Search for PodcastsRegister | Sign In
 

 

Thoughts on Turkeys and This Winter's Weather Episode | Jud's New England Journal

PodcastDirectory / Society and Culture / Blogs
PodcastDirectory / Regions / NA / USA



Jud's New England Journal

Monthly audio commentary on travel and life in New England from Jud Hale, Editor in Chief of YANKEE Magazine.

Primary Format:
Blogs

Also Listed as:

User Tags:

RSS Feed
Website

Visit Methings.com for the most recent listings of:

Thoughts on Turkeys and This Winter's Weather


Thoughts on Turkeys and This Winter's Weather

Play Now -->

DATE : Thu, 01 Feb 2007 05:00:00 +0100
Entered in Database : 2007-02-01 04:00:00
length : 5532956
Link to the Show / Show Notes

Unbelievable as it may seem, there may be a link between the two...

There's been a whole lot of talk about the weather lately. It's been weird all across the country, but particularly here in New England. And many of the old reliable "signs" have been way off -- at least so far.

I personally had a hint of said confusing weather this past Thanksgiving Day, when I examined, as I always do each year, the breastbone of our cooked turkey. You know the drill, I'm sure -- if the breastbone is light in color, the coming winter will be mild. If it's blue or purple, it'll be snowy and bitter cold. (Incidentally, the turkey must not have been previously frozen.) Well, at first glance, our turkey breastbone looked to be pretty light in color. Fine, I thought. We'll have a mild winter, and certainly December and January proved to be just that.

But you know, on closer examination, I discovered that one end of the breastbone was dark purple. I'd never seen a two-tone breastbone before, but that's what it appeared to be. Sorta confusing.

Well, we've all been fooled by weather signs before. It's not that nature doesn't know what she has in store for us, but rather our interpretation of her signs can be off. And then some of the so-called "sayings" are ridiculous. Like why would a warm Christmas (like this year) mean a cold Easter on April 8? If a month comes in good, why should it go out bad? Surely, if an elder person makes it through the winter, it doesn't necessarily mean he/she will make it through the summer. And why should squealing pigs signal a coming blizzard? (Well, maybe that one has some validity.)

I used to think that the most ridiculous weather saying was, "As many days old as is the moon at the first snow, there will be that many snows before crop-planting time again." To me, the age of the moon during the season's first snowfall would be irrelevant.

Sometime ago, I was attempting to explain this in a little talk I was giving to a women's club in Brattleboro, Vermont, a week after a snowstorm had hit New England unusually early that year. It was, of course, the season's first snowstorm and it so happened that it occurred when the moon was two days old. A perfect example, I thought, of how numerological weather sayings simply do not work.

"So you can see," I said, "that if the old moon-age theory were to be applied to this coming winter, the storm we had last week would be the second-to-last major snowstorm we'll have throughout the entire winter season coming up."

General laughter all around. How silly. But guess what? It was.

As I reflect back on that today, I'm beginning to think about that part of last Thanksgiving's turkey breastbone that was dark purple. There's lots of winter ahead and, well, do you suppose turkeys aren't really all that dumb?


Play in your Iphone

Roku + Netflix = Instant Movies on your TV


Add a Podcast
Remove a Podcast
Search for Podcasts
Podcast Directory
by Country
by Language
by Buzz
by Popularity
by Category
by Tags
by Region
by City
on a Google Map