10/01/2006

September 2006

Latest Additions to the
.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. World Kigo Database

… Please sign our GUESTBOOK …

Please add your haiku as a comment to the various BLOG entries
or e-mail them to me.


You do not have to be a member of any haiku club to submit your haiku.
This Database wants to serve ALL HAIJIN WORLDWIDE.





Keywords, non-seasonal haiku topics, all year topics, all season topics,
no season muki 無期 ...



..................................................................... September 2006

..... Zinnia (hyakunichisoo) Japan

..... World Days and Weeks a growing collection
.. .. World Deaf Day, World Mother-in-Law's Day and many more

..... Harvest and its various kigo  

Sage, Salbei, Salvia splendens et al. (sarubeea, seeji) Japan

Weeds (zassoo) worldwide !

Wild Chrysanthemum (nogiku) Japan

Zinnia (hyakunichisoo) Japan

Toad Lily (hototogisu) Japan

Peace (Swahili : Amani) Kenya

Begonia (shuukaidoo, shukaido) Japan

Candle (roosoku) Japan. With a discussion about translating Japanese haiku.

Heart Pond (kokoro no ike)   Japan

Maize : Green Maize, Corn on the Cob   Kenya

Rain Gutters Cleaning  North America

Ladakh : Haiku and Kigo  

Kamehameha Day  Hawaii

Hula Dance and the Goddess Laka  Hawaii

Long day, short day, long night, short night  Japan. nagaki hi, tanjitsu, nagaki yo, mijika yo

Pipal tree (Ficus religiosa) India Peepul or Bo tree
..... figs (ichijiku) Japan

Oranges, mandarin oranges, tangerines  Kenya. mikan (Japan)

Santoka and Sake Haiku  

Matsuyama and Masaoka Shiki  

Introducing Japanese Haiku Poets

Winter drizzle, sleet (shigure)   Japan. With many more related kigo.

World Peace Day International Day of Peace. Ahimsa. India, worldwide

World Music Day India, worldwide

Teacher's Day, Sarvapalli Radhakrishnan Memorial Day India

Summer Purification Ceremony (nagoshi, natsu no harae) Japan
..... including many related Japanese kigo

Coolness (suzushi) Japan. cool breeze (ryoofuu) and more about the Tea Ceremony
..... including "coolness in autumn"

Bukusu Culture, Babukusu People Kenya

Mud (Swahili : matope) Kenya
..... including: Brickmaking, Dry mud, Bukusu Initiation (Circumcision) in Kenya
..... Spring Mud, haru no doro, shundei in Japan

Figs (Ficus carica)   Turkey. Ichijiku, toogaki, hororoishi in Japan.

Ramadan, Berat Kandil (Leylatul Berat, Laylatul Barat)   Turkey   

Mahatma Gandhi's Birthday, Gandhi Jayanthi Day India

Bird Haze in Spring (torigumori) Japan. Also "flower haze", cherry blossom haze (hanagumori) and "herring haze" (nishingumori).
..... Birds and Clouds .. kumo ni tori .. 雲に鳥

Voices of Animals From Russia

Spring Equinox, vernal equinox (haru higan) Japan


..................................................................... August 2006

Holy Innocents Celebration Christian Catholic Communities

Deer (shika)   Japan

Tagore Memorial Day    Rabindranath Tagore, India, August 17

Senior Citizen's Day. Respect for the Aged Day (keiroo no hi) Japan
..... Including: Old people, elders, elderly and so on as haiku topics.

Buddha's Birthday, Flower Festival, Flower Hall (kanbutsu-e, shuuni-e, hahamatsuri, hana midoo   Japan
   
Soap bubbles (shabondama)   Japan

Honey Spas, Apple Spas, Linen Spas Russia . Honey Saviour.

Cemetery Sunday Ireland (Roman Catholic parishes)

Wasabi, Japanese horseradish Japan

Monkey, Hanuman India. saru (Japan)

Peace and War (heiwa to sensoo) Worldwide


..................................................................... July 2006

Grave marker (sotoba) Japan

Voice of an Animal (xx no koe) Japan. Various examples and translation possibilities.

Freezing, frozen (itsuru, kooru) Japan. Iced, under ice and more

Avocado pear (Kikuyu : Mûkorobîa) Kenya

"Kigo" and "haiku" as Haiku Topics Japan

..... Child, Children (kodomo) Read Haiku about Children and from Chilren. A new Forum of the World Kigo Database!

"Goats and Goat Meat Kenya

Green Caterpillar "green insect" (aomushi, namushi) Japan Kenya

Maize (toomorokoshi, tookibi), Corn (koon), Millet (kibi) Japan Kenya

Wading Pool, Spray Park Canada

First Kick-Ball Game (kemari hajime) Japan

Morning-Glory (asagao) Japan ..... Bindweed (hirugao). Evening Face (yorugao)

Buddha, Shakyamuni, Shaka India, Japan

TempleIndia

Temple, Buddhist Temple(tera) Japan

Shrine, Shinto Shrine (jinja) Japan

Bell, Temple Bell (kane, tsurigane, waniguchi, dootaku) Japan
..... Bell, Temple Bell in India

Withering Wind, Cold Gale (kogarashi) Japan

Grackle Bird (Quiscalus mexicanus) Oklahoma, USA Great-tailed grackle, boat-tail grackle

Wimbledon Tennis Tournament ... collecting


..................................................................... June 2006

Fly-swatter (haetataki) Japan

Cool dry season  Kenya, tropical areas
         
Desires, worldly desires, illusions, delusions (bonno) Japan

Wisteria Cutting Ceremony (Fuji Kiri Eshiki)Japan Yamanashi Prefecture

Dew, Dewdrop (tsuyu, ro) Japan Worldwide

Mortality (shi ni yuku) Japan Worldwide

Soccer, Football. Europe
..... Including other Winter Sport Kigo, such as Rugby, American Football, Bob Sley, Skiing, Skating, Ice Hockey

Loincloth (fundoshi) Japan

Coins, Money (zeni) Japan Worldwide

Seaweed (kaisoo) Japan
..... including laver (nori), kelp (wakame), duckweed (mo) and agar agar (tengusa)

Summer sash (natsu obi, natsuobi) Japan

Dead body, deceased person (hotoke) Japan

Butterfly in Winter(fuyu no choo) Japan
..... frozen/freezing butterfly (itechoo)

Pigeon, pidgeon, dove (hato) Japan dove whistling (hatobue)

Mountain, peak, hill (yama, gake, oka) Japan

Sunset (yuuhi) Japan

Sound of Water (mizu no oto) Japan Translation problems and more

Oysters (kaki) Japan
..... Including Pearls (shinju) and mother-of-pearl

Sponge gourd, loofah, luffa (hechima, ito-uri) Japan
..... Including the Memorial day for Masaoka Shiki, Hechima-Ki

Stepping on a Christian image (fumi-e, ebumi) Japan

Ginkoo in Kayole, Nairobi (Kenya)

Horse (uma) Japan
..... Including various kigo such as plough horse, foal,cooling horses, fatten a horse, horse market, autumn colt, autumn pony, horses standing in the cold.

Gentle breeze, soft breeze (Linde Lüfte) Germany

..................................................................... May 2006

Sliding paper doors (fusuma), Japan

Secret Buddha Statues (hibutsu) Japan. Including showing them (kaichoo), substitute statues (maedachi, kakebotoke)

Papad Bread (papadam, poppadom, papadum, and appalam). India

Rain on Cherry Blossoms (hana no ame) Japan

Hungry Ghosts (gaki) Japan Buddhist Communities

..... Dance, a haiku topic Japan

Dance in India

The color GREEN in Haiku (midori, ao) Japan

The color GREY (GRAY)in Haiku (hyaku nezumi, hai iro) Japan

The color WHITE in Haiku (shiroi, haku) Japan

..... ..... World Kigo Database : Canada Saijiki

World Youth Day (Weltjugendtag)Italy, Germany, worldwide

Sand (suna)Japan, Worldwide. On the Beach, in the Desert ... Yellow Sand (koosa)

Berlin Wall (Berliner Mauer)Germany. Including the Iron Curtain, Eiserner Vorhang.

Elephant (zoo)Africa, India, in the Zoo

Rainbow (niji)Japan

River (kawa) Japan

Bridge (hashi) Japan

Embankment, dike (dote) Japan, worldwide

Mu, Shunyata : void, nothingness Japan

Mother (o-fukuro) Japan

New Year's Tea, Good Luck Tea, lucky tea (fukucha) Japan

Hat, Straw hat, hood ...(kasa, zukin, booshi) Japan

Hyacinth (Hyacinthus orientalis) Europe, Japan, other areas

Crab (kani) Japan. Chesapeake Bay.
..... Including King Crab (tarabagani), Queen Crab (zuwaigani), swamp crab (zawagani) and many more.

Window (mado) Japan

Stone Lantern (ishidooroo) Japan

Chesapeake Saijiki - SPRING USA


..................................................................... April 2006

Water Strider, water boatman, water spider, water horse (amenbo 水馬) Japan
..... also whirligig beetles, mizusumashi 水澄

Grave (haka) Japan

Cloud (kumo) Japan

LIST of Non-seasonal Haiku Topics

Target (mato) Japan. Bull's Eye
..... Including Bow, Arrow, Archery.
..... First Arrow, First Archery Competition. Archery on horseback (yabusame).

Earth Day Worldwide

Peacock, Kujaku and Haiku Japan
..... Including Marigold (kujakusoo), fruit flies (kujakubae) and the peacock butterfly (kujakuchoo)

Pheasant (kiji) Japan

..... ..... Chesapeake Bay Saijiki, USA

Fortune cookies; "Haikookies", O-Mikuji

God of the Rice Paddies (ta no kami) Japan

Mourning Kenya, worldwide

Patrick Wafula, Kenya

LORNA Haiku Club, Kenya

OAKS Haiku Club, Kenya

PEACOCK Haiku Club, Kenya

SPIDER Haiku Club, Kenya

Long Rains (Kenya)

Lent (Europe)

Mothering Sunday, Laetare (Europe)

... ... SPICES from India

Sesame (til, tila, gingili) India goma, goma no hana (Japan)

Light Charcoal Cherry Blossoms, Usuzumizakura 薄墨桜 Japan

Hail (hyoo) Japan , also arare, snow pellets


..................................................................... March 2006

Weasel (itachi) Japan

Ambedkar Jayanti, Memorial Day India

Tukaram Celebrations India

Dragon, a non-seasonal topic of Eastern Art

Eagle(washi) Japan
..... including other birds of winter, fuyu no tori
Water birds (mizudori 水鳥) ; Hawk (taka 鷹), Winter wild goose (fuyu no kari 冬の雁) , Winter skylark (fuyu hibari 冬雲雀), Midwinter sparrow (kan suzume 寒雀) , Midwinter crow (kan garasu 寒烏) Owl (fukuroo 梟) , Duck (kamo 鴨), Plover (Chidori 千鳥) , Hooded gull (miyakodori, yurikamome ユリカモメ), Winter gull (fuyu kamome 冬鴎), Wren (misosazai ミソサザイ), Crane (tsuru 鶴)
Swan (hakuchou 白鳥) , Grebe (Kaitsuburi カイツブリ)

Butterbur sprouts (fuki no too) and butterbur (fuki) (Japan)

Coltsfoot (Tussilago farfara), Europa Butterbur Dandelion, fuki tanpopo (Japan)

Grape Hyacinth, Europa muscari, Lampenputzer

Gutsy Radish (dokonjoo daikon) Japan

Kite flying, India and Pakistan

Haiku in Bhutan INDIA SAIJIKI

Daffodil, Narcissus and Jonquils Europa

Spring light, spring shining (shunkoo) Japan
..... wind shining (kaze hikaru) Japan


Veronica, field speedwell, Europa inufuguri (Japan)

Girl Scout Cookies USA

Bahati Haiku Club Meeting, March 2006 Kenya

Bahati Haiku Club Records since January 2006 Kenya

Jizobon, Jizoo Bon 地蔵盆

Jizobon, Jizoo Bon 地蔵盆
..... including Coming of Age and Fire Rituals, Sagichoo 左義長

O-Mizutori, Omizutori Ceremony, お水取り) Shuni-E Ceremony 修二会 Nara, Japan
..... Including "Sending off Water from Wakasa" Wakasa no O-Mizu Okuri.

Hawaiian Spirit

Vailankanni (Velankanni), Festival in Chennai, India

Doll Festival (hina matsuri) Japan Peach Festival, Girl's Festival

Surfer, Surfing, Surf Hawaii, worldwide

Homeland, Hometown (furusato) Japan Heimat, Fatherland, Motherland


..................................................................... February 2006

Doll Festival (hina matsuri) Japan. Peach Festival, Girl's Festival.

Haiku Situation in Nepal

Tiruppavai of Andal Tamizhnadu, Tamil Nadu, India

Shiva Ratri Night, Festival India, Nepal, Hindu Communities

Goa Carnival India

Shivaji's forts India

Panchatantra, a Fable India

Nehru, Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru’s Memorial Day, Children's Day India

Maasai Cattle (Masai Cattle) Kenya, Nairobi

Summer in India Kigo Collection

Yoga India

Chittorgarh Fort (Rajasthan) India

Pansy, Pansies Europe, sanshoku sumire (Japan)

Haiku from Bulgaria Collection of the Europa Saijiki
Haiku from Hungary Collection of the Europa Saijiki

Alberta Family Day, Canada

Crocus (Europe, worldwide)

Power Stone, Strenght Stone (chikara ishi, Japan) weight lifting competition

Poetry and Literature of Kenya

Jaramogi Oginga Odinga, Writer, Kenya

Caterpillar, Hairy Caterpillar of Kenya

Festivals of India They are all kigo.

Ganesh Chaturthi Festival India

Tiger Dance (Huli Vesha, Puli Vesha) India
.... Including TIGER, the animal as non-seasonal topic.

Serpent Festival (Nag Panchami) India

Snake, serpent, viper, cobra (hebi, mamushi, habu) Japan

Wintersweet (roobai) Japan

..... Bahati Haiku Poetry Club, Second Meeting Kenya


..................................................................... January 2006

Caterpillars worldwide
..... Including
hairy caterpillar, woolybear, kemushi 
looper, inchworm, shakutori

Ice, Icicle (koori, tsurara) (Japan)

..... Kaniparambil Ramesh Poet from India

Start of School Year, School Year starts(Kenya)
..... Including
form one (form 1), new term, new textbooks, school fees, new uniform

..... Bahati Haiku Poetry Club, Kenya

..... Hawaii Saijiki

..... EUROPA Saijiki

Buddha's Seat (hotoke no za)(Japan) 05.
.................... Two flowers with the same name !

Seven Herbs of Spring (haru no nanakusa) (Japan) 05
..... Including Seri (Japanese parsley or dropwort), Nazuna (shepherd's purse), Gogyou (cottonweed), Hakobera (chickweed), Hotoke-no-za (Japanese nipplewort), Suzuna (Japanese turnip), Suzushiro (Japanese radish)

Fern (shida)(Japan) 05

Pheasant's Eye (fukujusoo) (Japan) 05

Vog (Volcanic Smog) (Hawaii, Big Island)

New Year's Day (ganjitsu)Japan, Worldwide. First day of the Year, January 1.

..... Korean Haiku

..... African Haiku

Kagura Dance (Japan)

Graduation Ceremony, Kenya

Last Fudo Ceremony of a year(osame-Fudo) (Japan)
Last Daishi Ceremony of a year (osame no Daishi) (Japan)

Whales, kujira (Japan)

Cow (Pashu, Gai) The Holy Cow of India

Bhagavad Gita (India)


Number of Entries December 2005 : 328

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........................................... Kigo Archives

World Kigo Database <> Archives

Use the search function provided at these archives to look for a kigo or synonym of it. These archives contain all kigo collected so far in the various saijiki of the World Kigo Database.

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The Discussion Group for the World Kigo Database started on May 19, 2004.
The BLOG Database started after the first 50 kigo had been collected, about October 2004.

A summary of our activities so far was posted in the WHR.
http://www.worldhaikureview.org/4-1/whcjapan-p2.htm


Thank you for visiting the World Kigo Database !
And come back soon !

Gabi Greve

*****************************

Please send your contributions to Gabi Greve
worldkigo .....

Back to the alphabetical Worldkigo Index
http://worldkigodatabase.blogspot.com/


World Kigo Database Part 03


... BACK to the TOP of this BLOG ...

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9/27/2006

- World Days

[ . BACK to worldkigo TOP . ]
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World XXX Day


Here is a large collection of days remembered worldwide for a special purpose.
Some have an entry of their own, so click on the hyperlink, please.
World Memorial Days, World Days.

If you google with the name of any day, I am sure you will find all the basic informations yourself.


The seasons are corresponding to the Japanese Haiku Seasons.

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Kigo for Spring

International Woman's Day

International Development Week
February 01

World Wetlands Day
February 02

World Cancer Survivors Day
February 02

NO CELLPHONE DAY
February 04 (March 20)

World Day of the Sick
February 11

Festival of Women as Cultivators
February 18

International Mother Language Day
February 21

Central Excise Day
February 24

National Science Day
February 28


Universal Human-beings Week
March 01

National Safety Week
March 04

International Women's Week
March 04

World Sustainable Energy Day
March 07

International Women's Day
March 08

United Nations Day for Women's Right & International Peace
March 08

Commonwealth Day
March 10

World Disabled Day
March 15

World Consumer Rights Day
March 15

World Forestry Day
March 21

World Poetry Day
March 21

International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination
March 21

World Water Day
March 22

World Meteorological Day
March 23

World TB Day - World Tuberculosis Day
March 24

World Theatre Day
March 27

World Apitherapy Day Bee Therapy Day
March 30

Earth Hour
last Saturday of March



APRIL, National Poetry Month, USA

Prevention of Blindness Week
April 01

International Children's Book Day
April 02

National Maritime Day
April 05

World Health Day
April 07

Arbor Day (tree day)
April 10

Customs Day
April 14

Fire Service Week
April 14

World Heritage Day
April 18

World Amatuer Radio Awarness Day
April 18

World Earth Day
April 22

World Book and Copyright Day
April 23

International Dance Day
April 29

Anti-Child Labour Day
April 30


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Kigo for Summer

World Music Day

World Youth Day

International Labour Day
May 01

Week of Solidarity with the People of Non Self Governing Territories
May 02

World Press Freedom Day
May 03

National Labour Day
May 05

World Asthma Day
May 07

World Red Cross Day
May 08

Universal Family Week
May 09

Europe Day
May 09

National Technology Day
May 11

International Migratory Bird Day
May 11

International Family Day
May I5

World Telecommunication Day
May 17

International Museum Day
May 18

World Day for Cultural Development
May 21

Week of Solidarity with the People of All Colonial Territories Fighting for Freedom, Independence and Human Rights
May 25

Missing Children's Day
May 25

World No Tobacco Day
May 31

International Day Of Innocent
June 04

World Children Victims of Aggression
June 04

World Enviroment Day
June 05

World Oceans Day
June 08

Day of the African Child  Kenya, Africa, worldwide
June 16

World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought
June 17

World Refugee Day
June 20

United Nations International Day in Support of Victims of Torture
June 26

Anti Drug Day
June 26

World Diabetes Day
June 27

World War 1 Commemoration
June 28

World Population Day
July 11


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Kigo for Autumn


World Alzheimer's Day


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World Deaf Day
September 23, 25 or other dates are quoted.

On 27 September 2004 a unique happening took place in Flanders, Belgium. That day, the Flemish Deaf embraced their northern colleagues from the Netherlands by organising a World Deaf Day together.
http://www.eudnet.org/update/online/2004/nov04/eudm_01.htm

daylight noises:
she realises that her world
is a blaring silence

a silent cry--
clapping hands to see
her newborn smile


Kala Ramesh, India, September 2006

... ... ...

Sitting together
Deaf and Dumb; no door for foes
Eyes open, the loopholes.


© Aju Mukhopadhyay, India, 2006

... ... ...


deaf boys --
their sign language argument
comes to blows

deaf couple
grabbing each other's hands
to shut each other up

sudden deafness --
the lonely stillness
in my head

waterfall...
the echo of silence
sounds the same

i close my eyes
to make the world disappear --
deafness


hortensia anderson, 2006

... ... ...

the first ever DeafRenga - Bristol Sign Poetry Festival2010
source : Alan Summers

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World Peace Day
... Hiroshima Day also: Nagasaki Day, August 06 and 09


International Day of Indigenous People
August 09

World Youth Day (Weltjugendtag). Italy, Germany, worldwide

..... Independence Day (India)

Women's Equality Day
August 26

National Nutrition Week
September 01

International Literacy Day
September 08


World Trade Centre Tragedy (2001)
Nine Eleven 2001, USA 9/11. September Eleven
September 11


International Cross-Cultural Day
September 14

Ozone Day
September 16

International Day For Peace, World Peace Day
September 17

World Car Free Day, Carless Day
September 22

World Rose Day
September 22

Playing for Change Day
September 22

We Day We Schools in Action
September 27

World Tourism Day
September 27

Arthur's Day - Arthur Guinness - Beer
September 27

World Heart Day
September 28


Green Consumer Day
September 28


World Elders Day
Senior Citizen's Day. Respect for the Aged Day (keiroo no hi)
October 01

World Vegetarian Day
October 1

Wildlife Week
October 01

Universal Children's Week
October 01

World Habitat Day
October 03

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World Animal Day
October 04
It started in Florence, Italy in 1931 at a convention of ecologists.
source : wikipedia


World Animal Day:
they observe it feasting
on rich animal flesh.


© Aju Mukhopadhyay, India, 2006


World Animal Day <>
a huge truck waits
at the slaughter house


Gabi Greve, Japan

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World Homeless Day
October 10
August 25 is the annual Day of the Homeless in Toronto.


Columbus Day
October 12


World Food Day
October 16

Anti Poverty Day, World Poverty Day
International Day for the Eradication of Poverty
October 17


. United Nations Day .
October 24

. International Day of Climate Action .
- World Environment Day
October 24


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Kigo for Winter


Sushi Day 寿司の日 Sushi no hi
November 1

World Quality Day
November 08

Legal Services Day
November 09

World Kindness Day
November 13

Children's Day
November 14

World Heritage Week
November 14

National Cooperative Week
November 15

International Day for Tolerance and Peace
November 16

National Integration Day
November 19

Child Rights Day
November 20

Universal Children's Day
November 20

Africa Industrialization Day
November 20

World Television Day
November 21

World Mother-in-Law's Day. Mother in Law
November 23


International Day on Violence against Women
November 25

International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People
November 29

International Computer Security Day
November 30



World AIDS Day
December 01

World Pollution Prevention Day
December 02

World Handicap Day, Black Day for the Blind
December 02

World Human Rights Day
December 10

World Photography Day
December 28 (sometimes on August 19)


Oil Conservation Week
January 04

World Braille day
January 04

Road Safety Week
January 10

National Youth Day
January 12

World Army Day
January 15

Pin Code Week
January 15

Eros Day
January 22


National Day of Patriotism
January 23

International Customs Day
January 26

World Leprosy Day
January 27

CRY Day
January 28

World Martyrs Day
January 30

National Cleanliness Day
January 30



Here is a list with a few more (external LINK):
http://www.webngos.org/socialcalendar.php

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World Days celebrated by the Catholic Church
Compiled by Cristian Mocanu, 2006

January 1-st: World Peace Day

January 18-th-25-th:World Week of Prayers for Christian Unity
(jointly celebrated by the Catholic Church and the World Council of Churches)

January 22-nd: World Migrants'and Refugees' Day
January 29-th: World Leprosy Day
February 2-nd:World Day of Consecrated Life (monks, friars, nuns etc.)
February 11-th: World Day of the Sick

Palm Sunday: World Youth Day-yearly local celebration Holy Thursday (Thursday before Easter): World Priests'Day

May 7-th: World Vocations'Day
May 28-th: World Media Day

June 23-rd: World Day of Prayers for the Sanctification of Priests (not to be confused with World Priests'Day)

October 22-nd:World Missions Day

(Some of them have already been mentioned in the long list above.)

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World Days with differing dates


World Friendship Day, Happy Friendship Day
To demonstrate the extraordinary power and importance of simple human kindness by promoting the practice of kind acts, large and small, on a regular basis.

March 1, November 13, December 8


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Please add your suggestins for a World Day as a comment here!


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Back to the Worldkigo Index
http://worldkigodatabase.blogspot.com/

9/06/2006

September (kugatsu)

[ . BACK to Worldkigo TOP . ]
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September (kugatsu 九月)

***** Location: Japan, worldwide
***** Season: Mid-Autumn
***** Category: Season


*****************************
Explanation

Haiku kugatsu in the Edo period relates to the climate of present-day October,
but some festivals are dated in our present-day September.

. . Names of Japanese months and their meanings . .

leaf month, hazuki 葉月 (はづき)
kigo for mid-autumn


other names for this month (the 8th month in the Asian lunar calendar, now September)

related kigo to this month

month for moon viewing, tsukimi zuki 月見月(つきみづき)
month with autumn wind, akikaze zuki 秋風月(あきかぜづき)
kusatsu zuki 草津月(くさつづき)
"trees start to color" kosome zuki 木染月(こそめづき)
nozome zuki 濃染月(こぞめづき)
red colored month, benizome zuki 紅染月(べにぞめづき)

month with bushclover, hagizuki 萩月(はぎづき)
month when swallows leave, tsubame sari zuki
燕去月(つばめさりづき)、

month when geese come, kari kuzuki 雁来月(かりくづき)

soogetsu 荘月(そうげつ), keigetsu桂月(けいげつ)
chuuritsu 中律(ちゅうりつ), nangetsu 難月(なんげつ)
chuushoo 中商(ちゅうしょう)


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. . . . AUTUMN
the complete SAIJIKI



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September---
All Things in Universe Becomes Clear in Autumn
Inahata Teiko

When September comes, the air becomes clearer and a sense of crisp autumn becomes deeper. When we think of a representative seasonal word of this time, there is nothing beyond tsuki (the moon). As shown by the phrase, setsu-getu-ka (the snow, the moon, the flower), the moon, which symbolizes the beauty of nature of this season, has appeared in a lot of poems and literary works from the old times.

According to this tradition, tsuki (the moon) in haiku stands for the moon in autumn, and a number of the excellent haiku poems have been composed on the subject of the moon. Because the moon is the brightest in the year as the air of this season becomes the clearest.

Autumn is the season in which we are lost in deep thought, as shown by a seasonal word, shushi (the deep grief of autumn). The moon has been the best subject in which we convey our feelings or deep emotions. Even after the space satellite Apollo reached the moon and sent the picture of the surface of the moon to the earth, the above-mentioned perception doesn't change, does it?

There are many seasonal words related to the moon in the glossary of seasonal terms for haiku composers; hatsuzuki(the new moon), futsukazuki (the second day-moon), mikazuki (the third-day moon), yuzukiyo (the moonlit evening ), tsuki (the moon), matsuyoi (the waiting evening), meigetsu (the harvest moon), tsukimi (the moon-viewing), ryoya (the clear full moon), mugetsu (no moon), ugetsu (the moon in the rain), izayoi (the 16th day-moon), tachimachizuki (the 17th day- moon), imachizuki (the 18th day-moon), fushimachizuki (the 19th day-moon), fukemachizuki (the 20th day-moon), nijusanya (the 23rd day-moon), yoiyami (dark at night).

If we add the subtitles to each word related to the moon, the seasonal words would swell in number. And these seasonal words are included in September. For example, yoiyami means to be darkness at night about 20th day on the lunar calendar, as the moon doesn't rise till ten o'clock.

I hope you to study the correct meaning of each seasonal word and how to use it appropriately by consulting a saijiki.

© Inahata Teiko, NATURE AND OUR LIFE

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Worldwide use

Southern Hemisphere, Tropics ...
Adjustments for each region must be made.

Calendar reference kigo


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Things found on the way



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HAIKU


葉月潮 伊雑の宮を さしてゆく
hazukijio Izoo no miya o sashite yuku

The tides of August
coming on a pilgrimage
to the Izoo Shrine.


. Yamaguchi Seishi 山口誓子 .
Composed 1976.
In August the great tides of the Pacific Ocean roll into Matoya Bay and, after passing through a narrow strait, enter the Izoo Lagoon. A god is enshrined at the Izoo Shrine there, and the great tides come all that way to worship the god.
Tr. Kodaira & Marks

There is now a beautiful red bridge over Matoya Bay 的矢湾大橋 and a memorial stone with this haiku by Seishi.
source : www.kanko-shima.com

hazuki, literally "leaf month,"
was the name of the eighth month on the lunar calendar, which in an average year would begin in mid-September on the Julian calendar. Seishi's note seems to indicate, however, that he is in fact speaking of the eighth month on the Julian calendar, August. Even so, the season remains autumn because the seasons in haiku are based on the old lunar calendar, and they begin and end about six and a half weeks earlier, on average, than those by the Julian calendar.
Thus, autumn runs from about August 8 to November 6.

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September morn...
a hen's endearments
for its brood

September morn...
a white butterfly brightens
the silent garden

September morn...
the rigid pen tames
sleeping puppies

September morn...
sweet potato sprouts crowd
the mossy catwalk

September morn...
a lone street sweeper pauses
for a breather

w.r. bongcaron, Philippines, September 2008"


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Related words

***** Calendar reference kigo


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. . . . AUTUMN
the complete SAIJIKI



. WKD : September - KIGO CALENDAR .

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8/21/2006

Typhoon, Hurricane

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Typhoon, Hurricane, Cyclone

***** Location: Japan, North America, Tropics
***** Season: Mid-Autumn in Japan,

.....................late tropical rainy season
***** Category: Heaven


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Explanation



"Women Running in a Storm", Isoda Koryūsai (1735–1790)

taifuu 台風 typhoon, Taifun
In Japan, typhoon is a kigo for mid-autumn, mostly September when most of them hit the islands.
In America, these strong winds are called hurricane.

"violent storm, hurricane," from Gk. typhon "whirlwind,"
personified as a giant, father of the winds, perhaps from typhein "to smoke." Or borrowed from Chinese (Cantonese) tai fung "a great wind," from tu "big" + feng "wind;" name given to violent cyclonic storms in the China seas. A third possibility is tufan, a word in Arabic, Persian and Hindi meaning "big cyclonic storm," which may be from the Gk., or from Ar. tafa "to turn round."
source : www.etymonline.com



quote
The Greek word (tuphon) meaning whirlwind, and the Arabic word (tufan) meaning deluge, or (tafa) meaning overflow or walkabout seem to be the origin of typhoon, which the Chinese seem to have adopted and created a new word big wind, or ta feng. In the face of the forces of nature manifesting themselves in typhoons and earthquakes, you may understand the 'modesty' and 'humility' of the Japanese people (of the past) towards the almighty nature.
Susumu Takiguchi



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http://www.physicalgeography.net/fundamentals/images/hurricanepaths.GIF

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"parting the fields" nowaki 野分, のわき
"field-dividing" wind, "field-divider"
kigo for mid-autumn
Usually between the day 210 and 220 after the beginning of spring (risshun). Typhoon, autumn gale or strong windstorm at this time. It stressed the WIND aspect of a typhoon, not the rain.

strong windstorm, autumn storm, nowake 野わけ(のわけ)
.... nowakidatsu 野分だつ(のわきだつ), 野分き立つ

clouds of a windstorm, nowakigumo 野分雲(のわきぐも)
aftermath of a windstorm, nowaki ato 野分跡(のわきあと)
fine weather after a windstorm, nowaki bare 野分晴(のわきばれ)


Living in the rice fields of Western Japan, I have come to see this "parting of the fields" quite often after our autumn typhoons. It hurts to see the ripe ears of rice hang down on the ground to the right and left of a swath of flattened stems.






Nowaki (野分 Nowaki)
is a short Japanese novel by Natsume Sōseki (1867-1916). Written in 1907, the novel was published in the magazine Hototogisu in January. The year 1907 was a turning point in the author’s life when he left his Tokyo University teaching position to write full-time for the daily Asahi Shimbun.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !

. . . . .


Genji Monogatari : Chapter 28
Nowaki 野分 Typhoon
第二十八帖 野分




. Genji Monogatari 源氏物語 The Tale of Genji .

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kigo for mid-summer

mizu mimai 水見舞 (みずみまい)
visiting after a water damage

lit. "water visit"

After a typhoon has brought damage in the form of flooding and landslides, it was customary to visit relatives and friends and support them with money and other help.


. SAIJIKI ... HUMANITY - Kigo for Summer  

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Hiroshige

歌川広重 -「六十余州名所図会 美作 山伏谷」

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Worldwide use

Trinidad and Tobago

During the late RAINY SEASON/WET SEASON storm watch, and storm or hurricane warnings are as natural as sunrise and sunset. Such public notices are authorised and issues from the National Agency responsible for Disaster preparedness and management; NEMA

storm watch
in the uncanny calmness
a hazy sunset

hurricane warning
the stray cats
have gone away

the storm having passed on
sunny day
the call of a kis-ka-dee

Gillena 2004


Hurricane relief, storm relief
kigo for the Late wet season

scorching hot day
water tops
the hurricane relief list


Gillena Cox


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North America

During the six-month hurricane season that runs from June 1 through Nov. 30, the center is responsible for alerting people to storms in a vast expanse of two oceans, the Atlantic and eastern Pacific.

- Reference -

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Things found on the way



. Typhoon legends - taifū 台風 伝説 Taifun Legenden .

. The Wind God, Fuujin 風神 Fujin、Fuu-ten 風天 .


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HAIKU


September 2005

i gratefully write that my area was not directly affected by hurricane rita.

however, we were close enough to experience the tips of the spiral nebula that was the storm.

all thru the afternoon before landfall and all the next two days, we at the fringes of the 170 mile wide storm were amazed at the spectacle of watching the arms of the storm spiral overhead. sweeping arms of cloud, hazy sunshine, cloud, sunshine .... repeated every hour. ten minutes of sun for every hour of cloud.

the hurricane's approach
spiral fingers
of pink clouds


we just got high winds and nary a drop of rain.

hurricane threat past
rehanging the windchimes

gratefully,

susan delphine delaney MD

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waiting for
mighty strong number fourteen -
katrina on my mind

Then it comes to hit Japan:

Typhoon Nabi 14 September 2005  台風14号

fallen leaves
fallen fruit and
fallen hopes


............................... Green Apples fallen by typhoon 14 

............................... Humans Powerless Katrina 2005

Gabi Greve

Our Typhoon Season in Japan, 2007


From 2004

typhoon -
in the folds of my robe
a bee hiding

cleaning the street
with a broom like old Jittoku -
typhoon destruction

some forgotten clouds
hooked to the mountains -
typhoon is over


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in the moonlit night
children swirl on a cold verandah --
China typhoon


yamame winslause, Kenya
August 2009


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© Haiga by Sakuo Nakamura

芦の穂の波に屯ス野分哉
ashi no ho no nami ni tamuro su nowaki kana

this typhoon
is hanging out making waves
in the ears of the reeds . . .


Kobayashi Issa
Tr. Gabi Greve

. . READ : Discussion of the translation.



狂乱の野分ありたき我思ひ
kyooran no nowaki aritaki waga omoi

Ah, that my thoughts
Might have the frenzy
Of this "field-dividing" wind!


Masaoka Shiki
Tr. Blyth


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Related words

***** WIND in various kigo

***** Wind Chimes (fuurin, Japan)


. Typhoon (Hurricane)  
(Backup)


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8/09/2006

Tibet

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TIBET

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CLICK for more informat8ion


Tibet is a plateau region in Central Asia and the home to the indigenous Tibetan people. With an average elevation of 4,900 metres (16,000 ft), it is the highest region on Earth and is commonly referred to as the "Roof of the World." Geographically, UNESCO and Encyclopædia Britannica consider Tibet to be part of Central Asia, while several academic organizations controversially consider it part of South Asia.

Many parts of the region were united in the seventh century by King Songtsän Gampo. Power eventually shifted to the Dalai Lama, a position that combined spiritual and political power. Between the 17th century and 1951, the Dalai Lama and his regents were the predominant political power administering religious and administrative authority over large parts of Tibet from the traditional capital Lhasa.

Tibet proclaimed its independence from China in 1911, right before the fall of the Qing government. However, "at no time did any western power come out in favor of its independence or grant it diplomatic recognition.”
The People's Republic of China (PRC), citing historical records and the Seventeen Point Agreement signed by the Tibetan government in 1951, claims Tibet as a part of China (with a small part, depending on definitions, controlled by India). Currently every country in the world recognizes China's sovereignty over Tibet. Dalai Lama, the head of the Tibetan government in exile, does not reject China’s sovereignty over Tibet:
“Tibet Wants Autonomy, Not Independence.”
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !

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Demonstration for a Free Tibet

Dag Hammarskjold Plaza, New York City, March 22, 2008

The day started out with a temperature of about 32 degrees farenheit, colder than usual for this time of year. When I went into the Japan Society building around 11 a.m., the New York Police Department (NYPD) was setting up barricades across the street in Dag Hammarskjold Plaza.

When I came back outside at around 1 p.m., there were, I would estimate, between 200 to 300 demonstrators, mostly Tibetan, holding Tibetan flags and chanting slogans, with the UN building looming up behind them a few blocks away. These flags weren't the little hand-held ones on small wooden sticks that are waved at sporting events. These were full-sized flags on poles that require both hands to hold uprignt.

There were New York City police present, both Patrol Officers and Community Affairs Officers, as well as four Mounted Patrol Officers on their well-groomed horses.

Most of the chants were derogatory toward China. One of the NYPD officers I saw looked to be ethnic Chinese. If I had been more courageous, I would have asked him how he felt hearing these anti-Chinese slogans being chanted.

I spent some time watching some of the children there with their parents among the demonstrators. The children chanted the slogans too, but seemed more pre-occupied playing with the protest signs they were carrying than putting all their attention and energy into chanting as their parents were doing. I was handed a couple of printed flyers detailing the situation in Tibet, and what people could do to help, and then with a backward glance at the Tibetan flags fluttering and flapping in the gusty wind, I went on my way.


a cold wind blowing
as if from far-off mountains:
Tibetan flags fly!


Larry Bole, March 2008


Tibet Info Net

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- quote
Lhabab Düchen
is one of the four Buddhist festivals commemorating four events in the life of the Buddha, according to Tibetan traditions. Lhabab Düchen occurs on the 22nd day of the ninth month on a Tibetan calendar.

This is a Buddhist festival celebrated to observe the descent of Buddha from heaven back to earth. Buddha had left for heaven at the age of 41, having ascended to The Heaven of Thirty-Three (Trayastrimsa) in order to give teachings to benefit the gods in the desire realms and to repay the kindness of his mother by liberating her from Samsara. He was exhorted by his follower and representative Maudgalyayana to return, and after a long debate managed to return. This is considered to be one of the eight great deeds of the Buddha. He returned to earth by a special triple ladder prepared by Viswakarma, the god of machines.

On Lhabab Duchen, the effects of positive or negative actions are multiplied ten million times. It is part of Tibetan Buddhist tradition to engage in virtuous activities and prayer on this day.In 2013 Lhabab Duchen starts on Full Moon November 17 and ends November 24.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !

The Stupa of the Descent from Tushita Heaven (Wyl. lha bab mchod rten)
The Buddha's mother, Mayadevi, was reborn in a celestial realm called the Tushita Heaven. To repay her kindness, the Buddha spent three months there and taught her the path to enlightenment.
This stupa represents the Buddha’s return from the celestial realms in order to continue teaching the people of northern India. Each side of the stupa has a stairway in the centre of the four steps.
source : www.rigpawiki.org/index

full moon-
on the stupa of descent
our prayers multiply


Angelee Deodhar
India 2013

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Communist Empire
stubbing the free Tibetans;
same face of the man.


(c) Aju Mukhopadhyay, 2008

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Winter in Tibet

a day in winter
high up on the white mountain –
never-ending tale


© Fluerau Petre, 2006


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flamme olympique...
à peine visible
derrière la police


Serge Tomé

Tibet and the Olympics in China, 2008


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Tibetan Daruma



© ARTISTS WITHOUT BORDERS / ARTISTS OF THE WORLD.


wonderous world -
Tibetan Eyes for my
Daruma san


Gabi Greve, 2007


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Related Items

The Old Tea Road from Yunnan to Lhasa
茶馬古道(ちゃばこどう) Chaba Kodoo


The Tibetan approach to ecology
by Tenzin P. Atisha
Rain Rituals and Haiku


INDIA SAIJIKI

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Thanksgiving USA

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Thanksgiving USA

***** Location: USA
***** Season: Early Winter
***** Category: Observance


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Explanation

Thanksgiving, a holiday we celebrate in the US by eating way too much and watching American Football--Thanksgiving falls on the fourth Thursday in November. It has been celebrated on this day since 1941 on the fourth Thursday of November.
Kate

CLICK for more photos


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The Pilgrims' 1621 Thanksgiving

The tradition of the Pilgrims' first Thanksgiving is steeped in myth and legend. Few people realize that the Pilgrims did not celebrate Thanksgiving the next year, or any year thereafter, though some of their descendants later made a "Forefather's Day" that usually occurred on December 21 or 22. Several Presidents, including George Washington, made one-time Thanksgiving holidays. In 1827, Mrs. Sarah Josepha Hale began lobbying several Presidents for the instatement of Thanksgiving as a national holiday, but her lobbying was unsuccessful until 1863 when Abraham Lincoln finally made it a national holiday with his 1863 Thanksgiving Proclamation.

Today, our Thanksgiving is the fourth Thursday of November. This was set by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1939 (approved by Congress in 1941), who changed it from Abraham Lincoln's designation as the last Thursday in November (which could occasionally end up being the fifth Thursday and hence too close to Christmas for businesses). But the Pilgrims' first Thanksgiving began at some unknown date between September 21 and November 9, most likely in very early October. The date of Thanksgiving was probably set by Lincoln to somewhat correlate with the anchoring of the Mayflower at Cape Cod, which occurred on November 21, 1620 (by our modern Gregorian calendar--it was November 11 to the Pilgrims who used the Julian calendar).

There are only two contemporary accounts of the 1621 Thanksgiving: First is Edward Winslow's account, which he wrote in a letter dated December 12, 1621. The complete letter was first published in 1622, and is chapter 6 of Mourt's Relation: A Journal of the Pilgrims at Plymouth.

Foods Available to the Pilgrims for their 1621 Thanksgiving

FISH: cod, bass, herring, shad, bluefish, and lots of eel.

SEAFOOD: clams, lobsters, mussels, and very small quantities of oysters

BIRDS: wild turkey, goose, duck, crane, swan, partridge, and other miscellaneous waterfowl; they were also known to have occasionally eaten eagles (which "tasted like mutton" according to Winslow in 1623.)

OTHER MEAT: venison (deer), possibly some salt pork or chicken.

GRAIN: wheat flour, Indian corn and corn meal; barley (mainly for beer-making).

FRUITS: raspberries, strawberries, grapes, plums, cherries, blueberries, gooseberries (these would have been dried, as none would have been in season).

VEGETABLES: small quantity of peas, squashes (including pumpkins), beans

NUTS: walnuts, chestnuts, acorns, hickory nuts, ground nuts

HERBS and SEASONINGS: onions, leeks, strawberry leaves, currants, sorrel, yarrow, carvel, brooklime, liverwort, watercress, and flax; from England they brought seeds and probably planted radishes, lettuce, carrots, onions, and cabbage. Olive oil in small quantities may have been brought over, though the Pilgrims had to sell most of their oil and butter before sailing, in order to stay on budget.

OTHER: maple syrup, honey; small quantities of butter, Holland cheese; and eggs.

Read a lot more about it here:
http://members.aol.com/calebj/thanksgiving.html


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Thanksgiving History

The Plymouth Thanksgiving Story
A very informative collection of information, including some challenging observations from a Native American viewpoint. Recommended reading!

Plymouth, Massachusetts: It's History and People

Thanksgiving Articles by Ralph F. Wilson.

The First Thanksgiving Proclamation

http://www.2020tech.com/thanks/

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

More information about the Pilgrims and Thanksgiving

PILGRIMS ^ The Pilgrims were a Separatist group. They left England because King James I did not permit religious freedom. Everyone was expected to belong to the Church of England.

MAYFLOWER COMPACT ^ The Pilgrims signed an agreement for self-government.

SQUANTO ^ the colonists' Indian interpreter and friend. He had learned English from explorers. He lived at the Plymouth Colony. He taught the Pilgrims how to live in the wilderness and showed them how to plant crops. The Indians gave the Pilgrims seeds for Indian corn. Squanto died in 1622.

MASSASOIT ^ the chief of the Wampanoag Indians. A peace treaty was signed and not broken by either side.

The FIRST THANKSGIVING ^ The winter was very difficult. Half of the Pilgrims died. But the harvest in 1621 was bountiful.The Pilgrims had their first Thanksgiving feast. They had Indian corn. Four Pilgrims hunted wild turkeys. Fishermen caught cod and bass. The Pilgrims invited Massasoit, who came with 90 Indians. Indian hunters brought five deer. The feast lasted three days.

Read the full story here:
http://eleaston.com/thanks-history.html

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Worldwide use

Guyana

kigo for the wet season

In Guyana we are getting now celebrating Thanksgiving(US holiday) every year especially in the city of Georgetown. Maybe because everyone here probably has a close relative now in USA especially in New York.

opening flowers
in the early sun
thanksgiving

tree shades
by the wayside
thanksgiving

resurrection
of the burnt out store
thanksgiving


Kenneth Daniels
(Guyana, 2009)

THE SOUTH AMERICAN SAIJIKI


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Things found on the way


Haibun

In 1620 a band of Puritan Pilgrim families sailed aboard the Mayflower from England to the New World. In that harsh New England Winter nearly half of their number perished. The following year, with the help of the Native American Indians, their homes were strong and harvest bountiful, they would survive. With this new hope no ordinary harvest feast but a festival was held. Now every year, the last Thursday of November, we celebrate with parades and football games, we gather our families together and have a Thanksgiving Day feast. We say prayers and count ourselves blessed for the roof over our heads, the pantry stocked, the table filled with food and surrounded with love.

slowly looking
around the table
Thanksgiving Day
.. .. .. .. .. .. ..

Thanksgiving Day parade
the New York cold
on TV

Michael Baribeau


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Children's Poem for Thanksgiving
Author unknown

For all the grandmas in the world
For all the grandpas too
For Mommy and my Daddy
For happy things to do
For food to eat and friends too love
Dear God I want to say
That I am very thankful
On this Thanksgiving Day

Michael Baribeau

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HAIKU


Thanksgiving --
all my favorite colors
in the sunset

Cindy

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

Thanksgiving Day-
watching football
out the window

Michael Baribeau


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Related words

***** Roasted Turkey

CLICK for more photos

Roasting a bird unstuffed is faster. If you like stuffing but want to spend less time in the kitchen, bake it alongside the turkey instead of inside it.
Don't let low holiday prices seduce you into buying the biggest turkey you can find. Smaller birds thaw faster, cook faster, are more succulent, and far easier to handle. If you're eager for leftovers, buy two and roast the second while you eat your holiday meal.

More recipies are here:
http://www.outofthefryingpan.com/recipes/turkey.roasted.shtml

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All the stats you'd ever want to know on
turkeys, cranberries, sweetpotatoes, pumpkin pie, stuffing, mashed potatoes, football games, and clogged drain pipes.
Thanksgiving by the Numbers
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/1123/p20s01-ussc.html
gK, November 2005


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Thanksgiving baking
The recipe book dusted
With last year's flour.

Happy Haiku Forum, butterflypsyche


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image credit - www.pinterest.com

Thanksgiving-
a presidential pardon
lets the turkey roam free


Angelee Deodhar
2013

In modern times the President of the United States, in addition to issuing a proclamation, will "pardon" a turkey, which spares the bird's life and ensures that it will spend the duration of its life roaming freely on farmland.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !



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turkey 七面鳥 shichimenchoo
Meleagris gallopavo

animal topic for all seasons




Smoke and fog mingle-
the wild turkeys run to me
hungry for some grain


Lisette Root
Happy Haiku Forum, January 2011


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looking past
an Angelina Jolie face --
Princess Turkey

Chen-ou Liu, Canada

Note
Princess Turkey is a delicious North American Chinese dish made up of turkey mince with mushrooms and bamboo shoots, sometimes ham included.

Kigo Hotline, January 2011


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. "mountain turkey", yama shichimenchoo
山七面鳥(やましちめんちょう)
 
another name for
wild goose, nogan 野雁(のがん)

animal kigo for late autumn


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Canadian Thanksgiving

Harvest Thanksgiving (Christian communities) Harvest Festival,


Worldkigo Database

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8/02/2006

Tamarack tree, Larch (karamatsu)

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Tamarack tree (karamatsu)

***** Location: Japan, North America, other countries
***** Season: Late Autumn
***** Category: Plant


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Explanation

Karamatsu 唐松 literally the "Pine from China"

Larix kaempferi (Lambert) Carriere
(Larix leptolepis (Sieb. et Zucc) Gordon, Pinetum)

Hackmatack
The American larch (Larix Americana), a coniferous tree with slender deciduous leaves; also, its heavy, close-grained timber. Called also tamarack.


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The tamarack tree
is a member of the pine family. It usually attains a height of between 30 and 50 feet high but in favorable conditionscan reach a height of 90 feet. The slender branches droop in long sweeps or grow horizontal. Bark on the younger trees is quite smooth and on older ones rough. Its twigs are slender also with smooth bark and terra cotta to tan in color. The needles of the tamarack are pale, bright blue green, 3/4 to 1 inch long, triangular, soft, deciduous, and cluster. They turn ocher yellow in the autumn. The tree flowers in March and April. It has very small cones less than an inch long and light chestnut brown. They remain on the tree throughout the winter when the seeds are dropped.
http://www.twingroves.district96.k12.il.us/Wetlands/


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The tamarack tree has a strong history with Native peoples since its dried, hardened wood was ideal for making shelters, tools, and other instruments. The Cree even used the inner bark to help stop bleeding, treat hemorrhoids, earaches, inflamed eyes, jaundice, colic, and melancholy. The scene in the photograph is believed to have been an ancient resting area for hunters in the spring and summer.
http://collections.ic.gc.ca/nilhinimuk/tamarack.htm


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.. .. .. Tamarack tree spirit and energy




When you come into our energies and notice just how beautiful our energies are, you forget that your energy holds the same beauty. Your energy is just as clear, just as full of joy and quiet bliss as ours. Yours is as full of wisdom, as full of knowledge, as full of strength as ours. As you feel the sweet, quiet, happy energy that we are, you tune into an aspect of tree consciousness. You would be unable, however, to notice this, if you did not have these same essential qualities in your own energy field. There is no separation.

Thinks of this, then, when you sit in Nature. It is a reflection not only of the innocent and pure energies around you but the resonating energies of your own. We are Tamarack.
source : people.tribe.net


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Worldwide use

Germany

Lärche, Latin: Family of Larix.

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North America

CLICK for original LINK. David Little © 2002

Native Corniferes
LARCH AND TAMARACK (LARIX)

About a dozen species are members of the genus Larix, although there is a great deal of disagreement about species limits in the Old World. Three species are found in North America, the widespread Tamarack (Larix laricina) occurring throughout the northern boreal forests and the woods northern and eastern United States and Canada. The two other species have much more restricted ranges in the Pacific Northwest. The genus is also found in the northern and montane regions of Europe and Asia
http://www.nearctica.com/trees/conifer/


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Things found on the way


Karamatsu Shrine, Karamatsu Jinja 唐松神社

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Karamatsu Shrine has one is one of the most famous shrines in Akita Prefecture and stretches back over 1000 years, the original priest of the shrine is said to be a descendant of a god. The beautiful rows of cedar trees lining the path to Karamatsu Shrine are over 300 years old and are said to have been planted by the Satake feudal clan in 1680.

In the Edo Period, Princess Hisashi of the Satake feudal clan was suffering during child birth, and is recorded that she visited Karamatsu Shrine.
“I heard that the God of Childbirth resides in Karamatsu Shrine in Senboku. I prayed for a safe childbirth and for the God to alleviate my pain,” the Princess said.
At the exact moment the servants prayed for a safe childbirth, the Princess safely delivered a baby boy.

The Satake feudal lord gave Karamatsu Shrine a wooden snake mask in gratitude for the safe delivery of the Princess’ child, and it is said that at this moment the snake whirled around – a sign that the God was pleased.
The mask is still displayed today, and has been designated as a ‘Prefectural Important Cultural Asset’.
Karamatsu Shrine is still a site of pilgrimage and people come from all over Japan to pray for a safe childbirth.

© www.city.daisen.akita.jp 秋田県大仙市

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Karamatsu Kannon 唐松観音
Karamatsu Temple to the Goddess of Mercy

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Coming over Sasaya Pass from Sendai to Yamagata, there is a vermillion temple building clinging to a cliff on the right overlooking the Mamigasaki-gawa (Mamigasaki River).
Karamatsu Kannon is number five of the sacred Thirty-Three Mogami Kannon Pilgrim Temples. It is said to be patterned after the platform style of Kiyomizu Temple in Kyoto, and to have been constructed around eleven hundred years ago.
© murayama-r/yamagata

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Ceiling of the main hall

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 © やまがた好日抄


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HAIKU


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soft golden tamracks
patchworked with deep green spruce trees
hillsides like old quilts

Tamaracks are the only "evergreen" that changes in autumn. Then eedles turn an old gold color, looking quite a bit like feathers. A beautiful sight among bare trees.
Bob Hunt
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/happyhaiku/

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golden afternoon --
the chickadee scatters
tamarack needles

Cindy Zackowitz

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the mutt
tamarack needles
on his tail

Geert Verbeke

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Page with Japanese Haiku about the Larch
www3.ocn.ne.jp/~shoonen/ichikawaseiji23

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唐松や 神社もあれば 観音も
karamatsu ya jinja mo areba kannon mo

tamarack trees -
there is a shrine and
a Kannon temple


Gabi Greve, October 2007

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***** Spruce tree, Fichte

Spruce (etymologically from an obsolete term for Prussia) refers to trees of the genus Picea, a genus of about 35 species of coniferous evergreen trees in the Family Pinaceae, found in the northern temperate and boreal (taiga) regions of the earth.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !


Two seasons could qualify as KIGO:

(1) the spring, when spruce trees have gorgeous, light green and soft growth, putting out fast-growing extensions to the previous year's branches,

(2) the winter, when so many of them serve as Christmas trees.

Spruce trees are the bread and butter of most Northern European forests -- perhaps 80 percent or more in Ireland, at least the same proportion in the Scandinavian countries, and a fair chunk of the German forests (the famous "deutsche Wald") too.

Most of the European paper industry is supplied by spruce trees too (nowadays in conjunction with recycled paper).

Isabelle Prondzynski

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logging road
the smell of cut spruce
in the air


bob



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Related words

***** . Tree (ki, jumoku) and Forest .



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