GEEK ALERT!!! This year, the rules of setting Easter had a little glitch from the science of the timing. The tradition of the church is that the equinox is the 21st of March, regardless of when it actually occurs, and the “Full moon” is the 14th day of the 29.5ish day lunar cycle, regardless of when the moon is actually full based on orbit. This year, the scientific moon was full at 1:42 UTC March 21 while the vernal equinox was at 21:58 UTC on March 20, 4 hours earlier. But, it is tradition and not science that drives the church, so instead of Easter being march 24th, it is today. I know, no one cares but us geeks, freaks and nerds.
The spelling of “paschal” surprised me here. I would have gone for “pascal” and would have been wrong of course… Otherwise, lovely and relevant background for the strip, in spite of the fact that Mercury appears to be in an overly eccentric orbit. Am I the only one to notice it?
Curiously, among Hindus, Zoroastrians, and Mithraics, the equinoxes (which were seen as ushering in the change of seasons) were the Big Celestial Deal—the solstices were unimportant.
Using a date like March 21 causes problems. An equinox and a full moon are events like an explosion. Easy to tell which comes first when they are close together … don’t need to see either.
But dates change continually around the world… like New Years.
Easter scheduling has always fascinated me. Not so much the details of how it’s done, but that it’s done that way at all. Or, primarily, this: Why does Easter float around while Christmas gets its own set calendar date? And which, ultimately, is the more consistent? You’d think Easter would be less consistent, bouncing around spring like that, but at least it’s on the same day of the week every time.
There’s just enough information there to form a theory or three. And little enough information that it’s a pretty good bet those theories will be pretty screwball.
Bilan over 5 years ago
And completely biased against the people down under.
SonicFan91 over 5 years ago
gee wow
SonicFan91 over 5 years ago
gee wow
Gary Fabian over 5 years ago
It’s coincidental but no causality.
T Smith over 5 years ago
Makes as much sense as anything else.
Ceeg22 Premium Member over 5 years ago
Spring break used to happen the week before Easter
jpayne4040 over 5 years ago
Some schools aren’t even scheduling spring break around Easter anymore.
Brian G Premium Member over 5 years ago
GEEK ALERT!!! This year, the rules of setting Easter had a little glitch from the science of the timing. The tradition of the church is that the equinox is the 21st of March, regardless of when it actually occurs, and the “Full moon” is the 14th day of the 29.5ish day lunar cycle, regardless of when the moon is actually full based on orbit. This year, the scientific moon was full at 1:42 UTC March 21 while the vernal equinox was at 21:58 UTC on March 20, 4 hours earlier. But, it is tradition and not science that drives the church, so instead of Easter being march 24th, it is today. I know, no one cares but us geeks, freaks and nerds.
asrialfeeple over 5 years ago
He’s got a point since we’re having summery days here.
cervelo over 5 years ago
The spelling of “paschal” surprised me here. I would have gone for “pascal” and would have been wrong of course… Otherwise, lovely and relevant background for the strip, in spite of the fact that Mercury appears to be in an overly eccentric orbit. Am I the only one to notice it?
Al Nala over 5 years ago
Spring break here was last month.
MichaelHelwig over 5 years ago
Spring break is usually around the middle of the term, not coinciding with Easter.
AndrewSihler over 5 years ago
Curiously, among Hindus, Zoroastrians, and Mithraics, the equinoxes (which were seen as ushering in the change of seasons) were the Big Celestial Deal—the solstices were unimportant.
Old Girl over 5 years ago
Using a date like March 21 causes problems. An equinox and a full moon are events like an explosion. Easy to tell which comes first when they are close together … don’t need to see either.
But dates change continually around the world… like New Years.
cshart over 5 years ago
In our Sunday paper comic section, there is always a leading panel that never shows on GoComics. Any idea why this is not ever included?
mauser7 over 5 years ago
An obsolete term for a form of insanity characterized by alternating lucid and insane periods, believed to be influenced by phases of the moon.
STACEY MARSHALL Premium Member over 5 years ago
Very punny!
Night-Gaunt49[Bozo is Boffo] over 5 years ago
PostsFrazz17 hrs ·
Easter scheduling has always fascinated me. Not so much the details of how it’s done, but that it’s done that way at all. Or, primarily, this: Why does Easter float around while Christmas gets its own set calendar date? And which, ultimately, is the more consistent? You’d think Easter would be less consistent, bouncing around spring like that, but at least it’s on the same day of the week every time.
There’s just enough information there to form a theory or three. And little enough information that it’s a pretty good bet those theories will be pretty screwball.
Rick Smith Premium Member over 5 years ago
Nice job working in the secondary bit for the moon: lunacy