Sunday

Evolving with the Times

Plus, growing herbs, baking with berries, our hurricane forecast, and more
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From The Old Farmer's Almanac
 
Almanac
Thank you, Katie Vander Meer, for this week’s photo!
The Old Farmer’s Almanac began publishing in 1792. A new issue has followed every year since. That’s 228 years of bearing witness to a world that has changed dramatically in many ways but in others—sometimes disappointingly—not much at all.

When our editors take to the airwaves each fall to talk about our newest edition, they are often asked about the Almanac’s longevity. The core of their answers speaks to not only a respect for self-sufficiency and tradition, but also an ability to evolve with the times. While being useful, resourceful, and kind will never go out of style, the Almanac has always been welcoming of new ideas, even when they challenge or run counter to how things have always been. So is this true of humans: An open heart and mind will get you far.

The road ahead can feel long and you might not always know the best thing to say or do, but you’re never wrong by showing empathy, elevating dignity, and listening with compassion. If we’ve learned anything in 228 years, it’s that being perfect is less important than continuing to try.

As sure as the Sun will rise and set each day, The Old Farmer’s Almanac is here for you, now and always.

Your Friends from The Old Farmer’s Almanac

What We’re Doing This Week:
“Where justice is denied, where poverty is enforced, where ignorance prevails, and where any one class is made to feel that society is in an organized conspiracy to oppress, rob, and degrade them, neither persons nor property will be safe.”
Frederick Douglass (1818–95), American social reformer and abolitionist, speaking on the 24th Anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation
 
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June Birthstone
June’s birthstone, the pearl, comes in a variety of colors, including white, pink, yellow, brown, green, purple, blue, silver, and black. No matter their color, shape, or size, pearls are all created in the same way. Mollusks (clams, oysters, and mussels) create pearls in response to irritants that get inside their shells. To learn more about how these beautiful gems are made, visit Almanac.com/June-birthstone.
 
WHAT WE'RE DOING THIS WEEK
 
The Old Farmer's Almanac P.O. Box 520 1121 Main Street Dublin, NH 03444

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