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The Ground Beneath:
When vision failed, the feet became primary sense. The mist-walker learned to read terrain through touch:
Texture: Grass versus rock versus bog versus heather—each felt different underfoot, and the transitions between textures indicated terrain changes.
Slope: Walking uphill versus downhill versus level—the leg muscles registered grade changes invisible in mist, allowing the walker to maintain orientation relative to landscape’s contours.
Moisture: Dry ground versus damp versus waterlogged—wetness indicated low-lying areas, proximity to streams, or bog zones requiring caution.
The Memorized Landscape:
The key to mist navigation was intimate terrain knowledge—memorizing the landscape during clear weather so thoroughly that vision became optional.
The experienced walker knew:
- How many steps between landmarks
- Which direction slopes ran
- Where streams crossed paths
- What rock formations marked key locations
- Which vegetation grew in which zones
This mental map, built through years of travel, allowed navigation even when physical landmarks were invisible.
The Counting Steps:
In complete obscurity, the walker counted paces—maintaining awareness of distance traveled, estimating position based on known distances between features. This dead reckoning was not perfectly accurate but prevented complete disorientation.
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