Welcome to American Folklore. This folklore site contains retellings of American folktales, Native American myths and legends, tall tales, weather folklore and ghost stories from each and every one of the 50 United States.
www.americanfolklore.net/ www.americanfolklore.net/
Weather folklore and weather proverbs from American folklore. ... Check out the latest weather reports - folklore style!! ... Weather Lore | Lesson Plans | Railroad Stories | ESL | Tongue Twisters | Latin American Folklore...
www.americanfolklore.net/weatherlore.html www.americanfolklore.net/weatherlore.html
Winter Weatherlore & Folklore from Stormfax® Look for weather signs in your own backyard! ... Folklore is different from weatherlore, but both are interesting and entertaining, Weatherlore is based on observation of the environment and the effects that changes in the weather have on insects, animals, birds and people.
www.stormfax.com/wxfolk.htm
Weather Wiz Kids is a fun and safe website for kids about all the weather info they need to know. It contains tools for weather education, including weather games, activities, experiments, photos, a glossary and educational teaching materials for the classroom. ... Welcome to Weather Wiz Kids®. I'm Crystal Wicker,
www.weatherwizkids.com/ www.weatherwizkids.com/
Welcome To Huge Collection Of Weather Folklore! ... General Weather Folklores ... Welcome to the Weather Folklore page. Here, you will find over 200 weather folklore sayings to help you forecast with a funny touch.
www.islanderz.com/weather/folklore.html www.islanderz.com/weather/folklore.html
Weather lore - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Weather lore is the body of informal folklore related to the prediction of the weather. It has been a human desire for millennia to make accurate weather predictions. Oral and written history is full...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weather_lore
Simply a collection of weather folklore ... General Weather Folklore; ... From Weather Folklore...
www.tooter4kids.com/weather/weatherfolklore.html www.tooter4kids.com/weather/weatherfolklore.html
People have been forecasting the weather for centuries. They once looked to plants and animals for hints about what the weather would do. For example, before it rained, some people often observed that ants moved to higher ground, cows lay down, pine cones opened up, frogs croaked more frequently, and sheeps' wool uncurled.
www.wxdude.com/proverb.html
pbskids.org/dragonflytv/parentsteachers/tguide_weather.... pbskids.org/dragonflytv/parentsteachers/tguide_weather.html
Britannica online encyclopedia article on Groundhog Day (weather folklore), in the United States and Canada, day (February 2) on which the emergence of the groundhog (woodchuck) from its burrow is said to foretell the weather for the following six weeks. ... in the United States and Canada, ... The beginning of February,
www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/247004/Groundhog-Day