A two season clime, we look toward Rainy Season and Dry Season. And now-a-days, folks will tell you these seasons are less clearly defined, since climate change is now the norm.Still, here in Trinidad and Tobago🇹🇹 solstices are defined by the sun's maximum tilt, marking the longest and shortest days of the year. Because the islands are close to the equator, daylight differences are less extreme than in higher latitudes. The longest day of the year yields about 1 hour and 15 minutes more daylight than the shortest day.
And too, here, solstice is more so a nuance, and something, realized by those of scientific or meteological minds
coolness of morning -
through the opened window
bird songs and whistles
© gillena cox 2026
NOTE: I googled for info on the solstices as it would apply to Trinidad and Tobago
Blog Hopping Today With
Haibun Monday 6-22-26: First Solstice
Haibun Monday 6-22-26: First Solstice

I'm sure that "coolness of morning" is welcome throughout the year.
ReplyDeleteYes indeed, we have been having some extremely hot days, and this is present day Rainy Season
ReplyDeleteThanks for dropping by Ken
much love
Hope your rainy season is good for the soul...and flowers!
ReplyDeleteThanks for dropping by, Lynn
ReplyDeleteMuch love
Birdsongs and whistles, nice and miusical like this delightful poem, well done!! 🩷
ReplyDeleteThanks for your appreciation, Cara
DeleteMuch love
Quite true there's not much change when you are nearer to the Equator. We are in the same boat Gillena!
ReplyDeleteHank
Thanks for dropping by, Hank
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Thank you for the interesting information about solstices in Trinidad and Tobago, Gillena, and I love the morning coolness and sounds in your haiku!
ReplyDeleteThanks for your appreciation, Kim
ReplyDeleteMuch love
I think I am built for those larger variations... love it when days are long
ReplyDeleteThanks for dropping by, Björn
ReplyDeleteMuch love
I liked reading this, and the closing haiku is particularly lovely.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your appreciation, Rosemary
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We're in Riga, Latvia right now, and your haiku perfectly describes our mornings. There isn't AC, so we sleep with the windows open, and the trees just outside are teaming with happy birds who gently awaken us each day with their songs.
ReplyDeleteHappy you dropped by, Kim
ReplyDeleteMuch love
I like the haiku which adds such a nonchalance to the prose, the importance of nature and living.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your appreciation, Paul
ReplyDeleteMuch love