CraigFloaters.jpg

Outstanding Recreational Resource

Friends of the Kaw considers the Kansas (Kaw) River a 171-mile linear park to be enjoyed by families and outdoor enthusiasts. We continue to partner with river communities to develop boat access, river front parks and hiking and biking trails along the river for public use.

Photo Credits

Watching the Kansas River

by Beth Schultz

 

Who looks upon a river

in a meditative hour

and is not reminded

of the flux of all things?

R.W. Emerson

 

My soul has grown

deep like the rivers.

Langston Hughes

 

1.

Tumescent in the spring,

the brown river surges.

It is swollen with desire.

It is sleek and slick,

its sheen spreading

as the heat rises.

Spume laps its edges.

The river foams.

It charges, lunging,

Leaping in its channel.

It discovers its depty.

The river is self-generating.

 

2.

turgid,

turbulent,

tumultuous,

tumbling,

rumbling,

stumbling,

mumbling,

grumbling,

rambling,

roiling,

rocking,

rolling,

rushing,

roaring,

pell-melling,

cascading,

catapulting,

churning,

turning,

twining,

winding,

swelling,

gathering

leaves, twigs, logs,

dogs, cars, cows,

carcasses unto itself,

continuous,

ongoing,

onward...

 

3.

On the stillest days,

when the river wears

satin, it is never still.

On the stillest days,

when its tangled banks

are seen mirrored

in the current, it rustles

and groans, seethes, sighs

in conversation with itself.

With the ruffling wind,

the reflections ripple

and morph into mosaics.

 

4.

Five fishermen are stationed

on rocks along the river.

They are as patient as sages

in Chinese landscape paintings.

One sits in a crumpled plastic

chair. Their lines curve out from

their rods and vanish into the river.

Caught in an eddy mid-river,

two tree trunks gyrate slowly

like the hands of a clock.

Following a metronome

of their own, swallows swoop

in and out beneath the bridge.

A heron stands by, stalk still.

There is no sign of fish.

The river reveals nothing:

only its currents' quick curl.

Like centuries of the faithful,

the fishermen believe in what

they cannot see, anticipating

the miraculous jolt.

Legends ride the river-

catfish monstrous enough

to swallow riffles, stagecoaches;

immense enough to feed three

neighborhoods; men wily

enough to wrestle gar eye-

to-eye, with the river rising.

The line straightens, the rod bends.

The fishermen brace their feet.

Any minute now, and expulsion

of carp, bullhead, drum fish,

crappy, strugeon. The bait is

taken and landed with its poisonous

package of PCBs and mercury.

The fishermen return tomorrow

to the gut-smeared rocks along the river.

They fish until the swallows vanish.

They fish although they do not see.

They throw back some small fry.

They scale others for supper.

The fishermen return tomorrow.

 

5.

It moves alongside us.

It passes beneath us.

It swishes around us.

It shapes our boundaries.

It bears our history.

It permeates our dreams.

We use it. We disturb it.

We name it. We claim it.

We touch it. It touches us.

 

6.

glacial melt,

draining south,

meandering

over floodplains,

through clay,

sand, gravel, loess,

around boulders,

named by and for

the Kanza people,

who drank it

and bathed in it,

first mapped

by a Frenchman

in 1718, 170 miles

free flowing from

the confluence

of the Republican

and the Smoky Hill

to the Missouri,

four miles wide

at Wamego, easy

going for canoes

and pirogues

stymieing steamboats

with its mud,

dug up by dredges

reaping its sand,

after excessive rain,

cresting its banks

drowning beasts

and men for centuries,

a wilderness river,

polluted and damaged,

called the Kaw

by those who still watch it

 

7.

A turtle shell hung

on my apartment wall,

a decoration as large

as a shield. It was worn

and scored, but the sea

had polished it to a gleam.

A turtle shell hung

on my apartment wall

commemorating those

who live for 10,000 years,

who shaped the continent,

who support the globe.

 A turtle shell hung

on my apartment wall,

until the night we tipped

it into the river, sending

it swirling back to the sea.

 

8.

In a canoe on the river

we can go with the flow,

or maneuver against its grain.

Either way, the river moves us.

Along the bank, we drift

with orioles sewing their gaudy

orange into the green canopy

of cottonwoods and willows.

Paddling the central channel,

we ride a progressive current,

around bends, past sandbars,

into rapids, spellbound by speed.

Along the bank, we drift

among beavers, who wink and

vanish, leaving us to follow

in a great blue heron's wake.

Paddling the central channel,

we swerve around a tree, roots

exposed and straining the river

of its plastic bags and condoms.

Along the bank, we drift

among cottonwood seeds spun

out on currents of air, light-filled

and leisurely in their wandering.

 

9.

On a sandbar

a heron is laid

out with care.

A dream catcher,

its design is

pressed into sand.

Its wings stretch

in skeletal symmetry.

Feathers crochet

its light bones.

Its feet curl into

dark amulets,

and its beak is

a polished blade.

Scarabs bead

its intricate fretwork.

Relentlessly,

remorselessly,

the shining insects

devour the design,

releasing the bird

into a river of light.

 

10.

One winter the eagles return.

Up and down the frozen river,

they stake themselves out in

the cottonwoods' dark branches.

Their gaze is imperial,

their shadow iron on the ice,

their beaks refined devices.

Glinting in the sun, their white

helmets flash like steel.

 

11.

The river freezes.

Its urgency is sedated.

Its deep brown pales.

Ghost-like,

it lies on the land,

the translucent skin

of its serpentine self.

The river thaws.

It puddles the sky.

Its scales shine.

Between stripes

of white, it uncoils

ribbons of sunset.

Unseen under ice,

the river stirs.

 

12.

At night the river is

opaque. It rolls thick

as black oil and

takes all prisoners.

It consumes the night,

the shadows of trees.

It swallows the glint of

campfires and animal eyes.

On a midnight dare,

a man sets out swimming

across the river, steady,

and swift, self-assured.

He did not foresee

a deadhead collision

or his body, snagged,

twisting and turning.

A girl, craving darkness,

leaps from the bridge.

She is buried in the water,

rushing and rinsing.

A naked boy stands on

the shore, his piss aspiring

toward the river. He listens

for the fusion of streams.

 

13.

In August,

in a season of drought,

consider the river,

pursuing its course

through a sandbar maze,

reconfiguring the land,

feeling its way forward,

finger by fluid finger.

Sucking and seething,

the river's waters

sieve through the maze.

As clouds in a streaming

sky, islands of sand

emerge in the river's flow.

The sand rearranges

itself, accommodating

buses and stumps,

absorbing protozoa

and chemicals equally.

Straining, cleansing,

the island's shifty shores

release the river from

is putrefaction.

So my dreams filter

the drifting night of

uncertainty's detritus,

buoying me, over and over,

restoring me to morning.

 

14.

Once we waded in the river.

Once we swam in the river.

Once we danced, sitting down,

while the river circled and gurgled around us.