August 12
Posted by sydney on Aug 12th, 2008
- 1792: August 12, 1792 – The thermometer for three or four days past has stood in the shade at Newton at 79, & 80.
- 1791: August 12, 1791 – Men bind their wheat all day. The harvesters complain of heat. The hand-glass cucumbers begin to bear well: red kidney beans begin to pod.
- 1790: August 12, 1790 – Sister Barker, & nieces, Mary, & Eliz. came.
- 1789: August 12, 1789 – The planters think these foggy mornings, & sunny days, injurious to their hops.
- 1787: August 12, 1787 – Bull-finches feed on the berries of honey-suckles. B. Hall came.
- 1785: August 12, 1785 – Black-caps eat the berries of the honey-suckle, now ripe. Pheasant-cocks crow.
- 1784: August 12, 1784 – Wheat housing at Heards.
- 1782: August 12, 1782 – Swifts about Windsor.
- 1780: August 12, 1780 – Dust flies. Gardens suffer from want of rain. Much wheat bound. Timothy, in the beginning of May, after fasting all the winter, weighed only six pounds & four ounces averdupoise; is now encreased to six pounds & 15 ounces, averdupoise.
- 1778: August 12, 1778 – My well sinks very much.
- 1775: August 12, 1775 – Full moon. High tides frequently discompose the weather in places so near the coast, even in the dryest, most settled season, for a day or two.
*Cimices lineares are now in high copulation on ponds & pools. The females, who vastly exceed the males in bulk, dart & shoot along the surface of the water with the males on their backs. When a female chuses to be disenegaged, she rears & jumps & plunges like an unruly colt; the lover, thus dismounted, soon finds a new mate. The females as fast as their curiosities are satisfied retire to another part of the lake, perhaps to deposit their foetus in quiet: hence the sexes are found separate except where generation is going-on. From the multitude of minute young of all gradations of size, thses insects seem without doubt to be viviparous. - 1774: August 12, 1774 – Fly-catchers bring out young broods. Mich. daisy blows. Apricots ripen. Some martins, dispossessed of their nests by sparrows, return to them again when their enemies are shot, & breed in them. Several pairs of martins have not yet brought forth their first brood. They meet with interruptions, & leave their nests.
- 1770: August 12, 1770 – Lapwings flie in parties to the downs as it grows dusk.