The main thing that I don’t miss about an English Winter is not
so much the weather, but actually the long nights. I can take the cold and I actually like snow
(as long as it’s fresh and not slushy), but the extended periods of darkness can just be plain
depressing.
The problem is that if the daytimes are overcast in England,
you can actually spend a week or more when it never seems to get light. You get up in darkness, go to work in
darkness, spend the day indoors looking out at the greyness and then return
home in the dark. The experience of
being stuck inside can also be exaggerated by an element of claustrophobia in
many cases, given that the size of rooms and houses are generally more modest
in England, compared with the USA.
I have long speculated that the darkness contributes to the
melancholic streak in the English character.
Just as the US is 2 notches to the right on the political scale, Blighty
is 2 notches towards miserableness on the chirpiness meter.
Not everyone in the US lives in Florida, of course. Some of the northern states have winters much
harsher than Northern England, or even Highland Scotland, for that matter. Some US Northerners, nicknamed ‘Snowbirds’
travel down to Florida for the Winter months in order to avoid the worst of it.
December in St Augustine, Florida |
Ironically, because the Winter can be so dark and miserable
in England, Spring can be a truly joyous time - when, much to everyone’s
relief, Nature literally seems to ‘spring’ back to life after lying dormant for
what seems like an age. You don’t get
that in Florida. It just gets gradually
hotter (and stickier) from February onwards.
Snow in Headingley, Leeds |
I am certainly not moaning.
I can play tennis here all year round here, which is pretty
amazing. The Winter in Florida, if anything, can be
better for outdoor sports. I still
remember the singles match I played at the height of Summer, when it was over a
100 degrees F and even the spectators in the shade were dripping with
perspiration – it was more like a war of attrition than a sporting contest!
It is also true to say that human cultures always tend to
adapt to their situation and make the most of it. The ‘indoor culture’ in England has no doubt
contributed to its wealth of literature, music, and numerous hobbies and
pastimes. There is also no real equivalent
in Florida of stumbling up a snow covered hill, entering a pub with a real
fire, and supping a foamy pint of warm ale whilst you thaw out.
12 degrees F the past few nights up here. Florida is better say Arizona with seasons at least.
ReplyDeleteI definitely do not miss English winters, and I was reminded of that this past Christmas. 8 hours of daylight, and grey daylight at that, do not a happy Eve make.
ReplyDeleteYou're right. The weather can be depressing, but I like your conclusion that the Brits have developed pastimes and hobbies and cultural activities as a result of the long days indoors.
ReplyDeleteI always dreaded around September when school started - it seemed like winter was just around the corner and I had to brace myself for the darkness. Days on end, where you had to have the lights on in your house even in the middle of the day for light. I love snow in England - it seemed to bright things up, even though everything shut down! I have to disagree about England having "seasons". Being from Colorado - I'd have to say England was pretty much "cool" for Summer, and just "a little cold" for Winter, even though it's a "wet" cold- it doesn't get anywhere near as cold as here.
ReplyDeleteI found November to be pretty miserable as a kid. Once November 5th had past, it seemed like an age until Xmas. The leaves turning brown looked good in Cumbria, but once they fell, you ended up walking around in a sludge of decomposing wet leaves in the cold and dark.
DeleteYou should be grateful that in the northern hemisphere, there is Christmas to look forward to. If you live in Australia or New Zealand, Christmas will be in the summer, and there will not be any celebration during the winter (June-August).
DeleteHa,I've always loved Nov and Dec in the UK ..at least the bright lights are out then,Jan is the worst month
ReplyDeletePaul! Have you stopped blogging? Or just taking a break?
ReplyDeleteI just published one today. I got embroiled in other things. But I am going to go back to regular blogging on here!
DeleteAt least in the northern hemisphere, there is Christmas to look forward to in the winter, in the southern hemisphere there is absolutely nothing to look forward to in the winter (as Christmas is a summer event). I love Britain with a passion, despite long hours of darkness in the winter and I particularly love seeing London all lit up!
ReplyDelete