Convection whispers first as puffy towers build over darker ridges. Leave crests before the first rumble, count strikes, and spread groups. Metal on packs gets buried, shelters separated, and animals coaxed to low bowls. After, breathe petrichor, scan for rising creeks, and adjust the evening’s mileage gladly.
Morning hardpack carries safely; late sun loosens bonds you cannot see. Dig pits, listen for whumpfs, note facets by feel, and cross suspect angles early. If drift lines lie like tiger stripes, choose ridges, snack modestly, and save summits for colder windows when risk shrinks back.
In whiteout or unfamiliar gullies, shadows and sound become instruments. Face slopes to feel warmth, align footsteps with wind-polished lines, and triangulate bells echoing off cliffs. A single sunbeam can confirm aspect, giving courage to backtrack, bivy smartly, or press on across gentle ribs instead of trap-filled hollows.