June Days of Note and Other Calendrical Miscellanea
Sharon Parker Sharon Parker

June Days of Note and Other Calendrical Miscellanea

This month is named for the Roman goddess Juno, wife/partner of Jupiter; queen of the heavens; protector of women, childbirth, and marriage. Read on to learn about the Anglo Saxon name for the month (which begins today, May 28), China’s dragon boat festival, Greenland’s National Day, a week to celebrate pollinators, the story of Pride Month, and assorted other commemorations.

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My Mother’s Compasses
Sharon Parker Sharon Parker

My Mother’s Compasses

My mother has two compasses in her car. One is securely affixed to the dashboard, and because the needle is a magnet and something under the dashboard contains steel, it always indicates that she’s traveling north. The second one clings to the windshield with a suction cup, and as such is usually reliable, except when it falls off.

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Artist Trading Cards and an Irish Hare
Sharon Parker Sharon Parker

Artist Trading Cards and an Irish Hare

I wanted to do something Celtic involving rabbits or hares, and remembered that I had come across some folklore of the British Isles assigning symbolic and magical qualities to hares.

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May Holidays and Observations
Sharon Parker Sharon Parker

May Holidays and Observations

May is named for Maia, Roman earth goddess. To the Anglo-Saxons, it was Thrimilce, meaning “three milks” or milkings, because cattle are well-fed on fresh green grass and can be milked three times a day.

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