“If the goose honks high, fair weather. If the goose honks low, foul weather.”
Before weather apps, push notifications, Doppler radar, and smartphones, people often relied on instinct, experience, and observation to predict storms and seasonal changes. Our ancestors were in tune with nature – they had to be to survive and make sure their farms thrived. Today, though, people rely on what technology tells them. What was once a means of survival has now gone the way of superstition.
Facts and Folklore
Our ancestors used a plethora of ways to predict the weather. They paid attention to how insects sounded before it rained, how the air felt, and how birds flew to know when it was time to plant new crops and when to protect them when frost was coming. “A ring around the sun or moon, means that rain will come real soon” has some truth to it since a halo around the moon often means ice crystals are present high in the atmosphere, which could signal moisture or storms on the way.
“If the goose honks high, fair weather. If the goose honks low, foul weather.” This proverb relates because it’s not about the pitch of a goose’s honk, but the altitude of its flight. So, if a goose “honks high,” then it is flying at a higher altitude, which indicates high barometric pressure and good weather. If it’s flying low, then the barometric pressure is low, and there’s likely bad weather ahead. Modern science backs this up because falling air pressure affects insects. Insects stay closer to the ground, and birds follow their food source.
Paying attention to wind direction was another tool people used to tell what kind of weather was headed their way. Take this old proverb as an example: “When the wind is in the east, it’s good for neither man nor beast. When the wind is in the north, the old folk should not venture forth. When the wind is in the south, it blows the bait in the fishes’ mouth. When the wind is in the west, it is of all the winds the best.”
The Farmer’s Almanac
The Farmer’s Almanac has been predicting weather since long before modern technology was available. It was founded in 1792, when George Washington was president and farming at Mount Vernon. Robert B. Thomas was its first editor, and he believed sunspots, which are “magnetic storms on the surface of the Sun,” as Almanac explained, influenced the weather. The Almanac predicts weather trends by comparing “solar patterns and historical weather conditions with current solar activity.” Since its inception, it has been one of the most popular journals and has been credited with having 80% accuracy. In fact, it was so popular, there was concern it was being used for wartime strategy, as the Almanac explained:
“In 1942, a German spy was apprehended by the FBI with a copy of The Old Farmer’s Almanac in his pocket. The U.S. government feared that the Germans were using the Almanac’s weather forecasts in their wartime strategy! A shift to weather indications, rather than forecasts, allowed the Almanac to continue publishing through the war. It was a close call that almost ruined the Almanac’s perfect record of continuous publication!”
The Old Farmer’s Almanac, first published in 1792 but then changed to The Farmer’s Almanac in 1818, produced its final publication this year after informing people of the weather for more than two centuries. Has technology replaced the old ways with at-your-fingertip apps and instant forecasts?
Weather Forecasts Today
Artificial intelligence has a heavy hand in predicting the weather. Today, it offers 10-day forecasts in under a minute. Planning a weekend getaway to the beach? Pull up the forecast to see if it will be a fun-in-the-sun time or a rain on your parade. But just how trustworthy are these predictions?
According to the National Environmental Satellite, Data, and Information Service (NOAA), “A seven-day forecast can accurately predict the weather about 80 percent of the time and a five-day forecast can accurately predict the weather approximately 90 percent of the time. However, a 10-day—or longer—forecast is only right about half the time.”
Still, these modern-day devices are helpful because a moon ring can’t predict next month’s temperatures, bird behavior can’t predict the path of a hurricane, and arthritis can’t forecast a severe thunderstorm outbreak three days away.
Without modern technology, though, many people would be clueless about weather conditions. Americans have become disconnected from the environments we live in. People spend less time outside, and they aren’t as aware of their surroundings. They don’t know how to identify cloud types and have little connection to seasonal rhythms.
Modern technology has made weather forecasting faster and more accurate than ever before, giving people instant access to storm warnings, temperature changes, and long-range forecasts with the tap of a screen. But while apps and artificial intelligence may be better at predicting hurricanes and severe storms, they have also replaced much of the awareness people once had about the natural world around them. Older generations paid attention to the sky, wind, birds, insects, and seasonal changes because those signs played an important role in everyday life. Today, many Americans rely so heavily on technology that they rarely notice the same signals nature still provides. The old ways of reading the weather may no longer be necessary for survival, but they reflected a connection to the environment, practical knowledge, and self-reliance that modern society seems to be slowly losing.
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