The Oxen
Wednesday, 24 December 2025
Christmas Eve
Wednesday, 1 October 2025
October Days
OCTOBER

I'm not sure where September went but it's gone.
October was originally the eighth month of the Roman calendar. The Anglo Saxons called it Wynmonath - the wine making month or Winterfylleth meaning the the month with the full moon (7th) heralding winter. This year the October full moon will be a super moon and is also the latest date possible for a Harvest moon.
I've probably mentioned all the bits of weather folklore for October in previous years but here are three good ones.
| A page from the Brambly Hedge Autumn Story by Jill Barklem |
A poem from the book " A Child's Garden of Verses" by Robert Louis Stevenson
AUTUMN FIRES
Friday, 26 September 2025
Autumn Poetry and Painting
| Autumn Leaves | |
|---|---|
| Artist | John Everett Millais |
| Year | 1856 |
Autumn Birds
SEPTEMBER
Golden in the glen,
Golden, golden, golden
September's here again!
Golden in the tree tops,
Golden in the sky—
Golden, golden, golden
September's going by!
Monday, 2 June 2025
June Country Days on the 2nd of the Month
June - my favourite month of the year, meteorologically the start of summer (or wait to the 21st for the astronomical start)
It is thought that June is named after the goddess Juno or possibly from Iuniores which was the lower level of the legislature in the constitution of ancient Rome.
The weather pattern for June often alternates between spells of stormy weather and shorter periods of dry calm. The farmers prefer calm and warm with night-time dew to speed up crop growth and statistically June is England's sunniest month.
| Summer Moon Walk . An Illustration by Angela Harding from her book 'A Year Unfolding' |
Other people in the past have also enjoyed June and written poems
Month of leaves,
Month of roses;
Gardens full
Of dainty posies;
Skies of blue,
Hedgerows gay,
Meadows sweet
With the new mown hay.
Flowery banks,
A-drone with bees,
Dreaming cattle
Under trees:
Song-birds pipe
A merry tune—
This is summer,
This is June.
And way, way back in 1557 Thomas Tusser said in his Five hundred points of good husbandry
Saturday, 1 March 2025
March 1st
In the Roman calendar March, or Martius, was the first month of the new year. The month was named after Mars, the god of war and the guardian of agriculture. March was the month when both farming and warfare could begin again after winter.
1st March, St David's Day, The Patron St of Wales. The start of meteorological spring.
2nd March, St Chad's Day(Bishop of Northumbria in the 7th Century)
| Stained Glass from Holy Cross Monastery New York |
| Sprinkling of Ashes from a Polish Painting C19 |
6th March, World Book Day
Saturday, 1 February 2025
February Country Days
| A February page from The Nature Notes of an Edwardian Lady by Edith Holden |
The Anglo-Saxons called February 'Solmonarth' which means flat-cake month. Cakes would be made as offerings to the gods in thanks for the lengthening daylight.
The full moon this month, on the 12th, was known as the Ice Moon or the Snow Moon and snow and ice are just as likely in February as they are in January.
I found this February poem by Jane G Austin. An American poet and author who lived between 1831-1894.
I thought the world was cold in death;
The flowers, the birds, all life was gone,
For January's bitter breath
Had slain the bloom and hushed the song.
And still the earth is cold and white,
And mead and forest yet are bare;
But there's a something in the light
That says the germ of life is there.
Deep down within the frozen brook
I hear a murmur, faint and sweet,
And lo! the ice breaks as I look,
And living waters touch my feet.
Within the forest's leafless shade
I hear a spring-bird's hopeful lay:
O life to frozen death betrayed
Thy death shall end in life to-day.
And in my still heart's frozen cell
The pulses struggle to be free;
While sweet the bird sings, who can tell
But life may bloom again for thee!
I wrote about Imbolc, St Bridget's Day and Candlemas last year so won't repeat again so soon but there are lots of weather sayings for February....................
When gnats dance in February, the husbandman becomes a beggar
A February spring is not worth a pin
Fogs in February mean frosts in May
Two weather sayings for tomorrow, February 2nd.............
Thursday, 2 January 2025
January Days and Thank You
It was really good yesterday to have so many comments - I loved them all. Special thank you and "hello" to people who'd not commented before and apologies for not replying individually. My excuse was that I was out at Son and DiL's house with the two grandchildren plus YD and EGD who came over from the coast through the very wet and windy weather (luckily it had stopped raining and blowing by evening going home time) plus BiL came too, we were all there helping to eat up their Christmas food. They are never knowingly under-catered! Now they need more visitors to help eat yesterdays food!
So, here we go into January..................
January is usually colder than December and this is one of the best known sayings..............
When oak trees bend with snow in January, good crops may be expected.
In January much rain and little snow is bad for mountains, valleys and trees
Mild weather isn't recommended, so it's probably good that the weather forecast is for a spell of colder weather over the next few days.
A January spring is good for nothing
January warm, the Lord have mercy
Us gardeners always want good frosts in winter to kill off all the nasties that lurk in the soil. Most years recently our winters just haven't been cold enough.
JANUARY
Janus am I; oldest of potentates;
Forward I look, and backward, and below
I count, as god of avenues and gates,
The years that through my portals come and go.
I block the roads, and drift the fields with snow;
I chase the wild-fowl from the frozen fen;
My frosts congeal the rivers in their flow,
My fires light up the hearths and hearts of men.
Longfellow - Poets calendar
Friday, 1 November 2024
November Country Days
| A November page from The Country Diary of an Edwardian Lady by Edith Holden |
November takes its name from the Latin novem because it was the ninth month of the Roman year. The Anglo Saxons named November "Blodmonath" meaning Blood Month, maybe because this was the month when any older livestock would have been slaughtered before winter, so as to save fodder for the younger animals.
Then the leaves are whirling fast
(Months of the year by Sara Coleridge )
Samhain which means "summers end" was the Celtic fire festival celebrated as the day shifted from October to November. The end of the light half of the year. Celts considered sundown as the start of a day, which is why although Samhain is November 1st, it would have been celebrated at sundown on the 31st. It was their new year and fires would have been lit on the hilltops to drive out the evil of the last year and welcome in the new. Then later came the Christian feasts of All Saints on the 1st and All Souls on November 2nd, when the dead are remembered in prayers.
Monday, 16 September 2024
'"Tis But A Thing of Straw"
I unpinned my corn dolly from the top corner of the bookshelves when they were emptied ready for moving when the floor was being done and bits fell off it. It's looking very faded too.
| This is how it looked when new |
So I had to look back on the blog to see how old it was and turns out I got it in October 2020 because of the connection to the Ogham Tree Alphabet which has Wheat Straw representing October to November.
| The Wheat-straw Page from Karen Cater's book" Ogham Sketch Book" |
Twisting and plaiting straw to make effigies and other objects has been practised all over the world and is closely linked to harvest thanksgiving. In the British Isles, the men who brought in the harvest traditionally made a human-like form out of the last wheat standing. This tradition developed to become a decorative pastoral craft often practised by women. Crafting these symbols of good luck and fertility, which reflected superstitious beliefs also enabled them to earn a small extra income. In it's purest form, the corn doll was used to than Mother Earth for the harvest.
Great ceremony was always attached to the harvesting of the last sheaf and a great Harvest Shout was raised by the reapers as it was cut. It was treated with special respect and used to make the corn dolly which would be carried home atop of the last load from the field. In the following year the Corn Dolly would be planted in the first furrow on Plough Monday, so that it's spirit would be released and ensure another good harvest.
Monday, 2 September 2024
September Days
Monday, 1 July 2024
JULY COUNTRY DAYS
| Illustration by Eugene Grasset from the Illuminated Book Of Days edited by K and M Lee |
Julius Caesar the Roman Dictator who reformed the calendar in 46 BC named the month after himself, he was killed in the Ides Of March so that he couldn't proclaim himself Emperor. July often contains some good hot days sometimes referred to as Dog Days. At this time of year Sirius, the dog star, rises at the same time as the sun and was thought by the Romans to give the sun extra heat. The Dog Days are from July 3rd until August 11th .
Tuesday, 9 April 2024
Goldfinch
One day towards the end of March I could hear a Goldfinch somewhere in the Sycamore tree............. they have a very twittery song - a mixture of different sounds............... and stood searching for it for several minutes because I've rarely seen any in the garden here. Later it was on the birdfeeder and I grabbed the camera and got a couple of not very good photos.
When the family were visiting a couple of weeks ago Son (the only one of our 3 children to take after me and Colin in having any interest in birds) spotted two in the garden and there's been one singing almost every time I've been outside since. Hopefully they are nesting somewhere around.
Thomas Hardy 1840-1928