International Mountain Day, Noodle Ring Day

★~♥~♥~★~ El Morno! ♥~★~★~♥ ~
December 11, 2013

Batman car

(My sweet Mom spotted Batman’s car while having her nails done and her manicurist was kind enough to race outside and take a picture for Cole! Cool car, isn’t it?)

★~ Today’s Quote:

“You’re off to Great Places!
Today is your day!
Your mountain is waiting,
So… get on your way!”

★~  International Mountain Day:

International-Mountain-Day

It’s International Mountain Day! This day was designated in 2001 by the United Nations General Assembly to create awareness about the important role that mountainous regions play in the global ecosystem. Mountains are essential to the world’s freshwater supply. They also safeguard many natural resources and protect communities against natural disasters.

The symbol for this holiday consists of three equilateral triangles on a single horizontal line. The left triangle has a blue diamond shape at the top, representing ice and snow on mountain peaks. The middle triangle has an orange circle, representing the resources that are continuously mined from the inside of mountains. The triangle on the right has a small green triangle at the base, representing the crops that grow on mountains. To learn more about this holiday and the events going on in your area, check out the official website.

★ ~  Noodle Ring Day:

Ziti

A noodle ring, for those of you who don’t know (and really, who does?), is made by mixing eggs and noodles together with ketchup, Worcestershire sauce and cheese and then, inexplicably, smashing the concoction into a ring mold to bake. In some variations, once the ring is released from the mold and properly plated, the center of the ring can then be filled with creamed chicken or tuna. Once a staple of mid-century cookbooks, the noodle ring has since fallen into obscurity. Can’t imagine why.

I suggest making Baked Ziti – A more upscale version of the Noodle Ring.

★~ Today in History:

Betty Grable Legs

♥~ 1719 – The first display of the northern lights was recorded in America. The sighting was made in New England. The report said that a mysterious face seemed to appear in the atmosphere; The simplest explanation for the green, red, and frost-white northern lights is that, just as the gas in a neon light glows when charged with electricity, so the gas in the atmosphere glows with specific colors when charged with electric particles from the sun. For a more technical explantation, see Mankind’s Explanation: Aurora Borealis or Aurora Season Begins. As far as we know, there is still no technical explanation for the off-season display.

♥~ 1816 – The Hoosier state, Indiana, entered the United States of America as the 19th state. The peony is the state flower. The cardinal, the state bird.

♥~ 1939 – Betty Grable and her famous legs were featured on the cover of LIFE magazine. Legend has it that she didn’t care much for the picture, but it became an international symbol of ‘back home’ for those at war.

♥~ 1973 – Karen and Richard Carpenter received a gold record for their single, Top of the World.

♥~ 1973 – Ron Santo was traded to the Chicago White Sox from crosstown rivals, the Chicago Cubs. Santo became the first major-league baseball player to invoke the rule which permits 10-year veterans of a club to refuse to be traded. He turned down a trade to the California Angels.

★~Born Today:

[youtube]http://youtu.be/_MaczkqNPBI[/youtube]

♥~ 1940 – David Gates musician: guitar, keyboard, singer: solo: Goodbye Girl; group: Bread: Make It With YouIfBaby I’m-A Want YouDiaryAubrey

♥~ 1940 – Donna Mills actress: Knots Landing, The Good Life, False Arrest, Curse of the Black Widow, Beyond the Bermuda Triangle, Play Misty for Me

♥~ 1944 – Brenda Lee (Tarpley) singer: I’m Sorry, All Alone Am I, I Want to Be Wanted, Sweet Nothin’s, That’s All You Gotta Do

♥~ 1966 – Gary Dourdan actor: CSI: Crime Scene Investigation, A Different World, Weekend at Bernie’s II, Alien: Resurrection, King of the World

★~ Good to Know: Mount Everest 

Mount Everest

In 1953, adventurist Edmund Hillary and his Sherpa guide Tenzing Norgay became the first men to reach the summit of Mount Everest. Ever since, the world’s tallest mountain has been calling out to thrill-seekers of all shapes and sizes. More than 3,800 people have attempted to conquer its icy mountain face, and while at least 225 people have died trying, men and women, the blind and the handicapped, the old and the young have all reached it’s 29,029-foot peak. But these intrepid folks don’t just come for the climb — they also seek to make Mount Everest history. Check out these 11 Mount Everest firsts:

♥~ FIRST TEEN WITH DOWN SYNDROME: 16-year-old Eli Reimer successfully climbed the 17,598 feet to Mt. Everest’s Base Camp. This is impressive not only because he accomplished as a teenager what millions of adults would never even consider, but also because Reimer is the first teen with Down syndrome to achieve the feat. The Oregon teen made the 70-mile trek with his father and a team of seven to the Himalayan mountain’s staging area to raise money and awareness for disabled children. “It’s monumental,” said the boy’s father. “When everyone else was dragging, it was Eli who led the way to the base camp.”  Reimer is not the youngest to take on Everest. In 2010, then-13-year-old Jordan Romero became the youngest person to reach Everest’s peak.

♥~ FIRST 76-YEAR-OLD: A 76-year-old Nepalese man named Min Bahadur Sherchan reached Everest’s peak on May 25, 2008. It was Sherchan’s first attempt, and he said he was determined to “climb the peak or die trying.” Close behind him in both age and timing was Yuichiro Miura, a 75-year-old Japanese man who reached the summit the very next day to become the second-oldest Everest climber. In 2002, 73-year-old Tamae Watanabe — a retired office worker who lives at the foot of Japan’s tallest mountain, Mount Fuji — became the oldest woman to reach the summit.

♥~ FIRST UNDER NINE HOURS: Sometimes getting to the mountain’s peak is less impressive than how quickly you do it. The harrowing climb from the foot of the base camp to the summit usually takes four days, if weather is on your side. But in 2004, stellar Sherpa guide Pem Dorjee covered the same trek in a record 8 hours and 10 minutes. This was actually the second time he earned the title for fastest ascent.

♥~ FIRST WOMAN TO SUMMIT:  In 1975, Junko Tabei was chosen as one of 15 in the first all-female team to take on the mountain. But only a few days into the journey, the expedition was hit by an avalanche. The team and its Sherpas were buried underneath, and Tabei was knocked unconscious for several minutes before a Sherpa dug her out. But the diminutive climber persevered, becoming the first of her group to reach the top on May 16, 1975.

♥~ FIRST-EVER ROCK CONCERT:  In 2007, a cancer awareness group from Colorado reached the greatest of musical heights with a first-ever performance on Everest’s rocky mountain face. The Love Hope Strength Foundation led a team of 40 musicians, cancer survivors, and mountaineers to the 18,600-foot peak of Kala Patthar, situated just above Everest Base Camp. After a fourteen-day trek, the “Everest Rocks” journey culminated in an acoustic concert that raised money for the Nepal Cancer Relief Society.

♥~FIRST AMPUTEES:  In 1998, Tom Whittaker, a 49-year-old college instructor from Arizona, reached the world’s tallest peak on his third try. Whittaker, who lost his leg in a car crash in 1979, managed the climb with a specially designed artificial leg that is lightweight and has its own crampons—claw-like boot attachments climbers use to stay secure on the icy mountain.

♥~ FIRST SWIM ACROSS A GLACIAL LAKE: In 2010, 40-year-old environmentalist Lewis Pugh became the first person to swim across Everest’s Pumori Lake. Situated at about 17,000 feet, the lake waters are a balmy 36 degrees Fahrenheit. Lewis is an avid “polar bear” swimmer, but the Everest swim was especially challenging: If he swam too quickly he could lose energy and drown; but if he moved too slowly he could succumb to hypothermia. “Because of the altitude you need to swim very slowly and deliberately,” he said. “I was gasping for air and if I had swum any faster I would have gone under.” In the end, Pugh breast-stroked across the 0.62-mile lake in 22 minutes and 51 seconds, which was just right.

♥~ FIRST BLIND PERSON: Erik Weihenmayer lost his sight because of a rare disease at the age of 13. But that didn’t stop him from exploring the world. The Colorado native took up climbing at 16, and by 32 he had already climbed some of the world’s tallest peaks, including Kilimanjaro in Tanzania. And in 2001, he conquered Everest, by following the sound of bells tied to the jackets of his climbing mates and Sherpa guides.

♥~ FIRST SNOWBOARDING DESCENT: Everest isn’t exactly a welcoming snowboarding trail. But despite the distinct lack of soft powder, two snowboarders attempted in 2001 to be the first to lay down tracks on that unforgiving mountain face. The two Europeans, Stephan Gatt and Marco Siffredi, snowboarded down Everest within two days of each other. However, it was Gatt who officially earned the title as the first to swowboard down Everest. If the feat itself weren’t enough, the athlete carried all of his snowboarding equipment up the mountain, and did so without the aid of oxygen. Then, after locking in his bindings, Siffredi descended down the North Face of the mountain, about 600 feet below the summit. The extreme cold broke one of his bindings, temporarily halting him in his tracks, but he continued his approximately two-hour descent after a Sherpa came to his rescue. In 2000, a Slovenian ski teacher named Davo Karnicar was the first to ski from Everest’s summit to its base. The attempt was actually his second — he was first thwarted by bad weather in 1996 — which he completed in five hours. Karnicar took only a few breaks and reportedly never removed his skis.

♥~ FIRST CANCER SURVIVOR: Sean Swarner has battled cancer not once, but twice. At 13, Swarner was diagnosed with stage four Hodgkin’s disease, and was given only three months to live. Swarner overcame the odds and his Hodgkin’s went into remission, but tests a year later revealed a golf-ball-sized tumor on his right lung. If you can imagine it, this second prognosis — for Askin’s sarcoma — was worse than the first, and he was given only two weeks to live. Swarner went through multiple surgeries, chemotherapy, and radiation over the years, and though he lost the use of one of his lungs, he came out on top. The same single-minded determination that pushed him through his illness propelled him toward Everest. On May 16, 2002, Swarner became the first cancer survivor to stand on the mountain’s summit. Since that climb, Swarner has gone on to complete the “7-summits,” the highest peaks in seven continents.

♥~ FIRST BACK-TO-BACK SUMMITS:  Chhurim Sherpa dreamed of climbing Everest ever since she was in the fifth grade, when she saw tourists trekking their equipment through her village in northeastern Nepal. But the 29-year-old wanted to break records, and so she set out to complete back-to-back climbs. Her first ascent, made with a group of four other climbers, was on May 12, 2012. After standing on top of the world for 15 minutes, returning safely to base, and resting for two days, she made the journey again on May 17 with just her aide for company. On that second trip she climbed the steepest face while carrying more than 30 pounds of gear. Beyond her double climb, Chhurim remains in an elite group of only 21 Nepalese women who have reached Everest’s peak.

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If you haven’t seen this video—it is FUN. And the moral: Always dream big–or you’re going to get socks from Santa. Ok, that is not my only take away….just watch.  Click here for more about information about the video 

[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zIEIvi2MuEk[/youtube]

A friend on Facebook wondered what would happen if someone had asked Santa for World Peace and another friend quipped back, “an IOU.”

Wishing you a wonderful Wednesday!

13 thoughts on “International Mountain Day, Noodle Ring Day

  1. Morno,
    Batman’s car is the coolest. A little surprised that Batman is having a manicure tho.
    Interesting about the people who have climbed Mt. Everest. Those guides must know that mountain backwards and forwards to help people up and back safely.
    I’d be the guy who asked for socks.
    Have a good one.

    • Maybe he was buying a gift certificate for Batgirl? Funny, about the socks…but now you know don’t ask for socks!

  2. Good Morno,
    Ok, after reading those “Everest firsts” I am sufficiently motivated to tackle some mountains in my life. I know, I can’t compare finishing my Christmas shopping on-line with a blind person climbing Mt Everest but I do still have a cold!
    I think my Mom made noodle ring. It’s not one of her home cooked meals that I miss.
    The video was great!
    Happy Wednesday.

    • If you’re Christmas shopping with a cold, go ahead and compare.
      Yep, noodle ring is a nothing mucher. Glad you enjoyed the video!

  3. Wow, what a great post. If the information on folks summiting Everest doesn’t motivate me to tackle my own mountains, I don’t know what ever will! Thanks so much for sharing those inspiring stories. And thank you for visiting my blog this morning and taking the time to leave a comment. It was wonderful to hear from you!

    Hugs from Ecuador,
    Kathy

    • Yep, I went out the door singing CLIMB EVERY MOUNTAIN. Well, not really but I thought about it. I had a nice visit over at your place! Thanks for being so welcoming!

      Hugs from 3F above in Chicago.:-D

  4. Love the Batman car, but I don’t think I’d like to drive it on icy streets!
    Interesting facts about Mr. Everest. Call me odd, but climbing that thing isn’t on my Bucket List.
    Okay, this is my five-year-old self talking, but Noodle Ring sounds yucky. I imagine its lack of veggies and fruit put it low on the list of healthy foods.

    • Think of the cool spin out on ice! So exciting.
      Nope, not on my list either but I wouldn’t mind having a picnic at the base!
      Yep–Noodle ring is Icky Poo! However, if you covered the top in potato chips—better. 😀

  5. Batman was not getting a manicure, he was buying gift certificates! The car was way cool. Batman was dressed to drive it in our cold weather. Cole and I love tricked out cars.
    Noodle ring? Sounds kind of like the tuna noodle casserole my Mom use to make and sprinkle crushed potato chips on top. Didn’t care for that either!
    TTFN
    MJ

    • Really. Gift certificates? That is what I told Mike without even reading your comments. Did you get his autograph too?
      I didn’t mind tuna casserole, but I am not a fan of noodle ring….

  6. do i see batman is taking up two parking spaces???
    i enjoy reading adventures of mountain climbers. gutsy. like your mount everest facts, too!
    never head of noodle ring.
    late, but good day!

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