Daily Almanac for Flagstaff
Week 19 Day: 125 \ Ave. sky cover: 5% \ Visibility: 10 miles Flagstaff Today 65° \28°
Wind: 5mph \ Gusts: 6mph
High risk of fire \ Nearest active fire: 12mi \ nearest
Lightning: 446mi
May Averages for Flagstaff: 68° \ 34° (3 days of moisture)
Today’s Quote
Monthly Observations
National
Allergy/Asthma Awareness Month Link
National Arthritis Awareness Month
National Barbeque Month
National Better Hearing Month Link
National Bike Month Link
National Chamber Music Month Link
National Egg Month Link Link
National Electrical Safety Month Link
National Foster Care Month Link
National Good Car Keeping Month
National Hamburger Month Link Link
National Hepatitis Awareness Month
National High Blood Pressure Education Month Link
National Inventors Month Link
Neurofibromatosis Awareness Month (aka NF Month) Link
(World) Lyme Disease Awareness Month Link
Weekly Observations
May 1-7
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2-6
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2-8
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3-11
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6-12
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6-15
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Daily Observations
My Sometimes-Long-Winded Thoughts
The first
non-windy day of May. Very nice.
Happy Cinco
de Mayo…a big party in the US, not so much in Mexico. Originally commemorating
the Mexican Army’s (outnumbered 3 to 1) victory over the French Empire at the
Battle of Puebla, on May 5, 1862, Cinco de Mayo has become an American
celebration of Mexican culture and heritage. Today, alcohol sales are on par
with Superbowl Sunday and Mardi Gras.
I had an 8am
appointment this morning. I drove by an elementary, middle, and high school to
get to the appointment. Lots of kids heading for a school day with many on
bikes. I was amazed to see every child riding a bike had on a helmet. When I
was in school, we rode our bikes to school without helmets…guess they hadn’t
been invented yet.
I have been
sending this blog to a colleague forever. Last week, I kept getting notices
that no such address existed. I tried calling, but the phone was an old phone
number and had been disconnected. Yesterday I got an email that technology had
won…she had simply gotten a new email address after her old one broke. Good
news.
Being
adopted or being empathic, I keep listening to the Abortion debate. I do not
understand the problem. No law is requiring a woman to get an abortion, just
like there is no law that requires a woman to take birth control or a man to
get a vasectomy…except in very rare circumstances. It is a choice. If the anti-abortion
crowd would become more empathetic, they would be working to find a way to
protect those children, when they are unwanted. Adoption is one way. Yes, I
know many adoptees. Most have good lives and are happy. Some had a difficult
time accepting that their birth mother gave them away. Even fewer had a bad
experience growing up with difficult adoptive parents. If abortion becomes
illegal, several things will happen: Mothers may return to the old days with an
illegal and dangerous abortion. Mothers may raise a child they do not want or
love. Mothers may put up the child for adoption. From my experience, adoption
has the best odds. Yes, there will be some children who still must grow up in a
bad situation, but the vast majority will be happy and functional in society.
The anti-abortion people need to put their money and their lives into improving
the adoption option before forcing mothers to make sometimes disastrous decisions.
The same is true for those who are pro-abortion.
Favorite Memes
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Myths that are not true
Salt makes water boil faster
Not only is
this one completely false, it actually accomplishes the complete opposite. Salt
increases the boiling point of water, actually making it take longer to boil.
If you sneeze with your eyes open, they
will fall out
We naturally
close our eyes when we sneeze, but if we force them to stay open, there is no
way they will fall out. There is a slight elevation in blood pressure behind
the eyes, but not nearly enough to cause anything resembling them popping out
of their sockets.
It is impossible for someone to lick
their own elbow
While rare,
a very flexible and hypermobile person is capable of this feat.
If you go outside with wet hair, you'll
get sick
Colds are
caused by viruses, not from being physically cold. Often, cold or flu viruses
are more common in the winter, increasing the overall likelihood of getting
sick, which may have resulted in this myth.
State Trivia
Arizona: cutting down a cactus can result
in jail time
The saguaro
is the largest American cactus and one that we associate Arizona very closely
with. Its blossom is the official state flower, but the impressive spiny flora
also takes a really long time to grow so the state has taken extra steps to
protecting its iconic cactus. Cutting saguaros down, even on your own property,
can result in substantial fines or even jail time. The maximum time given for
such offenses is a jaw-dropping 25 years. Fines for damaging the cactus in any
way, including scratching in initials, can reach as much as $5,000.
Arkansas: it's the diamond state
Crater of
Diamonds State Park is the only operational diamond mine in America and it's
also the only one in the world that allows the public to hunt for the precious
gems so if you find one, you're allowed to keep it. The most valuable and
largest diamonds ever discovered in the US were also found in this state park.
The 8.52-carat Esperanza gem was discovered in 2015 and is estimated to be
worth around a million dollars, while the largest diamond, the 40.23-carat
Uncle Sam, was found here in 1924.
California: it's both the highest and the lowest state
Amazingly,
California's terrain is extremely varied. At 14,494 feet (4,418m), the highest
point in the contiguous United States is Mount Whitney, while the lowest point
in the lower 48 states is the Bad Water Basin (pictured) in Death Valley, which
is 282 feet (86m) below sea level. What makes this extreme terrain even more
surprising and impressive is the fact that the two points are just 85 miles
(137km) apart as the crow flies.
Historical Events
Ø
1260 –
Kublai Khan became the ruler of the Mongol Empire.
Ø
1809 – Mary
Kies became the first woman awarded a US patent (#X01043), for a technique of
weaving straw with silk and thread.
Ø
1847 – The
American Medical Association (AMA) met for the first time in the Hall of the
Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Ø
1862 –
General Ignacio Zaragoza defeated a French army led by General Charles Latrille
de Lorencez that was attempting to capture Puebla de Los Angeles, a small town
in east-central Mexico. This was the initial Cinco de Mayo cause for
celebration.
Ø
1891 – The
Music Hall in New York City (now known as Carnegie Hall) has its grand opening
and first public performance, with Pyotr Tchaikovsky as the guest conductor.
Ø
1893 – Stock
Market Crash of 1893, the second-worst economic crisis in American history, so
far.
Ø
1987 –
Congressional televised hearings in the United States began over the
Iran-Contra Affair.
Ø
1904 – Cy
Young of the Boston Americans throws the first perfect game in the modern era
of baseball, against the Philadelphia Athletics.
Ø
1961 – Navy
Commander Alan Bartlett Shepard Jr. was launched into space aboard the Freedom
7 space capsule, the first American astronaut to travel into space.
Ø
1965 – The
Warlocks, later known as The Grateful Dead, made their first public appearance
at Magoo’s Pizza located at 639 Santa Cruz Avenue, Menlo Park, California.
Ø
1994 –
American teenager Michael P. Fay was caned in Singapore for theft and vandalism
Birthdays Today
95
– Pat Carroll, American actress
@81 – James Beard, American chef and
author (d.d 1985)
79
– Michael Palin, English actor, screenwriter
@64 – Karl Marx, German philosopher and
sociologist, wrote The Communist Manifesto (died in 1883)
@57 – Nellie Bly, American journalist, author
(d. 1922; pneumonia)
@55 – Tammy Wynette, American
singer-songwriter (d. 1998; blood clot)
41
– Danielle Fishel, American actress
39
– Henry Cavill, English actor
34
– Adele, English singer-songwriter
33
– Chris Brown, American singer-songwriter
23
– Nathan Chen, Olympic figure skater