Cultivo
by Luisa Caycedo-Kimura
once mourning doves made me think
of graveyards
today they peck at weed seeds
clean my land
the oldest on record lived 30 years and 4 months
from the time it was tagged
until it was shot
how many mates did it mourn
American toads breed
at the neighbor’s pond
I wring laundry to hang on a clothesline
mostly black
when I was eight
a man trapped me in the stairwell
to our New York apartment
the note from his pocket loose-leaf cutout
blue ink print said I was beautiful
a scalpel in his pocket
how many would die
in a war without weapons
I was born in the middle
of an Andean hurricane the first time
I saw mamá her blue eyes
reflected green from the flame
of a candle the last time in Florida
her eyes were shut
yesterday Aaron and I planned
a garden for our new Connecticut home
asparagus and blueberries can’t be harvested
for two years
seeds must avoid hickory taproots
cilantro has to be direct seeded
doesn’t like to be moved
my older sister bought her first house
after med school
lived there twenty years
before renting it out I’ve moved
twenty times from rental to rental
clouds dissipate on our ridge
we buy spades trowels
pruners window sheers
fog on the trees lingers
coats the open grass
droplets vaporize burn the fog
how does one quench an instinct
to bolt
Copyright 2021 Luisa Caycedo-Kimura From All Were Limones (The Word Works, 2025); originally published in Shennandoah, Spring 2021 Used by permission of the author.