Showing posts with label spring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spring. Show all posts

Friday, April 5, 2013

Hello! Summer... Are You Almost Here?

I am ready for some warmer weather. Tonight it wasn't too bad. It was up over 60 degrees so we grilled out and event ate outside on the patio. Ah man, it was so nice to relax outside after work like that. It's the first time we used our picnic table. Our next addition is going to be an umbrella for our round table. 

We even opened up the house for the afternoon and part of the evening. It's 11:00 pm and still 55 degrees outside. My only fear is that we won't have a spring at all. What I mean by that is we'll go from cold days... straight into sweltering hot days. I want several weeks of nice mild temperatures... You know... 60's and 70's with cool nights. Nice enough you don't have to run the heat and cool enough you don't have to kick on the air. Usually what happens.... Straight to 90 degrees and 80% humidity.

So I'm keeping my fingers crossed for a nice spring.

What is your favorite season? (Don't be shy... Leave a comment)


-Red


Saturday, February 2, 2013

Groundhog Day

So according to Punxsutawney Phil we are in store for an early spring. Sounds good to me. I've seen enough snow for the winter. I'm glad the furry little fella didn't see his shadow.

How is it that Phil became such a prognosticator of the seasons?

I was able to find this on the origin of Phil:

In 1887, a newspaper editor belonging to a group of groundhog hunters from Punxsutawney called the Punxsutawney Groundhog Club declared that Phil, the Punxsutawney groundhog, was America's only true weather-forecasting groundhog. The line of groundhogs that have since been known as Phil might be America's most famous groundhogs, but other towns across North America now have their own weather-predicting rodents, from Birmingham Bill to Staten Island Chuck to Shubenacadie Sam in Canada.

So this didn't answer my question of how he became the predictor of the seasons. I had to dig a little deeper to find out:

In western countries in the Northern Hemisphere, the official first day of spring is almost seven weeks (46–48 days) after Groundhog Day, on March 20 or March 21. The custom could have been a folk embodiment of the confusion created by the collision of two calendrical systems. Some ancient traditions marked the change of season at cross-quarter days such as Imbolc when daylight first makes significant progress against the night. Other traditions held that spring did not begin until the length of daylight overtook night at the Vernal Equinox. So an arbiter, the groundhog/hedgehog, was incorporated as a yearly custom to settle the two traditions. Sometimes spring begins at Imbolc, and sometimes winter lasts six more weeks until the equinox.



Let me get this straight... they selected a groundhog as their arbitrator. Wow... how did we make it to 
the 21st century.

If you have a different origin of the groundhog day. Please share it with us.

Here's to an early spring!

-Red
Twitter @MortisG187