A unique a study of how farmers and other country people forecast the weather, with many period engravings. With the '1' in a number line. A pristine copy, clean and unmarked.
Picked up on a whim when searching for another book on a secondhand website. This very short book details various old country sayings and beliefs about the weather. Although the sayings are charming, and the book has lovely woodblocks throughout, the knowledge seems unfortunately mostly useless. The only thing I am going to check out this year is the belief that the singing of green woodpeckers signifies rain coming.
So, a fun book with snips of Page's humor ("Flaming Junes has nothing to do with crematoriums", if you see a rainbow arc below you you are at Victoria Falls, beware of watching ducks instead of paying attention to your driving) and if you enjoyed that, check out his tweets, as I did. You may not care about his politics, but you will find a sensible conservationist. The other main reason to read this book are the illustrations by naturalist Thomas Bewick, who died in 1828 and has two birds named for him. The country ways described here may not hold true now that we have global changes in our climate, but the important takeaway is that they arose from observation. If you care about conservation, spend some time in a rural area, and observe what's around you.
I was given a copy of this book by a friend in the 1980s, treasured it, but moved house too many times and it ended up on someone else's bookshelves. I managed to buy a second-hand copy, and am really glad that I did. It is a delightful small, modest book, which is easy to read and explores the folklore behind old-fashioned weather forecasting. The woodcut illustrations are beautiful, and enhance the content. The value of this book for me, in 2020, is its simple un-technical innocence, evoking the colloquialisms of the 1970s. Whether the weather can still be predicted through these methods, with global warming and urban cityscapes, is a pertinent question.
Call it as a small handy book of weather lore. It can be called as the farmer's way of weather forecasting. It's an interesting book which teaches us the old way of weather forecasting using the knowledge of Natural History. Lovable.
For those days when you stay tucked up by the fire with a cocoa or perhaps even when resting in a sunny spot on your 10-mile hike, this is the book to read.
It's short, so light, and written in a lovely simple style, which makes it incredibly easy to read so one can relax and enjoy to weather lore.
A wonderful and varied collection made even better by the fact that the author is a farmer and therefore has much experience of observing and verifying the reliability of such beliefs.
I would have liked the book to expand and explain scientifically why each statements were true, although I realise this would have made it more intellectual and this wasn't trying to be a book for hard slogging study.