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Informative Articles

Catch More Fish With Hobie Sunglasses
There are many features of Hobie sunglasses that make them great to wear when you are going fishing. For one thing, the lenses in the Hobie sunglasses are polarized which is what you need in sun glasses for fishing to reduce the glare from the sun...

Get Swept Away on Your Wedding Day: Rent a Sailboat or Yacht!
By David Dunlap For a day you’ll never forget on that special occasion, take a once-in-a-lifetime voyage to the world’s waters – rent a sailboat or yacht for your wedding – or for your closest loved ones. Imagine saying your vows while sailing...

Legacies and Adventures Teach the Importance of Pursuing Your Dreams
Legacies and Adventures Teach the Importance of Pursuing Your Dreams Book Review – Saint Brendan and the Voyage Before Columbus by Mike McGrew Reviewed by Lisa M. Hendey Many parents want to teach their children the importance of identifying and...

Top 7 Digital Camera Newbie Mistakes to Avoid
Digital photography is taking the world by storm. Just look at the number of digital cameras and related equipment flying off the shelves. While digital photography opens up a new world of technology, eliminating the need to develop film, there are...

You CAN Have Your Cats and Your Furniture Too
You CAN Have Your Cats and Your Furniture Too By Kathie Freeman No one wants to invest hundreds or even thousands of dollars in furnishings only to see them ripped to shreds by an overzealous pet, however beloved. To many people the obvious...

 
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Of Sundogs and Other Old-Time Weather Signs

The old-timers back in the hills had their alternative to the evening TV weather forecast.
"Red sky at night, sailors delight. Red sky at morning, sailors take warning."

Many view old-time weather lore as folk tales or fables. But we've learned not to. Despite balmy spring temperatures in late March, the old folks here in the Blue Ridge mountains believe the forecasts of the Farmer's Almanac. They kept insisting we were due for one last sniffle of winter. Then, on March 30th, the temperature plummeted and the mountains were covered with four to ten inches of snow. The old-timers were right to believe the Almanac, as it turns out. They've long planted their gardens according to its predictions, believing in the dark phase of the moon for planting the best crop.

A hard winter ahead? Look for the location of the hornet's paper nest - high, and you can count on a cold, snowy winter. Conversely, the squirrel's nest built low presages the same. The wooly worm, if nearly jet-black instead of russet and brown striped; a squirrel's extra-bushy tail; the thick hulls of walnuts and hickory nuts; thick, tight corn husks; the number of foggy mornings in August - all of these and more are predictions of a winter more severe than usual.

Still more signs of a bad winter were onions with many layers, the depth to which carrots grew, tree bark thickest on the north side of the tree, a bumper crop of blackberries and pine cones, a thick layer of moss on the trees. Three


months after the first katydid chirps on a summer night, expect the first killing frost of the season. But the hoot owl's call late in autumn is yet another harbinger of a bad winter.

The curl of smoke from a chimney rises straight in fair weather, but travels toward the ground when harsh weather is coming.

When leaves on the trees show their undersides, expect rain. Also, if there's a ring around the moon. The Zuni Indians said that 'A red moon speaks of water.' And rainbows are the most beautiful reflections of rain. Look for birds and bats flying low to the ground, and don your raincoat.

Cloud-gazers who recognize the various cloud formations can forecast fair or rainy weather, even tornados and hail. A clear, white moon, crickets chirping loudly at night, a foggy morning with dew and cobwebs on the grass are all signs of fair weather.

An old forecast said that if it rains on Easter Sunday, it will rain every Sunday for seven weeks. Did it rain on Easter where you live? If so, how many rainy Sundays have you seen since?

About the Author

Stephania is a human service professional with nearly 40 years in the field. She publishes a content-rich ezine, "Tidbits from the Pantry," about self-help, growth, and relationships to over 11,000 subscribers, and offers a life coaching service. To subscribe to her ezine, mailto:info@humansrv.net?subject=SUB Visit her site at http://www.humansrv.net