Rediscovering the Seasons: Learning to Notice the Year Again
Rediscovering the Seasons: Learning to Notice the Year Again “Nature doesn’t suddenly change overnight — we’ve simply stopped looking.” Modern life has made it surprisingly easy to miss the seasons. We move from house to car, from car to office, from office to supermarket, and from supermarket back indoors again. Our homes are lit, heated, cooled and connected all year round. Strawberries appear in winter. Tomatoes appear in January. Weather forecasts arrive as phone notifications. We can go through an entire week barely noticing whether the hawthorn has flowered, whether the swallows have returned, or whether the first frost has silvered the grass. Yet outside, the year is still turning. The seasons have not disappeared. We have simply become less practised at seeing them. What Is Phenology? Phenology is the study of seasonal natural events: when blossom appears, when birds migrate, when leaves change colour, when fungi emerge, when insects become active, and when frost first ap...