World Animal Day
An international observance focused on animals, care, welfare, and the human bond with other living creatures.
United States Edition
World Animal Day leads today's complete edition for United States.
Daily Edition
Official observances, world days, local context, and everyday celebrations for people who need something worth reading, sharing, or talking about today.
An international observance focused on animals, care, welfare, and the human bond with other living creatures.
A day for knowing where things are kept, why nobody can find the tape, and how a home quietly teaches its own geography.
You explore Taiwan's unique Formosan black bears, Taiwanese serows, and numerous endemic bird species across the island. You notice that Taiwanese people most commonly keep cats, dogs, and fish as their household pets. ACADA celebrates the world's pets, and helps assure better care.
In churches across America, this is the day of the Blessing of the Animals. People bring their dogs, cats, birds, hamsters, iguanas, and goldfish to church to be blessed. In New York, the Cathedral of St. John the Divine holds a Blessing of the Animals that includes a procession with a camel, an elephant, and a police horse. The camel does not look thrilled. The priest blesses the camel anyway.
In San Antonio, tacos are breakfast (taco de huevo), lunch (taco de carnitas), and dinner (taco de barbacoa). The taco is not Mexican-American. It is Mexican, period. But the breakfast taco, the thing wrapped in a flour tortilla with eggs and potato and bacon, that is Tex-Mex, and it is glorious. In Austin, they debate which taco shop is best the way other cities debate sports teams.