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Imbolc/Candlemas/Groundhog"s Day

 
 
Noddy24
 
Reply Wed 2 Feb, 2005 02:08 pm
In the Northern Hemisphere, we're halfway through the winter. I've clipped forsythia to force inside and double-checked with my oil company to be sure that I'm still ahead on the budget plan. After all,

Candlemas Day, Candlemas Day
Half your wood and half your hay.

Punxsutawney Phil has seen his shadow, but I have hope that one of our local grundsows will have a more benign forecast.

The goldfinches are starting to get less dingy--they'll be full yellow by the time the daffodils bloom. All the birds are getting quite vocal waiting for turns on the feeders. Potatoes are sprouting in the cupboard.

What about you? Signs of spring? Plans for winter? Do your local prophets agree with Phil?
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Dartagnan
 
  1  
Reply Wed 2 Feb, 2005 04:24 pm
There are signs of spring here, for sure. Something like 61 degrees today, which is freakish. Little snow in the mountains, which means water shortages this summer. Still, the warmth feels nice...
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shewolfnm
 
  1  
Reply Wed 2 Feb, 2005 04:32 pm
My first sign of spring is seeing the squirrel I have named Charlie come to my back door. This is the second year I have ' adopted' him and I keep a regular amount of seeds available through the winter.
When it gets close to spring, like last year, he frequents my back door as his signal to - up the amount of food-.
During winter, I try not to put alot of extra food out because there isnt much wildlife here in the city and I dont want it to get too wet, freeze, or be stolen by the field mice.
Another sign is the amounts of blue jays that come out. Thier loud screech ( wich im sure is attractive to female bluejays.. just not to me heheh ) starts to penetrate my windows. I hear them earlier and earlier in the day.
As for signs of spring in the local human life......?
Yeah, that shows too.. christmas lights are finally coming down.. haha!
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Noddy24
 
  1  
Reply Thu 3 Feb, 2005 10:43 am
http://www.planetark.com/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/29337/story.htm

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

LONDON - Weather forecasts are notoriously fickle, but bees, caterpillars and bears are proving as divided as meteorologists on how long winter will last.
While January saw freezing temperatures in the United States and colder weather from Europe and Japan, animal conduct around the world is giving mixed signals.

"Bees have built their hives close to the ground. If it was going to snow very heavily, they would have built them higher up," said Chris Goss, who runs a smallholding in the northeast US state of Vermont.

Animal behaviour is just one of the clues used by some energy traders and analysts to try and predict temperatures in the US northeast, the world's biggest heating oil consumer region, as a barometer of oil demand.

Back in autumn, oil analysts pointed to narrow patches of brown fur on the back of woolly bear caterpillars as a sign that the US winter could be harsh. Frantic acorn-gathering activity by squirrels appeared to confirm the prognosis.

The world's most famous animal forecaster -- US rodent Punxsutawney Phil, made famous by the film Groundhog Day -- has just forecast six more weeks of winter, as he crawled out of his Pennsylvanian hole on February 2 and saw his own shadow.

In Japan, where demand for kerosene for heating has picked up in recent weeks as colder temperatures bite, oil traders have also been keeping their eyes close to the ground.

"I saw some preying mantis eggs, but they were lower than usual," a Japanese oil trader said, adding he had looked for eggs of the large carnivourous insect in his garden plants.

"If they are high up it's because they're trying to avoid the snow, so it's a sign that snow will be light. This winter will be bad for kerosene," he added.

Zoologists say insects can respond to different humidity, though birds are more likely to use changing day length as a sign to migrate than unreliable temperatures.


FORECASTS OR ADAPTION?

In Russia, a bear in a zoo woke up in January from her hibernation two months early, while another had not gone to sleep at all. Temperatures have since headed downwards but overall the normally ferocious winter has been unusually mild.

This has enabled oil exports from the world's largest producer to continue at high levels, at a time when ice usually restricts transportation, traders said on Wednesday.

In Europe, the UK's Met Office has forecast mild weather until April for northern Europe, but it warns techniques for seasonal forecasts are still at an early stage of development and are less skilled than short-term predictions.

In Finland, a man successfully predicted weather for a year based on his frog's behaviour. But overall the success at long-term forecasting by both humans and animals is inconclusive.

Some scientists say that animals cannot predict weather, but simply adapt their behaviour to current conditions, so that any forecasts gleaned could only be short-term.

"There's more folklore than real science," said Professor Barry Keverne at the University of Cambridge's zoology department. "But animals do respond to seasons, as it's important for reproductive success."

There seems no doubt that many animals have senses more highly developed than humans to changes in environment. Few large animals appear to have been killed in the recent Asian tsunami, while the human death toll has risen to around 300,000.

However, animals may not be able to adapt enough to changing temperatures -- whole species face extinction from global warming, scientists said on Wednesday.

(additional reporting Ikuko Kao in Tokyo)


Story by Neil Chatterjee

Story Date: 3/2/2005

D'artagnan--

I could do with a little basking about now. My pussy willow tree is coming out in catkins.

shewolf--

A house with a baby is always in springtime.
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sozobe
 
  1  
Reply Thu 3 Feb, 2005 10:53 am
A very large bug crawled slowly up the outside/ porch side of my window yesterday. I don't know what it was, vaguely cicada-ish though slimmer through the body than I'd expect. Aside from that, all is snow and white. Got more last night.

How does one recognize a forsythia if one has not seen it in bloom the previous year?
0 Replies
 
Noddy24
 
  1  
Reply Thu 3 Feb, 2005 02:09 pm
Unless someone has clipped it into a square hedge, you've good a good chance of bare-branch identification.

The branches themselves are a greeny-yeller and grow out from a central base in a curving fountain.

Have you met your neighbors yet? Or is your back yard fenced so that even man-eating tomatoes would be your very own secret?
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Noddy24
 
  1  
Reply Thu 3 Feb, 2005 02:12 pm
P.S.

Congratulations on your bug.

Forsythia is great for forcing because you get wonderful golden flowers. At this time of the year you can bring almost any branch of shrubbery in the house, put it in water, and earn some early green leaves.

If you have to fight your way through the fountaining branches to the base, it is definitely forsythia.
0 Replies
 
DrewDad
 
  1  
Reply Fri 4 Feb, 2005 09:31 am
Re: Imbolc/Candlemas/Groundhog"s Day
Noddy24 wrote:
Punxsutawney Phil has seen his shadow....

Bastard.
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