Things Worth Noticing in Winter

Winter has a way of slowing the world just enough for a person to notice things that usually pass unseen. Not the grand sort of things — nothing you would mark on a calendar or read about in the paper — but the smaller, steadier ones that tend to show up when days grow shorter and folks move a little more deliberately. It is a season that rewards paying attention. If you step outside and stand still for a moment, you may discover there is more going on than the quiet first suggests.

One of the first things one notices is wood smoke. It drifts low and unhurried, slipping between houses and along fence lines, carrying with it the sense that someone, somewhere, has settled in for the evening. It does not announce itself so much as it reassures you. Fires have been laid, kettles set on, and the day has found a comfortable place to rest. On winter nights, that smell lingers, as if the air itself has decided to hold onto it just a little longer.

On certain evenings, when the air lies heavy and keeps every sound close, there is something else worth listening for. Long before you ever see it, you may hear the train. At first it is only a low rumble — so far off you might take it for weather, or wind working its way slowly thru the hollers. But if you stand still and listen, it keeps coming. Minutes pass and the sound gathers itself as it travels, rounding distant bends, slipping along the lay of the land, growing clearer without ever seeming in a hurry. Folks who live within reach of the tracks come to know this kind of listening. It is not something you rush toward. You let it come to you — steel and motion carried on cold air, mingling with the smell of wood smoke — until, for a little while on a quiet winter night, you are reminded that even in the stillness, the world is finding its way along.

By morning, the snow has stories of its own to tell. Tracks crisscross yards and paths where wandering critters passed thru while most folks were asleep. Small prints hop and pause, then disappear beneath hedges or brush piles. Others wander more boldly, heading straight across open ground as if nothing in the world had reason to hurry them along. From the tracks, it looks like a porcupine left them for us to discover. But one does not need to know exactly who made the tracks to appreciate them. It is enough to know that life moved along quietly thru the night, leaving behind just enough evidence to be noticed.

Daylight brings its own set of noticings. Winter birds seem to understand the season better than most, wearing their colors proudly against the pale background. A bright red cardinal perched on a snow-dusted evergreen looks as if it was placed there on purpose, perhaps waiting for an artist with their paints and canvas passing by. Chickadees move quickly, darting and bobbing, as if they have errands to run and very little time to waste. Many folks keep watch for the dark-eyed juncos — the little “snowbirds” that seem to arrive right on cue — hopping and skittering along the ground and fence lines. And then there are the red-bellied woodpeckers, working steadily up and down bare trunks, tapping out a rhythm that feels as much a part of winter as breath in cold air.

There is a different kind of noticing that comes with taking a walk thru the woods on a snowy late afternoon. Sound is deadened as it seems to settle into the ground, and you find your own footsteps feel as though they belong there.

Light behaves differently then — sunlight catching the snow in one moment, moonlight taking its turn not long after — each making the world glisten in its own way. It is the sort of stillness that does not ask anything of you. You walk, you look, you breathe, and for a little while the quiet feels complete, as if nothing is missing at all. And, just for the moment, it is as if all the world is at peace.

Myrtle Mae Meadowbloom, our Farm & Home editor for the “Hearth & Holler Gazette” coming soon, reminds us that winter noticing often comes with small responsibilities of its own. Birds need full feeders when the ground stays hard, and fresh water matters even more than seed when everything else is frozen solid. A shallow pan set out and checked often can make all the difference.

She is the sort who never forgets the squirrels and chipmunks either, setting out a little something for them well away from the house. These are not grand gestures, Myrtle Mae says, just the ordinary kind of care that keeps a place feeling lived in and looked after. It is the kind of Farm & Home wisdom that never asks for credit, and here at the Gazette, we have learned that those are often the things most worth passing along.

In the end, winter does not demand much of us. It asks only that we slow down enough to notice — the drift of wood smoke at dusk, the far-off sound of a train finding its way thru the hollers, a flash of red against the snow, the quiet stories written overnight in tracks, the calm of the woods when snow glistens and light rests gently on the ground.

These are the kinds of things that never make headlines — but somehow matter most. They have a way of steadying a season, and the people moving thru it, reminding us where we are and what matters still, if we merely take the time to look and listen.

Thanks for walking along with me for a while. Safe steps until next time.

— Jim  (and Red!)

And before you go — a small note from the Gazette.

Something new is nearly ready here, and we will share a first look this Saturday, January 17th. It will be the last quiet preview before The Hearth & Holler Gazette officially opens its doors the following week.

P.S. from Little Red Bear — Red would like it noted that he has been noticing winter too — mostly from indoors, with a warming cup of tea and hot biscuit drenched with honey nearby, which he feels is the sensible approach, after all.

 

Once A Week, and Close To Home

How a paper told you what happened — and reminded you who lived nearby

There was a time when the paper did not arrive every morning.

It came once a week — sometimes folded neatly, sometimes creased and softened by many hands — and it usually ended up on the kitchen table, beside a coffee cup or under a pair of reading glasses. You did not rush through it. There was no need to. It would still be there after supper, and often the next day, and sometimes the day after that alongside the easy chair or rocker.

Before you reached the end of the first page, you had already seen names you knew.

Someone had a new baby. Someone else was celebrating a long-awaited anniversary. There would be a church supper on Saturday, a school program midweek, and a notice about a lost dog that everyone hoped would turn up before the next issue came out. Someone’s daughter had been mentioned for her playing at the spring recital, and the high school team had won on Friday night. And sometimes — quietly, respectfully — there would be a name you recognized for a different reason, and the house would grow a little still as you read.

Those small-town papers were not trying to impress anyone.

They did not shout. They did not hurry. They did not pretend that every day was historic. What they did, instead, was tell people what mattered right here — the kind of news that lived just down the road, in their own streets, their own schools, and their own kitchens. Who needed help, who was being celebrated, who would be missed, and what the coming days might hold. News and events close enough to touch, and familiar enough to care about.

They gave ordinary lives a place to be seen.

A person did not have to be famous to appear in print. You only had to belong. A spelling-bee ribbon, a new porch, a good harvest, a bad winter — all of it counted. The paper did something quiet but important: it slowed time just enough for people to recognize one another and remember that they belonged to the same place.

Somewhere along the way, those kinds of papers grew thinner — or quieter — or disappeared altogether.

It did not happen all at once, and it did not come with ceremony. One week there was a paper, and then one week there wasn’t. Or there was one, but it felt different. Faster. Louder. Less familiar. And without anyone quite meaning for it to happen, a small and steady way of keeping track of one another slipped out of reach.

This winter, I found myself missing that kind of paper.

Not the headlines — but the notices. Not the urgency — but the presence. Not the noise — but the quiet. Not the crowd — but the community.

The kind of paper that does not hurry, does not shout, and does not forget the small things. The kind that assumes you will sit with it awhile, maybe pass it across the table, maybe read a bit aloud.

So, missing all that, I decided to create one.

Not to recreate the past exactly — but to borrow its patience. To gather stories the way they used to be gathered. To leave room for observations, oddments, wanderings, and the sorts of things that never make headlines but somehow make up a life.

There are always stories circulating around a town, after all — if someone is willing to go looking for them. Some are found by a roving squirrel reporter with a knack for being in the wrong place at the right time. Others are sniffed out by a good-natured news hound who never missed the scent of a good story.

If this feels familiar, that is no accident.

Some things were worth keeping. And we’re in Little Red Bear’s “Honey Hill Country,” after all.

— Jim  (and Red!)

In the days ahead, I will be sharing more of the people and small happenings that make a paper like this feel alive — the kinds of names and notices that once filled the margins and gave a town its own sense of place and to know itself a little better.

There’s more to come — not all at once, and not in a hurry.

P.S. from Little Red Bear —
Little Red Bear says if a paper feels close to home, it probably is. It tells you what happened and reminds you who lives nearby.

Pen-and-ink illustrations created with the assistance of AI and lovingly styled for Little Red Bear Land.

Reflection and Renewal — Gently Finding Our Way Into the New Year

A gentle welcome for the year ahead — and an unhurried way to begin again.

January has a way of arriving with instructions already written for us, doesn’t it?
Begin again. Improve. Fix. Hurry.

But some years ask for something different.

Some years do not need to be conquered at all — only entered. And once inside, listened to. The quieter truths tend to reveal themselves that way, without ceremony or noise.

Here, reflection is not a reckoning, and renewal is not a contest to be won or lost.
What if it never needed to be?

Instead, it can be something simpler — an ongoing process of noticing what still matters, what has endured, and what might simply need a little tending rather than replacing.

If you have arrived here tired, or curious, or simply passing through, you are in good company. And welcome here.

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While the Year Is Still New

Easing out of December and taking the new year one unhurried day at a time

While the year is still new, there is a softness to the days that does not last long. The holidays have packed themselves away, and the calendar has turned without yet asking much of us. Mornings arrive more gently. Even the house seems to move at a slower pace, as though it, too, is willing to linger a moment before the year begins in earnest.

Porches are swept clean. Decorations are carefully taken down and set aside. The lights that remain are fewer, but somehow warmer for it. Routines return slowly — politely — without knocking too loudly. Most of the calendar is still blank, and there is comfort in that. Room to move. Room to breathe.

By the time January reaches its first full week, the talk of New Year’s resolutions has begun to hum a little louder. Lists are made. Promises are weighed. Some folks feel the pull to hurry — to decide everything at once, or to prove something before the year has truly had time to arrive.

But there is no bell to beat here.

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A Fresh Stack of Mornings

A quiet New Year arrives in Honey Hill Country, bringing stillness, reflection, and the promise of days yet to be read.

The New Year has come quietly to Honey Hill Country.

A cold winter morning has settled in. Snow lies clean and unbroken beneath the trees, save for a line of rabbit tracks stitching their way across the yard and disappearing into the brush. Frost rests easy on the fence rails, and the woods hold the kind of silence that only follows a good snowfall — deep, listening, and kind.

No fanfare, no fuss — just the slow turning of the calendar page, with a fresh stack of new mornings waiting to be opened on the kitchen table. The old year folded itself away politely, and the new one stepped in like a neighbour removing their hat at the door.

Out here, the year always begins the same way — with a pause.

There is time to look back at what was carried, what was learned, and what, perhaps, is ready to be set down. There is time to stand a moment longer at the window and consider what might yet come walking up the lane. And there is time — always time — to say, You Are Welcome Here.

Honey Hill Country remains much as you left it — and Little Red Bear is still right where he has always been.

The paths are familiar. The front porches are swept. The kettle is warm — Little Red Bear is keeping it so. Your choice, coffee or tea. Fresh biscuits, always. The stories continue — some by the fire, some on the page, and some quietly, heart to heart.

As the new year unfolds, there will be small kindnesses, ordinary miracles, and a few good surprises tucked between the days. There will be laughter that arrives unannounced. There will be reflections that linger. And there will be new rhythms settling gently into place, one week at a time.

Later this month, something long-planned and much-loved will find its way into the light — The Hearth & Holler Gazette, a weekly visit of tales, tidings, and old-time country comfort, shared from Little Red Bear’s corner of Honey Hill Country and meant to be read slowly, like the morning paper at the table.

But for now, there is no rush.

This first week of January is for standing still just long enough to take a breath, to look around, and to remember that beginnings do not need to be loud to be meaningful.

So welcome — to the New Year, to Little Red Bear’s Honey Hill Country, and to whatever good may yet come.

The gate is open. The light is on.
Come in when you are ready.

— Jim  (and Red!)

“A new year does not ask us to be different people,”
Clara Thimblewick once wrote,
“only to listen a little more closely to the better parts of ourselves.”

Pen-and-ink illustrations created with the assistance of AI and lovingly styled for Little Red Bear Land.

My Year-End Reflection & Looking Ahead

On Writing, Story, and the Road Ahead

As the year draws to a close, I find myself less inclined to sum it up than to simply set it down — like a coat hung by the door at the end of a long day. Some years ask for that. Not a tally, not a verdict, just a moment to breathe before turning toward whatever comes next.

Earlier this week, I shared a few thoughts meant simply to steady the heart as the year turns. This piece is something a little different. Less about what has been weathered, and more about what has quietly taken shape along the way.

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