Facts, Folklore, and Everything You Need to Know About the Fall Equinox
Fall Flowers and Foliage
Fall Vegetable Gardening
Fall Garden Cleanup
Garden Soil Preparation
Fall Nature
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The Jalali calendar is a solar calendar, Because months were computed based on precise times of solar transit between zodiacal regions, seasonal drift never exceeded one day, and also there was no need for a leap year in the Jalali calendar. However, this calendar was very difficult to compute; it required full ephemeris computations and actual observations to determine the apparent movement of the Sun. Some claim that simplifications introduced in the intervening years may have introduced a system with eight leap days in every cycle of 33 years. (Different rules, such as the 2820-year cycle, have also been accredited to Khayyam). However, the original Jalali calendar based on observations (or predictions) of solar transit would not have needed either leap years or seasonal adjustments.
In the next few days, we will enter from Summer into a season that Americans commonly call "Fall," but also called "Autumn." Why there are two words for the same season, while other seasons are known by one name? And what is the history behind both of these words?
That is a very interesting question! Autumn is considered the more formal name and the older word from the Latin word 鈥渁utumnus.鈥
鈥淔all鈥 is really more of an American word, interestingly enough, and not used universally in the same way in Britsh English. Perhaps it’s because the Colonial New England region experiences the 鈥渇all of the leaves,鈥 which is less common in England.
As autumn can get lumped into the autumn harvest time (which can have a broad range), fall is really more about that season in which this fall of the leaves takes place.
I can just imagine the fruit trees so heavily laden. Very nicely written article - an apt description of autumn for sure. Thank you.
Here, in Southern Alberta (Lethbridge County), autumn is approaching.....The fields of grain have been clipped short leaving a yellow-brown stubble like a man's new beard. The upright green lush plants have taken on a droopy look.....which means the sugar beets are waiting for the harvest. The trees, oak, still stand proud and uplifted, still reaching towards the sky but their green glossy heads are slowly turning orangey-gold as an old man that has started to turn grayish white. The grasses in the lawns are perking up now that a rain storm or two has past through the area. Apples, bowing down on slender branches, red and gold striped, are calling out to the gardener, "Come! Help me with my load!" The dark red plums are calling too, "We did this for you! Come pick and make a platz, a pie, anything......the burden is so great!" The Pears cry out, " Not yet! We need more time....we are green, not sweet....we need some frost to purify!" Finally, the maple trees say, "Ha! We can carry the colours through, because we are green, gold and red...... we are colours of autumn!" And, so, once again the garden, the fields, the orchard, and the lawns sing together while robins, sparrows, chickadee flit and fly southward. C.B.
Here in central Maryland, it is still very humid and summery. As an October baby, autumn is my favorite season!
Mosquitoes will soon stop chasing me around the garden. We can enjoy the colorful leaves, pumpkins, apples and warm drinks. Time for flannels, corduroy and sweaters pretty soon.
Sometimes I really envy some animals ability to hibernate. Wish I could have went to sleep around May and woke up around October, as that is how long summer seems to last in Texas. Still, the changes in daylight are becoming more apparent and the end of humid 95+ F days are in sight.
Your pictures are beautiful. May I use some of your pictures for illustration in my book on forest ecology. I have not determined which ones I will use. I will write the proper citation regarding the source of the pictures. This book is for education purposes, not for commercial ones. Thank you very much. Sincerely, Wiryono.
I was able to stand two eggs this morning (3:43am)
Which makes 20 years that I have been standing eggs on the equinox
Bogus science and mythology in celebration of the season!
Autumn like the other seasons, I feel, reach their apex on the day that most people feel they start. Its a transitional thing where one gradually melds into the next. Its not so distinctive. There needs to be a rethink about this .