#lawrenceburg
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Four Roses Distillery
Lawrenceburg, Kentucky ✨
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https://ckymobileblasting.com/contact-us/
#Paint Stripping#Rust Removal#PowderCoatingRemoval#ChromeRemoval#EpoxyRemoval#MarineGrowthRemoval#CurbPaintRemoval#LineStripeRemoval#FleetVehicleStripping#HeavyEquipmentStripping#GraffitiRemoval#PoolTileCleaning#WoodRestoration#GraniteCleaning#StoneCleaning#BrickCleaning#CentralKentuckyMobileBlasting#Kentucky#Lawrenceburg
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What up ppl, I’m on spring break from the ol U of NA, so here’s another pizza review, except I keep forgetting to post, so this one is 2 pizza reviews in one. Wow. So crazy, I know. Ok so the first one will be in red, and the second one will be in orange.
Ok so first is Hunt Brothers Pizza from a gas station. I actually got the last 2 pieces for my sister and I and the guy behind me was very upset that I got the last ones, so that’s pretty cool I reckon. Also I didn’t get a pic of it, so here’s a pic I found from google.
The second one was ur typical ol little caesar’s pepperoni that my dad got for us after we all replaced a guy’s window. My dad’s a contractor and I am NOT, but he gave me 40 bucks for picking up some glass lol! Also I did take a pic of this one, but it was like 4 hours later bc I took an extensive nap. Ok anyways here we go.
•Place? Some gas station in Lawrenceburg , TN. And the Little Caesar’s in Lawrenceburg TN.
•Pizza? Pepperoni and pepperoni.
•Fav Part? I was craving gas station pizza so bad bc I hadn’t had some in forever, so it was all around great. And the little caesar’s was the fact that I was very hungry beforehand
•How much did I spend? Tbh I don’t remember the first one bc I didn’t ask for a receipt, but my bank statement says 9 dollars and I also got a propel water too so prob like 2 pieces for 3 dollars and some change. On the 2nd one I didn’t pay, but my dad paid like 6 dollars and some taxes.
•Rating? Easy 10/10 on the first one. Banger pizza. The second one was prob a 6/10. It was meh.
#pizza#pizza crust#pizzalover#pizzahead#pizzatime#foodpics#food#foodie#foodlover#food review#pizza review#tennessee#Lawrenceburg
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Fred Minnick's Blind Bourbon Live - Lawrenceburg, USA | 17 Feb, 2024.
Find out more / Get Tickets.
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Harrodsburg Kentucky Motel
Stay at the Clarion Pointe Harrodsburg-Danville for easy access to the Four Roses Distillery in Lawrenceburg. This motel in Harrodsburg, Kentucky offers spacious and comfortable accommodations.
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Local Sports from Thursday, January 12th, 2023 -Essayborn
Local Sports from Thursday, January 12th, 2023 -Essayborn
Eagle Country 99.3 is Your Hometown Radio Station ,
View On WordPress
#99.3#Aurora#Country#dearborn county#eagle country#Greendale#harrison#Hebron#Indiana#Kentucky#lawrenceburg#local news#music#northern kentucky#Ohio#Ohio County#radio#Ripley County#rising sun#southeast indiana#southeastern indiana#southwest ohio#southwestern Ohio#tri-state
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Red Ryegrass - January 2013 The campground at David Crockett State Park is near the border of the park and just across the park boundary is a huge field of red ryegrass. I found that field to be photographically intriguing. The local cows evidently found it delicious. The first image is primarily of the field of red grass. The second is a closeup of the cows who apparently found me interesting. MWM
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Finding the Nearest Mattress Store to You in Lawrenceburg & Midway KY
Are you in search of the perfect mattress without breaking the bank? Look no further than Fd Mattress Lexington, your premier destination for affordable and high-quality mattresses near Lawrenceburg and Midway, KY.
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Lawrenceburg, Tennessee
built in 1907
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Black hole sons - egos of men daren’t be eclipsed
My sister invited us to visit her new place in Kentucky on Saturday. Her Lawrenceburg address was an hour and a half drive to “nowhere close.” Even Frankfort was 45 minutes away. As it was their one year anniversary at the new house, it was going to be a big shindig. We felt we had to go.
TD, my sister’s husband (although they never use the term and I don’t think they ever officially married) is a Marine(ret) and a black man so…
We would get to visit with some black people! Yay! lol I spent 21 years in a diverse Air Force with many of those years in North Carolina, Georgia, Mississippi, and Europe so, after our last 22 years in white bread Indiana, I was looking forward to a gathering with some color.
We had a good time but this morning we discussed a thing we both noticed.
We arrived on time so we were early. It’s a military thing. My sister met us at the car as we unloaded lawn chairs, a cooler with beer (I would drink) and a bag with a bottle of bourbon, a gift for TD. I apologized as I handed it to my sister because we didn’t find anything we specifically wanted to gift her. Then I said, “Maybe you like bourbon too?”
“I do like bourbon but TD doesn’t like me drinking it.” She said.
What?
“Yeah, he says I get too mouthy when I drink bourbon.” She chuckled
We walked in silence for a few seconds.
“I do love bourbon though.” She sighed.
This morning, I recalled this to D and she asked, “Did you notice how the black women and the white women married to black men were cheerfully subservient to the men.” She went on, “I was really shocked when Jerry said to his wife, “Hey can I get some ice over here?”
His wife, Anita, responded of course honey and brought it right over.
That was some Mad Men level patriarchy right there.
Before we were given leave to eat, TD turned the prayer into his personal story of deliverance by God, the result being the property he now owned. It was his dream, granted to him because he always put God first. He acknowledged the prior owners who were on hand, recounting how it was his note, left under the humidor entreating the, then unknown, owner to always keep the Marine Corps flag flying that sealed the deal. I felt this conclusion somewhat undermined when he admitted the seller asked the two prior contract offers to perform within 48hours and only when they couldn’t, was his offer accepted. Inshallah. After the conclusion of the prayer, I walked over to the prior owners.
What a wonderful place I enthused, “How could you bear to leave it? I asked.
They smiled and I saw genuine sadness as they said they’d always dreamed to have such a place but couldn’t keep it up. They said they’d bought a smaller place nearby but, what I was seeing here now had always been their dream too.
Perhaps they hadn’t always put God first in their lives or maybe it was just his plan to let them toil for years before letting someone else buy the fruit of their labor.
Minutes later, God’s chosen was back on his soapbox. He introduced his son. His oldest son. He said he’d always hoped one of his sons, but especially this one, would follow him into the Marine Corps. He couldn’t be prouder. Oh and his other son, a football coach, would be here later. Yikes
Then he demanded to know where the cake was. He directed this query to my sister. She said it was in the house. Well get it he smiled. She turned and went.
I watched her walk away from the crowd. No one looked her way. I shouted, “Do you need any help?”
FUCK! I never heard a cross word or impolite remark during the event. It was the type of fellowship I remembered from church dinners during my youth. Everyone emoting delight at the company around them. Sunny smiles all around + alcohol.
Earlier as we were driving down, I’d called my sister to say we would be early if that was okay so we could have a bit of time to visit before the crowds arrived. I joked there’d probably be a hundred people. She said that was accurate with all the people TD had invited. “His problem is he’s too likeable!” I joked.
“You don’t have to live with him.” She responded.
These men love their wives like cherished possessions. They ply them with caring condescension giving all credit to godly provenance and their own wisdom for doing so.
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Thursday.
So the thing that was supposed to happen last week on Thursday, or most likely on Friday, has still not happened. How is it that all communication just stops? My entire career has been about spinning plates on poles, and knowing just when to hit the ones that are falling.
All I want to do is take things off of his plate, and put them onto mine. He currently has too much on his plate. Also, I don’t have any spinning plates, just a couple of empty poles.
Sadly, as only a contractor, I’m not authorized to start, until he has officially given us the Notice To Proceed. So until that happens, I’m just shit out of luck.
Imagine what’s going to happen when the projects in Columbus, Aurora, Joliet, Henderson, San Antonio, Kansas City, Lawrenceburg, Black Hawk, and any other locations are all firing on all cylinders. The company is going to be in the middle of a shit storm.
I truly miss being in the middle of a shit storm. It’s where I do my best work. Unfortunately, as much as I’m part of this family, I’m not anywhere near the brewing shit storm.
Maybe it’s time to look for some other problems to fix, as clearly I’m not being asked to get involved with these.
#I used to define and solve problems between Mon and Fri#this company can’t figure out how to wipe its own ass#for months at a time#can’t see the forest through the trees#I guess it was a good run for a few years
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Here Are 17 Uncommon Curiosities Reportedly Found In The Ohio River
The Queen City, as Henry Wadsworth Longfellow famously wrote, sits “in her garlands dressed, on the banks of the Beautiful River.” Once claimed by the French and named by them exactly that: La Belle Riviere, the Ohio has been the soul and foundation of our city ever since the first houses went up, but our Beautiful River has also proved to be a weird and moody companion, coughing up a bizarre miscellany from time to time.
Alligators In 1879, Dr. A. Jackson Howe procured a live, three-foot long alligator for display at the museum of the Cincinnati Society of Natural History. The reptile had been captured on the Covington shore, while several others were spotted frolicking in the Ohio River among some empty coal barges. Three years later, John Thornton found an alligator sleeping beneath the floorboards of his Newport icehouse. Charles Pitts of Covington lassoed a three-and-a-half-foot alligator from the Ohio River at the foot of Covington’s Main Street in 1870.
Bodies, Lots Of Bodies Almost from the time Cincinnati was first settled bodies have been recovered from the Ohio River including suicides, victims of foul play and accidental drownings. Among the earliest casualties was Francis Kennedy, who operated the first ferry between Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky and who drowned while hauling beef cattle to Fort Washington. Over the years, the old newspapers printed hundreds of inquest reports, often directed toward ascertaining the identities of bodies found overnight.
Catfish Of Unusual Size The Cincinnati Commercial Tribune of 3 February 1849 reports that Frederick Diserens, proprietor of the William Tell restaurant, and Colonel Josiah J. Stratton of the Fire Department, had shipped a “mammoth cat fish” to the Exchange Hotel in Philadelphia. The leviathan, caught in the Ohio River at Cincinnati, measured five feet, ten inches in length and tipped the scales at 158 pounds. Prior to its shipment east, the beast hung outside Diserens’ establishment on the south side of what is now Government Square. In 2009, two fishermen landed a blue catfish measuring four feet, six inches long and weighing 96 pounds within view of downtown Cincinnati.
Chemical “Slug” The Ohio River, lined with heavily fertilized farmland and a multitude of manufacturing plants, is regularly listed as among the most polluted streams in America. Residents of a certain age will recall the great carbon tetrachloride “slug” of 1977. When a tank full of toxic “carbon tet” ruptured at the FMC Corporation facility in February of that year, it released 5000 to 6000 pounds into the Ohio River as a 50- to 60-mile “slug” of highly polluted liquid. Water purification systems up and down the river shut off intake valves until the “slug” passed.
Elephant Bathing All of Cincinnati – and Covington, too – turned out on the morning of 9 August 1860 to watch an elephant swim across the Ohio River. The elephant was Lalla Rookh, star of the Dan Rice Circus. Lalla Rookh had been, for the past decade, a highlight of Dan Rice's big-top extravaganzas. Billed as the “Pachyderm Princess,” she was famous for her tightrope act and she also danced, rang bells and fired a pistol. She was a huge draw and, according to the Cincinnati Enquirer, brought out a good crowd for her river bath, estimated between 15,000 and 20,000
Ghosts No one ever solved the 1890 murder of Billy Fee, who was knifed and shot on the banks of the Ohio River near Lawrenceburg. Almost a year later a young man traveling by boat up the river past the murder scene cried out that he could see shadows on the darkened waters vividly recreating the murder scene. For years, residents of Lawrenceburg venturing near the river at night reported visions of the dreadful crime, accompanied by the sounds of shrieks and gunshots.
Giant Snakes On 11 August 1849, a Clermont County “man of respectability” named John Wait swore to an affidavit in which he claimed to have seen a snake more than 30 feet in length on the banks of Hartman’s mill pond. A posse was assembled and searched all over for the beast with no results, even after draining the mill pond. Sightings, however, continued for the next decade. In 1858, the Cincinnati Commercial Tribune reported that the dam at Hartman’s mill had been badly damaged by a flood and the snake was assumed to have escaped toward the Ohio River. According to a 1940 article in the Cincinnati Post, the Cincinnati Zoo offered to help citizens near Gallipolis locate a snake estimated at 35 feet in length. Coincidence?
Green Clawed Beast It was a sultry afternoon on 14 August 1955 when Naomi Johnson and some friends headed to the Ohio River at Evansville for a refreshing dip. While swimming just 15 feet offshore, something swam up behind Mrs. Johnson and grabbed her leg. She felt claws scratch her leg as the thing pulled her under the water. She began kicking her assailant and was pulled under a second time before her friends lifted her out of the river. Her left leg was extensively lacerated and bruised, with one mark distinctly hand-shaped. Mrs. Johnson claimed to have seen a UFO just before she was attacked, and there were several UFO sightings in the Evansville area around the time of the incident, leading her to believe an extraterrestrial origin for her attacker.
Kentucky Border For most of our region’s history, the entire Ohio River belonged exclusively to Kentucky. That all changed on 21 January 1980, when the United States Supreme Court fixed the border between Ohio and Kentucky at the low-water mark of the river in 1792. With two centuries of dam construction and other navigational improvements, the Ohio River is significantly deeper and wider than it was in the 1790s. The border is now, in some cases, hundreds of feet off the Ohio shore.
Madonna’s Yacht Rusting away in an Ohio River tributary just 25 miles downriver from Cincinnati is a 186-foot yacht originally known as the Celt but probably most famous as the USS Sachem among a variety of names acquired over its 120-year history. Thomas Edison used it for anti-submarine research. It ran out of New York as a recreational fishing vessel and served as a coastal patrol ship during World War II. After the war it hauled tourists around Manhattan. Robert Miller of Finneytown bought the yacht for $7500 in the 1980s and rented it out to Madonna, who filmed part of her “Papa Don’t Preach” video onboard. Miller hauled it upriver to its current resting place shortly after sailing a boatload of friends around the rededication of the Statue of Liberty in 1986.
Man Afloat On 11 March 1879, a crowd of fifteen thousand swarmed the riverfront to catch a glimpse of the “Fearless Frogman,” Captain Paul Boynton, as he arrived in Cincinnati while floating from Pittsburgh to Cairo in a buoyant rubber suit. Outfitted with sails and oars, Boynton’s “peculiar life-saving dress” allowed him to maintain speeds of five or six miles per hour on his downriver odyssey. That night, he attended a performance at the Grand Opera House on Vine Street and, being recognized, was called to the stage and compelled to give a speech.
Mud Mermaids The Cincinnati Enquirer of 6 September 1894 reported two “nondescript creatures, horrible in appearance and strange in habits” at a sand bar in the Ohio River near Vevay, Indiana. The creatures appeared to be carnivorous, dining on fish and mussels plucked from the river. They were described as being yellowish in color, about five feet long, with webbed and clawed hands and feet. Their hairless heads had sharply pointed ears standing straight up. In the years since, the Vevay beings have been dubbed “Mud Mermaids.”
Octoman Police dispatchers along both sides of the Ohio River were swamped with frantic calls from late January to early February 1959 as dozens of residents and travelers reported strange creatures emerging from the depths. Sightings were recorded from New Richmond to the Licking River bridge. One witness compared the critter to an octopus while others said it looked like an immense human, leading to the nickname Octoman. Panic spread, with one 11-year-old boy calling the Cincinnati Post to confirm his teacher’s story that green men were clambering out of the river in platoons of twelve. To add to the mystery, all the streetlights along Kellogg Avenue from Lunken Airport to Coney Island extinguished as the first reports came in. After a week, sightings abated and Octoman seemingly disappeared.
Petroglyphs Just as the Ohio River slips across the state line from Pennsylvania, at the junction with Little Beaver Creek at East Liverpool, it covers a vast array of submerged designs carved into the rock. First recognized by French explorers in 1755, the display has been largely immersed in a much deeper river, only occasionally emerging into visibility in times of extreme drought. Hundreds of these Native American carvings were found for about 10 miles along the Ohio River from Midland, Pennsylvania through Wellsville, Ohio. The origin or date of the petroglyphs remains unknown and will likely never be determined.
Sea Lion In May 1962 several people reported a strange beast frolicking in the Ohio River near the Fernbank locks. The animal was not large; maybe three feet in length, but it was unlike anything naturally associated with the wildlife of the area. An expedition organized by the Cincinnati Zoo discovered that the mysterious visitor was a sea lion named “Playful George” that had escaped from a menagerie in Huntington, West Virginia and made its way nearly 200 miles downriver to the Markland Dam. George was captured and quarantined at the Zoo before returning home.
Sea Serpents In the dim, pre-dawn light of Friday, 11 January 1878, Ben Karrick was driving his horse-drawn delivery wagon over the Roebling Suspension Bridge when he saw a most unusual sight in the Ohio River below – a sea serpent. He told the Cincinnati Gazette that the creature’s serpentine head protruded from the water some twelve or fifteen feet and it lashed the water into foam with its tail. Karrick told the newspaper that the beast made a noise similar to the deep lowing of a cow, interspersed with a loud hissing noise. A day previously, John Davidson, master of the Silver Moon steamboat, saw a nearly identical monster while docked at Vevay, Indiana. In July 1893, pleasure boaters near Blennerhassett Island saw “a monstrous submarine animal or serpent, with an immense head and staring, bulbous eyes” gliding alongside their boat. The witnesses estimated the critter at more than 10 feet in length.
Underwater Pedestrian Newspapers around the nation carried the news in July 1878 that Captain John T. Guire, identified as “the celebrated submarine diver,” had entered into a wager that he would walk from Cincinnati to Cairo on the bottom of the Ohio River. Guire’s previous exploits in the Mississippi River at Saint Louis were cited as proof of his skill and determination. Although it was noted that Guire engaged in practice strolls near Cincinnati, it does not appear that the 500-mile underwater hike to Cairo ever materialized.
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Holidays 9.27
Holidays
Ancestor Appreciation Day (a.k.a. Honor Your Ancestors Day)
Answering Machine Day
Arbor Day (US Virgin Islands)
Banana Slug Day
Battle of Boquerón Day (Paraguay)
Bloodstone Day
Book Matches Day
Castor 927 Day
Crush A Can Day
Dave Matthews Band Day
Day of Preschool Employees (Russia)
Doris Day Day (Cincinnati, Ohio)
European Myeloma Day
1stLinePit Pitch Day
French Community Day (Belgium)
Fun and Fancy Free Day
GNU Day
Google Commemoration Day
International SEO Day
Julien Alfred Day (Saint Lucia)
Lendemain du Magal de Touba (Sénégal)
Manit Day (Culture Day; Marshall Islands)
Memorial Day (Azerbaijan)
Morning Show Hosts Day
National AJ Day
National Boccia Day (UK)
National Butt Plug Day
National Day of Forgiveness
National Doodle Day
National First Responder Appreciation Day
National Gay Men's HIV/AIDS Awareness Day
National Mustache Day
National 911 Telecommunications Suicide Awareness Day
National No Excuses Day
National Prescription Take-Back Day
National Scarf Day
National Youth Day (Turks and Caicos Islands)
NICU Giving Day
Oski the Bear Day (Berkeley)
Polish Underground State’s Day (Poland)
Post and Telecommunications Service Day (Indonesia)
Shut Up and Let Somebody Else Talk Day
Venom Day
World Freight Train Day
World Pet Day
World Tourism Day (UN)
Food & Drink Celebrations
National Chocolate Milk Day
National Corned Beef Hash Day
National Cats Curry Day (UK)
Saloon Day
Tabasco Sauce Day
Independence & Related Days
Consumación de la Independencia (End of Independence War; Mexico)
Elleore (Declared; 1944) [unrecognized]
Glebiania (Declared; 2012) [unrecognized]
Mexico (Date Consummated, 1821)
Turkmenistan (from USSR, 1991)
Zekia (Declared; 2012) [unrecognized]
4th & Last Friday in September
Ask a Stupid Question Day [Last Weekday]
Butterbrot Day (Germany) [Last Friday]
Comfort Food Friday [Every Friday]
Field Trip Friday [Last Friday of Each Month]
Finally Friday [Last Friday of Each Month]
Five For Friday [Every Friday]
Flapjack Friday [4th Friday of Each Month]
Flashback Friday [Every Friday]
Flatbread Friday [Last Friday of Each Month]
Flirtatious Friday [4th Friday of Each Month]
Friday Finds [Every Friday]
Fry Day (Pastafarian; Fritism) [Every Friday]
FSC Friday [Last Friday]
Go Gold Day [Last Friday]
Hug A Vegetarian Day [Last Friday]
Love Note Day [4th Friday]
Make Way Day [Last Friday]
Michigan Indian Day (Michigan) [4th Friday]
National BRAVE Day [4th Friday]
National Good Hair Day (Australia) [4th Friday]
National Hug Your Boss Day [4th Friday; also 9.13]
Native American Day (California) [4th Friday]
Save the Koala Day [Last Friday]
Sport Purple For Platelets Day [Last Friday]
TGIF (Thank God It's Friday) [Every Friday]
Vegan Baking Day [Last Friday]
World's Biggest Coffee Morning (UK) [Last Friday]
Weekly Holidays beginning September 27 (4th Full Week of September)
National Drive Electric Week [f.k.a. National Plug-In Week] (thru 20.6)
Festivals Beginning September 27, 2024
Anderson County Burgoo Festival (Lawrenceburg, Kentucky) [thru 9.29]
Apple Festival (Gays Mills, Wisconsin) [thru 9.29]
Beach n' Chili Fest: ICS World's Championsihp Chili Cookoff (Myrtle Beach, South Carolina) [thru 9.29]
Cannstatter Volksfest (Stuttgart, Germany) [thru 10.13]
Chester County BBQ Festival (Henderson, Tennessee) [thru 9.28]
Chicago Gourmet Hamburger Hop (Chicago, Illinois)
Chilhowie Community Apple Festival (Chilhowie, Virginia) [thru 9.29]
Coca-Cola Days (Atlantic, Iowa) [thru 9.28]
Downtown Chandler Oktoberfest (Chandler, Arizona) [thru 9.28]
Downtown Ithaca Apple Harvest Festival (Ithaca, New York) [thru 9.29]
Galway International Oyster & Seafood Festival (Galway, Ireland) [thru 9.29]
Georgia State Fair (Metro Atlanta, Hampton, Georgia) [thru 10.6]
Harvest Festival & Parade (Arroyo Grande, California) [thru 9.28]
Harvest Festival & Street Fair (Emmett, Idaho) [thru 9.28]
Honeybee Festival (Paris, Illinois) [thru 9.29]
International Sandsculpting Championship (Virginia Beach, Virginia) [thru 10.6]
Irmo Okra Strut Festival (Irmo, South Carolina) [thru 9.28]
Joy of Jazz (Johannesburg, South Africa) [thru 9.28]
Las Vegas Greek Food Festival (Las Vegas, Nevada) [thru 9.29]
Marino Grape Festival (Marino, Italy) [thru 10.7]
Marion County Country Ham Days (Lebanon, Kentucky) [thru 9.29]
Mississippi Pecan Festival (New Augusta, Mississippi) [thru 9.29]
Monterey Jazz Festival begins (California) [Last Friday thru Sunday]
Morgan County Sorghum Festival (West Liberty, Kentucky) [thru 9.29]
New Mexico Prickly Pear Festival (Albuquerque, New Mexico) [thru 9.28]
New York Film Festival (New York, New York) [thru 10.14]
Oktoberfest (Waterloo, Iowa) [thru 9.29]
Oktoberfest (Yachats, Oregon) [thru 9.29]
Oktoberfest Chicago (Chicago, Illinois) [thru 9.29]
Oktoberfest in Canada (Kitchener-Waterloo, Canada) [thru 10.19]
Pumpkinfest (South Lyon, Michigan) [thru 9.29]
River Falls Bacon Bash (River Falls, Wisconsin) [thru 9.29]
Saint Charles Oktoberfest (Saint Charles, Missouri) [thru 9.29]
Sisters Folk Festival (Sisters, Oregon) [thru 9.29]
State Fair of Virginia (Doswell, Virginia) [thru 10.6]
Texas Rice Festival BBQ Cook-Off (Winnie, Texas) [thru 9.28]
Virginia Beach Neptune Festival, Boardwalk Weekend (Virginia Beach, Virginia) [thru 9.29]
Warrens Cranberry Festival (Warrens, Wisconsin) [thru 9.29]
WineFest (North East, Pennsylvania) [thru 9.29]
Feast Days
Adheritus (Christian; Saint)
Aequinoctium Autumnale I (Pagan)
Bernard Waber (Artology)
Birth and Rebirth Day (Starza Pagan Book of Days)
Caius of Milan (Christian; Saint)
Cosmas and Damian (Christian; Martyrs)
Elzear, Count of Arian, and Delphina, his wife (Christian; Saints)
Feast of Eileithyia (Minoan Midwife Goddess)
Feast of Mashiyyat (Baha’i)
Fergus Mac Roith (Celtic Book of Days)
Festival of Namakungwe (The Originator; Zambia)
Festival of Varuni (Goddess of Wine; India)
George Cruikshank (Artology)
Horacio Sandoval (Artology)
Hieronymus Bosch Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Insult a Narcissist Day (Pastafarian)
Irvine Walsh (Writerism)
Jack Goldstein (Artology)
Jim Shooter (Artology)
Jim Thompson (Writerism)
Meskel (Discovery of the True Cross; Eritrea, Ethiopia)
Mookie (Muppetism)
Moon Hare Festival (Everyday Wicca)
Romano Scarpa (Artology)
Sesage (Positivist; Saint)
Sophie Crumb (Artology)
T.C. Cannon (Artology)
Thanksgiving Day for Disappearance of Kelp-Koli Again (Shamanism)
Thomas Nast (Artology)
Vincent de Paul (Christian; Saint)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Tomobiki (友引 Japan) [Good luck all day, except at noon.]
Premieres
Abominable (Animated Film; 2019)
The Affair, 16th Jack Reacher book, by Lee Child (Novel; 2011)
Bananaphone, by Raffi (Children’s Album; 1994)
A Bird in a Bonnet (WB MM Cartoon; 1958)
Bongo (Disney Cartoon; 1947)
Boogie Woogie Man (Song Symphony Cartoon; 1943)
Born to Run, by Bruce Springsteen (Autobiography; 2016)
Caballero Droopy (Droopy MGM Cartoon; 1952)
Chilly’s Hide-A-Way (Chilly Willy Cartoon; 1971)
The Cleveland Show (Animated TV Series; 2009)
Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2 (Animated Film; 2013)
Cracker (UK TV Series; 1993)
Dolly! (TV Series; 1976)
Don Kirshner’s Rock Concert (Music TV Series; 1973)
Don’t Stand So Close to Me, by the Police (Song; 1980)
Elementary (TV Series; 2012)
The Fever Code, by James Dashner (Novel; 2016) [Maze Runner #5]
Fun and Fancy Free (Animated Disney Film; 1947)
The Garden of The Prophet, by Kahlil Gibran (Poetry; 1931)
The Goal Rush (Noveltoons Cartoon; 1946)
Goodbye to Berlin, by Christopher Isherwood (Novel; 1939)
The Harlem Globetrotters Meet Snow White (Hanna-Barbera Animated TV Movie)
The Invisible Mouse (Tom & Jerry Cartoon; 1947)
The Journey of Natty Gann (Film; 1985)
The Karate Guard (Tom & Jerry WB Cartoon; 2005)
King of the Mardi Gras (Fleischer Popeye Cartoon; 1935)
The Last King of Scotland (Film; 2006)
Little House on the Prairie by Laura Ingalls Wilder (Novel; 1935)
Memphis Blues, by W.C. Handy (Song; 1912) [1st Blues Song]
Mickey and the Beanstalk (Disney Cartoon; 1947)
Monster, by R.E.M. (Album; 1994)
Mumbo Jumbo (Ant and the Aardvark Cartoon; 1970)
New Jersey, by Bon Jovi (Album; 1988)
Nightmare, recorded by Artie Shaw (Song; 1938)
The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex (Film; 1939)
Ran (Film; 1985)
Ringo's Rotogravure, by Ringo Starr (Album; 1976)
Rush (Film; 2013)
Sand and Foam, by Kahlil Gibran (Poetry; 1926)
Secret Diary of a Call Girl (TV Series; 2007)
Silent Spring (Nature Book; 1962)
Sweet Home Alabama (Film; 2002)
Tepee for Two (Woody Woodpecker Cartoon; 1963)
Thanks for the Memory, by Bob Hope (Song; 1938)
The Tonight Show (TV Talk Show; 1954)
2 Days in the Valley (Film; 1996)
Under the Table and Framing, by The Dave Matthews Band (Album; 1994)
The Village Barber (Ub Iwerks Flip the Frog MGM Cartoon; 1930)
We Didn’t Start the Fore, by Billy Joel (Song; 1989)
Wet Blanket Policy (Woody Woodpecker Cartoon; 1948)
Today’s Name Days
Dietrich, Hiltrud, Vinzenz (Austria)
Berislav, Gaj, Vincent, Vinko, Vinko (Croatia)
Jonáš (Czech Republic)
Cosmus (Denmark)
Elo, Loone, Õrne (Estonia)
Vesa (Finland)
Vincent (France)
Dietrich, Hiltrud, Vinzenz (Germany)
Akylini, Epicharis, Kallistratos, Zenon, Zinon (Greece)
Adalbert (Hungary)
Cosma, Damiano, Vincenzo (Italy)
Ādolfs, Ilgonis, Ronalds (Latvia)
Adalbertas, Damijonas, Daugilė, Kęsgailė, Kovaldas (Lithuania)
Dagmar, Dagrun (Norway)
Amadeusz, Amedeusz, Damian, Kosma, Przedbor, Urban (Poland)
Antim (Romania)
Cyprián (Slovakia)
Vicente (Spain)
Dagmar, Rigmor (Sweden)
Cosima, Cosimo, Cosmo, Damian, Damiana, Damien, Damion, Damon (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 271 of 2024; 95 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 5 of Week 39 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Muin (Vine) [Day 27 of 28]
Chinese: Month 8 (Guy-You), Day 25 (Jia-Wu)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025) [Wu-Chen]
Hebrew: 24 Elul 5784
Islamic: 23 Rabi I 1446
J Cal: 1 Orange; Oneday [1 of 30]
Julian: 14 September 2024
Moon: 22%: Waning Crescent
Positivist: 19 Shakespeare (10th Month) [Miss Edgeworth]
Runic Half Month: Gyfu (Gift) [Day 6 of 15]
Season: Autumn or Fall (Day 6 of 90)
Week: 4th Full Week of September
Zodiac: Libra (Day 5 of 30)
Calendar Changes
Orange (Month 10 of 12; J Calendar)
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Fred Minnick's Blind Bourbon Live - Lawrenceburg, USA | 17 Feb, 2024.
Find out more / Get Tickets here.
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State march masterpost (updated as information comes in!)
All times are local time unless otherwise specified. Reblogs are off because this is a living, regularly updated post; please see our website or send an ask for more information! Post you can reblog is here. Alabama: Florence—114 W Mobile St -> 200 S Court St, 3/31, 3:30pm (link) Montgomery—Alabama State House, 3/31, 1pm (link)
Alaska: Anchorage—Dimond Center -> Costco Wholesale, 3/31, 12pm
Arizona: Prescott—Prescott Courthouse, 3/31, 2pm Sierra Vista—Fry and Coronado -> City Hall, 3/31, 3pm (link) Tuscon—Tuscon City Hall, 3/31, 4pm (link)
Arkansas: Eureka Springs—Basin Spring Park, 3/31, 6pm (link) Little Rock—Lucie’s Place, 3/31, 6pm Marion—Brunetti Park -> Marion City Hall, 3/31, 5pm
California: Castro Valley—Castro Valley High School (non-students please join in once the protest has left school grounds) -> Corner of Redwood Rd and Castro Valley Blvd, 3/30, 3:35pm (link) Fresno—N Blackstone Ave & E Nees Ave, 3/31, 4pm (link) Hollywood—Corner of Sunset & Vine, 3/30, 4:15pm Merced—3055 Loughborough Dr -> Laura's Fountain -Applegate Park 1045 W 25th St, 3/31, 4:30pm (link) Pomona—Pomona Pride Center 836 S -> City Hall, 3/31, 4pm (link) Riverside—Back To The Grind Coffee Shop –> Riverside City Hall, 3/31, 4pm (link) Sacramento—Capitol Complex, 3/31, 12pm (link) San Diego—Balboa Park at the Bea Evenson Foundation -> El Prado, 3/31, 5pm San Francisco—Corner of Turk & Taylor -> City Hall, 3/25, 11am (link) | Patricia's Green -> City Hall, 3/31, 2:15pm (link) San Jose—San Jose City Hall, 3/31, 5:30pm (link) Santa Ana—Brad Brafford LGBT Center on 4th, 3/31, 6pm (link)
Colorado: Denver—Civic Center Park, 3/17, 8:30pm | West Steps of the Capitol, 3/24, 11am (link)
Connecticut: Bristol—131 N Main Street, 3/31, 1pm Fairfield—Upper Quad of Sacred Heart University, 3/31, 4pm New Haven—corner of Chaple and Church St, 3/31, 4pm
Delaware: Wilmington—Delaware Historical Society –> Rodney Square, 3/31, 6pm (link)
District of Colombia: Union Station -> US Capitol, 3/31, 3pm (link)
Florida: Altamonte Springs—3/31, 9am (link) Naples—Cambier Park, 3/31, 6pm (link) Ocala—Pine Plaza -> City Hall, 3/31, 3:30pm Orlando—Dr Philips Performing Arts Center, 3/31, 11am Port Orange—Corner of Yorktowne Blvd. and Dunlawton Ave -> Port Orange Regional Library, 3/31, 4:30pm Tallahassee—state Capitol building, 3/31, 2pm (link) Venice—Town Center -> Venice Beach, 3/31, 10:30am
Georgia: Atlanta—state Capitol building, 3/31, 12pm (link) Dalton—3/31, 11am (link) Gainesville—Gainesville Square –> Jesse Jewell Parkway (in front of CVS), 3/31, 5pm Savannah—Forsyth Park -> City Hall & back, 3/31, 6pm
Hawaii: Honolulu—state Capitol building, 3/31, 3:30pm
Idaho: Boise—TBD Shelley—Shelley City Park, 3/31, 2pm
Illinois: Champaign—McKinley Foundation Church Chapel, University of Illinois, 3/31, 5:30pm Chicago—Grant Park, 3/31, 5pm Rockford—1005 5th Ave, 3/31, 5pm (link) Streamwood—7 Augusta Dr –> 7 S Sutton Rd, 3/31, 8am (link)
Indiana: Fort Wayne—Boone Street Playlot -> Allen County Courthouse, 3/23, 3pm (link) | Allen County Courthouse, 3/31, 5pm (link) Hanover—Hanover College Quad, 3/31, 1pm Indianapolis—433 N Capital Ave -> 1 Monument Circle, 3/31, 3pm Terre Haute—Terre Haute Courthouse, 3/31, 5pm
Iowa: Des Moines—state Capitol building (West Capitol Terrace Stage), 3/31, 6pm (link) Dubuque—Dubuque Courthouse -> Washington Park, 3/31, 4pm (link) Iowa City—Pentacrest -> Wesley Center, 3/31, 6pm (link)
Kansas: Lenexa—Lenexa Rec Center -> City Hall, 3/31, 5pm Topeka—state Capitol building entrance, 3/31, 5pm (link) Wichita—121 E Douglas Ave, 3/31, 4pm (link)
Kentucky: Frankfort—front of Annex Building, 3/29, 9:30am (link) | Kentucky State Capitol, 4/8, 1pm (link) Lawrenceburg—Anderson County Courthouse -> 44 Anna Mac Clarke Ave, 4/3, 3pm (link) Lexington—Robert F. Stephens Courthouse Plaza, 3/31, 4:30pm | Outside of the Old Fayette County Courthouse, 3/31, 6pm
Louisiana: Lake Charles—Prein Lake Park, 3/31, 12pm New Orleans—Washington Square Park 700 Elysian Fields Ave, 3/31, 5pm (link)
Maine: Bangor—West Market Square, 3/31, 6pm Portland—456 Congress St, 3/31, 6pm (link) Rockland—Intersection of Main Street and Park Street (near Walgreens and Maine Sport) –> Chapman Park, 3/31, 5:30pm
Maryland: Baltimore—400 E Biddle St, 3/31, 5pm Oakland—32 Oak St –> 305 E Oak St, 3/31, 3pm (link)
Massachusetts: Boston—state house, 3/18, 11am (link) | state house, 3/28, 10am (link) Sunderland—North Star, 45 Amherst Road, 3/31, 12pm
Michigan: Detroit—Woodward-Warren Park, 3/31, 5pm (link) Fenton—Rackham Park, 3/31, 6pm (link) Grand Rapids—Downtown, 3/31, 5pm Lansing—state Capitol building, 3/31, 11am
Minnesota: Saint Paul—state Capitol building, 3/31, 9am (link)
Mississippi:
Missouri: Columbia—701 East Broadway Blvd, 3/31, 5:30pm (link) | Uptown Columbia –> Downtown Columbia, 4/15, 9am Jefferson City—Missouri State Capitol, 3/29, 2pm (link) St Louis—11911 Dorsett Rd –> 715 NW Plz Dr, 4/27, 1pm
Montana: Missoula—Missoula Courthouse, 3/31, 5pm (link)
Nebraska: Lincoln—state Capitol building, 3/31, 5:30pm
Nevada: Las Vegas—Las Vegas TransPride Center -> The LGBTQ Center of Southern Nevada, 3/31, 11am (link)
New Hampshire: Keene—Keene State College Campus Main Entrance -> Center Square, 3/31, 5pm (link)
New Jersey: Flemington—Flemington Historic Courthouse -> Flemington DIY, 3/31, 3:45pm (link) Trenton—State House, 3/31, 3pm (link)
New Mexico: Albuquerque—Civic Plaza, 3/31, 5pm Santa Fe—State Capitol -> the Attorney General's office, 3/31, 11am
New York: Albany—Washington Square Park -> Capitol Park, 3/31, 1pm Canandaigua—7 Mill St, 3/31, 3pm Forest Hills—Forest Hills Station, 3/31, 2:30pm New Paltz—SUNY New Paltz Campus, 3/31, 3:30pm New York City—Union Square -> Washington Square Park, 3/31, 5pm (link) | Times Square, 3/31, 5pm Penn Yan—Yates County Courthouse, 3/31, 3pm (link) Plattsburgh—Hawkins Pond -> Samuel Champlain Monument Park, 3/23, 3pm Utica—Genesee-Parkway Intersection, 3/31, 5pm Westchester—SUNY Purchase College, 3/31, 5pm
North Carolina: Asheville—TBD Mooresville—Freedom Park -> Town Hall, 3/31, 2:30pm (link) Raleigh—John Chavis Memorial Park, 3/31, 1pm Wilmington—Historic Thalian Hall Steps, 3/31, 5pm (link)
North Dakota:
Ohio: Cleveland—Free Stamp @ Willard Park -> City Hall, 3/31, 4pm Cleveland Heights—City Hall, 3/31, 11am (link) Columbus—Goodale Park, 3/31, 5pm Dayton—Lily’s Dayton (329 E 5th St) –> Courthouse Square (23 N Main St), 3/31, 4pm Lakewood Park—Lakewood Park, 3/31, 4pm (link) Madison—Madison Village Square Park, 3/31, 4pm (link)
Oklahoma: Oklahoma City—Supreme Court of Oklahoma -> state Capitol building, 3/31, 5pm Tulsa—Central Library, 3/31, 4pm (link)
Oregon: Bend—Drake Park, 3/31, 5pm Hillsboro—Civic Center -> 145 NE 2nd Ave, 3/31, 5pm Medford—Vogel Plaza 200 E. Main Street, 3/31, 4pm Portland—Tom McCall Waterfront Park -> Pioneer Courthouse, 3/31, 2pm
Pennsylvania: Harrisburg—state Capitol building, 3/31, 1pm (link) Oil City—Oil City -> Franklin, 3/31, 8am Philadelphia—Temple University Bell Tower, 3/29, 1pm (link) | City Hall, 3/31, 6pm (link) Pittsburgh—City County Building, 3/31, 5pm (link)
Rhode Island: Providence—the Wheeler School -> state Capitol building, 3/31, 11:30am
South Carolina: Columbia—State House Grounds, 3/31, 2pm Greenville—300 S Main St, 3/31, 3pm (link)
South Dakota: Brookings—City Council Building, 3/31, 5pm (link) Rapid City—Main Street Square, 3/31, 5pm
Tennessee: Knoxville—Downtown Hilton, 3/31, 10:30am (link) | Gay Street & Market Square (where the water fountain markers are), 3/31, 2pm Memphis—Civic Center Plaza, 3/16, 4pm
Texas: Amarillo—Amarillo Chamber of Commerce -> Potter County Courthouse, 3/31, 5pm Austin—state Capitol building, 3/20, 9am (link) Dallas—Main St Garden Park 1902 Main St, 3/18, 12pm (link) | Pacific Plaza, 3/31, 3pm Houston—Discovery Green Park -> City Hall, 3/31, 11:30am Killeen—101 N College St -> 1114 N Fort Hood St, 3/31, 5:30pm Lubbock—Mahon Library parking lot -> county Courthouse, 3/31, 5pm San Antonio—San Antonio Courthouse, 3/31, 6:30pm (link)
Utah: Salt Lake City—state Capitol building, 3/31, 5pm (link)
Vermont: Montpelier—Montpelier State House, 3/31, 12pm (link)
Virginia: Richmond—Open High School -> state Capitol building, 3/31, 3pm
Washington: La Center—by the bridge into town, 3/31, 5pm Olympia—Heritage Park -> state Capitol building, 3/31, 3:30pm Seattle—SeaTac Airport Station, 3/31, 1pm | Volunteer Park -> Seattle Courthouse, 3/31, 4pm (link) Spokane—Cracker Building, 3/18, 12pm (link) Walla Walla—Pioneer Park -> Land Title Plaza, 3/31, 3:45pm (link) Wenatchee—Memorial Park, 3/31, 4pm
West Virginia: Charleston—3/31, 4:30pm
Wisconsin: Appleton—Houdini Plaza, 3/31, 10am (link) Janesville—Corner of East Court Street/Jackman Street -> Corner of West Court Street/South Locust Street, 3/31, 2pm Kenosha—Civic Center Park, 3/31, 12pm Madison—Library Mall, 3/18, 2:30pm (link) | 534 State St –> Wisconsin State Capitol, 3/31, 12pm Milwaukee—TBD
Wyoming:
CANADA: Toronto, Ontario 3/17, 3pm, US Consulate (link)
#queer youth assemble#march for queer and trans youth autonomy#queer youth#queer pride#queer#trans healthcare#trans rights#trans#trans day of visibility#transgender#activists#activism#youth rights#protest
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