Ice in front flowerbed last year
Now that the Christmas things are put away and the
snow has come and gone, I’m ready for warmer weather—at least 50 degrees warmer,
please, Mother Nature. Then I can get the front door painted, the back screen
door re-screened, the frozen mums cut and composted and other cosmetic stuff
around here, both inside and out.
Alas, I know it’s not to be, except for an occasional
warm-up, and that the coldest part of winter is still ahead. In Edward F.
Dolan’s The Old Farmer’s Almanac: Book of Weather Lore (purchased at the Higdon
Ferry flea market some time back) I found these older sayings about months and
their weather: predictions, both optimistic and pessimistic.
“January warm,
The Lord have mercy.”
“January wet,
No wine you get.” (grapes won’t produce?)
“If you see grass in January,
Lock your grain in your granary.”
The Lord have mercy.”
“January wet,
No wine you get.” (grapes won’t produce?)
“If you see grass in January,
Lock your grain in your granary.”
If the following proverb/belief ever works out as
true, credit goes to coincidence, Dolan says: “The date of the month on which
the first snow falls gives the number of storms that the winter will bring.”
Oh-my-goodness! If that be so, we’re looking at six more winter storms! Let’s
hope . . . . [insert your own hope in this space.]
Contradictions in much weather lore makes for a fun
read, but four other factors played a part in these adages about January
weather: local weather, times of the month, religious hopes for what the
weather on a feast day portended, and local interpretations of what was
intended by certain wordings.
“March in Janiveer (January),
Janiveer in March, I
fear.”
“Remember
on St. Vincent’s Day, (January 22)
If the sun his beams display,
Be sure to
mark the transient beam,
Which through the casement sheds a gleam;
For ‘tis
a token bright and clear
Of prosperous weather all the year.”
“If St. Paul (St. Paul’s Day January 25) be fair and
clear,
It promises then a happy year;
But if it chance to snow or rain,
There will be dear all sorts of grain;
Or if the winds do blow aloft,
Great
stirs will vex the world full oft;
And if dark clouds do muff the sky,
The
fowl and cattle oft will die.”
According to the Trivia feature in one year’s
Arkansas Living, celebrating the arrival of a new year dates back 4,000 years
to ancient Babylon.
The
first New Year’s Eve celebration in Times Square took place in 1904 and
included fireworks. In 1907, because of a ban on fireworks, a 700-pound iron
and wood ball that was illuminated with 199 25-watt lightbulbs was lowered in
the square at midnight, marking the beginning of a celebration that continues
today, albeit with a different ball.
Other
years’ trivia appropriate for the new year are, “There are two seasonal
diversions that can ease the bite of any winter. One is the January thaw. The
other is the seed catalogs.” –Hal Borland, and “What the new year brings to you
will depend a great deal on what you bring to the new year.”—Vern McLellan.
Another one makes me smile in sympathy: “I need my sleep. I need ‘bout eight
hours a day, and about 10 at night.” –Comedian Bill Hicks. I’ll add,
‘especially during the winter.’
Finally,
a quote from Abraham Lincoln: “My dream is of a place and a time where America
will once again be seen as the last best hope of Earth.”
1 comment:
As we swelter here (it will be close to 100) a little of your snow would be nice.
Seed catalogues? Garden porn. And we always succumb.
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