When the Air Sings Back

In spring, the air receives birdsong as a promise of return. In autumn, the air answers back with rustling leaves, crisp winds, golden light, and the scent of ripened fruits. Migration doesn’t leave silence but a swelling reply from the earth, alive with harvest and change.

The days grow shorter, shadows lengthen, and the sky begins its slow shift. Celestial cues guide wings southward, just as they stir seeds in the soil to rest. Departure is not haste but rhythm — a call and response belonging to both bird and season.

days getting shorter
sun and stars celestial cues
a hush of leaving—
cranes stretch their wings to rise
where courage leans into light
the horizon opens wide

Preparation is everywhere. Cranes test their wings against thinning skies, their cries carrying both farewell and continuity. Fields echo with abundance — grain heavy on stalks, berries flushed and ripe, trees releasing fruit. The season offers its gifts even as it readies for rest.

To witness this is to know migration is not loss but exchange. Birds carry the memory of these skies, just as the air holds their voices long after they vanish. The horizon does not close with their leaving; it opens, reminding us that every departure is stitched with return.

When the air sings back, it’s not with sadness but fullness, an anthem of reciprocity — the earth keeping rhythm with wings.

Image of Redcurrant Bush

PS: Writing these impressions makes me realise migration happens with birds and writing, carrying our feelings through the mind, linking what we feel inside with the world outside. Autumn’s approaching migration influenced this piece, a contrast to Home Is A Moving Thing. Where spring sang of return, today I listen for the air’s reply in departure, and the lessons nature whispers in between.

In what ways are you adapting to the subtle seasonal transition and drawing strength from nature? As always, I love hearing from you.

PPS: Feature Photo by Jeffrey Hamilton on Unsplash

Khaya Ronkainen
Khaya Ronkainen is a writer, poet and creative professional. Her blog focuses on all things poetry and creative nonfiction.

2 Comments

  1. Khaya, here, the South-West monsoon is heading into its final month and then in October are the big festivals…commerce is already setting the mood with lights and sales but the spirits lift right about now as we hurtle towards the end of the year. It is about 27C…not too bad at all. In a couple of months the migratory birds will arrive! 🙂

    1. Hey Rajani! I’m guilty of being preoccupied with the north and south, two places I inhabit, and forgetting other parts of the world. Guess this is the danger of binary thinking! 🙂 So, I appreciate your comment a lot. It’s lovely to hear about seasonal shifts in your part of the world, the South-West, I hope to visit one day. And I know right, about October festivals as they are observed in South Africa as well. May this be a fruitful and joyous season, and may your poetry continue to shine! <3

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