Tuesday, February 3, 2026

But Will He Stay Warm? A Random and Happy Tuesday Post

***********************************







It's time once again for a random and happy Tuesday, linking up with Stacy's Random Thoughts at Stacy Uncorked and Sandee at Comedy Plus 


All through the saga of our cold weather, Ms. V has been in a bit of a lather about keeping Carl warm enough for his outdoor job.


Last Thursday she put me in charge of making sure he had a jacket before he left as she was going to exercise class.  I was careful to make sure he had plenty on.




Yesterday, i arrived to a note telling me these clothes were clean.







The rest were not.









It's been a bit of a mess for him, I guess, and he's trying again to choose clothes ahead of time and hang them on the bar.  Problem is, he doesn't remember they're there and goes and grabs others.






The good news is the main kitchen and Carl's kitchen both have new faucets.





The bad news is Carl is still going to take his mom's scissors and spill enough mouthwash on them to make them stick to his counter.


Speaking of mouthwash, each time Carl comes in the room before time to get up, i ask why he's there so i can perhaps assist or redirect him if he wants access to something i'm currently cleaning.


This time, he walked in and anticipated my question, simply saying, "Mouthwash!" as he walked past me.


He went back to snooze more for a while and when he finally came in, simply said, "I'm going to eat!


I asked if he wanted a shower first and he said, "I'm too hungry!  Eat first."  Then he grabbed a bathrobe to put over his pajamas.


Why are you putting on a bathrobe? i asked him.  Your pajamas cover you well.


"Modesty!" he answered and i nodded.  "Have to be modest," he stated to make sure i understood.


I do understand.  While he lives at home, it's not such a big deal, but as he will be moving to a group home someday, his parents are trying to instill more modesty into him, as he's perfectly happy to run around the house in almost nothing.  It seems he's getting it and I'm not going to interfere.


As he ate breakfast and i packed his cooler for work, he talked about his weekend.


"Went to see Trent," he said, "but he wanted to go see Aaron so that's where we ended up."


Did you have fun? i asked.


"Snacks!" he said with a grin.  "And we played games."


If Carl ate, Carl had fun, that's about the size of it.


"Make sure I have enough to eat," he noted as i was getting all his food together.  "And a drink!"


You don't have any drinks, i told him.


"Oh, shoot!" he muttered, then mumbled something that sounded like, "I have to work on the cards, too."


Yes, he'd been wearing both at the same time.


He came in to take his shower and that's when i realized he'd put on two aprons.  Not just modest, clean and modest.


He was actually ready for work early this time, so he went to play on his iPad.  Timing his leaving for work can be tricky.  His phone has a work app and the moment he drives close enough to the building, he's already signed in, even if he stays in the car and doesn't come in right away.  Sign in too early, and you have to get the manager to change the sign-in time which the manager doesn't want to have to do.  Sign in too late and you are still in trouble.


Then, too, he drives rather fast, and so we have to watch his leaving time closely.


And yes, he will stay warm.  Just before he pulled out of the driveway, i ran his coat out to him.


It's time for a few funnies.














Have a blessed and beautiful Tuesday, everyone!








***********************************



Today is:


Day of Remembrance for Oleg the Prophet -- Asatru/Slavic Pagan


Four Chaplains Day -- US (by act of Congress, honoring the four chaplains of the Dorchester who gave their life jackets to others and went down with the ship on Feb. 3, 1943)


Fukuju no mai (Jimai) -- Sensouji Temple, Japan (dance of the seven gods of fortune)


Halfway Point of Winter/Summer -- which it is depends, of course, on your hemisphere; enjoy that cold weather will warm soon, or that cooler temps will relieve your hot spells


Heroes' Day -- Mozambique


Lailat al-Bara'ah (Shab Barat) -- Islam (Night of Forgiveness, or sometimes Night of Records, a preparation for Ramadan; began at sunset yesterday, local custom dates may vary)


Magha Puja Day -- Buddhist (celebrations of the teachings of Buddha to an assembly of holy men)


Martyr's Day -- Sao Tome and Principe


National Carrot Cake Day


Nuestra Señora de Suyapa -- Honduras (Festival of the Virgin of Suyapa, Patroness of Honduras)


Setsubun-sai (Bean-Throwing Festival) -- Japan/Shinto (many fests throughout Japan) 


St. Anskar's Day (patron of Denmark, Scandinavia, Sweden; Bremen, Germany; Hamburg, Germany)


St. Blaise's Day/Blessing of Throats Day (Patron of animals, builders, carvers, healthy throats, stonecutters, veterinarians, wool-combers, wool weavers; Dalmatia; Anguillara Sabazia, Italy; Bovolone, Italy; Camastra, Sicily, Italy; Cassano allo Ionio, Italy; Castellania, Italy; Doues, Italy; Dubrovnik, Croatia; Militello, Sicily, Italy; Montecatini Val di Cecina, Italy; Palombara Sabina, Italy; Pietrasanta, Italy; Revello, Italy; Sacrofano, Italy; against coughs, goiters, throat diseases, whooping cough, wild beasts)


Takisanji Oni Matsuri -- Takisan-ji Temple, Okazaki, Aichi Prefecture, Japan


The Day the Music Died -- anniversary of the plane crash that killed Buddy Holly, Richie Valens, and The Big Bopper (J.P. Richardson)


Veterans' Day -- Thailand



Anniversaries Today:


Jean-Claude van Damme weds Darcy Lapier, 1994

Wake Forest University is established, 1834



Birthdays Today:



Isla Fisher, 1976

Maura Tierney, 1965

Keith Gordon, 1961

Thomas Calabro, 1959

Nathan Lane, 1956

Morgan Fairchild, 1950

Dave Davies, 1947

Blythe Danner, 1943

Fran Tarkenton, 1940

Shelley Berman, 1926

Joey Bishop, 1918

Simone Weil, 1909

James Michener, 1907

Norman Rockwell, 1894

Gertrude Stein, 1874

Elizabeth Blackwell, 1821

Horace Greeley, 1811



Debuting/Premiering Today:


"Victor Borge Show"(TV), 1951

"The Three Caballeros"(Cartoon Film; US debut), 1945 

"Face the Music"(Musical), 1932

"Le carnaval romain"(Berlioz, Op. 9), 1844

"Semiramide"(Opera, Rossini), 1823



Today in History


Bartolomeu Dias of Portugal lands in Mossel Bay after rounding the Cape of Good Hope, becoming the first known European to travel so far south, 1488

The first paper money in America is issued by the colony of Massachusetts, 1690

Philadelphia establishes a "pesthouse" to quarantine immigrants, 1743

The Dutch States-General forbid the export of windmills, 1752

Spain recognizes US independence, 1783

The world's first commercial cheese factory is established in Switzerland, 1815

The sovereignty of Greece is confirmed in a London Protocol, 1830

The Wisconsin Supreme Court declares the US Fugitive Slave Law unconstitutional,1855

Emperor Meiji becomes the 122nd emperor of Japan, 1867

The 15th Amendment to the US Constitution, guaranteeing Black suffrage, is passed, 1870

Albert Spalding, with only $800, starts a sporting goods company, which eventually manufactured the first official baseball, tennis ball, basketball, golf ball, and football (American style football), 1876

Circus owner P.T. Barnum buys Jumbo the elephant, 1882

The 16th Amendment to the US Constitution, the income tax, is ratified, 1913

Canada's original Parliament building, in Ottowa, burns down, 1916

Percival Prattis becomes the first African-American news correspondent allowed in the United States House of Representatives and Senate press galleries, 1947

A plane crash near Clear Lake, Iowa kills Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, The Big Bopper, and pilot Roger Peterson and the incident becomes known as The Day the Music Died, 1959

British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan speaks of the "a wind of change" of increasing national consciousness blowing through colonial Africa, signaling that his Government was likely to support decolonisation, 1960

The unmanned Soviet Luna 9 spacecraft makes the first controlled rocket-assisted landing on the Moon, 1966

In Cairo, Yasser Arafat is appointed Palestine Liberation Organization leader at the Palestinian National Congress, 1969

New York Police Officer Frank Serpico is shot during a drug bust in Brooklyn and survives to later testify against police corruption, 1971

John Buster and the research team at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center announce history's first embryo transfer, from one woman to another resulting in a live birth, 1984

Astronaut Eileen Collins becomes the first woman to pilot the Space Shuttle as mission STS-63 gets underway from Kennedy Space Center in Florida, 1995

The New York Giants defeated the heavily favored and previously undefeated 18-0 New England Patriots in Super Bowl XLII, 17-14, in what is known to be one of the greatest upsets in sports history, 2008

Eric Holder becomes 82nd and 1st African American US Attoney General, 2009

Moscow has its heaviest snowfall in a day on record, killing one and bringing down 2,000 trees, 2018

Pope Francis arrives in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, on the first ever papal visit to the Arabian Peninsula, 2019

The US and Russia extend their last remaining nuclear arms treaty, New START, for five years, 2021

Engineers at MIT announce they have engineered spinach to send emails when detecting explosive materials in groundwater as part of plant nanobionic research, 2021

The coldest wind chill ever is recorded in the the US, -108°F, taken at Mount Washington Observatory, New Hampshire, 2023

Monday, February 2, 2026

She Has Calls to Make (Awww Monday), Inspiring Quote of the Week and Poetry Monday, Bamboo

***********************************





Awww Monday is hosted by Sandee at Comedy Plus.


Join us every Monday for Awww...Mondays.  Post a picture that makes you say Awww... and that's it.


Make sure you get the code from Sandee's site, linked above, and leave a link to your post so we can visit you.  What better way to start the week than with a smile!


Our little Annie is a busy lady, she's got lots of people to talk to and loves playing with this old, non-functional phone.













***********************************



Sparks is the brainchild of Annie of McGuffy's Reader, who wanted us to post something positive and uplifting at the start of the week.  While she no longer blogs, i like to post an Inspiring Quote of the Week in her honor.     







***********************************


Our dear friend Diane is taking a break

accommodations we must make

we miss her poetry and wit

so carry on as Poetry Monday's a hit!


Poetry Monday was started by Diane at On The Alberta/Montana Border Charlotte/Mother Owl and i are keeping it going while she takes a blog break, we hope temporarily.  Anyone else is welcome to join in the fun, just let us know!


This week the theme is Bamboo.                       



She planted bamboo

mad at the neighbor

but she got punished

for the behavior.


When she went to sell

she became quite rueful

no one would buy

she'd been bamboozled!


(True story, she planted bamboo to screen her yard from very nice neighbors, then couldn't sell her house unless she paid to remove it.)



Future themes are:


February 2 Bamboo (Today!)

February 9 Carousel

February 16 Plants With Berries

February 23 Doughnut


(All themes are from the 365 Days of Drawing Prompts and Other Arts Facebook group.)


***********************************





It's Groundhog Day/Hedgehog Day/Badger Day -- what animal you looked to in order to predict the weather depended on where you lived.  It's also called Hromnice in the Czech Republic (hrom = thunder, a weather forecasting day).

This year, what will it be?  If you have dark, dreary, wintry weather today and not a shadow cast anywhere, winter is "spending itself out" and things will start to improve in a gradual rise toward spring in just over six weeks.  If you have a beautiful, sunny day today and see your shadow and everything else's shadow, too, wintry weather is going to come roaring back and you will have six more weeks of cold and bluster and storm until spring commences.

At least, that's the theory.



Thanks to Barb Kowalik and The Cat Blogosphere for the event badge.         



***********************************



Today is:


Anniversary of Treaty of Tartu -- Estonia


Bonza Bottler Day™


Candlemas -- Christian -- or Presentation of Our Lord (f/k/a the Purification of the Virgin Mary) - commemorates the presentation of Jesus in the Temple and purification of Mary on the 40th day after the birth of Jesus. Candles have been blessed on this day since the 11th century, and this was the original forecaster, “If Candlemas is fair and clear, there’ll be two winters in the year.”

    Bank Holiday -- Liechtenstein

    Candelaria Festival -- Puno, Peru (Virgen de la Candelaria, through the 16th)

    Dia de la Candelaria/Virgin of Candelaria -- Mexico; Spain

    La Fete de la Chandeleur -- Canada; France

    Matka Boska Gromniczna (Mother of God of the Blessed Thunder Candle) -- Poland


Constitution Day -- Mexico (obs.)


Festival of Juno Februa -- Ancient Roman Calendar (Juno as goddess of motherly and matrimonial love)


Imbolc/Sughnassad -- Pagan/Wiccan (Northern Hemisphere/Southern Hemisphere)

    Brigmid -- Druid Calendar, also called Feast of Imbolc, celebrated later as St. Bridget's Day, but originally a festival for Brigid, (also known as Brighid, Bríde, Brigit, Brìd) goddess of poetry, healing, and smithcraft.  It is always halfway between Winter Solstice and Spring Equinox, so some years it is on Feb. 1 with St. Brigid's Day

    Disting/Charming of the Plough -- Asatru/Slavic Pagan (a feast of new beginnings and spring)

    Serpent Day -- Celtic (The tradition was that on this day, the Brigmid, snakes or badgers would come out of their winter dens and predict the weather; perhaps a precursor to North America's Groundhog Day.)

    Wives' Feast Day -- Northern England (ancient celebration in association with Imbolc)


Inventors' Day -- Thailand


Lailat al-Bara'ah (Shab Barat) -- Islam (Night of Forgiveness, a preparation for Ramadan; begins at sunset, local custom dates may vary)


Le Jour des Crepes -- France (Crepes Day, as crepes are traditionally served on Candlemas; if you can flip the crepe pan and catch the crepe in it with your right hand, while holding a gold coin in your left, you will become rich this year!)


National Heavenly Hash Day


Nelson Provincial Anniversary Day -- Nelson, New Zealand


Presentation of Christ in the Temple -- Anglican Catholic Christian


Sled Dog Day -- anniversary of the arrival, in 1925, of diphtheria antitoxin in Nome, Alaska; in memory of the sled dogs, especially lead dogs Togo and Balto, who made it possible


St. Cornelius the Centurion's Day (the Cornelius converted by St. Paul in the Book of Acts)


Tu B'Shevat -- Judaism ("New Year of the Trees", began yesterday at sundown, through sunset today)


Veja Diena -- Ancient Latvian Calendar (day of wind, with rituals performed to assure no wind damage next summer)


World Wetlands Day -- UN (the 2026 theme is "Wetlands for our Future: Sustainable Livelihoods 



Anniversaries Today:


Marina Ogilvy (daughter of Princess Alexandra) weds Paull Mowatt, 1990

Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain) marries Olivia Langdon in Elmira, NY, 1870



Birthdays Today:


Shakira, 1977

Michael T. Weiss, 1962

Christie Brinkley, 1954

Ina Garten, 1948

Farah Fawcett, 1947

Graham Nash, 1942

David Jason, 1940

Tom Smothers, 1937

Les Dawson, 1934

Stan Getz, 1927

Elaine Stritch, 1925

James Dickey, 1923

Liz Smith, 1923

Ayn Rand, 1905

George “Papa Bear” Halas, 1895

William Rose Benét, 1886

James Joyce, 1882

Solomon R. Guggenheim,1861

Toyotomi Hideyoshi,1536 (Japan's second "great unifier")



Debuting/Premiering Today:


"The Rich Little Show"(TV), 1975

"The Midnight Special"(TV), 1973

"And Miss Reardon Drinks a Little"(Play), 1971

"What's My Line?"(TV), 1950

"Le Dame aux Camelias"(Play, Dumas, fils), 1848

"Artaxerxes"(Opera, Thomas Arnes), 1762



Today in History:


Alaric II, eighth king of the Visigoths promulgates The Breviary of Alaric (Breviarium Alaricianum or Lex Romana Visigothorum) a collection of Roman law, 506

Pedro de Mendoza founds Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1536

New Amsterdam (later New York) is incorporated as a city, 1653

The first leopard is exhibited in the US, in Boston (admission 25 cents), 1802

Russian settlers establish the Ft. Ross trading post north of San Francisco, 1811

Jonathan Martin sets York Cathedral afire, does £60,000 damage, 1829

The first Chinese workers arrive in San Francisco, 1848

The first public men's toilet in Britain opens, on Fleet Street in London, 1852

Samuel Clemens uses the pen name Mark Twain for the first time, 1863

James Oliver invents the removable tempered steel plow blade, 1869

The SS Strathleven arrives in London with the first frozen mutton imported from Australia, 1880

The Knights of Columbus forms in New Haven, Connecticut, 1882

The first official Groundhog Day is observed in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania, 1887

The bottle cap with cork seal is patented by William Painter of Baltimore, 1892

The longest boxing match under modern rules takes place in Nameoki, Illinois; 77 rounds between Harry Sharpe and Frank Crosby, 1892

The first movie close-up, of a man sneezing, is made at the Edison Studio in West Orange, NJ, 1893

The Australian Premiers' Conference held in Melbourne decides to locate Australia's capital, Canberra, between Sydney and Melbourne, 1899

Queen Victoria's funeral takes place, 1901

Musher Gunner Kaasan and his sled team, led by Balto, finish the serum run from Nenana to Nome, Alaska, delivering the much needed diphtheria medication (inspiration for the Iditarod), 1925

Leonarde Keeler tests the first polygraph machine, 1935

The Groundhog Day gale hits the north-eastern United States and south-eastern Canada, 1976

F.W. de Klerk allows the African National Congress to function legally and promises to release Nelson Mandela, 1990

Iran launches its first domestically made satellite, Omid, into orbit, 2009

All 955 miners are rescued from the Beatrix gold mine in Welkom town, South Africa, after 2 days underground, 2018

More than 40 mummies from around 323-30 BC are found at a burial site at the Tuna el-Gebel archaeological site south of Cairo, Egypt, 2019

Palindrome Day:  today's date, 02/02/2020, reads the same forward and backward, whether you are putting the order as month/day or day/month; the last time this happened was 11/11/1111, 2020

More than one million Afghans have fled the country for Iran threatening a new migrant crisis, 2022

In Chile's greatest natural disaster since 2010, wildfires begin burning east of Viña del Ma, spreading to Quilpué and Villa Alemana, 2024