sinterklaas Eve--December 6.


gloeg (Norway



glögg (Sweden)
Traditionally served during six-week Advent season. The very best glögg is fortified with aquavit. All countries' gloggs go very well with gingerbread and gingersnaps.

gløgg (Denmark)
Traditionally served on Christmas day with apple dumplings that are topped with powdered sugar and strawberry marmalade.

glogg (USA spelling)
It is common to drink "glogg" in the USA; not everyone calls it mulled wine.

glögi (Finland)
Traditionally served during six-week Advent season

glühwein (Germany)
Generally lighter (alcohol and spiciness) than glogg.


vin chaud (France, Swiss Alps)
More like glühwein in flavor, but more frequently fortified with brandy that its German counterpart.

zbiten; also spelled "sbiten" (Russia)
An old Russian beverage made from of red sweet wine, honey, spices, and tea made of spearmint, melissa, and/or St John‘s wort. It is said to give great health, especially strength for men and beauty for women.

Posset (England)
Sweet spiced hot milk curdled with ale or beer. Is the forerunner of eggnog. Today, these are mainly historical drinks. In the past, they were often drunk for heath. Some were given to children to make them sleep.

Toddies
Drinks made of liquor and water with sugar, spices and often, citrus juice.

grog, grogg (England, Germany, Australia, USA, and possibly elsewhere)
Today grog is made of rum, sugar, spices, limejuice, and hot water. Originally, it was just watered down rum. In some places, the names grog and toddy are used interchangeably.

hot buttered rum (USA)
This drink is grog with a pat of butter melting on top

hot toddy (England, Germany, Australia, USA, and possibly elsewhere)
A hot drink (as above with any citrus juice) made with any alcoholic liquor except rum. Again, the names grog and toddy are used interchangeably in some places.

hot whiskey (Ireland)
Also called "hot Irish" and if you are in an Irish pub, just ask for "punch." Like other drinks in this category except made with Irish whiskey.

yuwari 湯割り (Japan)
Alcoholic drinks diluted simply with hot water

hot umeshu (Japan)
plum wine diluted with hot water

Wassail
Punch made of sweetened ale or wine heated with spices and roasted apples
wassail (England and elsewhere)
See above description. The word "wassail" is also a verb that means to celebrate noisily or to whoop it up.

lamb's wool (England)
Hot flavored ale (wassail) with a good amount of roasted apple pulp (lamb's wool) floating on top; served with Twelfth Day Cake on the feast of the Epiphany.

Ed Schwellenbacher, 2005


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CIDER

hot cider; also hot apple cider (USA and probably elsewhere)
non-alcoholic cider which is simply heated, winter kigo

cold cider サイダー saidaa
kigo for all summer in Japan

fresh cider, frischer Apfelmost
kigo for autumn in Europe/Australia


Cider Daruma Label, a good luck drink ダルマサイダー


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.. .. .. .. WKD ... more Hot Drinks



hotto dorinku ホットドリンクス hot drink
hotto uisukii ホットウィスキー hot whiskey
hotto wain ホットワイン hot wine (grape wine)
hotto remon ホットレモン hot lemon


mugiyu 蕎麦湯 (そばゆ) hot buckwheat water
shoogayu 生姜湯 (しょうがゆ) hot ginger water


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kuzuyu 葛湯 (くずゆ) hot arrowroot water

うすめても花の匂の葛湯かな
usumete mo hana no nioi no kuzuyu kana

even if diluted
it still smells of the flowers -
hot arrowroot drink


Watanabe Suiha 渡辺水巴


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Egg Nog
A punch made of sweetened and lightly spiced milk or cream mixed with eggs and usually alcoholic liquor.
Eggnog, also called "auld man's milk" in Scotland (worldwide)
See description above. Eggnog is usually served cold in the USA.
Tom and Jerry (USA)
This drink is a special eggnog that uses a batter of eggs, sugar, and spices wherein the eggs are separated, beaten, and then folded together with sugar and spices. Rum, brandy, and boiling water or milk are added to complete the drink. This drink is usually thicker than regular eggnog.


Hot Whiskey (toddy)


Mulled wine (gloegg, Gluehwein), Wassail, hot mead
honey wine, met
The word "mulled" simply means heated and spiced.


hot rice wine, atsukan 熱燗, kanzake 燗酒
see : Ricewine, rice wine (sake, saké, saki, Japan)

tamagozake 玉子酒 (たまござけ) 卵酒(たまござけ) and more
nezake 寝酒 (ねざけ) nightcup, before going to bed


Rumpot (Rumtopf) Germany (rum with fruits of the season)


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Things found on the way



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HAIKU


on my mind
through the birch--
a hot drink once home

beckoning to me
through frosty panes--
her face and a warm drink


prosit
Ed Schwellenbach

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hot milk
for my bad fit of coughing
mum adds a whisky

a hot toddy
with a big cognac
his poor head


drink a hot toddy
and then take to your bed

does your head spin

Geert Verbeke

Read more haiku of Geert here:
http://happyhaiku.blogspot.com/2004/01/friends-geert-verbeke.html

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Related words


***** Frozen Drinks
kigo for Summer


Here is an external LINK with Frozen Coctails :
The hot days of summer call for really cold drinks and it cannot get colder than these blended cocktails. Most of these drinks are blended with ice but some use ice cream and they often include fresh fruit.
check this .. cocktails.about.com/od/cocktailrecipes



***** Iced Tea and Coffee

***** Black Tea and Coffe from Kenya


***** Things to keep you warm in winter, a KIGO list


WASHOKU : Shiru 汁 ... Soups Suppen


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SPRING DRINKS ... SAIJIKI

SUMMER DRINKS ... SAIJIKI

AUTUMN DRINKS ... SAIJIKI


DRINKS SAIJIKI ... TOP



Back to the Worldkigo Index
http://worldkigodatabase.blogspot.com/

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6/13/2005

Firework Display (hanabi)

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Firework Display (hanabi)

***** Location: Japan, worldwide
***** Season: Late Summer
***** Category: Humanity


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Explanation


CLICK for photos CLICK for many more photos

hanabi 花火 はなび firework display
..... agehanabi 揚花火(あげはなび)
..... shikake hanabi 仕掛花火(しかけはなび)


senkoo hanabi 線香花火 (せんこうはなび)
"incense stick firework"

..... hanabi senkoo 花火線香(はなびせんこう)
tehanabi 手花火(てはなび)firework to hold in your hand
nezumi hanabi 鼠花火(ねずみはなび)"mouse firework"
niwa hanabi 庭花火(にわはなび)firework in the garden
. . . CLICK here for Photos !



線香花火製造職 craftsmen making senko hanabi

. Edo no shokunin 江戸の職人 Edo craftsmen .

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Ryoogoku no hanabi 両国の花火(りょうごくのはなび)
firework display at the Ryogoku Bridge in Edo
(see below)
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


. Ryōgoku 両国 Ryogoku district and bridge 両国橋  .
Edo / Tokyo


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Every summer Japan prepares for its numerous
fireworks (hanabi 花火) festivals held throughout the nation. The biggest of these is the display over the Sumida River which is a major event on the cultural calendar of Tokyo, with spectacular multicoloured layers that blossom into the night sky to awe the millions of spectators gathered along the banks or in boats on the river. Many dress in traditional kimono and festival wear for the occasion. The highlight of the display is a dazzling competition between highly acclaimed fireworks manufacturers.
http://www.wordtravels.com/Attractions/Countries/Japan/Events/Sumida+River+Fireworks+Festival/


The center of the activities is Sumida River Park and the banks of the river in its immediate vicinity where, from early in the day, spectators gather to secure a good spot for fireworks’ viewing. Others make reservations at office tower restaurants or with tour boat operators often as much as a year in advance. It is popular for spectators to attend the festival wearing the cotton summer kimono, the yukata, and to bring traditional Japanese food and drink. Hundreds of vendors sell refreshments, sparklers and souvenirs of the event.

The Japanese word for fireworks, ‘hanabi’ is made up of two kanji characters – ‘hana’ for flower and ‘bi’ for fire. They were first introduced to Japan from China in the late sixteenth century and at the time, were enjoyed almost exclusively by the ruling class. Gradually, firework displays were held for the amusement of the common people and by the 18th century, they had become popular throughout Japan. There are over 7,000 fireworks festivals held throughout Japan each year. Many of today’s fireworks are being manufactured by the same families who began making them generations ago.
http://www.japancorner.com/news/festival.asp?story=37


Great Fireworks Display, Waterborn Fireworks at Kamakura


http://japan-fireworks.com/gallery/sanka/kamakura.jpeg

This display done this way : Fired shells droped into the sea by pyrotechnists from rear of running motorboat one after another. Each shells sink once time and come up to the near surface again and blooming in the sea water.
It look like gigantic half-doom. display at every August 10 .
http://japan-fireworks.com/gallery/sanka/ekamakura.html


Here is the complete list of Japanese Fireworks in English
"Photos by K.Onozato"
Fireworks!
They color the night sky beautifuly. Fireworks displays and events are held various places in Japan throughout the year not only on summer nights. This page attempts to introduce attractiveness of Japanese fireworks and gives information of various fireworks. I hope you have the opportunity to enjoy Japanese fireworks.
Take your time to surf through this one !
http://japan-fireworks.com/eindex.html


Here is a list of his fireworks pictures.
You can see the different types of firework displays.
Here are all the chrysanthemums, for example
http://japan-fireworks.com/gallery/regular1/obatamie.gif
http://japan-fireworks.com/gallery/regular1/egallery1.html

See all the different types.
http://japan-fireworks.com/gallery/egallery.html

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Japan Fireworks Calendar
http://japan-fireworks.com/calendar/calendar.html


http://japan-fireworks.com/tamura.gif


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. Edo craftsmen 江戸の職人 - shokunin .

The Hanabi season in Edo lasted from the 28 of May to the 28 of August (the Summer season in Edo).
Every evening there were firework displays from the Ryogokubashi bringe and people on the river sides and on boats enjoyed to watch them
. . . The Summer in Edo was very hot and humid and people could not work much during such hot days . . .

hanabishi, hanabi shi 花火師 firework makers
kagiya 鍵屋弥兵衛 Kagiya Yahei
tamaya 玉屋 Tamaya


hanabi uri 花火売り street vendors of small firework
They started to roam the streets of Edo from around 1650, selling mostly small fireworks for children (senko hanabi), calling out
hanabi hanabiii senko senkooo.
One simple set was only about 25 Yen, more elaborate contraptions were 100 Yen.


source : edoeten.cocolog-nifty.com


gangu hanabi 玩具花火 firework toys for children


弥兵衛


source : studyenglish.at.webry
線香花火 Child playing with Senko Hanabi



quote
HANABI - Japanese Fireworks
The first fireworks in Japan had been made in the 16th century, soon after guns were brought into the country. The oldest record of fireworks as a source of entertainment is said to be 1613, when Japan’s first shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu viewed fireworks in the Edo Castle. However, there are resources that also tell us that Date Masamune enjoyed viewing them back in 1589, or on April 14th of 1582 the Portuguese Jesuit Missionaries used fireworks at the church in Oita Prefecture. Furthermore, there is even a record that says fireworks were already used at a seasonal festival in either 1558 or 1560 at Yoshida Shrine in Toyohashi City, Aichi Prefecture. Hence, the history of fireworks display has not been made clear in its origin.

As Japan entered the Edo Period – a closed and fairly peaceful era that lasted for 260 years – and the need of guns and gunpowder decreased dramatically, the unemployed people in the gunpowder industry made re-starts as fireworks factories. Fireworks back then were so popular among people from lay people to warriors, bureaucrats and shogun, that the government even issued a law that bans fireworks other than at Sumida River.

The most popular fireworks craftsman in those days was the Sr. Yahei (n.b. the name and thus master title “Yahei” has been succeeded in the following generations) of Kagiya. It is told that Sr.Yahei was not from Edo (present day Tokyo) but from Nara Prefecture (mid-western Japan) and was known for having excellent fireworks creating skills from when he was small.
In 1659, Yahei became successful in Edo with toy fireworks in which he filled a reed-made cylinder with hoshi (gunpowder). Yahei continued to study and improve his skills, and opened a store called Kagiya in Ryogoku.

In the following years, Yahei studied large-scale fireworks and showed his marvelous works at the Water God Festival in 1717. When the country suffered many deaths due to famine in Kansai (west) and cholera in Edo, the 8th shogun Tokugawa Yoshimune held a Water God Festival at Sumida River to console the souls of the dead, with Yahei’s fireworks. This is said to be the beginning of Sumidagawa Fireworks that continues to attract millions of people in Tokyo today.

Another fireworks company that became famous and popular in Edo alongside of Kagiya was Tamaya. Tamaya was opened in 1810 by Seikichi, one of Kagiya’s assistant managers, as an independent branch of Kagiya.

By latter Edo Period both Kagiya and Tamaya had made impeccable success in the fireworks industry in Edo. The Sumidagawa Fireworks was left to these two companies, the upper stream to Tamaya and the lower to Kagiya. When the fireworks spread in the night sky, the audience started to call out “Tah-ma-yaah” and “Kah-gi-yaah” on top of their cheers accordingly to which side of the river the fireworks were shot from, saying “this is Kagiya’s hanabi,” or “this is Tamaya’s.” This is the very origin of the famous phrase “Tamaya, Kagiya” that the Japanese shout out when viewing fireworks.

However in 1843, an accidental fire spread out from Tamaya and burnt not only the store but also half the town. Back then accidental fire was considered a very serious crime, and because it was the night before the shogun left for a visit to a family shrine, Tamaya was given heavy punishment with all of its property taken and the master expelled from Edo.

In those days, fireworks companies like Kagiya were called chonin-hanabi (townsmen fireworks). Besides those townsmen fireworks, there were private fireworks displays competed among feudal lords who had their servant craftsmen make hanabi for them. These are called buke-hanabi (warrior’s fireworks). Warrior’s fireworks were especially popular and gorgeously held in the three domains Kii, Owari and Mito where there were no restrictions in fireworks productions for the domains were ruled by the Tokugawa (shogun) family. The warrior’s fireworks of the Date Clan was also known to be great, reflecting how the clan prospered the most for the first time after the historical figure Date Masamune. It was so popular that in fact, the reputation spread to Edo and people flooded over destroying a bridge nearby the site.
Warrior’s fireworks originated in war signals, therefore developed as fireworks that shoot up high in the sky. As compared to the rather flat fireworks of Edo which were more art-oriented (colors, shape, tricks) the warrior’s fireworks were more plain but grander in scale. Fireworks that Japan enjoys today have taken in both these elements, and developed into a unique high-skilled art.

According to Muto Teruhiko (1921 – 2002), the founder of Japan Fireworks Artists Association (JFAA) and a writer of innumerous documents related to fireworks, uchiage-hanabi (the kind that goes high in the sky and is meant to be displayed in the air) was developed in 1751. What people may have believed to be uchiage-hanabi before then were smaller fireworks that shot out sparks and smoke. On a side note, Kagiya’s 13th generation owner and master Amano stopped producing hanabi (handheld fireworks) during WWII, and has become a uchiage-hanabi-only company since then.
- source : jmode.com/madeinjapan -


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Worldwide use

Canada

The world's leading fireworks manufacturers consider the HSBC Celebration of Light international fireworks competition to be the most prestigious events of its kind in the world and an exciting arena where they can unveil the latest pyro-musical techniques and the most innovative fireworks materials.
http://www.celebration-of-light.com/Event-Information/Canada.php

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None in Kenya.

They are only used quite exceptionally, and the noise frightens the population (it sounds too much like an explosion... which of course it is...)...

In Belgium, it would be a strong kigo for Independence Day (21 July), which is also the King's official birthday and a public holiday for all. Fireworks are held in the Royal Park, opposite the city palace, and everyone is invited to watch. Every commune also holds its own fireworks and, as they take place at staggered intervals, one could theoretically move from fireworks to fireworks that night (I did watch two sets one year...!). Fireworks play a big part in the New Year's celebrations (midnight for the start of the new year) and would be another kigo then. Only public fireworks are allowed.

In Ireland, fireworks are rare and, if they take place at all, they are public fireworks. We had a wonderful display for new year 2000, and more recently on 1 May 2004 for the enlargement of the European Union (Ireland had the Presidency of the EU).
Fireworks would not be a kigo in Ireland, but are much liked.

Isabelle Prondzynski

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USA

Fireworks in the US are H-U-G-E for the 4th of July celebration, but are rarely used at other times. On the 4th, however, there are at least 6 fireworks celebrations that can be seen with the naked eye from atop Signal Hill near Long Beach California, and probably 2-3 times that if you used binoculars.
As you can see from the following link, almost all the fireworks displays that they list are within a week of July 4th.
http://www.fireworksfun.com/fireworks-locations.asp


Some of the theme parks, like Disneyland, do nightly fireworks during the summer, but the Queen Mary here in Long Beach quit doing their nightly fireworks.Fireworks do get used for special celebrations such as the Olympics' opening and closing ceremonies (e.g. 1984 Los Angeles Olympics).
gK September 2004


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summer play -
sparklers move in circles
after dark


- Shared by Elaine Andre -
Joys of Japan, 2012


A sparkler is a type of hand-held firework that burns slowly while emitting colored flames, sparks, and other effects.
In the United Kingdom, a sparkler is often used by children at bonfire and fireworks displays on Guy Fawkes Night, the fifth of November, and in the United States on Independence Day (United States).
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !


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Things found on the way




Oni Daruma 鬼だるま
Daruma Fireworks in three different colors



. my LIST of Japanese Firework Displays


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In Kyoto there is a special firework, tebotan, te-botan 手牡丹
"peony in the hand", a kind of "incense stick firework".



The sparks seem to fall like raindrops from an umbrella, first in a silver tinge, than changing into a golden tinge.

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The Tengu from 倉尾村 Kurao in Chichibu, Saitama often launch a firework from their rock called 天狗岩 Tenguiwa. But it does not make a sound at all, just beautiful colors like chrysanthemums in the sky.

. Tengu 天狗 "heavenly dogs" from Chichibu .

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. kitsune 狐 fox legends .

From 御殿場 Gotenba in Shizuoka an old farmer could see something like a firework up on the fifth station of Mount Fuji 富士山の五合目, and even hear the noise of its popping. But he knew he was only bewitched by a fox and begun to pee on the roadside to get rid of the bewitchment, as was custom in this area.
Indeed, when he finished his pee, a fox showed up at the side of the road . . . and he was healed.

In 中津川村 Nakatsugawa in Yamagata in the hamlet of 大別 Owakari there are foxes stealing the special food for the New Year. From near and far they play pranks on people for about 30 minutes, showing up like a firework.

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In 福島県 Fukushima before a fire of a home there is often a sort of firework to be seen. It looks like a comet falling from the sky, sparkling and dancing and disappears quickly.


In 瀬戸内村 Setouchi village in Kagoshima there is a special mysterious red fire ball called ヒジャマ hijama. It is about 20 cm in diameter. It appears above the ocean and sparks around like a round firework, but it never has a trail at its end. Before it falls, it becomes like a long pole, slipping into the sea.


In 城山町 Shiroyama in Kanagawa there sometimes appears a fire ball 火の玉 like a firework during a funeral service. It seems to come from afar and gets closer and closer, until it is almost above the stubble of an old mulberry tree. But it never makes a sound. If someone calls out:
化かすんじゃない - Don't fool us! it disappears soon.

. Legends and Tales from Japan 伝説 - Introduction .


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HAIKU


花火師を描写した句 Haiku about the Fireworks Makers
- source : hagafireworks.jp/archives -

花火を描写した句  Haiku describing directly

心象についての句 Haiku discribing the feeling about it

観客としての句 Haiku from a visitors point

花火のある風景 Landscape with fireworks

遠花火聞こえて消えし元の闇 
寅彦 

far-away fireworks,
now to be heard and gone
then silence again

Torahiko
(Tr. Gabi Greve)

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Another link to a beautifully illustrated Haiku and Hanabi page by students.

hanabi mite kokoro mo kirei na niji iro ni

Looking at fireworks.
My heart is also rainbow‐colored.
It is beautiful.

Erika
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hanabi mite egao no kimi ga kokoro uchi

Looking at fireworks
your smile
strikes my heart.


Emi
http://www.sakuragaoka.ac.jp/student/haiku/c03/hanabi/

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Here is another way of looking at things

And so they're flying
Launched by the hands of the fools
With money to burn

07 February 2001 Ashley Frieze
http://www.incredible.org.uk/haiku/fireworks.html

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American Fireworks Haiku

July 4
Vicksburg skies
silent


(Vicksburg, Mississippi, USA fell to the forces of General Ullyses S. Grant on July 4. They haven't had much heart for fireworks celebrating the American Revolution since...)

against the full moon
the fireworks
somehow closer

an hour
after the fireworks
the surf luminescent

(I vacation in a spot where the surf is made lumenescent by certain algae. The effect doesn't appear until well after dark...)

susan delphine delaney md

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Fireworks fade
To darkness, leaving only
This full moon

Mark Snyder (Fayetteville, NC)
June 2009, my facebook


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Daruma san -
high in the sky
a firework dances



© Photo: http://www.ldt.co.jp/hanabi/hanabi003.html

Read more about Daruma Haiku by Gabi Greve
http://darumasan.blogspot.com/2005/12/haiku-and-daruma-san.html


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一文の花火も玉屋玉屋哉
ichimon no hanabi mo Tamaya Tamaya kana

even the cheap fireworks
are best from Tamaya!
Tamaya! Tah-ma-yaah!


Kobayashi Issa
(Tr. Gabi Greve)

「鍵屋, 鍵屋弥兵衛 Kagiya Yahei」「玉屋 Tamaya」
Kagiya and Tamaya were famous firework producers during the Edo period, see above.
ichimon no hanabi refers to the small sticks or paper stripes (senkoo hanabi 線香花火 "incense stick firework") which children can hold in their hands and swing around to form patterns.


CLICK for LINKS
両国川開きの大花火 Great Firework at Ryogoku Bridge
Utagawa Hiroshige


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. WKD : Kobayashi Issa 小林一茶 in Edo .


川舟や花火の夜も花火売
kawabune ya hanabi no yoru mo hanabi-uri

river boats hire
fireworks boats even on
nights with big fireworks


This hokku is from the 9th month (October) of 1821, when Issa was living in his hometown. It seems to be a hokku based on a memory of what he saw in Edo. The hokku is about the great love Edoites have for various kinds of fireworks. By implication, it's also about their strong desire to experience all sorts of new forms of innovative entertainment. In addition to the many commercial boats that constantly crisscross the Sumida River in Edo, every evening in late summer and early fall the great river is covered with hundreds if not thousands of pleasure boats hired by people wanting to cool off after a hot, humid day, while even more people crowd onto the banks of the river and onto the various bridges that cross it in order to see the sights and catch some cool breeze. Between the passenger pleasure boats constantly pass other boats selling food, sake, personal goods, and fireworks. The fireworks boats row here and there, stopping whenever a pleasure boat hires them to perform a program of small and medium-sized fireworks.

On some nights between 5/28 and 8/28 (July-September) there were periodic and spectacular displays of large-sized fireworks sent up over the Sumida River at Ryogoku Bridge, near the largest entertainment district in Edo. Two different groups of fireworks artists competed with each other, resulting in long displays of fireworks exploding high over the river in many complex patterns and colors. Even on nights when these displays are held in the sky, however, Issa writes that the ordinary fireworks boats continue to do a good business down on the river. Their more modest explosions seem to be just as exciting when seen from nearby at water level, and they are viewer-friendly, since customers can ask for the types of fireworks they like best. The hokku presents a double vision of both the sky and the water being lit up simultaneously.

Chris Drake


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Related words

***** . Arai Handheld Fireworks
(Enshu Arai tezutsu hanabi 遠州新居手筒花火)
 
Arai was the 31 station of the Tokaido road.

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- CLICK for more Ukiyo-E about Edo fireworks ! -


. Join the Ukiyo-E friends on facebook ! .




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3/09/2005

Chesapeake TOPICS

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The Chesapeake Saijiki – Non-Seasonal TOPICS,
All Year, Miscellaneous


The Chesapeake Bay is on the East Coast of North America.

Please read the general introduction here.

Please add your kigo and information.

M. Kei, April 2006
Editor of the Chesapeake Bay Saijiki

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The Collection of Non-seasonal Topics




.. .. .. Non-seasonal TOPICS

.. .. Season

.. .. Heaven

bully breeze --
The breeze blowing off of Bulle Rock, near Havre de Grace, Maryland. Even when the rest of the air is dead, there is often enough of a breeze from the rock to help a sailboat make harbor.

The breeze blowing off of Bulle Rock, near Havre de Grace, Maryland. Even when the rest of the air is dead, there is often enough of a breeze from the hill to help a sailboat make harbor. When the wind is fresh... sailing gets ‘interesting.’

From time immemorial mariners have used short poems as mnemonic devices to help remember important information. The captain of the Martha Lewis recently composed the following couplet as advice to his relief captains.

When the wind is from 300 degrees,
beware the Bulle Rock breeze.

~Capt. Byshe Hicks, US
Capt. Byshe is a skipjack captain.



high winds --
The topography and meteorology of the area combine to bring about sudden shifts in weather and may spawn sudden strong winds; wind warnings are often posted on the many bridges in the area. Certain traffic is prohibited from using the bridges during wind warnings. These winds may even occur in fair weather, without any rain or storm, especially in spring and fall.
.. .. .. .. .. World Kigo Database : WIND in various kigo


.. .. Earth and Sea

Comegy's Bight --
The place names of the Chesapeake are many and varied, a result of the endless melange of people who have settled here or passed through.

crisp autumn night...
we anchor in stars in
Comegy's Bight

~Gail Greene, US



Elkton floods --
The town of Elkton, on the Elk River, floods at frequent intervals throughout the year. Once navigable as far as Elkton where steamboats docked downtown, the Elk River has now silted up and has a pervasive flooding problem. For decades folks have been saying ‘something should be done,’ but nothing has changed.

”Before it went out of business, the local 5 & 10 used to keep merchandise at least two feet off the floor. During floods, clerks in hipwaders would go to fetch whatever the customer wanted and bring it to where they waited on the steps.”~M. Kei

five and dime:
the clerks wear hip waders
to serve customers

~M. Kei, US


granite --
A common stone from the Chesapeake Country, it was so readily available that it was used to build not only houses and churches, but also roads and curbs. Many small towns still retain relics of their granite paving as well as houses and businesses built from granite. Baltimore has a number of streets where the old granite bricks are still exposed. The town of Port Deposit, Maryland, is famous for its granite ledges.


knoll --
In connection with the Chesapeake Bay, a 'knoll' is understood to be an underwater hill. The bay varies in depth from ankle deep to holes a 150 feet deep, and suddenly changes in bottom topography are common. Some of the knolls are well-known and have acquired their own names and hazard lights, eg, Seven Foot Knoll.


marsh --
Marshes and other wetland abound on the Chesapeake, but are being filled in and their ecosystems badly damaged by ongoing development. In watermen’s communities, worn out boats are abandoned in marshes to dispose of them. Also ‘marshland.’

graveyard of boats
their memory sinks
into the marsh

~ M. Kei, US


“Wind-blown seeds found homes in the marshland. Here crabs gathered in May to shed their shells. Here geese flocked on frosty mornings, kids spying on them from shacks hidden in the reeds. All is changed now, all faded away. The Black Walnut Point* on the Chesapeake Bay has become a bed and breakfast inn.”
~Tei Matsushita

marshland--
stakes rotten, but a haven
for flowers without name

~Tei Matsushita, US

* The artist’s country house from 1965 to 1976.



Seven Foot Knoll -
An underwater hill, its top is a mere seven feet below the surface of the Chesapeake Bay. This knoll is located just outside the Port of Baltimore and so is a navigation hazard. A warning light has been mounted on it. Seven Foot Knoll is the northernmost point at which skipjacks dredge for oysters.


Tidewater --
Another name for the Chesapeake Bay region. It is literally the land below the fall line, meaning that it could be reached by boat from the bay. In the old days, boats knit together the economy of the region and though modernization has changed many things, the region still shares an underlying history and structure due to the Bay.

Terrapin Sand Point
and Okahanikan Cove --
names alone are good.


~Harry Armistead
Previously published in ‘Chesapeake Bay Haiku,’ Audubon Naturalist News, Feb, 2002.


it's almost the sea,
Jellyfish and Loggerheads,
occasional Whales.

~ Harry Armistead, US.
Previously published in ‘Chesapeake Bay Haiku,’ Audubon Naturalist News, Feb, 2002.


Washington, DC --
The capital of the United States is located on the tidal part of the Potomac River and hence is very much a part of the Chesapeake Bay region. 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue is the address of the White House. A family of ducks became local celebrities when they took up residence on the White House lawn.

Behind the fence
at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue,
the ducks nest.

~ M. Kei, US



.. .. Humanity

boat --
Any small vessel that is not a ship. The Chesapeake Bay is home to numerous traditional, modern, and recreational boats. Traditional boats include the Baltimore clipper, skipjack, crab boat, pilot boat, sailing skiff, bugeye, sailing canoe, and others.


leathering --
the process of cutting, shaping, stitching, and gluing leather parts on a wooden sailboat or skiff. It is done first while the boat is under construction, which may be any time of year, but thereafter will usually be done in the spring (if needed) as part of haul out.

leathering the oars, how
leathered my hands...

~M. Kei


lighthouse --
A necessity for the many points and hazards of Chesapeake navigation. The lighthouses are such an integral part of the scenery that even lighthouses that have been officially retired are kept going as 'courtesy lights' by local non-profit organizations. Many lighthouses are open to the public or can be viewed from chartered boats.
For more info,
http://www.cheslights.org/


museum --
The Chesapeake Bay is rife with museums, ranging from the world-class museums of the Smithsonian Institution to many small and medium-sized museums dedicated to all manner of things, especially local culture and history, from the skipjack Rebecca T. Ruark (oldest skipjack still afloat) to the Fire Museum of Maryland (a major museum dedicated to the history of firefighting) to the Maryland House of Delegates (oldest state house still in use to house a legislature).
Many of the museums and historical sites are both open to the public and continuing at least in part their original function.

“The Washington DC Mall stretches between the U.S. Capitol and the Washington Monument. On either side is a wondrous array of museums. When I was a girl, my mother would give me two car tokens (bus/streetcar tokens) and a sack lunch and turn me loose to spend the day in the museums of my choice.”~ Susan Delphine Delaney, US

museum case
the bones
of a cavalry camel

~ Susan Delphine Delaney, US



roadside crosses --
It has become common for mourners to erect handmade crosses on the side of the road to mark the place where the loved one died. These crosses may receive offerings of flowers, balloons, and items special to the deceased at various times of year. In some areas there are many of them, one fifteen mile stretch of Rt. 40 in Cecil County has eight or more.

counting memorials on
the side of the road--
highway of misery


~M. Kei


.. .. Observances


.. .. Animals

Heron, great blue heron (Ardea herodias) --
Widespread in North America, great blue herons stand up to four feet tall with wingspans up to seven feet. They nest in trees and bushes that stand near protected waters. Herons principally eat fish, but they supplement their diet with snakes, birds, crabs, dragonflies, frogs, grasshoppers, and similiar creatures. Although they are solitary when hunting, they nest together in colonies, which in the Chesapeake are called ‘rookeries.’ Their eggs and young are preyed on by raccoons and other birds. They will abandon a rookery if a member of the community was killed there. The Chesapeake Bay is an extremely important habitat, about half of all Atlantic herons overwinter here.

A Great Blue Heron

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Image:Ardea_herodiasPCCA20060128-2118B.jpg



.. .. Plants



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COPYRIGHT:

All poems copyright by the authors and used with permission. All images, unless specified otherwise, are courtesy of the WikiCommons projectand are posted in accordance with the licensing agreement(s) accompanying each image on that site.


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Chesapeake Bay Saijiki: Spring

Chesapeake Bay Saijiki: Summer

Chesapeake Bay Saijiki: Autumn

Chesapeake Bay Saijiki: Winter

Chesapeake Bay Saijiki: Non-seasonal topics, miscellaneous


. BACK TO .. .. .. Chesapeake Bay, USA .



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3/07/2005

Chesapeake Bay

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Chesapeake Bay Saijiki

As a poet living and writing in the ‘Chesapeake Country’, the area in and around the Chesapeake Bay (and I do mean ‘in’, I sail!), my poetry is deeply steeped in the place where I live. I write for myself and my friends and I am not concerned about being ‘world famous,’ what matters most to me is that those I share my poetry with find a truthfulness and sincerity in it as well as artistic merit. All my poems are written out of real experience.

Unfortunately, when I began to submit my poems to public perusal, I had some editors and others complain that my poems were ‘too specific’ and that ‘nobody’ would understand them. I did not care to make my poems more generic because they weren't ‘universal’ poems, they were local poems.

I think we need local poems to express and recognize our own local cultures and to communicate amongst ourselves. If outsiders never understand them, that’s okay. On the other hand, I do think that some people genuinely want to understand places and cultures different from their own, and that therefore local poetry will have universal appeal to people who are willing to open their hearts to difference.

The saijiki, or seasonal haiku almanac, seems an excellent way both to gather a body of poetry rooted in a particular time and place, and to present it in a way that visitors can understand it without depriving it of what makes it unique.

The Chesapeake Bay is on the East Coast of North America.
The cities of Baltimore and Washington, DC, are located on its shores. It is completely surrounded by the states of Maryland and Virginia. Its largest tributary is the Susquehanna River, which rises in upstate New York and runs across three states to empty into the Chesapeake, it is the longest river on the East Coast. It supplies about half the water for the bay. Other large rivers, such as the Potomac and Patapsco also flow into it, and innumerable small waterways.

Thus the Chesapeake Bay watershed is actually quite large. However, when we speak of 'Chesapeake Country', we actually mean the counties that cluster around it and whose economies in the old days were directly tied to the bay. This spawned the waterman's culture. While the waterman's culture is not the only culture in the area, other cultures, such as those of the European-American farmers, are amply represented in other regions as well as here. Thus the Chesapeake brings together many diverse peoples, each of which makes their contribution.

If you have seen the paintings of Andrew Wyeth, he lives and paints right on the edge of this region. He lives in Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania, which is a hop, skip, and a jump from here, but there is a subtle dividing line -- which we locals instinctively grasp -- so he cannot be called a 'Chesapeake painter.' The distinction is a cultural one as well as geographic. When I have crossed the state line into Pennsylvania, I can tell, even when there is no sign posted. Pennsylvania just feels different. It looks different. Even the land looks different.

I hope others who love this region as much as I do will join me in composing a haiku almanac for the Chesapeake Country.

M. Kei, April 2006
Editor of the Chesapeake Bay Saijiki

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List of Contributors, in alphabetical order

With grateful appreciation for those who have contributed poems, stories, kigo entries, information, images, editing, formatting, encouragement, publication, and all the myriad details that go into making a work of this nature. Without the generous help of volunteers, none of this would be possible.
~ M. Kei, Editor

Harry Armstead, US -- ornithologist, poet
Paul Cassidy, US -- poet
Susan Delphine Delaney, US -- poet
Denis Garrison, US -- poet
Gail Greene, US -- poet
Gabi Greve, JP -- webmaster
maXine caRey harKer, US -- poet
Captain Byshe Hicks, US -- waterman, poet
Amora Johnson, US -- student, poet
Jim Kacian, US -- poet
M. Kei, US -- saijiki editor, poet
Tei Matsushita, US -- painter, poet
Carol Raisfeld, US -- poet
US Fish and Wildlife -- images copyright free
WikiCommons -- images used in accordance with copyright and licensing agreement(s) accompanying each image.
World Kigo Database -- host site

All works used with permission of the authors or in accordance with publically posted license/copyright agreements. All rights reserved to the respective copyright holders. If you desire to reprint or republish, please contact the copyright holder directly to obtain the necessary permissions.

Last Updated May 2006

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Some LINKs to the Area

Chesapeake Bay Foundation. Save the Bay !
The Bay region is losing farms and a way of life.
http://www.cbf.org/site/PageServer?pagename=homev3&printer_friendly=1


Environmental Problems
Find out how March's record low river flow could impact Bay ecosystem conditions this summer. http://www.chesapeakebay.net/

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Ellen Compton, Chesapeake Haijin

fifth of july
the wavelets shifting …
… shifting
.................the jellyfish

http://www.millikin.edu/haiku/writerprofiles/SadowskiOnCompton.html


ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo ooo


MDOsprey Archives, including Chesapeake haiku

Bloodsworth, Holland, Smith,
Spring, Pone, Tangier, James, South Marsh,
the Foxes, and Watts.

Terrapin Sand Point
and Okahanikan Cove -
names alone are good.

Harry Armistead
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/scripts/wa.exe?A2=ind0308b&L=mdosprey&D=1&O=D&P=2716

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Write a Chesapeake Bay Haiku

Tap your inner poet by constructing a Bay haiku. Since the 17th century, this traditional Japanese poetry has become popular for its brevity and richness. Haiku usually focuses on the present and implies deeper meaning or truth hidden in surface observations.

For optimum haiku conditions, grab your pencil and notebook and head to a quiet spot. For poetic muse, retreat to a favorite natural setting and absorb all the sights, smells, textures and sounds around you. Pay close attention to a frog waiting by the pond, a heron deliberately stepping through shoreline water, lightning illuminating lavender clouds, sunlight shifting through late afternoon leaves or the first firefly of the season.

Algae — graceful in
Swiftly flowing waters but
Quite treacherous

While haiku traditionally gathers inspiration from nature, let your poetic license guide you. Get haiku-inspired from anywhere: children playing, sailboats sliding through the water or sparkling dinner-party laughter at dusk.

Stoplight turns yellow
Nail it through intersection
Immense relief


You can even dive into memory and pull images that had special meaning, such as star-gazing from the back porch of your favorite aunt's Bayside house.

Ice cold hose water
Jets through backyard sprinkler
Children shriek with delight

Use details of these observations to shape your haiku.
Challenge yourself to put a quirky spin on a common object or thing, like the way a pigeon's head bobs like a sewing machine needle. Create a haiku that evokes a feeling or mood by the imagery, like the cool breeze before a storm.

Temperature shifts
Wind shows underside of leaves
Faint thunder rumbles

Even if no one sees your haiku, revel in the pleasure of writing one just for yourself.
© The Bay Weekly


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Chesapeake Bay Saijiki
Explanation:

The Category "Earth" has been renamed "Earth and Sea". This may require a bit of explanation.

The sea, rivers, and lakes are traditionally placed in the category of ‘earth’ in saijiki, but since the Chesapeake Bay is the defining characteristic of this saijiki, the thing that makes it different from all other saijiki, ‘earth’ seemed a bit of a misnomer. The land and water interpenetrate one another, with innumerable points and rivers lacing together thousands of miles of shoreline for a sea that is only about two hundred and fifty miles from north to south.

In the old days, the boat, not the horse was the preferred method of transportation because a boat was (and still is) the most direct route between almost any two destinations. Alas, with the rise of the automobile, the old ferries and passenger ships have mostly (but not completely) disappeared


Chesapeake Bay Saijiki: Spring

Chesapeake Bay Saijiki: Summer

Chesapeake Bay Saijiki: Autumn

Chesapeake Bay Saijiki: Winter / New Year

Chesapeake Bay Saijiki: Non-seasonal topics, miscellaneous


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Related words


***** World Kigo Database : North American Saijiki LIST


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