We've reached that time of year when boots all over South Sound leave little clods of dried mud all over the place.
I've noticed gritty little souvenirs of late-winter walks on the floorboards of the car, on the doormat and even in my kitchen.
It's a beautiful sight.
Hiking is something just about all of us can do — whether it's a short jaunt on a neighborhood trail, an all-day trip on a loop trail or a weeklong backcountry extravaganza.
I love to get into the backcountry, but most of my hiking happens within a mile or two of a parking lot or my driveway.
I've tromped around tabletop-flat Pioneer Park in Tumwater a few times since the rains let up, and I've seen little kids bouncing along — and folks well into their 80s stepping out as well. Each step is a celebration of who we are and the wonderful country where we live.
You don't have to have $1,500 worth of backpacks, technical boots, sleeping bags, tiny stoves, cute little cooking sets and bags of mysterious freeze-dried dinners to get started with all of this.
You can find local trails of a mile or less and set out with sturdy sneakers — the light hiking kind are best — and see the world wake up from winter.
Bring along a map of the trail, rain gear, a cell phone — and tell someone where you're going — even if it's just a jaunt on the up-and-down paths in Olympia's Watershed Park.
Hikers are usually the first to know that the birds of spring are flitting around, that deer are shedding antlers or the alder trees are budding out. The thing is, hiking is part of almost every outdoor activity, and it's an easy way to get your body moving after weeks of crummy weather.
The high country is buried under the heaviest snowfall in years, so a lot of those trails might not open until the summer. But there are a lot of trails at lower elevations to try, and South Sound's many urban trails are wonderful.
If you want to do a little hill training, try Watershed Park, Priest Point Park, Tolmie State Park or the trails at The Evergreen State College. If you want to start out flat and easy, Pioneer Park in Tumwater, Nisqually National Wildlife Refuge or even a long hike along the beach at Westport or Ocean Shores are the way to go.
Do you want The Olympian to keep you in mind when we canvass the community for opinions?
Click here and sign up with our Reader Network to offer your view.