Between Pavement and Pasture

Today is Valentine’s Day.

February edges steadily toward spring, yet this morning I wake to a landscape locked beneath a silver frost.

The morning starts with a simple errand—a visit to the barber. On a Saturday it is usually busy, so I decide to arrive early, before the doors open, hoping to be first in the chair. My barber is kindly disposed toward dogs, and Carys enjoys the admiration she receives there, so she will come with me.

4–5 minutes to read

A Kind Morning, Heavy Ground

Saturday arrives with a gentle kindness. The sky cannot quite decide what it wants to be—blue pushing back against grey with determined, if perhaps futile, effort. The air is calm, almost warm, touched only by the lightest breeze. It feels like a pause granted.

3–4 minutes to read

Intuition Before the Rain

Winter is consistent only in its inconsistency.

This morning, the land is damp and cold—three degrees by measure, though the wind strips that kindness away, dragging the feel closer to minus three. It is the sort of cold that slips past fabric and settles quietly into bone.

1–2 minutes to read

Movement Without Destination

Today is the first day of February. We leave early, stepping out into a world that is damp but gentler. The persistent rain of the night has eased, leaving behind an air that feels clean and fresh. The dawn light is brighter than expected, a definitive shift in the season.

3–4 minutes to read

The Gift of Blue Sky

We step out this morning into what feels like a generous gift. Blue sky and bright sunshine have taken command of the landscape, pushing cloud and rain aside—perhaps only briefly, perhaps just for a day or two, but we accept the offering gladly and walk.

3–4 minutes to read

A Subtle Shift in Winter

As we walk this morning, I notice a subtle but unmistakable shift in the world. The darkness has loosened its grip. Early dawn light returns, tentative but present, and for the first time this winter, my torch retreats to the quiet darkness of my pocket. We move now in relative brightness, guided by the soft, growing confidence of the day.

2–3 minutes to read

A Workday Begun on Foot

I am fortunate to work relatively close to home. Although I usually drive—out of habit, speed, convenience—there are several routes between house and workplace that thread through the same fields and meadows I walk with Carys. Paths I know well. Paths that slow time. This morning, I choose to walk.

2–3 minutes to read

Signs of Spring, Spoken Gently

The weekend has finally arrived.
This is my first entry of the week—not through neglect or laziness, but necessity. The days behind me have been heavy with work and training, a period of preparation for what I hope will be a full and demanding season ahead. Time, for once, has not bent easily.

3–4 minutes to read