Rebecca Stark is the author of The Good Portion: Godthe second title in The Good Portion series.

The Good Portion: God explores what Scripture teaches about God in hopes that readers will see his perfection, worth, magnificence, and beauty as they study his triune nature, infinite attributes, and wondrous works. 

                     

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Monday
May202013

The Year With No Summer

Yesterday we had snow flurries and a high of 5ºC, and today will be more of the same. This is Victoria Day weekend, our first long weekend of the (supposed) summer. It made me think of this post from five years ago.  (Update: Some Canadians have it even worse this weekend. Link sent by Kim Shay.)

William_Turner_-_Flint_Castle.jpg

When I was a child I read a novel that mentioned a year in the 1800s when there was no summer. I read a book a day at that time and they all blend together, so don’t expect me to remember a title. What I’ve never forgotten, however, is that there really was a year without summer.

I imagined a year with snow cover all year round, when people ice skated on frozen lakes in July. It wasn’t quite like that, but 1816 was an unusual weather year. There was a snowstorm that dumped 4 inches of snow in New England in the middle of June, and there was frost overnight for several days in a row in both July and August. In between those extraordinary occurrences, there was normal summer weather, but the frosts caused crop failure in the northeastern US and eastern Canada.

In Europe, there was nearly constant cold and wet, with crop failures there, too. In Ireland, it rained for 142 days in the summer, causing a famine. There was no grape harvest in France and no grain harvest in Germany. 

Historians blame the eruption of the Tambora volcano in Indonesia the year before,  the biggest eruption in recorded history. All those ash particles in the atmosphere of the northern hemisphere were bound to cause significant changes in the weather.

Not every result bad. There were brilliantly colourful sunrises and sunsets, which some say inspired the intense glowing depictions of the sun on the horizon in the paintings of the British impressionist painter J. M. W. Turner. You see an example in Turner’s painting of Flint Castle above, and another in one of his nautical paintings, The Fighting Téméraire tugged to her last Berth to be broken up.

According to oral tradition, we had a year without summer in the Yukon, and people starved here, too. In the 1970s, Yukon elder Rachel Dawson reported that it occurred over one hundred years before her time. Here’s how she describes it.

Two winters joined together. No snow, but there was ice all over, and the winters were joined together. 1

There are variations to the story, and it’s impossible to pin down exactly when it was. Perhaps it was 1816, when the Tambora volcano wreaked widespread havoc, or maybe it was either 1845, 1849, or 1850, when tree ring measurement shows very little growth.

But it all goes to show that in the weather realm, strange things can happen anywhere at any time. What I’m waiting for is the year with no winter. Of course, we’d chalk that up to global warming/climate change.


1When I originally posted this, I linked to a source for the information and quote. That document is gone now, but I found this book corroborating the info, but not the quote.

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Reader Comments (4)

Rebecca,

Don't know if, via your Minnesota connections, you'd heard about Rochester's 'fluke' snow storm on May 2. That Thursday, we received 15.5" of wet, heavy snow (who knows how much it could have been if it would have been the light, fluffy stuff of February) and then another 3" by Friday noon. Biggest snowfall ever in May in Minnesota; 6th largest snowfall ever recorded. By the next Monday, it was all gone and the temperature less than two weeks later set a record high 96ºF for one day! No volcano to blame this go round, I think. It's been a challenge reminding the people of my congregation that we're not to grumble or complain about anything, but to give thanks in all circumstances!

May 20, 2013 | Unregistered CommenterKevin Sorensen

I hadn't heard . . . .

I will try to remember your "no grumbling" reminder as I take the dog out for his morning walk. It's -3ºC (around 27ºF.)

May 20, 2013 | Registered Commenterrebecca

hello and greetings from Venice, Italy!! I enjoyed reading your post, I just read that in New York the winter after that "summer"was a very bleak one, reaching -32C some days.
Now, that's very very cold.
Anyway people are mentioning that summer because it has not been a great May but in fact temperatures have been within average, I am not a meteorologist I simply have been keeping a photo diary for a year or two, for instance it poured down in 2011 on the 6th of June, I am looking at a photo of that day :)
Take care and be good, love to Canada from Venice.

May 31, 2013 | Unregistered Commentermarco

Hello Marco,

That's interesting info about the winter after the summer-that-wasn't.

I'm glad you enjoyed the post.

June 1, 2013 | Unregistered Commenterrebecca

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