My grandmother nestles hair
in her flower beds to ward off
deer, who detest the smell.
She pulls the grey threads
from her brush, intending to help birds
as well, who take the strands for their nests.
Except for the occasional fox,
few creatures ever visit
my grandparent’s blooming beds
because of their house’s
woodland isolation. No other
humans grace the grounds,
though the shadows of alders
race across the lawn.
The trees encase the house in shade
while their unsung ages ellipse human life-spans.
My grandmother’s hair sprouts
from the earth grotesquely
in tufts half-buried by the dirt sprinkled over.
Most of it has yet to be collected by the birds.
1