Poetic

Bird Songs

The latest in our poetry series features work from a new avian-themed anthology—and original paintings.

Illustrations by Hiroko Seki By Various Poets February 23, 2026 Published in the Spring 2026 issue of Seattle Met

Image: Hiroko Seki

The below poems originally appeared in Birdbrains: A Lyrical Guide to Washington State Birds. The book is part poetry anthology and part bird guide, featuring original paintings by artist Hiroko Seki. 

Snow Geese

almost always migrate. Their spectacular aerial show
blots out the skies with thousands of birds—
communities of siblings, fathers & mothers—
doing what this waterfowl naturally do
embarking en masse from Mexico & the US to
feed on arctic plants & roots. To make goslings. To
grow their kin & kind. Behold their rhythmic
honk & squawk. Marvel at their
immense formation, & their steady, steady wingbeat.

Just ten years ago, The Snow Goose Cookbook
kindly urged us to eat our way out of this 
large & growing species, by making goose croquettes in the name of
managing arctic habitats. The bird’s gamey tough meat
notwithstanding. But I refuse to eat you, Beloved.
Or to complain about your greenish 
poop that carpets the Skagit Delta. Oh,
Quintessential Sign of the Passing of Seasons. Oh,
Regal Pilgrim of the Open Water. Never
stop multiplying. Your abundant life in
the present eco-disaster inspires. Be
unwavering, be millions, be our future. When the earth’s
very existence is unknown, spread your black-tipped
winged plumage like a prayer. Pray for our
xenogenesis from destructive inheritance: for
yellow offspring with bright eyes 
zig-zagging towards soft new grass.

                                  ~Renee Simms

Image: Hiroko Seki

Wood Duck at Wapato Park, Showing Out

Touch the water, summer bird, 
Touch the water, then strut 
your wings as in devotion.
Tell us, in your high tenor 
of home and its specifics 
that we mimeograph in block
                               after block.

Take your wings and show your color(s)
-your Burgundys-your Blues 
-your  heavy dirt clay tones that make
                                 us yearn
for a journey back (if only for a time).
Validate the now if not the memory 
of woods free from the remembrance of blood,
of grass free from bones, and mobless parks
and seven seals unbroken from sturdy branches, 
then flash the neon iridescence you hide 
in the cold. You among your people now.
Testify in the water, oh colored southern bird 
Testify on your portable promise lands

         ~Robert Lashley

Image: Hiroko Seki

Early Morning Song for a Great Blue Heron

Praise the Great Blue Heron, 
sister of waterfall and cedar, brother of peace 


Praise the great blue bird who balances, 
his house, body and soul, on slender legs like homes 
on stilts in fishing villages across the world


Praise the stately bearing of a blue heron carrying on 
in an estuary as light succumbs to the abyss of night


Praise the Great Blue Heron’s plumage, albus and umbra, 
love and loathing, traces of the imperfect in the present tense


Praise the taut line between grace and gaucheness 
that a Great Blue Heron traverses all the days of her life


Praise be to the noble heron witnessing 
the names of the dead floating on by and by 


Praise the heron’s patience, humility’s twin virtue, 
fishing on at dusk through the murk


Praise the Great Blue Heron’s ingenuity 
to meet its hunger, with extended wings creating 
her own weather, casting shade on quiet waters, 
luring aquatic creatures for lunch


Praise the frogs and minnows, the reeds and marsh, 
the wind and tides that nurture herons


This early dawn I praise the solitary Great Blue Heron, 
wings folded over its body, neck tucked, 
as if it feeling the weight of the world’s sorrow


Praise a Great Blue Heron in flight, 
crossing sky, archer and arrow of its destiny


Praise the heron’s long beak for making evident 
the delight of kissing with a human mouth 


Praise the great blue’s loyalty to mate and place, 
each year returning to the same nest 


Praise the herons who after decades 
decide not to return to the old nest, 
and those who make room to face their many deaths 
and each time let new light rush into their blue hearts


I, a Homo sapiens, praise the Great Blue Heron, 
Ardea herodias, its birdiness, against which 
my flawed humanity comes to light. 


 ~Claudia Castro Luna

 

Image: Hiroko Seki

The Bald Eagles of Seward Park

always surprise me, always make me 
believe trying to fix a mistake is worth it.
Case in point: DDT, an insecticide used to eradicate

diseases like malaria and typhus. 
Eradicating mosquitoes because, well, 
first and foremost: the health and safety of people.

God forbid a human should’ve known
how this chemical would weaken the eggshells of eagles,
inching down the number in the lower 48 from 100,000 to 

just 417. Yes, they harass ospreys, steal their prey, so it 
kinda makes sense Ben Franklin said He does not get his 
living honestly, preferred, for our national bird, the wild turkey, but

mating for life – what’s not to like? Google Eagles and DDT, find
No adverse effects on humans, domestic animals, or wildlife – really? 
Opinions graciously accepted. Free speech, I guess, which proliferates, 

propagates like these eagles, where on a good day I
question how there could be so much chattering and pealing, 
roosting and gliding. That there would be so many juveniles 

soaring over the water, diving down to nab a perch. 
Talon-grabbing and tumbling while mating. Cloacal kissing. 
Utterly promising, isn’t it? A success story! What was alarming

very much less dire now. That we banned it. 
Wailed and moaned no, no, no. That the EPA prevented
X-ing out a regal raptor that’s been around a million years, its 

(yowzers) reptilian past. Stopped the slide from abundantly robust to 
zero. That we might restore tall grass prairies, save the bees that feed us.

                           ~Martha Silano

Image: Hiroko Seki

Dear Sandhill Crane,

I’ve heard you in fields and by the river  
of great gatherings – symphonies of purrs
and gurgles that sound like “r”s swimming
in your throat. Even without that trumpet call,

I’ve heard your wings vibrate the air, long neck – 
with beak that can drill a coyote’s skull –  
cutting the wind. You and your mate dance, call
to each other in a synchronized, complex duet. 

Of the genus Antigone, you’ve been here
2.5 million years, survived by gathering and
foraging together for reptiles, snails,
amphibians, sorghum and waste corn. 

Walking, your head moves like a snake. But
in the sky, riding the thermals, you’re an arrow.

                 ~Susan Landgraf

Image: Hiroko Seki

Northern Flicker Reconsidered


If a bird could become
a poem, and why not—
 
promenade through wayward
stanzas, lift their couplets
 
of wings—what then? A high
wik-a, wik-a alchemical spell:
 
a cry of the unprintable?
Could a flicker know heartbreak,
 
practice self-restraint?
Their fashion leans bold—polka dots
 
and stripes, bright cinnamon
to morning fog hues. The male,
 
handsome, with his patch of mustache.
I would become his lifelong mate
 
should I return as a bird—celebrated
Shad-spirit, Cotton-Rump—
 
with the longest bird tongue
in North America.
 
This ode to plurality—
this epic boundless—then—
 
cross-stitched together
on the pages of Northwest sky.
 
             ~Susan Rich

Filed under
Share

Related Content

Poetic

Three Poems by Ally Ang

10/03/2025 By Ally Ang

Poetic

Three Poems by Troy Osaki

04/22/2025 By Troy Osaki Illustrations by Rumi Hara