World Home Threshold Day
A day for the doors, mats, shoes, keys, steps, and greetings that mark the passage between the world and home.
Namibia Edition
World Home Threshold Day leads today's complete edition for Namibia.
Daily Edition
Official observances, world days, local context, and everyday celebrations for people who need something worth reading, sharing, or talking about today.
A day for the doors, mats, shoes, keys, steps, and greetings that mark the passage between the world and home.
A day honoring the Skeleton Coast, the notorious stretch of coastline from the Ugab River to the Kunene River in the north, named for the whale bones, seal bones, and shipwrecked vessels that litter its shores. The Benguela Current brings cold Antarctic water northward, creating dense fog that has caused hundreds of shipwrecks over the centuries. The coast is so inhospitable that sailors who survived wrecks often died of thirst before they could cross the desert to reach civilization. Today the Skeleton Coast is a protected wilderness area where desert lions roam the beaches and hyenas eat seal carcasses.
A day for mending the little thing before it becomes the expensive thing.
A day for the footwear that knows the job better than the person wearing it wants to admit.
You see the European badger, red fox, and roe deer as the Netherlands' most recognizable native wildlife despite its urban landscape. You find that dogs, cats, and rabbits are extremely popular pets, with many Dutch households also keeping guinea pigs and hamsters. ACADA celebrates the world's pets, and helps assure better care.
You recognize cashew nuts as Guinea-Bissau's signature agricultural export and economic lifeline, grown throughout the country's savanna regions and harvested by family farmers. You understand that cashews represent the nation's connection to the land and its role in global supply chains, despite limited international brand recognition.