Seasonal & Holidays

First Day Of Fall 2019: Can't Miss Events Around Burke

Burke residents can look forward to fall festivals, Pumpkin Playground and the Burke Lake Park Ghost Train.

There are numerous ways to celebrate the fall season in Burke.
There are numerous ways to celebrate the fall season in Burke. (David Allen/Patch)

BURKE, VA — The fall equinox on Monday, Sept. 23, officially ushers in the new season and its promise of crisp air, show-stopping leaf displays and more sunny afternoons in football stadiums. Fall is an especially exciting time of year in Burke.

Among the events to look forward to is Nativity Parish Burke's Fall Festival on Sept. 28. The event will include an international food court, games, music, a pie baking contest and more.

October brings some spooky fun to the area. Burke Nursery holds its Fall Festival and Pumpkin Playground throughout October. Abiding Presence Lutheran Church will host a fall festival on Oct. 19 with haunted houses, pumpkin painting, free food and more.

Find out what's happening in Burkefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Top it off with the Burke Lake Park Ghost Train, a local favorite returning on Oct. 26. Tickets are available at the event.

The autumnal equinox isn’t a day-long event, but rather occurs at the exact moment the sun crosses the celestial equator. In the Fairfax area, fall officially arrives at 3:50 a.m. EDT.

Find out what's happening in Burkefor free with the latest updates from Patch.

We’re also coming up on the end of Daylight Saving Time, which officially ends on Sunday, Nov. 3, but that’s a while off.

SEE ALSO: Fall Foliage Peak 2019 Delayed In Virginia By Warm Temperatures

The word equinox comes from the Latin words “aequus,” which means “equal,” and “nox,” which means night. That’s led to the perception that everyone worldwide sees the same amount of daylight and nighttime, but it’s not the absolute truth. To be precise, daylight lasts about 8 minutes longer than nighttime on the day of the equinox.

Here are five other things to know about the September equinox:

1. There’s no guarantee, of course, but the chances of seeing stunning aurora borealis displays increase after the fall equinox, according to NASA. Both the spring and fall equinoxes are good aurora seasons, but autumn produces a surplus of geomagnetic storms — almost twice the annual average.

2. Nobody alive has seen a rare Sept. 21 autumnal equinox, and only young people have any hope of seeing one barring any big shifts in life expectancy. It hasn’t happened on that date in many millennia, and it won’t happen again until 2092 and 2096.

The date of the September equinox varies. Usually, it’s on the 22nd or, as it is this year, the 23rd, but it can occur as early as Sept. 21 or as late as Sept. 24 (that hasn’t happened since 1931, and won’t again until 2303).

The reason: A year is defined as 365 days by the Gregorian calendar, but it takes the Earth 365 and ¼ days to orbit the sun. What this means is the autumnal equinox occurs about 6 hours later than it did the year prior, which eventually moves the date by a day.

3. Thank Canada for spectacular fall sunsets with more vivid with pinks, reds and oranges than at any other time of the year. The Weather Channel offers an explanation: Dry, clean Canadian air begins to sweep across the country, fewer colors of the rainbow spectrum are scattered by air molecules. That means the reds, oranges, yellows and pinks make it through for your sunset-viewing pleasure.

4. No matter where you are in the world, the sun will rise due east and set due west during the fall equinox (the same thing happens during the spring equinox). For the directionally challenged, it’s a good time for a reset. Go outside around sunset or sunrise, find a landmark and mark the sun’s location in relation to it.

5. Fall isn’t just a time for the human world to start buttoning things up outside. It’s rutting — or mating — season for deer, elk and moose, and males will battle it out by thrusting their antlers together until one of them gives up or dies. Swans, geese and ducks begin their migration south. Frogs burrow deep into mud holes to wait out the winter. Chipmunks retreat to their underground tunnels. Bears eat and drink almost non-stop as they prepare for hibernation. And, according to the Mother Nature Network, the male Siberian hamster goes through a huge biological change: Its testicles swell almost 17 times their normal size.

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