OLD WIVES’ TALES. TRUE? FALSE? Either way, one thing is certain: “You would never coin such a term today,” says Joe Schwarcz, a chemistry professor and the director of the Office for Science and Society with McGill University. It’s a term with roots in early medicine—it goes back to a time when women were usually the ones concocting home remedies to treat ailments. “Most of the time, they didn’t work,” says Schwarcz. “But some had legitimacy.” The idea of using foxglove extract to treat heart conditions, for example, originally came from “a supposed ‘old wife,’” says Schwarcz. An old wife who, in fact, was correct: digitalis compounds from foxglove have since been used in heart medications for hundreds of years. Other tales—medicine-related or not—persist because “there’s a kind of truth to them,” says Schwarcz. While nobody really believes that if you swallow an apple seed a tree will grow in your stomach, there is a reason to avoid eating them: the seeds release cyanide when they’re crushed (see “Food Facts and Fictions,” p. 76). And when you hear the same stories often enough, even the strange ones, you begin to believe them, says Schwarcz. “A lot of these things become ‘true’ simply because of repetition.” And a lot of these things are repeated more often at the cottage than anywhere else, we’ve discovered. Time to get to the bottom of some of these tall—or not-so-tall—tales.
behind common weather-related sayings, we went to Mr. Weather Lore himself: David Phillips, a senior climatologist with Environment and Climate Change Canada. Even though we no longer need rhyming weather sayings to plan our days (Look, it’s a