[IMG]farmersalmanac.com/images/library/articles/foggyroad.jpg[/IMG]According to folklore, “For every fog in August, there will be a snowfall.”
More August folklore includes:
“If the first week in August is unusually warm, the coming winter will be snowy and long.”
“If a cold August follows a hot July, it foretells a winter hard and dry.”
While many of us in the 21st century may think weather lore is more whimsical that wise, it’s hard to discount
all of these “natural forecasters,” especially when they prove to be
true. But how could a saying that’s been passed down from sailor to
farmer to business executive really predict the weather?!
While not all weather lore is accurate, there are many sayings that prove to be on the mark time and time again. When you examine weather lore, you realize that the basics of this weather predicting method are careful observations that have been made over many years. Weather lore relies on the notion that there is a strong cause-and-effect relationship between nature and the weather.
A weather lore forecaster takes cues from nature at the time he or she needs to know what the weather is going to be like. It is more of a short-term forecast for a specific area, rather than a long-term forecast for broad areas.