4.9 • 846 Ratings
🗓️ 1 August 2024
⏱️ 30 minutes
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0:00.0 | Welcome to the Fern podcast as the season turns. |
0:11.8 | Released on the first of each month, the episodes follow the changing landscape of the seasons, |
0:17.6 | from the moon and the stars to the tides in the trees. |
0:23.5 | I'm Leah Lane Dutz, author of The Almanac, a seasonal guide. And this podcast is a collaboration between myself and Fern, |
0:30.1 | makers of small batch organic perfume. I love wearing Fern, in my quest to live in tune with |
0:36.6 | the seasons, applying the season's perfume is a lovely little ritual that reminds me to use all my senses. |
0:44.3 | We hope that this brief guide to the month ahead will awaken you to the rhythms of the year and help you to settle deeper into the seasons. Names for August. |
1:02.0 | August in modern English, August in Scots and Ulster Scots, |
1:07.0 | oust in Welsh, est in Cornish, Ote in Gerrier. After Julius Caesar started the |
1:16.9 | Julian calendar reform and rewarded himself with a month, July, along came Augustus Caesar to |
1:24.2 | complete the job, and so he gave himself a month too, hence August. |
1:30.4 | Most of the languages of the British Isles have variants on this as their names for August, |
1:36.2 | including the very French out in Gerrier. |
1:39.5 | However, Scots Gallic Eunastal, Irish Gaelic Lunassan, and Manx Lunistin all name the month after the Gaelic Festival of Lunasa, |
1:49.9 | one of the four Gaelic agricultural markers of the year, along with Imelk, Beltane and Sowin. |
1:57.6 | In Old English, August is Weedmonath, weed month, gardeners know why. |
2:04.1 | In the Romany year, August was the month of the corn, Givescaro, which means that it is time for the wheat to be brought in, |
2:12.4 | corn having always been used as a generic term for cereal rather than meaning sweet corn. |
2:20.3 | The wheat harvest has long been the biggest event in the rural year. Whole rural families would move from farm to farm around |
2:26.9 | their village to help harvest the wheat and there are a great number of traditions associated with it. |
2:33.5 | This is particularly the case at the end of the harvest, |
2:36.5 | when a corn dolly would be made from the last sheaf cut and would keep the spirit of the corn, |
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