There’s been snow on the hills, there’s been a dusting in
the glens, but the world has not turned completely white this winter, so white
that I can step in snow from my front door, until the last forty-eight hours.
Yesterday I woke to the snow falling steadily and silently, building up on the
trees, the rocks, the ground. In the afternoon I wandered the fields and woods
watching the whiteness increase, watching the world change. The heavy snow was
over but frequent showers still blew in bringing more, transforming the
landscape.
A calm frosty night brought a cold day and clearing skies.
With a winter landscape all around there was no need to venture far for the
first real snow walk of the season. The softness of the snow suggested
snowshoes and I donned these before I set off. In the woods they were a boon.
The snow was deep and unconsolidated. Even with the snowshoes I was sinking in
ankle deep at times. Nothing moved but the tracks of fox, deer, squirrel and
rabbit showed animals had been on the move, seeking food to get them through
another frozen night.
Beyond the woods I climbed gently up a moorland track, the
snow more compacted and thinner here. The wide expanse of Strathspey began to
open up, stretching out to the Cromdale Hills and the distant cloud-shrouded
high Cairngorms, only Bynack More clearly visible.
At the high point of the track I stared out over the
landscape, amazed, as always, at how much wilder and vaster snow makes these
little moorland hills. A sharp wind had me moving again, heading back down as
the first pink suffused the sky and the shadows on the Cromdale Hills grew even
longer. The magic of winter has returned.
More snow is forecast.
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