old, worn out, but comfortable


November 27, 2025 (Gregorian calendar/Day 330)
Thursday, 18 Hidar 2018 (Ethiopian calendar/3rd month)
Marpaˀīym (Marpeim) םיאפרמ 5 (Enochian calendar/9th month/Remedies of plants)
November 23, 2025 (International Fixed calendar)
Overtone Moon 5, Limi 13 (13 Moon calendar/first quarter moon)
~ Overtone Peacock Moon of Radiance, November 15th – December 12th
Day 8, 9th lunation at 40-51%, 6012 (lunisolar calendar/Sabbath Day)
Elder Moon: November 24 – December 23 (Celtic 13 Month calendar/13th month)
13.0.13.2.4 9 Kan 2 Mak (Mayan Long Count calendar)
Pie in the face day, turtle adoption day, Thanksgiving Day (US)

photo of the day

Huffle-Buffs

Scots; those old, worn out, yet comfortable items of clothing.

*photo is mine

hope you have a great day!
thanks for stopping by!!

Finding the Roots of the American Revolution in Frederick County: (visitfrederick.org/MD/USA) …”In the fight for American independence, Frederick County, Maryland had a major part to play. In the millennia before Europeans landed on the shores of North America, the Monocacy River Valley was home to numerous Native American settlements, utilizing the forests, lands, and waterways of the region. Archeologists from the National Park Service at both Catoctin Mountain Park and Monocacy National Battlefield have documented the ways in which Native American communities employed the land in what became Frederick County, including quarrying stone from Catoctin Mountain and establishing settlements along the banks of the Monocacy River. In the early 1700s, English and Scots-Irish settlers began moving west from the shores of the Chesapeake Bay into the interior of Maryland. At the base of Catoctin Mountain and in the valley of the Monocacy River, colonists began establishing small farms. In the 1740s, an Irish businessman named Daniel Dulany received a land patent for 7,000 acres of Maryland countryside known as Tasker’s Chance. In 1745 he laid out a grid for a town that he called “Frederick-Town” in honor of Frederick Calvert, the 6th Lord of Baltimore.” …German immigrants, A fateful meeting on the banks of Carroll Creek, Repudiating the Stamp Act, supplying an army, housing prisoners of war/Hessian Barracks

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