Summer · Forests
The hour before the lake remembers the sky
Dawn arrives slowly here, and for a while the water keeps its own counsel.
There is a moment, just before the light comes, when the lake belongs only to itself. No wind. No bird. Only the slow exchange of cold and warmth across the water.
We came for that hour. We waited in the dark for it, the way you wait for someone you trust to arrive.
What the stillness asks of you
To photograph quiet, you have to become quiet first. You learn to move slower than the mist, to let the cold settle into your hands and stop minding it.
The wild does not perform. It simply is, and asks whether you can be still enough to notice.
When the first colour reached the far ridge, it did not announce itself. It arrived the way warmth arrives — gradually, and then all at once.
Leaving it as you found it
We stayed until the surface broke into ordinary daylight, then packed up and left without a sound. The lake kept its own counsel, as it always has.
Some places are not meant to be conquered. They are meant to be remembered.
From the field
Keep reading
More from the quiet places.
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The next quiet place is already waiting.
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