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Meteors will fill the night sky in August
 

By Bill Felker

 Love all Creation. Love every leaf, and every ray of light. Love the plants. Love the animals. If you love everything, you will perceive the Divine Mystery in all things. Once you perceive it, you will comprehend it better every day. And you will come at last to love the whole world with an all-embracing love. – Fydor Dostoyevsky, The Brothers Karamazov

 

The Moon and Stars

The First Week of Late Summer

The Fledgling Moon wanes until it becomes the new Soaring Swallow Moon at 12:55 p.m. on July 28. Rising in the morning and setting in the evening, this moon travels overhead in the afternoon, encouraging creatures to be more active at that time, especially as the July 28 and Aug. 4 weather systems approach. Thee moon enters its second quarter at 6:07 a.m. on Aug. 5.

An hour or two before sunrise, walk out and look to the east. Orion will be rising in the same position he will be in the night of Christmas Eve. The Pleiades and Taurus will be almost overhead. Cygnus, the summer swan of August evenings, will be setting in the northwest.

The Southern Delta Aquarid meteors and the Perseid meteors brighten the east after midnight during the first half of August. The first week of the month provides the darkest sky for shooting star observation.

 

Weather Trends

After the July 28 cool front moves east, the Dog Days usually return for August, weakened only a little by the arrival of the Aug. 4 high-pressure system. Although the daily possibility of highs in the 80s and 90s remains near July levels, cool days do occur 15 to 25 percent of the years, and afternoons only in the 60s are recorded in the northern tier of states.

 

Zeitgebers: Events in Nature that Tell the Time of Year

By the end of the month, ragweed blooms, along with jumpseed and the great blue lobelia and boneset. Osage fruits, full size, drop to the ground. Lizard’s tail and wood nettle go to seed along the riverbanks.

Wild grapes ripen and geese become restless. The first Judas maple starts to turn orange, and late-summer fogs appear at dawn. Fireflies disappear from the summer evenings, honeysuckle berries ripen and blackberries are ready to pick for wine and pie.

When green acorns fall to the sweet rocket growing back for next year’s flowers, then black walnut trees will have lost about a third of their leaves and violet Joe Pye weed flowers become gray like the thistledown.

Now, the yellowing locust and buckeye leaves, and the brown garlic mustard give a sense of fall to the woods. Shiny spicebush, boxwood, greenbrier and poison ivy berries have formed.

Honewort, wood nettle, mallow and tall meadow rue go to seed. Early cottonwoods are weathering. Patches of yellow appear on the weaker ash trees. Pods of the touch-me-not burst at the slightest movement. Dogbane pods swing in the wind.

Now migration time intensifies for birds. The earliest blue-winged teal, meadowlarks, wood ducks, Baltimore orioles and purple martins start to disappear south.

 

In the Field and Garden

Peaches, processing tomatoes and peppers are almost all picked, and the fruit of the bittersweet ripens orange.

When hickory nuts and black walnuts drop into the undergrowth, then dig your potatoes and make corrective lime and fertilizer applications for August and September seeding.

Consider planting tomatoes for autumn and winter greenhouse fruit. As conditions permit, seed fall pastures and late summer greens, beans and peas. Put out cabbage, kale and collard sets. Prepare soil for autumn wheat planting.

Autumn turnip planting often begins this week, guided by the first purple blossoms of tall ironweed and the peak of melon harvest time.

Summer apple and blueberry seasons wind down. Farmers prepare for August seeding of alfalfa, smooth brome grass, orchard grass, tall fescue, red clover and timothy.

Consider marketing your lamb and chevon for cookouts celebrating Jamaican Independence Day (Aug. 7) and Ecuadorian Independence Day (Aug. 10).

 

Mind and Body

The S.A.D. Stress Index (which measures the forces thought to be associated with Seasonal Affective Disorder on a scale from 1 to 100) remains in the mild 20s and 30s this week of the year. However, ragweed season has opened throughout the South, and it is due to begin in the Lower Midwest this week. Recent studies have shown that academic test scores fall as pollen counts rise. Consider postponing college entrance examinations as well as federal or state service exams until late autumn or early winter.

 

Almanack Classics

“A little bird told me….”

Another True Story by Susan Perkins, Hardtimes Farm, Kentucky

While I was hanging clothes on the line, a black-capped chickadee flew down and landed just a few feet from where I was working. It jumped up and down, twittered and carried on like I was doing something wrong. I had never had a wild bird come this close before, so I knew a baby bird must be close to where I was working.

I started looking for the baby. Sure enough, a baby had fledged from the nest and ended up on the ground. But the baby was nowhere near where I was working. Something else was wrong.

I looked around and noticed a piece of tin lying up under some scrub brush. I knew there had to be a snake hiding there and it was after the baby chickadee. It may have already got some of the fledging babies, as I only saw one.

I picked up the tin and jumped back. Just as I suspected, there was a four-foot black snake under the tin. One of my dogs jumped in and made quick work of him.

I put the baby bird up in a tree and mom and dad continued feeding it till it finally flew away. This has never happened again.

Guess there’s something to the saying, “A little bird told me so.”

***

Send your memory stories to Poor Will, P.O. Box 431, Yellow Springs, OH 45387. Four dollars will be paid to any author whose story appears in this column.

***

 

 

ANSWERS TO LAST WEEK’S 

SCKRAMBLER

In order to estimate your SCKRAMBLER IQ, award yourself 15 points for each word unscrambled, adding a 50-point bonus for getting all of them correct. If you find a typo, add another 15 points to your IQ.

NAIRB BRAIN

INAPS SPAIN

EANW WANE

INAV VAIN

NIEV VEIN

ENVA VANE

INARD DRAIN

NIRAG GRAIN

ANITNCO         CONTAIN

PAENGCHMA   CHAMPAGNE

 

THIS WEEK’S RHYMING SCKRAMBLER

KASC

KASHC

KCMSA

CTSKA

CATC

KACHW

ICADARC

ACIOMNDE

CAINAMOTPELK

JACKKCALB

Copyright 2022 – W. L. Felker


8/1/2022