November 13th
We report too many colours too early; our field of vision is reduced to blurry shapes of searing intensity until our brain is able to process them better. We forget about how vibrant sunrises and sunsets can be in autumn, as though to make up for shorter and dimmer days.
November 12th
We report from the ink spill of after midnight: with the wind and the dark and the rainy afternoon, the chill climbs up from our toes to our ankles. We feel our cold knees scrape against our trousers as we walk. The stars are shivering up there, caught up in smoke and soot.
November 11th
We report: the shape comes into view slowly, a mirage over the trees. From a distance, it is difficult to remember that each dot represents a single bird. Barely a wing out of formation, the single movement of a wave coming in and going out on the fields. It makes sense, somehow.
November 10th
We report in the late morning, almost midday: it feels much earlier than proper time tells us it is. At this time of the season, clocks and watches make very little sense to us, as we watch the low sun make a tentative path through the sky. It still feels warm enough.
November 9th
We report: we keep weights on our feet so we do not float up to the sky. We sometimes take them off at the end of the day - they get to be heavy. Tonight was one such moment, a long lapse of time during which our feet did not touch the ground. We know where we were then.
November 8th
We report as the late afternoon meets the early evening: much is still happening, though it is dark. It is now the time of the year when sparrows gather in trees and bushes to produce as much sound as possible. The strong wind is barely muffling any of their chattering.
November 7th
We report: the morning light is attempting to gather itself in spite of various hurdles. That is how it goes. We are remembering the things that we like so much about autumn - the moodiness, the thrown expectations. The stubborn days when time collapses on itself.
November 6th
We report: the longer we stare at clouds, the less we understand them. We never thought we would solve any mysteries by looking at them for the appropriate amount of time; but nowadays, the very existence of even the most ordinary cloud constitutes an enigma to us.
November 5th
We report: there are ghosts on the horizon, strings of sunlight that are hanging on to the cooling dusk. They slowly pass on - they do, they always do, never have we seen them last the night through. We let our heaviest thoughts get taken by the transience of light.
November 4th
We report as we stare at the pit at the centre of the universe: we can feel ourselves drift this way, slowly and surely. It is north of the north, a spiral of a maelstrom, spinning counter-clockwise towards infinity. We regain our footing with a yawn (the night is young yet).
November 3rd
We report: it was a drizzly day throughout, which is something we can respect. In the early afternoon, we caught sight of some good clouds, and in the distracting moment of euphoria that followed, we slipped on the wet pavement. Our profession is a dangerous one indeed.
November 2nd
We report about an event that has rarely been seen lately: a sunny morning. Over the past month, fog has been our most common guest at the breakfast table. However, the sky was clear when we woke up, and even now that the clouds are coming out, they do not seem to be taking over.
November 1st
We report: half of the field has been flattened by the dew last night. There are memories of odd dreams haunting our mind as we watch Earth's shadow sink down behind the horizon. We try to get a hold of the last wisps of them, but they all end up fading away in the sunshine.
October 31st
We report at a forgotten moment of night: we cannot quite pinpoint the source of our uneasiness. We do not know why exactly we have found ourselves here so late, but our expert assures us there was a reason. They cannot, however, recall what it was. The phone line crackles.
October 30th
We report: we argued about directions with our expert on the way to the beach, and we felt spiteful enough to forgo our raincoat when they told us it would rain. We are now completely sodden. We feel quite silly, but we are still working through the spite. The rain has gotten to our socks.
October 29th
We report as we look straight up: the sky is all liquid today. We watch the billowing columns of clouds spin onto themselves, and the light clears itself a path in a thousand different ways. The colours of the shadows are changing, but the sky only gets bluer, brisk and intense.
October 28th
We report: this is as much of the sunset as we can see over the roofs tonight. We could run off to try and see it more clearly, more vibrantly, but it would likely already be over by the time we would find a good spot. Besides, we feel content enough with the view at the moment.
October 27th
We report from tired thoughts to blurry steps, we were thrown out of bed - or torn from it, depending on the perspective. Time seems to have warped as to have pushed the sunrise much later than we were used to. Even the sun has not fully woken up yet, so why should we be up?
October 26th
We report: it goes dark. It is already a little late in the afternoon, so we know that it will only get darker today. We watch the rain over there, trying to judge whether we are in its direct path. As time passes, we realise that it is useless; we will get drenched.
October 25th
We report in regards to clouds news: we are witnessing a transition from clear blues to a potential full coverage. The clouds are changing shapes, becoming thicker, but at this moment, our expert's diagnosis is altocumulus stratiformis translucidus perlucidus. We agree, probably.