What's the temperature where you are???

80° and 7% humidity at 10:00 A.M.

A spiky morning.

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Big goose egg 0C and sunny. Working on fixing some of the fencing my bad bad thoroughbred mare has managed to wreck during the winter. Electric fencing going up as soon as the new boards are replaced on my fence.

No snow left other than in the shady areas where it’s piled up.

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Monday
My gosh, look at this beautiful place! 😍

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All my living relatives were born and still live in various locations around the lake... it keeps everyone handy lol. My 86yr-old aunty was the first female child born at the lake.
 
Monday 24th of March 7.29a.m. a heavy grey sky, some drizzle / very light rain o'nite (0.2mm). 1.8 / 1.8kph WNW, Hg 70%, 21C / 69.8F top of 24C / 75F. Possible shower (again) haha :rolleyes:

Moon is 30%

Autumn Equinox (equal day / night)


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Harvest (n.) was the English name for the season until autumn began to displace it 16c. Astronomically, from the descending equinox to the winter solstice; in Britain, the season is popularly August through October; in U.S., September through November. Compare Italian autunno, Spanish otoño, Portuguese outono, all from the Latin word.


As de Vaan notes, autumn's names across the Indo-European languages leave no evidence that there ever was a common word for it. Many "autumn" words mean "end, end of summer," or "harvest." Compare Greek phthinoporon "waning of summer;" Lithuanian ruduo "autumn," from rudas "reddish," in reference to leaves; Old Irish fogamar, literally "under-winter."

Australia doesn't exist :lol:
 

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