Spring is one of the better seasons. You can go for walks in the nature and everything around you will be beautiful. Flowers, trees, everything!
But there are some things that you don’t know about this season! Let’s find them out together!
- Spring is one of the four temperate seasons
- Spring always follows winter and precedes summer
- There are various technical definitions of spring
- But local usage of the term varies according to local climate, cultures and customs
- When it is spring in the Northern Hemisphere, it is autumn in the Southern Hemisphere
- And vice versa
- At the spring equinox, days and nights are approximately twelve hours long
- With day length increasing
- And night length decreasing as the season progresses
- Spring and “springtime” refer to the season
- And also to ideas of rebirth, rejuvenation, renewal, resurrection and regrowth
- Subtropical and tropical areas have climates better described in terms of other seasons
- Cultures may have local names for seasons which have little equivalence to the terms originating in Europe
- Meteorologists generally define four seasons in many climatic areas: spring, summer, autumn and winter
- These are demarcated by the values of their average temperatures on a monthly basis
- With each season lasting three months
- The three warmest months are by definition summer
- The three coldest months are winter
- And the intervening gaps are spring and autumn
- Spring, when defined in this manner, can start on different dates in different regions
- Thus, in the US and UK, spring months are March, April and May
- While in New Zealand and Australia, spring conventionally begins on September 1 and ends November 30
- Swedish meteorologists define the beginning of spring as the first occasion on which the average daytime temperature exceeds zero degrees Celsius for seven consecutive days
- Thus the date varies with latitude and elevation
- In some cultures in the Northern Hemisphere, the astronomical vernal equinox is taken to mark the first day of spring
- And the summer solstice is taken as the first day of summer
- In Persian culture the first day of spring is the first day of the first month
- It is called Farvardin
- And it begins on 20 or 21 March
- In other traditions, the equinox is taken as mid-spring
- In the traditional Chinese calendar, the “spring” season consists of the days between Lichun, Chunfen as its midpoint
- Then ending at Lixia
- Similarly, according to the Celtic tradition, spring begins in early February
- And continues until early May
- The beginning of spring is not always determined by fixed calendar dates
- The phenological or ecological definition of spring relates to biological indicators
- Such as the blossoming of a range of plant species
- The activities of animals
- And the special smell of soil that has reached the temperature for micro flora to flourish
- These indicators, along with the beginning of spring, vary according to the local climate
- And according to the specific weather of a particular year
- Most ecologists divide the year into six seasons that have no fixed dates
- In addition to spring, ecological reckoning identifies an earlier separate prevernal season
- Between the hibernal, winter, and vernal, spring, seasons
- This is a time when only the hardiest flowers like the crocus are in bloom
- Sometimes while there is still some snowcover on the ground
- During early spring, the axis of the Earth is increasing its tilt relative to the Sun
- And the length of daylight rapidly increases for the relevant hemisphere
- The hemisphere begins to warm significantly
- Causing new plant growth to “spring forth”
- Giving the season its name
- The snow begins to melt, swelling streams with runoff and any frosts become less severe
- In climates that have no snow, and rare frosts, air and ground temperatures increase more rapidly
- Many flowering plants bloom at this time of year, in a long succession, sometimes beginning when snow is still on the ground and continuing into early summer
- In normally snowless areas, “spring” may begin as early as February or August
- Heralded by the blooming of deciduous magnolias, cherries, and quince
- Many temperate areas have a dry spring, and wet autumn, which brings about flowering in this season, more consistent with the need for water, as well as warmth
- Subarctic areas may not experience “spring” at all until May
- While spring is a result of the warmth caused by the changing orientation of the Earth’s axis relative to the Sun, the weather in many parts of the world is affected by other, less predictable events
- The rainfall in spring follows trends more related to longer cycles
- Unstable spring weather may occur more often when warm air begins to invade from lower latitudes
- While cold air is still pushing from the Polar regions
- Flooding is also most common in and near mountainous areas during this time of year
- Because of snow-melt which is accelerated by warm rains
- In North America, Tornado Alley is most active at this time of year
- Especially since the Rocky Mountains prevent the surging hot and cold air masses from spreading eastward
- And instead force them into direct conflict
- Besides tornadoes, supercell thunderstorms can also produce dangerously large hail and very high winds
- For which a severe thunderstorm warning or tornado warning is usually issued
- Even more so than in winter, the jet streams play an important role in unstable and severe Northern Hemisphere weather in springtime
- In recent decades, season creep has been observed
- This means that many phenological signs of spring are occurring earlier in many regions by around two days per decade
- Spring in the Southern Hemisphere is different in several significant ways to that of the Northern Hemisphere
- There is no land bridge between Southern Hemisphere countries
- And the Antarctic zone capable of bringing in cold air without the temperature- mitigating effects of extensive tracts of water
- The vastly greater amount of ocean in the Southern Hemisphere at most latitudes
- At this time in Earth’s geologic history the Earth has an orbit which brings it in closer to the Southern Hemisphere for its warmer seasons
- There is a circumpolar flow of air uninterrupted by large land masses
- No equivalent jet streams
- The peculiarities of the reversing ocean currents in the Pacific
Got anything to add?