Bending Reality Magazine November | Page 47

Dear Andi/Andy,

Where is I buy this inter seasoning I am hearing about everywhere – this “Winter Solstice”.

Is it good on chicken?

~Confused In Columbus

Dear C-In-C,

~face-slap~ Not mine! Yours! How can you get your winter season confused with winter seasonings? Oh wait, you are from Columbus, right? Well there you go. And here you go on information about THE WINTER SOLSTICE! Happy Holidays, C-In-C!

Winter solstice is an astronomical  phenomenon which marks the shortest day and the longest night of the year. Winter solstice occurs for the  Northern Hemisphere in December  and for the  Sothern Hemisphere  in  June.

The  axial tilt  of Earth and  gyroscopic effects  of the planet's daily rotation keep the  axis of rotation  pointed at the same point in the sky. As the Earth follows its  orbit  around the Sun, the same hemisphere that faced away from the Sun, experiencing winter, will, in half a year, face towards the Sun and experience summer. Since the two hemispheres face opposite directions along the planetary pole, as one polar hemisphere experiences winter, the other experiences summer.

More evident from high latitudes, a hemisphere's winter  solstice  occurs on the shortest day and longest night of the year, when the sun's daily maximum elevation in the sky is the lowest.[1] The winter solstice itself lasts only a moment in time, so other terms are used for the day on which it occurs, such as "midwinter", or "the shortest day". For the same reason, it should not be confused with "the first day of winter" or "the start of winter" (Lidong in the East Asian calendars). The seasonal significance of the winter solstice is in the reversal of the gradual lengthening of nights and shortening of days. The earliest sunset and latest sunrise dates differ from winter solstice, however, and these depend on latitude, due to the variation in the solar day throughout the year caused by the Earth's elliptical orbit (see earliest and latest sunrise and sunset).

Worldwide, interpretation of the event has varied from culture to culture, but many cultures have held a recognition of rebirth, involving  holidays, festivals, gatherings, rituals  or other  celebrations  around that time.[2]

The winter solstice may have been immensely important because communities were not certain of living through the winter, and had to be prepared during the previous nine months.  Starvation was common during the first months of the winter, January to April (northern hemisphere) or July to October (southern hemisphere), also known as "the  famine  months". In temperate climates, the midwinter festival was the last feast  celebration, before deep winter began. Most cattle were  slaughtered  so they would not have to be fed during the winter, so it was almost the only time of year when a supply of fresh meat was available. The majority of wine and beer made during the year was finally  fermented  and ready for drinking at this time. The concentration of the observances were not always on the day commencing at midnight or at dawn, but the beginning of the pre-Romanized day, which falls on the previous eve.[4]

Ask Andy and Andy

Winter Solstice –

A Winter Season Not A Winter

Seasoning

By DeGrey