Published on in Vol 14 (2025)

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/66417, first published .
Impact of Mānuka Honey on Symptoms and Quality of Life in Individuals With Functional Dyspepsia: Protocol for a Feasibility Randomized Controlled Trial

Season Now Australia May 2026

Impact of Mānuka Honey on Symptoms and Quality of Life in Individuals With Functional Dyspepsia: Protocol for a Feasibility Randomized Controlled Trial

Season Now Australia May 2026

Right now, as the Northern Hemisphere shakes off the chill of March and looks toward May flowers, Australia is exhaling. We are deep in the grip of The Shoulder Season —specifically, Autumn (March to May). But to call it simply "Autumn" in the North American or European sense is a disservice. This is not a season of decay or gloom; it is a season of relief .

We are currently in the lead-up to, or the midst of, the Grand Finals. Autumn in the eastern states is the sound of a crowd roaring from a pub on a Thursday night. It is the smell of meat pies and the sight of fans wearing scarves (finally a practical reason to wear them) as they file into the MCG or Suncorp Stadium. The energy is manic, tribal, and loud. season now australia

If Summer is a party, Autumn is the quiet drive home. It is, arguably, the best time of year to be an Australian. Right now, as the Northern Hemisphere shakes off

People are suddenly cleaning their garages. They are pressure-washing the driveways. They are signing up for gym memberships they will quit by October. There is a sense of "getting the house in order" before the darkness of June and July sets in. This is not a season of decay or

It is the season of the "long sleep." You wear wool socks for the first time in six months. You drink Shiraz instead of Sauvignon Blanc. You make soup. Right now, Australia is not the land of sunburn and surf. It is the land of golden light, roaring footy crowds, and crisp mornings that smell of woodsmoke and wet earth.