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December 28, 2007

Dipped my Toe...

Glass Pane
Glass Pane
I must have been skating some thirty years now, not every winter, but in total. I have never been careless or unattentive. I wouldn't skate when nobody else did. In short: I wouldn't test my luck. Neither have I today. Since the ice of our little lake here in Wessling got messed up with warm weather yesterday, I checked the webcam for people skating on Woerthsee - and to my greatest joy they did! Plus, the surface looked really even and great. And in addition: It was a misty-foggy day today, perfectly matching my mood and making for some mysterious, glazed frosted scenery - excellent!

Although having been "in the funk" to some extent over the past few days, the gliding, the fresh air, the scenery made me forget all that as soon as I felt the the rhythm of my own skating strides. I got almost inebriated with joy and started to look forward to at least an hour on the ice, possibly more.

At the far end, I ran into someone, I had been in a web-programming class with a few years ago and so we had a little, nice chat. But I didn't want to get cold, so I continued my first lap around the lake, intending to make a full round, have a cup of tea I had brought and then head on to the second round.

About half-way into the "home-stretch" a female person walks her kid onto the ice from the bank. While I'm approaching with long, measured strides, she calls at me "There's quite a cracking noise going out there". I turn around and mean to reassure her that everything's fine, when I hear a sharp cracking noise myself - but it's too late already! I can see the ice breaking beneath my left foot and the next thing I know is the sensation of ice-cold water in my skating boot. Then I lose my balance and fall, anticipating to feel that same sensation of cold water on my chest and then the rest of my body. But I'm lucky: The ice doesn't break any further and I get to make it to the bank, where I take my boot off to assess, how much water has come in. The shere surprise that this had actually happened outweighed potential shock by far - I couldn't believe it! I had just looked away for an instant, because she had been addressing me - and that's when I must have overlooked that thin layer I had approached. arrgggh!

 

Like I said before, I wouldn't consider myself careless, and so to actually dip my toe and breaking in made me angry more than it shocked me. Of course, I was being very careful and didn't take any chances any more. Since my socks and underwear had remained considerably dry and wasn't all soaked from the fall, I decided to just put my boot back on and take the same way back that I had come. And also: Isn't there an expression, which says you have to sit in the saddle again right after having fallen? Exactly.

And guess what? I'll be back tomorrow, if temperatures hold.

Published at 18:29 / 9 comments / 244 visits
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