Targum Pseudo-Jonathan on Genesis 8:13 dates Noah's first real look at the new earth with the kind of precision the Aramaic loves. It was the six hundred and first year of Noah's life, in Tishri, on the first of the month — the same Tishri the Targum earlier called "the beginning of the year at the completion of the world." The very month creation was finished is the month the recreated earth is unveiled.
Noah removes the mikhseh, the covering of the ark, and looks out. The ground is dry. The Targum does not tell us what he said. It does not need to. The silence is its own prayer.
This is the moment Jewish tradition honors as a second creation. The first Tishri saw a world spoken into being. The new Tishri sees a world returned to itself, scrubbed clean by water and waiting to be refilled. Our Rosh Hashanah, the anniversary of creation, is also the anniversary of this quiet uncovering.
The takeaway the Maggid gathers here: sometimes renewal does not feel like a miracle. It feels like pulling back a tarp and seeing that the ground is, at last, solid enough to stand on. That is enough. Get out of the ark.