But then I am often unexpectedly compensated, and the thinnest yellow light of November…

This month taxes a walkerโ€™s resources more than any other. For my part, I should sooner think of going into quarters in November than in winter. If you do feel any fire at this season out of doors, you may depend upon it, it is your own.  It is but a short time these afternoons before the night cometh in which no man can walk. If you delay to start till three o-clock, there will be hardly time left for a long and rich adventure, to get fairly out of town. November Eat-heart, is that the name of it? Not only the fingers cease to do their office, but there is often a benumbing of the faculties generally. You can hardly screw up your courage to take a walk when all is thus tightly locked or frozen up, and so little is to be seen in field or wood. I am inclined to take to the swamps or woods as the warmest place, and the former are still the openest. Nature has herself become like the few fruits she still affords, a very thick-shelled nut with a shrunken meat within. If I find anything to excite a warming thought abroad, it is an agreeable disappointment, for I am obliged to go willfully and against my inclination at first, the prospect looks so barren, so many springs are frozen up, not a flower, perchance, and few birds left, not a companion abroad in all these fields for me. I seem to anticipate a fruitless walk. I think to myself hesitatingly, shall I go there, or there, or there? And cannot make up my mind to any route, all seem so unpromising, mere surface-walking and fronting the cold wind, so that I have to force myself to it often, and at random.

But then I am often unexpectedly compensated, and the thinnest yellow light of November is more warming and exhilarating than any wine they tell of. The mite which November contributes becomes equal in value to the bounty of July. I may meet with something that interests me, and immediately it is as warm as in July, as if it were the south instead of the northwest wind that blew. 

โ€” Henry David Thoreau,ย from his journal, 25 November 1857, in “Autumn: From the Journal of Henry D. Thoreau” (Houghton, Mifflin and Company, 1892) (via The Hammock Papers)


Notes:

  • Thank you The Hammock Papers for the Thoreau Quote.
  • DK Photos from this morning’s walk at The Cove @ Twilight. 5:15 to 5:45 am. 35ยฐ F. November 12, 2025. Cove Island Park, Stamford, CT

Wait for it…

Wait for it. Twilight to Sunrise. Time Lapse 5:45 to 7:20 am. 95 minutes in 21 seconds. 22ยฐ F, feels like it’s much damn colder. December 3, 2024. Cove Island Park.

See more sunrise shots from this morning here.

TGIF: What a beautiful scene, I thought.

Other than that, there was no noise. Not a breath of wind, no birds flying. Around us pure white snow continued to silently fall. What a beautiful scene, I thought. It moved me, in a way. I was sure every detail would remain in my memory, until the moment came when I took my last breath.

โ€” Haruki Murakami, The City and Its Uncertain Walls. (Trans. Philip Gabriel) (Knopf, November 19, 2024)


Post Inspiration:

2:30 am. Wally is restless, and his tossing and turning had wakened me (again).

I don’t know what pulled me to get up and look out the window. Murakami: “You wordlessly shook your head. But something had happened. I could pick up on it, the delicate sound of wings beating at a decibel beyond a humanโ€™s audible range.” And what a surprise it was to see snow.

Murakami’s words didn’t exactly capture my experience this morning with our first snowfall of the season, but it was nonetheless beautiful. The impact of global warming continues to haunt me. I do wonder if our grandchildren will get to experience the beauty of snowfall in winter.

As I rounded the turn on the home stretch of my walk back to the car, the wintry mix turned to heavy rain and the snow was melting as quickly as it had arrived. Murakami: “The days passed, the seasons changed. Yet days and seasons are but temporary things…Human beings are as insubstantial as an exhaled breath, and what they do in their lives is but a moving shadow.”

More photos from this morning’s walk can be found here.

Photo above was taken at 3:12 am. Snow mixed with heavy rain. 32ยฐ F, feels like 22ยฐ F, wind gusts up to 37 mph. November 22, 2024. Cove Island Park. Stamford, CT.

TGIF: Same morning. 2 takes.

Cove Island Park this morning. Don’t miss more pictures of the pink sky light show here and my favorite moment here.

Sunday Morning

What colour is this blowing autumn wind, that it can stain my body with its touch?

โ€” Izumi Shikibu & Edwin A Cranston, The Izumi Shikibu Diary. (Harvard University Press, 1969)


DK Photo @ 7:30 am. this morning. More photos here: Time Lapse (90 minutes of Twilight to Sunrise in 17 seconds) and Sunrise.