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I. Ellensburg Gale The wind here has teeth. It gnaws the ridges naked, howls down Main Street like a pack of invisible wolves hungry for hats and hubcaps. It grabs you by the ribs, demands your balance as tribute, turns every corner into a dare. Traffic lights sway like drunks at last call, dust devils spin gossip from the hills to the Yakima. Even the sky trembles - clouds don’t drift, they flee. You shout to your friend, but the gale steals your words midair, flinging them somewhere past the Gorge to scatter into nothing. You can smell its temper - metal, grit, sagebrush turned wild. Some days it screams through the valley for hours, some days for lifetimes. Locals don’t fight it anymore; they walk sideways, lean into the madness, call it home. Because in Ellensburg, the wind doesn’t visit - it reigns. It doesn’t whisper - it declares. And when it roars, you hold on to your hat and pray the earth remembers its grip. II. The Whirling Fury of Ellensburg In Ellensburg, where the wild winds scream, A tempest dances, a chaotic dream. Across the sagebrush, through the golden fields, The breath of the earth, a force that wields. Gusts that howl like wolves in the night, Ripping through silence, a fierce, frenzied flight. The sky churns gray, a tempestuous sea, Where hats take flight, and hearts race free. Dust devils spin in a frenzied waltz, Nature's own riddle, a madcap pulse. They lift the tumbleweeds, a wild parade, In this windy city, where calm is delayed. Hold tight to your hat, let not it escape, For the wind here is wild, a mischievous shape. It sweeps through the streets with a devilish grin, Making the timid feel lost in the din. Light poles tremble, their metal does sway, As gusts whip around, in a furious ballet. A symphony of chaos, a cacophony loud, Ellensburg’s anthem, fierce and proud. The mountains stand guard, but even they bow, To the swirling madness that dances and prowls. With each gust that strikes, the world feels alive, In this windy embrace, where the wild things thrive. So come, brave souls, to this tempestuous land, Where the wind is a spirit, fierce and unplanned. Embrace the chaos, let your heart race, In Ellensburg's winds, find your wild place. III. The Ellensburg Howl The air is not a fluid here, it is a fist, A blunt, invisible hammer that cannot be missed. It doesn't whisper secrets, it doesn't merely blow, It roars from the Cascades, a white-knuckled show. This is not a breeze to lift a kite or a curl, This is the Windy City, USA, that unspools the world. It comes from the canyons, a screaming, sand-blasted ghost, A relentless, high-G force that counts the cost. The light poles bend and shiver, their steel spines taut and thin, As the gale, a hungry beast, tries to pull the pavement in. You walk a forty-five-degree angle just to stand, A human sail against the fury of the land. The dust, a million needles, is driven through the air, It scours the paint from cars and tangles up your hair. It finds the smallest crack, the window's tiny seam, And whistles through the house like a high-pitched, frantic dream. Every loose thing is a missile, a projectile of dread, From the roof-shingles torn to the branches overhead. You hear the train-whistle shriek of it before it hits, A sound that tears the silence into jagged, frantic bits. It presses on your chest, a weight you can't exhale, A physical, crushing presence that makes the spirit fail. Forget Chicago's gusts, their claim is thin and weak, This Central Washington madness is the wind that truly speaks. So clutch the nearest anchor, be it lamp post or door, Feel the vibration in your bones and pray for nothing more. For in this valley, where the mountains channel the might, The wind is not a weather, it's a battle through the night. It is the insane, vivid breath of a landscape gone wild, And you are just a fragile, temporary child. IV. Whispers of the Wind In Ellensburg, where the wild winds dance,   A tempest brews, a fierce, frenzied prance,   Sky-bound spirits, howling in a raucous song,   Their breath a whirlwind, fierce and strong. With arms outstretched, they seize the lane,   A symphony of chaos, wild like a hurricane,   Dust devils whirl in a playful embrace,   As rooftops tremble and trees lose their grace. “Hold on tight!” the shadows beckon,   As gusts sweep through with a fearsome weapon.   A carnival of debris, the sky becomes a stage,   Where nature's fury writes a tempestuous page. The wind whispers secrets, ancient and wise,   Through creaking lampposts and turbulent skies,   It tugs at your clothing, a playful tease,   Yet holds an edge, like a blade in the breeze. In this "Windy City," the banners unfurl,   With each fierce gale, watch the landscape swirl,   Ellensburg laughs in a raucous delight,   As the wind becomes both specter and sprite. So grip that light pole, and clasp your worn hat,   For the wind is a madman, and oh, how it chats!   Like a restless painter with colors that clash,   It paints with a vengeance, a bold, brash splash. The seasons may change, but the crazy wind stays,   A tempest of wonder, igniting the days.   In Ellensburg’s heart, where the wild breezes run,   There’s a madness, a beauty, a world coming undone. V. Winds of Ellensburg: Fury Unleashed In Central Washington's savage throat, Ellensburg roars as Windy City, USA - A title snatched from Chicago's grasp, Where gales clock 80 mph, relentless, mad, Overshooting the Windy City's throne in raw, unbridled spite. Hat-clutching apocalypse erupts from nowhere: Dust devils whirl like berserk djinn, Uprooting sagebrush, flinging fenceposts skyward, Asphalt screams as semis jackknife in terror, Roofs peel like onion skins in the maelstrom's claw. Hold fast to your hat, your life, that trembling light pole - It bends like a reed in Ragnarök's breath, Whipping rain sideways, horizontal lashes of ice, Cattle low in panic, barns shredded to matchsticks, The Kittitas Valley a howling vortex, devouring the weak. No mercy in this atmospheric beast - Winds that sculpt canyons, bury tractors in tumbleweeds, A primal force, insane and eternal, laughing through the canyons, Grip tight or be gone - Ellensburg's wind claims all who falter. VI. Windy City, USA The wind here does not blow - it arrives, unannounced, like a freight train made of teeth. Ellensburg teaches the air bad manners. It grabs you by the collar, checks your pockets for loose intentions, and flings them east toward nowhere at seventy miles of no, absolutely not. Hats become kites. Words leave your mouth and never come back. Car doors wrench free from hands like the wind is collecting trophies. This is not Chicago’s polite, river-polished breeze - this is basalt-fed madness, Columbia Gorge breath weaponized, a scream dragged for miles across scabland and sage until it learns your name and tries to peel it off your bones. Light poles sway like drunks at closing time. Semi-trucks kneel. Trees bow - not in reverence, but in negotiation. The wind gets under your coat, your skin, your thoughts. It whispers: lean harder. It shoves: not enough. It laughs in a thousand-pitched howl that sounds like coyotes arguing with God. Dust becomes scripture. Gravel stings prayers into your shins. The sky lowers its shoulder and hits back. You learn survival tricks here: – walk sideways – keep one hand free – never trust silence – grip the pole like it owes you money Because this wind is not weather - it’s a local phenomenon of attitude, a standing grudge between land and sky, a reminder that humans are just tall opinions with poor traction. And still - people stay. Because once you’ve been sandblasted into truth, once you’ve leaned so hard you discovered what part of you refuses to move, the calm elsewhere feels suspicious. Ellensburg wind doesn’t let you pass unnoticed. It strips you down to ballast and willpower and sends you onward with your hat somewhere in Idaho and your spine humming like a tuned wire. Welcome to Windy City, USA. Hold fast. The ground is optional. VII. Ode to Ellensburg: The Wind’s Wild Reign Beneath the sagebrush, bent and brown, the sky turns wolf and howls its crown - no whisper here, no gentle sigh, just fists of air that claw the sky. It comes not soft, nor slow, nor kind, but screaming down the canyon’s mind, a freight train loose, a demon’s breath, a thief that steals both sound and death. The stoplights sway like drunkards’ knees, the power lines hum hymns of unease, while hats take flight - goodbye, goodbye! - and tumbleweeds outrun the eye. Oh, Chicago, keep your windy name, your breezes tame, your gusts so lame! For here the gales don’t just blow through - they own the earth, they chew it too. They’ll strip the paint from barns like skin, send trash cans dancing, wild, thin, and leave you gripping steel and stone, while dust devils laugh and claim their throne. The locals grin - oh, they’ve been broke by winds that twist the trees to smoke, that turn the calmest walk to war, and slam the doors you left ajar. So hold your hat, your heart, your nerve, and pray the next gust doesn’t swerve - for Ellensburg’s the wind’s own town, and mercy’s not what blows on down. VIII. Ellensburg Wind Psalm The wind in Central Washington   doesn’t blow - it lunges,   a wild‑eyed creature barreling down the Kittitas Valley   like it’s trying to outrun its own shadow.   Ellensburg stands there anyway,   chin lifted,   coat flapping like a battle flag,   because this is Windy City, USA - the place where Chicago would come to take notes   and still get knocked flat on its back.   Some days the gusts arrive polite as tourists,   ruffling sagebrush,   whispering through wheat fields.   But then - without warning - the sky inhales,   and the whole valley braces   as if the world is about to be unzipped.   Hats become fugitives.   Dust devils rise like summoned spirits.   Stop signs vibrate with metallic panic.   You grip a light pole   like it’s the last sturdy thing left on earth   while the wind tries to peel you   out of your own footprint.   It screams down the canyon,   a freight train made of invisible teeth,   gnawing at your jacket,   tugging your breath sideways,   turning every step into a negotiation.   And yet - there’s a strange holiness to it,   this relentless, roaring presence.   A reminder that the land is alive,   that the valley has lungs,   that the wind is not weather   but a character   with a temper,   a history,   and a wicked sense of humor.   In Ellensburg,   you don’t walk the streets - you lean into them,   bent like a pilgrim in a storm,   laughing, cursing,   holding on for dear life   as the wind howls its ancient anthem   through the bones of the valley. IX. Windy City, USA (An Ode) Oh, Ellensburg - where the sky spins stories, and the wind never whispers, it roars. You can feel it sneaking down the Yakima, snatching hats, rattling fences, laughing like it’s got secrets to tell. It doesn’t just blow, it bullies. It grabs your jacket by the collar, whips your hair into wild confetti, and turns every step into a dare. Stop signs wobble, trees surrender. Cars shimmy sideways at the stoplight. They call Chicago bold? Please. Ellensburg could teach it mischief. This is where the weather’s got personality - loud, unpredictable, and totally alive. So grip that light pole, hold your breath, and join the dance, because here, the wind doesn’t visit - it lives. X. In the Windy City, USA Gale forces howl through the canyon’s lips,   A tempest breaks loose, as nature’s grip slips.   Ellensburg rises, a whisper, a roar,   Where sunlit dreams spiral - then scatter to soar.   The horizon bends low, like a beggar in flight,   Tethered by shadows, swallowed by light.   Gusts come crashing, a wild stampede,   Rattling the bones of each tremulous reed.   Hold fast to your hat, it twirls like a whiff,   A dervish in denim, a rogue, a swift glyph;   Gripping the poles, white-knuckled and tense,   As clouds churn and tumble with reckless suspense.   The sagebrush shivers, the sidewalk’s a blurr,   With dirt devils dancing, a whirlwind’s soft spur.   Sunflowers bow deeply, their petals like flags,   While tumbleweeds tango, in playful snags.   Here, kite strings snap in a high-wire ballet,   As echoes of laughter take wing and give way.   A lonesome lark strums a salute to the storm,   Flinging notes to the eaves of a house grown warm.   Yet daylight’s lament in this raucous delight,   Is a cyclone of whispers - of day into night.   The air, thick with grit, turns the sky into slate,   Each breath a wild gamble - each gust a first date.   From the ridge to the river in chaotic embrace,   The heartbeat of Ellensburg, time quickens its pace.   Breath of the mountains, fierce wild sister’s decree,   In windy delirium, it sings: “Stay with me!”   So clutch your possessions; the world spins and tilts,   In Central Washington where freedom’s unbuilt.   The wild winds will crown you, a flurry of light,   In this windblown kingdom, you dance with delight.   To live in this fury, where storms win their chase,   Is to taste the tempest, to revel in grace.   For amidst all the madness, where chaos unfolds,   Ellensburg whispers: it’s here that the bold hold. XI. The Kittitas Symphony: A Master Epic of the Gale I. The Arrival The wind in Central Washington doesn’t blow—it lunges, a wild-eyed creature barreling down the Kittitas Valley. The air is not a fluid here, it is a fist, a blunt, invisible hammer that cannot be missed. It comes not soft, nor slow, nor kind, but screaming down the canyon’s mind. II. The City Bends Ellensburg stands there anyway, chin lifted, coat flapping like a battle flag. But the wind checks your pockets for loose intentions, flinging them east toward nowhere at seventy miles of "no." Light poles sway like drunks at closing time, and car doors wrench free from hands like the wind is collecting trophies. III. The Dust and the Dance Dust devils rise like summoned spirits, a carnival of debris where the sky becomes a stage. The dust - a million needles driven through the air - scours the paint from cars and tangles up your hair. Tumbleweeds outrun the eye in a frenzied waltz, while sunflowers bow deeply, their petals like flags, and kite strings snap in a high-wire ballet. IV. The Human Cost You learn survival tricks here: walk sideways, lean into the madness, and call it home. It grabs you by the ribs, demands your balance as tribute, turning every corner into a dare. You are just a fragile, temporary child standing against a freight train made of invisible teeth. V. The Reign Oh, Chicago, keep your windy name! For here the gales own the earth - they chew it too. Because once you’ve been sandblasted into truth, once you’ve leaned so hard you discovered what part of you refuses to move, the calm elsewhere feels suspicious. VI. The Benediction So clutch your possessions; the world spins and tilts, but amidst the madness, where chaos unfolds, Ellensburg whispers: it’s here that the bold hold. In this windblown kingdom, you dance with delight, for the wind doesn’t visit - it reigns.
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Dec 17, 2025
Dec 17, 2025 at 9:58 AM UTC
The Bold Hold: A Poet’s Guide to the Ellensburg Gale
I. Ellensburg Gale The wind here has teeth. It gnaws the ridges naked, howls down Main Street like a pack of invisible wolves hungry for hats and hubcaps. It grabs you by the ribs, demands your balance as tribute, turns every corner into a dare. Traffic lights sway like drunks at last call, dust devils spin gossip from the hills to the Yakima. Even the sky trembles - clouds don’t drift, they flee. You shout to your friend, but the gale steals your words midair, flinging them somewhere past the Gorge to scatter into nothing. You can smell its temper - metal, grit, sagebrush turned wild. Some days it screams through the valley for hours, some days for lifetimes. Locals don’t fight it anymore; they walk sideways, lean into the madness, call it home. Because in Ellensburg, the wind doesn’t visit - it reigns. It doesn’t whisper - it declares. And when it roars, you hold on to your hat and pray the earth remembers its grip. II. The Whirling Fury of Ellensburg In Ellensburg, where the wild winds scream, A tempest dances, a chaotic dream. Across the sagebrush, through the golden fields, The breath of the earth, a force that wields. Gusts that howl like wolves in the night, Ripping through silence, a fierce, frenzied flight. The sky churns gray, a tempestuous sea, Where hats take flight, and hearts race free. Dust devils spin in a frenzied waltz, Nature's own riddle, a madcap pulse. They lift the tumbleweeds, a wild parade, In this windy city, where calm is delayed. Hold tight to your hat, let not it escape, For the wind here is wild, a mischievous shape. It sweeps through the streets with a devilish grin, Making the timid feel lost in the din. Light poles tremble, their metal does sway, As gusts whip around, in a furious ballet. A symphony of chaos, a cacophony loud, Ellensburg’s anthem, fierce and proud. The mountains stand guard, but even they bow, To the swirling madness that dances and prowls. With each gust that strikes, the world feels alive, In this windy embrace, where the wild things thrive. So come, brave souls, to this tempestuous land, Where the wind is a spirit, fierce and unplanned. Embrace the chaos, let your heart race, In Ellensburg's winds, find your wild place. III. The Ellensburg Howl The air is not a fluid here, it is a fist, A blunt, invisible hammer that cannot be missed. It doesn't whisper secrets, it doesn't merely blow, It roars from the Cascades, a white-knuckled show. This is not a breeze to lift a kite or a curl, This is the Windy City, USA, that unspools the world. It comes from the canyons, a screaming, sand-blasted ghost, A relentless, high-G force that counts the cost. The light poles bend and shiver, their steel spines taut and thin, As the gale, a hungry beast, tries to pull the pavement in. You walk a forty-five-degree angle just to stand, A human sail against the fury of the land. The dust, a million needles, is driven through the air, It scours the paint from cars and tangles up your hair. It finds the smallest crack, the window's tiny seam, And whistles through the house like a high-pitched, frantic dream. Every loose thing is a missile, a projectile of dread, From the roof-shingles torn to the branches overhead. You hear the train-whistle shriek of it before it hits, A sound that tears the silence into jagged, frantic bits. It presses on your chest, a weight you can't exhale, A physical, crushing presence that makes the spirit fail. Forget Chicago's gusts, their claim is thin and weak, This Central Washington madness is the wind that truly speaks. So clutch the nearest anchor, be it lamp post or door, Feel the vibration in your bones and pray for nothing more. For in this valley, where the mountains channel the might, The wind is not a weather, it's a battle through the night. It is the insane, vivid breath of a landscape gone wild, And you are just a fragile, temporary child. IV. Whispers of the Wind In Ellensburg, where the wild winds dance,   A tempest brews, a fierce, frenzied prance,   Sky-bound spirits, howling in a raucous song,   Their breath a whirlwind, fierce and strong. With arms outstretched, they seize the lane,   A symphony of chaos, wild like a hurricane,   Dust devils whirl in a playful embrace,   As rooftops tremble and trees lose their grace. “Hold on tight!” the shadows beckon,   As gusts sweep through with a fearsome weapon.   A carnival of debris, the sky becomes a stage,   Where nature's fury writes a tempestuous page. The wind whispers secrets, ancient and wise,   Through creaking lampposts and turbulent skies,   It tugs at your clothing, a playful tease,   Yet holds an edge, like a blade in the breeze. In this "Windy City," the banners unfurl,   With each fierce gale, watch the landscape swirl,   Ellensburg laughs in a raucous delight,   As the wind becomes both specter and sprite. So grip that light pole, and clasp your worn hat,   For the wind is a madman, and oh, how it chats!   Like a restless painter with colors that clash,   It paints with a vengeance, a bold, brash splash. The seasons may change, but the crazy wind stays,   A tempest of wonder, igniting the days.   In Ellensburg’s heart, where the wild breezes run,   There’s a madness, a beauty, a world coming undone. V. Winds of Ellensburg: Fury Unleashed In Central Washington's savage throat, Ellensburg roars as Windy City, USA - A title snatched from Chicago's grasp, Where gales clock 80 mph, relentless, mad, Overshooting the Windy City's throne in raw, unbridled spite. Hat-clutching apocalypse erupts from nowhere: Dust devils whirl like berserk djinn, Uprooting sagebrush, flinging fenceposts skyward, Asphalt screams as semis jackknife in terror, Roofs peel like onion skins in the maelstrom's claw. Hold fast to your hat, your life, that trembling light pole - It bends like a reed in Ragnarök's breath, Whipping rain sideways, horizontal lashes of ice, Cattle low in panic, barns shredded to matchsticks, The Kittitas Valley a howling vortex, devouring the weak. No mercy in this atmospheric beast - Winds that sculpt canyons, bury tractors in tumbleweeds, A primal force, insane and eternal, laughing through the canyons, Grip tight or be gone - Ellensburg's wind claims all who falter. VI. Windy City, USA The wind here does not blow - it arrives, unannounced, like a freight train made of teeth. Ellensburg teaches the air bad manners. It grabs you by the collar, checks your pockets for loose intentions, and flings them east toward nowhere at seventy miles of no, absolutely not. Hats become kites. Words leave your mouth and never come back. Car doors wrench free from hands like the wind is collecting trophies. This is not Chicago’s polite, river-polished breeze - this is basalt-fed madness, Columbia Gorge breath weaponized, a scream dragged for miles across scabland and sage until it learns your name and tries to peel it off your bones. Light poles sway like drunks at closing time. Semi-trucks kneel. Trees bow - not in reverence, but in negotiation. The wind gets under your coat, your skin, your thoughts. It whispers: lean harder. It shoves: not enough. It laughs in a thousand-pitched howl that sounds like coyotes arguing with God. Dust becomes scripture. Gravel stings prayers into your shins. The sky lowers its shoulder and hits back. You learn survival tricks here: – walk sideways – keep one hand free – never trust silence – grip the pole like it owes you money Because this wind is not weather - it’s a local phenomenon of attitude, a standing grudge between land and sky, a reminder that humans are just tall opinions with poor traction. And still - people stay. Because once you’ve been sandblasted into truth, once you’ve leaned so hard you discovered what part of you refuses to move, the calm elsewhere feels suspicious. Ellensburg wind doesn’t let you pass unnoticed. It strips you down to ballast and willpower and sends you onward with your hat somewhere in Idaho and your spine humming like a tuned wire. Welcome to Windy City, USA. Hold fast. The ground is optional. VII. Ode to Ellensburg: The Wind’s Wild Reign Beneath the sagebrush, bent and brown, the sky turns wolf and howls its crown - no whisper here, no gentle sigh, just fists of air that claw the sky. It comes not soft, nor slow, nor kind, but screaming down the canyon’s mind, a freight train loose, a demon’s breath, a thief that steals both sound and death. The stoplights sway like drunkards’ knees, the power lines hum hymns of unease, while hats take flight - goodbye, goodbye! - and tumbleweeds outrun the eye. Oh, Chicago, keep your windy name, your breezes tame, your gusts so lame! For here the gales don’t just blow through - they own the earth, they chew it too. They’ll strip the paint from barns like skin, send trash cans dancing, wild, thin, and leave you gripping steel and stone, while dust devils laugh and claim their throne. The locals grin - oh, they’ve been broke by winds that twist the trees to smoke, that turn the calmest walk to war, and slam the doors you left ajar. So hold your hat, your heart, your nerve, and pray the next gust doesn’t swerve - for Ellensburg’s the wind’s own town, and mercy’s not what blows on down. VIII. Ellensburg Wind Psalm The wind in Central Washington   doesn’t blow - it lunges,   a wild‑eyed creature barreling down the Kittitas Valley   like it’s trying to outrun its own shadow.   Ellensburg stands there anyway,   chin lifted,   coat flapping like a battle flag,   because this is Windy City, USA - the place where Chicago would come to take notes   and still get knocked flat on its back.   Some days the gusts arrive polite as tourists,   ruffling sagebrush,   whispering through wheat fields.   But then - without warning - the sky inhales,   and the whole valley braces   as if the world is about to be unzipped.   Hats become fugitives.   Dust devils rise like summoned spirits.   Stop signs vibrate with metallic panic.   You grip a light pole   like it’s the last sturdy thing left on earth   while the wind tries to peel you   out of your own footprint.   It screams down the canyon,   a freight train made of invisible teeth,   gnawing at your jacket,   tugging your breath sideways,   turning every step into a negotiation.   And yet - there’s a strange holiness to it,   this relentless, roaring presence.   A reminder that the land is alive,   that the valley has lungs,   that the wind is not weather   but a character   with a temper,   a history,   and a wicked sense of humor.   In Ellensburg,   you don’t walk the streets - you lean into them,   bent like a pilgrim in a storm,   laughing, cursing,   holding on for dear life   as the wind howls its ancient anthem   through the bones of the valley. IX. Windy City, USA (An Ode) Oh, Ellensburg - where the sky spins stories, and the wind never whispers, it roars. You can feel it sneaking down the Yakima, snatching hats, rattling fences, laughing like it’s got secrets to tell. It doesn’t just blow, it bullies. It grabs your jacket by the collar, whips your hair into wild confetti, and turns every step into a dare. Stop signs wobble, trees surrender. Cars shimmy sideways at the stoplight. They call Chicago bold? Please. Ellensburg could teach it mischief. This is where the weather’s got personality - loud, unpredictable, and totally alive. So grip that light pole, hold your breath, and join the dance, because here, the wind doesn’t visit - it lives. X. In the Windy City, USA Gale forces howl through the canyon’s lips,   A tempest breaks loose, as nature’s grip slips.   Ellensburg rises, a whisper, a roar,   Where sunlit dreams spiral - then scatter to soar.   The horizon bends low, like a beggar in flight,   Tethered by shadows, swallowed by light.   Gusts come crashing, a wild stampede,   Rattling the bones of each tremulous reed.   Hold fast to your hat, it twirls like a whiff,   A dervish in denim, a rogue, a swift glyph;   Gripping the poles, white-knuckled and tense,   As clouds churn and tumble with reckless suspense.   The sagebrush shivers, the sidewalk’s a blurr,   With dirt devils dancing, a whirlwind’s soft spur.   Sunflowers bow deeply, their petals like flags,   While tumbleweeds tango, in playful snags.   Here, kite strings snap in a high-wire ballet,   As echoes of laughter take wing and give way.   A lonesome lark strums a salute to the storm,   Flinging notes to the eaves of a house grown warm.   Yet daylight’s lament in this raucous delight,   Is a cyclone of whispers - of day into night.   The air, thick with grit, turns the sky into slate,   Each breath a wild gamble - each gust a first date.   From the ridge to the river in chaotic embrace,   The heartbeat of Ellensburg, time quickens its pace.   Breath of the mountains, fierce wild sister’s decree,   In windy delirium, it sings: “Stay with me!”   So clutch your possessions; the world spins and tilts,   In Central Washington where freedom’s unbuilt.   The wild winds will crown you, a flurry of light,   In this windblown kingdom, you dance with delight.   To live in this fury, where storms win their chase,   Is to taste the tempest, to revel in grace.   For amidst all the madness, where chaos unfolds,   Ellensburg whispers: it’s here that the bold hold. XI. The Kittitas Symphony: A Master Epic of the Gale I. The Arrival The wind in Central Washington doesn’t blow—it lunges, a wild-eyed creature barreling down the Kittitas Valley. The air is not a fluid here, it is a fist, a blunt, invisible hammer that cannot be missed. It comes not soft, nor slow, nor kind, but screaming down the canyon’s mind. II. The City Bends Ellensburg stands there anyway, chin lifted, coat flapping like a battle flag. But the wind checks your pockets for loose intentions, flinging them east toward nowhere at seventy miles of "no." Light poles sway like drunks at closing time, and car doors wrench free from hands like the wind is collecting trophies. III. The Dust and the Dance Dust devils rise like summoned spirits, a carnival of debris where the sky becomes a stage. The dust - a million needles driven through the air - scours the paint from cars and tangles up your hair. Tumbleweeds outrun the eye in a frenzied waltz, while sunflowers bow deeply, their petals like flags, and kite strings snap in a high-wire ballet. IV. The Human Cost You learn survival tricks here: walk sideways, lean into the madness, and call it home. It grabs you by the ribs, demands your balance as tribute, turning every corner into a dare. You are just a fragile, temporary child standing against a freight train made of invisible teeth. V. The Reign Oh, Chicago, keep your windy name! For here the gales own the earth - they chew it too. Because once you’ve been sandblasted into truth, once you’ve leaned so hard you discovered what part of you refuses to move, the calm elsewhere feels suspicious. VI. The Benediction So clutch your possessions; the world spins and tilts, but amidst the madness, where chaos unfolds, Ellensburg whispers: it’s here that the bold hold. In this windblown kingdom, you dance with delight, for the wind doesn’t visit - it reigns.
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