Late Fall, Prairie Creek Winter tiptoes silently on icy, sharpclawed toes through the steep-walled mountain valley, over peaks now rimmed with snow On the forest floor of Prairie Creek as afternoon withdraws I wait, the gathering of shadows pouring night across my paws Cathedral pines of Ponderosa, whispering of Firs, and the clattering of streams whose mountain waters chill the Earth Gone the chatter of the Magpies, gone the golden autumn glow, just the silhouettes of Sawtooths and of antelope below As the starlight thickens on the paths where elk have crossed, in the shadows pools the silence, while the branches catch the frost The northern forest bristles in these long, October nights to hear the clicking nails of winter scratching daybreak into ice