• 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 […]

  • National Clams on the Half Shell Day

    National Clams on the Half Shell Day celebrates a seafood tradition rooted in coastal living, shellfish harvesting, and culinary simplicity. National Clams on the Half Shell Day highlights the practice of serving raw or lightly prepared clams directly in their shells, a method that emphasizes freshness, texture, and the natural flavor of the sea. While […]

  • 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, […]

  • Hanukkah

    A Festival of Light Born from Courage and Restoration Hanukkah returns each year as a warm, flickering beacon against the deepening nights of winter. Its story reaches back to the second century BCE, when the Seleucid ruler Antiochus IV Epiphanes outlawed Jewish practice and desecrated the Second Temple in Jerusalem. In response, a small group […]

  • National Storytelling Week

    Origins and Historical Foundations of National Storytelling Week National Storytelling Week is observed annually during late January or early February and is dedicated to the practice of oral storytelling as a cultural, educational, and communal tradition. The observance originated in the United Kingdom in the late twentieth century as part of efforts to preserve and […]

  • National California Kiwifruit Day

    Origins and Agricultural Background of California Kiwifruit Day California Kiwifruit Day is observed annually in February and recognizes the role of California growers in cultivating kiwifruit for domestic markets. The observance reflects agricultural diversification rather than historical tradition. Kiwifruit originated in China and was later introduced to New Zealand, where it gained international recognition. California […]

  • National Crepe Day

    National Crepe Day

    Origins and Historical Background of Crepe Day Crepe Day is observed annually in early February and centers on crepes, a thin pancake associated most strongly with France, particularly the region of Brittany. The observance draws from long-standing culinary tradition rather than a single founding event, reflecting how staple foods can become cultural symbols through repetition […]

  • National Tater Tot Day

    National Tater Tot Day

    Origins and Historical Background of National Tater Tot Day National Tater Tot Day is observed annually on February 2 and celebrates a processed potato product that became an American staple through postwar industrial food innovation. Tater tots were developed in the 1950s by a major frozen food producer as a solution to reduce waste from […]

  • National Frozen Yogurt Day

    Origins and Historical Background of National Frozen Yogurt Day National Frozen Yogurt Day is observed annually in early February and centers on a dessert that emerged from twentieth-century experimentation at the intersection of dairy science, consumer health trends, and commercial innovation. Frozen yogurt did not arise from traditional dessert lineage but from modern efforts to […]