Stomped earth with broad feet Fastening fresh saplings into Whole forests Eight feet by eight feet, the grid Through winter month's To early spring Line of tree planters, twenty Sometimes less, sometimes more On Shasta, on Lassen, on Trinity Alps Douglas Firs and Ponderosa Pines In Mendocino, in Eureka Planting baby giants, Redwoods Sequoias in Sequoia National and Klamath Young men with ***-dads Knew some old ones too Women as well, though few If you could bear the snow, the rain If you could bear back-breaking pain The glory is yours As was once mine Reforestation Go plant your line To be eternally in Mother Nature's good graces And kinship known by campfire
In my early twenties, I worked in reforestation. Though weathering most inclement days, as saplings must be planted in the wet season, it was a most fulfilling time in my life. I planted whole forests all over Northern California. The men and women I worked with were so deeply dedicated, and all pulled together to make camping out in that brutal weather tolerable. Some of my best memories are there in those young forests. I often wonder how those thousands of trees I planted, fair today.