1 February 2023
Daily Almanac for Flagstaff
Week 5 Day 32 \ Ave. Sky Cover 40% \ Visibility 12 miles Flagstaff Today 40° \11° Wind 8mph \ Gusts 12mph
Air Quality: Fair \Very Low Risk of fire \ Nearest active fire 179mi \ Nearest
Lightning 1489mi
Feb. Averages for Flagstaff: 47° \ 19° \5
Days of moisture
High clouds with sunshine
Today’s
Quote
Monthly
Observations
Adopt A Rescued Rabbit Month Link
African-American Cultural Heritage Month
AMD/Low Vision Awareness Month
American Heart Month
An Affair To Remember Month Link
‘Atsa’ Biyaazh, which means Baby Eagle In Navajo
Bake for Family Fun Month Link
Barley Month Link
Beat The Heat Month
Weekly
Observations
Thru 2/4
Cordova Ice Worm Days Link
Catholic Schools Week
Meat Week
National Anesthesiologists Week Link
1-5
US Nationals Snow Sculpting Days
1-7
Women's Heart Week
World Interfaith Harmony Week
Daily Observations
Candy-Making Day
Car Insurance Day
CBC Day Link
Change Your Password Day Link
Chinese New Year 2022
Dark Chocolate Day
Decorating With Candy Day
Freedom Day
G.I. Joe Day
Global School Play Day Link
Hula in The Coola Day
International Brownie Camera Day 2023 Link
International Day of Black Women in The Arts
International Face & Body Art
Day
National Candy Making Day
National Get Up Day (About Perseverance. Not Getting Out Of Bed.)
National Girls & Women in Sports Day
National Signing Day for College Football Link
Robinson Crusoe Day
Serpent Day Spunky Old Broads Day
World Hijab Day Link
My
Sometimes-Long-Winded Thoughts
It
looks like our late January storm was a bust. It has been raining/snowing on
and off, but nothing is sticking. I made a run to Sam’s this morning and roads
were only wet. I was able to get a parking space with no problem and only a
short walk to the front door.
I
am used to huge long icicles from the roof in front of my office window upstairs.
Unusual today to see small icicles on a couple of branches on the Blue Spruce
outside the window.
Average
between January 1991-2022: 28.3 days with snow annually; 90.1” of snow annually.
Both these stats have Flagstaff as #1 for the state.
The
Super Bowl is coming to Phoenix in February. Business hope to make lots of
money. As of today, motel 6 is charging $850/night over the Bowl weekend. Glad
I have no reason to be in the Phoenix area that weekend.
African
Animals Abound…
|
Arizona is
a great state…
·
Rainfall
averages for Arizona range from less than three inches in the deserts to more
than 30 inches per year in the mountains.
·
Rising
to a height of 12,643 feet, Mount Humphreys north of Flagstaff is the state's
highest mountain.
·
Roadrunners
are not just in cartoons! In Arizona, you'll see them running up to 17-mph away
from their enemies.
·
The Saguaro cactus is the largest cactus
found in the U.S. It can grow as high as a five-story building and is native to
the Sonoran Desert, which stretches across southern Arizona.
Facts…
The award
typically celebrated a young actor’s achievement in the previous year, and in
1939 Garland had starred in two films: Babes in Arms and The Wizard of Oz. At
the time she accepted the award, presented by her former classmate and previous
Juvenile Oscar recipient Mickey Rooney, she was just a few months shy of her
18th birthday. The award really does look tiny with a teenager holding it — and
even tinier next to full-size Academy Awards, like the one her daughter Liza
Minnelli won for Cabaret in 1973.
The Juvenile
Oscar wasn’t awarded every year, so it took a special situation to warrant the
special trophy. Just 12 were awarded in the 26 years it existed; the last one
was awarded in 1961 to Hayley Mills, who appeared in Pollyanna the year before.
A 16-year-old Patty Duke won a regular Best Supporting Actress award two years
later.
Slang
Origins
1980: Chill out
Meaning: calm down; relax
Chill out, or telling someone to
"take a chill pill," are said to come from the recognition of ADHD in
the early ‘80s, and medication used to alleviate the symptoms. These claims,
however, may just be a coincidence.
Mysterious
sites…
Göbekli Tepe (Turkey)
Could a set of ruins in southeastern
Turkey be remnants of the world’s first temple? That’s one of the key questions
archaeologists ponder as they explore Göbleki Tepe, a series of huge stone
pillars that are some 6,000 years older than Stonehenge. Now a UNESCO World
Heritage Site, the landmark was ignored for centuries, dismissed as little more
than a cemetery. In the mid-1990s, excavations began and experts soon realized
it was a treasure trove of history. The pillars weigh as much as 10 tons each
and create massive stone circles. Radar surveys of the area indicate a number
of additional circles are still buried underground. Göbleki Tepe is older than
writing and older than agriculture. But who were the Neolithic people who built
this, and how and why did they do it?
Historical
Events
1790 – The United States Supreme Court
held its first session.
1898 – Travelers Insurance issued the
first automobile accident insurance.
1960 – The Greensboro ‘Sit-In’ took place
in North Carolina, protesting discrimination.
1964 – Hasbro introduced the G.I. Joe
action figure (retail price: $2.49)
1982 – Late Night with David Letterman
premiered on NBC.
Birthdays
Today
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