
A note to poets entering this competition. Please include your name below your haiku. An email address will not be counted as a name. If you make a mistake when entering, please enter your work again, including a note.
Welcome, haiku poets worldwide, to the Australian Haiku Society Winter Solstice Haiga Kukai 2025. The competition starts today, 21 June, in Australia. It will be open for eight days, including today, to allow haiku poets in Australia and abroad to contribute their haiku. The competition will close at 1 am on 29 June ACST (Australian Central Standard Time). To avoid missing out, please ensure you have entered your haiku in good time, as the competition cannot be reopened once it closes automatically. Please read the guidelines carefully.
You are invited to write one haiku in response to the image by Wanda Amos.
Your name should appear on your entry as you want to see it on the website.
Enter one haiku only. Haiku entered should not have been published previously in print or online, including in discussion forums. If you make a mistake in your haiku, please post it again, including a note to disregard your first entry.
To enter, post your haiku in the comment box. Scroll to the bottom of the page to find the comment box.
The winning haiku will be displayed on the AHS website.
By entering the competition, entrants agree to make their haiku available for display on the AHS website, although the copyright will remain with the author.
No correspondence will be entered into regarding winning entries.
Good luck and enjoy!

solstice prayer
one tree holds onto
the last light
Debbie Strange, Canada
LikeLiked by 1 person
winter map pinning the last leaf
Robyn Cairns
LikeLiked by 1 person
turmeric tea . . .
taking its leave
Indian summer
Monica Kakkar
India and United States of America
LikeLike
holding the melancholy
to the end —
longest night
Zina Ioannou
LikeLike
a leaf dies . . .
in the mist a windchime enchants
its final moments
John Low
Please disregard my earlier mistaken attempts.
LikeLike
a leaf dies . . .
in the mist a windchime soothes
its final moments
John Low
LikeLike
a
LikeLike