MDBCs 03 Aug 2024
August 3rd 2024 - Holidays and Observances
(click on the day for details)
- Anniversary of the Killing of Pidjiguiti (Guinea-Bissau)
- Armed Forces Day (Equatorial Guinea)
-
Christian feast day:
- George Freeman Bragg, W. E. B. Du Bois (Episcopal Church)
- Lydia of Thyatira
- Myrrhbearers (Lutheran Church)
- Nicodemus
- Olaf II of Norway (Translation of the relic)
- Stephen (Discovery of the relic)
- Waltheof of Melrose
- August 3 (Eastern Orthodox liturgics)
- Flag Day (Venezuela)
- Independence Day, celebrates the independence of Niger from France in 1960.
- National Guard Day (Venezuela)
Observances (click on the day, BD, or week for details)
Big Forehead Day
Clean Your Floors Day
Cloves Syndrome Awareness Day
Makira-Ulawa Province Day
Mead Day
National Disc Golf Day
National Grab Some Nuts Day
National Jamaican Patty Day
National Mustard Day
Sandcastle Day
National Playing Card Collection Day
National Sunflower Day
International Blues Music Day
Tony Bennett’s Birthday
Martha Stewart’s Birthday
James Hetfield’s Birthday
Devon Lee Carlson’s Birthday
Zach Wilson’s Birthday
Tom Brady’s Birthday
Martin Sheen
Fun Observances
Watermelon Day
August 3 is Watermelon Day, an annual holiday that celebrates everyone's favorite summer fruit.
Made of almost 92% water, the fruit is full of Vitamins A, C, and antioxidants. So what are you waiting for? Go get yourself a few slices of watermelon to celebrate this delicious holiday.
Watermelon is an ancient food that is believed to have originated in tropical Africa. Historians have found evidence of watermelon cultivation as far back as 4000 years ago. Today, many varieties of the fruit are grown in warm parts of the world.
A Superfood
Because of its high water content, watermelon is a good thirst quencher. In fact, in the Kalahari desert, where they are called tsamma, watermelons are one of the main sources of water during the dry, hot season. In the past, people crossed the desert only during a good tsamma season.
Some studies have shown that the antioxidants in watermelon - carotenoid and lycopene - can reduce the risk of some types of cancer.
All parts of the fruit are edible - its flesh can be eaten as is, cooked or juiced. In many parts of the world, the rind or the thick green outer covering of the fruit is stewed, fried or pickled. In some parts of in the China, watermelon seeds are dried and roasted and enjoyed like nuts.
How to Celebrate
- Celebrate the holiday by having watermelon for all your meals. Have a big glass of watermelon juice for breakfast; make a lovely watermelon, feta cheese, and mint salad for lunch; and for dinner, make watermelon salsa to go with your fish. And finally, make some refreshing watermelon sorbet to end the day on a high note.
- Of course, have slices of the fruit as a snack all through the day.
- Have a garden? Why not spend the day finding out how you can plant a watermelon plant in your yard. If you do it today, you'll not have to make a grocery store run to get watermelons for Watermelon Day next year. All you'll need to do is take a walk in your garden!
Did You Know…
…that watermelon is the official vegetable of the state of Oklahoma in the United States? There is some debate between the botanical and gardening community as to whether to classify watermelon as a vegetable or a fruit. Botanists all agree that watermelons are a fruit, while gardeners usually tend to believe that it is a vegetable given that it is closely related to the squash, gourd, and cucumber families.
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One night while I was cat-sitting my daughter’s indoor feline, it escaped outside. When it failed to return the following morning, I found the beast clinging to a branch about 30 feet up in a spindly tree. Unable to lure it down, I called the fire department.
“We don’t do that anymore,” the woman dispatcher said. When I persisted, she was polite but firm.
“The cat will come down when it gets hungry enough.”
“How do you know that?” I asked.
“Have you ever seen a cat skeleton in a tree?” she said.
Two hours later the cat was back, looking for breakfast.
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When my daughter and I caught only one perch on our fishing trip—not enough for even a modest lunch—we decided to feed it to her two cats. She put our catch in their dish and watched as the two pampered pets sniffed at the fish but refused to eat it.
Thinking quickly, my daughter then picked up the dish, walked over to the electric can opener, ran it for a few seconds, then put the fish back down. The cats dug right in.
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“Halt!” shouted our drill instructor. He had noticed that, for the umpteenth time, a recruit kept going to his right on a left command. Our instructor approached the directionally challenged Marine and stomped on his left foot.
“Now,” he said, “when I say ‘left,’ it’s the one that hurts.”
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Q: Which is faster, heat or cold?
A: Heat, because you can catch cold!
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sandrewn
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