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[personal profile] conuly
I am so so sooo sick of hearing "the groundhog saw his shadow! It's going to be a long winter!", and NOT just because it's an idiotic superstition. Let's examine this superstition.

The groundhog sees his shadow: six more weeks of winter... In 42 days, it will be about March 16th. A few days after that is the vernal equinox.

The groundhog doesn't see his shadow: six more weeks till spring... In 42 days, it will STILL be about March 16th. Six weeks doesn't change depending on shadowspotting. And a few days after that, it will STILL be the vernal equinox.

IT'S A SCAM! STOP LISTENING TO THAT CRAP!


I also have a question: Why did we ever start calling "midwinter" and "midsummer" the start of winter and summer? I think the older system made more sense. The longest day of winter/summer should, logically, occur in the middle, with a brief period of "getting darker" and "getting lighter" surrounding the solstice. That is, I believe, the way it used to be, with what we now call the midpoints (if we think about them at all) being the start of the seasons.

Date: 2004-02-03 09:11 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nightsea.livejournal.com
Why did we ever start calling "midwinter" and "midsummer" the start of winter and summer?

::blinks:: I had no idea that people were doing that. It makes absolutely no sense to call them that; in my head, midwinter and midsummer have always been the equinox and solstice respectively.

I guess we shouldn't really be surprised. Sometimes I think that the more we know, the less we really understand.

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