The men gather in the hunting house
deep within Michigan’s woods,
where a fire ring, picnic table,
and a spice rack are filled
for the gourmet hunter cooks.
They reside here
during hunting season.
Solar panels ignite the cabin.
The owner planted apple trees for the deer.
They call the climb uphill
to the outhouse,
where they also have a compost
where the view overlooks
the pond, geese, pine and deer,
their Stairway to Heaven.
4-12 points, deer head trophies,
adorn the walls.
The door to the bunker
where three single beds
house the room
with numerous camouflage jackets and pants
hanging on hooks
is where the men sleep
after and before
the bloodshed.
The door is closed off
the crack stuffed with a towel
to stop the smell of their cooking
from seeping into their hunting clothes,
so the smell of their sweetness
doesn’t interfere with the killing.
I practice non-violence.
I don’t eat meat.
So when the deer hunter
made us dinner,
offering fine wines,
single malt scotch
for the man takers,
and one brave hearted woman,
after setting the table
with the finest silverwares,
fit for kings and queens,
and pronounced that dinner was ready,
he turned to me, pointing at a pan, and said,
He’d made a curry,
but in my heart he made
a deer hunter into a dear hunter
proving in action
that he lives
as sensitive to the kill,
as to the living.
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Ed: Bryonie Wise
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