Untracked powder stretched before me. It's my own back yard, but a fresh snowfall makes it a new world. No one was going to break trail for me.
The storm had come on a Saturday night. It arrived later and left more quickly than the forecast had predicted, but left the maximum amount we'd been told we might expect. I'd cleared the the least amount necessary on Sunday morning to get out of the driveway and head to work. On Monday morning I had time to shovel away what was left around the house. It was light by New England standards, but heavier than airy fluff.
When I finally headed out, I made a wide sweep through pine woods, climbing very gradually, transitioning into hardwood forest as I went up. About 800 feet in from the road edge, the contour steepens all along this end of the small mountain range that forms the center of this end of town.
The town itself has no real center. It has little concentrations at various road junctions. The old town hall is about a mile from the Maine border, probably five miles in a straight line from the western corner of the town. Town House Road bisects the town, with the Green Mountain range filling the northern half, and a mixture of lower hills and glacial plain making up the southern half. It is mostly forested. A lot of it is wetland. It would be difficult to develop a lot of it because it's sensitive recharge area for the largest stratified drift aquifer in the state, and not well connected to transportation routes for heavy commercial loads. It's great.
When I moved here. the forest behind my house was relatively old growth pine and hardwood. From 1989 to 1998 I could bushwhack from my door to the other end of the range, about seven miles each way, and not see much sign of humans. Not recent ones, anyway. There were rock walls and some big stumps indicating that the forest had been cleared and regrown.
In 1998, an epic ice storm brought down the tops of many trees and dumped them into the formerly skiable spaces. The damage was widespread across thousands of square miles of the northeast USA and up into Canada. Around here, the damage was worst at about 800 feet above sea level and higher. While trees right down near my house at about 460 feet iced up and broke, the trees further up in what had been nice glades looked like they had been hit with a giant weed whacker.
A few years later, landowners on the big tracts above me started harvesting some timber. The clearings create unofficial ski trails, but they don't get maintained. New growth chokes them within a few years. By then, a lot of 1998 debris had cooked down, so a skier could climb and descend through the strips of older growth that the loggers had left.
New people have moved in. One built next to me at the back of the lot, pinching off what had been a leisurely line of ascent if I wanted to angle over toward a drainage with some steep lines through mostly pine and hemlock. On the other side, people who had a cabin in a hollow decided to put up a chateau on a plateau, bringing the threat of observation to what had been another set of great glades. They don't post their land, and seemed amenable to stealthy recreation (leave no trace), but I still feel awkward being seen.
Several years ago now, a landowner died who had kept his almost 200 acres undeveloped. His widow sold it to a strip-it-and-flip-it operation that mowed it almost completely, scraped off two lots on one of its pieces of road frontage, and left the scarred remains like a battlefield. I could ski up through it, but I really missed the comforting concealment of the old forest. And it's choked with briars and sweet fern now. The strips of older growth that they left were already bushy. Now they're almost impossible to connect. So my world keeps shrinking. But then so do my time and energy, it seems.
Last April, a heavy spring snowstorm really devastated the forest all over the area. A local logger rated it more damaging than 1998. Roads were blocked, power lines taken down, and lots and lots of trees bent and broke under the weight. That debris creates another giant obstacle course to negotiate.
Yesterday I only had an hour to poke around. The snow was like standing knee deep in baking soda. It didn't hold a steep climbing angle, but it held the skis firmly against gravity when I turned to descend. I grunted my way around and up to maybe 600 feet or a little higher before turning to trudge back down.
Because all of our snow this season has had very little moisture, there is no firm base. The last storm had a little more density, but still not a lot of structural strength. Supposedly it's a myth that the Inuit have 100 words for snow (or some similar amazing number), but I'll bet that they do have their own technical terms for all of the variations that different temperature and humidity can create.
The deer simulate ski lines as they follow each other through the glades. They also use my ski tracks if I get there first. Sometimes we see each other.
February is as winter as it gets. The upcoming week, beginning with Presidents Day weekend, is the sweet spot for likely winter conditions combined with noticeably increasing daylight. The days are still short enough to feel like winter, but offer a little more leeway for judgment errors and longer marches. And speaking of March, that bright and cheery month is the reward for putting up with the darkness, deep cold, and general drudgery of mundane necessities in winter. The chickadees are already singing their territorial song.