Daily Calendar for Wednesday, March 13, 2024
Question of the Day
Does Vermont have a long enough growing season for red peppers? The green bell type are no problem. How about okra?
It is possible to grow red bell peppers in Vermont (and areas with a similar climate), but they may not be as large as their southern-grown cousins. If they’re planted in a sheltered valley, if spring comes early, and if the summer is hot, hot, hotβthen maybe. Okra, on the other hand, is better suited to warmer climates. This plant requires a warm soil and climate, which is why it is associated with the South!
Read our Growing Guides for bell peppers and okra!
Advice of the Day
Though honey is sweet, do not lick it off a brier.
Home Hint of the Day
When laying a floor, start along the most irregular wall. It’s easier to cut for that wall before laying floorboards that close you in.
Word of the Day
Plough Monday
The first Monday after Epiphany and Plough Sunday was so called because it was the day that men returned to their plough, or daily work, at the end of the Christmas holiday. It was customary for farm laborers to draw a plough through the village, soliciting money for a βplough-light,β which was kept burning in the parish church all year. In some areas, the custom of blessing the plough is maintained.
Puzzle of the Day
Why is a dog dressed more warmly in summer than he is in winter?
Because in winter he wears a fur coat, and in summer he wears a fur coat and pants.
Born
- Joseph Priestley (scientist) β
- Abigail Fillmore (U.S. First Lady) β
- Percival Lowell (astronomer) β
- Hugo Wolf (composer) β
- Janet Flanner (journalist) β
- Sammy Kaye (bandleader) β
- L. Ron Hubbard (author) β
- Douglas Rain (Canadian actor) β
- Neil Sedaka (singer) β
- William H. Macy (actor) β
- Deborah Raffin (actress) β
- Adam Clayton (bass guitarist for U2) β
- Annabeth Gish (actress) β
- Coco Gauff (tennis player ) β
Died
- Benjamin Harrison (23rd U.S. president) β
- Susan B. Anthony (American social reformer ) β
- Bruno Bettelheim (child psychologist) β
- Maureen Stapleton (actress) β
- Robert C. Baker (founded Cornell University’s Institute of Food Science and Marketing. He was responsible for many innovations including chicken nuggets and chicken hot dogs) β
- Peter Tomarken (game show host) β
- William Hurt (actor ) β
Events
- Harvard University was named for clergyman John Harvardβ
- Halley’s Comet reached perihelionβ
- The planet Uranus was discovered by English astronomer Sir William Herschelβ
- First political cartoon depicting βUncle Samβ publishedβ
- Confederate Congress agreed on the recruitment of slaves into the army (U.S. Civil War)β
- Chester Greenwood patented earmuffsβ
- Eadweard Muybridge’s Zoopraxiscope, an early movie projector, debuted in Londonβ
- Tennessee banned teaching evolutionβ
- The discovery of Pluto, the ninth planet, was officially announced on this date, which was Percival Lowell’s birthday. Lowell was founder of Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona, where Clyde W. Tombaugh discovered Pluto on February 18, 1930. (Much later, Pluto’s planet designation changed!)β
- Hitler took formal possession of Vienna (WWII)β
- The Viet Minh began a successful siege of the French-held Dien Bien Phu in Vietnamβ
- Oil discovered in Prudhoe Bay in Alaskaβ
- U.S. Apollo 9 splashed down in the Atlantic Ocean after a 10-day flight testing the lunar moduleβ
- The Common Market officially inaugurated the new European Monetary Systemβ
- Irving King Jordan, Jr., became the first deaf president of Gallaudet Universityβ
- Solar flare caused power grid failure of Hydro-Quebec in Canadaβ
- Moscow’s newspaper, Pravda, announced that it was suspending publicationβ
- UFOs seen over Arizona, Nevada, and Sonora, Mexicoβ
- For 15 minutes, Luciano Pavarotti took in bravos after the night’s performance of Tosca at the Metropolitan Opera. It was his final night of staged opera; the end of a career that began 43 years earlier. It was the biggest farewell ovation at the Met since soprano Leonie Rysanek said goodbye in January 1996.β
- Twenty-five year old Dallas Seavey became the youngest winner of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Raceβ
- Roman Catholic cardinals elected the church’s first South American leader, Argentine Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio. He took the name Pope Francis I.β
Weather
- Three-day blizzard, Saratoga, New York, 58 inches snowβ
- Seventy-three inches of snow depth at Woodstock, Vermontβ
- Blizzard in Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine dumped 3 feet of snowβ
- High of 83 degrees F in New York Cityβ
- East coast blizzard dumped heavy snow: 25 inches in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; 27 inches in Albany, New York; and 13 inches in Birmingham, Alabamaβ