IN the coming months, expect selections like this one (with images—sometimes mostly images) revisiting various seasonal reflections here and there over the years. This will likely be our last winter in the Blue Ridges of Virginia. We are paying special attention to the details.
Excerpt from Winter Walk, from Slow Road Home ~ a blue ridge book of days by Fred First 2006
… When winter comes, our morning walks don’t end, but they are no longer a casual tiptoe through the woods.
Winter walks are a deep-sea dive into cold and dark, in a submersible of wool and down.
Peeking out from stocking hats like diving helmets, we trudge heavily against the stern and biting currents of polar air that wash over us like waves. Without our swaddling spacesuits, our frail pink flesh would turn blue and brittle as December leaves, and our expedition would never be heard from again.
A summer breath, outdoors or in, is little different. But with the first breathing in of winter air outdoors, you know that you have stepped out into a world that is remarkable for things missing.
Winter outdoors is a play on a stage vaguely familiar, from which most of the props have been temporarily removed. Heat is only one of the absent characters. Diminished too are color, smell and the sounds and motion of living nature. Even molecules move with lethargy.
Come the play of winter, all the best lines have been spoken by autumn; and, except for the wind, there are no words.
Summer is soft, yielding and supple. Winter is hard, unyielding and brittle. You feel winter through your feet and hear it in your steps.
Cold dry air has its own smell, and there is a sound that belongs to the cold of winter. It is the sound of breathing, ears muffled, holding the beat of your own heart in wool like an echo in an empty shell. No birds call; insects sleep frozen solid under bark and sod.
Winter smells of wool and of wrapped humanity inside. From beyond the thick shroud of winter clothes there is only the near-fragrance of frost. No motes of aroma escape on warm currents from spicebush, sassafras, white pine, from dank soft creek mud or pasture clover.
There should be an olfactory adjective, like monochrome, to describe the lunar-stark aromasphere of winter.
Thanks for the memories (to coin a phrase)! Both photos you included are suitable for framing. Especially the one with Ann and Nate. Just gorgeous!
I hate winter. I would never go outside if I could manage not to.