To celebrate this first day of Spring, the Vernal Equinox, I gave myself the gift of a slow morning and filled it with tea, haiku, and a walk in the woods.
First, I poured myself a cup of tea, brewed from fresh ginger root and soft, sweet Medjool dates, as my Korean friend had taught me. Then, I opened a slim, old book of poetry, Haiku Harvest. I bought it when I was in high school and quickly fell in love with the old haiku masters’ elegant simplicity of word and wisdom. Finally, having nourished body and soul, I set out for a walk, stopping first at a patch of snowdrops and slightly spent winter aconite and then making my way to a small nearby woods.

Snowdrops and winter aconite PHOTOS: Mary van Balen

A small bit of green pushing up through last years leaves
HE IS UNKNOWN
THE POET WHO SINGS
THIS GREATEST
OF ALL SONGS — SPRING!
Shiki
HONKING WILD GEESE COME
SCRAWLING DELIGHT
IN SPRING’S COLD
PALE MORNING SUNLIGHT
So-In
I didn’t hear any honking geese this morning, but the woods were filled with chickadees flitting form tree to tree, dipping and singing spring songs. The woodpeckers remained hidden, but I could hear their calls and hollow drumming on dead tree trunks.

IN MY HOUSE THIS SPRING
TRUE, THERE IS NOTHING,
THAT IS,
THERE IS EVERYTHING!
Sodo

Spring greening
OUT OF ONE WINTERY
TWIG, ONE BUD,
ONE BLOSSOM’S WORTH
OF WARMTH AT LONG LAST!
Ransetsu
UNDER A SPRING MIST,
ICE AND WATER
FORGETTING
THEIR OLD DIFFERENCE…

MY HORSE CLIP-CLOPPING
OVER A FIELD…
OH HO!
I’M PART OF THE PICTURE!
Basho
And so we are…
Happy Spring!







Yes, as the rain and the snow come down from the heavens and do not return without watering the earth, 
making it yield and giving growth to provide seed for the sower and bread for the eating,

without carrying out my will and succeeding in what it was sent to do. Isaiah 55, 10-11








My response is gratitude for those who have worked so long and hard to provide it. And to bend my knee before the One who creates it. I join with the ancient psalmist in prayer: The heavens proclaim the glory of God/and the firmament shows forth the work of his hands./Day unto day takes up the story/and night unto night makes know the message./ No speech, no word, no voice is heard/yet their span goes forth through all the earth,/their words to the utmost bounds of the world. 





![By Gravure d'Antoine Maurin dit "Maurin l'aîné" (1793-1860) à partir d'un dessin de Louis Janmot (1814-1892) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons Pencil drawing of Blessed Fredric Ozanam](http://staging.maryvanbalen.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/Frédéric_Ozanam_2-220x300.jpg)







