Maybe we’ll have snow next week. At the moment, it’s a lovely spring. People are enjoying the outdoors and the sun. Years ago I was on a great walk at Sjaelssoe. Steep hills, small springs, pastures, winding paths and a wooden pier for ‘happy swimmers’. The temperature varied a lot depending on whether I was in the woods or on the sunny meadow. It was bitterly cold in the wood by the springs, and the lake didn’t beckon for a swim, on the contrary. But the walk was worth remembering ❤
The place where you lose the trail is not necessarily the place where it ends.
Tom Brown, Jr.
“The days are short,
The sun a spark,
Hung thin between
The dark and dark.” From the poem; January by John Updike
The summer was lovely and a light breeze made the walk enjoyable for my friend, Joanna and I. She has a high metabolism like me, like a hobbit, and we didn’t get far before we had our first meal on a bench in the garden of Frederiksborg Castle.
Today* the temperature is slightly difference to put it mildly. There is frost in the air and severe wind but the sun is shining. I have layer upon layer until there are no more space under my jacket. Nevertheless, I take a short break on a bench beside Athene.
My walk is about 15 km long and I don’t have much time before darkness set in. I buy a bottle of water in a shop but I cannot open it. My fingers are already frozen. I slip the bottle into the rucksack and continue the walk past the spectacular little castle, Badstuen and Louise’s Island.
The small buildings on the Island in Ødammen was built by Frederick 7. as a miniature version of a Norwegian manor. I walk through the village Gadevang, and soon I’m on my way up towards the mountain, Fruebjerg, in the forest, Gribskov. The sun is setting and the sight towards the coast is magnificent. I love this view. However I have a train to catch so I hurry down the mountain and through the forest to the train station. There are ten minutes until the train arrives! I can not remember the last time I’ve been so cold. Well, maybe when I skated as a child 🙂
Sommeren var dejlig, og en let brise gjorde vandreturen behagelig for min veninde og mig. Vi har et højt stofskifte, ligesom en hobbit, og vi nåede ikke langt, før vi indtog vores første måltid på en bænk i parken ved Frederiksborg Slot.
I dag er temperaturen anderledes for nu at sige det mildt. Der er frost i luften og hård vind, men solen skinner. Jeg er iført lag på lag indtil der ikke er mere plads under min jakke.
Alligevel tager jeg en kort pause på en bænk ved siden af Athene.
Min tur er cirka 15 km lang, og jeg har ikke meget tid, før mørket indfinder sig.
Jeg har købt vand i en kiosk, men jeg kan ikke åbne flasken. Mine fingre er allerede stivfrosne. Jeg pakker flasken ned i rygsækken, og fortsætter turen forbi det spektakulære lille slot, Badstuen og Louises Ø.
De små bygninger på øen i Ødammen blev bygget af Frederik den 7. som en miniature udgave af en norsk herregård.
Jeg går ud gennem landsbyen Gadevang, og snart er jeg på vej op mod Fruebjerg, inde i skoven. Solen er ved at gå ned, og synet mod kysten er storslået. Det er højdepunktet på turen bogstavelig talt, og i overført betydning. Min vandretur fortsætter i hast mod togstationen, Kagerup.
Her må jeg måtte vente i 10 minutter. Jeg kan ikke huske hvornår jeg har været så nedkølet. Jo, måske dengang, da jeg løb på skøjter som barn 🙂
* My walk took place in 2016, but the weather today is very similar to that cold day ❄️ Wish you a wonderful walk out there and remember your packed lunch and the mittens 🥕😊
The weather is cold and grey. The rain is pouring down. What’s the point in going outdoors? I did and if you go close enough you’ll see many colours, amazing shapes and birds.
This post is back from 2016 but the condition is unchanged 😊
‘… Grasshoppers, birds, fish and plants live With natural colours as protection forever! Chameleons are something different though Capable of changing colours as to situation!
Even seasons have colours for a change Winter darkness, summer brightness, Autumn brownness and spring greenness Indeed are beautiful and inspiring all lives!
Refraction of colourless water reveals 7 hues As seven colours of rainbow at the raining times!’
I need positive stories and I’m not getting them from the news.
January 2023 is the hottest and wettest month on record. Fields are under water and inflation presents many people with challenges. And sadly there is a war going on too. That’s for Europe alone! Oh! I forgot the Corona scourge.
January is a dark month, particular with the absent of snow. So I need positive stories and nature doesn’t fail!
Yesterday I saw the little white-throated dipper. It was in a good mood. That’s my own opinion 😉😊 The bird had taken up residence on a rock, if it wasn’t walking around the bottom of the fast-flowing stream in search of spring fly larvae and other goodies. The bird nodded and preened its feathers and tilted with its tail. Quite a ballet, I think.
The white stag and the white-throated dipper are my crown jewels. Though the green mosses that light up on fallen trees in the forest floor are marvellous too. The trees are allowed to stay to support birds with food, they find in cracks and under the bark.
And I forgot all the nice people who are out enjoying nature too. The good talks, many smiles and the enthusiasm! It is uplifting.
Nature is incredible, enchanting, stimulating, sublime, extraordinary, staggering, impressive…
Lovely walk yesterday. Today’s weather turned out very hot and didn’t invite for walking. An extremely hot wind from south made the temperature rose rapidly. Not like in the poem of Mark Twain 😊
I’m dreaming of wilderness and mountains. About shades of rugged and stunning landscapes.
I have seen a wonderful, scenic film about climbing Suilven, a remote mountain in the north west of Scotland.
It is a life-affirming film about a woman who has recently become a widow. The woman, Edie, decides to live out an old dream she shared with her father when she was young. A dream to climb the strange mountain, Suilven.
Actress Sheila Hancock was 83 years old during the filming. She says it was a great and challenging experience. Something she wants for everyone to try. Sheila Hancock is the oldest person to have climbed Suilven back in 2018.
Per Thomsen, former editor-in-chief on Stavanger Aftenblad wrote this humorous subtle story about the mysteries of a wilderness:
“The trip to Svartvatnet was a battled experience and we were too puzzled to write anything before today.
Only now, are we able to see the comedy in it but there was nothing to laugh at, while it lasted.
On the way home, I slipped over a small grass shelf, and fell about a quarter of a meter.
My right foot went down into a hole between some moss-covered rocks. The foot was helplessly stuck. I tried to slide and tail and wiggle, but without any luck.
My friend Tore, became impatient. He tried in his way, which by the way was quite similar to my own. It made no difference and I said I would rather try myself.
Unfortunately, the foot had gotten so far down the hole that I couldn’t get the boot tied up, nor could I get a knife down and cut the boot up.
Tore tried once with the knife, but I said that if I wanted my foot amputated, I would rather have a doctor.
Then we tried to get the stones away, but unfortunately it was Mother Norway herself, and after an hour of clearing work, we made no progress.
It was completely idiotic. I was not injured. I had managed to get my foot down the hole. Therefore, the hole was also large enough for it to come up again.
I could feel that the foot wasn’t sprained. Therefore, it was not likely to be swelled. So why couldn’t it come up again?
Both Tore and I asked this question, to each other and to the world in general, to the Lord, and we made a series of highly derogatory remarks about the way the world is governed.
We stated that we found the case extremely funny the first five minutes, but now it was enough.
Of course the rain started to fall. The question came up if Tore should go for help?
It sounds good: ‘Go for help, when an accident occurs in the mountains.’
But how can the rescuer help. There are no reports of that!
While we were wondering about this, Tore thought very sensible that we needed to relax.
Whereupon we sat for half an hour, eating and smoking, pretending as if we had just sat down voluntarily.
The view wasn’t so bad, it stopped raining and the sun came out. We agreed that we had a holiday.
We told each other stories. Occasionally I jerked my foot, but it did not come loose, and I pretended not to have done so. Tore said I should leave it alone.
It could be, it slept eventually, and we might cheat it to come along.
But even though we both seemed cheerful and indifferent, we didn’t like it.
Did the foot sleep? I do not know, but at first Tore fell asleep, and shortly after I fell asleep too.
We don’t know for how long. But suddenly I was awakened by Tore who looked incredibly sleepy while he muttered; we’d better go home.
I gathered the fishing pole and the backpack and off we went.
We had been walking for at least five minutes before I remembered that the foot was actually stuck.
I was filled with an indefinable and strange feeling. The same was Tore when he remembered. But then we reassured each other that the spirit had triumphed over matter, and we proceeded home, extremely carefully and cautiously.
Such experiences affect us, especially when we can give no explanation for them. We went to bed without many words. But today we think the story is really funny. ”
“As soon as I saw you I knew a grand adventure was about to happen.” ~ A.A. Milne
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