Fall — Meaning Season

This ancient rhythm persists in our modern traditions. Thanksgiving, celebrated in North America in late November, is a ritual of gratitude for the harvest’s bounty. Across the globe, festivals like the Chinese Mid-Autumn Festival celebrate the lunar harvest with mooncakes and lanterns, while Germany’s Oktoberfest began as a celebration of a royal wedding and the autumn harvest. Fall is the season of the farmer’s market at its most generous—overflowing with the last of the zucchini, the first of the pumpkins, and bushels of pears and plums. More than any other season, fall invites introspection. Summer is action; winter is rest. Fall is the bridge between them—a time of transition. The falling leaf is the ultimate symbol of release: a living thing surrendering to change, drifting not in defeat but in a graceful, necessary cycle. It teaches that to make room for new growth, one must first let the old fall away.

This makes fall a season of poignant beauty. There is a sweetness in its sadness, a concept the Japanese call mono no aware —an awareness of the impermanence of things, which deepens our appreciation for their fleeting beauty. We rake leaves knowing more will fall, we watch the last rose wilt, and we feel a gentle melancholy that is not depressing but clarifying. It is a time for turning inward, for cozy evenings by lamplight, for reflecting on the year’s arc as the natural world quietly prepares for its long sleep. fall meaning season

In the end, fall is not an ending. It is an alchemy. It takes the green of life and turns it into gold. It takes the heat of summer and distills it into warmth—of hearth, of harvest, of human connection. It is the season that dares to be both beautiful and dying at the very same time, and in that fearless honesty, it finds its profound and enduring grace. This ancient rhythm persists in our modern traditions

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ADVANCED FILTERS

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REGION: The general mountain/geographical region the route is in.

BEST MONTH(S): Time of year a route is suited to visiting. Some pop all season, some are more limited.

DIFFICULTY: How strenuous a route is, and how technical it is. Full details here.

FREERIDE/SKITOUR: Very subjective, but is a route more-of-a-walk-than-a-ski or the other way around? Some routes are all about the screaming downhill (freeride), some are more about the hunt for a peak or nice forest (ski-tour). Some are in between. 

MAIN ASPECT: Which cardinal direction the primary consequential slope is facing, that you might encounter on the route. More details here.

ROUTE TAGS: An eclectic picking of other categories that routes might belong to.

SEARCH BY LOCATION: You can find routes near your current location – just click on the crosshairs (). You may need to give permission to HokkaidoWilds.org to know your GPS location (don’t worry, we won’t track you). Or, type in a destination, such as Niseko or Sapporo or Asahikawa etc.

Please let us know how we can make it easier to narrow down your search. Contact Rob at rob@hokkaidowilds.org with your suggestions.

Shiretoko Circumnavigation Day 3 – Nihon-daki to Ochiai-wan Difficulty Rating

Category

Grade

Points

Strenuousness

Vertical Gain

D

25

Time ascending

D

0

Technicality

Altitude

D

0

Hazards

D

Navigation

D

Totals

25/100

GRADES range from A (very difficult) to D (easy). Hazards include exposure to avalanche and fall risk. More details here. Rating rubric adapted from Hokkaido Yukiyama Guidebook 北海道雪山ガイド.