
A very sensible story full of very, very, very, very, very good advice
Always carry crumbs
when you are wandering in the woods
beside the waters –
just in case
you need to mark a trail,
like in a fairy tale.
And always have a piece of tape
in case a butterfly breaks
off its wing while fluttering,

and always
take a pitchfork
just in case
a cow
is also
wandering.

And always carry extra food like roasted beef or chicken legs for escaped crocodiles, because they like to gnaw on legs,

and always take a mongoose to defeat the snakes, and always take a violin for when the birds are stuttering.

And always carry party hats and birthday cake for any sons and daughters of destitute woodcutters who might be having lonely birthdays,

and always carry an umbrella because – you know why.

An elephant might fall out of the sky. And always take a shovel just in case

it rains – so you can dig a little hovel and stay dry, and always take a potted plant to brighten up that cozy space, and always take a duck in case

of lakes, and always carry otters.

*****
Isabel Chenot writes: “This was originally written and illustrated as a letter to the most magical six year old girl.”
‘What To Take For A Walk In The Woods’ was first published in Story Warren.
Isabel Chenot‘s first poem as a little girl was about marrying her cat Tig when she grew up: she married a good man instead, but kept scribbling poems and stories. The Joseph Tree, a collection of poems, is available from Wiseblood. For a preview of West of Moonlight, East of Dawn, her retelling of an old fairy tale, visit westofmoonlight.art.