Farmers Almanac Predicts Cold Winter Ahead

This is from the Associated Press wire report:

Households worried about the high cost of keeping warm this winter will draw little comfort from the Farmers’ Almanac, which predicts below-average temperatures for most of the U.S.

“Numb’s the word,” says the 192-year-old publication, which claims an accuracy rate of 80 to 85 percent for its forecasts that are prepared two years in advance.

The almanac’s 2009 edition, which goes on sale Tuesday, says at least two-thirds of the country can expect colder than average temperatures, with only the Far West and Southeast in line for near-normal readings.

“This is going to be catastrophic for millions of people,” said almanac editor Peter Geiger, noting that the frigid forecast combined with high prices for heating fuel is sure to compound problems households will face in keeping warm.

The almanac predicts above-normal snowfall for the Great Lakes and Midwest, especially during January and February, and above-normal precipitation for the Southwest in December and for the Southeast in January and February. The Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions should be getting an unusually wet or snowy February, the almanac said.

The forecasts, which are spelled out in three- and four-day periods for each region, are prepared by the almanac’s reclusive prognosticator Caleb Weatherbee, who uses a secret formula based on sunspots, the position of the planets and the tidal action of the moon.

Weatherbee’s outlook is borne out by e-mail comments that the almanac has received in recent days from readers who have spotted signs of nature that point to a rough winter, Geiger said. The signs range from an abundance of acorns already on the ground to the frequency of fog in August.

The almanac’s winter forecast is at odds with that of the National Weather Service, whose trends-based outlook calls for warmer than normal temperatures over much of the country, including Alaska, said Ed O’Lenic, chief of the operations branch at NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center.

While he wouldn’t comment specifically on the almanac’s ability to forecast the weather two years from now, O’Lenic said it’s generally impossible to come up with accurate forecasts more than a week in advance.

“Of course it’s possible to prepare a forecast with any lead time you like. Whether or nor that forecast has any accuracy or usable skill is another question,” he said.

Localvore Garden Tour Coming

We have been asked by the Upper Valley Localvore group to open up our gardens for “self-guided tours” on Sunday, August 30 between 3 and 5 pm.  Our garden will be one of several gardens in the Upper Valley Localvore Edible Gardens tour.  The news item is shown below.

Sunday August 30th
3:00 p.m.
45 East Wheelock Street
Hanover, NH
603-643-1503

As a finale to NH Eat Local Month, UV Localvores invite you to visit two vegetable gardens on East Wheelock Street in Hanover this Sunday, August 30th at 3:00 p.m. One garden demonstrates how to get a great veggie yield from a small south-facing front yard and the use of cold frames to extend the season. The other will fire your imagination as to making a garden child-friendly and fun. All ages welcome to join us outside rain or shine. Stay for light refreshments. All are welcome to do a self-guided tour of the Hanover Community Gardens on Reservoir Road (Hanover) after seeing the East Wheelock gardens.

Garden Spider and Beetles

Garden spider
Our friend Barbara sends the following news:

For the past few weeks we’ve been in the asparagus patch daily, picking Japanese beetles off the plants.  At first, there were hundreds, but of late just a few or none.

At one point, this wonderful spider appeared with her web in the tops of the plants.  She wanted to catch the numerous beetles;  I guess she finds them tasty.

First she spent time adding a vague white design down the center of the web, and a few days later pulled this material into the lovely zig zag pattern you see below her.    Maybe bugs find that attractive?

When she caught a beetle, she wrapped it completely in her silk like a neat package, and these were placed on the web for future dinner …. we saw as many as four of these bug packages attached to the web — but once she was done with the meals, the bug-packages were cast off.

In this photo (it took many tries to get one in focus), she is eating her last package…she huddles over the bug bundle, sticks her jaw into the package, manipulates the package with her elegant long legs, and neatly seems to pull out the insides of the bug.

Such simple entertainment.  We’ve spent hours watching her patient progress.

Now I know why EB White spun that wonderful children’s tale about Charlotte. Maybe it is time to re-read that story?   Doesn’t she give Wilbur advice about life, and other good things? It’s a good thing we didn’t spray anything on the plants to kill the bugs — look what we got instead!