Nature
Do You Love Animals?
Now available in Paperback
Richard and Mary Rensberry, Authors at QuickTurtle Books®
Help Clothe the World!
ebook is free on Amazon all day Sunday November 4
LEARN ABOUT KENAF
Richard and Mary Rensberry, Authors at QuickTurtle Books®
Help Feed the World!
Free from Amazon all day Sunday, November 4. https://amzn.to/2QeyFJd
LEARN ABOUT KENAF
Richard and Mary Rensberry, authors at QuickTurtle Books®
Help the World Be Cool

Robert Lawrason of Kenaf Partners USA (Onaway, Michigan) has partnered with QuickTurtle Books® and QuickTurtle New World Advertising (Fairview, Michigan) to create a Kenaf children’s book to help promote the environmentally friendly and economically sound Kenaf plant. Continue reading
Blue Heron Haiku

painting by Richard Rensberry Continue reading
Dance in the Dark
It is on occasion, after a day of drenching rain, they come out to play. Rain is music to their earthly souls, a primitive reminder of the percussion of sex, the need to partner-up and get down to some serious love making in the wet grass and dirt as lightning bugs and stars ramp up to flicker.
In the Amish Country, night crawlers are not neighborhood hoodlums. They don’t hang around on street-corners at two o’clock in the morning smoking pot. They aren’t out dealing Meth or accosting senior citizens for some meager amount of cash to buy a hit of crack cocaine. Continue reading
Raptors Rapture Day

Photo by Ray Henness on unsplash site
With a storm front moving in the wind has begun to whip the trees and move the clouds along at a clipper ship clip. Cumulous clouds are billowing full sail in the blustery sky.
As I watch the display of clouds colliding, raptors appear and begin to play. Continue reading
Road Apple Pie

These are the apple days of September when we find Johnny Appleseed has left his footprints all along the roads of Northern Michigan. The apple crop is ripe, with the early birds like the Transparent and the Dutch already deer fodder. Before those breeds fell to the ground in late August, I found, picked and made crisp from their distant relatives. Picked just before ripe, they are deliciously tart and make scrumptious crisps and pies, not bad in my oatmeal, either. Continue reading





