After weeks of rain, the allotments gleam;
in a month or so they’ll sparkle with a frosty sheen.
Groups of men huddle, boots covered in muck,
cocking an ear as they lift them with a suck.
It’s about time that they got down to work
and, grabbing their buckets and trusty forks,
they set off to their individual plots,
where foliage is yellow, hardly any blight spots.
It’s an honest day’s work, putting your back
into digging earth that’s soft, rich and black,
carefully lifting and turning it over,
sifting with fingers to discover the treasure.
Nuggets are golden beneath all the mud,
a reward for the passion in gardeners ‘blood.
Kim M. Russell, 21sT October 2025

Tuesday has come around again, and I’m hosting Poetics at the dVerse Poets Pub, where we are creating our own micro seasons.
As well as the usual four seasons that we have in the West, in Japan the year is divided into seventy-two micro seasons of several days each, with poetic names; my personal favourites are ‘frogs start singing’ and ‘crickets chirp around the door’.
There are already poems about Japanese micro seasons, of which I have provided links to examples, and they lend themselves to delightful haiku and tanka. However, we are making up our own names for micro seasons and writing poems about them, with the micro season’s name as the title, in any form of our choosing.
What a cool poem, and I really like the title.
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Thank you, Melissa.
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This is a season I could live with… alas our garden don’t really allow for potatoes, and I have no allotment, otherwise I would be there harvesting potatoes. Love the descriptive name of the season.
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Thank you, Björn. We love our potatoes in the UK and, having lived in Ireland, I appreciate it even more.
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We are also big lovers of potatoes… even more in the past when we had it with everything.
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Same in Germany. My foster mother used to cook them in so many ways.
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This is stunning writing, and I LOVE working with the micro-seasons! A brilliant challenge! Your potatoes look yummy. I can imagine a rich potato soup bubbling on the stove. Scrumptious!
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Thank you, Colleen, I look forward to reading yours.
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This is exquisitely drawn, Kim! Wow! 😍 I especially love; “Nuggets are golden beneath all the mud.” Yes, they are. ❤️❤️
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Thank you, dear Sanaa!
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You’re most welcome ❤️
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I could hear the squelch of boots, the “suck” of pulled potatoes, smell the scent of “digging earth that’s soft, rich and black” and feel the satisfaction of a passionate gardener. This micro season you delved into with both hands and delivered a micro poem that inspires and sets the bar high for the rest of us, Kim. I hope you’re happy! 🙂
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Your comment is much appreciated, Dora, and I am happy that you are here. I look forward to reading your micro season poem.
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This is so vivid–a feast for the senses, Kim. How wonderful to have those fresh potatoes. We’ve had some a few times with our farm share.
“Groups of men huddle, boots covered in muck,
cocking an ear as they lift them with a suck.”
Wonderful prompt!
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Thank you so much, Merril! I’m off to bed in a while. I might have to continue reading and commenting in the morning.
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You’re welcome, Kim. Sweet dreams. I still have to catch-up with reading other prompts. 😂
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Harvest of potatoes used to allow for a school break. A muddy, short, and bountiful time!
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I remember helping out with the potato harvest when I lived in Ireland.
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Nice one Kim
much♡love
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Thanks Gillena!
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An interesting idea to dig potatoes in the muck! Well done, Kim.
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Thanks Dwight!
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:>)
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Was it Seamus Heaney who wrote about his father digging potatoes? In it is indeed a solid days work – and as certain as your words and the connection to the land that comes with It – Jae
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Well spotted, Jae. Yes it was Seamus Heaney, one of my favourite poets. Thank you for your appreciation.
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Amazing!
It’s an honest day’s work, putting your backinto digging earth that’s soft, rich and black,
My favorite lines, internal rhyme and rhythm are beautiful!
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Thank you, Jay, and for spotting that internal rhyme!
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I, too, love potatoes (being English). I don’t think they’d grow well in our garden but at least they are available at the store.
Your poem has made me hungry now….😁
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I have given up allotmenting – too unsteady on the spongy bark paths – and left it to my daughter who only got as far as potatoes – but delicious they were – so I like this poem, Kim…
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That makes me happy, Andrew.
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So delicious, those garden-fresh new potatoes. A totally different taste. I am enjoying this prompt, Kim.
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Thank you, Sherry, I’m so pleased you enjoyed it.
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Lovely prompt, thank you! Your poem is evocative and delightful.
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Thanks so much, Anna.
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I love your story poem, Kim! True passion in gardeners’ blood ~ a wonderful thing to behold.
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Thank you so much, Helen!
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After all the hard-work a golden nugget is a splendid reward. I love those with melted butter.
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Me too, Truedessa!
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It’s wonder-ful living in a calendar always flush with a seasonal — especially so If you’re a lover or a mystic or a poet writing it down! All three personae here …
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Thanks so much, Brendan!
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Love the title, Kim and such a vivid write!
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Thanks so much, Punam!
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My pleasure, Kim.
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Potato picking season’s a thing. Idaho is not far from where my kids I raised my kids and so every year because we were poor we would drive up and volunteer for a day picking potatoes so we could go home with a couple hundred pounds of potatoes. Very cool poem. I love it.
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Thanks Aaron. I used to do the same in Ireland.
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What a wonderful season you have created. Perfect title!
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Thank you, Sara!
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