Edition 1

Bios   Longer Poetry   Tanka

Edition 1  – 21st Dec 2023

FOREWORD


FORWARD

From the start with Catchment — Poetry of Place, we resolved that our contributors need to be residents of Australia (whether more experienced or emerging), since one larger aim here is to try to help promote poetry within this country, in our own little way …

As readers, you will encounter writing varied in the sense of place from which it arises, across a pair of poetic genres — Eastern and Western — not often published in parallel.

Committed to embracing cultural contrasts in verse, we are proud to represent voices arising from across our own home area of Gippsland, with rivers and streams in Gunaikurnai country even featuring here and there, true to our title …

Concerned about appearing merely regional, however, we have likewise been encouraged by the fact that a range of contributions have been received from as far afield as Western Australia, giving us poems of place spanning the breadth of this continent.

In both longer forms and in tanka, writers have been sparked by outback desert locations, much further north.

Yet urban scenarios are depicted too, at times in the personalised poetry also incorporated.

All states and territories of Australia are represented in this, our first edition, either as settings for poems or as home ground for poets.

Likewise, readers can engage with impressions given of more distant environments: from England to Scotland; from the United States to Canada; from China to Japan: within a poetic short-form originating there, Catchment offers a tanka showing sunlight on a Japanese lake …

Pivotal to the structure of this journal is the choice made simply to place contributors in alphabetical order of surname; both in listing biographical statements and in presenting the poetry itself; whether in longer Western free-verse forms or in tanka.

The names of individual poets can also be clicked upon, of course, as links.

Each bio statement includes a digital link to relevant poems, needless to say.

In presenting carefully selected writing, a key aim for our editorial team has been not to seem intrusive: avoiding explicit shaping of reader reaction; not editing overtly, through placing distinct texts in close proximity, on our own interpretive say-so, in order to give a message …

Believing in all of the work chosen, we do not wish to appear to value some pieces of poetry more than others.

Rather, if a writer happens to have had multiple contributions included here, we have generally opted merely to present such a set of poems in the order in which it was sequenced, back in the submission that the author made in the first place.

You may still note — all the same — how sets of connections weave their way in and out, whether such links or contrasts happen to be geographical or stylistic, emotive or thematic.

My deep gratitude goes to Jennifer Fell, for offering sustained and insightful assistance, in all her work on this project; and in helping to review contributions of longer poetry in particular.

As a former colleague from teaching, and also as a long-term friend in writing — expert with Japanese-derived short-form verse — Jo McInerney has offered invaluable input within the process of helping to make recommendations and selections pertaining to tanka submitted.

From earliest discussions about such a dream as this, Kris Hemensley (from the old Collected Works Bookshop in Melbourne) and Peter Roberts (newly appointed as Poet-in-Residence for Hobsons Bay) have likewise shared feedback which has been instructive and affirming.

Keen to have the Bbaa support a literary dimension within the existing website for this Arts Alliance, towards promoting writing across Gippsland, Sue Murphy has offered genuine help with Catchment, in liaising with the Bbaa as a larger organisation.

All of Michael Ogden’s input — involving expertise & inventiveness, energy & support — has been truly indispensable in the IT area: my most heartfelt thank-you goes to him. Marlene Ogden’s tireless assistance especially during the final stages of site testing, thank you Marlene.

My deepest gratitude goes to all contributors who have taken the creative risk of submitting to a brand-new publishing venture.

It has been most rewarding to receive tentative offerings from writers making their first forays into publication, both in Western forms and in tanka, alongside credentialled practitioners and seasoned campaigners, with their poetry finding a place, side by side.

Rodney Williams                                    Editor

For information regarding the 2nd edition please refer to the Submissions page.


AN UPDATE FROM CATCHMENT – February 2024

Released on 21 December 2023, the first edition of Catchment – Poetry of Place has drawn very positive feedback.
As a number of you will know, our journal contains work in two poetic forms, Western free verse and Japanese tanka.
Some of its 65 poets come from Baw Baw Arts Alliance’s own region.
Beyond Gippsland, places from all Australian states and territories are also depicted, extending to overseas locations.
Strong support for Catchment has emerged in a posting made online by Gregory Piko.
A former secretary of the Australian Haiku Society, he is a widely published, prize-winning poet who works in both Japanese and Western forms.
Through this link to his poetry website, readers will see Greg giving a strong introduction to Catchment: http://gregorypiko.com/2024/02/14/catchment-poetry-of-place/

He features fine examples of work in each of the two styles of poetry found in our journal.As Gregory Piko has kindly gone on to specify, the submission window for the second edition of Catchment will open on 21 March 2024.
This opportunity to offer a new set of poems showing a sense of location will continue until May 21.
Issue # 2 of Catchment will go live online through the Bbaa’s website on June 21.
Again, poets resident in Australia can offer work focussed on place in two poetic genres:
either poetry springing from the Western tradition (in free verse or European forms);
or tanka (the longer sibling of the haiku, also from Japan);
or both.
Poets who made submissions last time are thanked deeply for their support.
We encourage you all to offer further poems!
A key point of difference will become more evident, however, once the new submission window opens on March 21.
Catchment has only a small team: developing the first edition was rewarding, yet a large undertaking.
In order to make editing/ formatting/ uploading more practicable/ sustainable, our IT team members have gained access to a digital proforma.
Pieces of poetry will need to be submitted through this in future.
New guidelines plus reminders will be provided in due course.
In the meantime, we thank all supporters of Catchment for their backing.
Lovers of Australian writing are encouraged to visit the website of Gregory Piko as well.

Yours through poems,

Rodney Williams
Editor
Catchment – Poetry of Place
bawbawartsalliance.org.au/catchment
editors.catchment@bawbawartsalliance.org.au

Longer Poetry

Tin House Town
Mundoora Wheatfields
Milparinka Breathes Again
by Jude Aquilina

Jiàn dào nǐ (Nice to meet you)
Fly Away
Guardians Till Now (extract)
by Kellie Asmussen

Driving to Mullewa
Kimberley
Monkland Canal, Scotland
by Maria Bonar

Colonised
by Pauline Cleary

An Island Mirage
by Ann Curwood

Mont-Saint-Michel
Cumberoona Boat Ramp
On the Cooran to Gympie Road
by Jane Downing

Inside the walls
by Naomi Duff

Yingundji-Gunibidji Country, Arnhem Land
Cobargo, New South Wales
Vale for Peter, Coal River Valley, Tasmania
by Fred Duncan

Cliffs, rocks, water
by Zac Eaton

New England
by Jeremy Gadd

Opening
by J F Garrow

Searches through Tall Timber
by Alleyne Hall

Unbidden
Bucket List
Grey – the Colour Nomads Leave Behind
by Jeannie Haughton

Topography 9/8/2023
Topography 29/8/2023
by Kris Hemensley

Benediction
On the Edge
by Marilyn Humbert

Doing it tough in a warm bath of retrospection
Before the summer city begins
I fancy
by Ross Jackson

Sojourn to the Underworld
by Michelle Kanevsky

Pranayama
by Tanja Kovac

Forest Sun
On the Beach at Dawn
Totem Pole, Tasmania
by Earl Livings

The Everchanging Self
by Walter Macmillan

Day moon
by David McCluskey

Yazme
by Heather McRae

Slung From a Bottlebrush
On the Seaboard’s Edge
Notes from the Naturalist’s Journal: Echinus
by Suzi Mezei

Arrival
Chalk Circle
by Jaya Penelope

An apple rotten
At the Café at Seaford by the Jetty
Untitled #99.56
by Wayne Pollard

Small acts
Camping
Riverbeds
by Stephanie Powell

Position, position
A drama of distance
by Ian Reid

Winter in Darwin
Maatsuyker
On turning away
by Peter Roberts

Blue cloud band
Look, it’s the Noosa everglades
by Margaret Owen Ruckert

Sandstone Gorge
by Janeen Samuel

Bus Stop
Busselton Jetty
The one that got away
by Pat Saunders

It’s NIGHT
The birds are restless again
love shack
by Yvette Stubbs

Tiger Tiger
Hay Season
Morning Squander
by Lyndal Turner

Bare feet not recommended
by Rebecca Weymouth

Training ride
Reunion – tercets on triangulation
Words of intimacy
by Rodney Williams

Storm on the Hay Plain
Mulligans Flat
Hiding in the Bird Hide
by Tony Steven Williams