I love cross-country skiing. I
love the feeling of gliding through the snow, sliding along through the trees
in ways not possible with human legs. I feel like a low-flying woodland
creature, swiftly moving between dark evergreen forests and bright open meadows
where the sparkle of thousands of rainbows dance across the snow-covered
landscape.
Today,
I lace up for what might be the last ski of the winter. Rain is forecast for
this afternoon and that will melt away the good snow. And anyway, it’s late
February; there are no guarantees that the base of snow will survive as the
temperature oscillates towards spring.
It
is a beautiful ski; the snow is soft but not yet sticky and I glide happily on
tracks laid by my husband and I on our almost daily outings together to breathe
in fresh winter air and enjoy each other’s company.
My
favourite part of the trail is an exciting glide down through a maple grove
towards a small stream that meanders through the woods. The excitement is due
to a combination of lack of skill and the need to maneuver through sloping
terrain densely populated with maple saplings. On this section there is even
the opportunity for ski jumping over a fallen ash tree, which I don’t attempt
this morning. My lack of skill has already been proven on my first and only try
which left me sprawling in the snow, my husband hastily ditching behind me to
prevent adding injury to insult.
On
the other side of the frozen stream, I pause in the gloom of an evergreen
thicket. The temperature is noticeably warmer and I unzip my jacket and remove
my toque. Silence descends in the absence of the scuffing of my skis skimming
over the packed snow. Movement catches my eye and it is the flurry of wings in
the underbrush; a robin. A robin?
Yep a robin, and he is not alone. I silently witness the forest becoming alive now that the human intruder (me) is quiet, and a flock of robins is flitting from tree to tree, and hopping through the underbrush and digging for insects at the base of trees where old snow has melted.
Chickadees and woodpeckers also show
up; the chickadees start checking me out in their friendly curious way,
alighting on branches right over my head. Once satisfied they have identified
what sort of creature I am and that I don’t appear to be a threat, they bounce
away to other trees in search of food.
I
move on, emerging from the forest. Increasingly overcast, the pearly sky mutes
the morning sun to a glowing ball that just barely lights up the soft white
sparkles on the warming snow; no rainbows today. I ski on, enjoying the journey
as I slide effortlessly through shrubby abandoned fields and balsam fir forest.
Coming
out of the final loop I slow down at the fork in the trail to navigate the turn
back home. The tracks gleam whitely and again I think this is likely the last
time I will ski out here this year. It also flashes through my mind that we’ve
been lucky this year with so many good ski days, and with the vagaries of
climate change, this might be the last great season.
Instead
of melancholy, to my surprise I feel acceptance, even contentment. I realize I
have no regrets. Unlike every year past, this year I chose to take every
possible opportunity to ski from the first significant snowfall of the winter. I
did not sit inside my house, pining for the outdoors, throwing obstacles in the
way of doing what I was yearning to do. As a result, I’m able to accept this
change of seasons, as well as circumstances I can’t control, with a grace that
is new to me.
What
I have been quietly, desperately, struggling with for years, I now know is
really quite simple. Not easy, but oh so simple.
Live
my life with no regrets. Remove obstacles I have placed in my way of being true
to myself. And, when I reach my final crossroad in life, I will be content to
move on with serene acceptance.
Natalie
Feisthauer loves
playing in the outdoors during all times of the year, even during ice storms
and the blackfly season. She enjoys writing both scientifically and creatively,
and her creativity has always been inspired by nature. Natalie is an avid
backyard birder and flower and vegetable gardener where she applies her biological
expertise in her spare time. Natalie lives in Flamborough, Ontario.
Note: The skiing photos are both Natalie's
See Brian Henry’s upcoming weekly writing classes, one-day workshops, and weekend
retreats here.
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