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Oktoberfest (Octoberfest)
***** Location: Germany
***** Season: Autumn
***** Category: Observance
*****************************
Explanation
The Oktoberfest in Munich, which usually starts in the middle of September (that is a good reason to call it OCTOBER fest) and runs only until the 3rd of October, is celebrated in many German communities all over the world where people love beer, saussages and companionship.
Next to the Christmas tree, the Oktoberfest is the most popular custom that Germany has ever exported. From Saturday thousands of thirsty tourists will flock to Munich for the world's biggest Oktoberfest.
The Munich Oktoberfest is the largest German Volksfest, or festival. It all began with the marriage celebration of the Bavarian crown prince Ludwig (later to become King Ludwig I.) to Princess Therese from the German kingdom of Saxony-Hildburghausen on Oct. 12, 1810.
Over the years, the beer fest has spread to many parts of the world. But not all are as old and traditional as the Munich festival. However, they have similarities: All serve lots of beer and authentic Bavarian meals to traditional Bavarian music played by local or some times exported German brass bands.
Read a lot more here
http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,1329027,00.html
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The Oktoberfest 2004 has ended!
On the Germans national holiday, October 3rd, the 171st Oktoberfest has ended. In spite of the bad weather, 5.9 Million people visited the worlds biggest fair this year and drank approximately 5.5 million liters of beer. On the 17th of September 2005 the 172nd Oktoberfest will open its gates.
Look at some great highlights from 2004.
http://www.oktoberfest.de/en/10/
Check it out here:
http://www.oktoberfest.de/en/index.php
And another German link
http://www.muenchen.de/Tourismus/Oktoberfest/89552/
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"Oktoberfest is a three-week festival held each year in Munich, Bavaria, Germany during late September and early October. It is one of the most famous events in the city and the world's largest fair, with some six million people attending
every year."
Many breweries in the USA make special beer at that time of the year and call it Oktoberfest. It is a tradition started by German immigrants many years ago.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !
*****************************
Worldwide use
USA
Fall is the season of Oktoberfests... folk festivals with live music, Bavarian treats, folk dancing, arts and crafts shows, ethnic food chalets, and of course a beer garden (Biergarten).
The background of Oktoberfest! is:
http://www.globalgourmet.com/food/egg/egg1097/oktoberfest.html
Carol Raisfeld
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Things found on the way
*****************************
HAIKU
Oktoberfest
a sampling of beer from
many kegs
Carol Raisfeld
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Oktoberfest unumgaenglich
von ottonormalverbraucher
De Musi spuid auf
Des Festbier fliesst in Stroemen
Bsuffa gema hoam
http://www.dulzinea.de/forum/haikus/e12782-gedicht.html
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Oktoberfest -
a drunken driver
sleeps in the car
Gabi Greve
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Kodak Moments of Oktoberfest:
two Chinese dressed
in Lederhosen and Dirndls
Munich's blue sky
Italians sing
Bavarian drinking songs
a German girl's smile
Oktoberfest
a sea of human heads
inside the beer tent
House of Horrors
hand in hand an old couple
giggling
slanted sunlight
in my gingerbread heart
her bite mark
a roller coaster
against the sunset sky
Sayonara
Chen-ou Liu
Canada, 2006
The 2012/179th Oktoberfest,
the biggest folk /beer festival in the world, came to end yesterday.
“Oktoberfest party goers glugged 6.9 million litres of beer.”
a line of waitresses
dancing on the table
smell of the Oktoberfest
Chen-ou Liu
Canada, 2012
*****************************
Related words
***** Harvest Thanksgiving (Christian communities)
Harvest Festival, Erntedankfest
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3/12/2006
3/04/2006
October (juugatsu)
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October (juugatsu 十月)
***** Location: Japan. worldwide
***** Season: Late Autumn
***** Category: Season
*****************************
Explanation
Haiku juugatsu in the Edo period relates to the climate of present-day November,
but some festivals are dated in our present-day October.
. . Names of Japanese months and their meanings . .
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
. . . . AUTUMN
the complete SAIJIKI
nagatsuki,nagazuki 長月 (ながつき) "long month"
ninth lunar month, now 8 Oct – 6 Nov
Kannazuki - Month without Gods
tenth lunar month, now 7 Nov – 6 Dec
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
October----The Changing Season
Inahata Teiko
October is the late autumn on the calendar. The sky is endlessly blue, hills and fields are covered with red and yellow leaves, plants bear fruit, and the air becomes clearer and colder. This month most distinctly shows the characteristics of autumn in the four seasons. Don’t you think so?
October is the beautiful and comfortable season, which is blessed with opulent products. However, at the same time, there shows a sign of the degeneration of the creatures, which steals up from behind. Light and shadow contend in power each other. In the meantime, after passing a short period when all the mountains, rivers, trees and plants are filled with deep tranquility, shadow becomes predominant. The temperature goes down, born fruits fall down, red leaves turn to the withered color, and at last the leaves begin to fall gradually.
In a word, October is the changing season.
Considering what sort of things nature has brought to the human beings through the above changes, we thank for the fact that we are given a lot of gifts.
© Inahata Teiko : NATURE AND OUR LIFE
*****************************
Worldwide use
Southern Hemisphere, Tropics ...
Adjustments for each region must be made.
Germany
Oktober, Goldener Oktober
*****************************
Things found on the way
*****************************
HAIKU
October night
dead leaves rush towards me
© Martin Gottlieb Cohen, tinywords 2007
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October night
not a leaf flapping
not a sound
October night
flying ants join me
for dinner
October night
the eerie feeling
of aloneness
October night
a napping cat curled
at the doorstep
October night
a cup of hot chocolate
stirs my reverie
Willie Bongcaron, Philippines
October 2009
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October in the desert of Yemen
around the campfire
never felt so content ..
shooting stars
~~~
a few stray camels
the only sign of life –
Milky way
~~~
shortened day at a grave:
the dog kept guarding
his mistress' new tent
~~~
the desert wolf digs
a deep burrow –
sand dunes transform
i)
~~~
together ...
listening to
the wolves howl
ii)
~~~
following the crack
in a mud wall ...
Pegasus' square
iii)
...
i) meaning: daytime, to protect himself from the sun/heat gain
ii) meaning: wolves howl > Arabian or desert wolf is usually alone (due to the fact that food or prey is rare), but not in mating time [mating season from October to December]. They congregate together, than they start to howl.
Arabian wolves do not live in large packs; packs only during mating season, just mating packs.
iii) The autumn sky is dominated by the Great Square of Pegasus, four stars that form a huge square in the sky, which you can see if you look almost straight up.
Heike Gewi, Yemen
Ocotber 2009
YEMEN SAIJIKI
*****************************
Related words
***** Calendar reference kigo
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
. . . . AUTUMN
the complete SAIJIKI
. WKD : October - KIGO CALENDAR .
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
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[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ]
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October (juugatsu 十月)
***** Location: Japan. worldwide
***** Season: Late Autumn
***** Category: Season
*****************************
Explanation
Haiku juugatsu in the Edo period relates to the climate of present-day November,
but some festivals are dated in our present-day October.
. . Names of Japanese months and their meanings . .
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
. . . . AUTUMN
the complete SAIJIKI
nagatsuki,nagazuki 長月 (ながつき) "long month"
ninth lunar month, now 8 Oct – 6 Nov
Kannazuki - Month without Gods
tenth lunar month, now 7 Nov – 6 Dec
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
October----The Changing Season
Inahata Teiko
October is the late autumn on the calendar. The sky is endlessly blue, hills and fields are covered with red and yellow leaves, plants bear fruit, and the air becomes clearer and colder. This month most distinctly shows the characteristics of autumn in the four seasons. Don’t you think so?
October is the beautiful and comfortable season, which is blessed with opulent products. However, at the same time, there shows a sign of the degeneration of the creatures, which steals up from behind. Light and shadow contend in power each other. In the meantime, after passing a short period when all the mountains, rivers, trees and plants are filled with deep tranquility, shadow becomes predominant. The temperature goes down, born fruits fall down, red leaves turn to the withered color, and at last the leaves begin to fall gradually.
In a word, October is the changing season.
Considering what sort of things nature has brought to the human beings through the above changes, we thank for the fact that we are given a lot of gifts.
© Inahata Teiko : NATURE AND OUR LIFE
*****************************
Worldwide use
Southern Hemisphere, Tropics ...
Adjustments for each region must be made.
Germany
Oktober, Goldener Oktober
*****************************
Things found on the way
*****************************
HAIKU
October night
dead leaves rush towards me
© Martin Gottlieb Cohen, tinywords 2007
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
October night
not a leaf flapping
not a sound
October night
flying ants join me
for dinner
October night
the eerie feeling
of aloneness
October night
a napping cat curled
at the doorstep
October night
a cup of hot chocolate
stirs my reverie
Willie Bongcaron, Philippines
October 2009
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
October in the desert of Yemen
around the campfire
never felt so content ..
shooting stars
~~~
a few stray camels
the only sign of life –
Milky way
~~~
shortened day at a grave:
the dog kept guarding
his mistress' new tent
~~~
the desert wolf digs
a deep burrow –
sand dunes transform
i)
~~~
together ...
listening to
the wolves howl
ii)
~~~
following the crack
in a mud wall ...
Pegasus' square
iii)
...
i) meaning: daytime, to protect himself from the sun/heat gain
ii) meaning: wolves howl > Arabian or desert wolf is usually alone (due to the fact that food or prey is rare), but not in mating time [mating season from October to December]. They congregate together, than they start to howl.
Arabian wolves do not live in large packs; packs only during mating season, just mating packs.
iii) The autumn sky is dominated by the Great Square of Pegasus, four stars that form a huge square in the sky, which you can see if you look almost straight up.
Heike Gewi, Yemen
Ocotber 2009
YEMEN SAIJIKI
*****************************
Related words
***** Calendar reference kigo
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
. . . . AUTUMN
the complete SAIJIKI
. WKD : October - KIGO CALENDAR .
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
[ . BACK to DARUMA MUSEUM TOP . ]
[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ]
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3/01/2006
February 2006
ARCHIVES
..................................................................... February 2006
Haiku Situation in Nepal
Tiruppavai of Andal Tamizhnadu, Tamil Nadu, India
Shiva Ratri Night, Festival India, Nepal, Hindu Communities
Goa Carnival India
Shivaji's forts India
Panchatantra, a Fable India
Nehru, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru’s Memorial Day, Children's Day India
Maasai Cattle (Masai Cattle) Kenya, Nairobi
Summer in India Kigo Collection
Yoga India
Chittorgarh Fort (Rajasthan) India
Pansy, Pansies Europe, sanshoku sumire (Japan)
Haiku from Bulgaria Collection of the Europa Saijiki
Haiku from Hungary Collection of the Europa Saijiki
Alberta Family Day, Canada
Crocus (Europe, worldwide)
Power Stone, Strenght Stone (chikara ishi, Japan) weight lifting competition
Poetry and Literature of Kenya
Jaramogi Oginga Odinga, Writer, Kenya
Caterpillar, Hairy Caterpillar of Kenya
Festivals of India They are all kigo.
Ganesh Chaturthi Festival India
Tiger Dance (Huli Vesha, Puli Vesha) India
.... Including TIGER, the animal as non-seasonal topic.
Serpent Festival (Nag Panchami) India
Snake, serpent, viper, cobra (hebi, mamushi, habu) Japan
Wintersweet (roobai) Japan
..... Bahati Haiku Poetry Club, Second Meeting Kenya
***************************
Please send your contributions to Gabi Greve
worldkigo .....
Back to the WHC Worldkigo Index
http://worldkigodatabase.blogspot.com/
..................................................................... February 2006
Haiku Situation in Nepal
Tiruppavai of Andal Tamizhnadu, Tamil Nadu, India
Shiva Ratri Night, Festival India, Nepal, Hindu Communities
Goa Carnival India
Shivaji's forts India
Panchatantra, a Fable India
Nehru, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru’s Memorial Day, Children's Day India
Maasai Cattle (Masai Cattle) Kenya, Nairobi
Summer in India Kigo Collection
Yoga India
Chittorgarh Fort (Rajasthan) India
Pansy, Pansies Europe, sanshoku sumire (Japan)
Haiku from Bulgaria Collection of the Europa Saijiki
Haiku from Hungary Collection of the Europa Saijiki
Alberta Family Day, Canada
Crocus (Europe, worldwide)
Power Stone, Strenght Stone (chikara ishi, Japan) weight lifting competition
Poetry and Literature of Kenya
Jaramogi Oginga Odinga, Writer, Kenya
Caterpillar, Hairy Caterpillar of Kenya
Festivals of India They are all kigo.
Ganesh Chaturthi Festival India
Tiger Dance (Huli Vesha, Puli Vesha) India
.... Including TIGER, the animal as non-seasonal topic.
Serpent Festival (Nag Panchami) India
Snake, serpent, viper, cobra (hebi, mamushi, habu) Japan
Wintersweet (roobai) Japan
..... Bahati Haiku Poetry Club, Second Meeting Kenya
***************************
Please send your contributions to Gabi Greve
worldkigo .....
Back to the WHC Worldkigo Index
http://worldkigodatabase.blogspot.com/
2/16/2006
November (juuichigatsu)
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November (juuichigatsu)
***** Location: Japan
***** Season: Early Winter
***** Category: Season
*****************************
Explanation
Haiku juuichigatsu in the Edo period relates to the climate of present-day December,
but some festivals are dated in our present-day November.
. . Names of Japanese months and their meanings . .
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
kannazuki 神無月 (かんなづき) "Gods are absent"
(now November)
The tenth lunar month (now November), after the harvest when the Japanese gods had done their duty, they left their local shrines for a bit of a vacation. They would all go for an audience and to celebrate at the great shrine of Izumo, so the rest of Japan was "without gods".
. Gods are absent (kami no rusu) .
kigo for mid-winter
chuutoo 仲冬 (ちゅうとう) middle of winter
..... fuyu monaka 仲冬 冬最中(ふゆもなか)
..... fuyu nakaba 冬半ば(ふゆなかば)
another name for November.
In reality, the middle of winter is now from end of december to mid-January, but customarily these kigo are pointing to November.
The name of the eleventh month according to the Asian lunar calendar:
(now also used for November in haiku)
"frost month", shimotsuki 霜月 (しもつき)
"frost coming down month", shimo furi zuki 霜降月(しもふりづき)
"waiting for snow month", yuki machi zuki 雪待月(ゆきまちづき)
"looking at snow month" yukimi zuki 雪見月(ゆきみづき
"month with Kagura Dance performances", kagura zuki 神楽月(かぐらづき)
"Gods coming back" month, shinki zuki 神帰月(しんきづき)
(they have been away in October to visit the shrine in Izumo, see LINK below.)
"month with a day of the mouse" ne no tsuki 子の月(ねのつき)
(meaning the month with the winter solstice)
. December, juunigatsu .
. . . . WINTER - the complete SAIJIKI
11.Shimotsuki - Frost Month
7 Dec – 4 Jan
The archaic name for November.
. Names of months and lunar seasons .
. Shimotsuki Matsuri 霜月祭り Shimotsuki Festivals .
Shinran ki 親鸞忌 (しんらんき)
Memorial Day for Saint Shinran
and seven days of memorial services for him
. o shimotsuki お霜月(おしもつき)"honorable frost month" .
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Inahata Teiko
November――Feeling of Drizzling
Winter comes after the day of ritto which falls on about November the 8th (the first day of winter in the traditional calendar). This time of the year, which is called early winter, is a good season, because the winter air braces our mind and body and we have Indian summer days during these days. While we still enjoy the feeling of autumn, the nature surely begins to change to winter. There is a clear, quiet and lonely atmosphere in the air of the mountains, rivers, trees and plants, and the sounds of rain and wind. We feel the more when we have the first frost or the first of drizzling rain of winter season.
In the meantime, when red and yellow leaves begin to fall, falling leaves are constantly scattered on the ground and still more a withering blast begins to blow, people become busy preparing for the arrival of real winter. The characters of this season are shown in the seasonal words such as daikon arau (wash the radishes), daikon hosu (dry the radishes under the Sun), kiriboshi (dried strips of the radishes) and takuan tsuku (pickle the radishes). People have lived with poetic feelings in their lives. Furthermore such seasonal words as kitamado fusagu (close the north windows), mebari (tape the windows), kazayoke (guard the house from the wind), fuyugamae (getting ready for coldness) describe the lives in winter.
But we believe that among those seasonal words, shigure (a drizzling shower in early winter) is the most typical seasonal word, which exactly depict the sceneries and atmosphere in early winter. In October in the lunar calendar it often rains on and off, and therefore it is called the month of drizzling rain. Shigure, raining on and off, has been composed in a delicate way in poems from the time of Waka of Shinkokin as a symbol of changeable things, the transience of human life.
This sense of transience, the original idea of shigure , has been inherited to haikai. But in haikai , "the Danrin school (a school of haikai which became popular in the latter half of the 17th century. It opposed the traditional haikai of the Teitoku school and composed haiku with innovative and novel interests and wrote comical idea in light and easy spoken language) made intentionally fun the original purpose and ended in comicality. However, it can be said that their innovative composition was still placed under the restriction of tradition in spite of their attempt.
In the book of "Sarumino" written by Basho, shigure came to be freely composed in haiku apart from the restriction of original meaning of the season. In the book of "Sarumino" there are thirteen poems of haiku composed with a theme of sigure.
When in 1936, Takahama Toshio (the son of Kyoshi) began to read "Sarumino" in turn with Nara Shikaro, Awano Seiho and others, Takahama Kyoshi encouraged them by sending a telegram, which reads:
"Begin with thirteen poems of haiku with a subject of sigure". Maybe he meant that they should study the seasonal word, shigure which was composed freely in "Sarumino" apart from original intention of waka poems.
How is shigure composed in haiku in modern times?
© Inahata Teiko, Nature and our Life
*****************************
Worldwide use
*****************************
Things found on the way
*****************************
HAIKU
November seven -
the haiku winter
starts today
Gabi Greve
The day of RITTO 立冬, when the Winter Starts, according to the Asian Lunar Calendar.
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on the mirror --
the last mosquito this
November morning
Isabelle Prondzynski, 2007
November wind --
a sparrow rides on
a swaying branch
November is a lovely warm month in Kenya, the month when the short rains peter out, and the sunshine coaxes the young plants up and into strong growth. Not yet hot (that is January), but the most ideal warmth, and an atmosphere full of hope. The jacarandas and many of the other beautiful trees are in flower, and the wind is mostly gentle, with the odd gust now and again.
Read more
Isabelle Prondzynski, Kenya 2007
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White-gold winking through
Black wiry branches half nude:
November streetlights.
Michael Collings, 2007
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November Day
little puffy clouds
float like tropical fish
in clear blue waters
quickly changing to
baby dragons chasing
buzzards on the prowl
butterfly hovers
over flowerless branches
dreaming of summer
blowing leaves entice
playful puppies to give chase
across the yard
winter waits anon
while autumn paints the landscape
in shades of amber
Ruth Nott, USA, November 2007
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first of November
freshly painted tombstones
where candles flicker
first of November
the sun shines mightily
on silent tombs
first of November
the grief of a widow
stored in her kerchief
first of November
tomb of the undertaker
sits at a corner
first of November
a stray black cat crosses
the beggar's path
first of November
the long and scorching trek
to the unmarked graves
November scene
piles of trash at the graveyard's
silent domain
November dusk
the city dresses up
for Christmas
November breeze
early birds buy knick-knacks
for giveaway
November night
the bright sparkles on lanterns
elicit some "ooohhhhs!"
Willie Bongcaron
Philippines, November 2009
Kigo Hotline
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November moon
a smile on my face
as I drive home
Ella Wagemakers
Kigo Hotline, November 2009
*****************************
Related words
***** All Saints’ Day
***** All Souls' Day
. WKD : November - KIGO CALENDAR .
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[ . BACK to DARUMA MUSEUM TOP . ]
[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ]
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
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November (juuichigatsu)
***** Location: Japan
***** Season: Early Winter
***** Category: Season
*****************************
Explanation
Haiku juuichigatsu in the Edo period relates to the climate of present-day December,
but some festivals are dated in our present-day November.
. . Names of Japanese months and their meanings . .
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
kannazuki 神無月 (かんなづき) "Gods are absent"
(now November)
The tenth lunar month (now November), after the harvest when the Japanese gods had done their duty, they left their local shrines for a bit of a vacation. They would all go for an audience and to celebrate at the great shrine of Izumo, so the rest of Japan was "without gods".
. Gods are absent (kami no rusu) .
kigo for mid-winter
chuutoo 仲冬 (ちゅうとう) middle of winter
..... fuyu monaka 仲冬 冬最中(ふゆもなか)
..... fuyu nakaba 冬半ば(ふゆなかば)
another name for November.
In reality, the middle of winter is now from end of december to mid-January, but customarily these kigo are pointing to November.
The name of the eleventh month according to the Asian lunar calendar:
(now also used for November in haiku)
"frost month", shimotsuki 霜月 (しもつき)
"frost coming down month", shimo furi zuki 霜降月(しもふりづき)
"waiting for snow month", yuki machi zuki 雪待月(ゆきまちづき)
"looking at snow month" yukimi zuki 雪見月(ゆきみづき
"month with Kagura Dance performances", kagura zuki 神楽月(かぐらづき)
"Gods coming back" month, shinki zuki 神帰月(しんきづき)
(they have been away in October to visit the shrine in Izumo, see LINK below.)
"month with a day of the mouse" ne no tsuki 子の月(ねのつき)
(meaning the month with the winter solstice)
. December, juunigatsu .
. . . . WINTER - the complete SAIJIKI
11.Shimotsuki - Frost Month
7 Dec – 4 Jan
The archaic name for November.
. Names of months and lunar seasons .
. Shimotsuki Matsuri 霜月祭り Shimotsuki Festivals .
Shinran ki 親鸞忌 (しんらんき)
Memorial Day for Saint Shinran
and seven days of memorial services for him
. o shimotsuki お霜月(おしもつき)"honorable frost month" .
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Inahata Teiko
November――Feeling of Drizzling
Winter comes after the day of ritto which falls on about November the 8th (the first day of winter in the traditional calendar). This time of the year, which is called early winter, is a good season, because the winter air braces our mind and body and we have Indian summer days during these days. While we still enjoy the feeling of autumn, the nature surely begins to change to winter. There is a clear, quiet and lonely atmosphere in the air of the mountains, rivers, trees and plants, and the sounds of rain and wind. We feel the more when we have the first frost or the first of drizzling rain of winter season.
In the meantime, when red and yellow leaves begin to fall, falling leaves are constantly scattered on the ground and still more a withering blast begins to blow, people become busy preparing for the arrival of real winter. The characters of this season are shown in the seasonal words such as daikon arau (wash the radishes), daikon hosu (dry the radishes under the Sun), kiriboshi (dried strips of the radishes) and takuan tsuku (pickle the radishes). People have lived with poetic feelings in their lives. Furthermore such seasonal words as kitamado fusagu (close the north windows), mebari (tape the windows), kazayoke (guard the house from the wind), fuyugamae (getting ready for coldness) describe the lives in winter.
But we believe that among those seasonal words, shigure (a drizzling shower in early winter) is the most typical seasonal word, which exactly depict the sceneries and atmosphere in early winter. In October in the lunar calendar it often rains on and off, and therefore it is called the month of drizzling rain. Shigure, raining on and off, has been composed in a delicate way in poems from the time of Waka of Shinkokin as a symbol of changeable things, the transience of human life.
This sense of transience, the original idea of shigure , has been inherited to haikai. But in haikai , "the Danrin school (a school of haikai which became popular in the latter half of the 17th century. It opposed the traditional haikai of the Teitoku school and composed haiku with innovative and novel interests and wrote comical idea in light and easy spoken language) made intentionally fun the original purpose and ended in comicality. However, it can be said that their innovative composition was still placed under the restriction of tradition in spite of their attempt.
In the book of "Sarumino" written by Basho, shigure came to be freely composed in haiku apart from the restriction of original meaning of the season. In the book of "Sarumino" there are thirteen poems of haiku composed with a theme of sigure.
When in 1936, Takahama Toshio (the son of Kyoshi) began to read "Sarumino" in turn with Nara Shikaro, Awano Seiho and others, Takahama Kyoshi encouraged them by sending a telegram, which reads:
"Begin with thirteen poems of haiku with a subject of sigure". Maybe he meant that they should study the seasonal word, shigure which was composed freely in "Sarumino" apart from original intention of waka poems.
How is shigure composed in haiku in modern times?
© Inahata Teiko, Nature and our Life
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Worldwide use
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Things found on the way
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HAIKU
November seven -
the haiku winter
starts today
Gabi Greve
The day of RITTO 立冬, when the Winter Starts, according to the Asian Lunar Calendar.
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on the mirror --
the last mosquito this
November morning
Isabelle Prondzynski, 2007
November wind --
a sparrow rides on
a swaying branch
November is a lovely warm month in Kenya, the month when the short rains peter out, and the sunshine coaxes the young plants up and into strong growth. Not yet hot (that is January), but the most ideal warmth, and an atmosphere full of hope. The jacarandas and many of the other beautiful trees are in flower, and the wind is mostly gentle, with the odd gust now and again.
Read more
Isabelle Prondzynski, Kenya 2007
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White-gold winking through
Black wiry branches half nude:
November streetlights.
Michael Collings, 2007
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November Day
little puffy clouds
float like tropical fish
in clear blue waters
quickly changing to
baby dragons chasing
buzzards on the prowl
butterfly hovers
over flowerless branches
dreaming of summer
blowing leaves entice
playful puppies to give chase
across the yard
winter waits anon
while autumn paints the landscape
in shades of amber
Ruth Nott, USA, November 2007
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first of November
freshly painted tombstones
where candles flicker
first of November
the sun shines mightily
on silent tombs
first of November
the grief of a widow
stored in her kerchief
first of November
tomb of the undertaker
sits at a corner
first of November
a stray black cat crosses
the beggar's path
first of November
the long and scorching trek
to the unmarked graves
November scene
piles of trash at the graveyard's
silent domain
November dusk
the city dresses up
for Christmas
November breeze
early birds buy knick-knacks
for giveaway
November night
the bright sparkles on lanterns
elicit some "ooohhhhs!"
Willie Bongcaron
Philippines, November 2009
Kigo Hotline
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November moon
a smile on my face
as I drive home
Ella Wagemakers
Kigo Hotline, November 2009
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Related words
***** All Saints’ Day
***** All Souls' Day
. WKD : November - KIGO CALENDAR .
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[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ]
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2/06/2006
New Year (shin-nen)
[ . BACK to TOP . ]
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New Year (shin-nen, shinnen)
***** Location: Japan
***** Season: a Haiku season of its own
***** Category: Season
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Explanation
The New Year is the day that marks the beginning of a new calendar year, and is the day on which the year count of the specific calendar used is incremented. The Roman new year is on March 1. In many cultures, the event is celebrated in some manner.
The New Year of the Gregorian calendar, today in worldwide use, falls on 1 January, continuing the practice of the Roman calendar. There are numerous calendars that remain in regional use that calculate the New Year individually.
With the expansion of Western culture to the rest of the world during the twentieth century, the 1 January date became global, even in countries with their own New Year celebrations on other days (e.g., China and India).
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !
Outside of Japan,
the NEW YEAR is not a season in itself and usually placed in the same season as January.
. JANUARY
kigo for late winter in the Northern Hemisphere
kigo for summer in the Southern Hemisphere
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Please read more in Part one with the basic information here:
NEW YEAR ... introduction
New Year, shinnen shin nen 新年
あけましておめでとうございます!
Akemashite O-medetoo gozaimasu!
The greeting when seeing a person for the first time in the New Year.
AKE ... what does it mean? The "opening" of the New Year?
No, it olden times it meant to open the small bag with the toshidama お年玉which the Deity of the New Year (Toshitokujin 歳徳神) has brought. It contained grains of rice (tama 稔玉 treasures) to multiply in the coming year and bring a good harvest.
Synonyms with "FIRST SPRING" (hatsu haru 初春)
SAIJIKI - THE NEW YEAR
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First view of Mt. Fuji,初富士 lit. First Fuji
First sky, hatsuzora 初空
Lion dance, shishimai 獅子舞. Kagura, 神楽
Rice cakes for the New Year (kagami mochi)
New Year Arrow (hamaya) Japan
Sacred rope, shimenawa 注連縄
shimekazari 注連飾、kadokazari 門飾、wakazari 輪飾 (round rope)
Read more about these beautiful decorations here.
In many shrines, they are renewed for then New Year
to last until the next.
Introducing Shimenawa, Gabi Greve
Pines at the gate, kadomatsu 門松
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First Religious Ceremonies of the Year in Japan
First temple visit, first shrine visit, hatsu-moode 初詣で
hatsu-moode yama no kami ni wa dare mo kon
Fiste Shrine visit -
to our Mountain God
nobody comes
Gabi Greve 2004 : Hatsu Mode
shizukesa ya mori no naka no hatsu-moode
so quiet !
walking in the forest for the
first Shrine visit
Gabi Greve 2005
More about First Ceremonies of the Japanese people
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First sparrow, hatsu-suzume 初雀 はつすずめ
Fern, shida 歯朶 Fern and the Seven Herbs of Spring
Pheasant's Eye (fukujusoo 福寿草)
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fukuwara ふくわら【福藁】"auspicious straw"
New straw that is placed at the entrance and in the garden of a mansion. It serves to purify the place for the coming year and is a gesture of respect for the visitors on the New Year.
福わらや十ばかりなる供奴
fukuwara ya juu bakari naru tomo yakko
straw for the new year -
about ten fellows working
in the garden
Kobayashi Issa
Tr. Gabi Greve
福わらや塵さへ今朝のうつくしき
fukuwara ya gomi sae kesa no utsukushiki
new auspicious straw -
this morning even the dirt
looks beautiful
Chiyo 千代
Chiyo-Ni (Chiyoni), Kaga no Chiyo jo (1703-1775)
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Fasting day, sixteenth day, sainichi 斎日,さいにち
yabuiri, yabu iri, yabu-iri 薮入 servant's holiday in Edo
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"Little New Year", Ko Shoogatsu, koshogatsu 小正月
January 15
. . . THE NEW YEAR
kigo for humanity
a long KIGO LIST
A few more kigo are listed below.
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Worldwide use
Outside of Japan,
the NEW YEAR is not a season in itself and usually placed in the same season as January.
. JANUARY
kigo for late winter in the Northern Hemisphere
kigo for summer in the Southern Hemisphere
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California
For New Year's here in Southern California, we have the
Rose Parade in Pasadena.
Deborah P Kolodji
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CHINESE NEW YEAR
Chinese New Year starts with the New Moon on the first day of the new year and ends on the full moon 15 days later. The 15th day of the new year is called the Lantern Festival, which is celebrated at night with lantern displays and children carrying lanterns in a parade.
The Chinese calendar is based on a combination of lunar and solar movements. The lunar cycle is about 29.5 days. In order to "catch up" with the solar calendar the Chinese insert an extra month once every few years (seven years out of a 19-yearcycle). This is the same as adding an extra day on leap year. This is why, according to the solar calendar, the Chinese New Year falls on a different date each year.
New Year's Eve and New Year's Day are celebrated as a family affair, a time of reunion and thanksgiving. The celebration was traditionally highlighted with a religious ceremony given in honor of Heaven and Earth, the gods of the household and the family ancestors.
The sacrifice to the ancestors, the most vital of all the rituals, united the living members with those who had passed away. Departed relatives are remembered with great respect because they were responsible for laying the foundations for the fortune and glory of the family.
http://www.educ.uvic.ca/faculty/mroth/438/CHINA/chinese_new_year.html
Chinese New Year's Eve ...
staring at the mirror
long before
tenth New Year
Chinese fried dough
... and black coffee
Note:
A traditional Chinese breakfast menu consists of the following two sets:
1 Mantou (Chinese steamed bun/bread) and Dou Jiang (sweet/salty soybean milk)
or
2 You Tiao (fried dough), Shaobing (baked, layered flatbread), and Dou Jiang (sweet/salty soybean milk)
Chen-ou Liu
Year of the Snake, 2013
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Hawaii
In Hawaii we celebrate New Years with a feast and lots of music...with many firecrackers to chase away all the bad spirits at midnight.. It is a wonder to see in the morning all the red paper from the fire works... is like snow... we never get snow so anything that resembles it we pounce on it.......
the dragon roars
at midnight for...
mornings blanket of red
children play in
scatterings
of firecracker paper
shanna
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India
. Marathi New Year's Day
Ugadi, Yudadi, Gudi Padva
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Ireland
Christ Church Cathedral saved by bell
Joe Humphreys
Christ Church is the traditional venue for Dubliners to mark the coming of the New Year and a large crowd is expected there tonight.
>
But the campanologists feared the annual event would be spoiled after the 2.25 tonne tenor bell broke during practice a fortnight ago.
>
A piece of the bell's tongue, or clapper, fell off, leaving Christ Church with the prospect of ringing in its first new year for decades without the sound of the "Great Tenor". Disappointment was averted however, thanks to the generosity of nearby St Patrick's Cathedral, which has given Christ Church a spare five-foot clapper for the occasion.
>
Mr Lesley Taylor, ringing master at Christ Church, said: "We always like to ring the Great Tenor bell, and there was a prospect of us not being able to do so. That would, of course, have meant we couldn't have done the full 19 either.
>
"We're very grateful to our friends at St Patrick's. They had a clapper of similar weight and size, and thankfully it works."
>
Mr Tony Reale, a civil engineer and one of Christ Church's 28 campanologists, has been given the honour of ringing the "Great Tenor" tonight after helping to install the new tongue.
>
Christ Church increased the number of bells in its tower from 12 to a world record 19 as part of its Millennium celebrations five years ago. Since then, however, the tenor bell has gone through three tongues - each of which has failed.
>
Mr Taylor said all three tongues had been made of spheroidal graphite, a modern substitute for wrought-iron. As a result, the bell-ringers were now seeking to design a clapper in wrought-iron, which "gives a better sound too".
>
However, Mr Taylor said: "as far as we can see there is a dearth of workers in wrought-iron. If there are any manufacturers in Ireland, we would like to hear from them." The tenor will swing into action shortly before midnight tonight with 12 strokes to mark the passing of 2004.
>
There will be 10 minutes' silence before midnight when another 12 strokes will ring out, followed by a cascade of all 19 bells - due to last about 20 minutes.
>
"Ringing large number of bells like that is prone to disaster," said Mr Taylor. "If one person messes up their timing it can produce chaos. "We are always striving for perfection," he added with a note of confidence. "All our ringers are very well trained."
>
http://www.Ireland.com/newspaper/ireland/2004/1231/3087096539HM3BELLS.html
Isabelle Prondzynski
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New Year in Kenya 2010
New Year 2012
men secure
spaces on top of the bus -
new year rush
Mango Junior
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Russia
In Russia, families also get together in parents' home usually, to celebrate New Year. And a buckwheat porridge which I like very much, is a very common meal (now, it's usually a side-dish, or a stuffing).
new-year's goose
with a buckwheat porridge --
grandma smiling
Origa
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cherrypoetryclub/message/21228
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Russian New Year
by Zhanna P. Rader
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Things found on the way
JANUARY FIRST NEW YEAR'S DAY HISTORY
http://wilstar.com/holidays/newyear.htm
SAMVAT or HINDU NEW YEAR
http://www.hindunewyear.com/hindu/abouthindunewyear/index.html
http://www.indianexpress.com/full_story.php?content_id=58858
Awaiting welcome
midst the same old worries
the new samvat
R.K.SINGH, India
AULD LANG SYNE
is a traditional song to say good -bye to the old and usher in the new year. Traditions of the season include the making of New Year's resolutions.The tradition of using a baby to signify the new year was begun in Greece around 600 BC.
Many people believe that one could be affected in luck by what theyate on the first day of the year. Here in Trinidad and Tobago; black-eyed pease and rice is a traditionally good luck menu for ending the old year and starting the new.
Other words that can be kigo in Trinidad and Tobago:
Black-eyed peas, Tournament of Roses, Whistles, Party hats, Auldlang syne, New Calander, Champagne, Kisses, Hugs, Fire works.
Gillena Cox
http://www.wilstar.com/xmas/auldlangsyne.htm
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HAIKU
春立つとわらはも知るや飾り繩
haru tatsu to warawa mo shiru ya kazari nawa
spring has finally come
even the children will understand this -
ritual rope decorations
Tr. Gabi Greve
Written in 寛文11年, Basho age 28, while he lived in Iga Ueno.
. Matsuo Basho 松尾芭蕉 - Archives of the WKD .
pun with wara, warawa 童 child, children
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a new year---
the old dog
runs out of tricks
andrew riutta 12.30.04
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cherrypoetryclub/message/21214
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new year
old load still
in the washing machine
Ella Wagenmakers, WHCworkshop
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ring out the old
embrace your near and dear ones
ring in the new
Isabelle Prondzynski, Ireland
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new year born
fire-works all over
I sit alone ~
new year midnight ~
through wild fireworks
troubled bird songs ~
new year dawn
the sun blooms again
in cool breeze ~
Narayanan Raghunathan, 2004
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蓬莱や只三文の御代の松
hoorai ya tada sammon no miyo no matsu
my eternal youth ornament --
just three cents
of emporer's pine
Kobayashi Issa
Hoorai is a mythical island of eternal youth. On New Year's Day offerings are set on a special table in its honor. Literally, miyo no matsu signifies "reign's pine." Issa is referring to a rather cheap pine decoration on the table in honor of the new imperial year.
Tr. David Lanoue
hoorai kazari 蓬莱飾 hoorai decoration
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
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. New Year 2010
Akita International Haiku Network
Hidenori Hiruta 蛭田秀法
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Related words
***** Little New Year .. ko shoogatsu (January 15) Japan.
Women's New Year (onna shoogatsu, me shoogatsu)
***** Ancestors New Year (Hotoke Shoogatsu) Japan
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***** New Year's Food, o-setchi ryoori おせち料理
CLICK here for the New Year Food SAIJIKI!
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***** First Calligraphy, kakizome 書初め、Japan
taking the brush
365 days
first calligraphy
Gabi Greve
Read about Zen Master TANCHU TERAYAMA and Zen Calligraphy: Hitsuzendo
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Darumasan-Japan/message/662
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***** New Year's Concert Vienna Austria
One of my favorite events to celebrate a worldwide New Year is the life concert, which starts around seven thirty on Japanese TV. This year, January 2005, the famous Radetzki March was not played with respect to the events in the Indian Ocean.
The New Year's Concert (in German Das Neujahrskonzert der Wiener Philharmoniker) of the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra is a concert which takes place each year on January 1 in Vienna, Austria. It is broadcast around the world to an estimated audience of one billion in forty-four countries.
The music is mostly that of the Strauss family (Johann Strauss I, Johann Strauss II, Josef Strauss and Eduard Strauss). The flowers that decorate the Wiener Musikverein concert hall are a gift each year from the city of San Remo, Liguria, Italy.
The concert always ends with several encores after the main programme. The musicians then collectively wish the audience a happy new year, and close with Johann Strauss II's Blue Danube Waltz followed by the Radetzky-March. During this last piece, the audience claps along in time and the conductor turns to conduct them instead of the orchestra.
The concert was first performed in 1939 (paradoxically on December 31st of this year) conducted by Clemens Krauss.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vienna_New_Year's_Concert
Neujahrskonzert -
mit geschlossenen Augen
bin ich dabei
New Year's Concert -
with closed eyes
I am right there
Gabi Greve, Japan
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***** January First, Neujahrstag , ganjitsu 元日
New Year's Day
Globally January first (Jan. 1st.) is celebrated as the start of the new calendar year; New Year's Day ; with pomp and festivity. The pomp and festivity associated with this observance is both
secular and religious. But this date is not the only observance of New Years Day.
In adition to this global New Year's Day there are other New Year's Day observances of other global sub cultures. For Example there is Samvat; April 9th of the Hindu New Year, there is the Chinese New Year Chinese New Year starts with the New Moon on the first day of the new year; The Chinese calendar is based on a combination of lunar and solar movements. The lunar cycle is about 29.5 days and ends on the full moon 15 days later, there is First Sunday of Advent the beginning of the church's new year of the Catholic Faith.
The Babylonian New Year began with the first New Moon (actually the first visible cresent)
after the Vernal Equinox (first day of spring).
The Romans continued to observe the new year in late March (Ides of March), but their calendar was continually tampered with by various emperors so that the calendar soon became out of synchronization with the sun. In order to set the calendar right, the Roman senate,
in 153 BC, declared January 1 to be the beginning of the new year.
Gillena Cox
January first
the bride and groom exit
into a new life
2004 Gillena Cox
a drizzle~
backdrops the birds twitter
January first
2005 Gillena Cox
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The Actor Ichikawa Danjūrō VII Preparing New Year's Gifts
Utagawa Kunisada (Toyokuni III) (1786-1865)
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. . . . SAIJIKI - THE NEW YEAR
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[ . BACK to DARUMA MUSEUM TOP . ]
[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ]
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New Year (shin-nen, shinnen)
***** Location: Japan
***** Season: a Haiku season of its own
***** Category: Season
*****************************
Explanation
The New Year is the day that marks the beginning of a new calendar year, and is the day on which the year count of the specific calendar used is incremented. The Roman new year is on March 1. In many cultures, the event is celebrated in some manner.
The New Year of the Gregorian calendar, today in worldwide use, falls on 1 January, continuing the practice of the Roman calendar. There are numerous calendars that remain in regional use that calculate the New Year individually.
With the expansion of Western culture to the rest of the world during the twentieth century, the 1 January date became global, even in countries with their own New Year celebrations on other days (e.g., China and India).
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !
Outside of Japan,
the NEW YEAR is not a season in itself and usually placed in the same season as January.
. JANUARY
kigo for late winter in the Northern Hemisphere
kigo for summer in the Southern Hemisphere
.................................................................................
Please read more in Part one with the basic information here:
NEW YEAR ... introduction
New Year, shinnen shin nen 新年
あけましておめでとうございます!
Akemashite O-medetoo gozaimasu!
The greeting when seeing a person for the first time in the New Year.
AKE ... what does it mean? The "opening" of the New Year?
No, it olden times it meant to open the small bag with the toshidama お年玉which the Deity of the New Year (Toshitokujin 歳徳神) has brought. It contained grains of rice (tama 稔玉 treasures) to multiply in the coming year and bring a good harvest.
Synonyms with "FIRST SPRING" (hatsu haru 初春)
SAIJIKI - THE NEW YEAR
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
First view of Mt. Fuji,初富士 lit. First Fuji
First sky, hatsuzora 初空
Lion dance, shishimai 獅子舞. Kagura, 神楽
Rice cakes for the New Year (kagami mochi)
New Year Arrow (hamaya) Japan
Sacred rope, shimenawa 注連縄
shimekazari 注連飾、kadokazari 門飾、wakazari 輪飾 (round rope)
Read more about these beautiful decorations here.
In many shrines, they are renewed for then New Year
to last until the next.
Introducing Shimenawa, Gabi Greve
Pines at the gate, kadomatsu 門松
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
First Religious Ceremonies of the Year in Japan
First temple visit, first shrine visit, hatsu-moode 初詣で
hatsu-moode yama no kami ni wa dare mo kon
Fiste Shrine visit -
to our Mountain God
nobody comes
Gabi Greve 2004 : Hatsu Mode
shizukesa ya mori no naka no hatsu-moode
so quiet !
walking in the forest for the
first Shrine visit
Gabi Greve 2005
More about First Ceremonies of the Japanese people
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First sparrow, hatsu-suzume 初雀 はつすずめ
Fern, shida 歯朶 Fern and the Seven Herbs of Spring
Pheasant's Eye (fukujusoo 福寿草)
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fukuwara ふくわら【福藁】"auspicious straw"
New straw that is placed at the entrance and in the garden of a mansion. It serves to purify the place for the coming year and is a gesture of respect for the visitors on the New Year.
福わらや十ばかりなる供奴
fukuwara ya juu bakari naru tomo yakko
straw for the new year -
about ten fellows working
in the garden
Kobayashi Issa
Tr. Gabi Greve
福わらや塵さへ今朝のうつくしき
fukuwara ya gomi sae kesa no utsukushiki
new auspicious straw -
this morning even the dirt
looks beautiful
Chiyo 千代
Chiyo-Ni (Chiyoni), Kaga no Chiyo jo (1703-1775)
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Fasting day, sixteenth day, sainichi 斎日,さいにち
yabuiri, yabu iri, yabu-iri 薮入 servant's holiday in Edo
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"Little New Year", Ko Shoogatsu, koshogatsu 小正月
January 15
. . . THE NEW YEAR
kigo for humanity
a long KIGO LIST
A few more kigo are listed below.
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Worldwide use
Outside of Japan,
the NEW YEAR is not a season in itself and usually placed in the same season as January.
. JANUARY
kigo for late winter in the Northern Hemisphere
kigo for summer in the Southern Hemisphere
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California
For New Year's here in Southern California, we have the
Rose Parade in Pasadena.
Deborah P Kolodji
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CHINESE NEW YEAR
Chinese New Year starts with the New Moon on the first day of the new year and ends on the full moon 15 days later. The 15th day of the new year is called the Lantern Festival, which is celebrated at night with lantern displays and children carrying lanterns in a parade.
The Chinese calendar is based on a combination of lunar and solar movements. The lunar cycle is about 29.5 days. In order to "catch up" with the solar calendar the Chinese insert an extra month once every few years (seven years out of a 19-yearcycle). This is the same as adding an extra day on leap year. This is why, according to the solar calendar, the Chinese New Year falls on a different date each year.
New Year's Eve and New Year's Day are celebrated as a family affair, a time of reunion and thanksgiving. The celebration was traditionally highlighted with a religious ceremony given in honor of Heaven and Earth, the gods of the household and the family ancestors.
The sacrifice to the ancestors, the most vital of all the rituals, united the living members with those who had passed away. Departed relatives are remembered with great respect because they were responsible for laying the foundations for the fortune and glory of the family.
http://www.educ.uvic.ca/faculty/mroth/438/CHINA/chinese_new_year.html
Chinese New Year's Eve ...
staring at the mirror
long before
tenth New Year
Chinese fried dough
... and black coffee
Note:
A traditional Chinese breakfast menu consists of the following two sets:
1 Mantou (Chinese steamed bun/bread) and Dou Jiang (sweet/salty soybean milk)
or
2 You Tiao (fried dough), Shaobing (baked, layered flatbread), and Dou Jiang (sweet/salty soybean milk)
Chen-ou Liu
Year of the Snake, 2013
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Hawaii
In Hawaii we celebrate New Years with a feast and lots of music...with many firecrackers to chase away all the bad spirits at midnight.. It is a wonder to see in the morning all the red paper from the fire works... is like snow... we never get snow so anything that resembles it we pounce on it.......
the dragon roars
at midnight for...
mornings blanket of red
children play in
scatterings
of firecracker paper
shanna
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India
. Marathi New Year's Day
Ugadi, Yudadi, Gudi Padva
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Ireland
Christ Church Cathedral saved by bell
Joe Humphreys
Christ Church is the traditional venue for Dubliners to mark the coming of the New Year and a large crowd is expected there tonight.
>
But the campanologists feared the annual event would be spoiled after the 2.25 tonne tenor bell broke during practice a fortnight ago.
>
A piece of the bell's tongue, or clapper, fell off, leaving Christ Church with the prospect of ringing in its first new year for decades without the sound of the "Great Tenor". Disappointment was averted however, thanks to the generosity of nearby St Patrick's Cathedral, which has given Christ Church a spare five-foot clapper for the occasion.
>
Mr Lesley Taylor, ringing master at Christ Church, said: "We always like to ring the Great Tenor bell, and there was a prospect of us not being able to do so. That would, of course, have meant we couldn't have done the full 19 either.
>
"We're very grateful to our friends at St Patrick's. They had a clapper of similar weight and size, and thankfully it works."
>
Mr Tony Reale, a civil engineer and one of Christ Church's 28 campanologists, has been given the honour of ringing the "Great Tenor" tonight after helping to install the new tongue.
>
Christ Church increased the number of bells in its tower from 12 to a world record 19 as part of its Millennium celebrations five years ago. Since then, however, the tenor bell has gone through three tongues - each of which has failed.
>
Mr Taylor said all three tongues had been made of spheroidal graphite, a modern substitute for wrought-iron. As a result, the bell-ringers were now seeking to design a clapper in wrought-iron, which "gives a better sound too".
>
However, Mr Taylor said: "as far as we can see there is a dearth of workers in wrought-iron. If there are any manufacturers in Ireland, we would like to hear from them." The tenor will swing into action shortly before midnight tonight with 12 strokes to mark the passing of 2004.
>
There will be 10 minutes' silence before midnight when another 12 strokes will ring out, followed by a cascade of all 19 bells - due to last about 20 minutes.
>
"Ringing large number of bells like that is prone to disaster," said Mr Taylor. "If one person messes up their timing it can produce chaos. "We are always striving for perfection," he added with a note of confidence. "All our ringers are very well trained."
>
http://www.Ireland.com/newspaper/ireland/2004/1231/3087096539HM3BELLS.html
Isabelle Prondzynski
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New Year in Kenya 2010
New Year 2012
men secure
spaces on top of the bus -
new year rush
Mango Junior
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Russia
In Russia, families also get together in parents' home usually, to celebrate New Year. And a buckwheat porridge which I like very much, is a very common meal (now, it's usually a side-dish, or a stuffing).
new-year's goose
with a buckwheat porridge --
grandma smiling
Origa
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cherrypoetryclub/message/21228
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Russian New Year
by Zhanna P. Rader
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Things found on the way
JANUARY FIRST NEW YEAR'S DAY HISTORY
http://wilstar.com/holidays/newyear.htm
SAMVAT or HINDU NEW YEAR
http://www.hindunewyear.com/hindu/abouthindunewyear/index.html
http://www.indianexpress.com/full_story.php?content_id=58858
Awaiting welcome
midst the same old worries
the new samvat
R.K.SINGH, India
AULD LANG SYNE
is a traditional song to say good -bye to the old and usher in the new year. Traditions of the season include the making of New Year's resolutions.The tradition of using a baby to signify the new year was begun in Greece around 600 BC.
Many people believe that one could be affected in luck by what theyate on the first day of the year. Here in Trinidad and Tobago; black-eyed pease and rice is a traditionally good luck menu for ending the old year and starting the new.
Other words that can be kigo in Trinidad and Tobago:
Black-eyed peas, Tournament of Roses, Whistles, Party hats, Auldlang syne, New Calander, Champagne, Kisses, Hugs, Fire works.
Gillena Cox
http://www.wilstar.com/xmas/auldlangsyne.htm
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HAIKU
春立つとわらはも知るや飾り繩
haru tatsu to warawa mo shiru ya kazari nawa
spring has finally come
even the children will understand this -
ritual rope decorations
Tr. Gabi Greve
Written in 寛文11年, Basho age 28, while he lived in Iga Ueno.
. Matsuo Basho 松尾芭蕉 - Archives of the WKD .
pun with wara, warawa 童 child, children
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a new year---
the old dog
runs out of tricks
andrew riutta 12.30.04
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cherrypoetryclub/message/21214
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new year
old load still
in the washing machine
Ella Wagenmakers, WHCworkshop
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ring out the old
embrace your near and dear ones
ring in the new
Isabelle Prondzynski, Ireland
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new year born
fire-works all over
I sit alone ~
new year midnight ~
through wild fireworks
troubled bird songs ~
new year dawn
the sun blooms again
in cool breeze ~
Narayanan Raghunathan, 2004
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蓬莱や只三文の御代の松
hoorai ya tada sammon no miyo no matsu
my eternal youth ornament --
just three cents
of emporer's pine
Kobayashi Issa
Hoorai is a mythical island of eternal youth. On New Year's Day offerings are set on a special table in its honor. Literally, miyo no matsu signifies "reign's pine." Issa is referring to a rather cheap pine decoration on the table in honor of the new imperial year.
Tr. David Lanoue
hoorai kazari 蓬莱飾 hoorai decoration
. . . CLICK here for Photos !
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. New Year 2010
Akita International Haiku Network
Hidenori Hiruta 蛭田秀法
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Related words
***** Little New Year .. ko shoogatsu (January 15) Japan.
Women's New Year (onna shoogatsu, me shoogatsu)
***** Ancestors New Year (Hotoke Shoogatsu) Japan
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***** New Year's Food, o-setchi ryoori おせち料理
CLICK here for the New Year Food SAIJIKI!
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***** First Calligraphy, kakizome 書初め、Japan
taking the brush
365 days
first calligraphy
Gabi Greve
Read about Zen Master TANCHU TERAYAMA and Zen Calligraphy: Hitsuzendo
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Darumasan-Japan/message/662
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***** New Year's Concert Vienna Austria
One of my favorite events to celebrate a worldwide New Year is the life concert, which starts around seven thirty on Japanese TV. This year, January 2005, the famous Radetzki March was not played with respect to the events in the Indian Ocean.
The New Year's Concert (in German Das Neujahrskonzert der Wiener Philharmoniker) of the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra is a concert which takes place each year on January 1 in Vienna, Austria. It is broadcast around the world to an estimated audience of one billion in forty-four countries.
The music is mostly that of the Strauss family (Johann Strauss I, Johann Strauss II, Josef Strauss and Eduard Strauss). The flowers that decorate the Wiener Musikverein concert hall are a gift each year from the city of San Remo, Liguria, Italy.
The concert always ends with several encores after the main programme. The musicians then collectively wish the audience a happy new year, and close with Johann Strauss II's Blue Danube Waltz followed by the Radetzky-March. During this last piece, the audience claps along in time and the conductor turns to conduct them instead of the orchestra.
The concert was first performed in 1939 (paradoxically on December 31st of this year) conducted by Clemens Krauss.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vienna_New_Year's_Concert
Neujahrskonzert -
mit geschlossenen Augen
bin ich dabei
New Year's Concert -
with closed eyes
I am right there
Gabi Greve, Japan
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***** January First, Neujahrstag , ganjitsu 元日
New Year's Day
Globally January first (Jan. 1st.) is celebrated as the start of the new calendar year; New Year's Day ; with pomp and festivity. The pomp and festivity associated with this observance is both
secular and religious. But this date is not the only observance of New Years Day.
In adition to this global New Year's Day there are other New Year's Day observances of other global sub cultures. For Example there is Samvat; April 9th of the Hindu New Year, there is the Chinese New Year Chinese New Year starts with the New Moon on the first day of the new year; The Chinese calendar is based on a combination of lunar and solar movements. The lunar cycle is about 29.5 days and ends on the full moon 15 days later, there is First Sunday of Advent the beginning of the church's new year of the Catholic Faith.
The Babylonian New Year began with the first New Moon (actually the first visible cresent)
after the Vernal Equinox (first day of spring).
The Romans continued to observe the new year in late March (Ides of March), but their calendar was continually tampered with by various emperors so that the calendar soon became out of synchronization with the sun. In order to set the calendar right, the Roman senate,
in 153 BC, declared January 1 to be the beginning of the new year.
Gillena Cox
January first
the bride and groom exit
into a new life
2004 Gillena Cox
a drizzle~
backdrops the birds twitter
January first
2005 Gillena Cox
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The Actor Ichikawa Danjūrō VII Preparing New Year's Gifts
Utagawa Kunisada (Toyokuni III) (1786-1865)
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. . . . SAIJIKI - THE NEW YEAR
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[ . BACK to DARUMA MUSEUM TOP . ]
[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ]
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2/01/2006
Digest January 2006
nnnnnnnnnnnn TOP nnnnnnnnnnnnn
..................................................................... January 2006
Caterpillars worldwide
..... Including
hairy caterpillar, woolybear, kemushi
looper, inchworm, shakutori
Ice, Icicle (koori, tsurara) (Japan)
..... Kaniparambil Ramesh Poet from India
Start of School Year, School Year starts(Kenya)
..... Including
form one (form 1), new term, new textbooks, school fees, new uniform
..... Bahati Haiku Poetry Club, Kenya
..... Hawaii Saijiki
..... EUROPA Saijiki
Buddha's Seat (hotoke no za)(Japan) 05.
.................... Two flowers with the same name !
Seven Herbs of Spring (haru no nanakusa) (Japan) 05
..... Including Seri (Japanese parsley or dropwort), Nazuna (shepherd's purse), Gogyou (cottonweed), Hakobera (chickweed), Hotoke-no-za (Japanese nipplewort), Suzuna (Japanese turnip), Suzushiro (Japanese radish)
Fern (shida)(Japan) 05
Pheasant's Eye (fukujusoo) (Japan) 05
Vog (Volcanic Smog) (Hawaii, Big Island)
New Year's Day (ganjitsu)Japan, Worldwide. First day of the Year, January 1.
..... Korean Haiku
..... African Haiku
Kagura Dance (Japan)
Graduation Ceremony, Kenya
Last Fudo Ceremony of a year(osame-Fudo) (Japan)
Last Daishi Ceremony of a year (osame no Daishi) (Japan)
Whales, kujira (Japan)
Cow (Pashu, Gai) The Holy Cow of India
Bhagavad Gita (India)
Number of Entries December 2005 : 328
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Please send your contributions to Gabi Greve
worldkigo .....
Back to the WHC Worldkigo Index
http://worldkigodatabase.blogspot.com/
..................................................................... January 2006
Caterpillars worldwide
..... Including
hairy caterpillar, woolybear, kemushi
looper, inchworm, shakutori
Ice, Icicle (koori, tsurara) (Japan)
..... Kaniparambil Ramesh Poet from India
Start of School Year, School Year starts(Kenya)
..... Including
form one (form 1), new term, new textbooks, school fees, new uniform
..... Bahati Haiku Poetry Club, Kenya
..... Hawaii Saijiki
..... EUROPA Saijiki
Buddha's Seat (hotoke no za)(Japan) 05.
.................... Two flowers with the same name !
Seven Herbs of Spring (haru no nanakusa) (Japan) 05
..... Including Seri (Japanese parsley or dropwort), Nazuna (shepherd's purse), Gogyou (cottonweed), Hakobera (chickweed), Hotoke-no-za (Japanese nipplewort), Suzuna (Japanese turnip), Suzushiro (Japanese radish)
Fern (shida)(Japan) 05
Pheasant's Eye (fukujusoo) (Japan) 05
Vog (Volcanic Smog) (Hawaii, Big Island)
New Year's Day (ganjitsu)Japan, Worldwide. First day of the Year, January 1.
..... Korean Haiku
..... African Haiku
Kagura Dance (Japan)
Graduation Ceremony, Kenya
Last Fudo Ceremony of a year(osame-Fudo) (Japan)
Last Daishi Ceremony of a year (osame no Daishi) (Japan)
Whales, kujira (Japan)
Cow (Pashu, Gai) The Holy Cow of India
Bhagavad Gita (India)
Number of Entries December 2005 : 328
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***************************
Please send your contributions to Gabi Greve
worldkigo .....
Back to the WHC Worldkigo Index
http://worldkigodatabase.blogspot.com/
1/22/2006
Mulled wine (gloegg)
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Mulled wine (Gløgg / Glühwein)
Mulled Mead (Honey wine, Honigwein)
***** Location: Scandinavia, Germany and elsewhere
***** Season: Winter
***** Category: Humanity
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Explanation
Glögg is a Swedish drink for a cold winter evening. It is heated, spiced and sweetened wine, a bit like the German Glühwein. Below is a recipe, though maybe the measurements don't make sense outside Sweden, and some of the ingredients may not be standard stock. But it will be nice even if it's not exactly like the original, so it doesn't really matter!
What to use:
3 sticks cinnamon
2-3 pieces dried Seville orange peel
2-3 pieces dried ginger (not ground)
some 10 cardamom seeds (whole)
some 10 cloves (whole)
1 cup (2.5dl) water
Also: sugar
1 bottle of wine (or similar amount of black currant or grape juice for a non-alcoholic alternative)
Some of these things are hard to find in some places, such as dried whole ginger (and how big is "a piece" anyway?). When in doubt, use fresh rather than powdered dry, as the powder makes it nigh well impossible to sieve/filter it all at -- the whole thing just clogs up. If you can't find dried peels of Seville orange (this has been known to happen), it is possible to substitute a smaller quantity of the thin orange part of the peel of an ordinary orange. In the end you'll probably have substituted just about everything, but that will work too, I've tried it.
Isabelle Prondzynski
What to do:
* Heat spices and water to boiling, then turn off heat and let stand overnight
* Sieve/filter out the spices
* Add the wine (or juice)
* Add sugar to taste (that should be a minimum of one decilitre (=2/5 of a cup); we're talking Swedish cooking here!). You probably have to heat it first so that the sugar dissolves, then see if you want to put some more
* Heat. Note that alcohol evaporates at 72 degrees Celsius (or is it 78?) so you want to be a bit careful!
* Some naughty people would spike the whole thing with a splash of vodka... (optional)
Serve hot with raisins and blanched almonds (dropped into the cups after serving). Glögg is normally served in tiny cups (the cups from your Turkish/Japanese/etc. souvenir tea set will be perfect), and some tiny spoons are useful for fishing out the raisins and almonds.
***
The socio-cultural context for glögg is either as a pre-dinner drink in the winter, or as a separate event, usually at about 4 or 5 pm, a bit like a cocktail party. On the side, pepparkakor is the kind of thing to nibble, but you'll have to look for the recipe for them somewhere else!
The extract keeps very well (that's why they used to sail all the way to Indonesia to get spices -- they work as preservatives), so you can make more and keep it in a bottle, handy for whenever you fancy a glögg on a cold evening (which is probably only about four times in a season; it's rather sweet); it will keep for a year at least.
Skål!
http://www.ling.su.se/staff/evali/glogg.htm
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Danish recipe, with English translation
http://www.godset.dk/rolf/glogg.htm
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Every family has its own recipe -- including the secret ingredient to raise the alcohol level. It becomes easy to have an extended chat outdoors by minus 15 degrees C -- if one keeps one's temperature (and spirits!) up with the help of glögg... and perhaps follows it up in the sauna!
This would be the case particularly in Finland (web site below, where we also find recipes for the Christmas biscuits and buns which go nicely with glögg...)...
** ** ** Glögg Party at Christmas
1 bottle red wine
2-3 tablespoons Madeira (optional)
1/2 cup raw sugar, or to taste
1/3 cup raisins
1-2 sticks cinnamon
5-6 whole cloves peelings of I orange
1/4 cup blanched, slivered almonds
1/4 cup vodka to spike it up (optional)
In a large kettle, combine all the ingredients except the vodka. Heat slowly, until the drink is steaming hot. Stir every now and then, and taste with a spoon whenever you feel like it. Do not let the drink get even close to boiling. Just keep it warm. Before serving, add vodka if you wish. Servings: 1 to 6.
Read some more Finnish recipies here:
http://virtual.finland.fi/netcomm/news/showarticle.asp?intNWSAID=26071
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Worldwide use
Germany
Glögg has a definite relationship to the German Glühwein (see below).
Glühwein (Traditional Glow Wine)
Ingredients:
1 litre good red wine
1/8 litre water
60 grams sugar (approx 2oz)
1/4 stick cinnamon
3 cloves
Peelings of half a lemon or two lemon slices
Preparation
Bring the sugar, spices and water to a boil (instead of the water experts say that you really should use red wine for a better flavor) Then let this mixture steep for 30 minutes. Finally, mix in the remainder of the red wine and carefully reheat to just under the boiling point.
If desired, flavor with lemon or orange juice to taste.
Glühwein is sometimes also made from raspberry, blueberry and blackberry wines.
Below are Variations of Glühwein :
1. French Glow Wine : Use Bordeaux with cinnamon, rubbed nutmeg and bay leaves as the spices.
2. Seehund (Sea Dog) : Substitute white wine for the red, and prepare as traditional glow wine. Depending on the acidity of the wine, a little lemon juice can be added to taste.
3. Negus : Prepare with port wine (1/2 wine, 1/2 water) and use rubbed nutmeg and lemon peelings for the spices.
4. Honig Glühwein (Honey Glow wine): prepare with red wine, 150gm honey (5oz), some cinnamon stick and two lemon slices. Heat to just under boiling.
http://www.altfrankfurt.com/Weihnachten/
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USA
** ** ** Mulled wine
In Frank Capra’s holiday film, It’s A Wonderful Life, a guardian angel walks into a bar and asks for mulled wine “heavy on the cinnamon, easy on the cloves.” For many, hot wine, which would be unthinkable in any other season, is a heavenly drink at this time of year.
It has been a wintry favourite for a long time with almost as names as it has recipes: glögg in Scandinavia, gluhwein in Austria, a bishop in England when made with port, and the Medieval drinks of Clarrey which included honey and spices, Caudell which was thickened with eggs and Ypocras which comes closest to the mulled wine or cider we know today.
However the drink is made, the spices always include the highly aromatic ones common in Britain and Northern Europe hundreds of years ago: cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger, allspice, mace, perhaps cardamom and a citrus peel. Honey or sugar is often added for a sweeter drink but these aren’t always used. What used to be a common drink, however, now seems exoctic. Although fancy packaging has made the ingredients in mulled wine spice sachets seem esoteric and expensive; most of us probably have everthing we need on our spice shelves.
You can experiment with the spices mentioned above but a typical recipe for mulled wine would be a tablespoon of honey or sugar, a stick of cinnamon, and a large pinch each of ginger, nutmeg, mace, cloves and cardamom for each cup of wine or cider or even apple juice. Fortunately the wine does not have to be expensive. Most red depanneur plonk works quite nicely thank you.
It is important not to boil the wine, but simply heat the spices in the wine over a low heat and stir occasionally until the sugar or honey is completely dissolved. For a clearer drink, strain the hot wine through a coffee filter before serving. As you raise a glass, you might consider proffering this heart-warming toast:
Beaujolais, Beaujolais, appellation controllée
Beaujolais est joli, parfumé et chaud
Bonne santé et cheerio.
http://www.montrealfood.com/mldwine.html
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The word "mulled" simply means heated and spiced. Many liquids can be mulled - mead, cider, and of course wine. Mulled wine is a traditional favorite in cooler locations, and goes well with the various celebrations that come around the end of the year.
Mulled wines have a long history. In medieval times these wines were called Ypocras or Hipocris, named after the physician Hippocrates. They were thought to be very healthy, and indeed, with wine at the time being far more sanitary than water, these heated drinks probably did keep people healthy through the cold winters.
Moving forward to the 1500s, cookbooks listed methods of mulling "Clarrey", or Bordeaux. Recipes involved honey, cinnamon, cardamon, galingale and of course French wine. Mulled wine was a favorite in Victorian England, and Negus - a type of mulled wine - was even served to children at their birthday parties. Today, mulled wine is a staple at many holiday parties.
http://www.lisashea.com/wine/types/bl_mulled.htm
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Things found on the way
German Poem about Christmas Problems because Santa had too much Gluehwein. His sledge went off the road and he could not deliver the presents to the kids in time. He promises never to have too much mulled wine... :o)
Weihnnachtspanne
Lauthals am Fluchen
Der Schlitten liegt im Graben
Rentiere fliehen
Nur einmal nicht aufgepaßt
Und die Weihnacht war versaut
Nie wieder Glühwein
Bevor die Tour zu Ende,
Die Kinder glücklich
Schwört der Weihnachtsmann
In den Trümmern des Schlittens
http://www.haikulinde.de/lyrikforum/board1/77.html
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HAIKU
a toast
to this millennium
mulled wine
Peggy
http://shiki1.cc.ehime-u.ac.jp/~shiki/kukai/kukai75-2.html
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by the fire visiting
with old friends
cups of mulled wine
Maureen Yates
http://www.millikin.edu/haiku/courses/roundtablefall2002/1kukaiHotDrinks.html
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Short days, cold dark nights,
Frost sparkles and breathing steams,
Mulled wine by the fire.
© Elfstone 20/8/03
http://www.ukauthors.com/article8681.html
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Advent Kerzenschein
Heimlichkeiten Vorfreude
Nüsse und Glühwein
http://wiesengrund.blogger.de/stories/188455/
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sugar plum fairies--
enjoying mulled wine
with Tschaikowsky
Ed Schwellenbach
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cherrypoetryclub/message/21012
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Related words
***** Mulled Mead (Mulled honey wine)
Often drunk at small stalls during the Christmas fairs inGermany. Sometimes fruit is included, for example souer cherries. Mead is good for your health too and brings you sweet dreams.
Heisser lieblich Met oder der Met mit Sauerkirsche heiss ....
*****
More about mead:
Mead is a fermented alcoholic beverage made of honey, water, and yeast. It is sometimes known as "honeywine" (for obvious reasons) and is generally pronounced "meed", though South Africans usually pronounce it "med", to rhyme with "red". The word mead refers to the sugary fluid excreted by flowers. In symbology mead is the tipple of the gods.
A mead that also contains spices (like cloves, cinnamon or nutmeg) or herbs (such as oregano or even lavender or chamomile) is called metheglin. The etymon of this word is possibly "medicine" as healing herbs were often stored as metheglin so they would be available over the winter (as well as making them much easier to swallow).
A mead that contains fruit (such as strawberry, blackcurrant or even rose-hips) is called melomel and was also used as a delicious way to "store" summer produce for the winter.
Mulled mead is a popular winter holiday drink, where mead is warmed (traditionally by having a hot poker plunged into it) and flavoured with spices.
Hippocras is spiced grape wine sweetened with honey. A grape-based wine with added honey is called a pyment.
Cyser is made with apple juice and honey; braggot or bracket is made with malted barley and honey.
Mead was very popular in Northern Europe where grapes could not be grown, but it faded in popularity once wine imports became economical. Mead was especially popular with the Slaves and was called in Polish miód (pronounced myoot), meaning honey. Mead was a popular drink among the Polish szlachta. During the Crusades Polish prince Leszek the White explained to the pope that Polish knights couldn't participate in the crusades because there is no mead in Palestine.
In Finland a sweet mead called Sima (cognate with zymurgy), is still an essential seasonal brew connected with the Finnish Vappu festival. It is usually spiced by adding both the flesh and rind of a lemon. During secondary fermentation raisins are added to control the amount of sugars and to act as an indicator of readiness for consumption — they will rise to the top of the bottle when the drink is ready.
Mead is probably also the origin of the word honeymoon as the father of the bride was said to give as a dowry a month's supply of the liquor. Mead is mentioned in many old north Anglo-Saxon stories, including Beowulf.
Mead can have a wide range of flavors, depending on the source of the honey, additives (including fruit and spices), yeast employed during fermentation, and aging procedure. Mead can be difficult to find commercially, though some producers have been successful marketing it.
Many meads retain some measure of the sweetness of the original honey, and some can even be considered as dessert wines. Drier meads are also available, and some producers offer sparkling meads, which (like champagne) can make for a delightful celebratory toast.
http://www.logicjungle.com/wiki/Mead
A common toast when drinking mead is WASSAIL! Wishing you Health !
wassail:
steam from the glasses
around the punch bowl
Haiku from Chibi
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Recipe for Wassail Mead
http://www.nhb.org/download/factsht/makingmead.pdf
The History of the Word "Wassail"
Apple tree wassailing is a ceremony which involves drinking to the health of the apple trees.
The Anglo-Saxons used the phrase Wæs hal! as an everyday greeting. Wæs is a form of the verb "to be" related to modern English was. Hal is the ancestor of the modern English words whole and hale. Thus, Wæs hal! literally meant "Be healthy!". The Vikings who later settled in Northern England used a dialectal varient of the same phrase: Ves heill!. Since the Anglo-Saxons and Norse shared a custom of welcoming guests by presenting them with a horn of ale (or cup of mead, or goblet of wine), the greeting evolved into a toast.
The phrase was eventually contracted into one word,wassail, and came to refer to the act of toasting to someones health, wassailing, and to a type of alcoholic beverage (spiced ale or punch) used to toast people's health on special occasions. The use of wassailing to mean "caroling" (as in "Here we go a-wassailing...") stems from the habit of singing songs whilst drinking from the "wassail-bowl" during Christmas and New Year celebrations.
http://www.wyrdwords.vispa.com/heathenry/wassailing/word.html
Thus Wassail itself is also a kigo for winter.
xx xx xx xx
Mead is one of the oldest alcoholic beverages of humankind. It has been made in Ethiopia for many thousand years. There it is called Tej.
In Ethiopia, T'ej is made in private homes for family consumption and is not sold commercially. Each household has its own family recipe and variations in taste result from the type of honey used, temperature, climate, materials and utensils and the time involved in making the mead. Ethiopians purchase gallons of honey at a time to produce the mead and the taste can be as individual as the imagination of the person making it. The same recipe can vary from mother to daughter, for the mead is made from instinct as much as from a recipe.
The extract of a native Ethiopian tree, the Gesho (similar to Hazel) imparts a bitter quality to the T'ej making it the ideal drink to complement the spicy food of the Ethiopians. The honey- sweet, bitter, dry tone of T'ej is enhanced by the food. Ethiopian meals often consist of pureed vegetable greens, lentils, peas, cabbages, bean sprouts, squash and meat - chicken, seafood and lamb. This is all served on a communal plate with injera, a sourdough, uncooked, unleavened bread. Injera is rolled and folded in the manner of a napkin and placed on the rim of the dinner plate or on a side plate.
Read a lot about Ethiopian Tej here:
http://www.gotmead.com/mead-research/tej-in-america.shtml
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***** Rumpot (Rumtopf) Germany
***** Hot Drinks, a List
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Bratapfelmet -fruchtiger Honigwein
feinster Druidenfeuer (Kräuterschnaps)
Mjedpiir - Biermischgetränk aus Bier und Honigwein
Drachenglut in Replik-Flasche
und mehr
http://www.trefflich-tropfen.de/
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
***** Honey
Non-seasonal Topic
unless specified with the name of a seasonal flower.
heather honey, Ireland
kigo for autumn
Heather, Erika Europa.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
***** Winter honey from YEMEN
***** Bee (mitsubachi)
***** Honey Spas Russia
Kigo for Autumn
honey spa
our savior savors
honey comb
"chibi" (pen-name for Dennis M. Holmes)
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Back to the Worldkigo Index
http://worldkigodatabase.blogspot.com/
WASHOKU ... Japanese Food SAIJIKI
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Mulled wine (Gløgg / Glühwein)
Mulled Mead (Honey wine, Honigwein)
***** Location: Scandinavia, Germany and elsewhere
***** Season: Winter
***** Category: Humanity
*****************************
Explanation
Glögg is a Swedish drink for a cold winter evening. It is heated, spiced and sweetened wine, a bit like the German Glühwein. Below is a recipe, though maybe the measurements don't make sense outside Sweden, and some of the ingredients may not be standard stock. But it will be nice even if it's not exactly like the original, so it doesn't really matter!
What to use:
3 sticks cinnamon
2-3 pieces dried Seville orange peel
2-3 pieces dried ginger (not ground)
some 10 cardamom seeds (whole)
some 10 cloves (whole)
1 cup (2.5dl) water
Also: sugar
1 bottle of wine (or similar amount of black currant or grape juice for a non-alcoholic alternative)
Some of these things are hard to find in some places, such as dried whole ginger (and how big is "a piece" anyway?). When in doubt, use fresh rather than powdered dry, as the powder makes it nigh well impossible to sieve/filter it all at -- the whole thing just clogs up. If you can't find dried peels of Seville orange (this has been known to happen), it is possible to substitute a smaller quantity of the thin orange part of the peel of an ordinary orange. In the end you'll probably have substituted just about everything, but that will work too, I've tried it.
Isabelle Prondzynski
What to do:
* Heat spices and water to boiling, then turn off heat and let stand overnight
* Sieve/filter out the spices
* Add the wine (or juice)
* Add sugar to taste (that should be a minimum of one decilitre (=2/5 of a cup); we're talking Swedish cooking here!). You probably have to heat it first so that the sugar dissolves, then see if you want to put some more
* Heat. Note that alcohol evaporates at 72 degrees Celsius (or is it 78?) so you want to be a bit careful!
* Some naughty people would spike the whole thing with a splash of vodka... (optional)
Serve hot with raisins and blanched almonds (dropped into the cups after serving). Glögg is normally served in tiny cups (the cups from your Turkish/Japanese/etc. souvenir tea set will be perfect), and some tiny spoons are useful for fishing out the raisins and almonds.
***
The socio-cultural context for glögg is either as a pre-dinner drink in the winter, or as a separate event, usually at about 4 or 5 pm, a bit like a cocktail party. On the side, pepparkakor is the kind of thing to nibble, but you'll have to look for the recipe for them somewhere else!
The extract keeps very well (that's why they used to sail all the way to Indonesia to get spices -- they work as preservatives), so you can make more and keep it in a bottle, handy for whenever you fancy a glögg on a cold evening (which is probably only about four times in a season; it's rather sweet); it will keep for a year at least.
Skål!
http://www.ling.su.se/staff/evali/glogg.htm
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Danish recipe, with English translation
http://www.godset.dk/rolf/glogg.htm
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Every family has its own recipe -- including the secret ingredient to raise the alcohol level. It becomes easy to have an extended chat outdoors by minus 15 degrees C -- if one keeps one's temperature (and spirits!) up with the help of glögg... and perhaps follows it up in the sauna!
This would be the case particularly in Finland (web site below, where we also find recipes for the Christmas biscuits and buns which go nicely with glögg...)...
** ** ** Glögg Party at Christmas
1 bottle red wine
2-3 tablespoons Madeira (optional)
1/2 cup raw sugar, or to taste
1/3 cup raisins
1-2 sticks cinnamon
5-6 whole cloves peelings of I orange
1/4 cup blanched, slivered almonds
1/4 cup vodka to spike it up (optional)
In a large kettle, combine all the ingredients except the vodka. Heat slowly, until the drink is steaming hot. Stir every now and then, and taste with a spoon whenever you feel like it. Do not let the drink get even close to boiling. Just keep it warm. Before serving, add vodka if you wish. Servings: 1 to 6.
Read some more Finnish recipies here:
http://virtual.finland.fi/netcomm/news/showarticle.asp?intNWSAID=26071
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Worldwide use
Germany
Glögg has a definite relationship to the German Glühwein (see below).
Glühwein (Traditional Glow Wine)
Ingredients:
1 litre good red wine
1/8 litre water
60 grams sugar (approx 2oz)
1/4 stick cinnamon
3 cloves
Peelings of half a lemon or two lemon slices
Preparation
Bring the sugar, spices and water to a boil (instead of the water experts say that you really should use red wine for a better flavor) Then let this mixture steep for 30 minutes. Finally, mix in the remainder of the red wine and carefully reheat to just under the boiling point.
If desired, flavor with lemon or orange juice to taste.
Glühwein is sometimes also made from raspberry, blueberry and blackberry wines.
Below are Variations of Glühwein :
1. French Glow Wine : Use Bordeaux with cinnamon, rubbed nutmeg and bay leaves as the spices.
2. Seehund (Sea Dog) : Substitute white wine for the red, and prepare as traditional glow wine. Depending on the acidity of the wine, a little lemon juice can be added to taste.
3. Negus : Prepare with port wine (1/2 wine, 1/2 water) and use rubbed nutmeg and lemon peelings for the spices.
4. Honig Glühwein (Honey Glow wine): prepare with red wine, 150gm honey (5oz), some cinnamon stick and two lemon slices. Heat to just under boiling.
http://www.altfrankfurt.com/Weihnachten/
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USA
** ** ** Mulled wine
In Frank Capra’s holiday film, It’s A Wonderful Life, a guardian angel walks into a bar and asks for mulled wine “heavy on the cinnamon, easy on the cloves.” For many, hot wine, which would be unthinkable in any other season, is a heavenly drink at this time of year.
It has been a wintry favourite for a long time with almost as names as it has recipes: glögg in Scandinavia, gluhwein in Austria, a bishop in England when made with port, and the Medieval drinks of Clarrey which included honey and spices, Caudell which was thickened with eggs and Ypocras which comes closest to the mulled wine or cider we know today.
However the drink is made, the spices always include the highly aromatic ones common in Britain and Northern Europe hundreds of years ago: cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger, allspice, mace, perhaps cardamom and a citrus peel. Honey or sugar is often added for a sweeter drink but these aren’t always used. What used to be a common drink, however, now seems exoctic. Although fancy packaging has made the ingredients in mulled wine spice sachets seem esoteric and expensive; most of us probably have everthing we need on our spice shelves.
You can experiment with the spices mentioned above but a typical recipe for mulled wine would be a tablespoon of honey or sugar, a stick of cinnamon, and a large pinch each of ginger, nutmeg, mace, cloves and cardamom for each cup of wine or cider or even apple juice. Fortunately the wine does not have to be expensive. Most red depanneur plonk works quite nicely thank you.
It is important not to boil the wine, but simply heat the spices in the wine over a low heat and stir occasionally until the sugar or honey is completely dissolved. For a clearer drink, strain the hot wine through a coffee filter before serving. As you raise a glass, you might consider proffering this heart-warming toast:
Beaujolais, Beaujolais, appellation controllée
Beaujolais est joli, parfumé et chaud
Bonne santé et cheerio.
http://www.montrealfood.com/mldwine.html
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The word "mulled" simply means heated and spiced. Many liquids can be mulled - mead, cider, and of course wine. Mulled wine is a traditional favorite in cooler locations, and goes well with the various celebrations that come around the end of the year.
Mulled wines have a long history. In medieval times these wines were called Ypocras or Hipocris, named after the physician Hippocrates. They were thought to be very healthy, and indeed, with wine at the time being far more sanitary than water, these heated drinks probably did keep people healthy through the cold winters.
Moving forward to the 1500s, cookbooks listed methods of mulling "Clarrey", or Bordeaux. Recipes involved honey, cinnamon, cardamon, galingale and of course French wine. Mulled wine was a favorite in Victorian England, and Negus - a type of mulled wine - was even served to children at their birthday parties. Today, mulled wine is a staple at many holiday parties.
http://www.lisashea.com/wine/types/bl_mulled.htm
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Things found on the way
German Poem about Christmas Problems because Santa had too much Gluehwein. His sledge went off the road and he could not deliver the presents to the kids in time. He promises never to have too much mulled wine... :o)
Weihnnachtspanne
Lauthals am Fluchen
Der Schlitten liegt im Graben
Rentiere fliehen
Nur einmal nicht aufgepaßt
Und die Weihnacht war versaut
Nie wieder Glühwein
Bevor die Tour zu Ende,
Die Kinder glücklich
Schwört der Weihnachtsmann
In den Trümmern des Schlittens
http://www.haikulinde.de/lyrikforum/board1/77.html
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HAIKU
a toast
to this millennium
mulled wine
Peggy
http://shiki1.cc.ehime-u.ac.jp/~shiki/kukai/kukai75-2.html
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by the fire visiting
with old friends
cups of mulled wine
Maureen Yates
http://www.millikin.edu/haiku/courses/roundtablefall2002/1kukaiHotDrinks.html
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Short days, cold dark nights,
Frost sparkles and breathing steams,
Mulled wine by the fire.
© Elfstone 20/8/03
http://www.ukauthors.com/article8681.html
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Advent Kerzenschein
Heimlichkeiten Vorfreude
Nüsse und Glühwein
http://wiesengrund.blogger.de/stories/188455/
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sugar plum fairies--
enjoying mulled wine
with Tschaikowsky
Ed Schwellenbach
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cherrypoetryclub/message/21012
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Related words
***** Mulled Mead (Mulled honey wine)
Often drunk at small stalls during the Christmas fairs inGermany. Sometimes fruit is included, for example souer cherries. Mead is good for your health too and brings you sweet dreams.
Heisser lieblich Met oder der Met mit Sauerkirsche heiss ....
*****
More about mead:
Mead is a fermented alcoholic beverage made of honey, water, and yeast. It is sometimes known as "honeywine" (for obvious reasons) and is generally pronounced "meed", though South Africans usually pronounce it "med", to rhyme with "red". The word mead refers to the sugary fluid excreted by flowers. In symbology mead is the tipple of the gods.
A mead that also contains spices (like cloves, cinnamon or nutmeg) or herbs (such as oregano or even lavender or chamomile) is called metheglin. The etymon of this word is possibly "medicine" as healing herbs were often stored as metheglin so they would be available over the winter (as well as making them much easier to swallow).
A mead that contains fruit (such as strawberry, blackcurrant or even rose-hips) is called melomel and was also used as a delicious way to "store" summer produce for the winter.
Mulled mead is a popular winter holiday drink, where mead is warmed (traditionally by having a hot poker plunged into it) and flavoured with spices.
Hippocras is spiced grape wine sweetened with honey. A grape-based wine with added honey is called a pyment.
Cyser is made with apple juice and honey; braggot or bracket is made with malted barley and honey.
Mead was very popular in Northern Europe where grapes could not be grown, but it faded in popularity once wine imports became economical. Mead was especially popular with the Slaves and was called in Polish miód (pronounced myoot), meaning honey. Mead was a popular drink among the Polish szlachta. During the Crusades Polish prince Leszek the White explained to the pope that Polish knights couldn't participate in the crusades because there is no mead in Palestine.
In Finland a sweet mead called Sima (cognate with zymurgy), is still an essential seasonal brew connected with the Finnish Vappu festival. It is usually spiced by adding both the flesh and rind of a lemon. During secondary fermentation raisins are added to control the amount of sugars and to act as an indicator of readiness for consumption — they will rise to the top of the bottle when the drink is ready.
Mead is probably also the origin of the word honeymoon as the father of the bride was said to give as a dowry a month's supply of the liquor. Mead is mentioned in many old north Anglo-Saxon stories, including Beowulf.
Mead can have a wide range of flavors, depending on the source of the honey, additives (including fruit and spices), yeast employed during fermentation, and aging procedure. Mead can be difficult to find commercially, though some producers have been successful marketing it.
Many meads retain some measure of the sweetness of the original honey, and some can even be considered as dessert wines. Drier meads are also available, and some producers offer sparkling meads, which (like champagne) can make for a delightful celebratory toast.
http://www.logicjungle.com/wiki/Mead
A common toast when drinking mead is WASSAIL! Wishing you Health !
wassail:
steam from the glasses
around the punch bowl
Haiku from Chibi
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Recipe for Wassail Mead
http://www.nhb.org/download/factsht/makingmead.pdf
The History of the Word "Wassail"
Apple tree wassailing is a ceremony which involves drinking to the health of the apple trees.
The Anglo-Saxons used the phrase Wæs hal! as an everyday greeting. Wæs is a form of the verb "to be" related to modern English was. Hal is the ancestor of the modern English words whole and hale. Thus, Wæs hal! literally meant "Be healthy!". The Vikings who later settled in Northern England used a dialectal varient of the same phrase: Ves heill!. Since the Anglo-Saxons and Norse shared a custom of welcoming guests by presenting them with a horn of ale (or cup of mead, or goblet of wine), the greeting evolved into a toast.
The phrase was eventually contracted into one word,wassail, and came to refer to the act of toasting to someones health, wassailing, and to a type of alcoholic beverage (spiced ale or punch) used to toast people's health on special occasions. The use of wassailing to mean "caroling" (as in "Here we go a-wassailing...") stems from the habit of singing songs whilst drinking from the "wassail-bowl" during Christmas and New Year celebrations.
http://www.wyrdwords.vispa.com/heathenry/wassailing/word.html
Thus Wassail itself is also a kigo for winter.
xx xx xx xx
Mead is one of the oldest alcoholic beverages of humankind. It has been made in Ethiopia for many thousand years. There it is called Tej.
In Ethiopia, T'ej is made in private homes for family consumption and is not sold commercially. Each household has its own family recipe and variations in taste result from the type of honey used, temperature, climate, materials and utensils and the time involved in making the mead. Ethiopians purchase gallons of honey at a time to produce the mead and the taste can be as individual as the imagination of the person making it. The same recipe can vary from mother to daughter, for the mead is made from instinct as much as from a recipe.
The extract of a native Ethiopian tree, the Gesho (similar to Hazel) imparts a bitter quality to the T'ej making it the ideal drink to complement the spicy food of the Ethiopians. The honey- sweet, bitter, dry tone of T'ej is enhanced by the food. Ethiopian meals often consist of pureed vegetable greens, lentils, peas, cabbages, bean sprouts, squash and meat - chicken, seafood and lamb. This is all served on a communal plate with injera, a sourdough, uncooked, unleavened bread. Injera is rolled and folded in the manner of a napkin and placed on the rim of the dinner plate or on a side plate.
Read a lot about Ethiopian Tej here:
http://www.gotmead.com/mead-research/tej-in-america.shtml
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
***** Rumpot (Rumtopf) Germany
***** Hot Drinks, a List
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Bratapfelmet -fruchtiger Honigwein
feinster Druidenfeuer (Kräuterschnaps)
Mjedpiir - Biermischgetränk aus Bier und Honigwein
Drachenglut in Replik-Flasche
und mehr
http://www.trefflich-tropfen.de/
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
***** Honey
Non-seasonal Topic
unless specified with the name of a seasonal flower.
heather honey, Ireland
kigo for autumn
Heather, Erika Europa.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
***** Winter honey from YEMEN
***** Bee (mitsubachi)
***** Honey Spas Russia
Kigo for Autumn
honey spa
our savior savors
honey comb
"chibi" (pen-name for Dennis M. Holmes)
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Back to the Worldkigo Index
http://worldkigodatabase.blogspot.com/
WASHOKU ... Japanese Food SAIJIKI
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1/16/2006
Mountains alive in all seasons
[ . BACK to Worldkigo TOP . ]
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This is a set of kigo with a personification.
This personification of the mountains goes through the four seasons,
in fact is is a quote from Gayuu Roku 臥遊録, a Chinese work from the Northern Sung dynasty by the painter Gaku Ki
Guo Xi 郭煕画譜 (c. 1023 - c. 1085)
春山は淡治にして笑うが如く、
夏山蒼翠(そうすい)にして滴(したた)るが如く、
秋山明浄(めいじょう)にして粧(よそお)うが如く、
冬山惨淡(さんたん)にして眠るが如し
Early Spring
Guo Xi (Chinese: 郭熙; pinyin: Guō Xī; Wade–Giles: Kuo Hsi)
(c. 1020–c. 1090) Chinese landscape painter from Henan Province who lived during the Northern Song dynasty. One text entitled "The Lofty Message of Forest and Streams" (Linquan Gaozhi 林泉高致) is attributed to him. The work covers a variety of themes centered around the appropriate way of painting a landscape.
The following is an excerpt from his treatise, "mountains and waters":
The clouds and the vapours of real landscapes are not the same at the four seasons.
In spring they are light and diffused,
in summer rich and dense,
in autumn scattered and thin,
in winter dark and solitary.
When such effects can be seen in pictures, the clouds and vapours have an air of life.
The mist around the mountains is not the same at the four seasons.
The mountains in spring are light and seductive as if smiling:
the mountains in summer have a blue-green colour
which seems to be spread over them;
the mountains in autumn are bright and tidy as if freshly painted;
the mountains in winter are sad and tranquil as if sleeping.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !
In Japan, people used to call the nearby mountain forests and groves "yama", they were part of the satoyama system, that sustained the life of a mountain village.
. Satoyama 里山 (さとやま) .
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Mountains asleep (yama nemuru)
***** Location: Japan
***** Season: Winter
***** Category: Earth
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Explanation
mountains and hills are sleeping,
yama nemuru 山眠る
sleeping mountains, nemuru yama 眠る山(ねむるやま)
It evokes a quiet atmosphere of things coming to a well-deserved rest.
Gabi Greve
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water is dripping down a mountain
yama shitataru 山滴る
yama shitatari 山滴り(やましたたり)
kigo for summer
moss dripping with water, shitatari 滴り (したたり)
kenteki 涓滴(けんてき)、
dripping from rocks, iwa shitatari 巌滴り(いわしたたり)
dripping from cliffs, gake shitatari 崖滴り(がけしたたり)
dripping from moss, koke shitatari 苔滴り(こけしたたり)
This kidai is difficult to translate in a short version in English. It refers to the freshness of cool water dripping down a mountain over moss.
It is not used for raindrops or dewdrops.
mountains take on make-up and color,
yama yosou 山粧う (やまよそう)
kigo for autumn
..... yama yoso-ou 山粧う(やまよそおう)
..... yama irodoru 山彩る(やまいろどる
..... yoso-ou yama 粧う山(よそおうやま)
滴りやふつと空気を噛む老人
shitatari ya futto kuuki o kamu roojin
water dripping over moss -
the old man bites
a bit of air
Ishida Yoshihiro 石田よし宏
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Worldwide use
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Things found on the way
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HAIKU
山眠るまばゆき鳥を放ちては
yama nemuru mabayuki tori o hanachite wa
Yamada Mizue 山田 みづえ
http://home.att.ne.jp/star/biling-haiku/kigofuyu.htm
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yama nemuru waga ude ni tsuma nemurikeri
la montagne dort...
et ma femme dort aussi,
là, entre mes bras
mountains asleep ...
and in my arms my wife
also asleep
(Tr. Gabi )
Seegan
http://perso.club-internet.fr/leonicat/haiku/cdc/seegan.htm
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山眠る 尾根ゆく人の 見え隠れ
mountains sleep -
people walking on the path
sometimes hidden, sometimes seen
(Tr. Gabi)
Haiko
http://www.all-suzurandai.com/haiku/back-2004.htm
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山眠る看護婦とふたり野辺の道
yama nemuru kangofu to futari nobe no michi
mountains asleep -
I walk with the nurse
on a nature path
山眠る病みし人訪ふ白衣かな
mountains asleep
in my white coat
I visit my patients
(Tr. Gabi)
Written by Mahara sensei, a local doctor in the area of Mt. Aso. He writes haiku for his patients and himself to feel some relief from harsh reality.
Link with more of his haiku and pictures from Mr. Aso in Kyushu and light effects.
http://plaza.rakuten.co.jp/gogaku/34003
http://plaza.rakuten.co.jp/gogaku/
************************************
Related words
***** mountains smiling, yama warau 山笑う - 山笑ふ
kigo for spring
Spring 2007 , Okayama, Japan
The plants and trees start to bud in all shades of green, pink, white, the sound of birds fills the mild spring air and as people smile, so they see their sourrounding mountains reflecting their onw emotion of joy.
山笑う わたしだって 笑いますよ
yama warau - watashi datte waraimasu yo
.. .. .. mountains smiling-
.. .. .. and me of course
.. .. .. smiling too
...
Mt. Daisen in April 2005
© Photos and Haiku by Gabi Greve
with more photos
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
ふるさとやどちら見ても山笑ふ
furusato ya dochira o mite mo yama warau
my hometown
wherever I look
mountains laugh with vendure
Shiki
... shiki/kim/shikispring.html
my hometown -
wherever I look
mountains are smiling
Tr. Gabi Greve
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
akasugi o sukku to tatete yama warau
with its redwoods
springing to their height
the mountain laughs
Kiyoko Tokutomi
http://www.modernhaiku.org/bookreviews/tokutomi2003.html
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
太陽を必ず画く子山笑ふ
this child
always painting a sun -
mountains smiling
(Tr. Gabi Greve)
高田 風人子
http://home.att.ne.jp/blue/alpha-club/kigocollection.htm
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whisking eggs
to a heavy-metal riff
the mountains smile
Susan Shand, April 2009
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. MOUNTAIN ... related kigo for all seasons
. Chinese origin of Japanese kigo .
[ . BACK to DARUMA MUSEUM TOP . ]
[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ]
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This is a set of kigo with a personification.
This personification of the mountains goes through the four seasons,
in fact is is a quote from Gayuu Roku 臥遊録, a Chinese work from the Northern Sung dynasty by the painter Gaku Ki
Guo Xi 郭煕画譜 (c. 1023 - c. 1085)
春山は淡治にして笑うが如く、
夏山蒼翠(そうすい)にして滴(したた)るが如く、
秋山明浄(めいじょう)にして粧(よそお)うが如く、
冬山惨淡(さんたん)にして眠るが如し
Early Spring
Guo Xi (Chinese: 郭熙; pinyin: Guō Xī; Wade–Giles: Kuo Hsi)
(c. 1020–c. 1090) Chinese landscape painter from Henan Province who lived during the Northern Song dynasty. One text entitled "The Lofty Message of Forest and Streams" (Linquan Gaozhi 林泉高致) is attributed to him. The work covers a variety of themes centered around the appropriate way of painting a landscape.
The following is an excerpt from his treatise, "mountains and waters":
The clouds and the vapours of real landscapes are not the same at the four seasons.
In spring they are light and diffused,
in summer rich and dense,
in autumn scattered and thin,
in winter dark and solitary.
When such effects can be seen in pictures, the clouds and vapours have an air of life.
The mist around the mountains is not the same at the four seasons.
The mountains in spring are light and seductive as if smiling:
the mountains in summer have a blue-green colour
which seems to be spread over them;
the mountains in autumn are bright and tidy as if freshly painted;
the mountains in winter are sad and tranquil as if sleeping.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !
In Japan, people used to call the nearby mountain forests and groves "yama", they were part of the satoyama system, that sustained the life of a mountain village.
. Satoyama 里山 (さとやま) .
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Mountains asleep (yama nemuru)
***** Location: Japan
***** Season: Winter
***** Category: Earth
*****************************
Explanation
mountains and hills are sleeping,
yama nemuru 山眠る
sleeping mountains, nemuru yama 眠る山(ねむるやま)
It evokes a quiet atmosphere of things coming to a well-deserved rest.
Gabi Greve
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water is dripping down a mountain
yama shitataru 山滴る
yama shitatari 山滴り(やましたたり)
kigo for summer
moss dripping with water, shitatari 滴り (したたり)
kenteki 涓滴(けんてき)、
dripping from rocks, iwa shitatari 巌滴り(いわしたたり)
dripping from cliffs, gake shitatari 崖滴り(がけしたたり)
dripping from moss, koke shitatari 苔滴り(こけしたたり)
This kidai is difficult to translate in a short version in English. It refers to the freshness of cool water dripping down a mountain over moss.
It is not used for raindrops or dewdrops.
mountains take on make-up and color,
yama yosou 山粧う (やまよそう)
kigo for autumn
..... yama yoso-ou 山粧う(やまよそおう)
..... yama irodoru 山彩る(やまいろどる
..... yoso-ou yama 粧う山(よそおうやま)
滴りやふつと空気を噛む老人
shitatari ya futto kuuki o kamu roojin
water dripping over moss -
the old man bites
a bit of air
Ishida Yoshihiro 石田よし宏
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Worldwide use
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Things found on the way
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HAIKU
山眠るまばゆき鳥を放ちては
yama nemuru mabayuki tori o hanachite wa
Yamada Mizue 山田 みづえ
http://home.att.ne.jp/star/biling-haiku/kigofuyu.htm
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yama nemuru waga ude ni tsuma nemurikeri
la montagne dort...
et ma femme dort aussi,
là, entre mes bras
mountains asleep ...
and in my arms my wife
also asleep
(Tr. Gabi )
Seegan
http://perso.club-internet.fr/leonicat/haiku/cdc/seegan.htm
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山眠る 尾根ゆく人の 見え隠れ
mountains sleep -
people walking on the path
sometimes hidden, sometimes seen
(Tr. Gabi)
Haiko
http://www.all-suzurandai.com/haiku/back-2004.htm
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
山眠る看護婦とふたり野辺の道
yama nemuru kangofu to futari nobe no michi
mountains asleep -
I walk with the nurse
on a nature path
山眠る病みし人訪ふ白衣かな
mountains asleep
in my white coat
I visit my patients
(Tr. Gabi)
Written by Mahara sensei, a local doctor in the area of Mt. Aso. He writes haiku for his patients and himself to feel some relief from harsh reality.
Link with more of his haiku and pictures from Mr. Aso in Kyushu and light effects.
http://plaza.rakuten.co.jp/gogaku/34003
http://plaza.rakuten.co.jp/gogaku/
************************************
Related words
***** mountains smiling, yama warau 山笑う - 山笑ふ
kigo for spring
Spring 2007 , Okayama, Japan
The plants and trees start to bud in all shades of green, pink, white, the sound of birds fills the mild spring air and as people smile, so they see their sourrounding mountains reflecting their onw emotion of joy.
山笑う わたしだって 笑いますよ
yama warau - watashi datte waraimasu yo
.. .. .. mountains smiling-
.. .. .. and me of course
.. .. .. smiling too
...
Mt. Daisen in April 2005
© Photos and Haiku by Gabi Greve
with more photos
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
ふるさとやどちら見ても山笑ふ
furusato ya dochira o mite mo yama warau
my hometown
wherever I look
mountains laugh with vendure
Shiki
... shiki/kim/shikispring.html
my hometown -
wherever I look
mountains are smiling
Tr. Gabi Greve
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
akasugi o sukku to tatete yama warau
with its redwoods
springing to their height
the mountain laughs
Kiyoko Tokutomi
http://www.modernhaiku.org/bookreviews/tokutomi2003.html
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
太陽を必ず画く子山笑ふ
this child
always painting a sun -
mountains smiling
(Tr. Gabi Greve)
高田 風人子
http://home.att.ne.jp/blue/alpha-club/kigocollection.htm
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
whisking eggs
to a heavy-metal riff
the mountains smile
Susan Shand, April 2009
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
. MOUNTAIN ... related kigo for all seasons
. Chinese origin of Japanese kigo .
[ . BACK to DARUMA MUSEUM TOP . ]
[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ]
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
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