I Was Wondering
What's the difference between Meteorological Winter and Astronomical Winter?
These icy trees didn't wait for astronomical winter. |
After a little reading, I figured out that it's easy to explain meteorological winter. It's the coldest three months of the year--December, January, and February. However, astronomical winter is a little more complicated. The beginning of astronomical winter has to do with the with the tilt of the earth's axis and the earth's orbit around the sun. It is best explained by pictures or a simple video that you can see here, but basically it is when sun strikes the earth at a minimum angle. This is also known as Winter Solstice and this year will be on December 21. Astronomical winter continues until the Spring Equinox which will be March 20, 2014.
So now I know.
(Obviously, this discussion is for the Northern Hemisphere. I'm a little jealous of those of you who are starting summer right now Down Under.)
A Second Look
Here are some things I saw this week during a Second Look.
Even though we have had plenty of days in the 20's, we have a few pansies still blooming. |
However, many of the pansies look like this. Something has made a snack out of them. |
Maybe it was these deer that enjoyed the pansies. |
I think the groundhogs have begun their winter hibernation because I haven't seen any activity around this hole recently. |
The leaves are all gone from the trees which makes it easier to see the birds in them. See the cardinal? |
That deer has its eye on you. :-)
ReplyDeleteThe deer actually does have its eyes on me. When they notice us watching from the window or outside, at least one of the alerts and keeps an eye on us the whole time while the others continue what they're doing. If we get too close, there's a signal and they all run away.
DeleteI didn't realize there was a difference, either! I've actually never heard the term Meteorological Winter. Learn something new everyday!
ReplyDeleteI heard meteorological winter for the first time recently also. I do learn something new everyday, or least I try to.
DeleteI never heard of those two different winters either...thank for enlightening us!
DeleteI'm glad to know that I wasn't the only one who didn't know that there were two different winters.
DeleteMy question this week is when did we start naming the winter storms? I noticed yesterday the storm moving through the US was named. Struck me as odd.
ReplyDeleteI can't believe you still have pansies in bloom.Our flowers have been long gone. The minute the temperatures started to fall the deer came closer to the building and munched down all the hosta. I had to laugh and only wondered where they dropped the pieces that will give me new plants next year. I planted 2 plants, thanks to the deer we have seven growing through the seating area we call the Little Cove It's nice of them to do the gardening for me. :-)
You know, I thought I heard a winter storm name mentioned the other day. I don't know when that started. The squirrels do most of our planting here. The deer do mostly just eating.
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