• Christmas Bird Count Week

    A Tradition Rooted in Conservation Christmas Bird Count Week is one of the longest-running citizen science efforts in the world, transforming casual birdwatching into meaningful conservation data. The tradition began in 1900 when ornithologist Frank Chapman proposed a new idea: instead of the popular holiday “side hunts,” where birds were shot competitively, people would count […]

  • Super Saturday

    The Final Sprint of the Holiday Shopping Season Super Saturday — sometimes called Panic Saturday — is the last Saturday before Christmas, a day when millions of shoppers flood stores and websites to complete their gift lists. Falling this year on December 20, it stands as one of the busiest retail days of the season, […]

  • Unchain a Dog Month

    Unchain a Dog Month

    Why Chaining Dogs Causes Harm Unchain a Dog Month, observed every January, draws attention to a practice that remains common yet deeply harmful: keeping dogs tethered for long periods of time. While some people believe chaining is a practical way to control a dog or keep them safe outdoors, research and decades of animal welfare […]

  • National Meat Week

    National Meat Week

    The Role of Meat in Human History National Meat Week explores one of humanity’s oldest and most influential food sources. Long before agriculture, early humans relied on hunted meat for survival. Animal protein provided dense nutrition, essential fats and minerals that supported brain development and physical endurance. Archaeological evidence shows that cooperative hunting and meat […]

  • Lunar New Year (Year of the Goat)

    Welcoming a New Year of Renewal and Good Fortune Lunar New Year is one of the world’s oldest and most widely celebrated holidays, observed across East and Southeast Asia and throughout global diasporas. Falling between late January and mid-February, its date is determined by the lunar calendar, marking the transition from one zodiac animal year […]

  • Lantern Festival

    A Night When Light Takes Center Stage The Lantern Festival glows on the 15th day of the first lunar month, marking the joyful close of Chinese New Year celebrations. It is a night when lanterns rise, riddles dance across paper, and families gather under the first full moon of the lunar year. Rooted in over […]

  • British Pie Week

    British Pie Week

    British Pie Week is observed in early March and celebrates one of the United Kingdom’s most enduring food structures: a filled dish enclosed by pastry that is designed to travel, hold heat, and concentrate flavor. British Pie Week is not just about comfort food. It is about a cooking technology that grew alongside urban labor, […]

  • National Pound Cake Day

    National Pound Cake Day is observed annually on March 4 and celebrates a cake style built on proportion, pantry stability, and the historical logic of simple ratios. National Pound Cake Day highlights a dessert that began as a practical formula and became a cultural staple across multiple regions, with variations shaped by ingredients, technology, and […]

  • National Absinthe Day

    Cinco de Marcho is observed in March and is best understood as a modern, playful food-and-drink themed observance rather than a historical commemoration. Cinco de Marcho is often framed as a pun on “Cinco de Mayo,” and it typically functions as a prompt for casual celebration centered on Mexican-inspired flavors, nachos, tacos, and festive beverages. […]

  • National Cheese Doodle Day

    National Cheese Doodle Day is observed annually on March 5 and celebrates a snack product that represents the intersection of corn agriculture, industrial extrusion technology, flavor engineering, and twentieth-century convenience culture. National Cheese Doodle Day highlights cheese doodles as more than a bright orange, airy snack. They are the result of precise mechanical processing that […]

  • Cinco de Marcho

    Cinco de Marcho

    Cinco de Marcho is observed in March and is best understood as a modern, playful food-and-drink themed observance rather than a historical commemoration. Cinco de Marcho is often framed as a pun on “Cinco de Mayo,” and it typically functions as a prompt for casual celebration centered on Mexican-inspired flavors, nachos, tacos, and festive beverages. […]

  • National Frozen Food Day

    National Frozen Food Day is observed annually on March 6 and recognizes the technological breakthrough that transformed freezing from a seasonal accident into a precise preservation system. National Frozen Food Day centers on the science of rapid freezing, cold chain logistics, and the industrial infrastructure that made frozen vegetables, seafood, and prepared meals widely accessible. […]