#dog training of north georgia
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
How Do I Stop My Dog’s Pulling on the Leash?
I remember when I was a very young child, and my grandparents would take my brother and myself on a walk. They would pick us up in their Chrysler and drive to a quiet part of the neighborhood. We would then get out of the car and go on our walk.
Being a quiet part of the neighborhood, there were very few cars passing up and down the street. There wasn’t a lot of “people activity” going on that could cause confusion. All these things made it easier for our grandparents to maintain control of what was around us. The “quietness and serenity” also allowed them to more easily control us while we were still having a great time.
I always loved these walks with my grandparents. I had a great time being “out and about” while still having the sense that I was on a great adventure. I also loved being able to “learn about the world around me” from my grandparents. I am sure that they loved the experience as well.
This is the exact same experience that all of us would love to have when out and about on a walk with our dog. We want them to be calm, safe, and happy. We want them to love the adventure while knowing they are completely safe with us. Some of us may not be having “that great experience” with our dogs right now.
Robin and I have some great tools that will make your walk with your dog great. Please read our dog training blog titled “How Do I Stop My Dog’s Pulling on the Leash”.
https://northgeorgiadogtraining.com/stop-my-dogs-pulling-on-the-leash-dawsonville/
#dog training#home dog training#dog training near me#home dog training near me#dog trainer#home dog trainer#dog trainer near me#home dog trainer near me#dog training classes#puppy classes#puppy training#potty training#obedience training#bruce edwards#north georgia dog training#dog training of north georgia#dog training dahlonega#dog training dawsonville#dog training cumming#dog training gainesville#dog training cleveland georgia#dog training blue ridge#dog training elijay
0 notes
Text
Alaska: Igloo, Kodiak bear, Iditarod sled dog race, Denali
Hawaii: pearl harbor, pineapple
washington: Space Needle, apple, mt st helens, rainier national park
oregon: roses, lighthouse, crater lake, oregon trail, hiking
california: redwood tree, white water rafting, gold, golden gate bridge, silicon valley, yosemite national park, wine country, sierra nevada mountains, hollywood, joshua tree
nevada: silver, las vegas strip, hoover dam
idaho: gemstones, potatoes
montana: rocky mountains, glacier national park, grizzly bear, bison
wyoming: yellowstone national park, old faithful geyser, bucking bronco
utah: great salt lake, zion national park, skiing
arizona: lake mead, grand canyon national park, montezuma castle, turquoise, saguaro cactus
new mexico: pueblo, yucca plant, carlsbad caverns
colorado: rocky mountain national park, columbine flower, elk
north dakota: oil, wind energy
south dakota: crazy horse memorial, the badlands, mount rushmore
nebraska: chimney rock, bald eagle, train
kansas: tornadoes, dodge city, sunflower
oklahoma: tomato, wheat, osage shield
texas: cattle, prickly pear cactus, oil refinery, the alamo, NASA Johnson space Center
Minnesota: lake of the woods, wolf, deer
iowa: prairie grass, corn
missouri; Hog, gateway arch
arkansas: razorback hog, banjo
louisiana: crayfish, mardi gras, jazz music
wisconsin: dairy
illinois: Willis tower, tractor, lincoln
michigan: copper, iron ore, automobile manufacturing, motown
indiana: Car
ohio: Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, tires
pennsylvania: street mill, liberty bell
new jersey: constitution
maryland: blue crab
virginia: mount vernon
north carolina: wright brothers national memorial, tobacco farm, great smoky mountains national park, appalachian mountains
south carolina: fort sumter
georgia: peanuts, peach
florida: oranges, kennedy space center, alligator, everglades national park
alabama: cotton, civil rights movement
mississippi: magnolia
tennessee: country music
kentucky: horse racing
west virginia: coal
new york: apple tree, financial market, statue of liberty
massachusetts: american revolution
vermont: maple syrup
new hampshire: fall colors
maine: acadia national park, moose, lobster
And don’t make me repeat it!!!!!!!
7 notes
·
View notes
Text
Holidays 9.19
Holidays
Aortic Disease Awareness Day
Armed Forces Day (Chile)
Arms Designer Day (Russia)
Bestselling Books Day
Biosphere Day (Australia)
Blessed Rainy Day (Bhutan)
Celebration of Labour (French Republic)
Children’s Day (Elder Scrolls)
Civil Aviation Day (Moldova)
Cosmetic Bridge Day
Day of the First Appearance of the Slovak National Council
Eleven Days of Global Unity, Day 9: Freedom
Fawlty Towers Day
Festival of Convictions (French Republic)
Frank Zappa Day (Baltimore) [also 8.9]
Hermione Granger Day
Holy Batman Day
Indra Jatra (Kathmandu Valley, Nepal)
International Aortic Dissection Awareness Day
International Athletic Training & Therapy Day
International Hop Like a Kangaroo Day
International Snakebite Awareness Day
International Talk Like A Pirate Day [ website ]
International Women's Commerce Day
Iota Phi Theta Day
Kenny Chesney Day (Tennessee)
Meow Like a Pirate Day
Mid-Autumn Festival Holiday (China)
Miners Memorial Day (Australia)
Moscow Day (Russia)
National Day of Chamame (Argentina)
National Cat DNA Day
National Ear Health Day
National Food Not Phones Day
National Jude Day
National Orthotics & Prosthetics Day (Canada)
National Meow Like a Pirate Day
National Service Day (Belize)
National Stillbirth Prevention Day
National Theater Day (Brazil)
National Woman Road Warrior Day
North Texas Giving Day (Texas)
919 Day (North Carolina)
919 mm Day
Smiley Face Emoticon Day
Thai Museum Day
Trollface Day
Visit a Sick Friend Today Day
What the Fork Day
Women’s Suffrage Day (New Zealand)
Food & Drink Celebrations
National Butterscotch Pudding Day
Popcorn Day
World Day of the Apertif
Independence & Related Days
Constitution Day (Nepal)
Hosamia (Declared; 2016) [unrecognized]
Meytallia (Declared; 2013) [unrecognized]
Saint Kitts and Nevis (from UK, 1983)
3rd Thursday in September
Ask An Atheist Day [3rd Thursday]
Free Queso Day [3rd Thursday]
International Day of Listening [3rd Thursday]
National Donor Recruitment Professionals Day [3rd Thursday]
National Family Business Day (UK) [3rd Thursday]
National PawPaw Day [3rd Thursday]
National Sour Beer Da [3rd Thursday] (also 9.20)y
National Teach Ag Day [3rd Thursday]
RAINN Day [3rd Thursday]
Responsible Dog Ownership Day (AKC) [3rd Thursday]
Theater Thursday [3rd Thursday of Each Month]
Thirsty Thursday [Every Thursday]
Three for Thursday [Every Thursday]
Thrift Store Thursday [Every Thursday]
Throwback Thursday [Every Thursday]
Transit Safety Thursday [3rd Thursday]
Turkey Thursday [3rd Thursday of Each Month]
Weekly Holidays beginning September 19 (3rd Full Week of September)
Sour Beer Week (thru 9.25) [Begins 3rd Thursday]
Festivals Beginning September 19, 2024
Adirondack Balloon Festival (Glens Falls, New York) [thru 9.22]
AppleJack Festival (Nebraska City, Nebraska) [thru 9.29]
Bourbon & Beyond (Louisville, Kentucky) [thru 9.22]
Clarkson Honeyfest (Clarkson, Kentucky) [thru 9.21]
Clay County Golden Delicious Festival (Clay, West Virginia) [thru 9.22]
Draft Horse Classic and Harvest Fair (Grass Valley, California) [thru 9.22]
Dwight Harvest Days (Dwight, Illinois) [thru 9.22]
Euphoria (Greenville, South Carolina) [thru 9.22]
Fantastic Fest (Austin, Texas) [thru 9.26]
The Frankenmuth Oktoberfest (Frankenmuth, Michigan) [thru 9.22]
Greek Festival (Columbia, South Carolina) [thru 9.22]
Harvest Moon Celebration (Farmington, Michigan) [thru 9.21]
Mid-South Fair (Southaven, Mississippi) [thru 9.29]
Montana Brewers Conference (Missoula, Montana) [thru 9.20]
Nappanee Apple Festival (Nappanee, Indiana) [thru 9.22]
Nez Perce County Fair (Lewiston, Idaho) [thru 9.22]
North Georgia State Fair (Marietta, Georgia) [thru 9.29]
Oktoberfest Zinzinnati (Cincinnati, Ohio) [thru 9.22]
OPA!HOMA (Tulsa, Oklahoma) [thru 9.21]
Plano Balloon Festival (Plano, Texas) [thru 9.22]
Pygmalion Festival (Urbana, Illinois) [thru 9.21]
Ravenna Balloon A-Fair (Ravenna, Ohio) [thru 9.22]
Sugar Creek Music Festival (Benton, Illinois) [thru 9.21]
Walnut Festival (Walnut Creek, California) [thru 9.22]
Wenatchee River Salmon Festival (Wenatchee, Washington) [thru 9.21]
Feast Days
Alonso de Orozco Mena (Christian; Saint)
Arthur Rackham (Artology)
Augustin Pajou (Artology)
Emilie de Rodat (Christian; Saint)
Eustochius, Bishop of Tours (Christian; Saint)
Feast of Gula (Ancient Babylonia; Goddess of Birth; Everyday Wicca)
Feast of Mato (The Bear Spirit; Lakota & Oglala Sioux)
Feast of Our Lady of La Salette (Roman Catholic; France)
Feast of San Gennaro (Christian; Saint)
Feast of Thoth (Egyptian God of Wisdom & Magic)
Feralia (Day of Purification; Pagan)
Frederick Ruple (Artology)
Ganesh Chaturthi (Indian Elephant God Festival)
Goeric of Metz (Christian; Saint)
Grape Pear Crisp Day (Starza Pagan Book of Days)
Ingrid Jonker (Writerism)
International Forgiveness Day (Jainism)
International Talk Like a Pirate Day (Pastafarian)
Januarius (Western Christianity)
Jubilee of the Moth Moons (Shamanism)
Laurie R. King (Writerism)
Lucy (Christian; Saint)
March of the Reanimated Corpses Day (Church of the SubGenius)
Nine Ages of the Faery Kind (Celtic Book of Days)
Our Lady of La Salette (Christian; Saint)
Pablita Velarde (Artology)
Peleus, Pa-Termuthes, and companions (Christian; Martyrs)
Racine (Positivist; Saint)
Sequanus (a.k.a. Seine; Christian; Saint)
Slimey Ole Tom (Muppetism)
Theodore of Tarsus (Anglican Communion, Roman Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodox Church)
Trophimus, Sabbatius, and Dorymedon (Christian; Saints)
William Golding (Writerism)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Shakku (赤口 Japan) [Bad luck all day, except at noon.]
Umu Limnu (Evil Day; Babylonian Calendar; 43 of 60)
Premieres
Amadeus (Film; 1984)
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, by Michael Chabon (Novel; 2000)
Away From the World, by The Dave Matthews Band (Album; 2012)
Best in Show (Film; 2000)
Block Party or The Happy Hedsman (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S3, Ep. 110; 1961)
Blue Velvet (Film; 1986)
Boardwalk Empire (TV Series; 2010)
The Book of Merlyn, by T.H. White (Novel; 1977)
Bosko Shipwrecked! (WB LT Cartoon; 1931)
Doogie Howser, M.D. (TV Series; 1989)
East of Eden, by John Steinbeck (Novel; 1952)
The Egyptian, by Mika Waltari (Novel; 1945)
ER (TV Series; 1994)
Fawlty Towers (UK TV Series; 1975)
Fine Feathered Friend (Noveltoons Cartoon; 1960)
Fishing by the Sea (Heckle & Jeckle Cartoon; 1946)
Fly, by The Dixie Chicks (Album; 1999)
Funny Girl (Film; 1968)
Goodfellas (Film; 1990)
The Good Place (TV Series; 2016)
Gossip Girl (TV Series; 2007)
Gramps to the Rescue (Noveltoons Cartoon; 1963)
Grendel, by John Gardner (Novel; 1971)
Hector and the Search for Happiness (Film; 2014)
Hobo’s Holiday (Noveltoons Cartoon; 1963)
How I Met Your Mother (TV Series; 2005)
Igor (Animated Film; 2008)
I’ll Never Crow Again (Fleischer Popeye Cartoon; 1941)
L.A. Confidential (Film; 1997)
Lady and His Lamp (Noveltoons Cartoon; 1964)
The Mary Tyler Moore Show (TV Series; 1970)
The Maze Runner (Film; 2014)
Moneyball (Film; 2011)
Monkey Business (Film; 1931)
Oh Teacher (Ub Iwerks Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Disney Cartoon; 1927)
Pedagogy of the Oppressed, by Paulo Freire (Philosophical Book; 1968)
Pluto’s Party (Disney Cartoon; 1952)
Rhythm Nation 1814, by Janet Jackson (Album; 1989)
Scooby-Doo! Pirates Ahoy! (WB Animated Film; 2006)
Secondhand Lions (Film; 2003)
Spice, by the Spice Girls (Album; 1996)
Squirrel in the Scope of Ring Around the Rocky (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S3, Ep. 109; 1961)
A Thousand Acres (Film; 1997)
Toy Town Hall (WB MM Cartoon; 1936)
2 Broke Girls (TV Series; 2011)
Uncle Joey Comes to Town (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1941)
Underworld (Film; 2003)
The Virginian (TV Series; 1962)
Yanks (Film; 1979)
Zipping Along (WB MM Cartoon; 1953)
Today’s Name Days
Arnulf, Igor, Jnuarius, Wilma (Austria)
Emilija, Januarije, Suzana, Teodor, Željko (Croatia)
Zita (Czech Republic)
Constantia (Denmark)
Erna, Marna (Estonia)
Reija (Finland)
Émilie (France)
Januarius, Thorsten, Wilhelmine (Germany)
Savatios (Greece)
Vilhelmina (Hungary)
Gennaro (Italy)
Muntis, Varnesis, Verners (Latvia)
Girvinas, Vilhelmina, Vytė (Lithuania)
Connie, Konstanse (Norway)
Alfons, Alfonsyna, January, Konstancja, Sydonia, Teodor, Więcemir (Poland)
Konštantín (Slovakia)
Genaro, Jenaro (Spain)
Fredrika (Sweden)
Monroe, Morgan, Morgann, Morganna, Morganne, Precious, Sawyer (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 263 of 2024; 103 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 4 of Week 38 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Muin (Vine) [Day 19 of 28]
Chinese: Month 8 (Guy-You), Day 17 (Bing-Xu)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025) [Wu-Chen]
Hebrew: 16 Elul 5784
Islamic: 15 Rabi I 1446
J Cal: 23 Gold; Twosday [23 of 30]
Julian: 6 September 2024
Moon: 96%: Waning Gibbous
Positivist: 11 Shakespeare (10th Month) [Voltaire]
Runic Half Month: Ken (Illumination) [Day 13 of 15]
Season: Summer (Day 92 of 94)
Week: 3rd Full Week of September
Zodiac: Virgo (Day 29 of 32)
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
taglist~
you’ll have to use the search function unfortunately :( i am no longer linking all my tags. if you’re on desktop, my theme should have a search bar!
dated by year
1980 | - | 1994 | - | 1997 | - | 1999 | - | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | - | 2039
dated by month
january | february | march | april | may | june | july | august | september | october | november | december
holidays/seasons
christmas | easter | fall | halloween | valentines day | winter
locations
australia | belarus | belgium | brazil | bulgaria | canada | china | france | georgia republic | greece | holland | india | ireland | italy | japan | medellín | netherlands | new zealand | palestine | peru | poland | spain | sweeden | switzerland | syria | russia | thailand | uk | ukraine | uae | usa
alabama / alaska / arkansas / california / connecticut / idaho / illinois / indiana / iowa / kansas / kentucky / louisiana / maryland / missouri / new mexico / new york / north carolina / ohio / oregon / pennsylvania / tennessee / texas / utah / west virgina / wisconsin
Chuck E Cheese | Dongdaemun Market | Hershey Park | Moody Gardens | NASA | Rocky Mountain National Park | Treasure Island Beach | Walmart
animals
anemone | birds | bees | bugs | bunnies | cats | chickens | cicadas | cows | crabs | deer | dogs | ducks | ferrets | fish | goats | goldfish | guinea pigs | horses | kittens | sheep | snakes | swans
pets
Abby | Augustine | Azuki | Bert | Bob | Mr. Boot | Bruce | Cupid | Donna | Dusty | Ellsie | Fiona | Fudge | Gizzy | Huckleberry | Itzl | Kiwi | Mattie | Mookie | Muffy | Newt | Noose | Ollie | Pepe | Mr. Punky | Ramses | Shika | Smokey | Tamako | Tucker | Xoco | Ziggy | Zoey
art/mediums
art car | ceramics | collage | crayons | crochet | drawings | food art | glass art | installation | knitting | miniatures | mural | oil pastels | origami | ornaments | paint | painting | paper crafts | patchwork | quilt | sculpture | tapestry | tiles | yarn
artists
Anne-Sophie Landou | Enrico Delponte | Jen | Keith Haring | Mark Schaer | Ryan Gander | Terry Ravan
Ween
colors
red | orange | yellow | green | blue | purple | pink | brown | black | gray | white | silver | gold | multicolor
food & drink
baking | batter | bento | birthday cake | bread | breakfast | cake | candy | cereal | cheese | coffee | cookies | cooking | curry | dessert | drinks | fake food | fruit | hot pot | ice cream | meat | onigiri | pancakes | pastries | pie | potluck | pumpkins | salad | sashimi | smores | soup | sushi | tea | torte | vegetables | wine
characters/licenses/media
animal crossing | anpanman | boognish | candy land | dora | doraemon | evangelion | garfield | giant microbes | hannah montana | hello kitty | hoops & yoyo | joe cool | miffy | moomin | moppy | muppets | nasa | powerpuff girls | sanrio | sesame street | snoopy | sonic (the hedgehog) | spongebob | texas chainsaw | universal studios japan | wallace and gromit | winne the pooh | yotsuba | yugioh
interior
apartment | attic | bar | basement | bathroom | bedroom | cabin | chandelier | dining room | dorm | foyer | hallway | home | hostel | hotel | kid’s room | kitchen | library | living room | mall | playroom | shelves | stairs | studio | unfurnished | window
bead curtains | beds | bookshelf | computer | crt monitor | chairs | curtains | desk | fishtank | fridge | furniture | kitchenware | lamp | laptop | lava lamp | salt lamp | sewing machine | stove | tablecloth | tables | tv | vase | whiteboard | wood paneling | wood stove
exterior/outside
backyard | balcony | beach | bridge | building | canal | car show | cemetery | chapel | chicken coop | church | city | clothesline | dam | fair | fence | ferris wheel | gate | highway | hills | house | iron gate | mailbox | neighborhood | park | patio | picnic tables | plants | pool | porch | road | street | tables | train | train station | tunnel | wind chimes | wreath | yard
clouds | creek | dirt | field | flowers | fog | forest | frost | garden | mountains | mushrooms | nest | night | lake | lawn | ocean | path | plants | rain | rainbow | sky | snow | snowman | sunset | topiary | trail | trees | waterfall | woods
miscellaneous tags
altar | angel | antlers | astrology | beekeeping | baby shower | bamboo | basket | bicycle | birthday | birthday cake | blankets | books | brick | bowling | camera | candles | chain | cherub | chess | clock | clothing | car | card game | cards | chess | cigarettes | collection | construction | decor | desk | dollhouse | dolls | dusty | figure | figurines | flowers | fortune telling | gift | globe | gloves | hay | installation | karaoke | kite | knife | knives | lace | landmark | lanterns | leak | lock | machinery | mannequins | market | moving | nursery | objects | orbs | party | pearls | people | piano | pillows | plane | playing cards | plush | polaroid | posters | preschool | pyrex | rail | remodel | religion | retail | roadtrip | school | school bus | sculpture | seashells | shoes | sign | silverware | smoke | spirits | suburbia | sunlight | stained glass | swords | tech | toys | trinkets | vehicle | vhs | video games | visual clutter | water | wedding | window
blur | edit | fisheye | flash | frame | glow | low quality | panorama | photo collage | text | timestamp | video | vignette | watermark
my tags
11:11 | baby tag | birthday tag | fav | grandmas house | magic tag | personal | thank you post
updated: 09/13/2024
4 notes
·
View notes
Note
If you haven't already, you might want to check out the book, "Quail Plantations of South Georgia and North Florida" by Hank Margeson. I never had the money to hunt plantation style. Instead, I raised and trained my own dogs and depended upon the generosity of farmers and landowners here in northern Georgia for a place to hunt. Sadly, the quail population here is now non-existent. People blame coyotes, but the real culprit is house cats, both tame and feral. There should be a bounty on all cats found off their owners' property. Anyway, to my question...I see several images on your Tumblr where people are shooting straight up in the air. The clothing seems indicate that the location is Europe. What style hunting is this? Thanks!
Great to hear from you and thanks for reaching out. Yes, Hank's book is very good and I know his family very well. Many of his photographs of South Georgia plantations are on permanent display at a popular hotel in the region that regularly hosts quail hunting events, as it is again this week. Most of the quail hunting plantations that the area is known for are privately owned and hunting there is for family and guests, many of which fly in from around the country throughout the Nov-Feb wild bird season. There are also many commercial plantations in the area which offer great hunting opportunities from Oct-March, but there's quite a bit of difference in hunting on the preserves vs the humbling speed of the reclusive wild birds. Wild birds simply can't handle the pressure that a steady diet of paying customers would bring. As for the loss of wild birds in North Georgia and most of the country, the culprit is primarily the loss of habitat. There are a variety of things that wild birds need in order to survive, starting with a couple of thousand acres of contagious habitat, enough sunlight to allow the needed ground cover, regularly disturbed (ideally every 2 years) sections from fire and soil dicing (which creates the preferred nesting habitat), areas left for escape, and other spots that grow weeds that will propagate seeds and insects to benefit the broods that are hatched from June-early October. Vast homogeneous commercial timber tracts, large unmanaged closed canopy federal forests, small tracts, large ag fields, and shopping centers just won't do. If you want quail, you have to give up much of the economic benefits of land ownership that most owners/investors require. As for the traditional English countryside attire and high bird shooting, that is a style of pheasant hunting that is very popular in much of Northern England. In a way it is similar to our commercial quail hunting preserves as in both cases the birds are raised and released, as compared to the much more exclusive red grouse hunting in England that has some similarities with our wild quail hunting as both birds are a limited resource and hunting is primarily available to those that are either well-connected or have large budgets. Thanks again for your questions and good luck in the field!
25 notes
·
View notes
Text
Holidays 9.19
Holidays
Aortic Disease Awareness Day
Armed Forces Day (Chile)
Arms Designer Day (Russia)
Bestselling Books Day
Biosphere Day (Australia)
Blessed Rainy Day (Bhutan)
Celebration of Labour (French Republic)
Children’s Day (Elder Scrolls)
Civil Aviation Day (Moldova)
Cosmetic Bridge Day
Day of the First Appearance of the Slovak National Council
Eleven Days of Global Unity, Day 9: Freedom
Fawlty Towers Day
Festival of Convictions (French Republic)
Frank Zappa Day (Baltimore) [also 8.9]
Hermione Granger Day
Holy Batman Day
Indra Jatra (Kathmandu Valley, Nepal)
International Aortic Dissection Awareness Day
International Athletic Training & Therapy Day
International Hop Like a Kangaroo Day
International Snakebite Awareness Day
International Talk Like A Pirate Day [ website ]
International Women's Commerce Day
Iota Phi Theta Day
Kenny Chesney Day (Tennessee)
Meow Like a Pirate Day
Mid-Autumn Festival Holiday (China)
Miners Memorial Day (Australia)
Moscow Day (Russia)
National Day of Chamame (Argentina)
National Cat DNA Day
National Ear Health Day
National Food Not Phones Day
National Jude Day
National Orthotics & Prosthetics Day (Canada)
National Meow Like a Pirate Day
National Service Day (Belize)
National Stillbirth Prevention Day
National Theater Day (Brazil)
National Woman Road Warrior Day
North Texas Giving Day (Texas)
919 Day (North Carolina)
919 mm Day
Smiley Face Emoticon Day
Thai Museum Day
Trollface Day
Visit a Sick Friend Today Day
What the Fork Day
Women’s Suffrage Day (New Zealand)
Food & Drink Celebrations
National Butterscotch Pudding Day
Popcorn Day
World Day of the Apertif
Independence & Related Days
Constitution Day (Nepal)
Hosamia (Declared; 2016) [unrecognized]
Meytallia (Declared; 2013) [unrecognized]
Saint Kitts and Nevis (from UK, 1983)
3rd Thursday in September
Ask An Atheist Day [3rd Thursday]
Free Queso Day [3rd Thursday]
International Day of Listening [3rd Thursday]
National Donor Recruitment Professionals Day [3rd Thursday]
National Family Business Day (UK) [3rd Thursday]
National PawPaw Day [3rd Thursday]
National Sour Beer Da [3rd Thursday] (also 9.20)y
National Teach Ag Day [3rd Thursday]
RAINN Day [3rd Thursday]
Responsible Dog Ownership Day (AKC) [3rd Thursday]
Theater Thursday [3rd Thursday of Each Month]
Thirsty Thursday [Every Thursday]
Three for Thursday [Every Thursday]
Thrift Store Thursday [Every Thursday]
Throwback Thursday [Every Thursday]
Transit Safety Thursday [3rd Thursday]
Turkey Thursday [3rd Thursday of Each Month]
Weekly Holidays beginning September 19 (3rd Full Week of September)
Sour Beer Week (thru 9.25) [Begins 3rd Thursday]
Festivals Beginning September 19, 2024
Adirondack Balloon Festival (Glens Falls, New York) [thru 9.22]
AppleJack Festival (Nebraska City, Nebraska) [thru 9.29]
Bourbon & Beyond (Louisville, Kentucky) [thru 9.22]
Clarkson Honeyfest (Clarkson, Kentucky) [thru 9.21]
Clay County Golden Delicious Festival (Clay, West Virginia) [thru 9.22]
Draft Horse Classic and Harvest Fair (Grass Valley, California) [thru 9.22]
Dwight Harvest Days (Dwight, Illinois) [thru 9.22]
Euphoria (Greenville, South Carolina) [thru 9.22]
Fantastic Fest (Austin, Texas) [thru 9.26]
The Frankenmuth Oktoberfest (Frankenmuth, Michigan) [thru 9.22]
Greek Festival (Columbia, South Carolina) [thru 9.22]
Harvest Moon Celebration (Farmington, Michigan) [thru 9.21]
Mid-South Fair (Southaven, Mississippi) [thru 9.29]
Montana Brewers Conference (Missoula, Montana) [thru 9.20]
Nappanee Apple Festival (Nappanee, Indiana) [thru 9.22]
Nez Perce County Fair (Lewiston, Idaho) [thru 9.22]
North Georgia State Fair (Marietta, Georgia) [thru 9.29]
Oktoberfest Zinzinnati (Cincinnati, Ohio) [thru 9.22]
OPA!HOMA (Tulsa, Oklahoma) [thru 9.21]
Plano Balloon Festival (Plano, Texas) [thru 9.22]
Pygmalion Festival (Urbana, Illinois) [thru 9.21]
Ravenna Balloon A-Fair (Ravenna, Ohio) [thru 9.22]
Sugar Creek Music Festival (Benton, Illinois) [thru 9.21]
Walnut Festival (Walnut Creek, California) [thru 9.22]
Wenatchee River Salmon Festival (Wenatchee, Washington) [thru 9.21]
Feast Days
Alonso de Orozco Mena (Christian; Saint)
Arthur Rackham (Artology)
Augustin Pajou (Artology)
Emilie de Rodat (Christian; Saint)
Eustochius, Bishop of Tours (Christian; Saint)
Feast of Gula (Ancient Babylonia; Goddess of Birth; Everyday Wicca)
Feast of Mato (The Bear Spirit; Lakota & Oglala Sioux)
Feast of Our Lady of La Salette (Roman Catholic; France)
Feast of San Gennaro (Christian; Saint)
Feast of Thoth (Egyptian God of Wisdom & Magic)
Feralia (Day of Purification; Pagan)
Frederick Ruple (Artology)
Ganesh Chaturthi (Indian Elephant God Festival)
Goeric of Metz (Christian; Saint)
Grape Pear Crisp Day (Starza Pagan Book of Days)
Ingrid Jonker (Writerism)
International Forgiveness Day (Jainism)
International Talk Like a Pirate Day (Pastafarian)
Januarius (Western Christianity)
Jubilee of the Moth Moons (Shamanism)
Laurie R. King (Writerism)
Lucy (Christian; Saint)
March of the Reanimated Corpses Day (Church of the SubGenius)
Nine Ages of the Faery Kind (Celtic Book of Days)
Our Lady of La Salette (Christian; Saint)
Pablita Velarde (Artology)
Peleus, Pa-Termuthes, and companions (Christian; Martyrs)
Racine (Positivist; Saint)
Sequanus (a.k.a. Seine; Christian; Saint)
Slimey Ole Tom (Muppetism)
Theodore of Tarsus (Anglican Communion, Roman Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodox Church)
Trophimus, Sabbatius, and Dorymedon (Christian; Saints)
William Golding (Writerism)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Shakku (赤口 Japan) [Bad luck all day, except at noon.]
Umu Limnu (Evil Day; Babylonian Calendar; 43 of 60)
Premieres
Amadeus (Film; 1984)
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay, by Michael Chabon (Novel; 2000)
Away From the World, by The Dave Matthews Band (Album; 2012)
Best in Show (Film; 2000)
Block Party or The Happy Hedsman (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S3, Ep. 110; 1961)
Blue Velvet (Film; 1986)
Boardwalk Empire (TV Series; 2010)
The Book of Merlyn, by T.H. White (Novel; 1977)
Bosko Shipwrecked! (WB LT Cartoon; 1931)
Doogie Howser, M.D. (TV Series; 1989)
East of Eden, by John Steinbeck (Novel; 1952)
The Egyptian, by Mika Waltari (Novel; 1945)
ER (TV Series; 1994)
Fawlty Towers (UK TV Series; 1975)
Fine Feathered Friend (Noveltoons Cartoon; 1960)
Fishing by the Sea (Heckle & Jeckle Cartoon; 1946)
Fly, by The Dixie Chicks (Album; 1999)
Funny Girl (Film; 1968)
Goodfellas (Film; 1990)
The Good Place (TV Series; 2016)
Gossip Girl (TV Series; 2007)
Gramps to the Rescue (Noveltoons Cartoon; 1963)
Grendel, by John Gardner (Novel; 1971)
Hector and the Search for Happiness (Film; 2014)
Hobo’s Holiday (Noveltoons Cartoon; 1963)
How I Met Your Mother (TV Series; 2005)
Igor (Animated Film; 2008)
I’ll Never Crow Again (Fleischer Popeye Cartoon; 1941)
L.A. Confidential (Film; 1997)
Lady and His Lamp (Noveltoons Cartoon; 1964)
The Mary Tyler Moore Show (TV Series; 1970)
The Maze Runner (Film; 2014)
Moneyball (Film; 2011)
Monkey Business (Film; 1931)
Oh Teacher (Ub Iwerks Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Disney Cartoon; 1927)
Pedagogy of the Oppressed, by Paulo Freire (Philosophical Book; 1968)
Pluto’s Party (Disney Cartoon; 1952)
Rhythm Nation 1814, by Janet Jackson (Album; 1989)
Scooby-Doo! Pirates Ahoy! (WB Animated Film; 2006)
Secondhand Lions (Film; 2003)
Spice, by the Spice Girls (Album; 1996)
Squirrel in the Scope of Ring Around the Rocky (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S3, Ep. 109; 1961)
A Thousand Acres (Film; 1997)
Toy Town Hall (WB MM Cartoon; 1936)
2 Broke Girls (TV Series; 2011)
Uncle Joey Comes to Town (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1941)
Underworld (Film; 2003)
The Virginian (TV Series; 1962)
Yanks (Film; 1979)
Zipping Along (WB MM Cartoon; 1953)
Today’s Name Days
Arnulf, Igor, Jnuarius, Wilma (Austria)
Emilija, Januarije, Suzana, Teodor, Željko (Croatia)
Zita (Czech Republic)
Constantia (Denmark)
Erna, Marna (Estonia)
Reija (Finland)
Émilie (France)
Januarius, Thorsten, Wilhelmine (Germany)
Savatios (Greece)
Vilhelmina (Hungary)
Gennaro (Italy)
Muntis, Varnesis, Verners (Latvia)
Girvinas, Vilhelmina, Vytė (Lithuania)
Connie, Konstanse (Norway)
Alfons, Alfonsyna, January, Konstancja, Sydonia, Teodor, Więcemir (Poland)
Konštantín (Slovakia)
Genaro, Jenaro (Spain)
Fredrika (Sweden)
Monroe, Morgan, Morgann, Morganna, Morganne, Precious, Sawyer (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 263 of 2024; 103 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 4 of Week 38 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Muin (Vine) [Day 19 of 28]
Chinese: Month 8 (Guy-You), Day 17 (Bing-Xu)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025) [Wu-Chen]
Hebrew: 16 Elul 5784
Islamic: 15 Rabi I 1446
J Cal: 23 Gold; Twosday [23 of 30]
Julian: 6 September 2024
Moon: 96%: Waning Gibbous
Positivist: 11 Shakespeare (10th Month) [Voltaire]
Runic Half Month: Ken (Illumination) [Day 13 of 15]
Season: Summer (Day 92 of 94)
Week: 3rd Full Week of September
Zodiac: Virgo (Day 29 of 32)
1 note
·
View note
Text
Outdoor Time
Spending time outdoors regularly has been proven to benefit one's physical health and mental well-being, promoting relaxation, reducing stress levels, and enhancing overall happiness. Varenita of West Cobb emphasizes the importance of spending time outdoors for residents in assisted living and memory care. The community provides a pet-friendly environment with beautifully landscaped grounds, inviting walking paths, and a spacious dog park for furry companions to enjoy. Two serene outdoor courtyards offer peaceful settings where residents can relax, socialize, or engage in therapeutic activities. At this Acworth retirement community, Varenita of West Cobb encourages residents to embrace the beauty of nature while maintaining a safe and enriching living environment.
The Transportation System in Acworth, Georgia
Acworth, Georgia, benefits from a well-connected transportation system that enhances accessibility for residents and visitors alike. The city is served by major highways such as Interstate 75 and State Route 92, facilitating convenient travel to neighboring cities and beyond. Public transportation options include bus services operated by CobbLinc, providing reliable connectivity within Acworth and to nearby areas. For those who prefer cycling or walking, the city offers designated bike lanes and sidewalks, promoting active transportation and safety. The transportation network supports daily commutes, shopping trips, and recreational outings, contributing to the overall livability of Acworth by ensuring efficient mobility for its residents.
Logan Farm Park in Acworth, GA
Logan Farm Park in Acworth, Georgia, is a favorite spot for outdoor activities and community events. This park offers expansive green spaces perfect for picnics, playing sports like soccer and baseball, or simply relaxing under the shade of trees. Kids love the playgrounds with swings, slides, and climbing structures. There are walking paths that wind through the park, ideal for strolling or jogging. Logan Farm Park also hosts concerts, festivals, and movie nights, bringing neighbors together for fun and entertainment. With its well-maintained facilities, including restrooms and ample parking, Logan Farm Park is a beloved destination for people looking to enjoy nature and community events in Acworth.
Acworth Police to Give Staff Lifesaving Tools After Officer Saves Elderly Patient From Choking
A LifeVac is a special device used to help save people from choking. It works by creating a strong suction to pull out whatever is stuck in someone's throat, allowing them to breathe again. The device has a mask that fits over the person's mouth and nose. When you push down and pull up on the handle, it creates a vacuum that can dislodge the object. LifeVac is easy to use and can be a lifesaver in emergencies when someone is choking and can't breathe. It's important because it can be used quickly and easily, even by people who are not trained medical professionals, to help save lives.
Link to maps
Logan Farm Park 4405 Cherokee St, Acworth, GA 30101, United States Head north toward Logan Rd 410 ft Turn left onto Logan Rd 0.1 mi Turn right onto Cherokee St 0.2 mi Turn left onto Hwy 92 S/Lake Acworth Dr 2.2 mi Turn left onto Kemp Ridge Rd 0.5 mi Continue onto Mars Hill Rd 3.2 mi Varenita of West Cobb 1979 Mars Hill Rd, Acworth, GA 30101, United States
0 notes
Text
Spirit Identifies Fallen Soldiers
After the Civil War, many communities "adopted" the graves of unknown soldiers, lavishing them with care and ceremony. Four graves in north Georgia were tended by employees of the Western and Atlantic Railroad.
Two of the graves, along the tracks near Adairsville, intrigued Alice B. Howell. During a table-tapping séance around 1939, Alice asked the spirits to identify the two Confederates. The table obliged and tapped out the names Jack Kirby and Tice Furrow. The spirit world, it turned out, knew its soldiers. Research in the National Archives confirmed the identity of Furrow, and the federal government supplied a regulation veterans' headstone. There were too many J. Kirbys for a definite identification, so Alice ordered a stone for that grave. On May 1, 1974, the comrades were reinterred at Adairsville's East View Cemetery attended by local, state, and federal officials.
Two Confederate graves remain at Allatoona Pass-one to the south, the other to the north-and the railroad still cares for them. The most accessible is to the south, and the graves have generated several paranormal stories, including the wandering spirits of the men and a ghost dog that chases passing trains.
0 notes
Photo
This map has a lot of issues, so I spent an unnecessary amount of time fact-checking all the shows and where they're located. Places in "italicised quotes" aren't real places. Using the "town, state" format even for big cities to make things clearer. I know probably too much about American geography for someone who's never been there, and I still get confused.
CORRECT
Molly of Denali: "Qyah", Alaska Clarence: "Aberdale", Arizona South Park: "South Park", Colorado The Amazing World of Gumball: "Elmore", California Sit Down, Shut Up: "Knob Haven", Florida Squidbillies: "Dougal County", Georgia Lilo & Stitch: The Series: Unnamed locality in Kauai, Hawaii Napoleon Dynamite: Preston, Idaho Twelve Forever: "Bethune", Iowa Courage the Cowardly Dog: "Nowhere", Kansas Hoops: "Lenwood", Kentucky Bunnicula: New Orleans, Louisiana The Spooktacular New Adventures of Casper: Friendship, Maine Craig of the Creek: "Herkleton", Maryland The Loud House: "Royal Woods", Michigan The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle and Friends: "Frostbite Falls", Minnesota Ellen's Acres: A hotel outside Tonopah, Nevada Assy McGee: Exeter, New Hamspshire Kid Cosmic: Unnamed town, New Mexico Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: New York, New York Big Mouth: Westchester County, New York The Epic Tales of Captain Underpants: Piqua, Ohio Gravity Falls: Gravity Falls, Oregon Arthur: "Elwood City", Pennsylvania (confirmed by the show's official Twitter) Little Bill: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Family Guy: "Quahog", Rhode Island The Legend of Calamity Jane: Deadwood, South Dakota King of the Hill: "Arlen", Texas (Didn't even look this one up until I needed the city name) Beavis and Butt-Head: "Highland", Texas (The state wasn't made explicit until the 2022 movie Beavis and Butt-Head Do the Universe) American Dad!: "Langley Falls", Virginia Rick and Morty: Somewhere outside Seattle, Washington
CORRECT, BUT
The Owl House: "Gravesfield", Connecticut (Much more heavily set in Bonesborough in the Boiling Isles, which is not a real place, though a few episodes do return to Gravesfield) Steven Universe: "Beach City", "Delmarva" (The landmasses are a little different in the universe of Steven... Universe, and the state of Delaware doesn't exist, but an official map labels the body of water north of Beach City as Rehoboth Bay, which is a real bay in Delaware, and would put Beach City in the same location as the real-world Long Neck, Delaware) (RIP to everything south of Indian River Bay, though) Fetch! with Ruff Ruffman: Boston, Massachusetts (This is a live action kid's game show with an animated host, so I'm not sure it qualifies as an animated series) Infinity Train: North Branch, Minnesota (The show is set on a magical train that travels through an otherworldly desert. The main human character of the first season is from Minnesota, but she spends almost the entire season trapped on the train, and the other seasons follow different characters, and generally spend even less time on Earth) Futurama: "New New York", "New New York" (New New York City is explicitly built over the ruins of its real-world counterpart, and is basically New York But Futuristic)
IMPLIED
Rugrats: Unnamed city (All indications point to California) Garfield and Friends: Unnamed City (Garfield is very occasionally stated to take place in Muncie, Indiana, where its creator Jim Davis lives, but I don't know if the Garfield and Friends show ever brings this up. I don't think US Acres was ever given a location) Bob's Burgers: "Seymour's Bay" (Evidence points to New Jersey, but it's never made explicit) (I'm finding conflicting things on whether Seymour's Bay is the canon name or an out-of-universe nickname) Jimmy Neutron: "Retroville" (A Texas number plate is visible in the movie, and a line on a map showing a trip the characters take in one episode clearly starts in Texas. Otherwise, the state is never specified)
UNCLEAR
Recess: Unnamed city (One episode has the kids take the Arkansas Elementary School Achievement Test, which is the basis for it being put in Arkansas in this map. Coordinates given in another episode would put the school in Pennsylvania) Regular Show: "City" (A few things indicate California, including the state flag being visible in one episode, but other things contradict this and place it further east) Curious George: "City" (The location was never given in the books, but the show has a line that says that the airport the characters are currently at is in Chicago, Illinois) The Boondocks: "Woodcrest" (The comic strip is definitely set in Maryland, but the show has some indications early on that it's set in Chicago, Illinois, with the exception of an episode where the main characters fly back to Chicago to attend a funeral. Later episodes imply that the show is set in Maryland) The Chicken Squad: Unnamed locality (An episode about a lost phone implies that the show is set in North Dakota. I can't find much more than that) Harvey Girls Forever!: "Harvey Street" (One episode includes a view from space of a bright light on the street, but the location is vague, and looks more like Missouri than Oklahoma to me. A showrunner confirmed on Twitter that this shot did not mean the show was set in Kansas, and that the street is actually "located in the great state of… oops, out of characters!") Daniel Tiger's Neighborhood: "The Neighborhood of Make-Believe" (Disclaimer: I never saw Mr Rogers' Neighborhood because it's an extremely North American thing. But I think the title neighbourhood was literally supposed to be Fred Rogers' neighbourhood in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, while the Neighborhood of Make-Believe was always an imaginary place with no real-world counterpart.) Peanuts: Unnamed City (I'm not sure which Peanuts animated series this is on the map, but the comics never make the location explicit. The closest is a strip from 1957, in which Lucy shows off a trophy that names her "Outstanding Fussbudget of Hennepin County". That would place the setting in Minnesota, in or near Minneapolis. But a later strip from 1963 introduces a character named 555 95472, whose surname has been changed to his ZIP code. ZIP code 95472 is in Sebastopol, California, where Charles Shultz's studio was.) Hey Arnold!: "Hillwood" (There are a lot of indications that the series takes place in the US part of the Pacific Northwest, so Oregon, Washington or Idaho. And at the end of one episode, Helga and her mother are seen driving past a "Welcome To Washington State" sign when returning from out of state. But there are also some implications that it takes place in New York City, particularly with the architecture, and the way the school is numbered)
DEFINITELY INCORRECT
Sniz & Fondue: Unnamed locality (Only source on being located in Missouri seems to be an addition to the Wikipedia page in November 2006 with no edit reason given) Big City Greens: "Big City" (The show is based in part on the creators' childhood in rural Michigan, but the show itself never mentions a state.) (If Michigan gets Big City Greens, might as well give Alabama Phineas and Ferb for similar reasons. Give the south something.) Sheep in the Big City: "The Big City" (Only source on being located in Missouri seems to be an addition to the Wikipedia page in January 2010) with no edit reason given) Daria: "Lawndale" (The setting of the show is unclear, but it doesn't appear to be set in Texas. The setting is extremely urban northeast, in my opinion. In an interview, one of the show creators said that he thought of the setting as being a mid-Atlantic suburb, and gave Maryland and Pennsylvania as possible locations. The idea that the show is in Texas seems to be based on the show being a spin-off of Beavis and Butt-Head, but Daria's family explicitly moved to Lawndale from Highland at the beginning of the first episode.) Chalkzone: "Plainville" (Only source on being located in Wisconsin seems to be an addition to the Wikipedia page in November 2006 with no edit reason given)
OTHER POSSIBILITIES (not on the map)
-The Ace Ventura: Pet Detective cartoon is set in Miami, Florida, and has a lot more episodes than Sit Down, Shut up -The Beetlejuice cartoon is set in "Peaceful Pines", Connecticut, and has more episodes than the Owl House, as well as seeming to spend more time in the real world. -I don't know much about China, IL, but it is unambiguously set in Illinois, unlike Curious George, or the Boondocks. Has less episodes than either of those, though. -Soul Eater is set in "Death City", Nevada, and only has one less episode than Ellen's Acres, with double the running time. -If Big Mouth is a runner-up for New York, Archer should be too. Even discounting the seasons that moved the setting to Los Angeles, or Los Angeles but in the 40s, or a fictional Pacific Island, or space, it's got more episodes than Big Mouth. -The animated show set in the District of Columbia with the most episodes is either Our Cartoon President, or Freakazoid!, depending on how you define an episode. Couldn't find anything for any of the US's overseas territories.
Longest Running Cartoon Set in Each State (based off of number of episodes)
#I actually wrote this months ago and forgot to post it#No clue how to tag it#misconceptions#I guess?#That one person going around editing random categories onto Wikipedia articles in November 2006 has several things to answer for#Kind of surprised that there was no cartoon I could find set in Puerto Rico but also not that surprised#...Oh wow the reblog viewer doesn't keep the readmore so the whole thing's down there#Sorry about that!
11K notes
·
View notes
Text
Northwest metis......the white sick had such a passion for furs. ..so the area doesn't appear all that solar western....they had differential ways to use the grid without westernism....they really dont like pesticides around the children....so
Missuse of the underground or my battery in a county jail in brunswick Georgia was to threaten a north western territory.....i only for beads needed to be invited to a moccasin event for missing indigenous women and children.....because if i get cancer they keep getting to detain animals.....
Well the addictive gross shitty males keep going around a pre school like little girls can't shoot coney so
That's me about moccasins there are responsible simple ways to use animals so they dont go missing....they had to find the donkeys a practice item for all sorts of slaveries so it's not good for the animals to go missing.....
Scarecrow
The black birds have been trained on plastic items because Aztec is such a gross dog shitty company that steals their palm foods......so i scared them away and tried to give them the seed pods from the yellow flower trees but they get more indignent that a mustard pack is their storm olive branch
Anyway sacred kyle with mental mckinney Texas wanted to know what i wanted to do with Hollywood....so Jennifer Lopez about hispanics that appropriated native philosophies is actually pretty good at scarecrow the white wedding military wife in the cell.....
The cell for the serial killer I find pretty awfully done.....but thinking of positivity or the very naive loves people no matter what peace idea of scarecrow the white wedding wife I find some pretty good tejanos drugs in it
I met this Californian in Alaska who told me she did sex work because she was sure marriage was the worst thing for women so I think no children of God scarecrow there used multiple times without pay by multiple partners is a lot more tragic then a loved wife.....j...lo....and Jay z....the white wedding wife does just have to go through military hospital stuff because her husband is her companion....im sorry but those families are loved admirable stories
Anyway I'm tired of being called poor because scarecrow for me won't be a happy wedding so Jennifer at least shows it off as a feminist professional title and a.i. community....
Phosphate company.....
Anils ghost my sister does whatever the family is and gets to be called first nations.....people prostituted there may be graves here and they mow it
Uhm the mother superior at saint Brigid's let's that creepy meth er lady assume privilege over the group though she is a gross rude sexually active person that does nothing relevant for public unions but claims er pay.....
She did this to me so that desperate to reach the happy beef from my wretched condition squeezed past that nasty lady in the doorway...she said hey because she kept putting her body directly in the doorway though caught for budging in line so
So now I have that vaginal wall to empathize with the unborn about
Anyway that lady should not be around homeless the street is not for sexually active people the street is for people who can cope with low resiliency situations...and people who show up for meal with their sex kept that unashamed are noticed that way....we all have to separate our underwear pads for research purposes and they go tell nuns their that consciously split ...
Anyway her baby dike friend later came up and threatened me for pushing past that creepy group that expects preferential
The group better be there for their frees....but they better be meth prioritized off group efforts
The baby dike was like if you ever do that to my friend ever again....so I was like you just threatened a homeless person attempted murder like suicidal duress of endangered detained people can be years in jail retard.....if you won't finally get away from me the company will come extract all you have here get away from me retard
Then I thought stupid bitch no one there cares that your a crotch states and you go places Catholics could select you out of being states and they leave you as a creepy lyndie england crotch Koch states....no one there cares at all about you
You have to be crotch and no one cares at all about you for threatening me or they would have come for you already you fucking nasty Koch street state
Barcelona I've already been told selection for catholicists doesn't favor my too passive copeing skills and I just don't want to develop my incisors that much so I don't appear to want to leave the states so they don't select me either....
I did tell her firmly segregative crime is decades in jail and complete retribution so don't ever come around me with a segregative ticket to batter ever again displacement to the mafia is wrong
My family was agrarian and I don't hunt animal when women Austrians bring me silage and herding ....it's not kind to my sex to expect it to hunt they were bohemian's
Anyway I explained to her when I pushed past her that she tried to open the door for males already glutonously served and women and children first if males constantly keep their pay that high....
At the time I just admitted if she expected the situation to be decriminalized for her outbursts then......it won't it will still be a little underground then if I have to be some detainee to be barked at with nothing smarter then shut the fuck up get the fuck away from me.....
Anyway As.....prey....gilcrest and Soamese....she was already selected as a good person to bring hygiene from britian back and catholicists will keep telling me to get a job so i can have things British philosophers and chicago medicals tell me too ...
You can tell by the hygiene table that she leaves all these clues about how methodically she was chosen....
Ozempic is larger then Starbucks and a lot combined and I won't get a job because I'm expected to be like what hurts me
The meal service girls are trained to not think because it hurts me and incriminates the men....
And people that robotic and unthoughtful are on a paraffin...
Black babies lives matter.....and I'm sorry but I won't take profit off spreading Parisian pharmaceuticals. ..
It's not that simple ..people can suggest me and stuff would come in illegally ...truth is everyone has had illegal stuff trafficked into their employment record and those people treat me like I have to serve everyone's sentencing till I don't care if I find out about secret cook talks and military quarantine inclusion
So im sorry but the United States government has to be held accountable to me ......and I will do things slowly. .....if they don't stop stalking me to leave the home they will be held accountable I have a disability and i really cant do things in that company....
Francis Francis chanel my people yes chanel ...dark leader.....I'm for the home....I'm going for.....I am for the home yes
....it's actually these regulators and system controllers that are the barriers for variable renewables..... modi not dikshit
0 notes
Text
Is There a Way to Stop My Dog from Stealing My Kids' Toys?
For any of you who have siblings, you will recall how much fun it was to steal your brother’s or sister’s toys and play “keep-away” with them. Sometimes we would just hide them, but the most fun was when we would use the stolen toy to tease our sibling into getting really mad and chasing us around the house. We knew it was wrong, but it was fun and highly amusing.
Eventually one of our parents would step in, grab the toy, give it back to our sibling, and then tell us to stop it or we would be sent to our room. We accepted our fate because, as I just said, we knew we were doing something wrong and would probably have to deal with the consequences.
Now, let’s switch gears and talk about our kids and the family dog. There are times when our child is playing with their toys on the floor in the family room. We may be watching TV or just “hanging out”.
Suddenly, and for no observable reason, our dog starts barking, grabs one of our child’s toys and runs off. Our child gets angry, and we become upset. Calling our dog does no good, so we get up and chase after him, yelling at him to drop the toy. Our dog seems to think it is a game and runs away even faster.
What is really happening? Why doesn’t he stop like we used to do when our parents intervened when we were kids? The answer is our dog is reacting to the situation as a dog and not a human.
Robin and I have a great dog training article that will explain the differences in how our dog views the situation and how we view it. We will also explain what you must do to keep your dog from stealing your child’s toys as they play with them. Please read our dog training blog titled “Is There a Way to Stop My Dog from Stealing My Kids' Toys”.
https://northgeorgiadogtraining.com/dog-stealing-childrens-toys-gainesville/
#dog training#home dog training#home dog training near me#dog training near me#dog trainer#dog trainer near me#home dog trainer#home dog trainer near me#board and train#board and train near me#obedience training#puppy classes#potty training#north georgia dog training#dog training of north georgia#home dog training of north georgia#bruce edwards
0 notes
Text
Two “established” or tax-supported churches were conspicuous in 1775: the Anglican church and the Congregational church. A considerable segment of the population did not worship in any church; and in those colonies that maintained an “established” religion, only a minority of the people belonged to it.
The Church of England, whose members were commonly called Anglicans, became the official faith in Georgia, North and South Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, and a part of New York. Established also in England, it served in America as a major prop of kingly authority; British officials naturally made vigorous attempts to impose it on additional colonies (ran into wall of opposition). In America the Anglican Church fell distressingly short of its promise; secure and self-satisfied, like its parent in England, it clung to a faith that was less fierce and more worldly than the religion of Puritanical New England (sermons were shorter; hell less scorching; and amusements, like hunting, were less scorned). So dismal was the reputation of the Anglican clergy in seventeenth-century Virginia that the College of William and Mary was founded in 1693 to train a better class of clerics for the church
The influential Congregational Church, which had grown out of the Puritan Church, was formally established in all the New England colonies, except independent-minded Rhode Island. At first Massachusetts taxed residents to support Congregationalism but later relented and exempted members of other denominations. Presbyterianism, though closely associated, was never made official. Ministers of the gospel, from the Bible to world, grappled burning political issues; as the start revolution against the British crown could be heard, sedition flowed free from pulpits; Presbyterianism, Congregationalism, and rebellion became a neo-trinity.
Many leading Anglican clergymen, aware of which side their tax-provided bread was buttered on, naturally supported their king. Anglicans in the New World were seriously handicapped by not having a resident bishop, whose presence would be convenient for the ordination of young ministers (had to travel to England to be ordained). On the eve of the Revolution there was serious talk of creating an American bishopric, but the scheme was violently opposed by many non-Anglicans, who feared a tightening of the royal reins
Religious toleration had indeed made enormous strides in America. Roman Catholics were still generally discriminated against, as in England, even in office-holding; but there were fewer Catholics in America, and hence the anti-papist laws were less severe. The anti-papist laws were also less strictly enforced; and in general, people could worship, or not worship, as they pleased
In all the colonial churches, religion was less fervid in the early eighteenth century than it had been a century earlier, in the beginning. The Puritan churches in particular sagged under the weight of two burdens: their elaborate theological doctrines and their compromising efforts to liberalize membership requirements. Churchgoers increasingly complained about the “dead dogs” who droned out tedious, overerudite sermons from Puritan pulpits. Some ministers, on the other hand, worried that many of their parishioners had gone soft and that their souls were no longer kindled by the hellfire of orthodox Calvinism; liberal ideas began to challenge the old-time religious beliefs of churchgoers. Some worshipers now proclaimed that human beings were not necessarily predestined to damnation and might save themselves by good works; even more threatening were the doctrines of the Arminians, follows of Dutch theologian Jacobus Arminius, who preached that individual free will determined a person’s eternal fate. Pressured by these “heresies,” a few churches grudgingly conceded that spiritual conversion was not necessary for church membership; together these twin trends toward clerical intellectualism and lay liberalism were sapping the spiritual vitality from denominations.
The stage was thus set for a rousing religious revival. Known as the Great Awakening, it exploded in the 1730s and 1740s and swept through the colonies like a fire through prairie grass. The Awakening was first ignited in Northampton, Massachusetts by an intellectual pastor, Jonathan Edwards; perhaps the deepest theological mind in America, Edwards proclaimed with burning righteousness the folly of believing in salvation through good works and affirmed need for complete dependence on God’s grace. Warming to his subject, he painted in lurid detail the landscape of hell and the eternal torments of the damned—“Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” was the title of one of his most famous sermons. Edwards’s preaching style was learned and closely reasoned, but his stark doctrines sparked a warmly sympathetic reaction among his parishioners in 1734; four years later English parson George Whitefield loosed a different style of preaching on America and touched off a conflagration of religious ardor that revolutionized spiritual life. A former alehouse attendant, Whitefield was an orator of rare gifts. His magnificent voice boomed sonorously over thousands of enthralled listeners in an open field (many were envious of him). Triumphantly touring the colonies, Whitefield trumpeted his message of human helplessness of divine omnipotence; during those roaring revival meetings, many sinners professed conversion. Whitefield soon inspired American imitators (style of preaching). Orthodox clergymen, known as “old lights,” were deeply skeptical of the emotionalism and the theatrical antics of the revivalists; “new light” ministers, defended the Awakening for its role in revitalizing religion. Congregationalists and Presbyterians split over this issue, and many of the believers in religious conversion went over to the Baptists and other sects more prepared to make room for emotion in religion
6. The Awakening left many lasting effects; its emphasis on direct, emotive spirituality seriously undermined the older clergy, whose authority had derived from their education and erudition
a. The schisms it set off in many denominations greatly increased the numbers and the competitiveness of American churches
b. It encouraged a fresh wave of missionary work among the Indians and even among black slaves, many of whom had to attend revivals
c. It led to the founding of “new light” centers of higher learning such as Princeton, Brown, Rutgers, and Dartmouth
d. Perhaps most significant, the Great Awakening was the first spontaneous mass movement of the American people; it tended to break down sectional boundaries as well as denominational lines and contributed to the growing sense that Americans had of themselves as a single people, united by a common history
I. Schools and Colleges
1. A time-honored English idea regarded education as a blessing reserved for the aristocratic few, not for the unwashed many; education should be for leadership, not citizenship, and primarily for males; only slowly and painfully did the colonists break the chains of these restrictions
2. Puritan New England, largely for religious reasons, was more zealously interested in education than any other section of the colonies
a. Dominated by the Congregational Church, it stressed the need for Bible reading by the individual worshiper; the primary goal of the clergy was to make good Christians rather than good citizens
b. Education, principally for boys, flourished almost from the outset in New England; this densely populated region boasted an impressive number of graduates from the English universities, especially Cambridge, the intellectual center of England’s Puritanism
c. New Englanders, relatively early, established primary and secondary schools, which varied widely in the quality of instruction and in the length of time that their doors remained open each year
d. Back-straining farm labor drained much of youths’ time and energy
3. Fairly adequate elementary schools were also hammering knowledge into the heads of reluctant “scholars” in the middle colonies and South
a. Some of these institutions were tax-supported; others were privately operated; the South, with its white and black population diffused over wide areas, was severely handicapped logically in attempting to establish an effective school system (wealth families had tutors)
b. The general atmosphere in the colonial schools and colleges continued grim and gloomy; most emphasis was placed on religion and on the classical languages, Latin and Greek
c. The focus was not on experiment and reason, but on doctrine and dogma; the age of one of orthodoxy, and independence of thinking was discouraged—discipline was quite severe (whipping occurred)
4. College education was regarded—at least at first in New England—as more important that instruction in the ABCs; churches would wither if a new crop of ministers was not trained to lead the spiritual flocks
5. Many well-to-do families, especially in the South, sent their boys abroad to English institutions in order to receive a college education
6. For purposes of convenience and economy, nine local colleges were established during the colonial era—Harvard, William and Mary, Yale, Princeton, Pennsylvania, Columbia, Brown, Rutgers, and Dartmouth
a. Student enrollments were small, numbering about 200 boys; at one time, a few lads as young as eleven were admitted to Harvard
b. Instruction was poor by present-day standards and the curriculum was still heavily loaded with theology and the “dead” languages
c. A significant contribution was made by Benjamin Franklin, who played a major role in launching what became the University of Pennsylvania, the first college free from denominational control
J. A Provincial Culture
1. When it came to art and culture, colonial Americans were still in thrall to European tastes, especially British; the simplicity of pioneering life had not yet bred many homespun patrons of the arts
a. Like so many of his talented artistic contemporaries, Trumbull was forced to travel to London to pursue his ambitions
b. Charles Willson Peale best known for his portraits of George Washington, ran a museum, stuffed birds, and practiced dentistry
c. Gifted Benjamin West and John Singleton Copley succeeded in their ambition to become famous painters, but like Trumbull they had to go to England to complete their training
d. Only abroad could they find subjects who had the leisure to sit for their portraits and the money to pay handsomely for them
e. Copley was regarded as a Loyalist during the Revolutionary War, and West, a close friend of George II and official court painter, was buried in London’s St. Paul’s Cathedral following his death
2. Architecture was largely imported from the Old World and modified to meet the peculiar climatic and religious conditions of the New World
a. Even the lowly log cabin was apparently borrowed from Sweden
b. The red-bricked Georgian style, so common in the pre-Revolutionary decades, was introduced about 1720 and is best exemplified by the beauty of now-restored Williamsburg, Virginia
3. Colonial literature, like art, was generally undistinguished, and for much the same reasons; one noteworthy exception was the poet Phillis Wheatley, a slave girl in Boston at eight and never formally educated
a. Taken to England when she was twenty, she published a verse book and subsequently wrote polished poems that revealed the influence of Alexander Pope; her verse were one of the best of the period
b. The remarkable fact is that she could overcome her severely disadvantaged background and write poetry at all
4. Versatile Benjamin Franklin, often called “the first civilized American,” also shone as a literary light among other things
a. Although his autobiography is a classic, he was best known to his contemporaries for Poor Richard’s Almanack (edited 1732 to 1758)
b. This publication, containing many pithy sayings culled from the thinkers of the ages, emphasized such virtues as thrift, industry, morality, and common sense—Honesty is the best policy, plough deep while sluggards sleep, and fish and visitors stink in three days
c. Poor Richard’s was well known in Europe and was more widely read in America than anything except the Bible (teacher of old and young, Franklin had influence in shaping the American character)
5. Science, rising above the shackles of superstition, was making some progress, though lagging behind the Old World’s progress
a. A few botanists, mathematicians, and astronomers had won some repute, but Benjamin Franklin was perhaps the only first-rank scientists produced in the American colonies
b. Franklin’s spectacular but dangerous experiments, including the famous kite-flying episode proving that lightning was a form of electricity, won him numerous honors in Europe
c. But his mind also had a practical turn, and among his numerous inventions were bifocal spectacles and the highly efficient stove
d. His lightning rod, not surprisingly was condemned by some stodgy clergymen who felt it was “presuming on God” by attempting to control the “artillery of the heavens” (the lightning)
K. Pioneer Presses
1. Americans were generally too poor to buy quantities of books and too busy to read them; however a few private libraries of fair size could be found, especially among the clergy and rich families in the colonies
a. The Byrd family of Virginia enjoyed perhaps the largest collection in the colonies, consisting of about four thousand volumes
b. Bustling Benjamin Franklin established in Philadelphia the first privately supported circulating library in America; and by 1776 there were about fifty public libraries and collections available
2. Hand-operated printing presses cranked out pamphlets, leaflets, and journals; on the eve of the Revolution, there were about forty colonial newspapers, chiefly weeklies that consisted of a single large sheet
a. Columns ran heavily to somber essays, frequently signed with pseudonyms and the “news” often lagged many weekends behind the event especially in the case of oversea happenings
b. Newspapers proved to be a powerful agency for airing colonial grievances an rallying oppositions to the British crown’s control
3. A celebrated legal case, in 1734-1735, involved John Peter Zenger, a newspaper printer; significantly, the case arose in New York, reflecting the tumultuous give-and-take of politics in the middle colonies
a. Zenger’s newspaper had assailed the corrupt royal governor; charged with seditious libel, the accused was hauled to court where he was defended by a former indentured servant, Andrew Hamilton
b. Zenger argued that he had printed the truth but the royal chief justice instructed the jury not to consider the truth or falsity; the fact of printing, irrespective of the truth, was enough to convict
c. Hamilton countered that “the very liberty of both exposing and opposing arbitrary power” was at stake; swayed by his eloquence, the jurors defied the judges and returned a verdict of not guilty
4. The Zenger decision was a banner achievement for freedom of the press and for the health of democracy; it pointed the way to the kind of open public discussion required by the diverse society that colonial New York already was and that all America was to become
5. Although contrary to existing law and not immediately accepted by other judges and juries, in time it helped establish the doctrine that true statements about public officials could not be prosecuted as libel
6. Newspapers were thus eventually free to print responsible criticism of powerful officials though full freedom of press was unknown for a time
L. The Great Game of Politics
1. American colonists were making noteworthy contributions to politics
a. The thirteen colonial governments took a variety of forms; by 1775, eight colonies had royal governors, who were appointed by the king
b. Three—Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Delaware—were under proprietors who themselves chose the governors; two, Connecticut and Rhode Island, elected their governors under self-governing rule
2. Practically every colony utilized a two-house legislative body
a. The upper house, or council, was normally appointed by the crown in the royal colonies and by the proprietor in the proprietary colonies; it was chosen by the voters in the self-governing colonies
b. The lowerhouse, as the popular branch, was elected by the people—or rather by those who owned enough property to qualify as voters
c. In several of the colonies, the backcountry elements were seriously underrepresented, and they hated the ruling colonial group
d. Legislatures, in which the people enjoyed direct representation, voted such taxes as they chose for the necessary expenses of colonial government—self-taxation through representation was a precious privilege that Americans had come to cherish above others
3. Governors appointed by the king were generally able men, sometimes outstanding figures; some, unfortunately, were incompetent or corrupt—broken-down politicians badly in need of jobs
a. The worst of the group was probably impoverished Lord Cornbury, first cousin of Queen Anne, who was made governor of New York and New Jersey in 1702—he was a drunkard, a spendthrift, a grafter, an embezzler, a religious bigot, and a vain fool
b. Even the best appointees had trouble with the colonial legislatures, basically because the royal governor embodied a bothersome transatlantic authority some three thousand miles away
4. The colonial assemblies found various ways to assert their authority and independence; some of them employed the trick of withholding the governor’s salary unless he yielded to their wishes (he was normally in need of money so the power of the purse usually forced him to terms)
5. The London government, in leaving the colonial governor to the tender mercies of the legislature, was guilty of poor administration
a. In the interests of simple efficiency, the British authorities should have arranged to pay him from independent sources; as events turned out, control over the purse by the colonial legislatures led to prolonged bickering, which proved to be one of the irritants that generated a spirit of revolt (Parliament’s Townshend taxes of 1767)
b. Administration at the local level was varied; county government remained the rule of the plantation South; townmeeting government predominated in New England; and a modification of the two developed in the middle colonies—in the town meetings, with its open discussion and opening voting, direct democracy functioned
6. Yet the ballot was by no means a birthright; religious or property qualifications for voting, even stiffer qualifications for office holding, existed in all the colonies at the time in the late 18th century
a. The privileged upper classes, fearful of democratic excesses, were unwilling to grant the ballot to every person in the colony
b. Perhaps half of the adults whites males were thus disfranchised but because of the ease of acquiring land and thus satisfying property requirements, the right to vote was not beyond the reach of most
c. Yet somewhat surprisingly, eligible voters did not exercise this precious privilege and frequently acquiesced in the leadership of their betters who ran colonial affairs (able to vote people out office)
7. By 1775 America was not yet a true democracy—socially, economically, or politically; but it was far more democratic than England and the European continent; colonial institutions were giving freer rein to the democratic ideals of tolerance, educational advantages, equality of economic opportunity, freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of assembly, and representative government
M. Colonial Folkways
1. Everyday life in the colonies was drab and tedious; for most people the labor was heavy and constant—from “can see” to “can’t see”
2. Food was plentiful, though the diet could be coarse and monotonous; Americans probably ate more bountifully, especially of meat, than any people in the Old World—Lazy/sickly was the person that was hungry
3. Basic comforts now taken for granted were lacking; churches were not heated at all; drafty homes were poorly heated, chiefly by fireplaces
a. There was no running water in the houses, no plumbing, and probably not a single bathtub in all colonial America
b. Candles and whale-oil lamps provided faint and flickering illumination; garbage disposal was so primitive that hogs ranged the streets and buzzards, protected by law, flapped over waste
4. Amusement was eagerly pursued where time and custom permitted
a. The militia assembled periodically for “musters”, which consisted of several days of drilling, liberally interspersed with merry-making
b. On the frontier, pleasure was often combined with work at house-raising, quilting bees, husking bees, and apple parings
c. Funerals and weddings everywhere afforded opportunities for social gathering, which customarily involved the swilling of much liquor
5. Winter sports were common in the North, whereas in the South card playing, horse racing, cockfighting, dancing and fox hunting
6. Over diversions beckoned; lotteries were universally approved, even by the clergy, and were used to raise money for churches and colleges
7. Stage plays became popular in the South but were frowned upon in Quaker and Puritan colonies and in some places forbidden by law; many of the New England clergy saw playacting as time-consuming and immoral—they preferred religious lectures (spiritual satisfaction)
8. Holidays were everywhere celebrated in the American colonies, but Christmas was frowned upon in New England as an offensive reminder
9. Thanksgiving Day came to be American festival for it combined thanks to God with an opportunity for jollification, gorging, and guzzling
10. By the mid-eighteenth century, Britain’s several North American colonies, despite their differences, revealed some striking similarities
a. All were basically English in language and customs, and Protestant in religion, while the widespread presence of other peoples and faiths compelled every colony to cede at least some degree of ethnic and religious toleration (as compared to contemporary Europe)
b. They all afforded to enterprising individuals unusual opportunities for social mobility; they all possessed some measure of self-government, though by no means complete democracy
c. Communication and transportation among the colonies were improving; British North America by 1775 looked like a patchwork quilt—each part slightly different, but stitched together by common origins, common ways of life, and common beliefs in toleration, economic development and above all, were somewhat self-ruled
d. Fatefully, all the colonies were also separated from the seat of imperial authority by a vast ocean some three thousand miles wide; these simple facts of shared history, culture, and geography set the stage for the colonists’ struggle to unite as an independent people
0 notes
Text
Holidays 5.11
Holidays
Aso ote Tala Lei (Gospel Day; Tuvalu)
Azores Day
Blow Bubbles For Your Cat Day
Bob Marley Day (Jamaica)
Christmas Banned Day (Puritans; 1659)
Day of the Military Police of the National Armed Forces (Indonesia)
Empty the Tanks Day
Feynman Day (On “Eureka”)
511 Day
Fritillary Day (French Republic)
Hawthorn Day
Human Rights Day (Vietnam)
International Strange Music Festival
International Technology Day
Joan of Arc Day (Orleans, France)
Lokadagur (Iceland)
The Long and Winding Road Day
Mata Tirtha Aunsi (Mother’s Day; Nepal)
Military Police Day (Indonesia)
Miskolc Day (Hungary)
Mixed Race Irish Day
Moose Hide Campaign Day (Canada)
National Deer Association Giving Day
National Foam Rolling Day
National Forest Planting Day (Russia)
National Girls Learning Code Day
National Hairy Nosed Wombat Day (Australia)
National Wear Red Pants Day
National Technology Day (India)
National Tree Planting Day (Malaysia)
Old May Eve
Parthenope Asteroid Day
Richard Feynman Day
Sex Difference in Health Awareness Day
Somerset Day (UK)
Tubeless Tire Day
Twilight Zone Day
Victoria Sponge Day
Witching Day (Isle of Man)
World Ego Awareness Day
World Keffiyeh Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
Chocolate Ball Day (Sweden)
Eat What You Want Day [also 12.16]
Eat Without Guilt Day
Hostess Cupcake Day
National Mocha Torte Day
Independence & Related Days
Imvrassia (Declared; 2011) [unrecognized]
Minnesota Statehood Day (#32; 1858)
Siam (Changed its name to Thailand; 1949)
2nd Saturday in May
American Indian Day [2nd Saturday]
Birth Mother's Day [2nd Saturday]
Black Fae Day [2nd Saturday]
Brunch for Lunch Day [Saturday before Mother's Day]
Cook With Your Kids Day [2nd Saturday]
Cornelia de Lange Syndrome Awareness Day [2nd Saturday]
Duckling Day (Boston) [2nd Saturday]
Global Big Day [2nd Saturday]
International Lugger Falcon Awareness Day [2nd Saturday]
International Migratory Bird Day [2nd Saturday]
Jamestown Day (Virginia) [2nd Saturday]
Letter Carriers "Stamp Out Hunger" Food Drive Day [2nd Saturday]
Martin Z. Mollusk Day (Ocean City, NJ) [Saturday of 1st Full Week]
Mother Ocean Day [Saturday before 2nd Sunday]
National Animal Disaster Preparedness Day [2nd Saturday]
National Archery Day [2nd Saturday]
National Babysitters Day [Saturday before Mother's Day]
National Bake Sale Day [2nd Saturday]
National Balloon Day (UK) [2nd Saturday]
National Cycling Day (Netherlands) [2nd Saturday]
National Dog Mom’s Day [Saturday before Mother's Day]
National Mild Day (UK) [2nd Saturday]
National Miniature Golf Day [2nd Saturday]
National Train Day [2nd Saturday]
National Windmill Day (Netherlands) [2nd Saturday]
Native American Day (f.k.a. American Indian Day) [2nd Saturday]
Prairie Appreciation Day [2nd Saturday]
Stay Up All Night Day [2nd Saturday]
Sun Awareness Day [2nd Saturday]
World Belly Dance Day [2nd Saturday]
World Binturong Day [2nd Saturday]
World Bonsai Day [2nd Saturday]
World Buckfast Day [2nd Saturday]
World Collage Day [2nd Saturday]
World Fair Trade Day [2nd Saturday]
World Migratory Bird Day (UN) [2nd Saturday]
Yale Day of Service [2nd Saturday]
Weekly Holidays beginning May 11 (1st Full Week)
Armed Forces Week (thru 5.18) [2nd Saturday to 3rd Sunday]
Brain Injury Awareness Week (thru 5.17)
National Mills Weekend (UK; thru 5.12) [2nd Saturday & Sunday]
World Migratory Bird Weekend (thru 5.12) [2nd Saturday & Sunday]
Festivals Beginning May 11, 2024
Bacon Festival (McDonale, Tennessee)
Beer, Bourbon & BBQ Festival DC Metro (Washington D.C.)
Brews, Boils & Bubbles (New Orleans, Louisiana)
Buzz B-Q (North Little Rock, Arkansas)
Cochon de Lait Festival (Mansura, Louisiana)
Dillsburg PickleFest (Dillsburg, Pennsylvania)
Fairy Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Royal Humans Foundation Day (Shamanism)
Hiawassee Highlands Wine Festival (Hiawassee, Georgia)
Hickory Hops Brewer's Festival (Hickory, North Carolina)
La Ceiba Carnival (La Ceiba, Honduras) [thru 5.25]
Lotus Lantern Festival (Seoul, South Korea) [thru 5.15]
Maryland Craft Beer Festival (Frederick, Maryland)
MT Brewers Spring Rendezvous (Bozeman, Montana)
Mud Bug Boil Off (Thibodaux, Louisiana)
'Of Ale & History Beer Festival (Middletown, Virginia)
Oz Comic-Con (Perth, Australia) [thru 5.12]
Paradise Chocolate Fest (Paradise, California)
Paso Robles Olive Festival & Lavender Festival (Paso Robles, California)
Rip Van Winkle Wine, Brew & Beverage Festival (Catskill, New York)
Stilwell Strawberry Festival (Stilwell, Oklahoma)
St. Louis Microfest (St. Louis, Missouri)
Saint Pontius Fair (Barcelona, Spain)
Taste of Pennsylvania (York, Pennsylvania)
Verde Valley Wine Festival (Cottonwood, Arizona)
Washington State Chili Cookoff (Ocean Shores, Washington) [thru 5.12]
Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show (New York, New York)
West Virginia Strawberry Festival (Buckhannon, West Virginia) [thru 5.12]
Feast Days
Alfred Stevens (Artology)
Ansfrid (Christian; Saint)
Anthimus of Rome (Christian; Saint)
Asaph (Christian; Saint)
Chester Gould (Artology)
Comgall (Christian; Saint)
The English Carthusian Martyrs (Christian; Martyrs)
Francis di Girolamo (Christian; Saint)
Gangulphus of Burgundy (a.k.a. Gengulf; Christian; Saint)
Gladys Rockmore Davis (Artology)
Greet the Sun Day (Starza Pagan Book of Days)
Ice Saints (Europe)
Ignatius of Laconi (Christian; Saint)
Jean-Léon Gérôme (Artology)
King of the Elements (Celtic Book of Days)
Majolus of Cluny (a.k.a. Maieul; Christian; Saint)
Mamertus, the first of the Ice Saints (Christian; Saint) [Three Chilly Saints #1]
Ma Zu (Goddess of the Sea’s Birthday; Buddhism, Taoism)
Nimnim (Muppetism)
Nisga'a Day (Nisga'a Nation/British Columbia)
Paul Nash (Artology)
Paulus Aemilius (Positivist; Saint)
Radunitsa (Ancestors’ Veneration Day; Belarus, Russian Christians, Thomas Sunday Slavs)
Salvador Dali Day (Artology; Church of the SubGenius; Pastafarian; Saint)
Syn’s Blot (Pagan)
Walter of L’Esterp (Christian; Saint)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Lemuria (Day 2 of 3; Ancient Rome) [Unlucky to Marry.]
Prime Number Day: 131 [32 of 72]
Sensho (先勝 Japan) [Good luck in the morning, bad luck in the afternoon.]
Premieres
Ahab the Arab, by Ray Stevens (Novelty Song; 1962)
Cats (UK Musical Play; 1981)
Cooked, by Michael Pollan (Book; 2013)
Dark Shadows (Film; 2012)
Fantastic Planet (Animated Film; 1973)
Firestarter (Film; 1984)
Fox-Terror (WB MM Cartoon; 1957)
Go Down, Moses, by William Faulkner (Short Stories; 1942)
Good-Bye Mr. Moth (Andy Panda Cartoon; 1942)
Higher Ground, recorded by Stevie Wonder (Song; 1973)
The Incredible Journey, by Sheila Burnford (Novel; 1960)
The King's Generally Daphne du Maurier (Novel; 1946)
The Kissing Booth (Film; 2018)
A Knight’s Tale (Film; 2001)
M (Film; 1931)
MacArthur Park, by Richard Harris (Song; 1968)
The Natural (Film; 1984)
Penny Dreadful (TV Series; 2014)
Poor Little Me (Happy Harmonies Cartoon; 1935)
Road Trip (Film; 2000)
Second Variety, by Philip K. Dick (Novella; 1953)
Sniffles Takes a Trip (WB MM Cartoon; 1940)
Swab the Duck (Noveltoons Cartoon; 1956)
Tales of Brave Ulysses, recorded by Cream (Song; 1967)
Turn Coat, by Jim Butcher (Novel; 2009)
28 Weeks Later (Film; 2007)
Water Babies (Disney Silly Symphonies Cartoon; 1935)
Wolf! Wolf! (Mighty Mouse Cartoon; 1944)
Woodstock (Soundtrack Album; 1970)
Woolen Under Where (WB MM Cartoon; 1963)
Today’s Name Days
Gangolf, Joachim, Mamertus (Austria)
Kiril, Kirila, Metodi (Bulgaria)
Franjo, Mamerto (Croatia)
Svatava (Czech Republic)
Mamertus (Denmark)
Leevo, Liivar, Liivo (Estonia)
Osmo (Finland)
Estelle, Mayeul (France)
Joachim, Mamertus (Germany)
Argyris, Armodios, Dioskouridis, Methodios, Olympia (Greece)
Ferenc (Hungary)
Achille, Fabio, Fiorenzo, Marziale, Stella (Italy)
Karmena, Manfreds, Milda (Latvia)
Mamertas, Miglė, Pilypas, Skirgaudas (Lithuania)
Magda, Malvin (Norway)
Adalbert, Benedykt, Filip, Franciszek, Iga, Ignacja, Ignacy, Lew, Lutogniew, Mamert, Mira, Żegota (Poland)
Chiril, Metodie, Mochie (România)
Blažena (Slovakia)
Fabio, Francisco (Spain)
Märit, Märta (Sweden)
Asa, Ervin, Erwin, Irvin, Irving, Irwing, Marlo, Marlon, Marlow, Marvin, Merle, Merlin, Mervin (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 131 of 2024; 235 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 5 of week 19 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Saille (Willow) [Day 27 of 28]
Chinese: Month 4 (Ji-Si), Day 3 (Jia-Xu)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025) [Wu-Chen]
Hebrew: 2 Iyar 5784
Islamic: 2 Dhu al-Qada 1445
J Cal: 11 Magenta; Foursday [11 of 30]
Julian: 27 April 2024
Moon: 15%: Waxing Crescent
Positivist: 19 Caesar (5th Month) [Paulus Aemilius]
Runic Half Month: Ing (Expansive Energy) [Day 1 of 15]
Season: Spring (Day 53 of 92)
Week: 1st Full Week of May
Zodiac: Taurus (Day 21 of 31)
1 note
·
View note
Note
Weird law fact anon here to give you some laughs!!!
In Alabama, it is illegal to wear a mustache in church that makes people laugh.
In Alaska, you can not wake a sleeping bear to take a photo.
In Arizona, it's illegal to let a donkey sleep in a bathtub.
In Arkansas, you cannot honk your car horn near a sandwich shop after 9pm.
In California, if a frog dies during a frog jumping contest, it is illegal to eat that.
Also in California, it is illegal to eat an orange in the bathtub.
In Colorado, you are not allowed to keep a couch on your porch.
In Connecticut, a pickle cannot legally be called a pickle unless it bounces.
In Delaware, it's illegal to sell dog hair.
In Florida, if you tie an elephant to a parking meter, you still have to pay the same parking meter dues as you would with a car.
In Georgia, you cannot keep an ice cream cone in your back pocket on Sundays.
In Hawaii, it's illegal to stick a coin in your ear.
In Idaho, it's illegal to give someone a box of chocolates that weighs more than 50 pounds.
In Illinois, it's illegal to fall asleep in a cheese shop.
In Indiana, it's illegal to catch a fish with your bare hands... or with a firearm.
In Iowa, it's illegal for one armed piano players to charge money for their performances.
In Kansas, there's a poorly phrased law that states, "If two trains meet on the same track, neither shall proceed until the other has passed".
In Kentucky, it's illegal to sell dyed baby chicks, unless you sell them in groups of 6.
In Louisiana, it's illegal to send a pizza to anyone else's house without their knowledge.
In Maine, you can't keep up Christmas decorations after January 14th.
In Maryland, though outdated, it's still technically illegal to wear sleeveless shirts in public.
In Massachusetts, you can't own an explosive golf ball.
In Michigan, women are technically not allowed to cut their own hair without their husband's permission.
In Minnesota, contests where the point is to catch a greased or oiled pig are illegal.
In Mississippi, it's illegal to disrupt a church service and parishioners are allowed, maybe encouraged, to perform a citizens arrest on them.
In Missouri, it's illegal to drive with an uncaged bear.
In Montana, putting an animal on railroad tracks with the intent of harming the train or the tracks is punishable by a $50,000 fine or 5 years in prison.
In Nebraska, it's illegal for people with STDs to get married.
In Nevada, it's unlawful to drive a camel down the highway.
In New Hampshire, you can't collect or carry away seaweed at night.
In New Jersey, it's illegal for men to knit during the fishing season.
In New Mexico, the state ordered over 400 words removed from "Romeo and Juliet" for being a little too unsavory.
In New York, it's illegal to take any pictures with big cats.
In North Dakota, it's illegal to lie down and fall asleep with your shoes on.
In Ohio, you can't get a fish drunk.
In Oklahoma, you can't make glue out of dead skunks.
In Oregon, it's illegal to go hunting in a cemetery.
In Pennsylvania, it's illegal to catch a fish with your mouth.
In Rhode Island, it's illegal to race horses on a highway, but if you do it's only a $20 fine.
In South Carolina, a man over 16 can't seduce a woman by lying and saying he'll marry her. Women can do it to men, though.
In South Dakota, casinos are not allowed to have a sign that says "casino".
In Tennessee, you can't share your Netflix password.
In Texas, it's unlawful to sell a human eye.
In Utah, it's illegal to ride a bike without at least one hand on the handlebars.
In Vermont, women need permission from their husbands to wear fake teeth.
In Virginia, having sex outside of marriage is still illegal.
In Washington State, should you be the person to confirm the existence of the species, it is illegal to harass or kill Bigfoot or Sasquatch.
In West Virginia, it's illegal to whistle under water.
In Wisconsin, butter substitutes cannot be served in a restaurant unless people specifically ask for it.
In Wisconsin, it's illegal to take a picture of a rabbit from January to April without a permit.
Lmao bruh what are these laws? Catch me in the streets selling human eyes yall. I got browns, blues, and even the rare gray and greens!
1 note
·
View note
Text
The Carolina Dog: America’s Forgotten Breed
Indigenous to the United States, the Carolina Dog is a rare, primitive canine strain and fairly new to domesticity. They’re medium in size, nimble, and independent; they’re also known for being veritably clean tykes.
The Carolina Dog is also occasionally called the Yellow Dog, the American Dingo, the Dixie Dingo, and the Yaller. They were feral and lived in the Southeastern United States hundreds of times, and they’re still set up in the wild in some corridors of Georgia and South Carolina.
Carolina Dogs are presumably not going to be exorbitantly tender but will form close bonds with their humans. Show them strong leadership and let them know you’re in charge when training. They may act reticent and cautious of nonnatives, but they don’t tend to bear aggressively.
Doggies of this strain are pack tykes through and through, and they’d thrive in multi-dog and person homes, forming loving bonds with other tykes and humans likewise. They have a high prey drive, so you must watch them nearly around other small creatures.
They love big families and big homes with yards where they can run around. Carolina Dogs are incredibly pious to their humans and sweet and sportful with kiddies.
DogTime recommends this canine bed to give a good night’s sleep to your medium-sized Carolina Dog. You should also pick up this canine-cost toy to help burn off your doggy’s high energy!
Origin: United States
Height: 17.75-19.5 inches
Weight: 30-55 pounds
size: 3-6 puppies
LifeSpan: 13 to15 years
Color: Tan, brown, black, red, cream, or a color combination
Breed Characteristics Of Carolina
Carolina Dogs are generally shy and suspicious in nature, but once a canine accepts a mortal into its pack, those actions vanish toward that mortal. A sighthound of medium figure, they have the general appearance of a jackal or wolf.
Carolina tykes are descended from the doggies that accompanied the Paleo- Indians who traveled from Asia to North America over the Bering land ground.
moment, they can still be set up living wild near the Georgia- South Carolina border, but have also been seen as far north as Ohio and Pennsylvania and as far west as Arizona; pastoral areas are the common denominator.
The typical Carolina canine has refocused cognizance, a fox- suchlike conk, and a tail that curves like a fishhook when it’s raised. They look analogous to Australian Dingoes but, taxonomically, they fall under Canis familiaris.
History
A nod to the strain’s pack intelligence, the Carolina Dog descended from a group of primitive tykes that migrated with the first primitive humans across the Bering land ground from Asia into North America
The tykes ’ remains were set up near other bones from the Southwest Indians, and from there, they moved into Central and South America, as well as the eastern United States.
Studies of free-ranging tykes from the Southeast have revealed these primitive tykes ’ continued actuality. Their appearance, not to mention geste, further indicates a close strain with, or decent from, these primitive tykes
Named the Carolina Dog, and also generally called the American Dingo, the strain was honored by the United Kennel Club in 1995.
Appearance
When a Carolina dog dashes by, you might think you’ve just spotted an Australian dingo. In fact, the resemblance between the two is so strong that Carolina dogs are often called the “Carolina dingo” or “American dingo.”
A Carolina canine is medium-sized with a thin- yet- important frame. His short fur can be unheroic, red, blond, white, black, or black and tan. Some Carolina tykes have white markings along their belly, casket, and throat. Dark sable or mask tails are also possible.
His cognizance, a defining specific of the strain, stands altitudinous and nearly looks a little too big for his long, triangular head. His almond-shaped eyes allude to his intelligence and are most frequently brown, however, there are unheroic and indeed blue-eyed Carolina tykes.
At his other end, his long tail is shaped like a” fish hook,” and reflective of his feelings — wagging with his family and held low around nonnatives, according to the Carolina Dog Club of America( CDCA).
Temperament
As a primitive strain that hasn’t been subject to picky parentage, Carolina canine grains tend to be shy and suspicious. Early socialization and obedience training are vital for a Carolina canine puppy dog to grow into a well-acclimated grown-up.
” They’re great once you earn their trust, but they can be a little more suspicious in nature and a little shy in the morning,” says Laura Pletz, DVM and Scientific Services director at Royal Canin.
Because of his pack intelligence, he’s steadfastly pious to his humans. He might not be exorbitantly snuggly during movie night, but his favorite conditioning — hiking, running, and exploring are each more when you are by his side.
A Carolina canine has putatively endless energy and needs diurnal exercise, says Haylee Bergland, CPDT- KA, CBCC- KA, RBT, editor of pet health and geste at Daily Paws.
Indeed if you wake up beforehand to take your canine on a jam or hike, he will want to head back out again in the autumn. He needs an active proprietor who can keep up with his energetic station.
more details:https://animalatoz.com/carolina/
0 notes
Text
Holidays 5.11
Holidays
Aso ote Tala Lei (Gospel Day; Tuvalu)
Azores Day
Blow Bubbles For Your Cat Day
Bob Marley Day (Jamaica)
Christmas Banned Day (Puritans; 1659)
Day of the Military Police of the National Armed Forces (Indonesia)
Empty the Tanks Day
Feynman Day (On “Eureka”)
511 Day
Fritillary Day (French Republic)
Hawthorn Day
Human Rights Day (Vietnam)
International Strange Music Festival
International Technology Day
Joan of Arc Day (Orleans, France)
Lokadagur (Iceland)
The Long and Winding Road Day
Mata Tirtha Aunsi (Mother’s Day; Nepal)
Military Police Day (Indonesia)
Miskolc Day (Hungary)
Mixed Race Irish Day
Moose Hide Campaign Day (Canada)
National Deer Association Giving Day
National Foam Rolling Day
National Forest Planting Day (Russia)
National Girls Learning Code Day
National Hairy Nosed Wombat Day (Australia)
National Wear Red Pants Day
National Technology Day (India)
National Tree Planting Day (Malaysia)
Old May Eve
Parthenope Asteroid Day
Richard Feynman Day
Sex Difference in Health Awareness Day
Somerset Day (UK)
Tubeless Tire Day
Twilight Zone Day
Victoria Sponge Day
Witching Day (Isle of Man)
World Ego Awareness Day
World Keffiyeh Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
Chocolate Ball Day (Sweden)
Eat What You Want Day [also 12.16]
Eat Without Guilt Day
Hostess Cupcake Day
National Mocha Torte Day
Independence & Related Days
Imvrassia (Declared; 2011) [unrecognized]
Minnesota Statehood Day (#32; 1858)
Siam (Changed its name to Thailand; 1949)
2nd Saturday in May
American Indian Day [2nd Saturday]
Birth Mother's Day [2nd Saturday]
Black Fae Day [2nd Saturday]
Brunch for Lunch Day [Saturday before Mother's Day]
Cook With Your Kids Day [2nd Saturday]
Cornelia de Lange Syndrome Awareness Day [2nd Saturday]
Duckling Day (Boston) [2nd Saturday]
Global Big Day [2nd Saturday]
International Lugger Falcon Awareness Day [2nd Saturday]
International Migratory Bird Day [2nd Saturday]
Jamestown Day (Virginia) [2nd Saturday]
Letter Carriers "Stamp Out Hunger" Food Drive Day [2nd Saturday]
Martin Z. Mollusk Day (Ocean City, NJ) [Saturday of 1st Full Week]
Mother Ocean Day [Saturday before 2nd Sunday]
National Animal Disaster Preparedness Day [2nd Saturday]
National Archery Day [2nd Saturday]
National Babysitters Day [Saturday before Mother's Day]
National Bake Sale Day [2nd Saturday]
National Balloon Day (UK) [2nd Saturday]
National Cycling Day (Netherlands) [2nd Saturday]
National Dog Mom’s Day [Saturday before Mother's Day]
National Mild Day (UK) [2nd Saturday]
National Miniature Golf Day [2nd Saturday]
National Train Day [2nd Saturday]
National Windmill Day (Netherlands) [2nd Saturday]
Native American Day (f.k.a. American Indian Day) [2nd Saturday]
Prairie Appreciation Day [2nd Saturday]
Stay Up All Night Day [2nd Saturday]
Sun Awareness Day [2nd Saturday]
World Belly Dance Day [2nd Saturday]
World Binturong Day [2nd Saturday]
World Bonsai Day [2nd Saturday]
World Buckfast Day [2nd Saturday]
World Collage Day [2nd Saturday]
World Fair Trade Day [2nd Saturday]
World Migratory Bird Day (UN) [2nd Saturday]
Yale Day of Service [2nd Saturday]
Weekly Holidays beginning May 11 (1st Full Week)
Armed Forces Week (thru 5.18) [2nd Saturday to 3rd Sunday]
Brain Injury Awareness Week (thru 5.17)
National Mills Weekend (UK; thru 5.12) [2nd Saturday & Sunday]
World Migratory Bird Weekend (thru 5.12) [2nd Saturday & Sunday]
Festivals Beginning May 11, 2024
Bacon Festival (McDonale, Tennessee)
Beer, Bourbon & BBQ Festival DC Metro (Washington D.C.)
Brews, Boils & Bubbles (New Orleans, Louisiana)
Buzz B-Q (North Little Rock, Arkansas)
Cochon de Lait Festival (Mansura, Louisiana)
Dillsburg PickleFest (Dillsburg, Pennsylvania)
Fairy Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Royal Humans Foundation Day (Shamanism)
Hiawassee Highlands Wine Festival (Hiawassee, Georgia)
Hickory Hops Brewer's Festival (Hickory, North Carolina)
La Ceiba Carnival (La Ceiba, Honduras) [thru 5.25]
Lotus Lantern Festival (Seoul, South Korea) [thru 5.15]
Maryland Craft Beer Festival (Frederick, Maryland)
MT Brewers Spring Rendezvous (Bozeman, Montana)
Mud Bug Boil Off (Thibodaux, Louisiana)
'Of Ale & History Beer Festival (Middletown, Virginia)
Oz Comic-Con (Perth, Australia) [thru 5.12]
Paradise Chocolate Fest (Paradise, California)
Paso Robles Olive Festival & Lavender Festival (Paso Robles, California)
Rip Van Winkle Wine, Brew & Beverage Festival (Catskill, New York)
Stilwell Strawberry Festival (Stilwell, Oklahoma)
St. Louis Microfest (St. Louis, Missouri)
Saint Pontius Fair (Barcelona, Spain)
Taste of Pennsylvania (York, Pennsylvania)
Verde Valley Wine Festival (Cottonwood, Arizona)
Washington State Chili Cookoff (Ocean Shores, Washington) [thru 5.12]
Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show (New York, New York)
West Virginia Strawberry Festival (Buckhannon, West Virginia) [thru 5.12]
Feast Days
Alfred Stevens (Artology)
Ansfrid (Christian; Saint)
Anthimus of Rome (Christian; Saint)
Asaph (Christian; Saint)
Chester Gould (Artology)
Comgall (Christian; Saint)
The English Carthusian Martyrs (Christian; Martyrs)
Francis di Girolamo (Christian; Saint)
Gangulphus of Burgundy (a.k.a. Gengulf; Christian; Saint)
Gladys Rockmore Davis (Artology)
Greet the Sun Day (Starza Pagan Book of Days)
Ice Saints (Europe)
Ignatius of Laconi (Christian; Saint)
Jean-Léon Gérôme (Artology)
King of the Elements (Celtic Book of Days)
Majolus of Cluny (a.k.a. Maieul; Christian; Saint)
Mamertus, the first of the Ice Saints (Christian; Saint) [Three Chilly Saints #1]
Ma Zu (Goddess of the Sea’s Birthday; Buddhism, Taoism)
Nimnim (Muppetism)
Nisga'a Day (Nisga'a Nation/British Columbia)
Paul Nash (Artology)
Paulus Aemilius (Positivist; Saint)
Radunitsa (Ancestors’ Veneration Day; Belarus, Russian Christians, Thomas Sunday Slavs)
Salvador Dali Day (Artology; Church of the SubGenius; Pastafarian; Saint)
Syn’s Blot (Pagan)
Walter of L’Esterp (Christian; Saint)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Lemuria (Day 2 of 3; Ancient Rome) [Unlucky to Marry.]
Prime Number Day: 131 [32 of 72]
Sensho (先勝 Japan) [Good luck in the morning, bad luck in the afternoon.]
Premieres
Ahab the Arab, by Ray Stevens (Novelty Song; 1962)
Cats (UK Musical Play; 1981)
Cooked, by Michael Pollan (Book; 2013)
Dark Shadows (Film; 2012)
Fantastic Planet (Animated Film; 1973)
Firestarter (Film; 1984)
Fox-Terror (WB MM Cartoon; 1957)
Go Down, Moses, by William Faulkner (Short Stories; 1942)
Good-Bye Mr. Moth (Andy Panda Cartoon; 1942)
Higher Ground, recorded by Stevie Wonder (Song; 1973)
The Incredible Journey, by Sheila Burnford (Novel; 1960)
The King's Generally Daphne du Maurier (Novel; 1946)
The Kissing Booth (Film; 2018)
A Knight’s Tale (Film; 2001)
M (Film; 1931)
MacArthur Park, by Richard Harris (Song; 1968)
The Natural (Film; 1984)
Penny Dreadful (TV Series; 2014)
Poor Little Me (Happy Harmonies Cartoon; 1935)
Road Trip (Film; 2000)
Second Variety, by Philip K. Dick (Novella; 1953)
Sniffles Takes a Trip (WB MM Cartoon; 1940)
Swab the Duck (Noveltoons Cartoon; 1956)
Tales of Brave Ulysses, recorded by Cream (Song; 1967)
Turn Coat, by Jim Butcher (Novel; 2009)
28 Weeks Later (Film; 2007)
Water Babies (Disney Silly Symphonies Cartoon; 1935)
Wolf! Wolf! (Mighty Mouse Cartoon; 1944)
Woodstock (Soundtrack Album; 1970)
Woolen Under Where (WB MM Cartoon; 1963)
Today’s Name Days
Gangolf, Joachim, Mamertus (Austria)
Kiril, Kirila, Metodi (Bulgaria)
Franjo, Mamerto (Croatia)
Svatava (Czech Republic)
Mamertus (Denmark)
Leevo, Liivar, Liivo (Estonia)
Osmo (Finland)
Estelle, Mayeul (France)
Joachim, Mamertus (Germany)
Argyris, Armodios, Dioskouridis, Methodios, Olympia (Greece)
Ferenc (Hungary)
Achille, Fabio, Fiorenzo, Marziale, Stella (Italy)
Karmena, Manfreds, Milda (Latvia)
Mamertas, Miglė, Pilypas, Skirgaudas (Lithuania)
Magda, Malvin (Norway)
Adalbert, Benedykt, Filip, Franciszek, Iga, Ignacja, Ignacy, Lew, Lutogniew, Mamert, Mira, Żegota (Poland)
Chiril, Metodie, Mochie (România)
Blažena (Slovakia)
Fabio, Francisco (Spain)
Märit, Märta (Sweden)
Asa, Ervin, Erwin, Irvin, Irving, Irwing, Marlo, Marlon, Marlow, Marvin, Merle, Merlin, Mervin (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 131 of 2024; 235 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 5 of week 19 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Saille (Willow) [Day 27 of 28]
Chinese: Month 4 (Ji-Si), Day 3 (Jia-Xu)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025) [Wu-Chen]
Hebrew: 2 Iyar 5784
Islamic: 2 Dhu al-Qada 1445
J Cal: 11 Magenta; Foursday [11 of 30]
Julian: 27 April 2024
Moon: 15%: Waxing Crescent
Positivist: 19 Caesar (5th Month) [Paulus Aemilius]
Runic Half Month: Ing (Expansive Energy) [Day 1 of 15]
Season: Spring (Day 53 of 92)
Week: 1st Full Week of May
Zodiac: Taurus (Day 21 of 31)
0 notes