MY EVENING WALK Exactly what it says in the title for once. I've had it in my mind for some time that one night with a full moon when there's harvesting going on in the distance, with lights from all the various tractors, trucks, and harvesters flickering away, that I should walk out to somewhere side-on to them and just watch them. Some night when it's warm so I can walk through the paddocks naked, with just my boots on, because I'm nuts. So when I went out to put some of the stuff that I've been sorting out this weekend in the shed, naked as usual in these summer evenings, and noticed the full moon and distant lights emphasised by a loud roar of engines, I figured I'd walk a little way into an adjoing paddock. It turns out they were a lot further away than they sounded, as is often the case on still nights, but I kept on walking down the farm tracks, slowly resolving to make it to one of the rear corners of the property, a kilometer or so away. I had a torch, but the moon lit the way fine even after the last rays of sunset had disappeared, showing the paths most free of grass, rocks, and prickly weeds, as I walked alongside my shadow of the raw human figure. The closer I got, the quieter the sound became. The land has no steep rises or valleys, yet slight contours over such distance bounce sound about in ever surprising ways, so even as I got nearer the roar of engines gave way to the peace of night and became nothing more than a vague distant humm by the time I reached the far gate facing the deserted gravel road running alongside that boundary of the property. I didn't take the most direct route, stopping off in a tree plantation to stare through the orderly rows of tree trunks while surprised birds fluttered above, and getting slightly disorientated while walking the tracks through the long grass of the last paddock. Much the same as my little road trips really, which sometimes unexpectedly end up at tracks in little better condition than those I was walking. At the gate the still-distant dance of headlights and orange beacons, cris-crossing a paddock some unknown kilometers away, was as beautiful to see as I'd hoped. I went back a little way along the boundary fence to climb up the mound of earth beside a nearby dam, with the vague outline of a kangaroo seen bounding away as I went. To climb up I had to venture for the first time into the long grass, making heavy footsteps to scare away anything else that might be hiding. While the long strands of grass ticked my undercarriage, I hoped they didn't deposit too many grumpy spiders in the process. Sitting down into a grassy bed, I watched, from slightly above, the constant quiet rhythum of huge vehicles moving in their varied ways around the distant field. Too far to really see what vehicle was what from just the lights, but able to see them turning back and forth, making their own little dance while unaware of the indecently dressed audience watching on from one dark mound on the horizon. I stayed there a little while, not that long. Again like with my road trips I wondered how it would be doing it with a girlfriend. Whether with someone else I could follow such a chaotic route while nevertheless sticking to a particular objective, without feeling too appologetic and compromising, and whether I'd see with them the beauty in the scene at the end, or whether it would end up purely a sexual thing, absorbed in each other, and whether I'd actually like that better? I considered going for a swim but without a towell it would have been too cold going back wet and muddy. It was a hot day, but the night cooled off a fair bit in preparation for a cooler day tomorrow, a perfect temperature for a walk like that though, for me at least. As I started on my way back I looked up to the sky and saw a fast moving 'star', which I would have once (probably still presumptuously) thought was the ISS, but perhaps might now be one of the Star Link LEO satellites. I mused for a time, while walking back on a slightly more sensible path, on the power of someone in America to change what a naked man in Australia sees while walking across the empty countryside. But the thought soon faded, as in practice it was no more significant to me than the lights coming from the farm machines, or lights from distant houses which became visible as I walked in the other direction, my shadow now leading the way. Little rays of humanity shining out into the dark world of nature, yet marking out a new nature all of their own. The dim light from my own house eventually came into view, a beacon of the civilised life that I'd left behind for just two or three hours. I sat on the rock where I wrote my ROOPHLOCH entry last year, until I'd cooled down a bit from the walk, then went on up to the light, through the back door, and over to the computer to write this post while drinking some water. Why write this post? I have no idea. But now, with the clock just ticking past midnight, I'm off to bed. - The Free Thinker.