Old Wives’ Tales – Nature’s Winter Weather Signals
It’s creeping towards midwinter here in Derbyshire and the rain has the sort of persistence that feels personal. It taps at the window, sulks down the lanes, and sluices the last of the autumn leaves into sad little piles, while the rest of us stare hopefully at the sky and mutter, “Any day now.”
Every winter, without fail, I start this same quiet vigil, because snow in Buxton is never just weather. It is a promise, a portent, and occasionally, a terrible joke told by the jet stream. And while the forecasters issue their percentages and probabilities, some of us prefer to fall back on something far older. The signs, the superstitions, the old country ways of reading the sky that our grandparents swore by and we still half-believe on the darker evenings.
The old folks always said you could smell snow before it came and I believe this to be true. It’s a sharp, metallic tang on the air, as if the cold has teeth. Most people insist it isn’t real, that you can’t possibly scent a weather system, but anyone who grew up with horses knows it’s true.
There’s something in the stillness, a pause, a hush, a tightening of the world, as though the land itself is holding its breath. My grandad used to step outside, tilt his head, sniff and declare, “We’ll have it by morning,” with a confidence no satellite has ever matched.
The sky was and still is the great storyteller of the season. A pale, whitish dome means nothing. Blue means rain. But a heavy grey with a faint yellow underbelly, stretching low like an old wet blanket – that’s snow without question.
Shepherds have a whole vocabulary for winter skies. A “bellied cloud” sags when snow is brewing. A “weeping sky” is one that can’t quite decide, and often brings sleet that stings your face like thrown gravel. A “blind sky” is the one every child loves… dense, colourless, depthless, giving nothing away until the first lazy flakes drift down as if from nowhere at all.
Birds have always been regarded as an oracle. Robins hopping close to the house mean a cold snap is coming. Crows gathering in odd places foretell a storm and if the little garden birds vanish all at once? Well, the old folks would simply nod grimly and tell you to bring in the washing.
Some old miners swore that when snow was imminent, the pit ponies grew restless and the dogs refused to settle. One old fella I used to know in Barnsley claimed his cat could predict snow two days before the Met Office. She used to turn her back on him and stare pointedly at the pantry door, a sure sign of impending trouble.
Then there’s the winds, each of them with their own personality. A wind from the east carried the threat of “the beast” long before it had a catchy name. An oddly warm breeze in December means the weather is winding up for mischief. And if the wind suddenly drops altogether, leaving a bright uncanny stillness, the older folk would mutter, “The snow’s packing its bags.” – You could almost see it forming, silently, somewhere just beyond the horizon.
Frost itself is said to be a messenger. A heavy white frost in early December was said to “lock in the winter,” ensuring snowfall before Christmas. A soggy, muddy morning – like most of this week in Derbyshire – meant the cold spell was hesitating and might yet lose its nerve. But a rime glistening on the hedges, thick as sugar icing, was the surest sign of a hard winter.
The old rhyme went:
“Frost on the gate, snow can’t wait.
Frost on the sill, snow climbs the hill.”
People repeated it with great seriousness, even though half of them couldn’t remember the rest.
The moon, naturally, has a say in everything. A bright ring around it – a winter halo – was seen as a classic sign of approaching snow, the ice crystals high above catching the light like a warning. Some families would even leave a candle in the window when they saw a halo, to welcome in the “snow spirits” and coax a gentler fall.
A red or orange moon in December meant unsettled weather ahead, while a silver-blue one, cold and crystalline, was believed to herald a dry, biting frost. And of course, if the moon seemed “too close” – larger than usual, looming like a watcher – the elders would glance at it as though it were telling them secrets.
Animals, too, played their part. Cows lying down has always a favourite of mine, although cows lie down for their own inscrutable reasons whenever they feel like it. Horses rolling more than usual meant the ground was about to harden. When the sheep cluster tightly, wool to wool, you can safely fetch your boots and begin the traditional practice of peering into the sky every twenty minutes with unrealistic optimism.
There were, of course, stranger beliefs in the past. Some people swore that when snow was incoming, your dreams changed – turning clearer, sharper, as though the cold crept into the subconscious. Others said the world grew quieter before a snowfall, the birdsong thinning out, the trees standing still, the air settling into a peculiar waiting – there’s truth in that one, I think. Anyone who’s experienced real snow knows the world hushes itself in readiness.
Yet for all these signs, for every omen and whisper of the weather, winter still delights in wrong-footing us – Derbyshire especially loves to pretend it’s about to snow for a week, only to dump a single apologetic flurry in February out of spite.
But still we look up. Still we check the moon, sniff the air, and try to convince ourselves that the clouds seem heavier today. Because reading the sky isn’t really about predicting the weather at all. It’s about belonging to the land, listening to its stories, trusting the instincts we inherited whether we admit it or not.
And maybe this year, with the rain drumming its steady rhythm and the hills wrapped in wet mist, the signs will align. The air will sharpen. The robins will hop a little closer. The sky will shift from grey to that peculiar shade that means business, and in the hush before dusk, snow will finally drift over Derbyshire, soft and slow and ancient as the old wives who taught us how to see it coming.
Until then, I’ll watch the sky. And I’ll wait.
#Folklore #Snow #Superstitions #UK #weatherFolklore #WeatherLore






