Peasant rules in climate change: what they are really worth today!

The farmer Karl Friedrich Meyer reports on the importance and validity of peasant rules in climate change.
The farmer Karl Friedrich Meyer reports on the importance and validity of peasant rules in climate change. (Symbolbild/NAG)

Peasant rules in climate change: what they are really worth today!

The use of peasant rules for the weather forecast is a topic that not only includes tradition, but also current challenges through climate change. In the Hameln region, farmer Karl Friedrich Meyer, 67 years old, shows how these centuries -old wisdom can still be relevant today. He has been running a family business for 10 generations, which will continue by his son in the 11th generation. Meyer observes the weather every day and, based on his experiences, builds his own peasant rules that help him plan the harvest of his crops such as grain, potatoes, corn and sugar beet. In a conversation with Remszeitung he reports of the current drought, which is extraordinary, but the upcoming harvest does not endanger.

At the moment, the drought of the wheat harvest has even well -fed because fewer diseases occurred. Meyer does not make use of artificial irrigation and rely entirely on the natural rain. It also uses modern weather apps and local weather stations to document its daily weather data, even if he firmly adheres to the validity of its traditional peasant rules.

peasant rules and their development

peasant rules have their roots in the oral tradition and can only be documented in writing since the 15th century. Many of these rules were formulated as proverbs to increase the noticeability. As Land and Forst determine the regional differences in peasant rules, depending on local weather conditions and agricultural practices. Their inaccurate origin and the often superstitious element make it difficult to evaluate your validity, but many peasant rules have a hit rate of over 50%.

The validity of the rules is increasingly influenced by climate change, especially due to the rarer snow -rich winter and the shift in plant flower times. These changes mean that some rules lose reliability. Nevertheless, many principles remain up to date because they describe elementary weather phenomena and their influences on harvests. For example, for the dormouse day (June 27), the rule is that the weather remains the same for seven weeks during this time. This rule has proven to be stable, since the big weather situation in Europe is often stabilized at the end of June, as well as

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OrtHameln, Deutschland
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