Here is Cedar Draw, a stream which spills free from the dam upstream and then slowly licks its way westerly among the billowing cottonwood and volcanic boulders that still appear red-hot, flattening out, pooling here and there where fat trout and perch can feed on luckless grasshoppers and mayflies blown into the water by the wind.
Here is Cedar Draw, widening into lush shallows with bulrush and cat-tails clicking in the wind, showy red-winged blackbirds clinging to stalks high above the waterline, and where snowy egrets ply the mossy banks for frogs. The only sound heard is the chittering of birds and that warm summer breeze softly moaning and sighing for you alone.
Here is Cedar Draw, as fine a place a poet could every hope to find to relax, meditate, sip a little port wine, tease the iridescent-blue damselflies that abound here, cool one's feet at water's edge, scribble in a notebook disjointed thoughts that may or may not make it into a poem, perhaps to doze a little and finally to rouse up and thank your muse for such a great day and such a splendid spot.