(explanation in "Artwork" below) |
March:
From Mars, the god of war, and the reputed father of Romulus, who is
traditionally believed to have compiled the first calendar and to have made
March the first month in the year.
With the 25th day of this month… the legal year began with
many Christian nations until a quite recent period.
William Walsh, Curiosities of Popular Customs (1898) p.
646.
“Come Mars, God of War, lay aside your
shield and spear:
A
moment, from your helmet, free your shining hair.
What
has a poet to do with Mars, you might ask?
The
month I sing of takes its name from you…
‘I
name the first month of the Roman year after you:
The
first month shall be called by my father’s name.’
The
promise was kept: he called the month after his father.
This
piety is said to have pleased the god.”
Ovid,
Fasti, Book III
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Astronomy
for March: Full Worm Moon, also called Full Sap Moon, on
the 27th.
Vernal
Equinox at 7:02 am on the 20th. Huzzah for Spring!
Spring
Forward! Daylight Saving Time begins (for those that are required to
follow it) at 2:00 am on the 10th. Move your clocks ahead one hour when
you go to bed the night before.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
March
is dedicated to Saint
Joseph
Liturgical
Celebrations
Lent
continues up to the Mass of the Lord’s Supper on Holy Thursday evening (new
calendar) or until the Vigil of Easter on Holy Saturday evening (for those of
us who still think Lent has 40 days, not 38.)
Passion
Sunday
17 March
Palm
Sunday
24 March
Maundy
(Holy) Thursday
28 March
Good
Friday
29 March
EASTER
31 March
Novenas for
March
Saint Patrick……………...begins 8 March
Saint Joseph……………...begins 10 March [there are several more on this page]
Saint Benedict…………....begins 12 March
Annunciation……….……begins
16 March (also here) [however, this
year, because Annunciation falls within Holy Week, it will be celebrated on 8
April and the novena started on 30 March]
All Hearts…….…………..begins 16 March
Good Friday….…………..begins 20 March
Risen Jesus……………….begins 22 March
Divine Mercy…………….begins 29 March (also here)
and particularly now:
Novena for the Election of a Pope......begins now
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
March
brings breezes, loud and shrill,
To
stir the dancing daffodil.
Weather for
March:
According
to the Twelve Days of Christmas: Rain and
wind.
According
to the first twelve days of January: Cloudy
and cold
According
to the Ember Days: Overcast or mostly
cloudy and cold.
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Weather Lore for March:
Everyone knows that March 'comes in like a
lion, goes out like a lamb' or vice-versa. Except in New England.
Here it comes in like a lion, and stays that way.
A
dry March, wet April, and cool May,
fill
barn and cellar, and bring much hay
Dust
in March brings grass and foliage. (And
if the dust is mud – which it usually is?)
A
bushel of March dust is worth a king’s ransom [the frosts of January and February pulverize the soil and the snows
make it wet. The farmer hopes that
the winds of March will dry the ground, so that it is suitable for sowing seed.
]
If
March be clear and warm throughout, April will be so at its end.
March
winds and April showers,
Bring
forth May flowers. [And what do
Mayflowers bring? Pilgrims]
When
March has April weather, April will have March weather.
If
March takes April’s weather and is mild and showery, then April will take
March’s weather and be stormy.
The
worst blast comes in the borrowing days (that
would be March going out like a lion)
A
peck of March dust and a shower in May
Makes
the corn green and the fields gay.
So
many mists in March you see
So
many frosts in May will be.
As
it rains in March, so it rains in June.
Fog
in March, thunder in July.
A
wet March makes a sad August. [Sad
in the form of a bad harvest.]
March
rain spoils more than clothes.
Thunder
in March betokens a fruitful year.
And
Thunder
in March signifies that same year great winds, plenty of corn, and debate
amongst people.
however
When
it thunders in March, it brings sorrow.
and
When
March thunders, tools and arms get rusty. [I'm
thinking that the arms referred to here are firearms - however, I've noticed my
own two arms sounding and feeling a little creaky].
Fruit
is never killed by a frost in March [at
least so we hope].
3/1,
2, & 3 – First comes David, next comes Chad,
Then
comes Winnall as if he was mad. (March
coming in like a lion)
3/1-
If it snows on the first day of March, there will be snow for thirty days.
3/1
– Wherever the wind lies on St. Eudoxia’s day, there it will remain during the
spring and summer.
3/3
– Thunder on St. Cunegunda’s day presages a second winter.
3/4
– There will be heavy rains on the first Monday in March.
3/10
– If it doesn't freeze on the 10th, a fertile year may be expected.
On
the other hand
Mists
or hoar-frosts on the 10th of March betoken a plentiful year, but
not without some diseases.
As
the weather is on the day of the Forty Martyrs, so will it be for forty days.
As
on Forty Martyrs, so on St. Peter’s (June 29).
3/12
– If the winds die down today, there is cold weather coming.
3/17
– If the cow does not walk in clover on Saint Gertrude’s day, then will she yet
walk in snow.
3/19
– If Saint Joseph's Day is clear,
So
follows a fertile year.
On
St. Joseph’s day the cold weather has gone [not
noticeably]
3/20
– As the wind and weather at the equinox, so it will be for the next three
months.
As
the equinoctial storms clear, so will all storms clear for the six months.
If
the wind is westerly or southwesterly at noon of the vernal equinox, there will
be fine weather till midsummer, but if the wind is
from the northeast or north, there will be no fine weather until then.
If
the wind is north-east at vernal equinox, it will be a good season for wheat
and a poor one for other kinds of corn; but if south or south-east, it will be
good for other corn, but bad for wheat.
The
vernal equinoctial gales are stronger than the autumnal.
If
near the time of the equinox it blows in the day, it generally hushes towards
evening.
3/20,
21, 22 – The first three days of any season rule the weather for that season
3/24
- If the weather is not clear on Palm Sunday, it means a bad year.
3/25
– Lady Day clear, expect a fertile year.
If
the sky is clear and the stars shine brightly in the hour before sunrise on
Lady Day, the year will be fruitful.
If
there is hoar-frost on the morning of the Annunciation, it will do no harm.
If
it rains on Lady Day, it will rain on all her feasts [and Our Lady has many in the year]
If
the sun does not shine brightly on Lady Day, there will be forty more days of
winter.
An
east wind on Lady Day
Will
keep until the end of May.
29,
30, 31 - March borrows of April three days, and they are ill;
April
borrows of March again three days of wind and rain.
[This is March going out like a lion and
extending his power into April.
One of the legends explaining the ‘borrowing days’ is that a shepherd
once promised March a lamb if the month would guarantee good weather. March did so, but when he went to get
his promised payment, the shepherd, seeing that there were only three days left
in the month and his flock was flourishing, reneged on the agreement. March, in disgust, took his last three
days, borrowed three from April, and for the six days sent such terrible
weather that the entire flock perished.]
3/29
– The sun never shines on Good Friday.
In
whatever direction the wind blows on Good Friday, it will blow for forty days.
Rain
on Good Friday foreshows a fruitful year.
Rain
on the Friday before Easter Sunday is a sign of good luck
On
the other hand
If
it rains on Good Friday, rains will be without value all summer, that is, they
will be too hard, or will come at the wrong time, or for some other reason be
valueless.
3/31
– Rain on Easter either means a good harvest, or very little hay
If
there is enough rain on Easter Sunday to wet a pocket-handkerchief, there will
be a good crop year.
If
it rains on Easter Sunday, it will rain on seven Sundays in succession.
If
the wind blows a certain way on Easter Sunday, it will blow that way for six
weeks.
When
there is an early Easter, there is an early spring.
When
there is a late Easter, there is a late spring.
These superstitions have nothing to do with
the weather, but they are rather interesting:
If
you cut your hair in March...
...you
will have a year of headache.
...you
will be sick before the year is out.
...you
will lose a horse.
...you
will never live to see another March
To
move in March brings bad luck.
If
a person lives through March, he will live the rest of the year. [Unless he cuts his hair]
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Gardening for March:
Advice to the Countryman for March
Now
when a few dry days have made the land
For
working fit, take then the Plough in hand;
And
if the weather should continue fair,
Keep
on with sowing Oats and Barley there;
Nor
this thy work defer, like some, until,
The
showers of April gin the Dike to fill:
A
bushel of March Dust is worth, they say,
A
Sovereign’s ransom or a Stack of Hay.
Now
sow your garden seeds, now nail the Trees,
When
the warm Sun at first brings out the Bees;
For
they, by instinct strange, appear to see
What
sort of weather is about to be –
Trust
them, and imitate their industry.
T.
Forster, The Perennial Calendar, p 87
If
March does not plant, May will not mow.
March
dry, good rye,
March
wet, good wheat.
3/1
– Upon St. David’s day
Put
oats and barley in the clay.
3/1
&2 – David and Chad
Sow
peas, good or bad.
Sow
the seeds of the Sweet Pea flower between St. David and St. Benedict.
3/17
– If it is fine weather on St. Gertrude’s day, it is time to begin spring
planting.
Sow
the seeds of the Sweet Pea flower before sunrise on St. Patrick’s day, for
larger and more fragrant blossoms.
3/21
– On St. Benedict, sow thy peas or keep them in the rick. [last call for sowing peas]
3/25
– Any seed sown today will prosper and anything transplanted today will easily
take root.
3/29
– Plant potatoes on Good Friday.
Beans,
peas, and garden seeds sown on Good Friday will yield a fine crop.
Then
comes the Daffodil beside
Our
Lady’s Smock at our Lady-tide,
Our Lady's Smock |
1817
Almanac:
All
Works in the Garden directed to be done last Month must be finished in this;
All Sorts of Grafting may be done this Month. Prune Nectarines, Peaches, and Apricots, and all other Trees
without delay.
Set
Slips of Sage, Rosemary, Lavender, Thyme, &c. and the Suckers, Offsets,
&c. of Trees and Shrubs; divide and plant fibrous-rooted Herbs, &c.
Continue
to set Willows and other Aquatics.
Transplant Seedlings. Lay
Turf for Walks.
Sow
Pease, Oats, and Barley, and also all Sorts of Grass Seeds.
Cassell’s
Illustrated almanack 1871:
Flowers—Where
bulbs have been sown and the plants are now making their appearance, dress the
ground between them, that they may get the full benefit of light and air. Sow hardy annuals, and keep in view the
arrangement of color when the plants come into flower.
Vegetables—Transplant
autumn-sown beans, and sow cabbages for use in summer and autumn. The sowing of
all crops of this kind should be so timed and continued at intervals, that a
constant succession is kept up in the supply. In purchasing seed, ascertain which kind is most appropriate
to the season when you intend to use it, or when you may desire to gather in
the plants. Onions, carrots, and parsley may be sown freely in mild weather.
Fruit—This
is the proper month for grafting fruit trees, and if you have any wall trees
coming into blossom, protect them from destructive frosts or heavy rains by a
covering of matting, or by wrapping fern leaves round them. A small coping
placed along the wall, to throw off rain and prevent radiation of heat, is also
an excellent means of preserving the trees from injury in bad weather.
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Health
for March (at least in 1817)
“Purge
and let Blood: Eat no gross
Meats.”
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Artwork:
March. Limbourg frères. Grandes Heures of Jean, Duc de Berry,
Fifteenth century.
The
calendar pages of the Grandes Heures carried
more religious symbolism than that of the more famous Tres Riches Heures. Each month was dedicated to a part of
the Apostles Creed, with the relevant prophecy from the Old Testament and
scripture from the New Testament.
March (appropriately enough the month of Our Lord’s conception) is
dedicated to the part of the Creed which says “…who was conceived by the Holy
Spirit of the Virgin Mary…” Here
we see (left to right) Saint Paul instructing the Corinthians (although the
scripture “…God sent His Son, made of a woman…” comes from Galatians 4:4); Our
Lady stands above one of the gates of the New Jerusalem, holding a banner with
a depiction of the Christ Child in swaddling bands; Aries, the Ram,
astrological symbol of March, emerges from the gate; the sun has moved into the
third of twelve divisions in the arc of the sky; and below it, while grass is
growing quickly, the trees still stand bare.
Saint Joseph. A Manual of Prayers for
the Use of the Catholic Laity (1896).
March. Breaking up Soil – Digging – Sowing –
Harrowing. Engraving based on an 11th century manuscript.
William Walsh, Curiosities of Popular
Customs (1898) p. 646.
Lady’s Smock, photograph by Barbara
Carr. Information at Wikipedia. “Our Lady’s Smock” (or
just “Lady’s Smock” for Protestants) (Cardamine pratensis) is a perennial plant of medium-tall height (about 2 feet
high). Plant once, enjoy several
times.