Tuesday 17 May 2016

May 18 No Dirty Dishes Day

May 18 No Dirty Dishes Day


No Dirty Dishes Day is observed on May 18. On this day you could celebrate by either not washing any dirty dishes or by washing all the dishes you can.

Dirty dishes, they are part of life. A lot of time, money and energy is spent every day on washing and drying dishes and putting them away. This unofficial holiday with unknown origins encourages people to take a break from doing the dishes for the day and spend the time saved doing things for fun.


There are many ways to make No Dirty Dish Day happen. An obvious solution is to switch to plastic plates, but this is by far the least glamorous way to mark this innovative holiday. Going out to a favorite restaurant or planning an outing on which you bring snacks or grill some goodies outdoors are just a couple of options which easily turn No Dirty Dish Day into a true festivity.

On this day, no dirty dishes should to be created, which you would have to wash. It is also not the goal of this day that you stack the dirty dishes and wash it the next day

May 18 No Dirty Dishes Day

Monday 16 May 2016

May 17 Pack Rat Day

May 17 Pack Rat Day
Pack Rat Day is celebrated every year on May 17, this holiday celebrate to encourages people to do some late spring-cleaning and to make space for newer, more useful things in their lives. “Pack Rat” can be considered a clever nickname for a hoarder. They may develop problems with compulsive hoarding. There are problems which may arise from compulsive hoarding which includes cluttered homes, yards, vehicles and other spaces.

We’re all a little bit materialistic, and tend to buy, own and hoard more ‘stuff’ than we might really need… We’re all pack rats, hoarders of treasures and possessions. Pack Rat Day encourages us to embrace the fact that we want to keep stuff, and suggests that you shouldn’t throw your old belongings, clothes or even rubbish away as it may be useful or valuable in days or years to come.
May 17 Pack Rat Day

May 17 Cherry Cobbler Day

May 17 Cherry Cobbler Day

May 17 is Cherry Cobbler Day. This fruit pie deserves its own holiday and today is a perfect day to bake cherry cobbler to celebrate with friends and family. No one knows how cobblers got their name, but there are several theories. One source suggests that the word “cobbler” evolved from “cobeler,” which was a specific type of wooden bowl used in cooking.
Cherry cobbler is a baked dessert made with a rich fruit filling and a biscuit dough crust. Back in the 19th century, pioneers of the American West had to adapt many recipes because of a severe lack of ingredients. The traditional pie evolved into the cobbler, which was often served as the main dish of the meal.

A cherry cobbler differs from a crisp as a cobbler lacks oatmeal. Sometimes the cobbler is topped with a scoop of vanilla ice cream. Bake your own delicious cobbler and serve it as the main course.


May 17 Cherry Cobbler Day

Sunday 15 May 2016

May 16 of each year honors Love a Tree Day.

May 16 of each year honors Love a Tree Day.


Trees are a vital part of nature. This is a good day to plant a new tree or spend some time enjoying the beauty of the trees that are all around you.





Trees provide more than just beautiful landscapes and a shady canopy on a sunny day. They play a significant role in reducing erosion and moderating the climate as well as give us oxygen. Large quantities of carbon are stored in their tissues as trees remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

Do Something below for tree around us.

1. Learn the Name of Trees That Live Around You, 2. Water a Thirsty Tree, 3. Give Your Tree Some Healthy Company, 4. Plant a Tree, 5. Give a Tree in Celebration.

On this day, trees are celebrated and recognized for the wonderful gift that they are to us. Love a Tree Day is in the middle of Garden for Wildlife Month. 

May 16 of each year honors Love a Tree Day.

May 16 Sea Monkey Day

May 16 Sea Monkey Day


Today is May 16 Sea-Monkey Day. Harold von Braunhut invented the “Sea Monkeys” and hatching kits in 1957. Most of us have memories of waiting for our mail order shipment of these magical creatures. The delivery usually contained the small “aquarium-like” hatching kit for them to live and grow in. Sea-monkeys, which are also called “brine shrimp”.
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Sea-monkeys have three eyes and breathe through their feet. Sea Monkeys are a type of “Artemia” (brine shrimp). They got their name because of their monkey-tail look.

One of the most fascinating characteristics of the sea-monkey is its ability to live for years as an egg before hatching. Purchased sea-monkeys only begin to hatch and grow once you’ve added the proper nutrients to the water environment.
Sea Monkeys went into space with astronaut John Glenn on October 29, 1998, aboard Space Shuttle Discovery. They returned to Earth after spending nine days in space and the eggs hatched eight weeks later, apparently unaffected by their travels

May 16 Sea Monkey Day

Saturday 14 May 2016

May 15 Chocolate Chip Day

May 15 Chocolate Chip Day


Chocolate Chip Day is celebrated on May 15 and everybody loves chocolate chips. They are available in numerous sizes, from large to miniature, but are usually less than 1 cm in diameter. Today, 25% of all the cookies baked in the United States are chocolate chip.





Chocolate chips are a required ingredient in chocolate chip cookies, which were invented in 1937 when Ruth Graves Wakefield of the Toll House Inn in the town of Whitman, Massachusetts added cut-up chunks of a semi-sweet Nestlé chocolate bar to a cookie recipe.
Chocolate chips are very popular as a baking ingredient in the United States and the chocolate chip cookie is regarded as a quintessential American dessert. Chocolate chips are also available in Europe, Australia, and other parts of the world. 

May 15 Chocolate Chip Day


May 15 Nylon Stocking Day

May 15 Nylon Stocking Day


Nylon Stocking Day is observed across the country each year on May 15. The stocking has come to represent a large number of different concepts, from femininity to sexuality.





Chemical company DuPont’s introduction of nylon in 1939 began a high demand for stockings in the United States. As nylon stockings were inexpensive, durable and shear, up to 4 million pairs would be purchased each day.

On February 11, 1942, as America entered World War II, DuPont ceased production of nylon stockings and switching their focus to the manufacture of parachutes, airplane cords and rope. This created a mass shortage followed by a black market for stockings. At the end of World War II, DuPont resumed production of the stockings but could not meet the demand leading to nylon riots in American stores. In time, DuPont was able to increase its output.

Stockings worn before the 1890s were made of woven cloth such as cotton, linen, wool or silk. Before the 1920s, women’s stockings were worn for warmth. As hemlines of women’s dresses rose in the 1920s, women began to wear stockings over their exposed legs. These 1920s stockings were sheer, made first of silk or rayon, followed by nylon after 1940. 

May 15 Nylon Stocking Day

Friday 13 May 2016

May14 Buttermilk Biscuit Day

May14 Buttermilk Biscuit Day


May14 is Buttermilk Biscuit Day. Biscuits appeared in the USA prior to Civil War. Alexander P. Ashbourne patented the first biscuit cutter in 1875. In 1931, Ballard and Ballard patented these refrigerator biscuits.



Biscuits became popular when people realized, that their hardness, compared to sliced bread, worked better to wipe up gravy on the plate. This evolved into a well-known meal, biscuits and gravy.

Biscuits are made using baking powder or baking soda as a leavening agent rather than yeast. A typical buttermilk biscuit recipe contains flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt, butter, and buttermilk. They are often referred to as a “quick bread”, indicating they do not need time to rise before baking. While being made, the dough is beaten and folded to incorporate air, which expands while baking, causing the biscuit to rise. 

May14 Buttermilk Biscuit Day
 


May 14 Dance like a Chicken Day

May 14 Dance like a Chicken Day


Today May 14th is Dance like a Chicken Day. The Chicken Dance is a tradition at weddings, children’s discos and family events.

Werner Thomas, a Swiss accordion player, wrote the basic melody for the Chicken Dance song in the late 1950s. In 1963, he began performing it at his restaurant. The people who bravely stood up and danced along often used sporadic movements that reminded Thomas of ducks and chickens. By the time the Chicken Dance arrived in America in the 1970s, it had transformed into a set of movements with repeated "beak", "wing", and "tail" movements.

Although we may not like to admit it, we all have rocked the Chicken Dance at least once or twice in our lives. This goofy dance is a popular favorite at kid’s birthday parties, bat mitzvahs, weddings, and beyond. 

May 14 Dance like a Chicken Day



Thursday 12 May 2016

May 13 Apple Pie Day

May 13 Apple Pie Day


Apple Pie Day is observed annually on May 13th. America’s favorite dessert. It was invented in Europe sometime during the 14th century. The ingredients in the recipe included apples, spices, raisins, figs, pears, and saffron which was all enveloped in a pastry crust.
The dish was also commemorated in the phrase "for Mom and apple pie". The phrase “as American as apple pie” has been around for more than 100 years.





Teddy Roosevelt was impressed to have a taste of home when he was an American apple pie while traveling in Africa. Soldiers during World War II were often quoted they were fighting “for Mom and apple pie.” In 1970, advertisers used the patriotic connection with a commercial jingle “Baseball, hot dogs, apple pie, and Chevrolet.”
To celebrate National Apple Pie Day, bake a delicious apple pie or pick one up at your local bakery to share with your family and friends. 

May 13 Apple Pie Day


May 13 Frog Jumping Day

May 13 Frog Jumping Day


Frog Jumping Day is observed on May 13, Frog Jumping Day, a fun day to jump like a frog. Frogs have great jumping capabilities and are the best jumpers among all vertebrates given their size.
In 1865, Mark Twain’s first short story, Jim Smiley and His Jumping Frog was published. Later, he changed the name and published it as The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County. This same story also had a third title, The Notorious Jumping Frog of Calaveras County.

In Calaveras County, California an annual Frog Jumping contest takes place since 1849. It attracts tens of thousands of attendees each year, who try to beat the record jump of 21 feet and 5 3/4 inches, set in 1986. Everyone should try at least to jump like a frog on that day or even to set up regional contests. 

May 13 Frog Jumping Day

Wednesday 11 May 2016

May 12 Nutty Fudge Day

May 12 Nutty Fudge Day


Each year on May 12th, Nutty Fudge Day tempts you to indulge in smooth chocolate fudge filled with crunchy nuts.
The earliest recorded evidence of fudge dates back to a letter written in 1886 by Emelyn Battersby Hartridge of Vasser College in Baltimore, USA. Other stories include a college lecturer in Virginia who was teaching toffee making but the temperature wasn’t high enough, resulting in fudge. Another story is that fudge was accidentally invented when a baker was trying to make caramel.



In the late 19th century, some shops on Mackinac Island, Michigan, began to produce similar products as the Vassar College fudge and sold it to summer vacationers. Fudge is still made in some of the original shops there today.
In Europe, fudge is usually made just from sugar, cream and butter while American-style fudge also contains chocolate. Just add in some crunchy nuts and there’s your nutty fudge! Easy to make but hard-to-resist, nutty fudge is best enjoyed with friends.

May 12 Nutty Fudge Day


May 12 Odometer Day

May 12 Odometer Day


Odometer Day is observed each year on May 12 by learning a little bit about the odometer. Odometer Day celebrates the invention of the odometer which was invented by William Clayton in 1847. An odometer is an instrument that indicates the distance traveled by a vehicle. It may be electronic, mechanical or a combination of both.





Odometer comes from the Greek words hodos meaning path or gateway and metron, meaning measure. In some countries, an odometer is called a mileometer, milometer or tripometer. Odometers were first developed in the 1600s for wagons and other horse-drawn vehicles to measure distances traveled.
Developed by Arthur P. and Charles H. Warner of Beloit, Wisconsin, the first odometer for automobiles appeared in 1903 and was patented as the Auto-Meter. 

May 12 Odometer Day