We live in a part of Fairfax County laced with runs and rills. Last fall, torrential rains swelled these small streams into wide rivers that spilled across our narrow lanes, taking tree limbs and other debris with them.
You wouldn't know that now. Most creek beds are bone dry; the deepest are only a trickle of their former selves. This is not good news for the water table, but it is a boon for the walker.
Routes without bridges, paths that lead to narrow log crossings (or none at all) are now open for business. For the last two weeks I've been walking trails I hadn't walked since 2007, when, in an attempt to ford a stream, I pulled myself up with what turned out to be poison ivy vines. (I somehow grew up without knowing that the second half of the rhyme "leaves of three, let them be" is "only a dope would touch a hairy rope.")
But this summer I can easily cross that stream on a concrete spillway that is usually under several feet of water. And this opens up an entire network of trails through woods and along country lanes.
The dry season reveals worlds that are invisible under high water.