"Middle Season #33" (November 30, 2021)
"Middle Season #32" (November 20, 2021)
"Fall leaves" (November 12, 2021) is a collage of pretty fall leaves I collected
"Middle Season #31" (November 10, 2021)
"Small Seasons" November 9, 2021) Prior to the Gregorian calendar, farmers in China and Japan broke each year down into 24 sekki or “small seasons.” These seasons didn't use dates to mark seasons, but instead, they divided up the year by natural phenomena. Kanro - (cold dew) Temperatures begin to drop, crickets stop chirping. Geshi - (reaching summer) Longest days of the year, irises bloom.
"Middle Season #30" (October 31, 2021)
"Middle Season #29" (October 20, 2021)
"Middle Season #28" (October 10, 2021)
"A Great Difference Between This Season and a Month Ago" (October 7, 2021) is a quote by HDT saying that, along with details from nature supporting the claim.
"Middle Season #27" (September 30, 2021)
"72 Microseasons" (September 25, 2021) is about an app that gives you information for every sekkei or ko- or microseason.
"Middle Seasons #26" (September 20, 2021)
"Middle Season #25" (September 10, 2021)
"Middle Season #24" (August 31, 2021)
"Middle Season #23" (August 20, 2021)
"Middle Season #22" (August 10, 2021)
"Middle Season #21" (July 31, 2021)
"Phenology Wheel" (July 29, 2021) is the round diagram that shows the yearly cycle of a chosen natural thing... wildflowers in a forest, lifecycle of a species of bug, etc. It is halfway art, halfway observation, halfway natural history.
"Phenology" (July 28, 2021) is a definition of this term, which means the study of the cycles of nature of a place.
"Middle Season #20" (July 20, 2021)
"Middle Season #19" (July 10, 2021)
"Middle Season #18" (June 30, 2021)
"Middle Season #17" (June 20, 2021)
"Middle Season #16" (June 10, 2021)
"Middle Season #15" (May 31, 2021)
"Middle Season #14 Trees" (May 21, 2021)
"Middle Season #14" (May 20, 2021)
"Middle Season #13" (May 10, 2021)
"Middle Season #12" (April 30, 2021)
"Middle Season #11" (April 20, 2021)
"Middle Season #10" (April 10, 2021)
"Middle Season #9" (March 31, 2021)
"Middle Season #8" (March 20, 2021)
"Middle Season #7" (March 10, 2021)
"Middle Season #6" (February 28, 2021)
"Middle Season Haikus" (February 24, 2021) is a selection of haikus broken down by season.
"Middle Season #5" (February 20, 2021)
"Middle Season #4" (February 10, 2021)
"Season of Icicles" (February 8, 2021) is a couple images from Andy Goldsworthy about his icicle sculpture and my reflection on the polar vortex and seeing beautiful ice formations everywhere.
"Middle Season #3" (January 31, 2021)
"Middle Season #2" (January 20, 2021)
"Middle Season #1" (January 10, 2021)
"Middle Season #36" (December 31, 2020)
"Middle Season #35" (December 20, 2020)
"Middle Season #34" (December 10, 2020)
"Average Daily Temperatures for the Middle Seasons" (December 6, 2020) contains a link to a spreadsheet I made with the average daily temps in each of the middle seasons! Also provides a sense for the rate of change for each 'middle season.'
"Middle Season #33" (November 30, 2020)
"Middle Season #32" (November 20, 2020)
"Middle Season #31" (November 10, 2020)
"Middle Seasons #30" (October 30, 2020)
"Middle Season #29" (October 20, 20202)
"On 10-day Weeks and the poet of the Season" (October 11, 2020) Post comes from "Waiting for the Weekend." Long quotes about the 10-day weeks in several civilizations and details about the French Revolution's new calendar.
"Middle Season #28" (October 10, 2020)
"Building an Inventory of the Middle Seasons" (October 6, 2020) Where I work out the whole middle seasons plan. I have the idea that I should also add each day's "Note 10 things" to this... so each middle seasons entry would have both photos and descriptions.
"Middle Season #27" (September 30, 2020) (or just after)
"On 'Middle Seasons' on the autumn equinox" (September 24, 2020) This is about the 24 Japanese seasons (72 microseasons), about the French calendar named after seasonal things. I included a picture of 4 nature things that were happening at this time, but I didn't yet have the idea of making my own series of middle seasons.
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