December 26th
We report a few minutes before sunset: it seems to us the sun has been hovering there for a long time. We almost fall on our face several times for our staring at it to the side, but it is simply not moving. But then, of course, we look away for a moment, and it disappears.
December 25th
We report: all the snow and the ice came in the very last hours of the night. It is a paper thin layer on the ground, and it will likely melt when the sun comes out, but the view is arresting nonetheless. Our expert is trying hard to contain their excitement, unsuccessfully.
December 24th
We report late in the morning: the clouds are taking root, big old trees casting enough shade to make it look like dusk. In the leaden sky, we find whispers of snow. It has been cold for days now, has had time to settle in. It burns our nose and the tips of our fingers.
December 23rd
We report: it has stopped raining, and the sky has cleared out some, but it is not quite sunny yet. The humidity is still shimmering in the air, even though the wind is now coming in strong; it is cold like this. The clouds are being diluted into liquid shapes up there.
December 22nd
We report at dawn, when the weather is about to turn - a sweet, pink sunrise like this, we know something has changed in the atmospheric pressure. This will be the first day during which we will not lose light since June. As usual, we do not see a difference, but we want to.
December 21st
We report: in the very long night before nights start getting shorter, there are more stars than we have seen in some time. In the sharp chill of after midnight, we watch a stray child from the Geminids dash in between Castor and Pollux, and then it is gone for good.
December 20th
We report back from the wettest walk we have had all year. At first, it was a drizzle, and it was a pleasant time. It got progressively heavier, until the rain started hitting our face head on. We came home with the impression that we had just narrowly avoided drowning.
December 19th
We report: we had thought these clouds might expand into another form, but they seem to be collapsing instead. We have a thought towards the storm chaser we met last year, and we wonder how he deals with the clouds that do not make it to storms, how he fares in the off-season.
December 18th
We report: at this late point in December, it is as though the sun is aware it only has a scarce few evenings left to make the best sunset of the year. And though we have adored every sunset since the beginning of January, we know we will call each one of those our new favourite.
December 17th
We report: in the depths of bog country, the will-o’-the-wisps of distant city lights are keeping the sky three shades above full darkness. This is not enough light to observe the night life we hear, no matter how much we squint. We still think we see things move above the water.
December 16th
We report halfway through the month-long sunset that is December. We go through the days trying out different flavours of endings, and in this continuous fade-out, rain is present on almost each of those days. We weave our way around curtains of water and light.
December 15th
We report: we watch layers of air mingling along gravity waves. We hear a little bit of music in the frequency of the waves; harmonies resonate in the ebbing of the clouds. On the ground, the wind is also drawing tight ripples on puddles, small-scale practice for grander schemes.
December 14th
We report late afternoon: we come out at sunset to look at distant squiggles caught in light. It is cold, and the sun goes quickly, so we are back inside within minutes. It is really good; our cheeks burn, our nose runs, and we are still smiling when we meet eyes in the mirror.
December 13th
We report: the Geminid meteor shower peak has come around again. Like a tired running joke, though the sky was clear, it pulled a blanket onto itself in the evening, fair, understandable, so would we. The stars we see stay still, which is fine. We hope to see them fall next year.
December 12th
We report mid-afternoon, on a hurry between two places. We do not even know whether it is raining or not at this point in time. We look out for the clouds at they pass over our head, but when we think we know their name, the light changes, and they emerge as different creatures.
December 11th
We report: the wind is forming white horses on the open sea. Our expert thinks this is a 4 or a 5 on the Beaufort scale. We like it when our expert brings up scales and numbers, and when they are not quite descriptive enough. The sun skims the sea foam with low, timorous rays.
December 10th
We report at dawn, when the sun is spitting out scoria into the sky before much light can even be seen. It seems a little brave, this kind of sunrise in December, when we know how scarce daylight is these days. It feels like the sun is making promises it cannot keep.
December 9th
We report: all of the wind of these past few weeks has stripped the trees bare here. The ground is all mulch and rotting wood, and we are bound to get a foot stuck in there at some point tonight. With no leaves on the branches, and barely a breeze, the night is eerily quiet.
December 8th
We report as we are waiting for the train. A small murmuration has risen from the trees, and has been drawing arabesques in the sky around us, like a pile of dead leaves scattered on the wind. It has been raining since the morning, a steady pour disguised as a light drizzle.
December 7th
We report: it occurs to us as we are looking up that we might still be dreaming. There is a slight haze to the sky, and the light seems to be coming from very far away, soft around the edges. It is a little too cold for a dream, though, and this is what shakes us out of it.