Spring Equinox Facts

by Seasonal Wisdom on March 20, 2010

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Looking Back: Spring began officially in the Northern Hemisphere with the spring equinox today. From this point forward, the days will grow longer than the nights until the summer solstice on June 21.

Cool trivia about the spring equinox:

  • Some believe the spring equinox is when the days and nights are exactly the same length. That’s not exactly true, according to National Geographic.
  • Easter and the spring equinox have more in common than you may think. Easter falls on the Sunday on or after the full moon that follows the Equinox. Many of Easter’s symbols (eggs and rabbits, for example) are spring fertility symbols that date back to pre-Christian times.
  • The spring equinox is now considered the official start to spring. But in many traditional calendars, spring’s emergence was typically celebrated in early-February.

Today, we’re having one of those warm, sweetly scented days that illustrate why people get “spring fever.”

For those of you, who believe spring will never come. Consider these words from Henry Van Dyke:

“The first day of spring is one thing, and the first spring day is another. The difference between the two is sometimes as great as a month.”

Keep the faith, spring will arrive for you too.

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