I was always told it meant till the hawthorn (Mayflower) was blossoming
but some of my friends agree with you. I think it's just one of those things that can be taken either way.
Waiting until the 1st of June to shed your winter woollies is rather late, wouldn't you say? After all, June 21/22 marks MIDsummer's Day! Hawthorn rather than month, surely. It's an old proverb, so I doubt whether the word 'out' was used to mean 'over' that long ago.
My great grandmother taught me this and she understood it as 'till the month of May is done' as you can still get hard frosts and even snow till then. However, I have heard the other version referring to the May blossom too.
I suspect it may be a regional thing so you could both be right lol x
Always took it to be the May Blossom, otherwise it would be a bit late. In any case it says 'a clout', so you didn't have to discard everything, and in the past they just wore everything without taking it off all through the winter. Dirty devils if you ask me.
I think Quizmonster is right. All the same, the weather was a great deal colder during the Little Ice Age in medieval times, so people may well have kept their woolly mammoth cloaks on longer than is necessary now.
Mmmm! Looks as if we both could be right. Lovely to hear your comments, thankyou--
Starby, my old dad used to often use that little ditty about birds.
If he was alive today he'd be 108.
a clout is, I think, a "clothe" - as in the singular of clothes - and so a garment. I don't know if it's an old, or a dialect form, or both. Cast, I presume, means cast off.