A backyard chorus, a century‑old formula, and a reminder that nature always knows more than we think.

The chirping of crickets in your backyard can be a soothing seasonal soundtrack — but it turns out those tiny musicians are also surprisingly accurate temperature readers. Long before weather apps and smart home sensors, physicist Amos Dolbear discovered that cricket chirps follow a mathematical pattern that reveals the outdoor temperature. Count their chirps, do a little math, and you’ve got a natural thermometer right outside your window.
A compact side note that keeps the wonder of the story going while giving readers a few smart next clicks.
Listen closer, then read the weather
The beauty of this little fact is how everyday it feels. A warm night, an open window, and a steady cricket chorus suddenly start sounding a little more precise. It turns a familiar summer backdrop into something observant, curious, and unexpectedly useful.
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In a playful segment for CBS Sunday Morning, Robert Krulwich teams up with puppeteer Barnaby Dixon to break down the science behind the sound. With a guiro standing in as a “cricket substitute,” they demonstrate how the insects rub the ridged edges of their wings together to create that familiar nighttime rhythm — a rhythm that speeds up or slows down depending on the temperature.


Dolbear’s Law is simple: Count the number of chirps in 15 seconds, then add 40. That sum gives you the temperature in Fahrenheit, right where you’re standing.
It’s a charming bit of natural math, but like all things in nature, it has limits. Crickets are cold‑blooded, so when temperatures drop toward 50°F, they slow down… and eventually fall silent. On the opposite end, extreme heat pushes them into a frantic chirping pace that isn’t exactly healthy for them either.
Still, on a warm night — windows open, air still, the yard alive with sound — the formula works beautifully. It’s one of those small wonders hiding in plain sight: a reminder that the world hums with quiet intelligence if we slow down long enough to listen.
Drop a comment and tell us if you’ve ever tried counting cricket chirps yourself. Nature always has a secret — we love hearing which ones you’ve discovered.






