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Daylight Saving Time ends on Sunday
 
Poor Will’s Almanack
By Bill Felker
 
But let the months go round, a few short months,
And all shall be restored. These naked shoots
Barren as lances, among which the wind
Makes wintry music, sighing as it goes,
Shall put their graceful foliage on again,
And more aspiring and with ampler spread
Shall boast new charms, and more than they have lost. – William Cowper

The Moon: The Pumpkin Moon wanes into its final quarter at 3:38 a.m. on Nov. 5, reaching lunar apogee, its position farthest from Earth, on the same day. Rising in the evening and setting in the afternoon, this moon passes overhead in the morning.

The Sun: Daylight Saving Time ends at 2 a.m. on Nov. 5 in 2023. Set clocks back one hour at 2 a.m.

The Planets: Moving into Virgo, Venus is the Morning Star, and it continues to rise after midnight, crossing the sky until dawn. Jupiter in Aries, travels the heavens through the night, setting in the west before dawn. On Nov. 3, Jupiter will be at Opposition, its closest position to Earth, and it will be at its brightest of the year.
 
The Stars: Late Autumn brings back Orion as an easy marker of sky time. By 11 p.m., it has emerged from the east, following a cluster of seven stars, the Pleiades and the red eye of Taurus, Aldebaran. A few hours before dawn, all those stars have moved to fill up the southern sky.

The Shooting Stars: The Taurid shower brings only a handful of meteors per hour on Nov. 4 and 5, and the crescent moon should not interfere with meteor watching. The Leonids (at the rate of about 15 per hour) fall near the constellation Leo after midnight on Nov. 17 and 18.

Weather Trends: Weather history suggests that the cold waves of Late Fall usually cross the Mississippi River on or about Nov. 6, 11, 16, 20, 24 and 28. Snow or rain often occurs prior to the passage of each major front.
If strong storms occur this month, weather patterns suggest that they will happen during the following periods: Nov. 2-5, 13-16 and 22-27. New moon on Nov. 13 will strengthen cold waves of the 11th and 16th. Lunar perigee on the 21st and full moon on the 27th will contribute to difficult travel conditions throughout the nation.

The Natural Calendar: Even before all the leaves come down, “Second Spring” is underway, regreening pastures, bottomlands and fencerows. Wood mint grows new stalks. Watercress revives. Waterleaf reappears. April’s sweet Cicely, May’s sweet rockets, ragwort, dock and poison hemlock, June’s cinquefoil and hollyhocks, July’s avens and caraway, September’s zigzag goldenrod and small-flowered asters send up fresh leaves. The grass continues to grow, glowing in the low sun. Newly planted winter wheat creates patches of emerald green in the countryside. Migrating flocks of birds, sometimes large enough to stretch across the sky, remind the commuter and trucker that ice and snow lie ahead. The urgent call of the geese, common at this time of year, evokes an autumnal restlessness.
Countdown to Early Winter: By the time you notice all of the following zeitgebers (a German word for time keeper or marker), Early Winter could well be here:
• Budding Christmas cacti
• The opening of climbing bittersweet
• Juncos at the bird feeder
• The fall of the last maple and the burning bush leaves
• A killing frost on your tomatoes
• Poinsettias in the supermarket and Christmas trees for sale everywhere
• Sparrow hawks on the high wires, scouting the fields for prey
Peak Activity Times for Creatures
The following guide to lunar position shows when the moon is above (Best times) or below (Second-best times) the country, and, therefore, the period during which livestock, people, fish and game are typically the most active and the hungriest.

Date              Best            Second-Best
Nov. 1-6:     Mornings            Evenings
Nov. 7-15:  Afternoons   Midnight to Dawn
Nov. 16-22: Evenings            Mornings
Nov. 23-29:Midnight to Dawn   Afternoons
Nov. 30:     Mornings           Evenings

In the Field and Garden: Mulch all perennials and new transplants after watering.  Get out your rose collars and fill them with dirt. Mulch root crops to keep them from turning to mush when the ground around them freezes solid. Heaping leaves around kale and collards can often keep these hardy vegetables alive through numerous heavy frosts – sometimes even through the whole winter. Begin major watering of shrubs and trees through mid-November in order to provide plantings full moisture for the winter months. As pasture growth slows in cooler weather, consider feeding hay to your livestock. Harvest honey from your hives (leaving plenty for the bees).
As the days shorten, the breeding cycle of sheep and goats dictates a new routine on many farms. As the leaves turn, rutting begins for local deer. And even human conceptions are thought to increase as the weather cools.

Mind and Body: Seasonal affective disorders may be increasing in many people due to the change in sunset time that accompanies the end of Daylight Saving Time. Even though you are getting up when it is lighter outside, the sudden end to the day near suppertime is often upsetting. And cloud cover reaches winter levels during the first half of November, compounding the effects of the shortening day and the change in time.

Almanack Literature
Brownie, the Lap Lamb
By John Hamstreet, Grand Ronde, Ore.
We had a lamb named Brownie that her mother refused, so Brownie ended up in the house. I was recovering from surgery and not allowed to go to the barn. Since I was suffering from lamb withdrawal, I would hold her in my lap while I watched TV. She would lie there quietly for hours, practically from feeding to feeding, if I continued to sit that long.
Well, it turned out that she was one of the lambs that we took to the fair, and at the fair the people love to pet our animals and the animals love the attention. One day I got Brownie out of the pen to just have out for people to pet.
As I sat there holding her on a lead with people fussing over her, I could see her mind starting to work. This was all starting to seem very familiar to her. I thought to myself: What would happen if I picked her up? She weighed about 70 pounds by this time. So, I reached over and picked her up and put her in my lap. Immediately she settled right down and lay there without moving for an hour while people came by and petted her, fed her pretzels, and kids had their pictures taken.
After an hour my lap gave out and I put her back in the pen. The next day I repeated the process and the same thing happened, only this time it was for more than an hour. I think I can say we were the highlight of the sheep barn.
Next year, she will go back to the fair as a yearling, and I am wondering if she will still remember and will my lap be strong enough to hold her.

ANSWERS TO LAST WEEK’S SCKRAMBLER
PHTHIDGNO DIPHTHONG
GNODGDIN DINGDONG
EHDATSORGN HEADSTRONG
LNOGLFEI LIFELONG
OONGLB OBLONG
PPGGNNOI             PINGPONG
NEEOVNSG EVENSONG
NOGG GONG
RPNOG PRONG
GNOS SONG

THIS WEEK’S RHYMING SCKRAMBLER
OBDE    
OCED
UOANLD  
DREOE
ODEPLMI
DEMOOMC
EODTRS
EDNO  
ISPEDOE
DOALREVO
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. Yes, you are a genius.
Copyright 2023 – W. L. Felker 
10/30/2023