Nature Travel in Britain

października 2020 - czerwca 2025
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This blog will record all my creative nature experiences in my homeland on the island of Britain. Czytaj więcej
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  • Hembury Woods and Bonehill Rocks

    4 listopada 2020, Anglia ⋅ ☀️ 2 °C

    The lawn grass of my parents’ garden was crystal cut with myriad threads of fraying ice; the first frost of the year glistening in the early morning sunlight. A little wren appeared atop the wooden garden fence busying herself with finding food to keep her tiny inner fire burning a little longer. A robin landed in the hawthorn tree behind the fence, his breast glowing bright orange as an ember, singing his self-composed symphony like a tiny Mozart, throwing in virtuoso flourishes of chirps and clicks to delight his audience. Large flocks of pigeons flew high overhead, their white rumps reflecting the sunlight, their darker wing beats flickering in contrast, like an old black and white animation. The sky was a piercing, arching, cloudless, azure blue as I left my parents’ garden with its panoply of life, and drove to Hembury woods on the lower part of Dartmoor National Park’s wild, expansive, high moorland in the centre of Devon with rolling hills of grass and bracken topped by piles of weather rounded granite rocks known as tors, remnants of volcanic upwellings in ancient chambers of crystallising minerals.

    I arrived at the woodlands, put my wellies on as I wobbled and hung on to the back of the car for stability. My breath formed small clouds of mist, like a gently puffing steam engine, in the icy, early morning air. I walked down a rocky, rain-soaked trail, as the low autumn sun fired arrows of white light through the high reaching, beech trees, casting long, thin shadows across the layers of jumbled leaf litter. On the lower hanging branches, I peered up through the translucent leaves, revealing their skeleton structures, as the sunlight made x-ray like images through them. The leaf colours transitioned almost imperceptibly from pale greens, to yellows, and into auburns from the trunk out to the periphery of the trees. I arrived at the earthen banks of the deep flowing river, wine-dark, and swollen by recent rains. Long, thin, spiralling trails of white foam, swirled like a watery memory of its tumbling over granite rocks further upstream. The imposing beech and oak trees along the banks, grew up like a great palisade, creating a natural theatre in which the sunlit, hazy light, could dance and perform on the dark, mineral waters. I wandered slowly up the river bank, occasionally spinning around to take in the various tree-scapes towering up in their golden crowns high above me. A nimble, Greater Spotted woodpecker, hopped lithely up the trunk of a birch tree, flashing his white and red feathers, before disappearing instantly in an avian trick of the light. Upstream, the river narrowed and swelled over large, smoothed, granite boulders, in an early show of its winter strength, sweeping all before it. I put my ear against the rough, ridged bark of an old oak tree by the bank to try and hear the gurgle of gallons of sugary sap descending down through the great heartwood of his regal being into the deep, dark network of roots, safely stored away from the bitter winter storms that would be howling above. After some time carousing in the society of wind-whispering trees, I began to feel the drawing stony fingers of the tors, beckoning me to the higher realms of the moor, so I turned to leave the autumn splendour behind, and head for the green hills.

    I drove up narrow, winding, ‘eye of the needle’, high-hedged, lanes, squeezing past oncoming cars with an anxious wave of thank you from both parties as we edged past each other relieved to remain unscathed. Then the lane turned steeply upwards testing the straining valves of my car’s wheezing engine. I emerged, freed, like a new-born, out onto the bright white, fizzing, light of the open moorland, with wide expanses of tufted grasses and browning bracken, occasionally dotted with hardy, wind-sculpted hawthorn trees. Old stone walls marched along field boundaries, bringing hand-crafted constrictions, until they too retreated and gave way to the origin wilderness of an ancient landscape. The sense of openness and liberation felt in these moorlands, must have also enraptured the first Neolithic farmers, who settled here thousands of years ago, clearing woodlands, putting down their generational roots, fishing the rivers, and harvesting crops from the peaty, rocky soil. They would have shared the land then with wolves, bears, elk and lynx. Such is the timeless quality of this place, that I felt as if I could turn beyond a tor, to find a stone circled hut, hearth fire smoke still lifting through its timbered roof, animal skins drying on a wooden rack outside, and a young family shouting amiably to each other in some ancient incomprehensible tongue.

    I arrived at Bonehill Rocks, a tumble of giant granite boulders in the vale of Widecombe in the Moor. I found myself unconsciously singing the famous song of the local fair “all along, down along, out along lee”. I stood humbly below the jumble of rocks living up to their name, looking like the emerged backbone of some fossilised leviathan buried in a sea bed long ago, or a great dragon that once terrorised the local inhabitants before crashing to the earth and meeting his demise in a burning ball of fire. I climbed up through the rounded rocks, wondering at how the wind, rain, snow and ice had carved them into such outlandish shapes, as the Earth turned its endless circuits around the sun, leaving some boulders finely balanced on their edges, as if they might roll off the tor at any moment, to join their fallen brethren in the grass below. A small stream flowed by the rocks, and I had taken delight, in taking off my trail shoes to go barefoot in the icy waters of the stream, to then warm them on the soft, wet, sun-bathed and sheep-cropped grasses. This contrasted sharply with the still frosted grass in the shade of the giant rocks that I climbed up and over now, where the cold wind seemed to prick air-needles into my exposed toes. I felt the rough texture of the sharp quartz protrusions in the coarser granite of this part of the moor and stood tall at the top to admire the wide view over the valley and medieval village below. Despite the occasional discomfort in the cooling November winds, I felt a deep, blissful, joy walking barefoot in this landscape, like I had gained an extra sense, feeling the granular heartbeat and rhythm of the Earth through the skin of my soles, sampling every texture and temperature of the land as I walked. I realised how shoes involve a kind of numbing or blunting of the senses, insulating us from the ground, and separating us from our ancestral birthright to walk on our own two feet.

    A small, straggled stream of chatting families and day ramblers trickled down the hill in their own gentle rhythm with walking poles swinging and conversations echoing in the shadowy chambers of the tor rocks in which I sheltered. I climbed down to follow this human rivulet, like a trout returning to the main body of the river, from a restful sojourn in a quiet pool, as we all headed for the stony necklace of higher tors, that lay adorning the rising grassy chest of the moorlands above. The clear, cooling, ground water welled up from the woven mat of grass, massaging my bare feet, blissfully bathing them, like a natural sponge. I reached a small car park and road to cross at the bottom of the hill, before climbing up again, and felt the sharp contrast of the scraping, pinching tarmac on my exposed soles. I gratefully leapt back into the soft grass on the other side, which grew drier and warmer on the sun soaked southern flank of the hill as I climbed the well worn path up to Bell Tor. The bracken shone golden, on either side, growing all the way up to the foot of the tor, which rose in a craggy cone, with vivid blue sky piercing iridescently through two triangular framing holes in the rock, capped by granite capstones. I walked off the main trail along a thin bracken skirted track, at the base of the tor, and climbed up the shallower side, to find a soft grassy spot to sit near the apex of this jumbled pile of time tumbled granite. I sat warmly, sheltered by the tor, squinting in the low sun, eating my packed lunch, looking out over a wide vista of moorland, all the way over to a distant Haytor and its near neighbour, Saddle Tor, that stood like two raised nipples on the whitish-blue horizon. I was distracted from my reverie by a crow far below, pottering among the bracken, stretching his glossy black wings, outer feathers separating almost like fingers, to lift effortlessly onto granite boulders. I inwardly said ‘hello’ to this native denizen of Dartmoor, asking silently if he would like to visit me, if it was his will. He disappeared behind the face of the tor and I returned to looking out across the moor, but sometime later, he landed on a boulder very close to me, and eyed me for several minutes, cocking his head to one side, seemingly asking “well here I am, and who might you be?” He seemed to embody the stark, wildness of the place, speaking to me in a language of gesture and curiosity older than any words I might have for him. We sat in a silent communion for a while, until our encounter was complete, and he lifted off into the wide air swooping down and out of sight to return to his own activities.

    I too had a walk to continue, so I rose up stiffly, splashed gleefully through peaty, watery puddles at the top of the tour, and on along the high ridge to the next granite knot in this string of tors. The grass grew wilder, more wiry, and windswept, with clumps of pale mauve heather sheltering by boulders. In a moment of distraction, I stubbed my bare foot toe on a rough piece of granite protruding from the path, and looked down to see that it had incised a small crescent moon shaped cut in my big toe, which was now bleeding. The watery grasses washed and cleaned the blood away, but had given me a sharp reminder, that walking bare foot requires a continual attention to where you are putting your feet on the ground. It is wonderfully connecting to feel the different textures of land, from soft, to hard, to gritty, but it can also punish distraction and inattention, so that it’s better to stop walking when admiring the view above the ground.

    I walked on, more diligently, and came to a grassy rise covering a low granite outcrop. Atop the rise, stood another denizen of this wild country; a Dartmoor pony, dark chestnut brown, with her distinctive thick, black, shaggy mane and tail, feeding lustily on the wiry tufts of grass, and contrasting starkly with the bright blue sky behind. These native ponies may have graced these moorlands stretching all the way back to at least the Neolithic, as 3500 year old hoof prints of similar wild horses have been uncovered in local archeological excavations. As the pony continued her feeding, seemingly uninterested in, and unbothered by, my approach, she afforded another wistful impression of time collapsing thousands of years. She worked her way down from the rise, chewing and wrenching up copious amounts of grass as she went, before eventually looking up to eye me fixedly through her thick black fringe, as I gave a sniff of greeting in the way that most polite mammals do. My greeting acknowledged, she dipped her head, returned to the more important business of scratching her long neck on a convenient outcrop of rough granite, and walked down to join a fellow pony, where they were both beautifully framed in the landscape of distant tors and rolling moorlands; a scene from the ages.

    I walked on through more soothing wet grasses and dark peaty puddles, where I stooped to clean my still bleeding toe. The terrain steepened again on the approach to Chinkwell tor with large cairns of granite rocks piled up to a pinnacle on top of the granite outcrops, presumably by the many thousands of passing ramblers over the years. Before I reached it, an older man with a traditional wooden walking stick in hand, and wearing a dark green wax jacket, approached me with friendly curiosity, and asked me in a well spoken accent, how tough my soles were to walk barefoot on the moor. His wife soon joined us with a similar friendly and open curiosity. I replied that my foot soles weren’t particularly tough, as I had only started walking barefoot in nature in the spring, and had since realised that our soles are all pretty tough as we'd evolved to walk barefoot, despite our modern tendency to wrap boots and socks around them. I extolled the virtues of barefoot walking in providing a much deeper connection to the landscape, but the friendly couple seemed unconvinced about trying it for themselves, even though admiring my ‘chutzpah’ in doing so. The gentleman mused that the tribes of Africa still walked barefoot, but I had to disabuse him of this idea, because apart from tribal communities such as the Masai who have stoically kept to many of their tribal traditions, most modern Africans have joined the shoe wearing ‘tribe’ now prevalent around the world. We said our goodbyes, went our separate ways, and I climbed up to survey the 360 degree view from the local high point of Chinkwell tor by one of the cairns. I spun around, taking in the grand circle of tors punctuating the horizon, with green, grassy, sun-blazed, moorlands stitched between them, and the fields of rural, ‘civilised’, Devon stretching all the way out to the coast and the rolling seas to the South.

    My nature thirst, fully satiated by such a clear and wonderful view, I carefully navigated the tumble of granite rock on the other side of the tor and followed the thin, gritty path down and along, until the path rose up one more time where I climbed up to the final, and most majestic tor of my walk, the aptly named, Honeybag Tor.

    Wren, Robin singing, crow, flocks of glistening pigeons.
    Hembury Woods - wellies
    Autumn leaves in the light
    Full Dart river
    Lesser spotted woodpecker
    Bonehill Rocks
    The joy of bare feet
    Crow visit
    Dartmoor ponies
    Cut toe
    Couple talking about my bare feet
    Circle of tors
    Rougher granite
    Buzzard calls
    Depths of the Earth
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  • Sabbacombe Sands

    2 listopada 2020, Anglia ⋅ 🌬 12 °C

    I woke up early at 6am in my old childhood bedroom at my parents’ house in Exeter, as I was visiting ahead of the second Covid19 pandemic lockdown. The morning sky was bright with the dawn sun tinging the clouds read as it rose unseen behind the family home. I did my daily nature ritual connecting with the kingdom of plants that day. I took my breakfast outside into my parent’s well tended garden, and sat on a stone step by the large garden pond, with deep orange goldfish slowly stirring below the reflective surface, under the lily pads. Goldfinches twittered and chattered to each other in the large hawthorn tree growing just beyond the garden fence. A robin landed in its gnarly branches and struck up his beautiful, melodic song. He was rudely interrupted by a ring-necked dove landing heavily at the top of the tree’s crown, which sent the robin darting for cover. A solitary crow flapped his black, fanned wings as he passed overhead and seagulls circled unusually silently in the sunny sky with billowing storm clouds forming around. The deep red leaves of a small acer tree were strewn across the rockery, and various plants still flowered hopefully in the late Autumn, as the first frost was yet to arrive.The day already seemed filled with natural gifts as I decided to use the better than forecast weather to visit one of my favourite beaches, Scabbacombe Cove, nestled snugly in a coastal valley in South Devon between Brixham and Dartmouth.

    I packed a lunch and set off in the mid-morning sunshine, although the darker clouds suggested seasonal showers would be dowsing and fertilising the land during my walk this day. I arrived at the National Trust car park in good time. The low sun was still shining as I embarked down a stony path, with classic Devonshire, high sided hedges on both sides. Rounding a corner, I was treated to a grand view of a steep sided, grassy valley with a deep blue sea beyond, broken up with wind-whipped, white-horse, waves. Such views of the open sea always evoke wistful thoughts of travel and adventure in me, and invited my imagination to spread out into the wide world.

    I reached a very wet and muddy section of the path, just before a gate into a field, and this felt like the time to take off my trail shoes and let the cool mud seep up between my toes. It was wonderful to feel the cool Earth beneath me, and another treat for my foot soles to feel the wet-dewy grass as I descended the steep field into the valley leading to the cove. I rounded the hill into a wide vista of the sea, with Scabbacombe cove beckoning below. The sea waves gently sighed onto the beach of mixed sand and shingle. High headlands on either side of the cove seemed to soar in the white light of the late morning sun. Another steep and slippery descent brought me to the top of the beach, fed by a stream, tumbling it’s bubbling waters onto the flat worn rocks on the beach, and twisting down to meet the sea like a child returning to its mother. I walked out onto the beach over the flat rocks, with the clear stream water cooling my feet and ankles. I reached that magical place where the stream joyously mingles with the sea waves. I let my feet sink into the sand as the gentle waves lapped onto my lower legs. The water felt pleasantly mild as the cooler Autumn had not yet penetrated the sea’s great, summer warmed, body.

    I was soon followed onto the beach by a couple and their three children, that I had said ‘hello’ to back up in the car park and could hear their youthful and happy family chatter behind me as I had walked down. I walked on across the beach to visit a beautiful cliff-top waterfall at the far end of the beach, which gushes out of a grassy channel at the top, and pours down the cliff to form a mesmerising, melodic stream through smoothed and polished dark blue-grey, striated rocks at the bottom. As I stopped to take a photo of the grassy headland with orange-brown tufted bracken bordering its edges, I could hear the family chatter close behind me. I realised that they were also making a ‘bee-line” for the cliff-top waterfall. I was happy to let the eager father and his three kids to pass me and climb up onto the rocks under the waterfall, while I chatted pleasantly to the mother briefly, finding out that they lived locally. I pottered about in the rock pools by the sea where the waterfall stream met the waves. After the family had enjoyed their time up by the waterfall and walked down to where I was by the sea, I took my turn and walked up to the waterfall, as it’s waters glistened and danced in the sunlight, free-falling to crash on the rocks below. The family soon headed back along the beach, and as their chatter slowly faded away, I was lucky enough to spend the next few hours undisturbed in this magical spot. I sat eating my lunch on the polished rocks, with the waterfall tumbling down nearby, my feet caressed by the cool stream waters flowing by. I looked out to the, endlessly, rolling waves, fluorescing foam from their crown tips as the cold wind tried futilely to blow them back out to sea. The wide, whitish-grey, sands blazed in the sunlight forming wavy, patterned, lines of graded sizes and colours of silicon granules, gently woven like textile threads by the retreating sea. Seagulls spiralled in great flocks above the sea, which dissipated almost as soon as they’d formed. High, voluminous, cloudscapes formed inland blowing out over the back of the beach, creating dramatic light shows with the rays of the low white sun angled upwards. The clouds released occasional, brief showers of rain, turning into dark torrential storms over the sea. I took cover in nearby sea caves when the rain grew heavy and more persistent, which led me to explore the dark and mysterious depths of a larger sea cave, drips echoing loudly in the tidal pools beneath its salty, rocky, echoing chambers.

    After sitting, meditating on the beautiful, natural gifts of my surroundings, on the smoothed rocks by the stream for a few hours, I ambled back along the beach, as the descending late afternoon sun cast lengthening shadows from the pebbles and rocks strewn artfully across the sand and shingle. I stood ankle deep amidst the waves, occasionally jumping backwards, when a larger wave from the incoming tide threatened to submerge my rolled up trousers. I decided to reluctantly leave the magic behind, and make my way back up over the flattened river rocks of the larger stream I had walked down hours earlier when I had entered the beach. However, nature had one more gift for me before I left; a small, lively rock pipit picked and flicked its way through the flotsam left high on the tide line looking for insects and morsels to eat. I watched her at close quarters for several minutes, taking a nice video with my camera. It was now finally time to say goodbye to this beach haven, and head back up the green, grassy valley to my car. I bumped into a friendly Liverpudlian hiker and wild camper for my second human encounter of the day as I began my climb back up the hill. He asked if I was ‘mad’ to be walking barefoot in the Autumn, and I extolled the virtues of feeling the Earth beneath one’s feet. He was planning to wild camp on the beach in the cold Autumn night, and I suggested that he might be ‘madder’ then me!

    As I climbed the hill, I stopped to sit in the waning sunlight, and look back out across the sea with its white, roiling waves stretching out to the curving edge of the Earth. A huge seven story cruise ship, looking like a floating city, was moored far out, apparently taking refuge in the coastal waters as the raging Covid19 pandemic had turned such vessels into death traps. I took the steep climb back up through the valley fields. A stormy squall hit me as I climbed, turning a pleasant stroll, into a freezing battle against the wind. I made it to the sheltered, muddy lane, only enduring some half-intentionally induced nettle stings to my bare ankles along the way. Such nettle stings are apparently good for the blood flow in herbal medicines, and I like to feel this stingy connection with one of my favourite wild plants. I reached my lone car in the car park and headed for my parents’ home. As I descended towards Paignton, I was greeted by a vividly coloured and spectacular double rainbow in the evening sunlight. One end of the rainbow fell into the deep blue waters of the bay, arced over cruise ships sheltering there, and fell far out to sea on the other side. I drove on, smiling inside, my heart filled full with the natural wonders of the day.
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  • Autumnal Walk in Lower Woods

    25 października 2020, Anglia ⋅ ⛅ 11 °C

    After days of rainy weather, the sun was at last bursting through burgeoning, cumulus clouds still threatening sporadic showers. My keenness to be back out in nature's embrace, meant that I was happy to take the chance of getting wet, and go for a walk in the Autumnal woods. I hurriedly packed a lunch, threw my rucksack over my shoulders, and drove out to Lower Woods near Wickwar, a large, ancient woodland of some 750 acres, that I have come to know and love in recent years. It is managed jointly by the Gloucestershire and Avon wildlife trusts, and was known as a bit of a hidden gem. However, the overflowing car park on my arrival, indicated that it is hidden no more. The combination of the day being Sunday, nicer weather, and many thousands of Covid19 pandemic refugees had meant that a formerly quiet spot was now not so quiet. Fortunately, the woodland is big enough for every man, woman, child and their dogs to disappear into.

    I took a path I know well, and quickly removed my trail running shoes, to let my feet feel the mats of fallen leaves, and the mud oozing up between my toes. The wetness cooled my feet, but not uncomfortably so, and I was pleased that I could continue to walk barefoot in nature up until late October. Walking barefoot has given me a kind of 'sixth sense' when walking in nature, allowing me to feel all the nuanced textures of the ground beneath me. I get the occasional prickle from a bramble or thistle, but our human foot soles are fairly tough and are clearly evolutionarily designed to encounter such rough terrain. It is ironically man made surfaces such as roads that pose dangers, as they seem to attract broken glass thrown from passing vehicles. Lower Woods is well known for its wet mud, one part being known as Lower Wetmoor and, after the recent rains, it fully lived up to its name. I was soon up to my ankles in dark, rich, wet mud, and had to watch my step, not to slip over onto my backside, nearly doing so on several occasions.

    The trees were just turning yellow as the nights cooled and the days shortened. I stopped to admire the bright yellow Field Maples; such Acer trees always produce the most spectacular and vivid Autumn colours. The many young Hazel trees with their large, tooth-edged leaves were also turning from pale green to yellow like a fading memory of summer. The large Oaks too were bowing respectfully to the season and slowly discarding their precious canopies of leaves. I realised just how many acorns each oak tree drops as they felt like so many mini cobblestones under my bare feet. I thought of all those thousands of potential new Oak trees gestating in thousands of acorns scattered across the woods. I looked down the long path with leaf curtains of yellow drawing in on either side. Suddenly there was a bustling commotion in the air behind me, with crows cawing angrily. Then the cause of their ire appeared, as a large buzzard, with long, grey speckled, fanned wings, glided low and nonchalantly over my head. I smiled inwardly at the timeless, and strangely comforting, battles of the crows and the buzzards that must stretch back millions of years. May it always be so.

    I passed through a gate and onto a new wide thoroughfare between the trees, known as a 'trench'. I have read that this used to be an old road from Gloucester to Bristol and that the trenches were created to stop bandits and highwaymen from ambushing the passing stagecoaches. I don't know if this is true, but it's an evocative story nonetheless. I turned off the increasingly muddy trench as it headed down to the Little Avon River that winds its wild way through the woods, and walked down through the woodland to a beautiful rivulet that feeds the river. I washed the mud from my feet as I crossed the rocky stream, where I have found many ammonite and ancient clam fossils in the past, carved out of the beds of limestone by the waters. On the other side, I stopped by a favourite large Alder tree that stands guardian to a lovely bend in the stream. With its five trunks arranged in a circle, you can stand in the centre and feel that you are ensconced in its dark red wooded heart. Nearby was a leafy collage of interlaced Field Maple leaves lying in yellows, browns, auburns, oranges and reds like a patchwork quilt for the sleeping Earth. I came out by the river, which was swollen with recent rains, as it wound its way under a small footbridge and on towards the Severn Estuary.

    I turned up a path that leads to a more open area where the wood's great Oaks can be viewed in all their seasonal glory. The sun was now blazing white and low, backlighting, and illuminating the trees' canopies in a breathtaking way. The almost imperceptible transitions from the dark and pale greens of the lower canopies into the yellows and oranges of the higher canopies, was nature at her most artful. I found a convenient wooden bench to sit on and marvel at the sunlit autumnal scene as I ate my lunch. A small reconnaissance crew of three muddy dogs ran on ahead of their human owners, lifting their forepaws up onto my lap, in expectant greeting, and sniffing at my lunch hopefully, before being called away by their owners with apologies. I love the indomitable joy, curiosity and enthusiasm of all the canine family, and wondered wistfully whether wild wolves would ever run in English woods again. I chose to believe, inspired by the dog's seemingly boundless hope, that they would someday return, and that the ancient night-time howl would be heard by English ears again, as they once were.

    I headed back along the path whence I had come, and turned around to admire the sunlit oak filled valley one more time. I turned up a new wide 'trench' path on the right, shuffling through a thick carpet of bright yellow aspen leaves, by the tall thickly ridged trunks of their parent trees. There were still enough leaves on the aspens for the leaves to whisper like ancestral voices in the gentle breeze. My feet were alternately pummeled by fallen acorns under oak trees, and then soothed and massaged by wet mud and clover. I stood for a while in the warming sunshine to survey the woods on either side of me, before the sun slid behind thicker clouds, with the sky darkening and the air cooling, portending an approaching storm. I started to make my way back, slip-sliding on the thick mud at the bottom of the hill which had been churned up by so many walkers before me. As I returned to the alder by the small stream which I had passed earlier, two young men with rucksacks, blaring out EDM music from some hidden source, walked by me. These young lads were not typical woodlanders and it was heartening to see them exploring the place. I have a feeling that the current Covid19 pandemic which has blighted so many lives, may have a potential silver lining, of turning people away from shopping malls and urban pursuits which weren't available during the pandemic 'lockdown', and back to nature's solace in changing times. I had certainly never seen so many people in these woods, where I have walked alone all day, without seeing a single human soul, in years past.

    I returned the way I had come, back up the hill, and along the muddy path, with the sunlight still dancing in the autumn leaves, the different layers casting shadows on each other, and the veins of leaves delineated sharply like miniature tree crowns, where the light fell. I wiped the mud off my feet with dock leaves as best I could and squeezed on my trail running shoes to reluctantly insulate myself from the Earth again. The woodland had worked its restorative magic, as I sighed deeply, already looking forward to my return when a biting winter may have clawed its icy grip onto bare tree branches, sillhouetted black against white snow-filled skies.
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