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Two pigs race through a turn during the
afternoon pig races at the Cattaraugus County Fair in Little Valley, New
York, Aug. 4, 2007. A U.S. farmer can forecast a major snowstorm
through his pig spleens instead of radar or other high-tech
equipment. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
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BEIJING, Dec. 25 (Xinhuanet) -- A U.S. farmer can forecast a major snowstorm
through his pig spleens instead of radar or other high-tech equipment, media
reported on Monday.
Paul Smokov, 84, raising cattle on a 1,750-acre ranch
north of the town Steel, North Dakota, forecasts the weather by peering at two
of brown, glistening, foot-long spleens on his kitchen counter.
If the spleen is wide and then narrows, it means
winter will come early with a mild spring; if it is narrow and then widens, it
usually means harsh weather in the spring; if it is pretty uniform in thickness,
it indicates no drastic changes, Smokov said.
"The spleens are 85 percent correct, according to my
figures, and those guys (the weathermen) aren't any better," the farmer said.
Smokov's Ukrainian parents brought their knowledge of
pig spleen forecasting with them when they went to the United States a century
ago.
"It's folklore and a dying art," said Janice
Stillman, editor of the Old Farmer's Almanac in New Hampshire.
The weather service's three-month outloook is
typically at least 60 percent accurate. Forecasters are calling for a normal
winter for North Dakota. That matches Smokov's gut feeling, accroding
to meteorologist Vic Jensen with the National Weather Service office in
Bismarck.
(Agencies)