Episodios

  • S9E14 A handful of haibun but what links them?
    Apr 13 2026

    In this special Poetry Pea episode, we celebrate impending close of our haibun submissions period with a curated selection of haibun readings. New to haibun? Don’t worry — helpful links in the show notes will guide you through this beautifully blended form of prose and haiku.

    All the pieces in this episode share something in common… but will you spot what it is?

    Answers in the shownotes.

    We also thank Johnny Moran for editing March’s video prompt and welcome Lakshmi Iyer, our guest editor for April. Be sure to submit your poems in the comments under the latest Poetry Pea YouTube video so they can be considered.

    Plus, there’s exciting news coming soon from Poetry Pea — and an opportunity you won’t want to miss. To make sure you hear about it, join the Poetry Pea membership via Buy Me a Coffee and sign up for the Poetry Pea mailing list.

    Pop in your earbuds and enjoy a thoughtful feast of haibun poetry.


    Poets included:

    If Wishes Were Horses

    Reid Hepworth, DSH issue 29 September 2024

    The Wailers

    Bisshie, Cattails 2025

    A loneliness business, and yet . . .

    Chen-ou Li, Contemporary Haibun Online April 2026

    Invisible Web

    Simon Wilson, Cattails, October 2025

    Memento

    Neena Singh, Cattails, October 2025

    Multiverse

    Melissa Dennison, Drifting Sands Haibun, Issue 34, Dec 25

    The Far Shore

    Sandip Chauhan, haikuKATHA, Issue 43, May 2025

    Grandpa Carr’s Kohlrabi

    Nicky Gutierrez, Tendrils Haibun Journal, 2024

    Mauerspechte

    Bisshie, Wales Haiku Journal,Winter 25/26

    Rain

    Robert Witmer Tokyo, Japan, Drifiting Sands Haibun, issue 34, Dec 2025

    Iterations

    David J Kelly, Tendrils Haibun Journal, 2024

    The Soles of my Feet

    Gerry Jacobson, Kokako, Issue 42, March 23, 2025

    Tides

    Jill Muhrer, Tendrils Haibun Journal, 2025

    Más Menos
    38 m
  • S9E13 Haiku between wings, contemporary short poetry
    Apr 6 2026

    Step into a listening space shaped by small poems and quiet attention.

    This weekly podcast brings together contemporary haiku from voices around the world. Each of our episodes features carefully selected poems, and thoughtful readings.

    From murmuration skies to winter dusk, from the hush of birdsong to the swell of the everyday, we explore the moments that might otherwise pass unnoticed — and give them room to resonate.

    How to take part:

    Respond to our video prompts on YouTube, submit your haibun via our website, and join a growing international community of poets and listeners.

    🎧 New episodes released weekly.

    Subscribe, listen, and let the words take flight.

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    20 m
  • S9E12 Poetry Pea Podcast Brilliant poetry and some highlights from our judges'
    Mar 30 2026

    Settle in for another episode of the Poetry Pea Podcast, where this time there’s no set theme—yes, maybe it 's a bit trickier for you… but as they say, if it were easy, it wouldn’t be worth doing.

    In this episode, you’ll hear a wonderful selection of contemporary haiku and senryu , all submitted without the safety net of a prompt. Our judges—one familiar voice and two brand-new to the podcast—have read the poems anonymously and selected their nominations, decided on a Judges’ Choice and Honourable Mention. You’ll hear their thoughts during the show, with the final results revealed soon in the Poetry Pea Journal.

    We also share a few notices from Pea Towers, including details of upcoming submissions for our annual haibun journal, Tendrils, and how you can nominate poems for the Golden Pea Award anthology.

    Whether you’re an experienced poet or just discovering English language shortforms there’s something here for you.

    Subscribe, join our mailing list, and consider supporting the podcast to help keep the poetry flowing.

    And as always—keep writing.

    Episode notes

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    1 h y 4 m
  • S9E11 One-line haiku love them or leave them.
    Mar 23 2026

    In this episode of the Poetry Peacast, we bring our current exploration of one-line haiku to a halt for now.

    After three episodes and a number of thoughtful questions, I reflect on what the form offers, where it challenges us, and where I find myself—at least for now. There is, of course, more to be said, and the conversation remains open, particularly as listeners continue to share their own insights and experiences.

    I’ll also be following this series with a short essay drawing together ideas from all three episodes.

    Over the coming weeks, the Peacast will turn to your work, featuring original poetry written by listeners, followed by poems inspired by the Poetry Pea video prompt—continuing our focus on poetry out loud and shared creative practice.

    If you’d like to take part, you’re warmly invited to submit your work, respond to the prompts, or share your thoughts.

    Thank you for listening, and for being part of the Poetry Pea community.

    Until next time—keep writing

    show notes

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    35 m
  • S9E10 Kala Ramesh on Haiku – A Special Poetry Pea Podcast Conversation
    Mar 16 2026

    This week on the Poetry Pea Podcast there’s a slight change of plan.

    Part three of the one-line haiku series isn’t quite ready yet. After posing several questions at the end of part two, I realised I needed a little more time to sit with them. My head is currently full of ideas, possibilities and half-formed thoughts, and rather than rush things, I want to give those questions the attention they deserve.

    So, while I continue wrestling with the mysteries of the one-line haiku, I thought I’d share something special with you.

    In this episode you’ll hear part one of a conversation with renowned haiku poet Kala Ramesh, originally recorded for our sister podcast, Poetry Pea Readings. Kala’s insights into haiku, creativity and poetic practice are always inspiring, and it felt like the perfect conversation to revisit while we pause the one-line haiku series for a week.

    If you enjoy this discussion, you’ll find the link to part two in the show notes.

    Next week I’ll be back with part three of the one-line haiku extravaganza — and while I may not have answered every question swirling around in my head, I promise I’ll have given it a very good try.

    Check out the show notes for more detail...

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    35 m
  • S8E9 One line haiku part two: 5 powerful techniques for writing haiku & senryu
    Mar 9 2026

    In this episode of the Poetry Pea Podcast, we continue our deep dive into the art of the one line haiku and explore five powerful techniques for writing compelling haiku and senryū in English.

    If you’ve been experimenting with one line poems and wondering how they work — or whether they work at all — this episode is for you.

    We explore five essential techniques for writing strong one line haiku:

    Speed – creating breathless momentum

    Circular structure – poems that can be read in multiple directions

    Truncated form – leaving deliberate space for the reader’s imagination

    Shape and horizontal movement – how visual and directional flow affect meaning

    Multiple cuts – discovering layered readings within a single line

    Have we answered our won questions?

    • Have we appropriated the Japanese short form?
    • Do one line haiku conform to traditional three line expectations?
    • Is a poem a one line haiku simply because the poet says it is?
    • Why did the one line become so popular — and why have they endured?

    Whether you are new to writing haiku or already publishing in journals, this episode offers accessible, practical techniques you can try immediately in your own notebook.

    If you enjoy learning about haiku craft, senryū techniques, poetry prompts, and contemporary short form poetry, make sure to follow the podcast and check the show notes for cited poems and further reading.

    And don’t forget:

    Submit your poems via the YouTube video comments for the Monthly Prompt or try the 3-Word Challenge in our Shorts.


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    25 m
  • S9E8 Examining one line Haiku, The Form, The Flow
    Mar 2 2026

    In this episode of The Poetry Pea Podcast, we begin an in-depth exploration of one line haiku and senryū in English. What makes a one line haiku work? Is it simply a haiku written without line breaks, or is there something more subtle happening with rhythm, pause and flow?

    Through close readings of poems by Michael Segers, John Wills, Alvin Cruz, Elizabeth Searle Lamb, Kala Ramesh, Tess Sherman, Scott Wiggerman, martin gottlieb cohen and even Allen Ginsberg, we examine how the single line changes pacing, meaning and impact.

    We also begin asking some bigger questions about English-language haiku:

    • Have Western poets reshaped the short form into something unrecognisable in Japan?
    • Are English one line haiku a natural evolution — or a reinvention?
    • Is a one line poem a haiku simply because the poet says it is?

    This is Part 1 of a short series. Next week we’ll turn to techniques for writing one line haiku, looking at structure, rhythm and craft.

    If you’re interested in:

    • one line haiku
    • senryū
    • English-language haiku technique
    • haiku form and structure
    • poetry craft discussions
    • modern haiku debate

    then this episode is for you.

    Show notes and links are here.

    If you’d like to read along, a slideshow version is available on YouTube.

    Keep writing.

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    21 m
  • S9E7 Poetry Pea Podcast A Monster haiku & senryu edition
    Feb 23 2026

    Monster trucks meet haiku.

    In this adrenaline-charged episode of Poetry Pea,I share original haiku and senryu inspired by a thrilling monster truck video, captured by Renee Schaffer and curated by Allyson Whipple. Huge thanks to both for fuelling this creative ride.

    Expect short-form poetry that explores power, spectacle, humour and the poetry of roaring engines and flying mud — all in just three lines.

    Every poem featured will appear in the first Poetry Pea Journal of the year, celebrating contemporary haiku and senryu from our international poetry community.

    Love modern haiku? Enjoy writing prompts and award-winning poems? Don’t miss the Golden Pea Award Winners Podcast and the accompanying anthology.

    Subscribe, follow, and sign up to the newsletter so you don’t miss the next Poetry Pea release.

    Check out the show notes.

    Small poems. Full throttle.

    Poets Featured today

    Bisshie

    Alicia Samson

    Angiola Inglese

    Christopher Seep

    David Cox

    Hifsa Ashraf

    Jonathan Blakeslee

    Joshua Gage

    Lakshman Bulusu

    Melissa Dennison

    Mims Sully

    Neena Singh

    Mona Bedi

    Ralph Matthews

    Richard Bailly

    Richard Tice

    Rob McKinnon

    Rohan Buettel

    Tracy Davidson

    Rupa Anand

    Sheikha A.

    Kimberly Kuchar

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    14 m