April 09, 2026

10 Apr

 




         


       

Week 15  Day 100 Flag Today  66°/43°                             Wind 2 mph Gusts - mph

Active Fire: 274 miles away Risk of fire: High  Nearest Lightning: 512 miles away

Air Quality: Moderate Sunshine Partly Cloudy

April Averages: Temps: 60°\35°

 

Monthly Observations

National Youth Sports Safety Month
Occupational Therapy Month 
Link
Oral, Head and Neck Cancer Awareness Month 
Link
Pharmacists War on Diabetes Month
Pet First Aid Awareness Month

Physical Wellness Month
Prevent Lyme in Dogs Month 
Link
Prevention of Animal Cruelty Month  
Link  Link
Rosacea Awareness Month
School Library Month

Weekly Observations

4-10

Hate Week
National Dental Hygienest Week
 Link Link
4-12

National Robotics WeekLink
Week of The Young Child
5-11.

Bat Appreciation Week
National Property & Evidence Professionals Awareness Week
 Link 
Oral, Head and Neck Cancer Awareness Week 
Link 
National Occupational Health Nursing Week
Link
National Public Health Week
National Window Safety Week

8-11

World Irish Dancing Week
9-12

The Masters Tournament


10-12

American Crossword Puzzle Days Link

Daily Observations

ASPCA (American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals) Day  Link
International Kids Yoga Day
National Day of (No) Silence 
Link 
National Donate Life (Blue and Green) Day 
Link 

National Farm Animals Day
National Siblings Day 
Link  Link Link
Salvation Army Founder's Day
Safety Pin Day

Today’s Quotes                                                                 

 



Today’s Memes

 




Today’s Thoughts

Pretty cloudy, but still a great weather day.

I had a great lunch with Andy and Faith. They spent the last week moving his older sister into Assisted Care here in Flagstaff. She got into The Bluffs, the Taj Mahal of care here in Flagstaff. Emma, his sister, is happy with her new digs and the staff. This is quite the change from her place in Many Farms.

A little surprised that JD Vance was in Hungary, speaking about how great Orban is such a great leader and role model. He is a dicatator.

This morning I saw that Ed Bathke, my travel buddy from Focus, was celebrating his birthday. After seeing that he hasn’t posted anything is a while I called him. He is doing very well. He is still very active in his many groups that deal with Colorado History, 4-wheeling, and other Colorado groups. I’m glad he is doing well. He had a story about sliding his 4wheel Toyota into a ditch. Just like AZ, it was a warm winter, and a snowstorm had hit as he was planning on leaving. The warm ground melted the snow and then turned to glare ice. He was heading down a hill and had no way to stop as he just kept sliding. It took two different AAA drivers, and one day wait to get him out of the ditch. The first truck also went into the ditch near his vehicle. He was going to a wedding in New Orleans but had to cancel as he couldn’t get to the airport in time. It turned out well, but, at the time, I am sure it was harrowing. 

Strange Historical Facts

The Eiffel Tower Was Supposed to Be Demolished

When Gustave Eiffel built the tower for the 1889 World’s Fair in Paris, the plan was always to tear it down after 20 years. Many Parisians hated it — artists and writers signed petitions calling it an eyesore.

What saved it was the radio. Engineers realized the tower made an excellent antenna, and its practical value outweighed the aesthetic objections.

The world’s most visited monument survived because of telecommunications.

 

A Dead Man Won a U.S. Congressional Election

In 2000, Missouri governor Mel Carnahan died in a plane crash just weeks before the Senate election. His name remained on the ballot because there wasn’t enough time to remove it.

He won. His wife was appointed to fill the seat in his place.

It wasn’t the only time this happened — dead candidates have won elections at various levels of government across the country at different points in history. 

Native American Phrases That Subtly Shaped American English

Circle of Life

According to Brainly, deeply rooted in Native American beliefs, the “circle of life” reflects the cyclical nature of existence. Birth, death, and rebirth are seen as interconnected stages, each essential to the whole. The circle also represents unity, equality, and the continuous flow of energy.

Modern usage applies “circle of life” to natural cycles, personal growth, and the inevitability of change. Its Indigenous origin adds depth to its meaning, emphasizing that all life is part of a greater whole.

 

Keepers of the Earth

The Native American worldview often frames humans as caretakers rather than owners of the land, as highlighted by Fiveable. Many tribes teach that the Earth is a shared inheritance, and it’s the responsibility of each generation to protect it for the next. “Keepers of the Earth” captures this duty in a simple yet powerful way.

Environmental groups and educators have embraced the phrase to inspire conservation. Its enduring presence in American discourse speaks to the resonance of Indigenous ecological ethics in modern thought. 

Historic Events

 April in History

Birthdays

Steven Seagal (75 years old)

1951 American actor (Above the Law, Hard to Kill), born in Detroit, Michigan

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Juan Williams [72 years old], Panamanian-American journalist and political analyst (Fox News Channel, The Washington Post, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal), born in Colón, Panama

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Ruth E. Carter [66 years old], American costume designer (Black Panther) and the first Black woman to win multiple Oscars, born in Springfield, Massachusetts

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Neil Smith [60 years old], American football defensive end (KC Chiefs, Den Broncos-Super Bowl 32), born in New Orleans, Louisiana

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Charlie Hunnam [46 years old], British actor (Sons of Anarchy, Queer as Folk), born in Newcastle upon Tyne, England

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Mandy Moore (42 years old)

1984 American singer ("Candy") and actress (This Is Us - "Rebecca Pearson"), born in Nashua, New Hampshire

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Haley Joel Osment (38 years old)

1988 American actor (The Sixth Sense, A.I., Pay it Forward), born in Los Angeles, California

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Daisy Ridley (34 years old)

1992 English actress (Star Wars: the Force Awakens), born in London

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Hugo Grotius (1583-1645; @62, after shipwreck)

Dutch jurist, father of international law, born in Delft, Holland

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Matthew C. Perry (1794-1858; @62, rhematic fever)

Commodore of the United States Navy who opened Japan to Western influence and trade, born in Newport, Rhode Island

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James Bowie, American pioneer and soldier (Texas Revolution), born in Logan, Kentucky (d. 1836; @39, at the Alamo)

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William Booth (1829-1912; @83)

English preacher and founder of the Salvation Army, born in Sneinton, Nottingham, England

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Joseph Pulitzer (1847-1911; @64)

Hungarian-American publisher (St Louis Post-Dispatch, NY World) and Democratic politician whose bequest founded the Columbia School of Journalism and the Pulitzer Prize, born in Makó, Kingdom of Hungary

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Frances Perkins, American politician and 1st woman to hold cabinet-level position (Labor 1933-45), born in Boston, Massachusetts (d. 1965; @85)

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Clare Boothe Luce, American politician and U.S. ambassador to Italy, born in New York City (d. 1987; 84)

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Harry Morgan (1915-2011; @96)

American actor (December Bride; M*A*S*H, 1975-83 - "Col. Sherman Potter"; AfterMASH; Dragnet - "Bill Gannon"), born in Detroit, Michigan

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(Kevin) "Chuck" Connors, American actor (The Rifleman; Cowboy in Africa), NBA basketball player (Boston Celtics), and MLB baseball player (Chicago Cubs), born in Brooklyn, New York City (d. 1992; @71, lung cancer)

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Sheb Wooley [Shelby Fredrick Wooley], American vocalist ("The Purple People Eater"), born in Erick, Oklahoma (d. 2003; @ 82)

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Bernard Moitessier (1925-1994; @69, prostate cancer)

French sailor, vagabond and author who famously led the 1st non-stop, singlehanded, round the world yacht race before sailing a 2nd lap of the world back to Tahiti, born in Saigon, French Vietnam

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Max Von Sydow (1929-2020; @90)

Swedish actor (Hawaii, Exorcist, Dune, Game of Thrones), born in Lund, Sweden

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Blaze Starr [Fannie Fleming], American stripper and burlesque star whose affair with Governor Earl Long inspired the 1989 film "Blaze", born in Wayne County, West Virginia (d. 2015; @83)

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Omar Sharif (1932-2015; @83)

Egyptian actor (Doctor Zhivago, Lawrence of Arabia), born in Alexandria

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John Madden (1936-2021; @85)

American Pro Football HOF coach (Oakland Raiders 1969-78; Super Bowl 1976) and sportscaster (16X Emmy Award winner; CBS, FOX, ABC, NBC; Madden NFL video games), born in Austin, Minnesota

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Don Meredith, American NFL quarterback. 1960-68 (Dallas Cowboys, 3 x Pro Bowl), broadcaster (Monday Night Football), and actor, born in Mount Vernon, Texas (d. 2010; @72, stroke)

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…The End for today…

               

April 08, 2026

9 Apr

 




                

Week 15  Day 99 Flag Today  70°/57°                             Wind 12 mph Gusts - mph

Active Fire: 37 miles away Risk of fire: Low     Nearest Lightning: 357 miles away

Air Quality: Fair Sunshine

April Averages: Temps: 60°\35°

 

Monthly Observations

National Pet Month Link Link
National Pickleball Month
National Poetry Month 
Link
National Rebuilding Month
National Safe Digging Month 
Link 

National Sarcoidosis Awareness Month Link 
Nationally Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs) Month
National Sexual Assault Awareness & Prevention Month  (SAAM) 
Link
National Social Security Month 
National Toddler Immunization Month 
Link

Weekly Observations

2-9

Pesach or Passover
4-10

Hate Week
National Dental Hygienest Week
 Link Link
4-12

National Robotics WeekLink
Week of The Young Child
5-11.

Bat Appreciation Week
National Property & Evidence Professionals Awareness Week
 Link 
Oral, Head and Neck Cancer Awareness Week 
Link 
National Occupational Health Nursing Week
Link
National Public Health Week
National Window Safety Week

8-11

World Irish Dancing Week
9-12

The Masters Tournament

Daily Observations

Appomattox Day Link
Jenkins Ear Day
Jumbo Day 
(Elephant came to US and created the word for big in our language.)
National Alcohol Screening Day 

National Cherish An Antique Day
National Former Prisoner of War Recognition Day
National Unicorn Day 
Link 
Winston Churchill Day

Today’s Quotes                                                                 


 

Today’s Memes

 

Today’s Thoughts

It is a very nice spring day.

Taxes are never a favorite. I don’t mind paying; it’s all the paperwork I have to gather. This year I changed where my investments are handled. The new company sent information, but it sure looked different. Then I never got my 1099 from Social Security. I took what I had to H&R. Then I sat at the SS office here in Flag for almost 2 hours to get the 1099…8 windows with only one open. Then after an hour a second window opened. Five minutes later we were back to one window. All good, as I got the 1099, went back to H&R and she squeezed me in to finish my forms. I’m getting a nice refund from both Feds and AZ. H&R stopped doing ‘senior discount’, but I’m just happy it is done for another year.

I am grateful that Trump called off his military strike. I heard on the news that I was not the only one very concerned that he might have been starting a big war. I still am upset by his language, knowing that many voters did not want or expect his vulgar language. 

Strange Historical Facts

The Shortest War in History Lasted 38 Minutes

The Anglo-Zanzibar War of 1896 holds the record. Zanzibar’s sultan died and was replaced by a man Britain didn’t approve of.

Britain delivered an ultimatum: step down or face bombardment. When the new sultan refused, the British Navy opened fire.

About 38 minutes later, Zanzibar surrendered. The new sultan reportedly fled through a back door before the fighting even ended.

 

Ancient Greeks Thought the Brain Was for Cooling Blood

Aristotle, one of the most influential thinkers in history, believed the brain was essentially a radiator. He thought thinking happened in the heart, and the brain’s job was to cool the blood flowing up from it.

Egyptian embalmers, working from the same assumption, removed the brain through the nose and discarded it when preparing mummies. They preserved the heart carefully.

Being very smart and being exactly right are not always the same thing. 

Native American Phrases That Subtly Shaped American English

Listen to the Wind

Emerging from Indigenous traditions, the phrase reflects the belief that nature communicates wisdom. The wind, in particular, is often viewed as carrying messages, warnings, or blessings. “Listen to the wind” is both literal advice for hunters and travelers and metaphorical counsel for paying attention to life’s subtle signs, as noted by Housely.

Writers and speakers often use the phrase with a poetic tone to suggest mindfulness or openness to inspiration. Its roots in Native storytelling give it a spiritual dimension that persists even in casual use.

 

We Are All Related

From the Lakota phrase “Mitákuye Oyás’iÅ‹,” the meaning is “all my relations” or “we are all related,” expressing the belief that all beings—human, animal, plant, and even elements—are interconnected, as emphasized in Crystal Wind. It’s a reminder of shared existence and mutual responsibility.

The phrase often appears in conversations promoting unity and compassion, especially in social justice and environmental contexts. Its Indigenous origin grounds it in a worldview that sees kinship as the foundation of life. 

Historic Events

 April in History

Birthdays

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Returns tomorrow

 

…The End for today…