What flavors does the wind carry?
Each breath of wind brings a new story to our noses. Sometimes it's rich with the sweet decay of fallen leaves, telling tales of what lies on the forest floor. Other times it carries the sharp green scent of cedar, or the honey-like warmth of sun-baked pine needles.
The wind is the forest's messenger, delivering news from places we cannot see. A hint of dampness might speak of a hidden creek around the bend. A mushroomy sweetness might reveal fallen logs decomposing in the shadows. The clean, mineral scent of approaching rain arrives long before the clouds do.
These scents shift and change as the wind moves through the forest. One moment might bring the spicy perfume of mountain laurel in bloom, the next a cool breath of moss and stone. Each inhale offers a different blend, a unique mixture of here and there, now and soon.
Morning winds taste different from evening ones. Dawn often carries the crisp clarity of dew, while dusk might bring warmer notes of sun-warmed earth finally cooling. Summer winds are thick with green life and flower nectar, while autumn ones speak of fruit and fungus and change.
When we pause to notice these invisible flavors, we begin to understand how connected everything is. The wind reminds us that the forest is more than what we see - it's a web of scents and stories, constantly moving, always changing, endlessly surprising our noses with new tales to tell.