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Prelude to Disaster
by
Mark M. Lichterman
Verse One
September, October and November
Reservoir water levels down,
drought conditions apply
Southern California water rationing enforced.
October promising a bit of rain
but no,
not till mid-November,
then…
Rain!
Seven months without,
within days of the season’s first rain,
brown, burnt-out shrubs and wild grass
magically,
once again turn green and the seasonal
process begins anew.
Rain…
and more rain
The worse the weather
the better the weather…
to a point.
Overflowing water flooding denuded
previous burn areas as rivers of sludge
inundate mountainside and wooded
localities destroying home after home.
Walls of mud closing canyon roads,
as loosened earth allows bounding
boulders onto Pacific Coast Highway.
Verse Two
December, January and February
Breathtakingly beautiful in their distance:
snowcapped mountains peak into and disappear
within pure white clouds back-dropped by
startling blue skies.
California poppies abundant,
hills and prairies dotted with red, pink and blue flowers.
Daily sunshine along with intermittent rain resurrecting
dry prairie grass and sun-browned shrubs effectuating
mile upon mile of flower dotted green umbrage.
Occasionally seen on the velvety green hillside
herds of grazing cattle, horses or sheep.
Lake Tahoe to the north,
Yosemite Park mid-state,
Big Bear to the south,
whereupon lowering snow lines
opening mountain resorts
to a constant stream of vehicles
bearing skies and snowboards.
Verse Three
March and April
From the high Sierras flow fifteen to twenty
feet of melting snow runoff filling reservoirs
allowing sluice gates to open permitting
capricious amounts of water to flow
imperceptibly downhill from north to south
within the hundreds of miles of California’s
snaking, southbound aqueduct system.
Wild growth upon mountains, hills and prairies
now distantly showing as mottled green foliage
Verse Four
May, June and July
California beauty,
Prelude to disaster
Last notable rain in early March.
Reservoir water levels down,
forthcoming drought conditions apparent
Southern California rationing suggested.
Moisture now a nonexistent memory as draught stricken,
sun-browned scrub grass and dead shrubs cover mountains,
hillsides and prairies.
Verse Five
August, September and October
California beauty,
Prelude to disaster
Ignited by:
a cigarette flipped from a speeding car
a blowing ember from an illicit campfire
a spark from the hoof of a horse
a striking bolt of lightning…
or purposely set.
In wild abundance,
sun-browned scrub grass and dead shrubs
Ignite…
and quickly,
running with the wind,
within seconds:
running with the wind,
pine trees igniting explosively
highly combustible scrub grass and dead shrubs
become a conflagration consuming all within its path.
Ten, twenty, thirty miles distant,
appearing as a wide red glow on the far distant horizon,
day becomes night.
As a hurricane of fire…
As Cyclonic Fire:
Running with the wind, out of the hillside,
ripping through evacuated residential neighborhoods
tall palm trees igniting as Roman Candles on the Fourth of July,
homes burnt to the ground, naught but standing chimneys remain.
Ten, Twenty, thirty miles distant,
night becoming day,
black smoke appears as storm clouds on the far distant horizon as,
carried in the air, specks of gray ash fall upon all within the wind’s path.
Verse Six
December, January and February
California poppies abundant,
hills and prairies dotted with red, pink and blue flowers.
Daily sunshine along with intermittent rain resurrecting
dry prairie grass and sun-browned shrubs effectuating
mile upon mile of flower dotted green umbrage.
California beauty
Prelude to disaster
©May 1, 2012 / Mark M. Lichterman