Did you know that this month was named after the Roman god Janus, who fittingly represented new beginnings. January was named for the Roman god Janus, known as the protector of gates and doorways, who symbolize beginnings and endings. Janus is depicted with two faces, one looking into the past, the other with the ability to see into the future. What a fitting symbol for this first day of the year; this month is our door into the new year. The Romans often made promises to Janus and exchanged good wishes, so start the first month of the year right.
Even in astronomy, there is a sense of new beginnings. In the Northern Hemisphere, the days are starting to get longer again, and we look forward to the light’s re-emergence.
Perihelion: Earth Passes Its Closest to the Sun
On January 2, 2024, Earth reaches perihelion, which is the point in the planet’s orbit where it is closest to the Sun. At perihelion, Earth will be 91,403,034 miles from our bright star.
Even in astronomy, there is a sense of new beginnings. In the Northern Hemisphere, the days are starting to get longer again, and we look forward to the light’s re-emergence.
Perihelion: Earth Passes Its Closest to the Sun
On January 2, 2024, Earth reaches perihelion, which is the point in the planet’s orbit where it is closest to the Sun. At perihelion, Earth will be 91,403,034 miles from our bright star.
Coming back down to earth ... January's birthstone is the garnet and the months birth flowers are the carnation and snowdrop.
Words and image above taken from article here
Keep warm this January with a nice mug of
Spiced Parsnip Soup with Coriander and Chilli Pesto
please see recipe/more details here
~ Have a lovely January and a wonderful start to the year ~
All the best Jan
Always sharing information, food, history, you have it all. LOL I wish for you the very best of 2024. Happy New Year.
ReplyDeleteWe too have a month packed with family birthdays. Which will keep the celebrations coming.
ReplyDelete...my plan is to get each morning and enjoy the days that come my way!
ReplyDeleteA lovely soup! Happy New Year!
ReplyDeleteThe two-faced statue is really classic
ReplyDeleteInteresting Jan.
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year to you and your family.
January, a month of new beginnings with the prospect of brighter days ahead.
ReplyDeleteParsnip soup sounds tempting!
My best wishes in this newly trained year, may it come full of peace, happiness and good news for all.
ReplyDeleteBest regards
Happy New Year to you and your family! I always enjoy reading your informative posts. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year! I wish you all the best for 2024. :)
ReplyDeleteHappy January, I hope your new year is off to a great start.
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year to you and your family, wishing you all the best in 2024!
I forgot Janus was the 2 faced god. And it sounds like if the clouds go away I might have some night sky viewing soon. Happy happy new year to you both.
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year! I am working on getting back to eating some what better. For almost a yr now I have not done a good job at it. I am totally lost on the all the moons and what they are called.
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year. Sounds like you have a busy January ahead. Keep up the good work with the blogging.
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year.
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to all the new foods your post. Happy New Year.
ReplyDeleteSounds like a busy Jan for you.
ReplyDeleteNo special plans for us this year. Just thankful for each day.
Happy New Year.
Happy, safe, healthy and joyous new year to you and Eddie, dear Jan. I love that you shared the various things that make January special.
ReplyDeleteThanks for all the fun information.
ReplyDeleteThank you Jan and Eddie for all the work you do on the blog.
ReplyDeleteAll so interesting. I love these posts. I wish porhelion meant that we would actually SEE sun in Michigan!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful new year 2024.
ReplyDeleteSounds like our sky is pretty busy the first of the year :) My hubby enjoys all the stars and all that stuff :)
ReplyDeleteWishing you all the best in this New Year, enjoy that family time!
Gracias por todos tus reportajes. Besos.
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to seeing that wolf moon! What an interesting read. Happy New year to you and yors.xxx
ReplyDelete