It is the Fifth Month,
But still the Heaven-high hills
Shine with snow. ~ Li T’ai-Po
(cited: Trans: F Ayscough & A Lowell, FirFlower Tablet)

It is the Fifth Month,
But still the Heaven-high hills
Shine with snow. ~ Li T’ai-Po
(cited: Trans: F Ayscough & A Lowell, FirFlower Tablet)

smudge-ing sky, dove gray
painting brush, white dipped – dripping
Snowflake by snowflake

The quiet that follows a snowstorm.
looking delicious
the snow falling softly
softly ~Issa (cited: haikuguy.com)

Yesterday’s snowstorm blanketed the sphere of my world with 17.7 inches of snow…today feels calming, relaxing, and tranquil.
What a treat from Mother Nature.

Time to slow down…What a treat!

Travel and Trifles invites us to share “What a Treat”
Stay at Home Order … day 23 plus 14 seclusion retreat days
Total accumulation of snow: 11+ inches





Solitude Retreat… 8th day (Snow showers and Waning Crescent moon)
melting the big snow
with a spoon…
a child
~Issa (cited: www.haikuguy.com)

“The silence after a snowstorm isn’t just your imagination — all those tiny flakes actually trap the sounds of your surroundings.
“Chris Bianchi, a meteorologist at Weather Nation, described the phenomenon as a sort of citywide cup of tea: After a big storm, we can take a few minutes to relax and take in the quiet.
“The science behind that quiet comes down to how sound waves travel (or, more accurately, don’t travel) through snowflakes.
“‘Snowflakes, when they’re spaced further apart, there’s little gaps, obviously invisible to the naked human eye,’ Bianchi said. ‘But there are these little gaps within the snow and those are very efficient at absorbing sound.’
“The sound waves from cars, buildings and people get trapped in those small places between the snowflakes.
“Not just any snow can trap noise. It has to be the freshly fallen, light and fluffy. Wet and heavy snow doesn’t leave those spaces for sound to be trapped.
“One study found a couple of inches of snow can absorb as much as 60 percent of sound. Snow can act as a commercial sound-absorbing foam when it’s in that fluffy, freshly fallen state.
“As the snow starts to melt, those little sound-catching spaces start to go away too.
“(When snow melts) it compacts, and that compaction reduces the amount of little crevices and nooks and crannies that sound is able to be trapped in,” Bianchi said.
“So, for at least a few hours or even a day after a snowstorm, we can get some reprieve from all that noise around us.
“‘It’s calming, it’s relaxing, it’s tranquil,’ Bianchi said. ‘Life is kind of forced in a sense to slow down.'”
cited: CPR News, Claire Cleveland and Andrea Dukakis, “Yes, it really is quieter when it snows. Here’s the science behind the calm after the storm. February 4, 2020.

Image submitted for Dogwood Photography’s annual 52-week photography challenge.
Week 6: Inspiration: #NoFilter (No limit on what you shoot this week, as long as the image is pure. No filters, presets or other edits. Basic exposure corrections only this week.)
In which direction
Should head my longing?
On an autumn night
The skies are full of
The moon’s light... Omoro Gojusshu (www.wakapoetry.net)

Olden memories
so brisk
in their fading,
this moment soon to follow —
shadows on the snow

Nikon D750 f/5 1/4,000s 83mm ISO 800
looking delicious
the snow falling softly
softly
~Issa (www.haikuguy.com)

Nikon D750 f/5.6 1/200s 300 mm 100 ISO
those snow days…blanketing the earth and gifting us with silence, before snow shovels and snow removal trucks, serene
Let’s spend a few minutes listening to…The Sound of Silence, Simon and Garfunkel.
No matter how much things change, they still remain the same.
an early spring –
sent back into seclusion
by morning snow
~Socho (S Carter, Haiku before Haiku)

I wonder where
the winds of spring
drive the snow clouds

When I was so much younger than I am today, December was the month of anticipation. The movement of time from the beginning of winter break until Christmas crawled slower than a snail. Today, winter is the season of anticipation…winter advisories, wind chill, snow-covered sidewalks…and most importantly…the awakening of spring.

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