Whale Trail announces its writing and poetry contest winners
Sat, 03/13/2021
Information from the Whale Trail
The Whale Trail announces the winners of its first Welcome the Orcas Writing Contest, held in December 2020 to celebrate the seasonal return of the endangered southern resident orcas to central Puget Sound. Writers Andy Haven and Hannah Lindell-Smith, both West Seattle-ites, took top honors in their age groups.
“We are grateful to everyone who participated, and helped us welcome the southern residents with heart, and art!” said Whale Trail Director Donna Sandstrom. "With the recent additions of J57, J58 and L125, there are three new calves to welcome! The southern resident community has grown to 75 individuals—here's to a new season of hope for the orcas, and the world.”
First Prize
The Librarian, by Andy Havens (Adult Category)
J57, by Hannah Lindell-Smith (9th to 12 grade)
Second Prize
Love Them, Protect Them, by Lucy Larkin (Adult Category)
Orca Song, by Hannah Lindell-Smith (9th to 12 grade)
Honorable Mention
Welcome Home, Orcas, by Bobbi Fabbelano (Adult Category)
Read the prize-winning poems on our website here:
Welcome the Orcas Poetry Contest Winners
https://thewhaletrail.org/welcome-the-orcas-writing-contest-winners/
First prize winners are shared below.
The Librarian
by Andy Havens
The orca’s tongue is tattooed in crowblack ink
with the whole history of the Hoh
and the names of Nisqually who breathed the air
in the sacred space between hawk and bear –
hung to cure in a frozen smoke.
In the blackfish grin, written on salmon skin,
lives the library of the Lummi
and the forgotten words to S’Klallam songs
sung in the fog from which they’re drawn –
then gone like a dream’s unblooming.
But the orca speaks, too, the newer words
of submarine and ferry boat
and the sharp dialect of high skylines
that replace the flesh with the crystalline –
concrete terms being asked to float.
A blackfin ripple loops like cursive in the bay
as the orca pens the Pacific tome
and writes Sound verses beneath the surface
in a Salish hand whose arc is perfect –
the scrimshaw line of tooth and bone.
Andy Havens is husband, a father of two, and a US Army veteran living on the ersatz island of West Seattle, WA. He is currently writing poetry focused on Pacific Northwest geography, nature, and history. His poetry has appeared in Fragments Literary Magazine, and the online journal Whatever Keeps the Lights On.
J57
by Hannah Lindell-Smith
You are the wind.
You are the Sun and Moon that light the way.
You are the stars in the darkest of nights.
You are the rainbow after the storm.
You are the waves you swim through,
the child of the life-giving water and your family’s tears.
You are the blood of a dying universe.
You are the fighter and survivor.
You are the salmon that travel hundreds of miles
to give their lives to you.
You are the stories your family will tell you.
You are all that they will give to you,
and the love you will give to all.
You are everything that has come before.
You are the one we have been waiting for.
Hannah Lindell-Smith is a 14-year-old from Seattle, Washington. She is a student, activist, writer, and change-maker, future and present. Watch out, world!
About Welcome the Orcas 2020. The endangered southern residents orcas (J, K and L pods) return to central Puget Sound each fall and winter, following chum salmon runs. Welcome the Orcas is an event hosted by The Whale Trail to celebrate and promote awareness of the SRKW in this critical part of their range. In 2020 the event was virtual due to COVID-19. Activities included “Put a Whale in Your Window” and a writing contest. Welcome the Orcas 2020 was co-sponsored by Seal Sitters and Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.
About The Whale Trail. The Whale Trail is series of sites to view orca and other marine mammals from shore. From 16 inaugural sites in Washington State, there are now more than 135 along the west coast, from California to British Columbia. The Whale Trail is a nonprofit organization headquartered in Seattle. Its founding and overarching goal is to recover the southern resident orcas from the threat of extinction. The project is led by Donna Sandstrom, who served on Governor Inslee’s Task Force for Orca Recovery.