Can't wait for winter

Joined
Nov 5, 2001
Messages
8,969
I love winter, especially being outside and hiking. No bugs to deal with. Quite often, I am the only one out even in the popular places that I will go to for a quick trail hike. I don't mind the cold... need less than you think if you are moving constantly. Always take time to stop and make a small fire and eat some lunch.

Fall is OK, as long as not too hot. Spring is always refreshing, especially when things are blooming. Summer? Meh... too hot. Too buggy. Too crowded. Winter is KING! Anybody else feel this way?
 
I prefer winter because I like the cold. The hot I just cannot get along with. I try my best, but the winter is, indeed, king. I am out a lot more in the winter, and do a lot more in the winter. In the summer, I have to deal with too many mosquitoes to move outside. In the winter, there is nothing to stop me...
 
You're not kidding. I hate the heat. I currently live in florida and rarely venture out of my house during daylight. It's rediculious. I keep telling my wife when I get out of the Marine Corps we are moving to Alaska. she wants to stay in Florida. So I think we have compramised on Tennessee.
 
Same here...i love winter and hate summer because of 2 reasons: mosquitoes and ticks. Winter hiking is great, especially when everything is covered in snow. I dont care much for wet winters though, when its grey and raining all the time. Fall is fantastic too, when the leaves have changed color and are starting to fall.

Only thing i dont like about winter-hiking is that it gets dark so early.
 
I guess I can agree with this. In the southwest, summer is alright. A little warm perhaps. But bugs and fauna are not that bad. But the rest of America is different. What's with the load bugs? Seriously some of them sound like chainsaws. It's really annoying. Then the mosquitoes, ticks, and.....spiders!!!:eek: In winter there is peace.
 
Absolutely! Heat doesn't keep me from doing anything, but cooler weather is exhilarating. Our winters are actually wet and miserable, but at least they're short.
Late fall and early spring are great, though! I love where I live, but will probably think something's wrong the next time I get to do something outdoors without being soaked with sweat. About time, too. The heat may be bearable, but bearing it is getting a little old:grumpy:
I'll take the cold any time, regardless. You can always put more clothes on, but there's only so much you can take off.
 
I also prefer the cold weather. I like to take my dogs out woods walking and in the summer we get to hot and the bugs eat us up.
jim
 
I love those few perfect weeks in spring and fall when it's warm during the day (not hot), but cool enough at night to keep the bugs from being too bad. The only trouble with winter is that I really like trail running, and it can be difficult when all the trails are under a foot or two of snow and ice. And it's usually cold enough to force me to wear a shirt and pants. My favorite part about the summer is not needing to wear so much clothing.
 
Autumn
By Alexander Pushkin

I
October has arrived - the woods have tossed
Their final leaves from naked branches;
A breath of autumn chill - the road begins to freeze,
The stream still murmurs as it passes by the mill,
The pond, however's frozen; and my neighbor hastens
to his far-flung fields with all the members of his hunt.
The winter wheat will suffer from this wild fun,
And baying hounds awake the slumbering groves.

II
This is my time: I am not fond of spring;
The tiresome thaw, the stench, the mud - spring sickens me.
The blood ferments, and yearning binds the heart and mind..
With cruel winter I am better satisfied,
I love the snows; when in the moonlight
A sleigh ride swift and carefree with a friend.
Who, warm and rosy 'neath a sable mantle,
Burns, trembles as she clasps your hand.

III
What fun it is, with feet in sharp steel shod,
To skim the mirror of the smooth and solid streams!
And how about the shining stir of winter feasts? . .
But in the end you must admit that naught but snow
For half the year will even bore a bear
Deep in his den. We cannot ride for ages,
In sleighs with youthful nymphs
Or sulk around the stove behind storm windows.

IV
O, summer fair! I would have loved you, too,
Except for heat and dust and gnats and flies.
You kill off all our mental power,
Torment us; and like fields, we suffer from the drought;
To take a drink, refresh ourselves somehow -
We think of nothing else, and long for lady Winter,
And, having bid farewell to her with pancakes and with wine,
We hold a wake to honor her with ice-cream and with ice.

V
The latter days of fall are often cursed,
But as for me, kind reader, she is precious
In all her quiet beauty, mellow glow.
Thus might a child, disfavored in its family,
Draw my regard. To tell you honestly,
Of all the times of year, I cherish her alone.
She's full of worth; and I, a humble lover,
Have found in her peculiar charms.

VI
How can this be explained? I favor her
As you might one day find yourself attracted
To a consumptive maid. Condemned to death,
The poor child languishes without complaint or anger.
A smile plays upon her withering lips;
She cannot sense as yet the gaping maw of death;
A crimson glow still flits across her face.
Today she lives, tomorrow she is gone.

VII
A melancholy time! So charming to the eye!
Your beauty in its parting pleases me -
I love the lavish withering of nature,
The gold and scarlet raiment of the woods,
The crisp wind rustling o'er their threshold,
The sky engulfed by tides of rippled gloom,
The sun's scarce rays, approaching frosts,
And gray-haired winter threatening from afar.

VIII
When autumn comes, I bloom anew;
The Russian frost does wonders for my health;
Anew I fall in love with life's routine:
Betimes I'm soothed by dreams, betimes by hunger caught;
The blood flows free and easy in my heart,
Abrim with passion; once again, I'm happy, young,
I'm full of life - such is my organism
(Excuse me for this awful prosaism)

IX
My horse is brought to me; in open field,
With flying mane, he carries fast his rider,
And with his shining hooves he hammers out a song
Upon the frozen, ringing vale, and crackling ice.
But fleeting day dies out, new fire comes alive
Inside the long-forgotten stove-- it blazes bright,
Then slowly smoulders - as I read before it,
Or nourish long and heartfelt thoughts.

X
And I forget the world - in silence sweet,
I'm sweetly lulled by my imagination,
And poetry awakens deep inside:
My heart is churned with lyric agitation,
It trembles, moans, and strives, as if in sleep,
To pour out in the end a free statement-
And here they come - a ghostly swarm of guests,
My long-lost friends, the fruits of all my dream.

XI
My mind is overcome by dashing thoughts,
And rhymes come running eagerly to meet them,
My hand demands a pen; the pen - a sheet of paper.
Another minute - and my verse will freely flow.
Thus slumbers an immobile ship caught in immobile waters,
But lo! - the sailors rush all of a sudden, crawl
Up top, then down - sails billow, filled with wind;
The massive structure moves, and cuts the waves.

XII
It sails. But whither do we sail?...
 
I enjoyed that Esav Immensely!

I feel cherished and blessed being exposed to 4 distinct seasons. True, I get tired of the one I'm currently in at the end of season, but its really the dynamic of change that gets me. Spring with its transitions of plants. Summer with its gloriousness of lush. Fall with its colours and deer on the rut. Winter with its solitude and peace. They all have their place in the nature of things and you can only appreciate the best qualities of each season in the throws of another. Personally, I can't wait for fall. But maybe that is because I'm satiated on the bounty of summer edibles. Never want to live in the tropics myself. The four seasons are a defining part of my earth/commune.
 
Yep, definitely a colder weather person here. I like fall and winter best.
 
The older I get the less I like heat.

I prefer late fall, winter and early spring. Less or no bugs and people. I guess I'm turning into a grump because many people's behavior nowadays irritates me.
I'm off the Gen-X era, that has seen so many technological advances come to fruition, and has become unwillingly dependent on them, yet remembers when these things were not needed to survive a day. It's nice to get away and get back to the simple way of life, if it's just for a short while.

I like to explore off of trails and deep into wooded areas and doing so in summer would be punishing. Winter trailblazing is awesome. It can be a window into the past if you look close enough.
 
While I like summer, I don't care for the biting flies, I hate spring with its endless damp cold days and long daylight hours. Fall and winter are my favorites. With fall comes the promise of another winter, sunsets come sooner and the evenings are longer, its a nice time to be out in the woods. With winter comes cross country skiing and the ease of travel to the cabin with snowmobiles. I enjoy the coziness of a warm house with the woodfurnace running and a glass of scotch in my hand while outside it is -30 with a cold north wind after a day of outdoor activity and a BBQ to satisfy the appetite that comes with a day on the trails.
 
I'm not 100% on board that winter is king... unless of course there are record breaking temps like this year, so I'd say at least 40% of the later part of the summer I've been wishing for winter..

I too do not mind the cold at all, my other half however complains about it, which leave me more time out and about :D
 
I used to love winters for all of the reasons mentioned. But the cold is harder to take now. And spring is a wonderful time of year. I never cease to marvel at how my world transforms itself from greys to greens. I work out in the heat of summer, so it doesn't bother me so much. Sweat is purifying and good for the soul. Fall is a great time of year. Not too hot and not too cold. Now I don't wish away a single day of any season yearning for what is to come. They pass all too quickly without me wishing it so.
 
Autumn is my favorite season overall but I do prefer winter for camping. No bugs, no pollen, no people, no humidity, no sweat.
 
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