Last year, I traded for lilacs, dandelions, rhubarb, nasturtiums, hyssop, deer sausage, grape leaves, zucchini flowers, cherries, apples, and pickerel.
This year, I am interested in fiddleheads, spruce bud tips, nettles, burdock, caragana, chicken-of-the-woods…and anything else edible that can be grown or foraged in the city.
How does it work? Say you’ve got abundant lilac. You email me at poetrybarter@gmail.com to say you’d trade a vaseful for a poem. You provide me with 5 words to use in the poem: dinosaur, birds, love, childless, peace. In a week's time, I visit your house/apartment/garden plot, pick a bouquet of lilac, and hand over a fresh poem.
About me:
Ariel Gordon is a Winnipeg writer. Her
first book of poetry, Hump
(Palimpsest Press, 2010), won the Lansdowne Prize for Poetry at the Manitoba
Book Awards, as did her second collection, Stowaways
(2014). She is currently working on creative non-fiction about Winnipeg’s urban
forest, slated for publication with Wolsak & Wynn in 2018.
Deadline: October 31, or when frost kills everything.
Deadline: October 31, or when frost kills everything.
So, who has lilac/fiddleheads/nettles/mushrooms/etc and NEEDS a poem written just for them?
4 comments:
I love this idea and wish I lived closer. I've been making dandelion pizza and have fresh lilac but live half a continent away....
If you can think of something that you can dry/preserve—herbs for tea, for instance —I'd be happy to do a mail barter!
If you would like a little string of dried Thai peppers, we're on!
Sounds like a plan! Email me at poetrybarter@gmail.com and we'll work out the details...
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