d’Verse, W3 & Bird of the week
I’ve put all three of these challenges together this week.
Dora’s d’Verse poetics challenge is something borrowed, something blue. You can join in here: https://dversepoets.com/2026/06/02/poetics-something-borrowed-something-blue/
Deanna’s W3 challenge is to include a character from a nursery rhyme. You can join in here: https://skepticskaddish.com/2026/06/03/w3-prompt-214-weave-written-weekly/
You can join in the bird of the week challenge here: https://anotherglobaleater.wordpress.com/2026/06/02/tufted-duck-birds-of-the-week-invitation-clxxi/
I have written five syllabic poems, on for each component of Dora’s challenge. Each verse includes a character from a nursery rhyme as well as a bird.
Something Old (American cinquain)
hungry
white backed vulture
Old Mother Hubbard like
searching surrounding area
for bones
Below are two of my photographs of a white backed vulture taken in the Hluhluwe National Game Reserve in Kwa-Zulu Natal, South Africa.


Something New (American cinquain)
loeries
propagators
of seeds; gardeners like
Mary, Mary Quite Contrary
green birds

Something Borrowed (tanka)
greater honeyguide
lays its eggs in foreign nests
bold brood parasite
runs away like Knave of Hearts
but she bypasses capture
Something Blue (tanka)
flash of brilliance
Little Boy Blue look alike
European roller
favours warm, open country
at home in meadows and fields

Sixpence in Her Shoe (shadorma)
kingfisher
excavates tunnels
laying eggs
its treasure
better than a golden pear
or silver nutmeg

Thursday Doors
Today I’m sharing photographs of the Arc de Triomphe in Paris. You can join in Thursday Doors here:
This is what Wikipedia says about the Arc de Triomphe: https://nofacilities.com/2026/06/04/iowa-doors-2/
The Arc de Triomphe, is one of the most famous monuments in Paris, France. It is located at the western end of the Champs-Élysées, at the centre of the Place Charles de Gaulle—formerly known as the Place de l’Étoile—named for the star-shaped configuration formed by the convergence of twelve radiating avenues. The monument is situated at the intersection of three arrondissements: the 16th (to the south and west), the 17th (to the north), and the 8th (to the east). Commissioned to honor those who fought and died for France during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, the Arc bears the names of French victories and generals engraved on its inner and outer surfaces. Beneath its vault lies the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier from World War I, marked by an eternal flame commemorating unidentified fallen soldiers.








Well done Robbie with your poems and photos. 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
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Thank you, Sadje
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You’re most welcome
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🥰
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Great poetry and awesome photos, Robbie. 👌👏👏👏👌
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I thought you’d enjoy this post, Michael 😃
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😁. Totally. At the moment I am watching hundreds of Painted Lady butterflies migrating from Africa to Europe. Every flowering bush is covered with them. 🦋
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How wonderful 🦋🩵
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Truly amazing.
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💞
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Interesting. I didn’t know that white-backed vultures ate bones
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They eat small bones and bone fragments 💛
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Thanks for this new piece of information. I’d thought its food is mainly protein and fats. About its diet, ebird says “Carrion and bone fragments of larger carcasses, mainly soft muscle and organ tissue. Usually gregarious, feeding and fighting amid a hectic scrummage to obtain flesh, even thrusting the long bare neck under the skin or crawling into the rib cage. May also come down to small dead animals and afterbirth” I recalled a video I’d taken of vultures (including the white-backed) feeding at an elephant’s carcass which shows this behaviour: https://anotherglobaleater.wordpress.com/2019/11/11/failing-light-vultures-delight/
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Thanks for the video link. An extraordinary sighting. I tried to leave a comment but the site hung so I don’t know if it posted.
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I love the inclusion of nursery rhymes in your poems. Very clever. I included the Art d’Triumph and the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Amanda in France. Great photos. xo
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Yes, Amanda certainly gets around 💚. I’m glad you enjoyed the poems.
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Bravo Robbie … just truly brilliant. 💜💜
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I’m delighted you enjoyed this, Willow
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I really did Robbie 💜
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Awesome poems and photos, Robbie 🩵✍🏾📸
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I’m pleased you enjoyed this post, Jude.
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Awesome Robbie
Love how you incorporated a line from a nursery rhyme into each poem !
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Thank you, Maggie. It took a bit of time to write these 😉
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I can imagine Robbie 😉
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Your poems and photos are fabulous!
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Thank you, Luisa
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Clever use of nursery rhymes and the wedding rhyme with the bird photos. I especially liked the Something Old and Something Blue. 💙
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Hi Merril, I’m delighted you enjoyed these poems 💜
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You’re welcome, Robbie! 💙
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💖
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I enjoyed your poems, Robbie. I’m amazed at how you can get so many good bird photos. Birds are so shy. As soon as I start to lift the camera, they fly off. We have a tomb of the unknown soldier in the US, too. Maybe many countries do.
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Hi Priscilla, it takes a lot of patience to get bird shots. I also try to always be prepare for photography opportunities which helps.
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Just wonderfully done, Robbie – I do like nursery rhymes and putting together wedding things.
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I’m pleased to know this, Chris.
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A lot to digest here. Arcs do make excellent doors.
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Very well done, Robbie! A great collection!
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Thank you, Dwight. This challenge was a bit of effort but I enjoyed it 💞
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You are very welcome.
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🧡
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Such a lovely and creative post. Love the varying forms of poetry … the subject is birds 🐦⬛. Beautiful capture of the birds , I love the blue ! I visited the Arc de Triomphe years ago , it’s good to see it again, so beautiful. Thank you Robbie. A day brightener.
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Hi Holly, I’m so pleased this post brightened your day. Nature is my pick me up and my first port of call for inspiration 🌈
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This is truly lovely 🥰
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🌈
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Hi Holly, the blue was such a great shot. It was so close. I enjoyed my six days in Paris. So much to see and do.
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It’s an enchanting city. 😊
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Yes, it is.
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I was there a number of years ago. I’ve been dreaming of going back there again 🥂
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I love the way you so adeptly blended nursery rhyme characters into nature- what a great concept! The arch just makes me recall that Trump is building one to honor himself and disgracing out national mall with his tacky gilded presence…
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I read about this on social media. One of our presidents did a similar thing and it caused a huge public outcry. Of course, you expect this sort of behaviour in Africa.
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When we took the children to Paris in the early nineties we went inside and up the steps to the top of the Arc de Triomphe, I wonder if you still can?
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yes, you can do that. We didn’t as there was a big queue and I think you have to pay. My desire to do it wasn’t strong enough to stand in the queue for an hour 💖
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No we would not have queued! We climbed up the stairs of the Tour Eiffel to avoid the queues for the lifts on the other legs.
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That makes sense. We didn’t go up the Eiffel Tower either. We did go inside the Louvre and the Orsay. It’s my priorities.
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We skipped the Louvre when we saw the queue. I enjoyed the Orsay with my sister another time.
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I booked a guide for both visits and then you can skip the queue. It costs a bit more but worth it in time saved.
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You’re good at weaving these challenges together Robbie. I love the colors of the kingfisher and warbler! 😍
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Hi Brad, I’m pleased you enjoyed the birds. Thank you 💚
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My pleasure Robbie.
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💞
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Excellent Arc de Triomphe photos, Robbie!
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Hi Dave, I’m pleased you like the pictures 💓
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Love all the birds. The The Arc de Triomphe is a great monument.
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Hi Timothy, I thought you’d like the birds. The Arc de Triomphe is magnificent.
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It’s been 15 years since I saw the Arc de Triomphe.
Clever use of the nursery rhymes. Fun fact: one of my teachers in high school was named Mrs. Hubbard. I recall enjoying her marine biology and zoology classes.
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Time flies past when you start working. How cool to know a real Mrs Hubbard.
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She was a wonderful teacher.
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💖👌
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Those are beautiful nature poems. I believe I read them before but I don’t remember where, but I could be mistaken. We’ve visited Arc de Triomphe a few times, last time in 2025. My wife has a sister who lives in France. It is a very interesting place.
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Hi Thomas, France is an interesting place to visit. These poems are all new but I’ve post the European roller photograph before 🩵
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Thank you so much Robbie. It is great that they are new. Somehow they felt familiar. In any case they are great poems.
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🦋🩵
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I’m most drawn to the European roller and the kingfisher. (I’ve never seen either one.)
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No, you wouldn’t see these birds in America. Thank you, Liz 💞
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You’re welcome, Robbie.
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🌈
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Wonderful poetry, Roberta, and lovely pictures! 😍
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Thank you, Tim 👌
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My pleasure, Roberta. 😍
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💚
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delightful poetry
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Thank you, Annette
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Really enjoyed the photos. I kind of like vultures. Ours are black over here.
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I like vultures too. Thanks, Craig
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Great post, Robbie. I love the poems. The arch is a perfect door!
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Thank you, Dan 🥰
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Robbie, I was ready to comment on the W3 poem but there was so much more to enjoy! By the time I’d finished I’d forgotten what what I wanted to say!! The was a delight – and the cinquain worked perfectly!
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I’m so pleased you enjoyed. It was a great prompt.
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You have written beautiful, nursery rhyme type poems.
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Thank you. They were a bit of effort but worked in the end
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Wow, Robbie, what beautifully skilled writing! It is not an easy task to combine nursery rhymes with syllabic poetry. I love what you’ve done with them all… “Old Mother Hubbard…searching for bones.” Brava!
Beautiful photo gallery. I love your feature photo…a superb perspective of the Arc de Triomphe, and your photos of the birds…stunning. Great work, well done, share.
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Hi Suzette, thank you so much for your lovely comment. These poems were a bit of effort to write and I appreciate your appreciation 🥰🩷
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You are most welcome, Robbie!
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How lovely are these..! I love the little boy blue especially, and your kingfisher is so different to ours … beautiful birds 💞
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Thank you, Suzanne. We have some amazing birds 🥰🩷
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💞
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You ran away with this prompt, Robbie, or should I say … flew away! You charmed with each one of the poems, giving that old Victorian rhyme an airing it sorely needed. Loved discovering these birds through your lens and through your witty words, especially the kingfisher, just when “sixpence in her shoe” may have defeated a less knowledgeable poet/ornithologist! So much beauty in nature. I feel I have been spoiled on this Sunday afternoon bird-watching with you. 🙂🙏🏽🩵🩵🩵
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Hi Dora, thank you for this wonderful prompt. These poems took a bit of time to write but it was a fun exercise. Interestingly. The suspense in her shoe was the one that triggered the birds idea. This was a great week of prompts. Happy Monday 💚
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Thanks, Robbie, and Happy Monday! 🤍
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🌈💜
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o Robbie: I adore these bird poems and snaps with their nursery rhyme references ; so clever: the first post I’ve bookmarked in weeks —
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Thank you, John. I appreciate your comment and the book marking 🙏
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Very skillfully done, slipping a nursery line into each poem .
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Thank you 🙏🧡
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A brilliant post, Robbie, thank you!
I love the way you broke the old saying into 5 poems. Well done!
The Arc de Triomphe shots are fab.
OMG – the European roller is sublime. WoW!
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I just want to say National Game Reserve rather than pronouncing Hluhluwe if I’m correct.🤭
Love the blue bird, and interesting entry for tanka, poems, and Thursday doors, Robbie
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It is a challenging name to say – giggle. Thank you, Hazel, this was fun to put together.
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My pleasure, Robbie
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⭐️
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Robbie, I so enjoyed your poetry based on Nursery Rhymes. The Arc de Triomphe photos are stunning.
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Thank you, Jennie
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You’re welcome, Robbie.
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💙
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Wonderful post as always, Robbie. Poems and photos ❤️❤️
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Hi Lesley, thank you. I’m delighted you enjoyed this post.
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Hi Robbie, Beautiful work!!!
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Thank you, Charles
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hi, Robbie❣️
Just wanna let you know that this week’s W3, hosted by our beloved Artie, is now live until Monday:
Much love, David
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Thank you, David.
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🤗
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I love how you matched nursery rhyme characters with real birds and their special habits in five different poems, Robbie. 🐦 Your wonderful photos help bring each bird to life and make the whole collection even more fun to read. 📸
~David
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Thank you, David. It was an interesting challenge to do this 😃
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You rocked it!
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😃🩵
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Applesauce! I didn’t realize I had fallen behind again… Robbie this is a brilliant combination of poetry and photos. Your European roller photo is “National Geographic” quality perfect. Stunning. Hugs.
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Thank you, Teagan. I am trying with my photography and painting. I am learning and getting better. I am always behind too.
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