Happy almost official Spring everyone! With the Vernal Equinox only a few days away and going from a Winter storm that brought 3-5 inches of snow and a blustering wind producing chills into single digits, if not negatives, this past weekend in PA to being melted and gone, and I mean a good 95% gone, by late day Tuesday with some solid 60 degree sun, I’m sure beginning to feel Spring Fever a bit! Must be March??! ;-)
In honor of the transition, I thought this would be a fun weekend read for you to enjoy, over some coffee perhaps, as you may notice a pattern that I tend to write in my journal while sipping my coffee at camp in the mornings haha!
You may also realize that this takes place on the same stretch of the Loyalsock Trail that I have been backpacking in January and February. Some people might tend to feel that re-visiting a place is a waste of time or that you’ll never see as much if you keep going back to the same places. Well, I’ll tell you - I fully realize I am not going to get to see everything I want to in my lifetime. There’s just no way! But, I aim to try and see as much as is within my ability to do so and there are several places I am going to return over and over again. Those really special places that speak to you in some way, for whatever reason, deserve the attention. In fact, I find that the first time I am somewhere new, I feel like I am just beginning to scratch the surface of what it has to offer.
It is in this theory of repetition that one can truly get to know a place, witness its moods and changes, how it “feels” in different light, different seasons. Explore a place enough in close intervals, and you can begin to pick up the tiny subtleties that differentiate January from February from March and so on and so forth. It is a practice I highly recommend to anyone who fancies themselves a lover of Nature - pick a place and make it a point to visit, explore, observe in monthly intervals and I think you’d be amazed at the subtle shifts of light and all the little nuances that separate Nature’s dance throughout the seasons, especially during the less obviously drastic times of the year.
With that in mind, I bid you farewell Winter - I thank you for your majestic beauty these past 3 months, and welcome Spring - I feel your jubilance rising.