January 2023
Daily Almanac for Flagstaff
Week 4 Day 28 \ Ave. Sky Cover 5% \ Visibility 17 miles Flagstaff Today 44° \4° Wind 2mph \ Gusts 1mph
Air Quality: Fair \Very Low Moderate High Extreme Risk of fire \ Nearest active fire 318mi \ Nearest Lightning 1381mi
Jan Averages for Flagstaff: 44° \ 16° \5
Days of moisture
Sunshine
Today’s Quote
Weekly Observations
19-29
Sundance Film Festival
22-28
Clean Out Your Inbox Week
Data Privacy Week Link
National CRNA (Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists) Week
National Handwriting Analysis Week
National School Choice Week Link
Snowcare for Troops Week
Snowcare for Troops Week
23-28
National Medical Group Practice Week
26-29
Angouleme International Comics Festival Link
28—2/4
Cordova Ice Worm Days Link
Catholic Schools Week
Meat Week
National Anesthesiologists Week Link
Daily Observations
Blueberry
Pancake Day
Daisy Day
Data Privacy Day Link
Fruitcake Toss Day Link
Global Community Engagement Day
Global Community Engagement Day Link
Local Quilt Shop Day
National Gift of The Lady Bug Day Link
National Kazoo Day Link
National Pediatrician Day
National Seed Swap Day
Rubber Ducky Day Link Link
Thank A Plugin Developer Day
Thank A Plugin Developer Day Link
World Leprosy Day
My Sometimes-Long-Winded Thoughts
Sunshine
but still chilly. I headed out to buy groceries. When I got home I finally was
able to remove the snow that was on the roof of my vehicle. While it is chilly,
the iceberg had melted enough to slide it off the roof of the vehicle in just a
couple of pieces.
I
still like snow, but prefer the normal…snow that melts away in a day or two.
Videotape
of a crime can be useful. However, it never shows the entire story. In my much
younger days, there was a local kids show with a live audience. My brother and
I watched the show very frequently. Somehow my mom got us tickets to see the
live show in person. I still remember how
the world of Florence and Faye was a small stage. The huge kids section was off
to the side and was merely 3 small bleachers where kids were packed in close. Then
in my adulthood, I was on several sound stages…always cramped and much smaller
than the mind interpreted when seen on TV or the movie screen. As several videotaped crimes are released today,
I am reminded that what you see is only a small part of what really happened.
African Animals Abound…
Arizona is a great state…
·
Famous labor
leader and activist Cesar Chavez was born in Yuma.
·
In 1912,
President William Howard Taft was ready to make Arizona a state on February 12,
but it was Lincoln's birthday. The next day, the 13th, was considered bad luck
so they waited until the following day. That’s how Arizona became known as the
Valentine State.
·
When
England's famous London Bridge was replaced in the 1960s, the original was
purchased, dismantled, shipped stone by stone and reconstructed in Lake Havasu
City, Arizona, where it still stands today.
·
Mount
Lemmon, Tucson, in the Santa Catalina Mountains, is the southernmost ski resort
in the United States.
Facts…
Alaska is
home to 227 federally recognized Indigenous tribes, more than any other state
in the U.S.
The U.S.
federal government recognizes 574 tribes throughout the country — and 227 of
those are in Alaska alone (the Bureau of Indian Affairs recognizes an
additional two). In fact, nearly one in six Alaskans is considered Native
American, which is the highest rate of any U.S. state (although California is
home to the most Indigenous people overall). Although the U.S. government has
formally recognized Alaska’s 229 tribes, the state of Alaska didn’t follow suit
until the summer of 2022, when Governor Mike Dunleavy passed legislation
recognizing the tribes and their indelible contributions to the history and
culture of Alaska.Slang
Origins
Mysterious sites…
Nazca Lines (Peru)
Southern Peru’s Nazca Desert is covered
with hundreds of geometric designs. These ancient geoglyphs range from simple
shapes to plants and animals such as a hummingbird, monkey, llama, and whale.
The Nazca Lines date back to around 200 to 700 CE, when the Nazca people who
lived in the region created them. Researchers have struggled to agree upon the
purpose of these giant works of art, particularly since they are best seen from
the surrounding hills and by plane. Among many theories are astronomical maps,
indicators of sacred routes, and water troughs. An alternative take is that
they were created to be observed by deities from the sky.
Historical Events
1909 – United States troops left Cuba
with the exception of Guantanamo Bay Naval Base after being there since the
Spanish-American War.
1958 – The Lego company patented
(#3005282) the design of its Lego bricks- it is still compatible with bricks
produced today.
1986 – The Challenger Space Shuttle
exploded 73 seconds after lift-off, killing all 7 people aboard.
Birthdays Today
87
– Alan Alda, American actor, director and writer
It’s
too bad I’m not as wonderful a person as people say I am, because the world
could use a few people like that.– Alan Alda
@84 – Charles Williams Nash, American businessman, founded Nash
Motors (d. 1948)
@84 – Alice Neel, American painter (d. 1984)
@81 – Sidonie-Gabrielle ‘Colette’, French writer (d. 1954)
Sit
down and put down everything that comes into your head and then you’re a
writer. But an author is one who can judge his own stuff’s worth, without pity,
and destroy most of it.– Colette
73
– Barbi Benton, American actress and model
@63 – Henry Morton Stanley, Welsh Explorer (d. 1904)
Doctor
Livingstone, I presume?– Henry Morton Stanley
55
– Sarah McLachlan, Canadian singer-songwriter
If
you love large, you’ve got to hurt large. If you’ve got a lot of light, you’ve
probably got an equal amount of darkness.– Sarah McLachlan
47
– Rick Ross (William Roberts II),
American rapper
@44 – Jackson Pollock, American painter (d. 1956; car crash)
It
doesn’t make much difference how the paint is put on as long as something has
been said. Technique is just a means of arriving at a statement.– Jackson
Pollock
43
– Nick Carter, American singer-songwriter
42
– Elijah Wood, American actor
@42 – José Julián Martí Pérez, Cuban writer (d. 1895; killed in
battle)
@41 – William Seward Burroughs I, founded the Burroughs
Corporation (d. 1898)
38
– J. Cole, American singer
25
– Ariel Winter, American actress
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