Skosh Japanese Children's Festival and Cultural Fair

Reblogged from HSA Oregon:

Click to visit the original post
  • Click to visit the original post

Mount Hood Community College was the venue for the second annual Skosh Japanese Children's Festival and Cultural Fair. The Haiku Society of America sponsored a popular information table and weathergram craft activity, where participants ranging from school age children to adults could try their hand at writing haiku. Cara Holman, Lisa Hills, Jim Rodriguez, and David staffed the HSA table, answering questions and sharing information about writing haiku.

Read more… 20 more words

This is the write-up I did on the HSA Oregon blog for the Skosh Japanese Children's Festival and Cultural Fair that was held this past weekend.

Cara Holman

Reblogged from HSA Oregon:

Click to visit the original post


Name: Cara Holman
Location: Portland, Oregon

Blog: Prose Posies
Facebook: Cara Holman
Twitter: caraholman
THF Registry Page: Cara Holman

How long have you been writing haiku? Since 2009.

What other related Japanese forms do you write? senryu, haibun, rengay, renku, tanka, and collaborative photo haiga

Places your haiku have appeared: Sketchbook, Riverwind, Frogpond, Notes from the Gean, The Heron’s Nest, A Hundred Gourds, Mariposa, Prune Juice, Daily Haiku, Modern Haiku, Multiverses, tinywords,

Read more… 49 more words

Aha, I meant to "reblog" that last post, rather than "press" it. Ah, the intricacies of blogging!

cherry blossom petals

Back in February, I saw a notice that haiku about blossoms were wanted for “Haiku for Hope”, an art exhibit that was raising funds for a cancer hospital back east. Few causes are nearer or dearer to my heart, and so I sent along a couple of my haiku that had received Honorable Mentions in the latest Vancouver Cherry Blossom Festival.

I am pleased to have one haiku selected to be matched with a photograph, and that the exhibition is viewable online, through an article in The Baltimore Sun. It made it even more special that I know two of the other haiku poets whose haiku were also selected: Roberta Beary and Charlotte Digregorio. Proceeds from this art show go towards Howard County General Hospital’s Claudia Mayer Cancer Resource Center.

cherry blossom petals
this quiet hour
before dawn

Counting

Counting

“Did you know a plane flies over your house every seven minutes?” Dad asks. I didn’t know that. Dad is checking his watch again. “There goes another one,” he says triumphantly. I check my watch. He’s right. It has been exactly seven minutes. Dad likes to measure things. He was a scientist, before he retired. He taught me how to measure my pulse, how many steps to take before letting the kite string out, and how to count the gap between lightning and thunder. In his world, everything is precise and orderly. The hospice nurse says he has six months or less to live. That’s a lot of airplanes.

deepening twilight…
one by one
stars appear

Contemporary Haibun, Volume 14

Spring Cleaning

After 5 consecutive months of daily online writing challenges, I decided I needed a break! So I’m taking the month of April to catch up on reading the haiku and haibun books and journals that I have backlogged.

 

It was also time to clean up my publications pages, as they were getting too crowded. Check out my newly update pubs pages: Anthologies, Haiku, Haibun, Tanka, and Rengay. Please let me know if any of the links are not working.

 

As spring arrives in the Pacific Northwest, I am busy paying attention, and jotting down haiku and haibun starters for future writes. In the meantime, I have haiku that will appear in the next issues of Modern Haiku, A Hundred Gourds, Mariposa, and Acorn.