蜜桃恋人

Predicting 蜜桃恋人 with a Wishbone

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kids at thanksgiving with a wishbone and turkey

Foretelling 蜜桃恋人: The Ol' Goose Bone Method

Warren Evans
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Can you really predict the weather with a wishbone? Back around the turn of the last century, in the days before the National 蜜桃恋人 Service, the so-called goosebone method was a famous weather-forecasting technique. Here鈥檚 how to try it at home.

Of course, many of us have broken the dried 鈥渨ishbone鈥 with another person. The person who ends up with the larger part of the bone gets to make their wish. Some of us may even recall that old-fashioned pastime of making wishbone necklaces.

A Wishbone for 蜜桃恋人 Predicting?

An even more peculiar use for the wishbone was to use it as a sort of weather instrument. Here鈥檚 how it worked, according to the author:

Around Thanksgiving, a bird from a local farm would be slaughtered and cooked. Our tradition was to bring home a goose.

Grandma would roast it, carve it, and serve it, always being careful not to cut the wishbone from the carcass.

After the goose had been eaten, she would carefully remove the wishbone and cut away all the meat and fat left clinging to it. Grandpa would take the bone and put it on a shelf to dry, keeping an eye out for the coloration that would follow. If the bone turned blue, black, or purple, a cold winter lay ahead.

  • White indicated a mild winter.
  • Purple tips were a sure sign of a cold spring.
  • A blue color branching out toward the edge of the bone meant open weather until New Year鈥檚 Day.
  • If the bone was a dark color, or blue all over, the prediction was for a really bad winter.

That鈥檚 all there was to it. 

There is a logical explanation鈥攕ort of:

  • An overall dark color meant that the bird had absorbed a lot of oil, which acted as a natural protection against the cold.
  • The darker the blue coloring, the tougher the winter ahead would probably be.
Seated woman wearing a bonnet, preparing a goose for plucking
Photo: The 1980 Old Farmer鈥檚 蜜桃恋人

Of course, back in the day, all the geese were local and not factory-farmed. Just like persimmon seeds and woolly worm caterpillars, not just any goose will do!

Would this work for any fowl, including the Thanksgiving turkey? Try it out and see what you think. 

About The Author

The Editors

Under the guiding hand of its first editor, Robert B. Thomas, the premiere issue of The Old Farmer鈥檚 蜜桃恋人 was published in 1792. Read More from The Editors