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How to Make a Worm Bin

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How to Make a Worm Bin

by Willi Galloway

A worm bin is a great way to create healthy compost in a small space, as it only involves using a plastic bin, moist newspaper and kitchen waste. Build a welcoming environment for composting worms with help from an organic gardener in this free video on nutrient-rich fertilizer.…Keep reading

 

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DarkPoetry Poem of the Day: Moonflower // October Pearls

'...weaving moonbeams soft and silver
onto Jagged lace ( Azure

Tarnished // breaks the pearly waves upon
her slumbering lashes

Everything was once so simple...


~

drenched in ink
and elegance of _ / pale glamour

~ It was you who sketched the feathers of October
in
my
hand
and watched them grow

The shimmery breath of talent past

('Bright eyes,burning like fire...
bright eyes how can you close and fail?
How can the light that burned so brightly,
suddenly burn so pale?...Bright eyes...')

~

Everything is blue
and
glows

Inside the symphony
Of pale breeze


Slivers of your twisting mirr'
breaking onto night
and slicing stars
Into your saddness

*


I smile.

'As you flick your pen

and tilt
your crown
of silver strings'

(The scathing of my shiny wings)


~

Everything can be so simple


For Cheynne
Because you're wonderful and you inspire me

*Ok...Ive decided I don't actually like this work...I think it works in pieces but
it doesn't seem to fit together right...bleh..
Oh...btw..its supposed to be set out somewhat differently.But I can't seem to figure
out how to make it work...

http://www.darkpoetry.com/node/work/39609
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Meet Tina Chang, Ada Limon & Mark Wunderlich


October 19, 2010

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Interviews with Poets Forum Participants

Come to New York City this October 28-30 for the 2010 Poets Forum to hear Tina Chang, Ada Limón, and Mark Wunderlich on a panel discussion with fellow poets Jericho Brown, Meghan O'Rourke, and Olena Kalytiak Davis on the use of irony and sincerity in their poems.


Mark Wunderlich: Letter to a Young Poet

"It is something we do secreted away from other people, but it's a gesture you're making toward the unknowable and toward other people, hoping that there could be some kind of reciprocation. He said that's what this letter was. From that moment, there was no turning back."

Hear Mark Wunderlich discuss his first connections to poetry, his influences, and a letter he received from Mark Doty.

Hear Wunderlich read a poem

"This is based on an 18th-century document that I saw, written in German. It was a house blessing. It's held at the Library Company of Philadelphia. I used the title of what this document was called, and it was a 'Heaven Letter.'"

On the web at: www.poets.org/mwund



Ada Limón: A Religion of Noticing Things

"We're bombarded with all of this information all of the time. We have the internet, Twitter, Facebook, all of these things that are coming at us. They're wonderful tools, but I think that we find it hard to settle our brains down. Poetry offers us that silence, that quiet space..."

Hear Ada Limón discuss poetry in contemporary life, social media, and how she finds a sense of community through poetry.

Hear Limón read a poem

"This is a poem I wrote for my friend Jess who died of cancer before reaching her 32nd birthday. We worked together in the magazine world."

On the web at: www.poets.org/alimo



Tina Chang: The Poetics of Multi-tasking

"The idea of being a mother, the idea of being a poet laureate, the idea of being a writer, the idea of being an educator, the idea of being a public servant—it all kind of topples on top of itself, and in the course of one day, I try to do all of it."

Hear Brooklyn poet laureate Tina Chang discuss her various responsibilities—as a poet, a public advocate, and a mother—and how she balances all of those roles at once.

Hear Chang read a poem

"I was reading a book on flora and fauna. I was reading about beech trees, and no matter how many times I read the phrase beech tree, I kept seeing: bitch tree. So I thought I would write a poem called 'Bitch Tree' to honor the fact..."

On the web at: www.poets.org/tchan



Ticket Information

Friday, October 29
1:30 p.m.
Philoctetes Center
247 East 82nd Street

Purchase tickets online now at www.poets.org/poetsforum
or by calling (212) 274-0343, ext. 10.


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