Final NaPoWriMo prompt! And it is to translate a poem, but unfortunately there is no otter literature, so I have had to listen to the varied vocalisations of the giant otter and then make up some complete nonsense again. Giant otters have twenty-two distinct sounds, probably because they live in the largest and most complex social groups. They are also very stressed out by being in close proximity with humans.

I may not have lived among giant otters, but I have shared flats
with people I can barely tolerate. Their hastily-chosen, temporary
sexmates, on catching sight in a doorcrack of my solitary moshing,
have given just that strangled yip of laughter that would garner
a small dead fish from an alpha otter momma.
I have beaten wearily at floors and ceilings in the incoherent Morse
of the diurnal trapped among nocturnal experimental loop-pedallers,
whose weeeekrrrikkering dial-flip zzewstatic WAH interferenzzzzeee
resounded loud enough to alter the direction of hunting otter packs
as far afield as Lake Salvador.
I have nursed beers on window seats whilst macaw-hoarse flirters
make throat-back grokkle sounds in the crowded kitchen, tsip-tsip
their own drinks and then exit the yikkering, yipchuckling hodgepodge
to find a place to ‘be alone’. Through my wall I heard them,
little snouty buzzings, universal language of purr.
And yes, I have felt that wavering scream of isolation threaten
to come sailing out like a violin bow dragged ragged on a saw-edge,
though I have been habitually considerate and kept the noise down,
at most emitted a pup-squeak like a balloon-dog having its neck rung,
but no otter ever answered.
e James Williams because during this month of research various ads for his books on otters have popped up in my peripheral vision, but I had no idea he had been awarded an MBE for his conservation work, “for services to otters”.
It’s been a long day, folks, and we were challenged by NaPoWriMo to write a poem with long lines – seventeen syllables long, to be exact. To my mind, this calls for a particularly long otter, so I’ve taken a look at the Giant Otter of the Amazon. Which, of course, is a particularly long river.
Our prompt today was to start with a line from an existing poem that we could remember without looking it up, and then to write our own poem onwards from there. Many people immediately reached for beautiful, flowing phrases, lines that have remained with them as inspiration and guide…. My immediate thought was ‘Can a parrot eat a carrot standing on his head?’. Spike Milligan. Gotta love him.
Ah!
Welcome to
Day 21, another milestone moment! I didn’t manage to stay on-prompt yesterday, today I have cunningly combined yesterday’s instruction to write using