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Monday, February 27, 2017

World Wide Cigar Smoking Day, February 27th

     Almost every day of the week has been designated as some sort of weird holiday.  Lots of people know about Festivus (12/23), but have you ever heard of National Chicken Dance Day ((5/14), or Cinco de Marcho (3/5, of course), or Clean Out Your Refrigerator Day (11/15)?  I recently learned that February 27th is World Wide Cigar Smoking Day.
     When I was growing up in the 1950s and 1960s, cigarettes were the thing to smoke.  Pipes and cigars were old fashioned.  Only old men like Groucho Marx and my grandfather puffed on big, fat stogies.  My grandmother hated Grandpop's smoking.  She complained that her sheer, white curtains contained so much smokey residue that they turned the wash water yellow. She tried to ration Grandpop's Dutch Masters or El Producto consumption by purchasing one small package containing five cigars when she did her weekly shopping.  Rather than sneak out to buy more smokes, Grandpop poked a tooth pick into the butt end of his cigar so he could puff it longer.
     I thought cigars were stinky, but I liked watching my grandfather cut off the tip of his corona and go through the lighting and puffing ceremony.  I was even oddly fascinated with the slimy end left stuck on the toothpick.  I turned against cigars the day I went to school after spending the night with my grandparents.  A classmate, a new enrollee from a state south of the Mason-Dixon Line, loudly exclaimed, "You smell like see-gars."  I was ten or eleven at the time, and I wanted to smell like my mother's Coty perfume.
   
This early 1930s photo shows my uncle pretending to smoke one of my grandfather's stogies.  Fortunately, my uncle's attraction to cigars didn't carry over into adulthood.

     Every now and then Grandpop got a whole cardboard box of cigars, probably as a Christmas gift.  We grandkids received the empty boxes.  They were great for storing trinkets, and they lasted a lot longer than the paper rings we sported on our fingers.
     I don't remember any wooden cigar boxes.  Wooden boxes had a much higher purpose than holding marbles or jacks - they could be turned into musical instruments.  Check out this informative video:

     

   

     If you want to know more about the history of cigars in the United States, check out this site: https://www.famous-smoke.com/cigaradvisor/national-cigar-day 

Monday, February 20, 2017

Pig in a Park

     This goes out to the lady who was walking her pet pig in Long Bridge Park.  Thanks for telling me about the nature of pet pigs and thanks for letting me run my fingers though your piggy's bristly hair.  A "Hee Haw" salute seems appropriate.




Friday, February 17, 2017

WKHS - FM 90.5

     Subscribing to satellite radio doesn't make much sense to me since I'm usually in the car for 15 minute stretches.  When I do take a long road trip, I like to take CD's or my iPod.  Recently I drove to Maryland without my tunes and and ended up scanning for radio stations.  That's when I discovered Kent County High School Radio, FM 90.5, WKHS.
     WKHS is a non-commercial radio station owned by the Board of Education of Kent County High School.  The purpose of the station is to train the broadcasters of tomorrow.  The station is staffed by students while school is in session.  Community volunteers take over during the evenings.  On nights and weekends and over the summer break, the station simulcasts WXPN - 88.5 FM, public radio from the University of Pennsylvania.
     WKHS has been on the air since March 28, 1974.  That's coming up on 43 years.  The station broadcasts at 17,500 watts and can be heard from as far away as 60 miles.  I liked the mix of music.  The student DJ's (I heard three since I tuned in at the shift change) had enthusiasm and lots of personality.  The kids who read the news and sports updates could have polished their deliveries, but that's what the student radio training ground is all about.
     Thanks to WKHS and DJ Spanky for brightening up those 20 minutes I spent listening as I passed through your broadcast area.