Weather
Will It Feel Like Spring In MD With Arrival Of Vernal Equinox?
The vernal equinox on Friday signals the astronomical start of spring. Here's when it will feel like spring in Maryland.
When the first day of spring rolls around Friday, it will feel like the real thing in the Baltimore area as the forecast calls for showers and highs in the upper 60s.
The vernal equinox at 9:46 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time on Friday signals the astronomical start of spring. Meteorological spring began on March 1.
Although the definition of the first day of spring varies, the arrival of milder weather often provides a significant psychological lift, acting as a natural, symbolic, and physiological reset point.
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Here’s a look at what various forecasts say about spring in Maryland:
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Climate Prediction Center: NOAA predicts temperatures will be slightly above average this spring, with chances of the state seeing slightly above-average precipitation.
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AccuWeather: In Maryland, AccuWeather predicts residents will see a typical transition to spring, as well as average temperatures. Meanwhile, severe weather is expected to peak in May.
The Weather Channel: The private weather service expects the state to experience slightly warmer than average temperatures from March until May, as well as slightly above average precipitation.
The Old Farmer’s Almanac: The publication’s outlook suggests the weather in Maryland during April and May will be warmer and drier than usual, while rainfall will be below normal in April and normal in May.
5 Things To Know About The Equinox
The date of the vernal equinox changes because Earth’s orbit around the sun takes approximately 365.25 days, not the 365 days in a standard calendar year. This “extra” quarter-day causes the equinox to occur roughly six hours later each year, a shift eventually corrected by leap years, resulting in a fluctuating date.
1. During the equinox, will we have equal hours of day and night?
No, according to National Geographic, although they’re close. Days of nearly equal daylight and nighttime always fall before the spring equinox and or autumnal equinox — that’s on Sept. 23 this year — and then it depends on where you are on the planet.
So, when the sun passes over the equator on March 20, the day will be a little longer than the night, no matter where you are.
2. Does the sun rise due east and set due west at the equinox?
Yes, it does, no matter where you are on Earth. If you’re directionally confused, or downright dysfunctional, this is a good time of year to find due east and due west, according to Earthsky.org, which advises: “Just go outside around sunset or sunrise and notice the location of the sun on the horizon with respect to familiar landmarks.”
Your clarity won’t last, though, as the direction of the sun will shift as the season progresses.
3. During the equinox, can you stand in the direct sun and not cast a shadow?
The sun’s new angle during the equinox will change the length of your shadow, but conditions would have to be perfect for this to happen. For example, you’d have to be standing right at the equator when the clock strikes noon to avoid casting a shadow, according to The Old Farmer’s Almanac.
4. Can you really stand an egg on its end at the exact moment spring arrives?
Yes, but no more so on the first day of spring than on any other day, according to “The Bad Astronomer” Philip Plait, who compares the egg standing myth to “an extremely contagious virus.” Plait, an American astronomer, skeptic, writer and popular science blogger, says the reason eggs can be balanced on one end most likely has to do with tiny bumps on the shell on the end that “act like little legs holding the egg up.”
5. Does spring really make people more amorous?
Uhm, no, according to the Science of Relationships, which says sexual drives and mating behaviors follow six-month cycles. So, you’re most likely to feel the urge to go forth and procreate, or at least practice for it, in the winter and spring.
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