All content © Robert Williamson

All content © Robert Williamson

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Codgers

Codgers
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They get together in fly shops
worn and washed up like
driftwood on the banks of
the rivers they've strolled.

They talk of huge stoneflies,
and how they hit the hatch
prime-time perfect one year,
and how big trout went crazy.

Someone says, "It just isn't the same
anymore; not as many bugs,
and the trout are smaller."

Heads nod in agreement
as another voice cracks,
"I remember when..."

Out on a river, migrating nymphs
invade the banks like an alien army.
Split shucks shimmer and dry,

as clumsy adults clamber
up willows and rocks,
trading water for earth, again.

2 comments:

joLyn Baldwin said...

Yep. That's me.

Steve Zakur said...

Sweet poem. I've been to that fly shop.