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đŸŒ± Spring Is Here (Whether You’re Ready or Not)

Welcome back, dear reader. If you’ve been living under a rock — or, more likely, under three blankets and a Netflix subscription — allow us to deliver some news: spring has arrived.


🌾 What Even IS Spring?

Great question. Scientifically speaking, spring is the season that begins around the vernal equinox (March 20th in the Northern Hemisphere), when the Earth’s axis tilts just enough toward the sun to remind us that warmth is, in fact, real and not something we imagined.

But forget the science for a moment. Spring is really this: that specific afternoon when you step outside and think “oh. OH.” Your whole body remembers that sunlight exists. You squint. You might cry a little. You start making plans you definitely won’t follow through on, like jogging or starting a garden.


“Spring has returned. The Earth is like a child that knows poems.” — Rainer Maria Rilke

(And we, dear reader, are like a child who forgot all the poems but is very excited about ice cream.)


📾 Signs of Spring in the Wild

Here are some photos capturing the magic of the season in full bloom:

đŸŒ· [Photo: Cherry blossoms lining a sunlit park path] (The internet’s most photographed trees, and honestly, they deserve every pixel.)

🐝 [Photo: A bee absolutely losing its mind over a crocus] (Same, little bee. Same.)

☀ [Photo: Golden afternoon light through new green leaves] (This is what hope looks like, scientifically.)

🐣 [Photo: Baby ducks following their mom along a canal] (Don’t @ us, these are objectively the best content spring produces.)


🎬 For Your Viewing Pleasure

Need more spring in your life? We’ve got you covered:

đŸ“ș Watch: “Why Do Flowers Bloom in Spring?” — SciShow

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3CmQ_ZTmIRI (Öffnet in neuem Fenster)

(Finally understand what’s actually happening in your garden, beyond “magic.”)

đŸ“ș Watch: Timelapse of Spring Arriving Across North America — BBC Earth

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T_ECL3fn1Pw (Öffnet in neuem Fenster)

✅ The Official Spring Checklist

You know we love a good bullet point. Here’s what spring demands of you:

  • Open a window. Just one. Let the air in. Let winter out.

  • Touch some grass. Literally. It’s therapeutic. Scientists have studied this.

  • Buy flowers for no reason. Tulips, daffodils, whatever. Put them on your kitchen table. Feel smug.

  • Make a plan to go hiking and then spend 45 minutes choosing the right trail before giving up and going to a cafĂ© instead. (Classic.)

  • Sneeze approximately 400 times. This is not optional. Pollen has opinions.

  • Say “it’s finally feeling like spring!” to at least three people. This is legally required.

  • Notice something small. A bee on a windowsill. A green shoot cracking through pavement. A dog experiencing a warm day for the first time this year. Let it delight you.


đŸŒĄïž What’s the Weather Actually Doing?

Spring weather, as you know, is completely unhinged. One day it’s 18°C and gorgeous; the next you’re back in your coat wondering if you hallucinated the whole thing. This is normal. This is part of the deal.

The atmosphere is basically a toddler in April — enthusiastic, chaotic, and capable of producing sunshine AND a tantrum within the same hour. We say this with love. We say this because we cover weather for a living.

The good news? The trend is upward. The days are longer. The light is golden. The worst is behind us.


🌿 A Few Spring Facts Worth Knowing

Here’s some trivia to impress people at whatever outdoor gathering you’re attending now that it’s warm enough to have outdoor gatherings again:

  • Flowers don’t actually “know” it’s spring — they respond to photoperiodism, the ratio of daylight to darkness. They’re not magic. They’re just really good at reading the room.Âč

  • The word “spring” comes from the Old English “springan,” meaning to leap or burst forth. Which is exactly what your energy does on the first warm day.ÂČ

  • Birds start singing earlier in spring not just because they’re happy, but because longer days trigger hormonal changes that make them... very chatty. Very, very early.Âł (At 5am. Every day. Without asking.)

  • Bees don’t sting in spring out of aggression — they’re usually just confused and caffeinated on pollen. Respect the bee. Leave the bee alone.⁎


💛 A Final Word

Spring doesn’t ask if you’re ready. It just shows up — warm and chaotic and full of pollen and possibility — and it says here we go again.

And every single year, somehow, it’s enough. A little light. A little warmth. The smell of rain on dry earth. A tulip being absurdly, unnecessarily beautiful just because it can.

Welcome back, spring. We missed you more than we’d like to admit.

Until next week — go outside. Even just for a minute.

— The Better Weather Team ☀


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Footnotes:

Âč Photoperiodism was first described by Wightman Garner and Henry Allard in 1920, when they noticed tobacco plants behaved differently based on day length. Tobacco ruined everything, but at least it gave us plant science.

ÂČ The Oxford English Dictionary traces “spring” in the seasonal sense to around the 14th century. Before that, people called it “Lent” — which explains a lot about medieval vibes.

³ The dawn chorus — that cacophony of birdsong at sunrise — peaks in April and May. Studies show male birds sing more at dawn to defend territory and attract mates. Essentially: they’re showing off. Loudly. Before you’ve had coffee.

⁎ Honeybees are generally docile in spring when nectar is abundant. An unbothered bee is a happy bee. The same, arguably, applies to humans.

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