Author Topic: All things Easter, Spring Solstice, Passover, or Ostara  (Read 197664 times)

Offline CellarDweller

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Re: All things Easter, Spring Solstice, Passover, or Ostara
« Reply #180 on: Today at 09:58:50 am »
My neighbors and I have developed a custom that every holiday we go out to lunch at Dairy Queen (for those not familiar, it's a soft-serve ice cream chain). So we find plenty of holidays -- even though we generally skip Thanksgiving and Christmas!

January: NY Day, MLK Day
February: Groundhog Day, Valentine's Day, President's Day
March: Ides of March, St. Patrick's Day
April: April Fool's Day, Earth Day
May: Cinco de Mayo, Mothers Day, Memorial Day
June: Fathers Day, Flag Day, Juneteenth
July: 4th of July
August:
September: Labor Day
October: Indigenous People's Day, Halloween
November: Veteran's Day, Black Friday
December: Hannukah; Christmas

We also try to celebrate one or two Jewish holidays as they occur along the way.

As you can see, there's no famous holiday in August. We'll have to consult this list, and maybe pick Woman Astronomers Day or National Coloring Book Day or Big Forehead Day.

https://nationaltoday.com/august-holidays/


It seems they havce a "day" for everything.  :laugh:

Also, Sonja, while Katy gave a good list of holidays, they are not all federal holidays where people have the day off work.  The holidays that I made green are the ones where government offices and banks and post offices are closed.


Tell him when l come up to him and ask to play the record, l'm gonna say: ''Voulez-vous jouer ce disque?''
'Voulez-vous, will you kiss my dick?'
Will you play my record? One-track mind!

Offline serious crayons

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Re: All things Easter, Spring Solstice, Passover, or Ostara
« Reply #181 on: Today at 02:44:23 pm »
Also, Sonja, while Katy gave a good list of holidays, they are not all federal holidays where people have the day off work.  The holidays that I made green are the ones where government offices and banks and post offices are closed.

Good point, Chuck! Yes, almost all of the above days have some form of traditional celebration -- cards, candy and fancy dinners on Valentine's Day, wearing green and celebrating Irish culture on St. Patrick's, costumes and trick-or-treating on Halloween, etc. But not all are national holidays.

Chuck would be familiar with national holidays, of course, because banks are closed. Newspaper reporters have to work, or at least a few on any given holiday. Usually, people volunteer to work on holidays, either to be cooperative or because on holidays we'd get eight hours pay for five-hour shifts.


 

Offline Sason

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Re: All things Easter, Spring Solstice, Passover, or Ostara
« Reply #182 on: Today at 04:49:11 pm »

It seems they havce a "day" for everything.  :laugh:

Also, Sonja, while Katy gave a good list of holidays, they are not all federal holidays where people have the day off work.  The holidays that I made green are the ones where government offices and banks and post offices are closed.

You actually do have quite a few holidays! Paul always complains that you never have any holidays and we always have them.

I count ten above, we have twelve. But you always get the Monday off instead if a holiday falls on the weekend, we never get that. So I guess it's about the same amount in a year.

Düva pööp is a förce of natüre

Offline Sason

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Re: All things Easter, Spring Solstice, Passover, or Ostara
« Reply #183 on: Today at 04:58:24 pm »
Good point, Chuck! Yes, almost all of the above days have some form of traditional celebration -- cards, candy and fancy dinners on Valentine's Day, wearing green and celebrating Irish culture on St. Patrick's, costumes and trick-or-treating on Halloween, etc. But not all are national holidays.

Chuck would be familiar with national holidays, of course, because banks are closed. Newspaper reporters have to work, or at least a few on any given holiday. Usually, people volunteer to work on holidays, either to be cooperative or because on holidays we'd get eight hours pay for five-hour shifts.

I've always had all holidays off work, which I've always been very greatful for, esp when my son was little.
When I worked at the hospital, OTs weren't considered essential, so while most of the staff of course had to work, me and my colleagues were off.
For the most of my working life though, I worked in a public clinic, they are always closed on a holiday.

Düva pööp is a förce of natüre