Daily Almanac for Flagstaff
Week 21 Day: 138 \ Ave. sky cover: 5% \ Visibility: 10 miles Flagstaff Today 79° \41°
Wind: 4mph \ Gusts: 10mph
Extreme risk of fire
\ Nearest active fire: 12mi \ nearest Lightning: 301mi
May Averages for Flagstaff: 68° \ 34° (3 days of moisture)
Today’s Quote
Weekly Observations
15-21
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16-22
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17-28
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18-22
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Daily Observations
My
Sometimes-Long-Winded Thoughts
Can’t
complain about this great weather. Doors and windows open, slight breeze, warm.
Today’s
local paper reported that there were 18 illegal campfires in the forest around
Flagstaff. I guess Smokey the Bear needs to be standing on every road that goes
into the forest.
There was also
a well-written article on ‘Replacement Theory’ in our local paper. That is the
conspiracy Theory that liberal politicians are trying to replace white
Americans with immigrants because they are more likely to vote liberal. The idea
has been around for many decades. I guess they believe that one day you will go
to the family doctor, only to find that immigrants have taken over the
practice. I would really like to see the list of White Americans who were ‘replaced’
by immigrants. The list should include the White American’s current job and
location. It is not happening. Yes, some immigrants fill job vacancies. The position
did not simply ‘replace’ someone who was doing the job. Crazy.
Favorite Memes
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State Trivia
West Virginia: it has a peculiar October
tradition
The
876-foot-high (267m) New River Gorge Bridge is one of the state's most
important landmarks. Featured on the state's commemorative quarter, it's the
longest single-arch bridge in the Western Hemisphere. But it's also notable for
an interesting tradition. Every year, on the third Saturday of October the
bridge is closed to traffic and hundreds of BASE jumpers parachute from the
bridge. The Bridge Day, as it's called, was started in 1980 and today as many
as 100,000 spectators come to watch the daredevils and enjoy a great day out.
Wisconsin: it hosts the world's largest
cranberry festival
Held annually in the tiny town of Warrens
with just 400 residents, the Warrens Cranberry Festival draws in as many as
100,000 visitors each September (the event was canceled in 2020 due to
COVID-19). Cranberries are the state's largest fruit industry in both value and
size and more than 250 growers produce around 4.9 million barrels of
cranberries every year – that represents 60% of the nation's crop.
Wyoming: there are only two escalators in
the state
To be precise,
there are two sets of escalators – two going up and two going down – in all of
Wyoming. A rather surprising thing for the 10th largest state in the US, it
seems that escalators are not needed here. Both escalators are located in
Casper, one in Hilltop National Bank and the other in First Interstate Bank.
Even the airport in Jackson Hole doesn't have one as it's a single-level
building. One possible explanation could be that there's so much space in
Wyoming, that most build out rather than up. It might also have something to do
with the state's fire codes as unprotected openings between adjacent floors are
not very welcome.
Paraprosdokians
Winston
Churchill paraprosdokians
v To be sure of hitting the target, shoot
first and call whatever you hit the target.
v Nostalgia isn't what it used to be.
v Change is inevitable, except from a
vending machine.
Historical Events
Ø
1804 –
Napoleon Bonaparte is proclaimed Emperor of the French by the French Senate.
Ø
1860 –
Abraham Lincoln won the Republican Party presidential nomination over William
H. Seward.
Ø
1912 – The
first major Indian film, Shree Pundalik, by Dadasaheb Torne, is released in
Mumbai.
Ø
1926 – In
one of the first Media Frenzy’s of Popular Culture, Evangelist Aimee Semple
McPherson disappeared while visiting a Venice, California beach.
Ø
1952 –
Professor Willard F. Libby determined the age of Stonehenge on Salisbury Plain,
England, at 1848 BC, give or take 275 years.
Ø
1953 –
Jackie Cochran became the first woman to break the sound barrier.
Ø
1974 – India
successfully detonated its first nuclear weapon, becoming the sixth nation to
do so.
Ø
1994 –
Israeli troops withdrew from the Gaza Strip, ceding the area to the Palestinian
National Authority to govern.
Ø
2005 – A
photo from the Hubble Space Telescope confirmed that Pluto has two additional
moons, Nix and Hydra.
Birthdays Today
@94 – Frank Capra, Italian-American
director, producer, and screenwriter (d. 1991)
@90 – Robert Morse, actor (d. 2022)
@88 – Perry Como, American singer and
television host (d. 2001)
@84 – Pope John Paul II [Karol Józef Wojtyła](d. 2005)
@74 – Mathew Brady, American photographer,
journalist (d. 1896)
70–
George Strait, American singer-songwriter
52
– Tina Fey, American actress, producer, and screenwriter
30
– Adwoa Aboah, British fashion model
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