logo
Bizarre plan to make Aussie city switch to the Aboriginal calendar and have SIX seasons: 'It makes sense'

Bizarre plan to make Aussie city switch to the Aboriginal calendar and have SIX seasons: 'It makes sense'

Daily Mail​a day ago
The Lord Mayor of one of Australia's biggest cities wants to switch to a six-season Indigenous calendar, claiming it is more accurate than the four-season version.
Melbourne Lord Mayor Nicholas Reece said adding two extra seasons would be more representative of the city's weather than the current Northern European model.
'In the Wurundjeri calendar, there were six seasons in the year. It was a wet summer and a dry summer,' Mr Reece told 3AW.
'A wet winter and a dry winter. And when you think about it, it makes sense.
'But we have gone and superimposed the four seasons essentially from Northern Europe here in Melbourne.
'They don't really match up with the weather patterns that we experience over the 12 months.'
The idea was brought up at the Melbourne 2050 Summit, hosted in May, where around 1,000 people discussed the city's future.
Mr Reece, who was only elected Lord Mayor in 2024, said it was logical to have a system created by Indigenous people.
'This is one of those things where a bit of First Nations knowledge appears to make a bit more sense,' he said.
'Literally, wattle season starts and that week you look around Melbourne and all of the wattle trees have turned fluorescent yellow, and it's beautiful.
'Aboriginal people who lived here for tens of thousands of years, in their calendar, had six seasons here in Melbourne and when you actually look at the calendar and the seasons you actually realise hey that actually does line up.'
Many Aussies poked fun at the Lord Mayor's proposal.
'We should all be able to adopt and identify with as many seasons, months of the year and days of the week as we feel like. Just like our pronouns,' one wrote online.
'Melbourne has really lost the plot. This is complete nonsense,' another said.
The idea of changing the number of seasons in Australia isn't new.
In 2013, Dr Tim Entwisle, at Sydney's Royal Botanic Gardens, told National Geographic Magazine that 'four seasons just don't make sense'.
'When Europeans arrived in Australia, they brought a lot of cultural baggage, including a seasonal system from the temperate Northern Hemisphere,' he said.
Australia's weather is very different to Northern Europe's, with some regions experiencing high rainfall for several months of the year, followed by long, dry periods.
Dr Entwisle developed his own five-season model for Australia's central east.
He said spring should begin a month early when native plants flower and last just two months instead of the usual three.
It would then be followed by two-month-long 'sprummer', a four-month-long summer starting in December, before autumn sets in.
He also agreed that indigenous calendars did a much better job at reflecting Australia's climate than the inherited European model.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Melbourne's mad plan to adopt an Aboriginal six-season calendar
Melbourne's mad plan to adopt an Aboriginal six-season calendar

Spectator

time14 hours ago

  • Spectator

Melbourne's mad plan to adopt an Aboriginal six-season calendar

Victoria's capital, Melbourne, has a dubious meteorological reputation. Our weather is so predictably unpredictable that Melbourne can easily have four seasons in one day. At any time of year, a typical Melbourne day can start off beautifully until the clouds gather, the winds freshen and turn bitingly chill, and it's time to haul in the washing as the rain starts to fall. Never mind that Sydney has a higher average rainfall. The reputation of Melbourne's rapidly changeable weather is so entrenched it's become a national joke. But that could all soon change. Melbourne's Lord Mayor, Nicholas 'call me Nick' Reece, has declared that four seasons simply is not enough for his fair city (and mine). It must have six. Why? Because we're told the local Wurundjeri tribesmen, who inhabited the Melbourne district before British settlement in the 1830s, reckoned their years by six seasons, not four. Those seasons were identified by the fauna and flora abundant in the region at various times of year, including eels, wattle, wombats, black swans and tadpoles. Reece has told Melbourne radio that if it was good enough for local Aboriginal tribes, it is good enough for him, because a six-season calendar more accurately reflects the spectrum of Melbourne's weather. 'In the Wurundjeri calendar, there were six seasons. It was a wet summer and a dry summer. A wet winter and a dry winter. And when you think about it, it makes sense,' Reece said, forgetting that to make six, autumn and winter need to be squeezed in as well – and ignoring that some Aboriginal lore says it's actually more like seven seasons. The four seasons of the traditional calendar are, by contrast, apparently un-Australian. 'We have gone and superimposed four seasons, essentially from northern Europe,' Reece told a gobsmacked Melbourne radio presenter. 'This is one of those things where a bit of (Aboriginal) knowledge appears to make a bit more sense … Literally, wattle season starts, and that week you look around Melbourne and all of the wattle trees have turned fluorescent yellow and it's beautiful.' Which just happens to be now. Here in Melbourne, the wattle is out in all its golden glory, and it truly is beautiful. Melbourne's much-lampooned climate could well accommodate six seasons in one day, but there's just one small problem with Reece's 'decolonising' Melbourne's calendar. Absolutely no one, not even local Aboriginals, measure their years using pre-colonial definitions of the seasons. It's definitely an annual cycle of spring, summer, autumn and winter, everybody accepts it, and nobody's even thought anything different. That Melbourne's Lord Mayor seriously suggests tampering with the traditional calendar to prove how woke and switched-on he is reflects not just on him. It is the sort of twaddle that is eagerly grasped and propagated by the progressive political, institutional and media left-wing establishment that currently dominates all levels of Australian society. This progressive establishment believes that ostentatiously rendering homage to romantic notions of pre-colonial Australia beats worrying about boring and mundane things like reducing the cost of living, better managing Australia's sluggish economy, and being able to feed and house the torrent of international migration Australia has welcomed since the blighted Covid years. And, at a local council level, concentrating on roads, rates and rubbish. It certainly would be more useful if Reece could stop worrying about reordering the seasons and concentrate on his core mayoral challenge: reversing the rapid decline of what was once Marvellous Melbourne. Covid and the world's harshest lockdowns, followed by the rise of home working, have turned the city's central business district into a shadow of its former self. As for the rest of us, we stand bemused and bewildered as the self-appointed great and good talk about reordering the seasons and giving our cities Aboriginal names. Our political class are happy to spend hundreds of millions on expiating the perceived sins of our colonial past, treating the Aboriginal cultures that existed before Captain Cook landed in Botany Bay as man living in a perfect state of nature that evil Europeans destroyed. Lord Mayor Reece is welcome to indulge in his seasonal fantasy. For the rest of us in this most European of Australian cities, our seasons actually do align with northern Europe's, but in reverse. September marks the start of spring; December summer; March autumn; and June winter. And just now, in the gradually lengthening winter days of early August, we're freezing down here. At least the wattle's in full bloom though.

Australian city considers adopting aboriginal calendar
Australian city considers adopting aboriginal calendar

Daily Mail​

time18 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Australian city considers adopting aboriginal calendar

The Lord Mayor of one of Australia's biggest cities wants to switch to a six-season Indigenous calendar, claiming it is more accurate than the four-season version. Melbourne Lord Mayor Nicholas Reece said adding two extra seasons would be more representative of the city's weather than the current Northern Hemisphere model. 'In the Wurundjeri calendar, there were six seasons in the year. It was a wet summer and a dry summer,' Mr Reece (pictured) told 3AW. 'A wet winter and a dry winter. And when you think about it, it makes sense. But we have gone and superimposed the four seasons essentially from Northern Europe here in Melbourne. They don't really match up with the weather patterns that we experience over the 12 months.' The idea was brought up at the Melbourne 2050 Summit, hosted in May, where around 1,000 people discussed the city's future. Mr Reece, who was only elected Lord Mayor in 2024, said it was logical to have a system created by Indigenous people. 'This is one of those things where a bit of First Nations knowledge appears to make a bit more sense,' he said. 'Literally, wattle season starts and that week you look around Melbourne and all of the wattle trees have turned fluorescent yellow, and it's beautiful. Aboriginal people who lived here for tens of thousands of years, in their calendar, had six seasons here in Melbourne and when you actually look at the calendar and the seasons you actually realise hey that actually does line up.' Many poked fun at the Lord Mayor's proposal. 'We should all be able to adopt and identify with as many seasons, months of the year and days of the week as we feel like. Just like our pronouns,' one wrote online. 'Melbourne has really lost the plot. This is complete nonsense,' another said. The idea of changing the number of seasons in Australia isn't new. In 2013, Dr Tim Entwisle, at Sydney's Royal Botanic Gardens, told National Geographic Magazine that 'four seasons just don't make sense'. 'When Europeans arrived in Australia, they brought a lot of cultural baggage, including a seasonal system from the temperate Northern Hemisphere,' he said. He said spring should begin a month early when native plants flower and last just two months instead of the usual three. It would then be followed by two-month-long 'sprummer', a four-month-long summer starting in December, before autumn sets in.

Aussies brace for a cold and wet weekend as mind-blowing map captures huge 3,000km weather system stretching across the country
Aussies brace for a cold and wet weekend as mind-blowing map captures huge 3,000km weather system stretching across the country

Daily Mail​

timea day ago

  • Daily Mail​

Aussies brace for a cold and wet weekend as mind-blowing map captures huge 3,000km weather system stretching across the country

Aussies have been warned to brace for a wet and cold weekend as a massive 3,000km-long cloud band moves across the country. Weatherzone meteorologist Anthony Sharwood explained the band, extending from the Indian Ocean to Australia's interior, will trigger inclement weather as it creeps eastward. 'As we head towards the end of the working week and into the weekend, we can expect two main effects,' he said. 'Cooler daytime temperatures at many inland locations due to cloud cover preventing daytime warming, even if little or no rain falls. 'Enhanced rainfall potential is the other likely effect. As the stream of tropical moisture shifts further east, it will fuel rainfall over parts of Queensland and NSW. 'An injection of moisture from the Coral Sea will also contribute to the rain in eastern Australia, with another multi-day burst of persistent showers on its way for the east coast.' The tail end of the system had reached the eastern states by Wednesday afternoon, but the rain isn't expected to begin in Queensland and northern NSW until Friday as as the cloud band clashes with a coastal low-pressure system. Wet weather is forecast to intensify on Saturday with Central Queensland expected to bear the brunt of the rain. Areas between Yeppoon and Maryborough could see up to 300mm. Fortunately, the rain is forecast to rapidly ease on Sunday. High pressure over Australia's south-east is expected to bring mostly dry conditions, but another system in the country's west is set to bring rain. Tropical moisture is forecast to trigger rain over WA's south-west, with up to 50mm expected to fall in areas between Perth and Albany. Sydney Friday: Partly cloudy. Medium chance of showers, most likely in the evening. Light winds becoming southeast to southwesterly 15 to 25 km/h in the early morning then becoming light in the late evening. Min 11. Max 18. Saturday: Cloudy. Very high chance of showers. Winds southeast to southwesterly 15 to 25 km/h tending southeasterly during the afternoon then tending southerly 15 to 20 km/h during the evening. Min 12. Max 17. Sunday: Cloudy. High chance of showers. Winds southerly 15 to 20 km/h tending southeasterly during the day then tending southeast to southwesterly during the afternoon. Min 12. Max 17. Melbourne Friday: Mostly sunny. The chance of morning fog about the nearby hills. Areas of morning frost. Light winds. Min 5. Max 15. Saturday: Areas of frost and the chance of fog in the morning. Sunny afternoon. Light winds. Min 4. Max 15. Sunday: Mostly sunny. The chance of morning fog in the northeast suburbs. Areas of morning frost. Light winds. Min 3. Max 18. Brisbane Friday: Cloudy. High chance of showers. Winds south to southeasterly 20 to 30 km/h. Min 14. Max 20. Saturday: Cloudy. Very high chance of rain. Winds south to southeasterly 20 to 30 km/h. Min 13. Max 19. Sunday: Partly cloudy. High chance of showers, most likely in the morning and afternoon. Winds south to southeasterly 20 to 30 km/h becoming light during the evening. Min 13. Max 21. Perth Friday: Becoming cloudy. High chance of showers, most likely in the afternoon and evening. The chance of a thunderstorm in the southwest. Winds northeasterly 20 to 30 km/h turning north to northwesterly 15 to 25 km/h in the late morning. Min 11. Max 20. Saturday: Cloudy. Very high chance of showers. The chance of a thunderstorm in the southwest. Winds northerly 20 to 30 km/h turning northwesterly during the day. Min 11. Max 21. Sunday: Partly cloudy. Very high chance of showers, most likely in the morning. Winds west to northwesterly 15 to 25 km/h tending west to southwesterly during the morning then becoming light during the evening. Min 11. Max 18. Adelaide Friday: Cloudy. Slight chance of a shower. Light winds becoming north to northeasterly 15 to 20 km/h during the day then becoming light during the afternoon. Min 6. Max 16. Saturday: Partly cloudy. Slight chance of a shower. Light winds becoming northeasterly 15 to 20 km/h during the morning. Min 10. Max 19. Sunday: Mostly sunny morning. Slight chance of a shower, most likely later in the day. Winds northeasterly 15 to 20 km/h turning northerly 15 to 25 km/h during the morning. Min 12. Max 19. Hobart Friday: Cloudy. Slight chance of a shower. Light winds becoming southeasterly 15 to 20 km/h in the early afternoon then becoming light in the late afternoon. Min 7. Max 14. Saturday: Partly cloudy. Light winds. Min 5. Max 14. Sunday: Partly cloudy. Light winds becoming east to northeasterly 15 to 20 km/h during the afternoon then becoming light during the evening. Min 5. Max 15. Canberra Friday: Partly cloudy. Areas of morning frost. Winds south to southeasterly 15 to 20 km/h tending east to southeasterly 15 to 25 km/h in the middle of the day then becoming light in the late evening. Min -1. Max 15. Saturday: Cloudy. Areas of morning frost. Slight chance of a shower. Winds southerly 15 to 20 km/h turning southeasterly 20 to 30 km/h during the morning then becoming south to southeasterly and light during the evening. Min -1. Max 15. Sunday: Cloudy. Slight chance of a shower, most likely in the morning and afternoon. Winds south to southeasterly 15 to 20 km/h tending east to southeasterly 15 to 25 km/h during the morning then becoming light during the evening. Min 3. Max 15. Darwin Friday: Sunny. The chance of fog in the morning, mainly about the Cox Peninsula. Light winds becoming east to southeasterly 15 to 20 km/h in the morning then becoming light in the late afternoon. Min 21. Max 33. Saturday: Sunny. The chance of morning fog about the Cox Peninsula. Light winds becoming southeasterly 15 to 25 km/h during the morning then becoming light during the afternoon. Min 21. Max 33.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store