====================================================================== Title: Tree Cutters Date: 2026-04-25 Link: https://spool-five.com/poetry/2026_apr25_apple/ Word Count: 395 ====================================================================== > And now for our (optional) daily prompt! In her poem, “The Apple Tree > in Blossom,” Melissa Kwasny strings together several fantastical metaphors > for the apple tree, before shifting into exclamations, definitions, and > a series of nimble, tonal shifts – and seeming changes in topic – before > circling around back to the apple tree. Today’s challenge asks you to > write your own poem in which you use at least three metaphors for a > single thing, include an exclamation, ruminate on the definition of a > word, and come back in the closing line to the image or idea with which > you opened the poem. I didn't really follow the prompt today, but the poem that is referenced, "Apple Tree in Blossom", made me think about something I've noticed in Ireland in the last few weeks - the sheer number of trees whose branches have been dramatically cut back! I'm not sure what it prompting this, save for in some cases where trees are being 'managed' in response to a storm last year. In other cases, though, it seems very gratuitous. Below is a picture from a street nearby, where the trees for the whole road have been cut with the result that it looks more like a graveyard than a city street. There may be a good horticultural reason for all this tree-cutting, but I haven't come across it yet. [1] =>[1] https://spool-five.com/blogimg/street.jpeg It seems to have become a fad The cutting of trees, shearing of leaves In Spring the tree-cutters emerged in force Though work has been ongoing since The storm last year, when nature, in its small attempt at vengeance, flung trees at power lines Sending a message: Stop! Put down your phones and do not panic For this was the way of things not long ago In tit-for-tat, zero-sum game We hit back, cutting off nature's antennas - points of presence - for creatures who navigate the sky. Petty communications battle. Or does the cutting help the tree somehow? Are we all becoming banzai monks? Under sycamore leaves, flying creatures small and medium-sized, hover for hours at a time. Their stochastic dance mesmerising, as I too enjoy shade of leaves And now, searing sun cuts through bare branches nowhere to hide And worse still, is loss of colour Save for the dark gleam of desolate wood.