Forest Asceticism
In 1780 Nicetas built a cell on a hillock in a remote part of the forest and dug a well beside it. He sustained himself on the bread that passersby would leave in a basket hung by the roadside on a tree. The sources recall the severity of his life in the forest, including the relentless mosquitoes that, by the account of his life, bit him until he was covered in blood.
He is remembered as having received the gift of tears, weeping both for his own sins and for the sins of others. The synaxarion relates that during an illness in the month of March he was granted a vision of the Theotokos surrounded by angels, who blessed him.
His original cell was destroyed by fire. After this he lived for a time at the White Bluff Hermitage and served at a monastery before joining the solitaries of the Roslavl forests, where he settled on the southern edge of a place called Monks' Gorge (Monk's Ditch), near the village of Yakimovskoe (Akimovka). He is said to have dwelt among the Roslavl solitaries for more than ten years before returning to the forest.