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Kevin Myatt

Latest entries from the Weather Journal blog

About Kevin

Kevin Myatt grew up in Arkansas to the tune of tornado sirens and the rhythm of hailstones, aspiring to be a meteorologist before his studies and career were turned to journalism instead. Though he often chases storms, he prefers living in the cooler, more tranquil weather of the Blue Ridge. He moved to Roanoke in 1999 to take a job on the copy desk of The Roanoke Times; writing headlines and editing copy is his principal work for the newspaper today.

Each May, Kevin assists Pulaski County High School / Virginia Tech meteorology instructor Dave Carroll in leading college and high school students to the Plains to observe severe weather firsthand. The accounts of many of his storm chases can be found here on the storm chasing page of his weather blog on roanoke.com.

Kevin was an editor for "Hurricanes and the Middle Atlantic States," a book written by D.C.-area weather enthusiast Rick Schwartz and published by Blue Diamond Books that documents hurricanes striking the mid-Atlantic states since colonial times.

The Weather Journal column began in 2003 and appears on Friday's Virginia section front in The Roanoke Times. The Weather Journal blog began in 2006 and follows weather day-by-day between the larger columns.


Monday, July 12, 2004

Folklore and forecasting


By Kevin Myatt
The Roanoke Times

Gary Blackcloud Foutz says that he can tell how many days to the next rain by how many stars are inside a ring around the moon.

Most of us have heard of this saying or a version of it before. Many roll their eyes and dismiss it. But is there truth in it?

High-level cirrus clouds often precede large-scale rain-producing weather systems by several days. These cirrus clouds disperse the moon's reflected light, producing a large halo. Mid-level clouds that would occur a day or two before such a system can produce what appears to be a tighter halo around the moon.

So more stars would be inside the halo the farther out the rain system is. Admittedly, the exact number of stars would depend on what part of the sky the moon was in, and this method would have less applicability to the daily summertime showers than it would to large-scale weather patterns.

Still, long before there was Doppler radar and geosynchronous satellites, many cultures developed sayings and lore about the weather. Many of these are based on observation and have at least some basis in scientific fact.

Foutz is a weather enthusiast who sometimes chases local storms and utilizes both modern and traditional techniques in forecasting weather. He is a descendant of Delaware Cherokee Indians, and he helps organize the annual Gathering of Veterans Pow Wow each June in Salem.

We've all heard old sayings about weather. Most of them relate to what kind of winter is ahead, such as the thickness of coats on woolly worms.

Foutz offers three of these from the Indian folklore he was taught.

It will be a snowy winter if:

>Squirrels accumulate huge stores of nuts.

>Beavers build heavier lodges than usual.

>Hair on bears and horses is thick early in season

In my own childhood in Arkansas, I frequently heard a saying of Ozarks origin that persimmon seeds could foretell the winter. Cut open a seed longways, and there is a white formation inside, actually the plant embryo. If the formation is shaped like a knife, a bitterly cold winter is ahead. If it is shaped like a spoon, there would be lots of snow. If it's shaped like a fork, then a mild winter was forthcoming.

While we're on the subject, I would say that as far as western Virginia is concerned, the "fogs in August equals snows in the winter" theory is out the window. Fog develops much more commonly in valleys during August; snow falls much more commonly on mountaintops.

This raises an important point about weather folklore -- often, sayings are location-specific. What my have validity in one area may not in another. An evening rainbow in the east means the storm has probably passed here, since our weather generally moves west to east. A sailor in the north Atlantic just above the equator could well be headed into a storm, though, with the same sight: weather generally moves east to west in that area.

With that, I offer some of Foutz's nuggets of wisdom today, for your own consideration:

>If the bull leads the cows to pasture, expect rain; if the cows precede the bull, the weather will be uncertain.

>Dandelion blossoms close before a storm.

>When the leaves of trees turn over, it foretells possible severe weather.

>The sky turns green in a storm when there is hail.

>The first frost in autumn will be exactly six months after the first thunderstorm of the spring.

>If the raven crows, expect rain.

>Fish bite best before a rain.

>A reddish sun has water in his eye.

>Tobacco gets moist before a rain.

>When ropes are tight it's going to rain.

>Campfires are more smoky before a rain.

>When stones sweat, rain will soon come.

Feel free to let me know about the weather sayings you have found to be reliable, or perhaps, not so reliable.

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