December 10, 2025

11 Dec

 

 

 


 

Dec. Averages: Temps: 43°\20° Moisture:4 Days moisture 0.7”

Flagstaff Today 56°: 35° Week 50 Day 345

Wind: 9 mph Gusts 15 mph                    Nearest lightning: 1525 miles away

Active Fire: 74 miles away Risk of Fire: Moderate

Air Quality: Fair Moderate Partly Mostly Cloudy Overcast Smoky Red Flag Warning Sunshine

 

 

 


Weekly Observations

4-24

Andisop (Meterological Fiddling Link

7-13

National Hand Washing Awareness Week Link 
Recipe Greetings For The Holidays Week

8-14

Computer Science Education Week Link ) 10-17

Human Rights Week

11-1/1/26

Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over Link 

Daily Observations

International Mountain Day
Kaleidoscope Day
Magnum P.I. Day
National App Day Cancelled.

National Sobriety Day Cancelled.

National Stretching Day Link
UNICEF Birthday

 

Today’s Quotes                                                             


 

Today’s Memes

 



My Thoughts for the day

An unusually warm day for December. Nice!

Sec. Rubio has returned to the State Department the Times New Roman font for all State Dept. information. He somehow determined that the Microsoft default Calibri font to too woke. I’m sure that anyone receiving information from the State Department will feel much better about this change. Hmmm.

Here’s some Flagstaff information that shows why I enjoy living here:

Ø  Average annual days of sunshine: 266 days

Ø  Average annual snowfall: 108.8”

Ø  Average temperatures in summer: High 73°, Low 53°

Ø  Average temperatures in winter: High 49°, Low 20°

I had a nice visit with my brother in Mexico. I have decided not to go there for Christmas. This late, tickets are about $1500, the plane will be crowded, weather and/or cancellations are always concerning, and it will all work out. He will be in Colorado in late October, so I will visit him then. It was a difficult decision, but it will be fine. 

Wild West Myths that never happened…

Everyone Lived in Small Frontier Towns

Frontier towns are central to the Wild West myth, but not everyone lived in them, as shared by Petticoats & Pistols. Many settlers lived on isolated homesteads or ranches, sometimes miles from the nearest neighbor.

Cities like San Francisco, Denver, and Dallas grew rapidly during the 19th century, offering urban lifestyles alongside the frontier experience. These cities had theaters, newspapers, and cultural institutions that rivaled those in the East.

A one-street dusty town may be the image we picture, but settlement patterns were much more diverse. Urban centers played just as important a role in shaping the West. 

Cities that changed their names…

Calcutta → Kolkata (India)

In 2001, another Indian city reclaimed its voice. “Calcutta,” once the capital of British India, had carried a foreign pronunciation for too long. Changing it to “Kolkata,” closer to how Bengalis have always said it, was a subtle correction (a linguistic homecoming). The sound shift was small, but it felt like respect.
The city of poets, revolutionaries, and street vendors didn’t become different overnight, but its name finally echoed in its own rhythm, the same cadence that fills its crowded trams and poetry readings.
 

Random Thoughts…

What would we do if we didn’t have love? We would no longer be beings who feel and live for love, but rather a basic and quiet existence.

 

It is better to be alone and content within the four walls of your head than to be subjected to someone’s contempt simply because you are afraid of loneliness.

 

Love just happens and provides you an answer rather than asking you a question.

 

Is there a reason for everything, or is it just a coincidence? 

Historic Events

1719 - The first recorded sighting of the aurora borealis took place in New England.
1792 - France's King Louis XVI went before the Convention, which had replaced the National Assembly, to face charges of treason. He was convicted and condemned and was sent to the guillotine the following January.
1816Indiana was admitted to the Union as the 19th American state.
1844 - Dr. Horace Wells became the first person to have a tooth extracted after receiving an anesthetic for the dental procedure. Nitrous Oxide, or laughing gas, was the anesthetic.
1894 - The world's first motor show opened in Paris with nine exhibitors.
1936 - Britain's King Edward VIII abdicated in order to marry American Wallis Warfield Simpson. He became the Duke of Windsor.
1946 - The United Nations International Children's Emergency Fund (UNICEF) was established by the U.N. General Assembly. The fund provides relief to children in countries devastated by war.
1951 - Joe DiMaggio (New York Yankees) announced his retirement from major league baseball. DiMaggio only played for the Yankees during his 13-year career.
1980U.S. President Jimmy Carter signed into law legislation creating $1.6 billion environmental "superfund" that would be used to pay for cleaning up chemical spills and toxic waste dumps.
1986 - The government of South Africa expanded its media restrictions by imposing prior censorship and banning coverage of a wide range of peaceful anti-apartheid protests.
1991 - Salman Rushdie, under an Islamic death sentence for blasphemy, made his first public appearance since 1989 in New York, at a dinner marking the 200th anniversary of the First Amendment (which guarantees freedom of speech in the U.S.).
1997 - More than 150 countries agreed at a global warming conference in Kyoto, Japan, to control the Earth's "greenhouse gases."
1998 - Majority Republicans on the House Judiciary Committee pushed through three articles of impeachment against U.S. President Clinton.
2001 - Ted Turner purchased 12,000 acres in Nebraska for Bison ranches.

Birthdays

Rita Moreno(94 years old)

1931 Puerto Rican singerdancer and actress (West Side Story), born in Humacao, Puerto Rico

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1940 Donna Mills (85 years old, American actress (Knots Landing, Incident), born in Chicago, Illinois

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John Kerry(82 years old)

US Secretary of State (2013-17) and 2004 presidential nominee of the Democratic Party, born in Aurora, Colorado

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1954 Jermaine Jackson (71 years old, American singer (Jackson 5 - "ABC"; solo - "Let's Get Serious"), born in Gary, Indiana

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Nikki Sixx(67 years old)

1958 Jr.], American rock bassist and songwriter (Mötley Crüe - "Girls, Girls, Girls"), born in San Jose, California

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1967 Mo'Nique [Monique Hicks] (58 years old, American comedian and actress (Precious), born in Baltimore, Maryland

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Yalitza Aparicio(32 years old)

1993 Mexican actress (Roma), born in Tlaxiaco, Mexico

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Hailee Steinfeld(20 years old)

1996 American actress (True Grit (2010); Pitch Perfect films), and singer ("Starving"), born in Los Angeles, California

 

 

George Mason(d.1792; @66)

American statesman (Bill of Rights) and founding father, born in Fairfax County, Colony of Virginia

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Hector Berlioz(d. 1869; @66, Chron’s)

French composer (Symphonie fantastique), born in La Côte-Saint-André, France

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Robert Koch(d. 1910; @66, heart attack)

German pioneering bacteriologist (TB, cholera, Nobel Prize 1905), born in Clausthal, Hanover

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Fiorello La Guardia(d.1947; @64, cancer)

American politician and Mayor of New York City (Republican: 1933-45), born in New York City

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Walter Knott(d.1981; @91)

American farmer who created the Knott's Berry Farm amusement park in California and introduced the boysenberry to America, born in San Bernardino, California

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Carlo Ponti, Italian film producer (Marriage Italian Style, Doctor Zhivago), born in Magenta, Lombardy (d. 2007; @94)

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Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn(d.2008; @89)

Russian writer (Cancer Ward, Nobel Prize for Literature 1970), born in Kislovodsk, Russia

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Willie Mae "Big Mama" Thornton, American rhythm-and-blues singer and songwriter (Hound Dog, Ball & Chain, Stronger than Dirt), born in Ariton, Alabama (d. 1984; @57, liver failure)

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Ferdinand A. Porsche, German car designer (Porsche 911), born in Stuttgart, Germany (d. 2012; @76)

 

…The End for today…

            

December 09, 2025

10 Dec

 


 

 


 

Dec. Averages: Temps: 43°\20° Moisture:4 Days moisture 0.7”

Flagstaff Today 59°: 33° Week 50 Day 344

Wind: 1 mph Gusts 5 mph                    Nearest lightning: 1147 miles away

Active Fire: 75 miles away Risk of Fire: High

Air Quality: Fair Sunshine

 

 




Weekly Observations

3-10

Clerc-Gallaudet Week

4-24

Andisop (Meterological Fiddling Link

7-13

National Hand Washing Awareness Week Link 
Recipe Greetings For The Holidays Week

8-14

Computer Science Education Week Link ) 10-17

Human Rights Week

 

Daily Observations

Dewey Decimal System Day
Human Rights Day  
Link
International Animal Rights Day  
Link
International Traffic Light Day  
Link 

Jane Addams Day
Nobel Prize Day
World Aszu' Day 
 Link

 

Today’s Quotes                                                             


 

Today’s Memes

 



My Thoughts for the day

A warm fall day here. Nice!

Technology is moving fast, I’m not happy with some of it. I live in a small town and used to be able to call any of my doctor’s offices with no problem. Now every doctor’s office has a complicated system and one can rarely get to a human voice. The latest: my fairly new PA was to call in a script for my itching. It is nothing serious, no rash, just various itches on my torso and legs. The OTC itch cream isn’t working very well. She said she could give me a strong one. I called the pharmacy this morning about it since I hadn’t gotten a text. I called the office and after numerous prompts I ended up leaving a message at 9:05a. I got a call back just after noon. The lady said the PA had just sent in my script. I also was told by the PA that I didn’t need a phlebotomy, but last night at 5:30p I got a call for an appointment on Wednesday. When I was talking to the clerk, she said ‘I guess she didn’t delete that appointment.  I think I’ll ask for another PA on my next visit, as this is two strikes and I don’t like it. There is another PA that I’ve seen for several years, and she never messed up. I’m just tired of being a guinea pig for the new PA. 

Wild West Myths that never happened…

Everyone Rode Horses Everywhere

It’s easy to imagine every Westerner galloping across the plains, but horses were not the universal mode of transport. Many people walked, especially poorer settlers who couldn’t afford a horse, as pointed out by C Lazy U Ranch.

Wagons, pulled by oxen or mules, were the main vehicles for long journeys. Horses were valuable and often reserved for specific tasks like cattle herding or mail delivery. Owning one was a sign of wealth, not an everyday convenience.

In towns, people often traveled on foot, just as they did in Eastern cities. The romantic image of everyone mounted on horseback was largely a cinematic embellishment. In fact, horses were often too costly to maintain for daily use. 

Cities that changed their names…

Madras → Chennai (India)

On India’s southeastern coast, the city once known as Madras had grown from a colonial trading post into a cultural powerhouse. In 1996, Tamil Nadu’s government reinstated its pre-colonial name, Chennai, reflecting the Tamil language and heritage that predated British rule by centuries. The change represented linguistic pride and cultural accuracy, and for locals, it felt right.
Madras still lingers in old businesses, in the famous “Madras filter coffee,” but Chennai now stands proudly in official maps and hearts alike. The sea breeze feels the same; only the name tells a new story.
 

Random Thoughts…

·         Maybe it’s best not to kill the spider because if I do, his relatives and friends will show up to his burial, and I’ll wind up calling even more spiders.

·         Who came up with the terms and names for various items, and how did it occur to someone to simply call a chair “chair”?

·         What does our inner voice sound like?

·         It’s important to have someone who accepts you for who you are and feeds your mind and soul rather than your ego. 

Historic Events

1817 Mississippi was admitted to the Union as the 20th American state.
1830 - Emily Dickinson was born in Amherst, MA. Only seven of her works were published while she was alive.
1845 - British civil engineer Robert Thompson patented the first pneumatic tires.
1851 - American librarian Melvil Dewey was born. He created the "Dewey Decimal Classification" system.
1869 - Women were granted the right to vote in the Wyoming Territory.
1901 - The first Nobel prizes were awarded.
1906U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt became the first American to be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, for helping mediate an end to the Russo-Japanese War.
1939 - The National Football League's attendance exeeded 1 million in a season for the first time.
1948 - The United Nations General Assembly adopted its Universal Declaration on Human Rights.
1953 - Hugh Hefner published the first "Playboy" magazine with an investment of $7,600.
1993 - The crew of the space shuttle Endeavor deployed the repaired Hubble Space Telescope into Earth's orbit.
1996 - South Africa's President Mandela signed into law a new democratic constitution, completing the country's transition from white-minority rule to a non-racial democracy.
2007 - Cristina Fernandez was sworn in as Argentina's first elected female president.

Birthdays

Susan Dey (73 years old), American actress (1st Love, Partridge Family, LA Law), born in Pekin, Illinois

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Rod Blagojevich (69 years old), American politician (Governor of Illinois, 2003-09 - impeached and removed), and convicted felon (corruption and solicitation of bribes), born in Chicago, Illinois

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Kenneth Branagh(65 years old)

1960 Northern Irish actor and director (High Season, Dead Again), born in Belfast, Northern Ireland

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Nia Peeples (64 years old), American dancer and host (Fame; Party Machine), born in Hollywood, California

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Bobby Flay(61 years old)

American celebrity chef, restaurateur and TV personality (Iron Chef America; Bobby Flay's Barbecue Addiction), born in New York City

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Raven-Symoné(40 years old)

American actress (The Cosby Show, 1989-92 -"Olivia"; That's So Raven, 2003-07), singer, and TV personality (The View, 2012-16), born in Atlanta, Georgia

 

 

Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet, American pioneer of educating the deaf, born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (d. 1851@63)

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William Lloyd Garrison(d.1879;@73 pnuemonia)

American abolitionist, and publisher ("The Liberator"), born in Newburyport, Massachusetts

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Ada Lovelace(d.1852; @36, cervical cancer)

English mathematician considered the first computer programmer, born in London

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Emily Dickinson(d.1886; @55)

American poet (Collected Poems), born in Amherst, Massachusetts

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Melvil Dewey, American librarian and educator (created Dewey Decimal System for libraries), born in Adams Center, New York (d. 1931; @80)

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Nelly Sachs(d.1970; @78)

German-Swedish poet and playwright (O the Chimneys - Nobel Prize for Literature 1966), born in Berlin, Germany

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Chet Huntley, American newscaster (NBC Huntley-Brinkley Report), born in Cardwell, Montana (d. 1974; @62, cancer)

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Dorothy Lamour [Mary Kaumeyer], American actress and singer (Road to Bali; My Favorite Brunette), born in New Orleans, Louisiana (d. 1996; @81)

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1923 Harold Gould, American character actor (The Sting, The Golden Girls, Rhoda, Big Bus), born in Schenectady, New York (d. 2010; @86)

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1927 Agnes Nixon, American television producer, director and writer (One Life to Live, All My Children), born in Chicago, Illinois (d. 2016; @93)

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Dan Blocker, American actor Cimarron City - "Tiny"; Bonanza - "Hoss"), born in DeKalb, Bowie County, Texas (d. 1972; @43, embolism)

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Chad Stuart [David Stuart Chadwick], English pop-rock vocalist and guitarist (Chad & Jeremy - "Yesterday's Gone", "A Summer Song"), born in Windermere, Cumberland, England (d. 2020; @79, pneumonia)

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Tommy Kirk, American actor (Old Yeller), born in Louisville, Kentucky (d. 2021; @79)

 

…The End for today…