Dayton Daily News

This week brings Judas Maple Time to the Miami Valley

- Bill Felker Poor Will’s Clark County Almanac Follow the days of August with Bill Felker’s book,“A Daybook for August in Yellow Springs, Ohio” that contains all of his daily almanack notes for that month and can be used throughout the Miami Valley. Order

And August comes, when fields are sere and brown,

When stubble takes the place of ruffling corn;

When the sweet grass is like a prisoner shorn;

The air is full of drifting thistledow­n,

Grey pointed sprites, that on the breezes ride.

— V. Sackville-West The Moon: The Blackberry Jam moon, new on August 11, waxes all week, entering its first quarter at 2:48 a.m. on August 18. Rising in the afternoon and setting at night, this Moon passes overhead (its strongest position) in the evening.

The Sun: This month, the Sun moves halfway between summer solstice and autumn equinox, entering Virgo and reaching Cross-Quarter Day on August 23.

The Planets: All four major planets are still visible after dark. Mars and Saturn travel along the southern horizon after sundown. Venus is the brightest evening star due west, followed by Jupiter in the southwest.

The Stars: In the late night sky, the Summer Triangle shifts into the west, following June’s Corona Borealis and Hercules. Delphinus, the Dolphin, is due south. After midnight, winter’s Pleiades rise up over the northeaste­rn tree line.

The Shooting Stars: After the Perseid Meteors pass through on the 12th, no other major meteor shower occurs in August.

Weather Trends: Last week, chances for 90s were steady about 40 percent. Suddenly, those chances are reduced by half, and August 17 is the last day of the year on which a high of 100 degrees is still reasonable to expect. This shift to autumn often goes unnoticed, since highs in the 80s continue to dominate the afternoons. Brisk highs in the 60s, however, occur 5 percent of the days on record. The weather in the third week of August is relatively stable, bringing highs in the 90s on 20 percent of the afternoons, milder 80s 55 percent of the time, and cool 70s the remaining 25 percent. The 19th of the month, however, breaks from the pattern many years, and it has the highest frequency of 90s (35 percent chance) of any other day in the week. Chances for rain increase from 20 percent at the beginning of the period to 30 percent by August 21, then drop abruptly to just 10 percent on the 22nd.

The Natural Calendar: The third week of August brings Judas Maple Time to the Miami Valley. Complement­ing that maple season, Sumac, Poison Ivy and Virginia Creeper Reddening Seasons grow along the fencerows. In the woodlots, Wild Plum Season compounds the sweetness of Elderberry Season. Deep in the woods, Puffball Mushroom Season commences as the WhipPoor-Will, Cedar Waxwing and Catbird Migration Seasons open. Goldenrod Season presages September as Ironweed Season and Wingstem Season continue to brighten the fields, and the height of Tall Bellflower Season softens the mood of the decaying undergrowt­h with stalks of powder blue.

Rows of lanky great mulleins, black and gone to seed, line the bike paths and roadways. Pokeweed plants are the size of small trees, with purple stalks and berries. The panicled dogwood shows pale fruit, its leaves fading pink. Trefoils decay, and staghorns darken brown above their red or yellow leaves.

But goldenrod brightens the fields, and the height of Tall Bellflower Season softens the mood of the decaying forest undergrowt­h with blossoms of powder blue. Beneath them, big, white puffball mushrooms emerge like moons among spring’s rotting stems and leaves.

Fish, Insects, Livestock and Birds: In August, the last spicebush swallowtai­ls visit the garden. Tiger swallowtai­ls and giant swallowtai­ls often remain into September. Grackle flocking increases while cardinal song becomes fainter. Murmuratio­ns of starlings become more common, and long flocks of blackbirds follow the harvest. Scout woodlots for deer as acorns ripen and fall. Fish are more likely to bite in the late afternoon as the Moon passes overhead and the barometer is dropping in advance of the August 17 and 21 cold fronts.

In the Field and Garden: Puffball mushroom hunting season begins if the nights are cool and wet enough. The best of hickory nutting season begins. Plum and pear picking is underway, and long flocks of blackbirds head north to clean up after harvest of field crops. If you plant your spinach now, it should overwinter and provide an early spring crop. Wild plums are ready for jelly. Garlic planting begins along the Canadian border. In the East and Midwest, wait until October or November. Scout fields for late-season pests, for larval feeding scars, a sign of rootworm damage, second brood corn borer, second generation of bean leaf beetles and rootworm beetles.

Marketing Notes: The Muslim feast of Eid AlAdha: (Festival of Sacrifice) takes place on August 21 – 25. Lambs and kids in the range of 55 to 80 pounds are favored for this market. Make plans for Labor Day sales at farmers’ markets and your roadside stand.

The Almanack Horoscope: Nostalgia often accompanie­s the steady transforma­tion of the landscape. Memories proliferat­e, the mind traveling back through the concentric circles of the years, sorting and ruminating. And the day’s length, which shortened only two hours between solstice and today, suddenly collapses, shedding an entire additional hour between now and September’s equinox, creating a sudden surge of energy in some people, a sudden sadness in others.

Journal

The rate of change accelerate­s, as does the shift in my mood. So may days I experience a vague disquiet and a lack of focus. Sometimes I blame it on the season, and I wonder to what extent I am susceptibl­e to the new, deeper colors of the foliage, to the trickle of leaves into the undergrowt­h, to the aging of the garden zinnias, to the ripening of the tomatoes, to the end of lilies, to the multiplica­tion of butterflie­s? I believe I am protected by my social context, by my work and family concerns, but those things insulate me less from the environmen­t and the approachin­g autumn than from being honest with myself. Well, all this tangle of self-analysis itself is a sign of fall! I can’t settle the restlessne­ss, and so I daydream and mark time, sluggish and disoriente­d in the last Dog Days.

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