All Object Lessons
Knowledge & Navigation

The Farmer's Almanac: A Year in a Book

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 history, science, ethics, citizenship, language
Core question How does one small yearly book bring together the calendar, the weather, astronomical information, and practical wisdom — and what does the farmer's almanac teach us about how communities organise time and knowledge?
A page from Benjamin Franklin's Poor Richard's Almanack, March 1733. Almanacs like this gave farmers the year's calendar, weather predictions, lunar phases, and practical wisdom — all in one small book. Photo: Benjamin Franklin / Wikimedia Commons / Public Domain
Introduction

For thousands of years, in many cultures, people have used yearly books to organise the year ahead. The book contains the days of the year, marked with festivals, religious holidays, and seasonal events. It contains the times of sunrise and sunset for each day. It contains the phases of the moon and the positions of the planets. It contains predictions of the weather for the coming season. It contains tide tables for fishing and sailing. It contains advice on when to plant which crops, when to harvest, when to breed animals. It contains recipes, jokes, proverbs, and folk wisdom. All of this fits in a small book that can be carried in a pocket or kept on a shelf. The book is called an almanac. Different cultures have produced their own almanac traditions. The Chinese tongshu (通書, sometimes called the 'Yellow Calendar') is one of the oldest, going back over 1,000 years. It includes lunar calendar dates, astrological information, religious festival dates, and farming advice. Modern Chinese tongshu still sell in millions of copies across China and the Chinese diaspora. The European tradition includes medieval Christian church calendars and from the 1500s onwards printed almanacs in many countries. England had farmer's almanacs by the 1600s. The American tradition started in colonial times. Benjamin Franklin's Poor Richard's Almanack was published from 1732 to 1758 — written by Franklin under the pen name 'Richard Saunders'. It became one of the most famous early American books. The Old Farmer's Almanac was founded in 1792 by Robert B. Thomas in New England. It has been published every year since — over 230 years of continuous publication, making it the oldest continuously published periodical in North America. The 2025 edition is the 233rd issue. Other modern Western almanacs include the Farmers' Almanac (US, founded 1818) and Whitaker's Almanack (UK, founded 1868). South Asian almanacs include the Bengali Panjika and various regional Hindu and Islamic calendars. Vietnamese, Thai, Burmese, and many other Southeast Asian cultures have their own almanac traditions. The Old Farmer's Almanac and similar books contain a remarkable mix: the calendar (with religious holidays, sun and moon times), weather predictions (using a 'secret formula' developed in 1792, supposedly with about 80% accuracy), tide tables, planting charts, recipes, jokes, folk wisdom, articles about farming, gardening, and rural life. The book is part calendar, part science book, part guide to daily life, part entertainment. This lesson asks how the almanac works, why it has lasted so long, and what it teaches about practical knowledge and the organisation of time.

The object
Origin
Many cultures. Chinese tongshu (通書) traditions go back over 1,000 years. European almanacs date from medieval times. The Old Farmer's Almanac (United States) was founded in 1792 by Robert B. Thomas and is the oldest continuously published periodical in North America. Poor Richard's Almanack (Benjamin Franklin) was published 1732-1758.
Period
Continuous publication for various almanacs from medieval times to today. The Old Farmer's Almanac has appeared every year for over 230 years. The Chinese tongshu has appeared for over 1,000 years. Many regional traditions continue today.
Made of
Printed paper book, traditionally about 100-150 pages, soft cover or simple binding. Modern almanacs include print and digital versions. Older almanacs were often printed on cheap paper to keep costs low.
Size
Most printed almanacs are pocket-sized or slightly larger — about 12-18 cm tall by 10-12 cm wide. Designed to be carried in a pocket or kept on a kitchen shelf.
Number of objects
Many millions of almanacs are sold each year worldwide. The Old Farmer's Almanac alone sells about 3 million copies annually. Chinese tongshu sells in millions across China and the Chinese diaspora.
Where it is now
Sold across the United States, China, India, Bangladesh, Vietnam, Thailand, the Philippines, and many other countries. Modern Western almanacs include the Old Farmer's Almanac (US, 1792), Farmers' Almanac (US, 1818), Whitaker's Almanack (UK, 1868). Major Chinese tongshu publishers print millions annually.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. The almanac is an old technology that continues today. How will you teach the continuity without making it sound quaint?
  2. Different cultures have very different almanac traditions. How will you respect this diversity?
  3. The almanac contains both real science (astronomy, calendar) and traditional knowledge (folk wisdom, weather lore). How will you teach both honestly?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
Let me explain what a farmer's almanac contains. The basic structure has been remarkably stable across cultures for centuries. The calendar is the spine. Every day of the coming year is listed, with the day of the week, the day of the month, and any special significance. Religious holidays are marked. Civic holidays are marked. Sometimes seasonal events (the start of spring, the longest day of summer, harvest time) are marked. For each day, the almanac usually gives the time of sunrise and sunset. This information is precisely calculated using astronomical principles. The sunrise time on 15 March in New York will be different from the sunrise time on 15 March in San Francisco — the almanac usually has tables for different regions. The phases of the moon are listed for each day. Full moon, new moon, waxing, waning. The almanac tells you exactly when each phase begins. Some almanacs also give the times of moonrise and moonset. For coastal areas, tide tables are essential. The almanac gives the times of high and low tides for major coastal points. This information has been crucial for fishermen, sailors, and coastal farmers for centuries. Weather predictions are a famous feature. Old Farmer's Almanac has been making weather predictions for the year ahead since 1792, using what the publishers call a 'secret formula' developed by founder Robert B. Thomas. The publishers claim about 80% accuracy. Independent studies suggest the actual accuracy is closer to 50%, similar to chance for many specific predictions, though the seasonal averages are sometimes more reliable. Planting and gardening advice fills many pages. When to plant tomatoes, beans, corn, lettuce, in different regions. When to prune fruit trees. When to harvest. The advice is rooted in long observation of growing seasons. Recipes are common. Old farming households would use the almanac for new recipes, especially seasonal ones — what to make from autumn apples, how to preserve summer vegetables for winter. Jokes, proverbs, and folk wisdom round out the content. 'A penny saved is a penny earned' — Benjamin Franklin's Poor Richard. Short pithy sayings have been a staple of almanacs for centuries. Why might one small book contain so much different information?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because for many farming families, this was the only book they bought each year. The cost of books in pre-modern times was significant. The almanac was cheap (a few cents in colonial America) and contained the most essential practical information for the year. Compressing everything into one book maximised its value. The almanac was the family's calendar, their weather forecaster, their gardening guide, their cookbook, their entertainment, all in one. Other societies have produced similar combined books. Chinese tongshu has long contained calendar, astrology, festival dates, agricultural advice, and folk wisdom in one volume. Bengali panjika contains religious dates, astrological information, and agricultural advice. Each culture's almanac reflects what that culture's farmers and rural families needed to know. The combination of practical and entertaining content has made almanacs one of the most enduring book formats in print history. Students should see that 'almanac' is not just a calendar. It is a comprehensive yearly reference book, designed for households that did not have many books. The format has served farming and rural life for centuries.

2
The Old Farmer's Almanac is the oldest continuously published periodical in North America. It was founded in 1792 by Robert B. Thomas, a young man in his early thirties living in central Massachusetts. Thomas had previously edited a similar almanac for two years and decided to start his own. Thomas's almanac was distinguished by 'usefulness, with a pleasant degree of humour' (his motto). It contained accurate astronomical calculations, weather predictions, planting advice, and what Thomas called 'curious anecdotes'. The first edition cost six cents. Thomas worked on the almanac for 54 years, from 1792 until his death in 1846. The book was popular from the start. By the 1850s it was selling about 200,000 copies a year. The publication continued under various editors after Thomas's death. The current publisher, Yankee Publishing in Dublin, New Hampshire, has issued the Almanac every year since 1939. The almanac has weathered massive change. It was published throughout the American Civil War (1861-1865). Throughout both World Wars. Throughout the Great Depression. Throughout the rise of radio, television, and the internet. People kept buying it. The 2025 edition was the 233rd consecutive year of publication. Why might one specific book continue for over 230 years?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because the format works. The combination of useful information (calendar, weather, planting advice) and entertaining content (jokes, recipes, folk wisdom) has continuing appeal. The Almanac has always been priced cheaply. It is small enough to keep on a shelf or in a drawer. It is republished every year, so users buy it repeatedly. The Almanac has also been clever about adaptation. It has added new content as society has changed — astronaut information when the space age began, environmental columns when climate awareness grew, mobile phone tips when those became common. The basic format (calendar, weather, advice, entertainment) has stayed stable; the specific content has continued to evolve. The same is true of many long-lasting publications. Whitaker's Almanack in Britain (founded 1868) has continued similarly. Bengali panjika continues. Chinese tongshu continues. The almanac as a format is one of the most enduring publishing forms in history. Students should see that 'long-lasting publications' are usually those that combine genuine usefulness with regular updating. The Old Farmer's Almanac is one of the clearest examples in any country.

3
Benjamin Franklin's Poor Richard's Almanack is one of the most famous early American almanacs, even though it predates the Old Farmer's Almanac by 60 years. Franklin published the Almanack from 1732 to 1758 — 26 years, under the pen name Richard Saunders ('Poor Richard'). Franklin was 26 years old when he started the Almanack. He was a Philadelphia printer, looking for a steady source of income. The almanac sold well — about 10,000 copies a year by the 1740s, a remarkable number for colonial America (the population of Philadelphia was about 25,000 at the time). Franklin used Poor Richard's Almanack to publish many of his most famous sayings: - 'Lost time is never found again.' - 'A penny saved is two pence dear.' (later condensed to 'A penny saved is a penny earned') - 'Early to bed and early to rise, makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise.' - 'Fish and visitors stink in three days.' - 'There are no gains, without pains.' Many of these proverbs came from older European sources, but Franklin polished and popularised them through the Almanack. His sayings became a major part of American popular wisdom. The Almanack also had real practical content — calendars, sunrise and sunset times, weather predictions, astronomical information. Franklin took the calendar work seriously, doing the astronomical calculations himself for many editions. He was a scientist as well as a printer; the Almanack reflected both interests. Franklin stopped publishing Poor Richard's Almanack in 1758, when he was busy with politics in London. The Almanack ended after 26 years. Why might one almanac become so culturally important?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because of who Franklin was and what he chose to include. Franklin became one of the founders of the United States. His role in American politics — diplomat, scientist, founding father — gave his earlier writings, including the Almanack, lasting cultural significance. The proverbs in particular became part of American cultural identity. 'A penny saved is a penny earned' is still quoted today, nearly 300 years after Franklin first wrote it. The Almanack also showed how the format could carry serious content. Franklin's astronomical calculations were genuine science. His proverbs were polished folk wisdom. His writing was witty and accessible. The combination demonstrated what an almanac could be — useful, entertaining, and intellectually serious all at once. The same is true of Robert B. Thomas's Old Farmer's Almanac sixty years later, and of many of the world's almanac traditions. The almanac is not a trivial format. It is a serious vehicle for combining practical and cultural information. Franklin's Poor Richard's Almanack is the most famous American example. Students should see that 'almanac' is not just a quaint old book. It is a significant cultural form that has carried important content for centuries.

4
The Chinese tongshu (通書, 'comprehensive book') is one of the oldest almanac traditions in the world, going back over 1,000 years. The Imperial Chinese state historically published official calendars; alongside these, popular tongshu were widely used by Chinese families for everyday decisions. A traditional tongshu contains the lunar calendar (with all the dates of the lunar year), solar calendar (modern Western dates), Chinese festival dates, religious dates, lunar phases, sunrise and sunset times, and tide tables. It also contains extensive astrological and divinatory information — what days are auspicious for weddings, business ventures, building, travelling. Many Chinese families consult the tongshu before scheduling important events. Beyond calendar information, the tongshu contains traditional medicine guidance, fortune-telling techniques, dream interpretation, geomancy (feng shui) principles, herbal remedies, and other traditional Chinese knowledge. Some tongshu run to 300+ pages. The tongshu continues today. Major Chinese tongshu publishers print millions of copies annually for sale across China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and the Chinese diaspora communities worldwide. Even in modern Hong Kong, where Western calendars dominate office life, many homes have a tongshu for personal use. Different regions have their own variations. The Hong Kong-published tongshu is particularly well-known internationally. Mainland Chinese tongshu have continued through the Cultural Revolution and modern reform period. Japanese koyomi (almanac) tradition is closely related but has diverged into its own form. Why might Chinese culture continue to use traditional almanacs in the modern era?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because the tongshu serves functions that modern Western calendars do not. The lunar calendar information is essential for traditional Chinese festivals (Lunar New Year, Mid-Autumn Festival, others). The astrological guidance is consulted by many Chinese families before major life decisions, regardless of educational background. The combined practical information (weather, sunrise, agriculture) is useful for those who farm or fish. The cultural and religious continuity matters — the tongshu connects modern Chinese families to their historical and cultural traditions. Modern technology has not replaced this. Chinese-language calendar apps now offer some of the same information, but the printed tongshu continues. Many older Chinese feel more comfortable with the printed book; many younger Chinese consult both. The same is true of many other traditional almanac traditions in Asia. Bengali panjika continues to be used in West Bengal and Bangladesh. Vietnamese lịch is consulted by many families. Thai farmer's almanac is published annually, with the king setting the official date for the Royal Ploughing Ceremony. These traditions have survived modernisation because they connect to cultural identity, religious practice, and continuing practical needs. Students should see that 'old technology' is not always replaced by new technology. Sometimes the old form continues alongside the new because it serves functions the new does not. The almanac is one of the clearest examples worldwide. End the discovery on this thought.

What this object teaches

The farmer's almanac is a yearly book containing the calendar of the coming year along with practical information for daily life: weather predictions, sunrise and sunset times, lunar phases, tide tables, planting and harvesting advice, recipes, jokes, proverbs, and folk wisdom. Different cultures have produced their own almanac traditions for over 1,000 years. The Chinese tongshu (通書) goes back over 1,000 years and continues today in millions of copies. European almanacs date from medieval times and became widespread after the spread of printing in the 1500s. The Old Farmer's Almanac (United States) was founded in 1792 by Robert B. Thomas and is the oldest continuously published periodical in North America — over 230 years of continuous publication. Benjamin Franklin published Poor Richard's Almanack from 1732 to 1758, contributing many famous American sayings. Other modern almanacs include the Farmers' Almanac (US, 1818) and Whitaker's Almanack (UK, 1868). South Asian, Southeast Asian, and African cultures have their own almanac traditions. The almanac combines real science (astronomical calculations, sunrise and tide tables) with traditional knowledge (folk weather predictions, agricultural advice based on long observation) and cultural content (festival dates, recipes, folk wisdom). The format has lasted because it provides useful information in compact, affordable form that is updated annually. The Old Farmer's Almanac sells about 3 million copies a year today; the Chinese tongshu sells millions across the Chinese-speaking world. The almanac is one of the most enduring book formats in print history.

TraditionOrigin and continuationNotable feature
Chinese tongshuOver 1,000 years; continues todayLunar calendar, festivals, astrological guidance, traditional medicine
Old Farmer's Almanac (US)Founded 1792 by Robert B. Thomas; continuousOldest continuously published periodical in North America
Poor Richard's Almanack1732-1758, by Benjamin FranklinFamous American proverbs ('A penny saved is a penny earned')
Whitaker's Almanack (UK)Founded 1868; continues todayBritish civic and political reference; very different focus
Bengali panjikaCenturies-old tradition; continuesHindu religious dates, astrological information, agricultural calendar
Vietnamese lịchCenturies-old; continuesLunar calendar, festival dates, agricultural advice
Key words
Almanac
A yearly book containing the calendar of the coming year along with practical information for daily life: weather predictions, sunrise and sunset times, lunar phases, tide tables, planting advice, recipes, and folk wisdom. Different cultures have produced their own almanac traditions for over 1,000 years.
Example: A typical printed almanac is 100-150 pages, pocket-sized or slightly larger. The Old Farmer's Almanac is about 17 cm tall by 12 cm wide. The 2025 edition is the 233rd consecutive year of publication.
Old Farmer's Almanac
An American almanac founded in 1792 by Robert B. Thomas in central Massachusetts. The oldest continuously published periodical in North America. Currently published by Yankee Publishing in Dublin, New Hampshire.
Example: The Old Farmer's Almanac sells about 3 million copies annually. It contains weather predictions made using a 'secret formula' developed by Thomas in 1792, plus astronomy, planting advice, recipes, and folk wisdom.
Poor Richard's Almanack
An American almanac published from 1732 to 1758 by Benjamin Franklin under the pen name Richard Saunders. One of the most famous early American books. Source of many famous American proverbs.
Example: Famous proverbs from Poor Richard's Almanack include: 'A penny saved is a penny earned', 'Lost time is never found again', 'Early to bed and early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise', 'There are no gains, without pains'.
Tongshu
The traditional Chinese almanac (通書, 'comprehensive book'). Goes back over 1,000 years. Contains lunar calendar, Chinese festival dates, sunrise and tide times, astrological information, traditional medicine, and divinatory guidance.
Example: Chinese tongshu sells millions of copies annually across China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and the Chinese diaspora worldwide. Many Chinese families consult the tongshu before scheduling weddings or business ventures.
Robert B. Thomas
American almanac editor (1766-1846) who founded the Old Farmer's Almanac in 1792 in central Massachusetts. Edited the Almanac for 54 years until his death. Developed the 'secret formula' for weather prediction that the Almanac still claims to use.
Example: Thomas's motto for the Almanac was 'usefulness, with a pleasant degree of humour'. The current publishers still use this motto. Thomas is honoured at the Almanac's editorial offices in Dublin, New Hampshire.
Lunar calendar
A calendar based on the phases of the moon, with months that begin at the new moon and last about 29.5 days. The Islamic calendar, Chinese calendar, Hebrew calendar, and Hindu calendars all use lunar or lunisolar systems. Many almanacs include both Western (solar) and lunar calendar information.
Example: Chinese New Year falls on a different Western date each year because the Chinese calendar is lunisolar — its New Year is on the second new moon after the winter solstice. The tongshu includes both Chinese and Western calendar dates.
Use this in other subjects
  • Science: Discuss the astronomy in an almanac. Sunrise and sunset times can be calculated precisely from latitude, longitude, and the time of year. The moon's phases follow a predictable cycle. Tide times can be calculated from the moon's position. The almanac is part of the long history of practical astronomy.
  • History: Build a class timeline: Chinese tongshu (over 1,000 years), European medieval almanacs, Poor Richard's Almanack (1732-1758), Old Farmer's Almanac founded (1792), modern continuation (today). The almanac as a format has lasted longer than most other book formats.
  • Geography: Different almanacs serve different regions. Sunrise times in New York are different from sunrise times in California. Tide tables differ by coastal location. Monsoon predictions matter in South Asia, hurricane predictions in the Caribbean. Discuss how almanacs reflect their regional context.
  • Citizenship: Hold a class discussion: 'In a world with smartphones, why do printed almanacs continue to sell millions of copies?' Use the Old Farmer's Almanac and Chinese tongshu as examples. Strong answers will see that printed books have qualities digital tools do not — durability, ease of consultation, cultural continuity.
  • Language: Many famous English proverbs come from Benjamin Franklin's Poor Richard's Almanack. Discuss specific examples: 'A penny saved is a penny earned', 'Lost time is never found again', 'There are no gains, without pains'. Each is a compact piece of wisdom in a memorable form. Other languages have their own proverb traditions; almanacs are often the source.
  • Ethics: Almanacs combine real science (astronomy, calendar) with folk wisdom (weather predictions, agricultural advice) and sometimes superstition (astrology, fortune-telling). Discuss how readers can sort what is reliable from what is less reliable. Strong answers will see that 'all in one book' has both advantages and challenges.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

The almanac is a Western invention.

Right

Different cultures have produced almanacs for over 1,000 years. The Chinese tongshu predates European almanacs by hundreds of years. South Asian, Southeast Asian, Middle Eastern, and African cultures all have their own almanac traditions. The Western almanac is one of many.

Why

This challenges the Western-centric view that often dominates discussions of book history.

Wrong

Almanac weather predictions are scientifically accurate.

Right

They claim about 80% accuracy, but independent studies suggest the actual accuracy for specific predictions is closer to 50% (chance level). Seasonal averages may be slightly more reliable. The 'secret formula' is partly real solar and lunar cycle science but partly folk forecasting. Modern weather forecasting is much more accurate for short-term predictions.

Why

This honestly addresses a real limitation. The almanac is not a substitute for modern weather forecasting.

Wrong

Almanacs are a thing of the past.

Right

They continue to sell millions of copies annually worldwide. Old Farmer's Almanac sells about 3 million copies a year. Chinese tongshu sells millions. Bengali panjika continues. The format has not been replaced by digital alternatives — it continues alongside them.

Why

'Past' framing makes the almanac sound dead. The truth is that it is one of the most enduring book formats in history.

Wrong

All almanacs contain the same information.

Right

Different almanacs serve different functions. Western farmer's almanacs focus on weather, agriculture, and folk wisdom. Chinese tongshu emphasises lunar calendar, festivals, and astrological guidance. British Whitaker's Almanack is more like a civic and political reference book. Bengali panjika focuses on Hindu religious dates. Each tradition is distinct.

Why

This matters because each tradition has its own purpose and audience.

Teaching this with care

Treat the almanac tradition as genuinely global. The Western farmer's almanac is just one tradition among many. The Chinese tongshu is older. South Asian, Southeast Asian, and African traditions are equally real. Avoid framings that present the Western almanac as the original or main version. Be honest about the science. Almanacs combine real astronomy and calendar work (very accurate) with folk weather predictions (much less reliable than modern weather forecasting). Both should be presented honestly. Do not endorse the Old Farmer's Almanac's claim of 80% accuracy without noting that independent studies suggest much lower accuracy for specific predictions. Be respectful of the astrological and divinatory content in some almanacs. Many traditional Chinese, Indian, and Vietnamese almanacs include astrological guidance for major life decisions. Many readers in those traditions take this seriously. Without endorsing the predictive claims, the lesson should respect the cultural significance. Some students may have heritage from cultures with strong almanac traditions; give them space to share if they want, but do not put them on the spot. Be careful with Western superiority framings. The fact that modern Western weather forecasting is more accurate than the Old Farmer's Almanac does not mean the almanac is worthless — it serves cultural and practical functions beyond weather prediction. Similarly, the fact that modern Chinese readers may not literally believe in tongshu astrology does not mean they should stop reading the tongshu — it carries cultural meaning beyond literal predictive accuracy. Honour the editors and writers. Robert B. Thomas worked on the Old Farmer's Almanac for 54 years. Benjamin Franklin published Poor Richard's Almanack for 26 years. Modern Chinese tongshu publishers continue centuries-old work. The almanac tradition involves real careful labour. Avoid the lazy 'quaint old book' framing. The almanac is sophisticated content delivery — combining astronomy, weather, agriculture, religion, and culture in a single compact yearly volume. The format has lasted because it works. Finally, end the lesson on the present. Almanacs are still being published worldwide. The 2025 editions of the Old Farmer's Almanac, the Chinese tongshu, and many others are on shelves now. The story continues.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the farmer's almanac.

  1. What is a farmer's almanac, and what does it typically contain?

    An almanac is a yearly book containing the calendar of the coming year along with practical information for daily life — weather predictions, sunrise and sunset times, lunar phases, tide tables, planting and harvesting advice, recipes, jokes, and folk wisdom. The format combines reference information with practical advice and entertainment.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the calendar core and at least three other types of content.
  2. What is the Old Farmer's Almanac, and why is it remarkable?

    An American almanac founded in 1792 by Robert B. Thomas in central Massachusetts. It is the oldest continuously published periodical in North America — over 230 years of continuous yearly publication. It currently sells about 3 million copies annually and is published by Yankee Publishing in New Hampshire.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention the date (1792), the founder (Thomas), and the continuous publication record.
  3. What was Poor Richard's Almanack, and who wrote it?

    An American almanac published from 1732 to 1758 by Benjamin Franklin, under the pen name Richard Saunders. One of the most famous early American books. Many famous American proverbs first appeared in it, including 'A penny saved is a penny earned' and 'Early to bed and early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise'.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions Franklin, the pen name or the dates, and at least one famous proverb.
  4. How is the Chinese tongshu similar to and different from Western farmer's almanacs?

    Similar: both are yearly books with calendar information, sunrise and sunset times, festival dates, and practical advice. Different: the tongshu focuses on the lunar calendar (essential for Chinese festivals), includes extensive astrological guidance for major life decisions, and includes traditional Chinese medicine and divinatory content. The tongshu tradition is also older — over 1,000 years.
    Marking note: Strong answers will name both similarities and differences. Either is enough for partial credit.
  5. Why have almanacs lasted as a format for over 1,000 years?

    Because the format works. The combination of useful information (calendar, weather, planting advice) and entertaining content (proverbs, recipes, folk wisdom) has continuing appeal. The book is cheap, compact, and updated yearly. Different cultures have adapted the format to their specific needs. Modern technology has not replaced the format — it continues alongside digital alternatives.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that recognises both the practical usefulness and the cultural durability of the format.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. In your own family or culture, are there yearly traditions that involve looking ahead — calendars, planners, religious calendars, almanacs, gardening guides?

    This is a personal question. Students may suggest: family calendars, religious holiday calendars, school year planners, gardening guides their grandparents used, fishing season guides, sports calendars. The deeper point is that 'yearly forward-looking books' are common across cultures. The almanac is one specific case of a wider human practice — humans organise the future as well as remembering the past.
  2. In a world of smartphones and constant internet access, why do printed almanacs continue to sell millions of copies?

    This is a contemporary question. Students may suggest: cheaper than smartphones, doesn't need power, easier to flip through, more durable, cultural tradition, gift item, coffee table appeal. The deeper point is that 'old technology' is not always replaced by 'new technology'. Sometimes the old form has qualities the new does not. Books, in particular, have qualities (no battery, no notifications, easy to share, easy to keep) that screens lack. The almanac is one of many printed books that continue to thrive in the digital era.
  3. The almanac combines real science (calendar, astronomy) with folk wisdom (weather predictions, agricultural advice) and sometimes superstition (astrology in some traditions). How should readers think about this mix?

    This is a thoughtful question. Strong answers will see that the mix has both advantages and challenges. The advantage: a single small book covers many practical needs. The challenge: readers may not always know which content is reliable science and which is folk tradition. Different content types should be evaluated differently. The astronomical calculations are highly accurate. The weather predictions are mixed. The agricultural advice based on long observation often has real value. The astrological content is cultural and religious rather than scientific in the modern sense. Knowing the difference is part of being an informed reader. The same kind of careful reading applies to many other types of information today.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Without saying anything about the lesson, ask: 'What single book contains the calendar, the weather, the moon's phases, when to plant tomatoes, recipes, and proverbs about life?' Take guesses. Then say: 'The almanac. People in many cultures have been buying one every year for over 1,000 years. We are going to find out about them.'
  2. INTRODUCE THE OBJECT (10 min)
    Describe the almanac: a yearly book with calendar, weather, astronomical information, and practical advice. Give examples: Old Farmer's Almanac (US, 1792-present), Poor Richard's Almanack (Franklin, 1732-1758), Chinese tongshu (over 1,000 years). Pause and ask: 'Why might this format have lasted so long?' Listen to answers.
  3. THE OLD FARMER'S ALMANAC (15 min)
    Tell the story: Robert B. Thomas founded it in 1792 in Massachusetts; he edited it for 54 years; it has continued every year since 1792 — over 230 years; sells about 3 million copies annually today. Discuss what makes the format last. End by asking: 'What information would farmers in 1792 have wanted that they could not get elsewhere?'
  4. THE GLOBAL TRADITION (10 min)
    Explain that the almanac is a global format. Chinese tongshu (1,000+ years). Bengali panjika. Vietnamese lịch. Each culture has its own version with its own emphasis. Discuss: how do different traditions reflect different cultures? End by asking: 'What does this teach us about how cultures organise time and knowledge?'
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'In the smartphone era, why do printed almanacs still sell millions of copies?' Take a few honest answers. End by saying: 'For over 1,000 years, in many cultures, people have used yearly books to organise the year ahead. The format combines practical information with cultural meaning. The Old Farmer's Almanac sells about 3 million copies a year. The Chinese tongshu sells millions more. Modern digital tools have not replaced the printed almanac — they continue alongside it. The next year is being calculated now. The next edition is going to press.'
Classroom materials
What Goes In Your Almanac
Instructions: In small groups, students design their own almanac for the next year — what would they include? Calendar features, holidays, sports schedules, school events, weather guidance, recipes, proverbs, jokes, anything else they think their classmates would find useful. Each group shares their list. Discuss: this is what almanac editors do every year.
Example: In Mr Thompson's class, students designed almanacs with: family birthdays, school holidays, sports seasons, weather guesses, favourite recipes, song lyrics, family proverbs. The teacher said: 'You have just done what almanac editors have done for over 1,000 years. Each yearly almanac is a careful selection of what readers will need and enjoy. Your selections reflect what matters to you. Robert B. Thomas in 1792 made his selection for Massachusetts farmers. Chinese tongshu editors today make different selections for Chinese readers. The principle is universal: pick what your readers need.'
Franklin's Wisdom
Instructions: On the board, write five Franklin proverbs from Poor Richard's Almanack: 'A penny saved is a penny earned', 'Lost time is never found again', 'Early to bed and early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise', 'Fish and visitors stink in three days', 'There are no gains, without pains'. In small groups, students discuss what each one means and whether they think it is true. Each group shares one example.
Example: In Mrs Lopez's class, students debated whether 'fish and visitors stink in three days' is rude or wise. The teacher said: 'You have just done what readers of Franklin's Almanack did 290 years ago. Each proverb sparks discussion. Franklin's wisdom is intentionally provocative — he wants readers to think, not just agree. Many of his proverbs are still quoted today. They have lasted because they are short, memorable, and contain real observations about life.'
Different Almanacs, Different Cultures
Instructions: On the board, list four almanac traditions: Old Farmer's Almanac (US), Chinese tongshu, Bengali panjika, Whitaker's Almanack (UK). In small groups, students research (or imagine, if no resources are available) what each one would emphasise based on the culture it serves. Discuss: each almanac reflects what its readers need.
Example: In one class, students realised that the Bengali panjika would emphasise Hindu religious calendar dates and monsoon timing, while the Old Farmer's Almanac emphasises North American weather and planting. The teacher said: 'You have just understood that 'almanac' is not one thing. It is a flexible format that each culture adapts to its needs. The Chinese, the Bengalis, the British, the Americans — each tradition reflects what its readers find most useful.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the Antikythera mechanism for another ancient calendar/astronomical device.
  • Try a lesson on the astrolabe for another scientific instrument used for astronomical calculation.
  • Try a lesson on the quipu for another method of organising and recording information.
  • Connect this lesson to history class with a longer project on print culture and how ordinary people accessed information in pre-modern times.
  • Connect this lesson to science class with a longer project on calendar systems, astronomical calculations, and weather prediction.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a longer discussion of how communities organise shared knowledge and how this has changed across the centuries.
Key takeaways
  • The farmer's almanac is a yearly book containing the calendar of the coming year along with practical information: weather predictions, sunrise and sunset times, lunar phases, tide tables, planting advice, recipes, jokes, and folk wisdom.
  • Different cultures have produced almanacs for over 1,000 years. The Chinese tongshu is one of the oldest traditions and continues today.
  • The Old Farmer's Almanac (US, founded 1792 by Robert B. Thomas) is the oldest continuously published periodical in North America. It sells about 3 million copies annually.
  • Benjamin Franklin published Poor Richard's Almanack from 1732 to 1758, contributing many famous American proverbs including 'A penny saved is a penny earned'.
  • Almanacs combine real science (astronomical calculations, calendar work) with folk wisdom (weather predictions, agricultural advice) and cultural content (festival dates, recipes, jokes).
  • The format has lasted because it provides useful information in compact, affordable form, updated yearly. Modern digital tools have not replaced the printed almanac — they continue alongside it. The 2025 editions are on shelves around the world.
Sources
  • The Old Farmer's Almanac — Robert B. Thomas (founder); Yankee Publishing (1792) [institution]
  • Poor Richard's Almanack — Benjamin Franklin (1732) [book]
  • How the Old Farmer's Almanac has lasted 230 years — BBC Travel (2018) [news]
  • The Chinese Tongshu Tradition — Hong Kong Heritage Museum (2024) [museum]
  • Whitaker's Almanack: A Concise History — Whitaker's Almanack (2024) [institution]