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April 3, 2008
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Pothole Poetry Contest
A Big Success

The Herald’s Pothole Poetry contest started drawing submissions the day after it was announced two weeks ago and continued until a day after the contest ended April 1.

Two full pages of Pothole Poetry were amply illustrated by Herald artist Scott Wood, creator of the Poco Loco cartoon.

Of about 100 poems that were submitted, The Herald printed 44 in a two-page spread illustrated by Scott Wood.

Submissions came from all over the Herald readership and even outside, from school children, senior citizens, and every age in-between. Two town clerks and one town moderator were among those submitting poems, as well as one nationally published writer.

The Herald wants to emphasize that the Poetry Contest is not meant as criticism of any of the hardworking town crews. The evidence is that towns throughout Vermont were simply hit with a historic invasion of potholes this year, and the road crews couldn’t do much about it.

Below are all the poems that were published:

Ode to a Vermont Pothole

O lovely chasm

Thy depth and breadth astounding

The echoes of metal resounding

As the bowels of the earth are pounding

With the sound of the cars, the cars, the cars.

Wilst thou give up the fractured iron

The broken tires, the shattered glass?

Are thou so heartless as to delight

In the senseless ruin of our transportation?

Alas, Wicked Pothole

Deliver me from out of your broken concrete

And send me on to meet my destiny.

—Mindy Branstetter

Pothole Limericks

There was a large hole in the road

Between my work place and abode

I zigged right so I’d miss

My car zagged left to kiss

That pothole, and turned into "towed."

—Stewart Ketcham, DVM

South Royalton

Oh, the potholes I find

Drive me out of my mind,

Increasing in number each day,

And in words most unkind,

As they jounce my behind,

I doom ‘em to _____ far away.

—Mim Herwig

Randolph Center

There was a large pothole in town

That people tried hard to steer ‘round

It was rather unnerving

But they couldn’t stop swerving

‘Cause if they fell in they might drown.

—Sheldon Esch

There was a man from Nantucket

Who thought he’d buy a sap bucket;

In the snow-capped green Mountains,

Near sweet mapled fountains,

A pothole, alas, ate his ducat.

—Rick Edwards

There was an Italian, Spumanti,

Who longed to see things Vermonty,

But the roads were so hole-y

He dropped the cannoli

He’d brought all that way for his Auntie.

—Ann Aikens

Outside that place, The Bare Mexican,

Was heard an unsavory lexicon;

Drivers dodged ‘round each hole-y

"Sacred guacamole…

It’s like driving with my ex again!"

—Ann Aikens

Double Limerick

My boy, said the mom, don’t you whine-a

Why, everything’s perfectly fine-a

If you must, bless my soul

I’ll drop you down this hole

And you’ll probably end up in China.

An old Chinese peasant name Quant

From his well heard "Please sir, it’s important

If you’re on dry land

Please give me a hand

I’ve been swimming all night from Vermont."

—S. Stanfield

I live in The Green Mountain State

Where the potholes we grow are first rate.

My truck bumps along

'Cuz the views in Vermont are so great.

—Amy Braun

Pothole Haikus

Can you see pothole

A crater of emptiness

Wrecker of nice cars

—Stewart Ketcham

South Royalton

N.A.S.A. called today,

Asked if we’d drive their space cars

Over moon craters.

—A. Davis

Hole Waiting.

My car drives into.

Meet Friend!

—Carole Brobst

Asphalt mouth eats rim

Car eats the government check

Sam should feed the roads

—Carole Hall

Crumbly open wound

Hidden under snowy scab

Coarse words when revealed.

—Daniel Mcloughlin

Randolph

The pothole

Filled with water

Reflects the moon.

—Jean Merrill

Randolph

That dreadful pothole

The one on Bethel Mountain,

Is a sign of spring.

—Amy Braun, teacher

Village School Hancock

I hate big potholes

They are the worst ever.

They hurt my bottom.

—Kaylah Stone, age 7

Village School Hancock

I’ve never seen one,

I’ve never seen a pothole.

I’ve never seen one.

—Cullen Kelly, age 7

Village School Hancock

I don’t like potholes.

They make my mom’s car sick.

But I like puddles.

—Taylor Sylvester, age 6

Village School Hancock

A Winter Excursion

Here we go!

Proceed with caution,

Pick and choose the route.

Weave around the pothole mine field.

Miss one, hit two.

Swerve to the right,

Then to the left,

Maybe the center is better!

Around the pothole

And into a crater.

Good Grief!

We’re finally out of the driveway!

—Sandy Higgins

Potholes by the ‘Yard’

Two-by-four potholes of yore

Have multiplied by a score

To make matters worse, they form

Three-in-a-row and can hold

A caddy, a bus, and a hearse.

—EMC

Randolph

Spells ‘Potholes’

P is for the Panic when we hit them!

O is for the oaths we then spew forth!

T is for the thoughts of warmer climate.

(when the transportation is a horse.)

H is for the Hope that way up Yonder,

Only roads of gold will

Lead and wind and

Everyone will smoothly glide at

Springtime, and shed a tear for those they left behind!

—Mary Ann Church

Bethel

Vermont Speed Bumps

Pothole, pothole from afar

Speedbump, speedbump in the tar

Pickup, pickup comes ajar.

—Michael J. White

Bethel

Ode to Potholes

The feeling many people have

Toward potholes is simply hateful.

I would suggest a different approach:

Instead we should be grateful.

When potholes are present on our roads

We can often see the sun.

The snow is melting; spring is here;

And winter is (almost) done.

Our potholes come in many forms.

They are truly nature’s art.

Can’t you see the beauty

As you see the pavement part?

My kids enjoy the potholes

Of every shape and size.

They ride the waves of broken roads

And relish each surprise.

Ruts in roads will slow you down.

Relax. Take in the view.

Take the time to enjoy the ride.

You’ll feel better if you do.

So the next time you hit a pothole

And you are just about to swear…

Remember this poem; take a deep breath;

And be grateful—you’re almost there.

—Christine Hoyt

Tunbridge

Holy Pothole!

As I live miles outside of town,

My grocery supplies sometimes get down.

On Saturday of the week past

I started my car and hit the gas.

Because this season snowed so much

I drove on ice and dirt and slush.

I missed one hole, then hit two more

Staying on the road was quite a chore.

I looked, then blinked, then slowed the car

A hand, sticking up, I saw afar.

A hand—a head—and then some more

A voice I heard when I opened my door.

Such ranting, cursing, crying and yelping

Words crying out for someone’s helping.

I reached down and gave a pull

But still the cursing was loud and full.

I said "Be calm, I’m helping you out;"

But it’s not me it’s the preacher’s shout.

I hauled him up and then the other

The second a Priest—Our Holy Brother.

The Potholes alas are many and deep

They try our patience—They upset our sleep

But Spring is here and hopes are high.

That Summertime will be high and dry.

The Potholes are a yearly thing

But we all know they’re worse this Spring!!!

—Mary M. Felch

Ellenburg Depot, N.Y.

Pothole Season

Please watch out for potholes,

They’re apt to hurt your car,

Unless you want to pay the tolls

Of not staying where you are.

You’ll probably hurt your muffler

And then pop all your tires,

The price for not going slow,

May be even higher.

The car bills will accumulate,

And suck up all your cash.

By this time you will probably wish

You took a better path.

With the price of gasoline

And buying many parts

You might be meant to stay at home

Or get a horse and cart.

—Marya Merriam, age 11

East Brookfield

Pothole Heaven

As I head home, my day’s work done,

I don’t get far, it’s pothole one.

It seems quite simple, what they should do.

And then I bounce through pothole two.

I look ahead, and there I see

Another one, it’s pothole three.

I realize there may be many more,

And sure enough, there’s pothole. four.

I wonder how these folks survive.

As I roll into pothole five.

My car, I soon will need to fix

As I bounce out of pothole six.

And as I swerve past pothole seven,

I realize, I’m in Pothole Heaven.

—Richard Bradley

Randolph Center

Potholes in Paradise?

There are potholes by the dozen

There are potholes by the score

And every time we turn around

We discover thirty more.

We dodge, we swerve, we grunt and moan

We grumble, and some may even curse.

Day by day, we gaze in awe.

Can this get any worse?

We do not care to drive by night

Potholes lurk in the dark

And, if by day we venture out,

We jolt and lurch to find a place to park.

The streets of Heaven are paved with gold

Bright enough to blind the eyes.

Can someone please advise me—

Will there be potholes in Paradise?

—Sally Ford

Bethel

Poor Pothole

The life of a pothole

Must indeed be bad,

It lies in the road

Feeling lonely and sad.

And for what does it wait

You may ask with a grin

For whatever will pass it—

A tire, a rim.

But drive by we do

Without a thought or a care,

Our tire, our rim

We try not to share.

Our friendship it wants

But the hole’s a disgrace,

With water and mud

All over its face.

And no one wants it,

Goof grief, let’s get real,

But I ask you…

If you were a pothole,

How would you feel?

—Shannon M. Trigos

Randolph Center

Apologies to W.E. Henley

Into the pothole that swallows me

Seems deeper than the Quechee Gorge

I pray to whatever Gods may be

That the DPW can find my trusty Ford

Into the pothole I fell by circumstance

I winced, and I cried out loud

Into the pothole I found by chance

My SUV is dented, my head is bowed

Beyond this place of broken spring and fear

Looms the promise of spring and thaw

Yet during the menace that is this time of year

I drive with nerves drawn tight and raw

It matters not how straight the grade

Nor how well it is ditched, drained and crowned

Nature is the master of our fate

She controls the heaves of the ground.

—Peter M. Nowlan

Randolph

Pothole Vermont

While traveling down a country road,

Potholes galore rattling apart my heavy load.

Lumber upon my truck—many miles to go,

Soon it’ll be pavement—ending being tossed to and fro.

Route 12 in sight—without potholes no doubt,

Smash, crash, bang—my false teeth dropped out.

Before retrieving my teeth off the floor,

Another pothole has slammed open my driver door.

Kerr boom my headlights have shattered on the ground,

Suddenly my lunchbox is sailing all around.

Then a pothole the size of a 6 foot pool,

Ripped of my bumper like a power tool.

Gone is my toupee, my teeth and my socks,

Broken are my artificial knees, hips and Snoopy lunchbox.

The truck that last summer was new,

Looks like a war-torn tank to everyone’s view.

Gone are the doors, bumpers, lights and hood too,

The antenna, the shocks and springs—what am I to do.

What happened to you and the truck my boss wants to know,

I answered, "there’s a War in Pothole Vermont—I had to drive slow."

Lumber is scattered from Worcester to the New Hampshire line,

Let Vermont keep the pieces they can find.

I hope Governor Douglas can sell the best of the lot,

To help foot the bill for the tons of blacktop.

—Marcy Frink

Worcester

Potholes of Randolph

Bumpa Chicka Chugga Chugga

Bam Chicka Chunk

Winter driving in Vermont

Can put you in a funk.

Coffee splashing this way

Cheerios fly about

We’re swerving around potholes

Like we’re snakes as we shout

But my daughter’s in the back seat

Starting a new song

Making constant "Aaahhh" sounds

While the bumps make beats along.

And my son thinks it’s real funny

Bouncing this-a-way and that

‘Til I tell him it’s the closest thing

To Disney that he’ll get.

OK, a bit extreme

I admit, but it’s not fun

To imagine that the bottom of your car…

WHOA, there isn’t one!

So, Bumpa Chicka Chugga Chugga

Bam Chicka Splat

Swiss cheese lookin’ pavement

In Vermont is where we’re at.

—Tracey Rotman

Randolph

Pothole Blues

I drive like a drunk

Because I’m sunk

Here, there, everywhere

All around the state

Clink, clunk

I’m up to the trunk

Don’t despair

As long as you carry a spare.

With luck you’ll be there

Speeders beware

Don’t swear

There are no repairs

Our money went elsewhere

Potholes galore

All the way to the store

Don’t be dumb

Save your gum

Maybe we can fill some

We were real keen

About keeping this clean

But swear words

Keep popping up

Just like the ruts.

—Participants of the

Gifford Adult Day Program

Judy Santamore, director

A Pothole?

A POTHOLE is really a KNOThole,

For if in one you’ve ever been caught,

You know you are NOT going forward or back,

And you’re surely

NOT pleased with the spot.

NOT insured for the damage,

Your temper gets hot.

Attempts to get free

Have all been for NAUGHT.

You’re NOT pleased with yourself

For NOT seeing the POT.

What should you do now?

Your mind is fraught.

That HOLE has your stomach

Tied up in a KNOT.

—Carolyn Boone

Randolph

The Shock Bump Boogie

You go bump on the way to work,

You go bump on the way home.

March brings ruts along with the bumps.

You do the shock bump boogie on your way to work,

You do the shock bump boogie on your way home.

Lookout, Josephine! There’s a mud hole up ahead.

It’s the shimmy slide swerve shock bump boogie on your way to work,

It’s the shimmy slide swerve shock bump boogie on your way home.

The muffler falls off on your way through the last mud hole.

Now you do the blat shimmy slide swerve blat shock bump boogie blat on your way to work

And the blat shimmy slide swerve blat shock bump boogie blat on your way back home.

—Stuart Levasseur

Royalton

The Seasonal Cost

Careening down roads, spraying up gravel,

Bouncing and swaying is the way we travel.

Arriving at destinations always too late

Is the price you pay when you live in this state.

But Vermonters adapt; we've practiced until

Eluding the holes is an admirable skill.

And, in time, by June maybe, the snow will melt,

The mud will harden, spring will be felt.

The potholes won't go, but they'll cleverly hide,

They'll be covered and filled, just a memory set aside.

Then once more the roads will gracefully sweep

Through country hillsides by cows and by sheep,

By the Green Mountain majesties that inhabit our state

And the roads will be bandaged and healed 'til they're almost first rate.

—Katie Jickling

RUHS Humanities 10 Class

Life With Potholes

Get in the car

Breathe in deep

Still thinking

I should be asleep.

Pull out of the driveway

On the dirt road

Now the car is in

Vibration mode.

The seatbelt locked up

The coffee has spilt

Time to find out

How well this car was built.

Get off the dirt road

Onto the one that is paved

But soon to find out

I am still not saved.

Going into town

Across the big bridge

Look up ahead

Is that a bump or a ridge?

The four-way near school

Is equipped with a crater

Which causes me to arrive to school

Later and later.

I get to school

Safe at last

Glad my drive

Is all in the past.

Out of the car

Head for the front door

Little did I know

What was in store.

Trip in a hole

Fall into the slush.

My homework has now

Turned to mush.

My hands are scratched

My butt is wet.

Getting out of bed

I now regret.

Are you a klutz?

My friends will taunt.

Such is life

Potholes in Vermont.

—Molly Jacobs

RUHS, Humanities 8 Class

Charge of The Four Wheel Brigade

(With apologies to A.L. Tennyson)

Half a mile, half a mile

Half a mile onward

All in the valley of death

Drove the one hundred

Forward the four wheel brigade

Charging ahead, not a one dismayed

Into the valley of death

Rolled the one hundred.

Potholes to the right of them, Potholes to the left of them,

Potholes in front of them

Swerving and braking

Jolted and jarred, boldly they charged

On to their destination they drove

Into the valley of death

Slowed the one hundred.

Forward the four wheel brigade

Was there a driver dismayed

Theirs not to reason why

Theirs but to drive and buy

Buy new shocks and struts

Attached with new bolts and nuts

Through the valley of death

Crept the one hundred

Half a yard, half a yard,

Half a yard homeward

With tires flat and axles bent

Last month’s paycheck now is spent

Ball joint to the right of them,

Mufflers to the left of them

Out from the valley of death

Walked the one hundred.

—Ken Hafner

Randolph Center

Spaceship Bound

When I was young I whined and whinged

Mud and ruts made me unhinged.

Despised the pothole without hope

Until I found a telescope

But then I peered up at the moon

Pocked with potholes all rough hewn.

So now when potholes pave the ground

I fancy I am spaceship bound.

—Karen Miller

Randolph

Have a Laugh

It’s pothole season in Vermont.

Come down and have a laugh.

While watching other drivers here,

Snap their axles in half.

It’s really quite surprising

To see the look on drivers’ faces,

When they hit a pothole here,

In the middle of a race.

So before you jump into your car

You better do the math.

You might want to ride your brand new car

On a better path.

Timothy Farrington, age 12

Brookfield

Final Vermont Spring

Oh my hubcap lies in Bethel

My bumper’s up in Peth

And my steering wheel’s a-quiver

As if it were on Meth

A trail of radiator goo

Follows me around

My headlight’s up in Brookfield

And my horn won’t make a sound.

My springs are shot, my struts are not

Attached to any thing.

I lift my glass and pledge that it’s

MY FINAL VERMONT SPRING.

O potholes, potholes, potholes

Why do you treat me so?

Where’er you come from, I just pray

That back to there you’ll go!

—Alex Canarsie

I’ve Been Crashin’

In the Potholes

(The family newspaper expurgated version.)

To the tune of "I’ve Been Workin’ on the Railroad"

I’ve been crashin’ on the potholes

All the live-long day.

I’ve been crashin’ on the potholes

And a-swearin’ all the way;

Can’t you hear the hubcaps rolling,

Twirling and landing in the mud?

Sounds like lotsa people bowling.

And landing with a thud.

Driver, won’t you curse,

Driver won’t you curse.

Driver, won’t you curse and baw-aw-awl?

Still, it’s gettin’ worse,

Still, it’s gettin’ worse;

Cursin’ doesn’t help at all!

Someone’s in the potholes this morning,

Someone’s in the potholes this noo-oo-oo-oon.

Someone’s in the potholes this evening,

I’ll be in the potholes soon.

And cursing.

"****,****, fiddley-eye-O

****,****,****,****

****,****, fiddley-eye-O!

****,****,****!

—Marjorie Drysdale

To a Pothole

Oh, pothole, how I loathe to see your face,

Your depths I take great care not to explore.

But when you’re multiplied, and there’s no place

To avoid you, your depths I can’t ignore.

So I’ve striven, foul ditch, not to allow

The deep stress you put upon my driving

To darken my mood or words—oh but how

I fail at the "thump," despite my striving.

—Sheldon Esch

The Herald’s Pothole Adventure

There’s nothing to do in Vermont, you’ll agree

Unless you like snow sports, or "Idol" TV

Or whining ‘bout weather, town business and such

Cuz other than that there is nothin’ much.

In the White River Valleys the citizens read

The Herald of Randolph, for praise and misdeeds

The publisher, Dickey, prints tales and cool pics

Amusing the folks who are stuck in the sticks.

In 2008 there was such a long winter

That newborns from fall grew into spring spinsters

The snow was so deep that the pets were all lost

And towns ceased all plowing because of the cost.

The girth of the potholes come March are explained

By saying they rivaled the size of Champlain

The holes in the dirt of our roads were so wide

That townspeople witnessed NY on one side.

But the depth of these holes was the biggest disaster

The truckloads of dirt couldn’t come any faster

The earth sucked it down and soon it was clear

That nature was not to be messed with, but feared!

The paper ran photos of snow, mud and ice

Dick asked that his staff find more pics with more spice!

Bob Eddy went up Braintree Hill for a shot

But ruined his rig when he hit a huge pot.

Dick called for young Tim to find a prize-winner

Then waited all day ‘til long past his dinner

With the news that his last photo-guy had gone down

Our publisher bore a most furrow-browed frown!

Jill then heard the editor, under his breath,

"I’ll get my own photos; I’ll go up to Peth.

It’s on my way home and the view is much greater!"

But once on the road, he was ‘et by a crater.

"Who’ll help me now, I’m deep in the mud

I wish I had not lost my best friend, ole Fud"

What Dick didn’t know was that his dog was in hiding

Just waiting for spring so he could go riding.

And hearing Dick’s cries, Mighty Golden Retrieve

Bound in from the forest, grabbing Dick by his sleeve

A furious struggle, mutt vs ground

I’m happy to say Dick was saved by his hound.

So next time you’re thinking of coming up North

Be ready to drive forth and back, back and forth

Our views are to die for, enjoy our cool breeze,

But you’d better be ready to drive on Swiss cheese.

—Barb Baumann