Showing posts with label Sonoran Desert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sonoran Desert. Show all posts

Friday, July 3, 2026

Of Desert Rats (A Tale of Survival)

 

Photo © Jennifer Wagner

Even after the bandages

come off, my post-surgery hand

still feels like I am waving

a Mickey Mouse glove

as I walk the block

in Phoenix heat.

 

But I won’t duck into

the cool A/C yet—

not while I’m watching

the old black-and-white

neighborhood street cat

chase off a coyote

five times his size,

then saunter back, leap up,

and stretch himself long

across my neighbor’s truck roof.

 

Wile E. returns, crouched

behind a pile of Apache-gold rocks, waiting.

 

I love this desert.

People keep trying to

put a fork in its belly,

proclaiming we’re cooked.

 

Oh no. 

Tomorrow there may be

blood in the street,

but it won’t belong

to us desert-rat

cool cats.

 

 

© 2026 Jennifer Wagner


Tuesday, November 18, 2025

So This Is the Valley of the Sun

 

They call it the desert.  A wasteland

with bones sticking up through the sand.

A plain, dry, yellowing

spreading epidemic-like for miles.

 

But the first thing you notice is you’re alive.

Palm fronds wave you in, smooth and gentle

like a Kenny G in the wind,

causing your upper lip to curl.

 

You smile, full, back to the sun,

forgetting that inner chill you’ve been

lugging along with your bad knee,

that ache in your neck, the pain in your lungs.

 

Late winter, a touch of spring, and citrus blossoms perfume the air.

You want to sip that pink sherbert sky,

tear off a piece and hold it to your lover’s lips for a taste,

letting it drip from your hands, and scoop some more.

 

You forget what you’ve been told

about harsh winters, about valleys

being metaphors for dark,

depressing no man’s lands.

 

You touch your fingers to your own lips,

like when you remember that kiss—

sweet as the agave growing here, soft as baja fairy dusters

blushing, flirty and brushing, smooth as aloe.

 

And that’s when you notice you found it—

that lost feeling of stretching yourself out

like a puppy on the lawn, or a cat in the triangle ray

slipping through the window—

 

seeing past the cholla

to the mighty saguaros

with their arms held high in praise—

and you know why.

 

 

© 2025 Jennifer Wagner

 

After Ted Kooser’s “So This Is Nebraska” poem for dVerse Poetics.  I’m hosting—come join us!

Located in the Sonoran Desert the “Valley of the Sun” has been the nickname for the greater Phoenix, Arizona area since the 1930’s.  The Sonoran Desert, also, is the only place saguaros grow.