Cascadia Poetics LAB
Poetry Postcard Fest
Watershed Press
Cascadian Prophets Podcast
Cascadia Poetry Festival 8
Mapes Creek Postcard

Less Than One Month

June 6, 2024
Ryukan

Poetry Postcard Fest D-Day is July 4 and already there are 14 groups of 32 poets each awaiting their list for the 18th Poetry Postcard Fest. Registration is open here: https://cascadiapoeticslab.org/ppf-2024-event-registration/if you have a poet friend who has not yet experienced the joy of postcards.

Here at the world headquarters of the Cascadia Poetics Lab, we are getting ready to write postcards next to our humble city creek and Roberta Hoffman has created some beautiful old school postcards, like these:

Thanks for being part of this community of poets.

5 Comments

  1. Clayton Clark

    These cards are fabulous! Excited for the coming list. Thank you.

  2. msjadeli

    Yay! Those are neat-looking postcards.

  3. Suzanne S. Austin-Hill

    Will the 6/16 ZOOM call be recorded?

  4. Splabman

    That is the plan.

  5. Splabman

    Yes that is the plan Suzanne.

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

dashed cool colors line

You May Also Like

Register for Fall 2024 Workshops!

Register for Fall 2024 Workshops!

Register for Fall 2024 Workshops!  Registration for Cascadia Poetics Lab Fall 2024 workshops is OPEN NOW! This fall, we welcome Matt Trease, poet and CPL board member, as a workshop instructor! The workshop offerings are as follows: Life as Rehearsal for the Poem,...

Register NOW for the 8th Cascadia Poetry Festival!

Register NOW for the 8th Cascadia Poetry Festival!

Register now for Cascadia Poetry Festival 8! The 8th Cascadia Poetry Festival will be held November 1-3, 2024 at the Richard Hugo House, Spring Street Center and Newkam Vivarium at the Olympic Sculpture Park. The festival will be a celebration of the release of...

Barry McKinnon Interview (from July 2015)

Barry McKinnon Interview (from July 2015)

Paul: You know, you moved up here and one of the first things you did as a teacher in Prince George – was it UNBC at the time when you moved here – the University of Northern British Columbia?
Barry: No, it was the College of New Caledonia.
Paul: And you were teaching English in a welding class?
BM: Yup, it was a technical school. We moved into a technical school before they built the college.
PN: And this is 1969?
BM: Yeah, 1969. But in that first year here we taught out of the high school. We’d start teaching at three in the afternoon after the high school was out, so we were a night school. We were kind of interlopers. The high school teachers thought, “oh, here are these smarty pants academics coming in and taking over the functions that we’ve provided!”