Daily Almanac for Flagstaff
Week 20 Day: 128 \ Ave. sky cover: 10% \ Visibility: 10 miles Flagstaff Today 77° \42°
Wind: 8mph \ Gusts: 23mph
Extreme risk of fire \ Nearest active fire: 12mi \ nearest
Lightning: 631mi
May Averages for Flagstaff: 68° \ 34° (3 days of moisture)
Today’s Quote
Monthly Observations
Teen CEO
Month
Tennis Month
Tay-Sachs and Canavan Diseases Month
Textile Month Link
Tourettes Syndrome Awareness Month (5/15 - 6/15) Link
Toxic Encephalopathy and Chemical Injury Awareness Month Link
Ultra-violet Awareness Month
Women's Health Care Month
Worldwide Home Schooling Awareness Month
Young Achievers of Tomorrow Month
National Family Month (5/12 to 6/16)
Weekly Observations
2-8 Children's Book Week Link (Also
Nov. 7-13) |
3-11 (World) Dystonia
Awareness Week Link |
6-12 |
6-15 National Public Gardens Week Link |
7-8 Toad Suck Daze |
8-14 Food Allergy Awareness Week Link Tick Awareness Week |
8-15 Reading is Fundamental Week Link |
Daily Observations
My
Sometimes-Long-Winded Thoughts
A very happy
Mother’s Day. My mom had a great life for 89 years. She is gone, but not
forgotten. Also, Happy Mother’s Day to all who are raising children with the
mother present.
My new air
fryer arrived late yesterday. I am very pleased as I could recycle my toaster
oven and my small air fryer at Savers…[Big Brothers & Big Sisters]. The toaster
oven was about 5 years old and the air fryer about a year old…both still
worked.
Today is the
Run for the Roses…Kentucky Derby. About 150,000 spectators will watch and
millions will be bet. I’m sure those into such extravaganzas are excited since
this is the first Derby with spectators since Covid started 2 years ago.
I never
really understood why we were in Afghanistan for so long. I was very
disappointed by our withdrawal’s lack of a good strategy. The Taliban rulers have
now said that all women must be covered when in public. Any woman not obeying
this law will be punished, and their husband may also be punished. So very sad.
Senator Sinema,
of AZ, visited Flagstaff yesterday to see the devastation of the Tunnel fire
that claimed 31 homes. She is pushing Congress to have Hot Shot crews moved from
seasonal to year-long. Part of the issue to the Tunnel fire was that it was so
early, many out-of-state hot shot crews had not started their seasonal work. The
Hot Shots in AZ just happened to be in training sessions and could be deployed.
I hope she gets the change made.
‘My body, my
choice’ was a battle cry of many mask haters during the pandemic. However,
during the abortion debate, many of those same people are silent. Curious for
sure.
Almost 5000
students had graduation ceremonies at our local University yesterday and today,
in 4 different ceremonies. Congrats to
the grads. Traffic on that side of town is very slow. Glad I don’t have to head
that way.
The Havasupai
tribe lives in the Grand Canyon. Mail is still delivered by mule. The only way in
or out is to hike, by mule, or by expensive helicopter rides. The tribal
council voted yesterday to keep the tribal land closed through 2022, to prevent
the spread of Covid.
Favorite Memes
Thanks to Ed, my Focus
roommate for these:
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State Trivia
Idaho: there's a
unique New Year's tradition
The iconic
Times Square New Year's ball drop is one of the most famous traditions when it
comes to ringing in the New Year. However, Boise residents have found a more
unique (and more state-appropriate) way to welcome 1 January. Since 2013,
thousands of spec-taters have gathered at the Idaho State Capitol every year to
watch the Idaho Potato Drop – a giant, illuminated GlowTato is lowered from
above as the clock strikes midnight. We'd expect nothing less from Idaho.
Illinois: Chicago
isn't The Windy City because of the weather
It's thought
that the source of the nickname is political rather than the chilly gusts that
sweep across the city from Lake Michigan. In an 1893 editorial in the New York
Sun, Charles A. Dana calls Chicago a "windy city" in reference to the
city's politicians who were said to be "full of hot air". At the time
Chicago was competing with New York to host the 1983 World's Fair. In a twist
to this tale, the original editorial has never been located, however, there is
an existing copy of an 1876 Cincinnati Enquirer that calls Chicago "That
Windy City" after a tornado swept through the city so we might never know
the truth...
Indiana: Wabash was
the first electrically-lit city in the world
The small
city of Wabash made significant history on the evening of 31 March 1880, when
the world's first electric streetlights were turned on. After Edison's
invention of the light bulb in 1879, Charles F. Brush came up with the idea of streetlights,
but he needed a place to try out his idea. After a demonstration in Cleveland,
four 3,000 candlepower lamps were placed atop the Wabash County Courthouse
(pictured) and around 10,000 people came to watch the spectacle. The original
Brush lights are still on display at the courthouse.
Iowa: Fenelon Place
Elevator is both the shortest and the steepest in the world
Elevating
passengers 189 feet (57.6m), from Fourth Street to Fenelon Place in Dubuque, the
Fenelon Place Elevator is dubbed the world's shortest and steepest, although
the title has been contested by other funicular railways. Just 296 feet (90.2m)
in length, the elevator was first used by local banker J.K. Graves in 1882. The
funicular was opened to public in 1884 and cost five cents per ride. After
several devastating fires, the current funicular opened in 1893 and is now
listed in the National Register of Historic Places.
Historical Events
Ø
1886 –
Pharmacist John Pemberton first sold his carbonated beverage named “Coca-Cola”
as a patent medicine.
Ø
1933 –
Mohandas Gandhi began a 21-day fast of self-purification and launched a
one-year campaign to help the Harijan movement.
Ø
1945 –
Germany’s ‘second surrender’ with Stalin
Ø
1912 –
Paramount Pictures was founded.
Ø
1933 –
Mohandas Gandhi began a 21-day fast of self-purification and launched a
one-year campaign to help the Harijan movement.
Ø
1945 – V-E
Day (Victory in Europe Day) was celebrated in America and Great Britain.
Ø
1961 – The
first practical seawater conversion plant in the US was opened in Freeport,
Texas.
Ø
1976 – The
New Revolution, the first steel roller coaster with a vertical loop, opened at
Six Flags Magic Mountain.
Ø
1980 – The
World Health Organization confirmed the eradication of smallpox.
Ø
1984 – The
Soviet Union announced that they were boycotting the 1984 Olympics.
Ø
2010 – Betty
White hosted Saturday Night Live, thanks to a push by fans on Facebook. She won
an Emmy for her appearance.
Birthdays Today
96
– David Attenborough, TV Host
@90 – Don Rickles, American comedian and
actor (d. 2017)
@88 – Harry S. Truman, 33rd President (d.
1972)
@84 – Fulton J. Sheen, American archbishop
(d. 1979)
78
– Gary Glitter, Glam rocker
@65 – Peter Benchley, American author and
screenwriter (d. 2006; Pulmonary fibrosisz)
@64 – William Henry Vanderbilt, American
businessman, philanthropist (d. 1885)
58
– Melissa Gilbert, American actress
47
– Enrique Iglesias, Spanish-American singer-songwriter
@45 – Ricky Nelson, singer-songwriter,
guitarist, and actor (d. 1985; plane crash)
@+/-40 – Sonny Liston, American boxer (d.
1970; OD)