Up a ladder weightless as bird legs, thinner
than the indelible grass
where thistle leafs out, sizzling like bacon fat,
I’m re-ascending to heaven, getting back into management.

In no time I’ve persuaded underweight creeks to invest’ themselves
in the Green, the Yampa, the San Juan, the Gunnison
as they go bandsawing deeper into their canyons
or meander flats, watering acorns I’ve programmed
with daydreams and applause for shorelining reservoirs.

I feed a magpie on seeds wanting to fly.
I remind burrowing prairie dogs to exchange and dissolve
into offspring. I nudge cottonwood lint across the Divide
while its tree stays behind
riffling, lacing the San Luis Valley with plankton.
I stock the sky’s night waters with dim barge-loads of turquoise
before lofting them southerly, just under the moon.

Off seasons? There are none?