Monday, September 30, 2024

Farewell to Blogspot

On February 7, 2010, when I wrote the first Walker in the Suburbs post, I knew only that I wanted to share a few thoughts with the world. I had no idea if I could keep blogging until the end of the month. 

Now, almost 15 years later, it's time to move A Walker in the Suburbs to a new home. Truth to tell, it outgrew Blogspot long ago, but until now I've lacked the time and will to switch sites. 

Starting tomorrow, October 1, 2024, you can find A Walker in the Suburbs here. The content won't change, but the design is updated, and you'll be able to subscribe and comment.

Meanwhile, as I say goodbye to this platform, I think of all that's happened since it began, the writing I've done; the people who are gone and the ones who've just arrived; how our world has changed

How grateful I am to have this opportunity to connect with all of you, to share my love of walking and place. Thank you, as always, for reading. I hope you enjoy the new Walker in the Suburbs


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Saturday, September 21, 2024

Two-Walk Day

I didn't intend for it to be, but it was anyway. A two-walk day, that is. Two-walk days usually result in deep sleeps, and this one was no exception.

Of course, a two-walk day is not a two-day walk. I imagine I would sleep extremely well after that. But a two-walk day isn't nothing, either, especially if both are an hour or more, which these were. 

Yesterday's strolls were in north Reston, with its well-peopled trail, its purposeful pedestrians. They're not just sauntering; they're making their way from Point A to Point B. They carry backpacks and shopping bags. They're going places. To be in their company is to be caught up in meaningful movement. 

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Monday, September 16, 2024

No Way to Say No

When I began walking this morning, pink clouds were piling up on the horizon. The day was just getting to know itself. I needed a quiet tune, so I chose Dan Fogelberg's "To the Morning." 

There's a line in the song I've always liked: "There's really no way to say no to the morning." It's an obvious statement but one I need to hear sometimes.

To listen to it as I walked this Monday morning was to hear how beautifully reality can be crafted. Yes, there's no way to say no. But there are so many ways to say yes.

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Friday, September 13, 2024

Walking Distance

Yesterday, a walk with a friend. Not just any friend, but one who lives a walking distance away from my house. 

Granted, it's a walk through the woods, and this time of year the woods are full of burrs that attach to your socks and spider webs that cling to your hair and clothes. 

But still, to be able to walk anywhere around here is a triumph. And to walk to a friend's house ... even better. It humanizes the neighborhood. It allows me to think (even fleetingly) that I live in a village instead of a 'burb.

(A downed tree I clambered through on my walk.)

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Saturday, August 17, 2024

Ice Cave Ridge

When I was a kid, I liked to explore the farm behind our house. It was mostly a cow pasture, but my romantic 14-year-old self once mapped it, naming one sheltered section the Land of Eternal Snows. 

I probably made this discovery in early March,  and I imagine that the small amount of white stuff that remained was gone the next day, but the Land of Eternal Snows it was.

Today I walked past fissures so protected from the sun that snow can last in them well into June. Since we were hiking in August, these were simply caves, not ice caves, but to peer into them was to see the earth revealing itself, layer by layer. 

What was most impressive about this trail, though, were the views off the ridge: mountains beyond mountains and a brow across from our trail, higher and more impressive than the one where we stood. I stayed well back from the edge. I always do. 

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Tuesday, August 13, 2024

Elevenses

As a term it is a mouthful, and as a practice ... it's a mouthful, too. But just a nibble of a mouthful. 

Elevenses is a break Brits enjoy at 11 a.m., time to pour a cup of tea, nibble on a biscuit and catch one's breath during a busy morning. 

I often find myself wanting a snack at 11 a.m., especially if I haven't had much breakfast. And if I'm walking after a few hours of writing, this is the perfect time to stoke up for the expedition to come. 

Perfect for this repast is a handful of the animal crackers I impulsively bought last week. They have little taste but a satisfying crunch, and they certainly won't interfere with lunch a couple hours later. 

So here's to elevenses, a most civilized practice. 

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Friday, August 9, 2024

Between the Bands

There are flood warnings and tornado warnings here today, as what's left of Hurricane Debby pummels us from offshore. I slipped out during a lull, which I thought at first might be the eye of the storm, but which was more likely a gap between bands of rain and wind. 

I left sunglasses at home but almost wished I'd worn them as the clouds parted from time to time. For the most part, though, it was a cloudy walk and a wild one. Winds whipping. Sticks crunching beneath my feet. A sense of urgency: get home before the skies open.

I made it, and now I wait for the predicted deluge. We certainly need it. I can almost hear the trees and plants lapping it up.

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Wednesday, July 31, 2024

Late-Day Hike

It was late enough in the day that dinner was no longer a vague thought. There wasn't time for a long hike. Luckily, it's a five-minute drive to half a dozen paths.

Yesterday it was Beckman's Trail, an easy two-mile loop that wound up and around itself. There were boulders and grass and a strange yellow fungus foaming around the base of a tree. 

The climb was mellow and the air was bracing. It was over far too quickly. 

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Monday, July 29, 2024

Highly Walkable

I imagine the walk when I'm falling asleep. It's not just the lake that makes this place so magical. It's the landscape around it. And I plunged into it this morning.

Down the lane, across a field still wet from dew, right at the road and up to the intersection, then back onto the peninsula. There are dips and curves, green fields, and glimpses of lake water through trees.

It's highly walkable, this spit of land where the family has gathered, and I'll be walking as much of it as I can.


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Friday, July 26, 2024

Bouncing Along

Music matters. I believe this always, but especially when choosing the soundtrack for a walk. Today's choice was Bach's Brandenburg Concertos. 

I started with Number Two, remembering the story my long-ago piano teacher told me about the physical rigors of playing the trumpet solos of that piece. Her husband played the trumpet, she said, and the second Brandenburg was so difficult, even when played on the smaller piccolo trumpet, that one could pop a blood vessel with the effort.

Apparently, she did not make this up. A quick bit of research today tells me that the second Bach Brandenburg Concerto is "a trumpet player's Everest."

For a walker, though, it's an energetic beauty of a piece. It revs one up and keeps one going. And this morning, it kept me bouncing along. 

(One of my favorite music-themed photos, shot May 2010 in Vienna's Musikverein.)

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Thursday, July 11, 2024

Tunnels of Reston

It's automatic: I always hold my breath when I walk through a tunnel. Too many years living in cities, where most subterranean sites reek of urine. 

But the tunnels of Reston smell only earthy or musty — and sometimes not even that, depending upon length and time of year. 

Which leaves me free to contemplate the road I'm scooting beneath, the traffic above and the crushed leaves below. The overpass and underpass. Two modes of travel, two ways of life. 

Reston believes in foot traffic, so it only makes sense that Reston believes in tunnels.

(One of Reston's 25 underpasses.)

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Wednesday, July 10, 2024

Running Water

It's been a while since I've seen running water,  besides what I run through our taps. The streams in my neighborhood, the smallest tributaries of Little Difficult Run, have been dry for weeks. 

Yesterday I walked a section of the Cross County Trail that has a notoriously (to me!) difficult stone crossing. It should be dry enough to skip over, I thought, and decided to try it.

Turns out, that shady section of the trail is one of the few places where I've seen running water lately, where I've heard the music of liquid sluicing over stones.

I paused for a moment and took in the scene, the glare of sunlight on stream water, the tracery of shadows. I realized what I've been missing these last hot, dusty weeks. 

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Tuesday, July 9, 2024

Considering Categories

I've been taking a look at the categories in my blog, trying to whittle down a list that's 160 strong, which is about, oh, 150 categories too many. 

Doing this is an exercise not just in taxonomy but identity. That more posts are tagged "walking" than anything else is to be expected — but why so many posts tagged weather? 

When I first realized this, I took myself to task: "Weather, Anne? Really? Can't you do better than that?" But then I thought about it some more. 

For a blog that's about place, about noticing, what could be more elemental than the elements? 

Whether it's the snow that made this blog possible or the heat that's even now telling me to finish my post and start walking immediately, before the pavement is truly sizzling, weather is not a tepid topic. It's a living, breathing force we reckon with daily.

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Wednesday, June 26, 2024

Sock it to Me

The newspaper headline caught my eye: "Your Socks are Showing Your Age." The accompanying photo shows two people who both look young to me, one wearing ankle socks barely visible above their shoes and the other wearing crew socks. 

Apparently, Gen Z is embracing the sort of tall, dorky socks that everyone wanted to leave behind two decades ago, the kind you see on old guys mowing the lawn. Young folks now sport crew socks with sneakers and even with high heels. Take that, Millennials, they say as they flaunt their now-trendy tube socks. 

How old do you have to be before you start seeing fashion as a game? Not very. The youngest Millennials are turning 30. 

As a walker in the suburbs, it only figures that I would have an opinion on socks. They are, after all, the interface between foot and shoe. A well-fitting pair puts a bounce in my step; an ill-fitting pair drives me crazy. With socks, as with so much of life, the best approach is one of moderation: neither too high nor too low is the recipe for happiness.

(Photo from Wikipedia's page on socks and sandals, considered a "fashion faux pas" in some places.)

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Tuesday, June 25, 2024

Covering Ground

There is no clear trail around Lake Audubon. There are twists and turns, hidden paths and a bridge it took me years to find. 

But yesterday the pieces all fell together, the landscapes and the streetscapes. There were wooded straightaways and sunny patches. There was neighborhood walking — perfect for ogling lakeside houses I'd love to live in — and forest glades with dappled shade.

I saw anglers, paddle-boarders and dog-walkers. Everyone was up to something, and I was covering ground. The weekend torpor had vanished with the breeze. 

(Banana trees along the lake. Yes, bananas grow in Fairfax County.)

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Monday, June 24, 2024

Cool Breeze

Something shifted overnight. It won't last long, so I'd better write fast.  A cool breeze is blowing in from the west, bending the bamboo that fringes the deck, and thin clouds are scuttling through a blue sky.

There is movement and gladness in the air, and the lazy trills of birdsong. 

Colors look brighter, and there are plenty of them, especially in the back garden. 

I'd like to sit here and keep describing it all, but I'd better walk now, before it goes away.

(Two young walkers enjoying a cool breeze a few weeks ago. Photo: CCC)

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Monday, June 17, 2024

Knowing the Way

It's not something I think about often, but it struck me this morning, as I returned from a walk that took me down neighborhood streets and back home through the woods, that I know the way, that I have this

I know the path begins beyond the short guardrails in the cul-de-sac, that it winds down to the creek through ferns and knotweed. 

I know that you can cross the creek easily there, because it's low and there are rocks to help you. 

And I know that if I turn left at the end of that trail, I'll find the main path, which takes me back to the street.

It's a skill older than language: knowing the way home.

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Saturday, June 8, 2024

Mountain Laurel

The mountain laurel was blooming, and I had to see it. I remember stumbling on it during the pandemic during a one-day getaway that was the most time I'd spent away from home in months.

Yesterday, well clear of lockdowns and one week further into June, the blossoms were heavy on their glossy green stems. Flowering shrubs lined one section of trail, making a passageway of poesies. 

Walking through it, I felt like those blossoms were blessing me, which I guess, in their own way, they were. 

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Wednesday, June 5, 2024

Lovely, Dark and Deep

It's less than three weeks till summer solstice. By 5 a.m. the first birds are singing, and darkness doesn't fall till almost 9 p.m. At this time of year, light is our constant companion. 

Perhaps that's why the woods appeal. They are, to quote Robert Frost, "lovely, dark and deep." Though he described a winter landscape, mine is a summery one: oaks, maples and sycamore in full leaf, the path that winds through them sheltered and shady.

What mysteries lie down these trails? What refreshment will they bring? Will the woods be cooler than the street? These are questions I want to answer — and will. 

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Tuesday, June 4, 2024

Finding Hildasay

People who know me know I like to read, and sometimes they give me a book they think I'll like. Finding Hildasay is one of those. It's the story of a veteran from the United Kingdom who decided to walk the entire UK coastline. 

I've walked a few feet of the UK coastline (!), and books about walking are a sub-genre I enjoy, so it's no wonder that this volume found its way into my hands.

I'm so glad it did. Christian Lewis took off on his journey with £10 to his name. He foraged for food, survived 70-mile-an-hour winds, and never gave up on his quest. Hildasay is the Shetland island where he spent three months during the pandemic lockdown. It was where he finally had the time to reflect upon what he had achieved: the depression he had beaten, the money he had raised for a veterans' charity, the  sense of purpose he had found.

The book stops mid-journey, so I wondered what was up. Could there be a sequel? Well yes there is. I have a feeling I'll be reading it soon.

(The coastline of the Orkney Islands, as close to Hildasay as I've traveled.)

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