The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

When Patrick, William and Leo align

- CINDY DAY weathermai­l@weatherbyd­ay.ca Cindydaywe­ather Cindy Day is chief meteorolog­ist for Saltwire Network.

March — the Ides, St. Patrick's Day, the storms, the lion, and the lamb.

Most of us have a love/hate relationsh­ip with the third month of the year. I will leave the topics of saints and Shakespear­e to someone more qualified; I'll deal with the weather.

Our Atlantic Canadian weather is always quite changeable regardless of the season, but as my friend, CTV Atlantic senior anchor Steve Murphy says, "March can break your heart."

To forecast — or perhaps just better deal with the bitter March blows — many of us turn to an old and very famous bit of folklore.

After "Red sky at night," without a doubt, "In like a lion, out like a lamb" is the most-recited weather proverb. Grandma loved it. She looked forward to the first day of March for weeks. We know how this one goes: if the weather is stormy on March 1, the month should go out on a quiet note and vice versa.

Most weather lore is based on careful observatio­n of nature's cycles and animal behaviour. There were no lions on the farm, but there was a famous lion high above the old gray barn: Leo the Lion. According to astronomer­s, the expression, "In like a lion, out like a lamb," may have originated from ancient observatio­ns of the stars. In the springtime, two of the constellat­ions visible just after the sun goes down are Leo the Lion and Aries the ram, or lamb.

Leo rises in the east at the same time that Aries sets in the west. While this happens throughout the year at varying times, it's most visible at night in early March. If the sky was clear on March 1st and Leo was spotted overhead, the lion ushered in the month; it would end on a quiet note. Conversely, if clouds covered the night sky on the first of March, the lion would roar at the end of the month - and the weather would be stormy.

That's just the opposite of what Grandma believed; a clear start to the month was more lamblike.

So, which is it? Based on the original understand­ing of the expression that takes the weather into account, it's more right than wrong. Over the past 20 years, the popular weather saying was correct 14 times.

The proverb might not be well understood or even accurate, but it does, somehow, manage to bring some hope after a long winter.

Speaking of which, it's over! That's right, meteorolog­ical winter ended Sunday, Feb. 28. The meteorolog­ical seasons were created because traditiona­l seasons vary in length from 89 to 93 days, making it difficult for experts to compare statistics from one year to another.

Meteorolog­ical spring started March 1 and wraps up on May 31.

Happy Spring!

 ??  ?? I came across this adorable photo in my file titled, “Too cute to delete.” The picture was submitted a couple of years ago by Leah Noye of Kensington, P.E.I.
I came across this adorable photo in my file titled, “Too cute to delete.” The picture was submitted a couple of years ago by Leah Noye of Kensington, P.E.I.

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