Orange Grove Haul-Over 1847, by Elizabeth Buttimer
Posted on September 11, 2019
Orange Grove Haul-Over 1847
By Elizabeth Buttimer
Hidden from view
in the bend of the water,
the most distant spot
on my journey so far,
at the haul-over point.
I didn’t see the impasse
until right upon it.
In search of new waters,
I lift my boat carrying it
across dry land
pulling and pushing
poorly suited for the task.
Not ready to stop paddling,
to stop gliding across
light dappled waters
with fern forested banks
to an unfamiliar tributary.
No maps for this deeply
wooded stretch of water,
I never knew it ended
here, on the edge of a
sour orange grove
with only the option
to carry my boat
and walk across
untraveled land
to new water,
paddling again,
in a new place,
navigable passage
on unknown waters.
The Halcyone Literary Review
Volume 2 * Fall/Winter 2018
Elizabeth Buttimer is inspired by the exotic in the everyday moments of our lives, the sense of camaraderie that lives in small towns, family tales, Southern history and cultural heritage. Buttimer has been published in Blue Mountain Review, Magnolia Quarterly, and Reach of Song anthology. This year she won the Natasha Tretheway Award from the Atlanta Writers’ Club and previously placed second in the national poetry contest Let’s Write.