Montana Moments

Mabon - Autumnal Equinox 2012
Posted by: AutumnWinters, 7:19 PM GMT on September 22, 2012 +0
AUTUMN 2012

"A whiff of woodsmoke on the wind,
The first chill in the air,
The woods edged in gold...
Without looking at the calendar
We know we've turned the page...

It is
September!
...Come Autumn,
....Come!"
-unknown


*** *** *** *** *** *** ***

Its finallllllly here....the First Day of Autumn, Mabon!
My favourite day, well, after Halloween, that is... (although one might well consider Halloween more of a favourite night).


Autumn broke this morning with a vivid sunrise over the mountains... tinged a purplish-pink due to another day of wildfire smoke hanging in the air.
... a beautiful sight, nonetheless!

And a gorgeous start to a very lovely season!

A very Happy Autumn to all.

Updated: 7:20 PM GMT on September 22, 2012   Permalink | A A A
Come, Autumn, Come!
Posted by: AutumnWinters, 6:38 PM GMT on September 21, 2012 +0
Fall, Leaves, Fall

By Emily Jane Brönte


Fall, leaves, fall;
die, flowers, away;
Lengthen night and shorten day;

Every leaf speaks bliss to me
Fluttering from the autumn tree.

I shall smile when wreaths of snow
Blossom where the rose should grow;
I shall sing when night’s decay
Ushers in a drearier day.

*** *** *** *** ***

Hooray!!! Today is the last day of Summer... At long last!

For those of us who prefer the "dark half of the year"... Autumn was a long time coming.
This summer began cool and rainy, but then the sun came-out.... and stayed.

After two years of cooler-then-average summers, this long, hot one was a hard one to take.


Tomorrow, Saturday, 22 September 2012n heralds in the Autumnal Equinox at 08:49 A.M. (MDT)
The earliest arrival since 1896.


"Equinox" is derived from the Latin words for "equal night.” Around the time of the autumnal and vernal (spring) equinoxes, there are nearly-equal days of daylight and darkness.


For NW Montana (all times MDT)--
Sunrise:07:24. Sunset:19:34. Length of daylight: 12hrs 10mins

You’ll notice that there aren’t exactly 12 hours of light and dark. Why not?

[On the equinoxes, the very center of the Sun sets just 12 hours after it rises. But the day begins when the upper edge of the Sun reaches the horizon (which happens a bit before the center rises), and it doesn't end until the entire Sun has set.

Not only that, but the Sun is actually visible when it is below the horizon, as Earth’s atmosphere refracts the Sun’s rays and bends them in an arc over the horizon.

According to our former astronomer, George Greenstein, “If the Sun were to shrink to a starlike point and we lived in a world without air, the spring and fall equinoxes would truly have ‘equal nights.’” -The Old Farmers Almanac ]


*** *** *** *** ***

"Smoke hangs like haze over harvested fields,
The gold of stubble, the brown of turned earth
And you walk under the red light of fall
The scent of fallen apples, the dust of threshed grain
The sharp, gentle chill of fall.
Here as we move into the shadows of autumn
The night that brings the morning of spring
Come to us, Lord of Harvest
Teach us to be thankful for the gifts you bring us ..."
-  Autumn Equinox Ritual


Wishing everyone----
MERRY AUTUMN & HAPPY FALL!



"Autumn Leaves" by Charles Dickens animated recitation--

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Updated: 7:25 PM GMT on September 21, 2012   Permalink | A A A
Hazy Days-Dazzling Hues
Posted by: AutumnWinters, 7:10 PM GMT on September 17, 2012 +0
Although its mid-September in the Northern Rockies of NW Montana, we haven't experienced our usual early Fall cool-down. Instead the past few weeks have been dominated by unseasonal inland high pressure.
Our chilly nights, followed by unusually warm days have one benefit... We're experiencing early, very bright autumnal colour in our trees and shrubs.

My "Autumn Blaze" Maple began turning the third week of August, as have my "Burning Bushes".

Many trees in the area peaked a week ago, and now stand bare-branched, their leaves in a crumpled heap beneath them.
Other trees are slowly dropping their leaves... And as I drive down curving, country lanes, the fallen leaves swirl up in a wild dance, then gently come to a rest again.

On the downside, we're being inundated by a continual in-flow of smoke from nearby wildfires.
The smokey haze hangs in the mountains, and down to the valley floors. Some days, the smoke is so thick, it literally obscures the sun.

While the smoke is unpleasant, making breathing difficult for some, it's presence in the evenings have made for gorgeous sunsets with intensely saturated colours.

The forecast calls for another very warm, smoke-filled week. Beyond the weekend, I've read that models diverge greatly.
I can only hope that more seasonable weather will follow.

Until then, we'll continue to enjoy the sun-lit, dazzling, autumnal-jewels dangling from our trees. (09.17.2012) ¤¤¤

*** *** ***

"There are flowers enough in the summertime,
More flowers than I can remember—
But none with the purple, gold, and red
That dyes the flowers of September!"

–Mary Howitt (1799-1888)


"The morrow was a bright September morn,... There was nameless splendor everywhere-- That wild exhilaration in the air!"
-Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
 
 
Updated: 9:22 PM GMT on September 17, 2012   Permalink | A A A
About AutumnWinters
Montanan who loves phenology & Wx, espescially the Autumn and Winter seasons. NWS SkyWarn Weather Spotter. Writer-Artist-Photographer. @CC_WxWitch

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