We set out just after sunrise, the morning air crisp and sharp with the returning frost. Overnight, the landscape has been brushed by winter’s delicate hand once again. Above, a pale blue sky, uninterrupted by clouds, and the sun a glowing orb suspended low, spilling golden warmth across the frost-bound earth.
The weekend arrives beneath a soft percussion of rain, tapping gently against the windows as though trying to rouse me with its persistent song. The day is damp, heavy, and cold—but it is mine. A single day of stillness carved from a working week, which I refuse to surrender to the weather.
This morning I wake to a shimmering, diamond-bright blanket cast across the land—winter’s familiar touch returning with its quiet authority. Every blade of grass, every fallen leaf, every humble stone is dressed in frost, glittering beneath the beam of my torch as though the earth itself has been dusted with crushed stars.
Sunday returns with its familiar promise of adventure—a single, precious day carved out for wandering, after six straight days of work and routine. It is meant to be a day for the hills, for high places and long views. But one glance outside tells me the weather has other ideas. Rain lashes the windows with fierce determination, and the horizon dissolves into a long, unbroken smear of grey. The world looks as though it has been washed of colour overnight.
I take my reflections today from our afternoon walk, a welcome shift in tone and mood. Afternoon carries a different kind of quiet, a softer light, a slower rhythm. And on a day like this—cold, damp, grey—the contrast is even more pronounced. The early winter darkness folds itself into the landscape long before its time, and the trail feels deserted, as though it has borrowed the stillness of an early Sunday morning.
This morning unfolds as a quiet milestone in my journal—the first true freeze of the season. The day begins at -3°C, and the air carries that unmistakable sting that belongs only to winter’s earliest breath.
For the first time this year, my winter coat emerges from its summer slumber, shaking off months of stillness so it can once again stand guard against the cold. Hat and gloves return to their familiar duty. Their presence signals that the season has shifted.
The morning offers only a hint—a quiet promise—of what lies ahead: the first frost of the season.
The land has been washed clean and repainted in shades of winter. Every blade of grass is white at the tip, like a field of tiny quills dipped in moonlight. The trees shimmer as my torchlight passes over them, their branches catching the frost and scattering it in delicate glints, as if dusted with ground glass. We walk through the darkness with only the faintest blue glow rising behind the hills, the sky still black, but softening at the edges.
This morning, I wake to the quiet, insistent call of the hills—as though the wind itself whispers my name across the valley. There will be no slow Sunday slumber for us today. Instead, we trade the warmth of the duvet for the cold breath of the high trails, answering an invitation from the wild that always seems to wait for us.