Top Left: April - Bird Scaring. You’ve no sooner sowed you seed than those pesky birds are there eating eat. Incidentally. the propensity of local lords and landowners, not to mention monasteries, to keep large flocks of doves and pigeons for food was a real issue for the peasantry whose seed was apt to fatten the birds for the pot! Top Right: May - My personal favourite - Rogation Sunday and the blessing of the crops. Do you have a diary that has a day mysteriously called “Rogation Sunday”? Well it was a very important occasion in the mediaeval world, the meaning of which is now largely lost to us. I once took a woman to a restaurant for Sunday lunch as a first date. Eager to impress with my erudition and wit I made her a mock Rogation Day card (Clinton Cards surprisingly not having yet tapped into the obvious potential). She didn’t get the joke - yes, it was feeble - and wanted to talk about golf and dogs, two of the only subjects under the sun about which I have nothing to say (what - you’ve noticed?). Well apart from the Ryder Cup, that is, and she knew nothing at all about that. There was no second date, needless to say. .Lower Left: I thought this was some bloke who’d had a bit too much to drink and was falling off his horse but apparently it is June - Hawking. This, it hardly needs saying, was not a pursuit for the peasantry and the clothing is much finer. The hawk, sadly, has been broken off. Note the dog to the right. Lower Right: I got this one wrong too. I thought it was some bod with a raging thirst and a tankard in each hand. The same bloke who had been falling of his horse in June perhaps. But no, it is Aquarius spreading water not ale. Thus, it is another of the influencing factors on the crops - rain. You have to admit he does look much more like a pub landlord than a Babylonian god.
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