Cold enough to remember

Ireland has lived through colder climates than this, and what stands out in hindsight is not collapse, but continuity. During the Little Ice Age (from roughly the 14th century to the mid-19th century) people adapted to altered seasons and unreliable weather without knowing they were living through a climatic shift
Cold enough to remember

A robin in the frost in the morning sunlight. Picture: Denis Minihane

Cold has a particular power in Ireland. Not because it is constant (it isn’t) but because when it arrives properly, it disrupts things. A wet winter barely raises an eyebrow. A cold one still does.

This January’s frost has been enough to slow roads, harden ground, and sharpen conversation. Cold air arriving from the north and east has pushed aside the Atlantic’s usual mild influence, and Ireland feels briefly, unmistakably wintry.

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