It is the magnetic polarization of the earths' poles that are affected when the suns' gravitational pull on the earth alters and equalizes the fields of gravity between the north and south poles.
2006-10-09 03:29:48
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answer #1
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answered by TMAC 5
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As a heathen, not for the Equinox specially, no. My Folkway is very strongly *Norse* and admittedly, this is somewhat early for spring rites in Scandinavia, and extra suitable than somewhat overdue for them in South Texas. *G* Ostara became a Saxon goddess in Southern Germania to start with, and became Eostre (from which the draugrtru get "Easter") while they migrated to England. lower back, not probably my ancestral something. yet, I *am* a Freyrsgothi, after all, and spring is all approximately plowing and copulating and sowing of seeds and swelling of buds and gamboling farm animals and fecundity in his Cult. So i don't precisely _overlook_ this season, the two. frequently, i will do some variety of plow alluring, Alfablot, or planting ritual sometime between Valentine's Day (while tomatoes traditionally bypass in down here) and the xian "Easter" . . . timed to the climate extra suitable than the celebrities. My great adventure is the Walpurgisnacht/might Day cycle, which prolonged properly into my ancestral lands "lower back interior the day." there's a staggering Norseness with reference to the dichotomy between an prolonged, frightened and darkish "evening of the Witches" (in Germania---it became "evening of the Disr" in Scandinavia, although they are no much less fearsome, those) and the exuberant sunshine and vegetation and dancing and phallic symbolism and feasting of might Day. it is in simple terms so . . . US. :-)
2016-11-27 02:35:55
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answer #2
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answered by bruckner 4
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