MODIS Aqua – Thursday, November 14, 2022
The afternoon view, that is a little while before the sunset.
The afternoon view, that is a little while before the sunset.
Thursday was the last really clear day around these parts, and it was warm.
That’s how a dairy farmer once told me to look at the winter, as they count the loads of box manure spread on fields until it warms enough for spring tillage and ultimately planting come the warmth and greens of May.
The land has a tangy, sharp smell of cow during this time period in Upstate farm country. Is it a bad smell? I don’t know, it’s the smell of land working, nutrition and fertilizer returned to the land that will continue to support the cattle that produce the milk, the cheese, the beef, fats and meats that are important to both us humans and the livihoods of those who farm it.
Winters really are long in Upstate New York. The months of brown and gray – some days with blue skies – and others with ice and snow are long. The greens of summer are short, what seems like days while the dead kill of frost and winter are long.
Clear day, the day before election day. Not much color left.
On October 28th, the maximum sun angle is 34.1 degrees, but the average high is 55 degrees.
In contrast, on February 15th, the maximum sun angle is 34.8 degrees but the average high is 35 degrees.
So the sun is higher in the sky in mid-February then late October, but it’s cooler.
Why? Because the earth retains heat, it causes the average temperature to lag about 22 days behind the angle of sun.
Up north it was quite clear and colors were starting to pop.