01 April 2026

What's Happening in April?

                                                         The first of April, some might say,
                                                              Is set apart for All Fool's Day,
But why people call it so
Nor I nor they themselves do know

                                                      From Poor Richard's Almanack (1760)




April flowers from the 'Illustrated Country Year" by Celia Lewis. From left to right they are Bluebell, Yellow Archangel, Bugle, Forget-me-not, Petty Spurge, Wood Spurge, Ramsons, Cuckoo Flower or Ladys Smock and White Dead Nettle.

April was Aprilis in Roman times derived from aperio to open. Giblean in Scots Gaelic. Apryle in Scots, Aibrean in Irish Gaelic, Averil in Manx and Ebrill in Welsh.


April weather, rain and sunshine both together

April wet, good wheat

April has 30 days, and if it rained on 31 no harm would be done

A dry April is not the farmer's will
April wet is what we should get

Till April's dead, change not a thread.

April full moon tomorrow in the UK - it has many names in the past, the Pink Moon,  Budding Moon, Seed Moon, New Shoots Moon.

The mobile library will be bringing me a nice lot of books - fingers crossed,  then Easter weekend coming up, a very quiet one for me. Easter Events are almost all for families, no fun if alone. The nearest car boot starts as long as we don't get inches of rain, then ED and the two grandsons are coming up from Surrey for a few days as long as they can get fuel for their car OK. One garage here had no diesel at the weekend.
Once they've gone I'll be able to get the windowsill electric propagator out and get seeds started.

Mid month I'll be another year older - all downhill towards 80 then!

On the financial side of things it's always an expensive month with TV Licence, House insurance, birthdays and this year a bill for the boiler repair too.

And before we know it May will be on the horizon.


Back Tomorrow

35 comments:

  1. You are having a couple of expensive months with unavoidable repairs to the car etc. I get dispirited when I'm trying so hard to save in small ways and we get whacked with a big repair bill. Having a house and car is much better than not having them of course but rising costs for work done does get me down sometimes. Sorry, shouldn't be gloomy! Hope you enjoy the family's visit.
    Penny

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm realising (although I knew anyway) how much money we saved when Colin did all the car and house repairs!

      Delete
    2. When in Carms, we had a local chap who did car repairs evenings/weekends and was very cheap and good. I miss having him nearby to fix the car. Keith would of course, like Colin, do all the house repairs and it hurts to have to pay someone to do a small job - but one I can't do.

      I love your monthly countryside sayings and wild flowers etc.

      Delete
    3. I'm glad to have found the guys at the car repair place, friends of BiL so they don't rip me off!

      Delete
  2. Now I'm in my 70s, it's not the downhills that bother me, it's the UP hills (even here in Flat Norfolk) 🧗

    ReplyDelete
  3. Some cracking April Fool's Japes about, one very convincing one by my friend on FB, and she nearly got me!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I haven't heard any April fools jokes - only listened to radio 2, I can listen early now Scott Mills has gone - I always found him too childish and silly.

      Delete
  4. There is more Gravity about now than when I was younger, noticeable in dropping things and falling down. DH had a dramatic fall over the heavy rucksack I asked him not to leave in the middle of the lounge.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh that sounds like a nasty fall. Lots of the exercises we do at the Keep Moving Group are to help with balance and avoiding falls, I hope they help us all.

      Delete
  5. Always something in house and garden that needs money throwing at it.
    I love seed sowing time, so hopeful and positive.
    Alison in Devon x

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I shall be a bit late starting seeds but they usually catch up

      Delete
  6. Loved Angela's comment about the uphills! I definitely don't take the stairs at the speed I once did.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. 5 years in a bungalow and my knees aren't good at all!

      Delete
  7. Lovely April - my birthday month, too. We have forget-me-nots, violets, wallflowers, bluebells, and the forsythia and kerria japonica are a blaze of colour and full of flowers.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's very strange how so many bloggers have birthdays in April - there must be a reason!

      Delete
  8. Yes, it's here our month. Both another year older, and hopefully wiser. I seem to be spending big money on so many things at the moment and saving small money on a day to day basis. I've almost fell for so many April Fools jokes this morning. My niece shared on Facebook that they would be appearing on 'One Born Every Minute' later in the year. She has just had her third baby, but as she only took an hour to deliver, even I thought it would make for a very short segment of the show.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Goodness that was a speedy new arrival. My youngest daughter was only a couple of hours and that felt pretty speedy at the time! Just in time to hospital - phew.

      Delete
  9. For those who don't include Sue:
    Oh, to be in England
    Now that April's there
    Whoever wakes in England
    Finds some morning unaware
    That the lowest boughs and. brushwood sheath
    Around the elm-tree bowl are in tiny leaf,
    While the chaffinch sings on the orchard bough
    In England. - now
    Robert Browning, Home Thoughts from Abroad. Roderick

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I'm sure that poem has been included in may of my April 1st posts in the last 13 years

      Delete
  10. It is true, April showers bring May flowers in Massachusetts.
    The only thing I see in my garden right now are tiny green points peeking through the soil and showing the start of daffodils and iris.
    You seem to have many more lovely blooms in April.
    Enjoy your time with Ed and your grandsons and have some good family fun.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The daffodils are finishing - onto bluebells next.

      Delete
  11. I just read an article on the BBC online news site about the Norwegian custom of reading crime novels over Easter weekend. sounds right up your alley-and mine.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I wonder how that custom started, yes crime fiction for me this weekend definitely

      Delete
  12. I turned 75 last year and it has been one stress after another lately. My great-aunt used to say, "Getting old is not for sissies!" and "The golden years are tarnished." She was right!! ;)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My Mum and Mum in Law both died in their early 70s - it's a worrying thought

      Delete
  13. Statistics show that the birth rate is high in April, 9 months after the summer holidays and also September, 9 months after Christmas!!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I think back in the 50's there was some sort of tax break for having a baby in the spring - might be wrong but I think that's what Mum said

      Delete
  14. Ah yes, I recognize many of those wildflowers. We have bluebells, archangel, spurge and forget me nots in our garden, and sometimes I see cuckoo flower when I walk on Hampstead Heath.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You have more interesting things growing in your London garden than we have out in the countryside

      Delete
  15. I see you are advised to hang on to warm wear through April. Here it's "Ne'er cast a clout 'til May is out".

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The same rhyme here so best stay warmly dressed until June!

      Delete
  16. I'm going to be over the 55 hill sliding down into 60 this year lol. It doesn't seem to bother me. I feel a lot older when I realise how old the 'children' are.

    April here means things are starting to grow!

    ReplyDelete