Poem 366
A haar is a sea fog, also known as a sea fret, under the right atmospheric conditions it occurs in Wellington on otherwise sunny days and imparts a strange cast to everything, a bit like a solar eclipse … a table tennis ball sliced in half was what we used when I was a psychology tutor to make a ganzfeld, a blank visual field in order to do experiments in visual perception … it was also a punishment given out at high school to write a ten page essay about the inside of a table tennis ball …
Wellington Haar
I looked at the sun through sea mist grounded cloud tall on the sea that tipped smoothly into our valley the sun was an old coin no bigger than the moon fussy about its pale perfect disc and that was our star closest I'll ever come the mist stripped it took its dazzle and occluded that one eye until the whole of the sky was bright and blind the inside of a table tennis ball mid afternoon people watching moving tongues of mist like glaciers off Scorching Bay felt obscurely put out when the green ferry afraid of nothing boomed straight into it and disappeared everyone went about their normal business under no sun no sky as if in the long run they wouldn't be missed