Tuesday, 23 September 2025

The ‘ber’ months

 

The ‘ber’ months

I don’t live under a rock, but the expression, ‘the ber months’ is new to me. Until a couple of weeks ago, I had never heard it, but now it’s cropping up everywhere, and today it appeared on the front cover of our community magazine, Crowthorne Eye.

Though the cover adjures readers to ‘Enjoy the ‘Ber’ months, there is nothing inside to encourage that, apart from one sentence that says, ‘. . . it won’t be long before our beautiful County turns golden, the best time of year to enjoy the outdoors with so many woodland walks on our doorstep.’  

It is true that we are blessed with acres of woodland, and surprising that more people don’t take advantage of them. It’s still commonplace to take long walks in this busy county without seeing another soul.

However, I started thinking about other conceivable aggregations of months, but there is only one, the ‘ry’ months of January and February. If the ‘ber’ months conjure up images of golden leaves and fiery sunsets, the ‘ry’ season, at least in the northern hemisphere, promises, or threatens, biting winds, driving rain, ice, frost, snow, and fog. There can be bright days, with thin sunshine in an arctic blue sky, but they are overwhelmed by the dark hours and the gloom, and the very real desire to reach home, close the curtains and soak up comforting warmth.

We try to cheer each other up by saying, ‘February is a short month,’ but really we’re fooling ourselves. It would be more accurate to define it as ‘shorter.’ For three out of every four years, February has twenty-eight days, but in a leap year, it has twenty-nine. So, it’s two or three days shorter, depending on which month it’s being compared to. That’s the equivalent of a weekend, even a long weekend, or possibly half a working week, so not to be sneezed at. It does not, however, compensate for the sheer bone-chilling, soul-sapping misery of February.

January enjoys the afterglow of the ‘festive season,’ even when the bills come in, and there may be momentary regrets about the overindulgence that was enjoyed. February has nothing to recommend it. The children contract every indisposition known to mankind and generously pass them on to their nearest and dearest. More than one child in the family means there will be a recurring circus of infection.

If a doctor’s appointment is required, and you are actually able to meet a medical professional face to face, you will discover that they fall victim to even more germs than the average family. You leave the surgery feeling very sorry that you’ve troubled such an obviously unwell adult with your problems.

All bad things come to an end. The ‘ry’ months are soon forgotten in the bold and blustery month of March, when signs of spring are all around . . . and so the year progresses.                  

55 comments:

  1. I like the concept of the ber months and the ry months, which of course are reversed for us.

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    1. I have to remind myself that life in the southern hemisphere is very different to that in the northern hemisphere. It's easy to become very insular and introspective.

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  2. Nice description of parts of the year. I've never heard of ry months. It makes sense.

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    1. Our seasons in UK are not nearly as marked as they used to be, but the first two months of the year remain miserable on the whole!

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  3. The "Bers" were new to me, too.

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    1. I'm glad I'm not the only one. A lot of popular trends pass me by and others I simply resist.

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  4. I've known of the "ber" months for years, only I think of them as the "Brrrr" months for you people up above the equator. February is the worst no matter where you live, too cold for you and too hot for us.

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    1. I wonder why the 'ber' months have come to prominence recently? 'Brrr' months is right!

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  5. January, February and March I always think of the early months, they are cold, wet and blustery, we don't often get snow down along the south coast. The ber months are OK, loads of birthdays here.

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    1. March can be a bit iffy, weatherwise, but the daylight hours are lengthening and life looks a little brighter.

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  6. An interesting roundup! The ber months are some of my favourites. Cooler!

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    1. I can understand that you would welcome them after the searing summer heat. 🥵

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  7. I had heard the term "ber months" before but it seems like it's being used way more this year than it ever has before.

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    1. It's certainly come to my attention in spades! 😊

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  8. Good description of the months that are coming very quickly upon us. For me February is actually the longest month of the winter. It doesn't matter how few days it has the weather just continually gets worse and worse every one of those days. March offers a small bit of a thaw.

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    1. It is a miserable month and doesn't ever seem particularly short.

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  9. The sad months bereft of long days of warmth and sun. There must be an explanation somewhere of why this colder months all have the same ending.

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  10. Yes, the 'Ber' months are here, and I do like them all.
    September, October, November and December, they each offer different things. I just concentrate on making the most of every day ...

    Enjoy your day, it's another lovely sunny one here and the squirrels are out looking for nuts!

    All the best Jan

    PS Good luck for tomorrow and your perseverance with a doctors appointment.

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    1. Thank you - I have actually been able to book one today for a month's time, Nothing's immediate, but at least it's progress of a sort. 😁

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    2. Pleased you've been able to book one.

      All the best Jan

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  11. They soon become the brrr months, at least from the last half of October onward. Even now, it can be brr-y at night although the days can be quite wonderful.

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    1. It is nippy when it's dark, more so for you than me, I think.

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  12. My favourite season is spring myself . -Christine cmlk79.blogspot.com.
    Time to look for my warm coats.

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    1. Each season has its gifts, but some are harder to see! 😂🤣

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  13. I'm another reader who has not heard the term ' ber months ' before, but there is now such a trend, surely more than ever before , to invent such things....... most of the time harmless of course...... perhaps should be changed to ' brrrrr months' though.
    Alison in Devon x

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    1. Apparently, the term has been around for years - how did it manage to miss us?

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  14. "Ber" months are definitely a popular term, especially with all the holidays and beautiful autumn colors. You've perfectly captured the contrast between the cozy, festive feel of the "ber" months and the dreary reality of the "ry" months.

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  15. Four 'ber' months versus two 'ry' months is a fair distribution, I suppose. 😊

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  16. Other than the summer months being almost unbearably hot and sultry at times and the possibility of hurricanes in the summer and fall, I have to say that most of our months here near the Gulf of Mexico Coast, "ber" and "ry," are quite pleasant.

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    1. I suppose we all adjust to our personal circumstances - no choice, really, but I would find hot and sultry energy-sapping.

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  17. You've made me wonder, now, what I'd consider the bleakest month. I think January. Even by February the sky is looking brighter.

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  18. I've never heard those months grouped as the "ber" months either. (And their names are the same in Swedish.) On the whole, I think September and October are among my favourite months - that colourful period when the summer heat has given up, but winter has not yet taken over.

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    1. They can be very pleasant. October sun is most welcome.

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  19. I'd heard the expression, although I won't be embracing it myself any time soon. That's not to say I don't enjoy this time of year ... quite the contrary, I'm just not keen on the expression.
    The "ry" months, on the other hand, aren't my favourites at all. They're what I'd call the "brr" months :-) xxx

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    1. It's not an expression I'll adopt, either!

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  20. I've not heard this expression. I think they mean brrrrr months. By February I shall not be worth knowing! (Dreaming of buying a sauna.)

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    1. 'Make your dream a reality' - I'm sure there's an advertisement that starts like that.

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  21. It's the first time I've heard the expression!
    I do like the photos on the cover that go along with the months. I like September and October - November and December just mean brrr to me lol.

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  22. I think that the "ber" months need an extra "e" - hence Septembeer, Octobeer, Novembeer and Decembeer - with free pints for all at your local pub... if indeed it is still in business.

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  23. I love the ber month more than the ary months..

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  24. I just had to look up why the "ber" months end in "ber". Interesting, considering I don't know that much Latin. The Roman calendar started in March. "Ber" means month. September is the 7th month, October the 8th, November the 9th, and December the 10th. Sadly, the later "ber" months here are the "brrr" months and I do not look forward to anything from October to April.

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  25. You found what I did, and saved me the trouble of writing a blog post. The Roman calendar underwent a few changes . . .

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  26. March can still be pretty brutal here! Give me April.

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    1. April is kinder and a little more reliable.

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  27. Not heard them called that before but I do group them together in my head because of the latin numbering. I recall an English friend explaining what she called March Mopes. We dont have an equivalent September sentiment down under.

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  28. I very much enjoyed your description of the months! Not fond of the ary months always!

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  29. Likewise and I think 'ary months' is a better description than 'ry months.' 😊

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