Welcome to The Australian Haiku Society Haiku String for the day of the Southern Hemisphere Winter Solstice
We will keep the String open for contributions for three days to accommodate international poets who may wish to take part.
We welcome contributions from haiku poets worldwide.
Please select the title or ‘continue reading’ to go to the main post and make your contribution.
This is now closed for comment. Visit the post to read the contributions.
The haiku in this String will be tied together by the subject: ‘seeing the world with a child’s eyes’. There is no need for each haiku to relate to the previous haiku in the String, although we allow for response haiku for two levels below each haiku in the top-level posts in the String.
Please contribute up to three of your best haiku.
Haiku should be posted in the comment box at the end of this post
Haiku posted must be original work by the poet making the post. Please include your name below each haiku as you wish it to appear.
We invite you to include the place of residence below the author’s name.
In the spirit of creativity we encourage poets to submit new work.
Posting your work in the AHS Winter Solstice Haiku String 2018 assumes the following:
Copyright of each haiku remains with the author. We request nonexclusive permission to publish your work on AHS website and to republish it in any future online collections on the AHS website
道あるに 雪の中行く 童かな
michi aruni/ yuki no naka yuku/ warabe kana
there’s the road
yet the child walks
in the snow
Kijo Murakami (1865 – 1938)
(Translation Vanessa Proctor)

tussock clumps
cupping snow
secrets we keep
Marietta McGregor
Australia
LikeLiked by 6 people
this long night
a sliver of moonlight
her smile
.
.
.
LPConvey
Brisbane, Australia
LikeLiked by 1 person
losing his pet
he asks some vexing questions
we search for answers
LikeLiked by 2 people
Kristina Valler
New Zealand
11 years
a horrible sight
a storm, a deadly thing
finally it dies
LikeLiked by 3 people
winter,winter here
a delicate blanket of snow
trees will not grow
Bridget France
New Zealand
Age 12 years
LikeLiked by 1 person
Perez Takiwa
New Zealand
Age 12 years
the storm falls close
the wind and breeze
exchange words
LikeLiked by 3 people
Jenny Pyatt
New Zealand
watching the cruise ship
– how did it get
in the sea?
gazing across the gull
a small boy asks
‘where do echoes live’?
tress and sunlight
paint zebra strips
on a country road
LikeLiked by 5 people