Blogger Day

Blogger Day featured image art with laptop.

Blogger Day is celebrated on August 5 every year.

This day celebrates one of the most popular platforms in the world, Blogger. Anyone who has ever created a blog before has most likely used Blogger. This platform allows people to express themselves for either personal or commercial reasons.

Some bloggers use blogs to disseminate information and it has been a very good way to consume news ranging from politics to sports, technology, lifestyle, and a host of other topics.

This day should be well celebrated, especially by the blogging community, as it celebrates one of the platforms that contribute to our freedom of speech.

Happy Blogger Day

Thank you for joining us on this very special day.


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Lollipop classic

Lollipop Hattingdon top featured image.

In 1908, candy maker George Smith revolutionized the candy world by creating a hard candy mounted on a stick, the first modern lollipop. According to his memoirs, he named the treat after his favorite racehorse — Lolly Pop.

National Lollipop Day is celebrated each year on July 20. It is a day to celebrate hard candy, sweet treats and being a kid.

Hattingdon does not have a “lollipop hat” per se, but she does have a very pretty classic hat inspired by the sweet lollipop Vivian created, seen below.

We named the design Lolly. Hattingdon fans call it the Lollipop hat. That’s cool. Here she is.

Lollie classic hat with lollipop in coordinating colors.
Lolly with her Lollipop

Isn’t she sweet? Love love love the colours. Oh. Before we go, here is a bit of lollipop history.

History of the Lollipop

Jon Prince, writing for CandyFavourites.com, states, “The first incarnation of the lollipop was probably created by cave people thousands of years ago, who collected honey from beehives with a stick. Not wanting to waste the sweet nectar, they most likely licked the stick, thus inventing the world’s first lollipop. Good for them (good for us).”

“Archaeologists believe that ancient Chinese, Arabs, and Egyptians all produced fruit and nut confections that they ‘candied’ in honey (which serves as a preservative), and inserted sticks to make it easier to eat.”

What are your favourite lollipops? Let us know. Love, Hattingdon.

Related Reading

National Day Calendar » | New Haven Gives the Lollipop Its Name »
Note: You will not be mercilessly bombarded with ads. —Vivian.

Updated: 28 July 25.


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Nat’l Cherry Day

Red cherries with pink blossoms.

AT this time of summer, the cherry harvest is at its peak. Today is the perfect time to celebrate all things “cherry”. It is July 16th, National Cherry Day.

Many farming communities celebrate with a harvest festival. We don’t have to tell you what is in the baked goods for those celebrations.

The Hat

Hattingdon can wait no longer to join the festivities and show off her new hat — designed especially for her for this day. How cool does she look? Ain’t she sweet?

Cherry Hattingdon
Cherry.

Variety of cherries

Cherries are a fun and tasty fruit. There are sweet cherries for eating fresh. There are tart or sour varieties that are best for baking. There is even a yellow variety. Yellow varieties are quite sweet. In addition to tasting good, cherries are healthy eating.

Super snack

Pop a few into your mouth and feel guiltless. Why!? Simply because they are good for you. While they are sweet, they are also low in calories.

Cherries are high in fiber. They are high in vitamins A and C. Their high level of antioxidants helps to fight free radicals. It contains anti-inflammatory properties, too. And, they have lots of potassium. Cherries are gluten-free.

Studies show that they help to lower blood pressure. And, if you have trouble sleeping, have a few pieces of this magical fruit in the evening. They contain melatonin, a natural chemical that helps to induce sleep.

Even diabetics can enjoy the natural sugars in cherries. But, don’t eat a whole bunch at one sitting. Rather, eat a few at a time.

Cool facts

• The first recording of the cultivation of cherry trees goes back to ancient Mesopotamia in 300 B.C.
• Ancient Romans and Chinese dynasties also cultivated them.
• Prehistoric caves in Asia and Europe contained cherry pits.
• Cherry blossoms are a symbol of beauty and renewal.
• Cherry trees are not native to N America. Early settlers brought them to the New World in the 1600s.
• According to legend, George Washington chopped down the family cherry tree. But, when confronted by his father, he could not tell a lie. The rest as they say is history.
• The first time cherry turnovers were made was in 1440. At the time, cake was banned in some European countries.
• The average mature tree produces approximately 7,000 fruit each year.
• Japanese cherry trees do not produce fruit. Rather, they are ornamentals.
• On August 30, 1909, Japan announced it was donating 2,000 cherry trees to the United States for planting along the Potomac River. The trees arrived in the United States on January 6, 1910. Today, millions of people visit D.C. at Cherry Blossom time just to see them in bloom.
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You see. We are more than just pretty hats. Wink. See you again soon. Love, Hattingdon.


Hattingdon & Co.

©Vivian J Grant. All Rights Reserved.

• Featured Image: Red Cherries. Freepick.com.

Nat’l I love Horses Day

Featured image featuring Dee Dee Hattingdon.

On July 15, “National I Love Horses Day,” we express our love and gratitude for that marvelous and magnificent creature — the horse. With over 200 breeds, these spirited animals give humans much to love. Their loyalty and devotion throughout history is a fraction of the many reasons we love them.

Their contribution to mankind has been incalculable. Thus began  the horse’s unrivalled historical influence across millennia to the present day. “Civilization was built on the back of a horse.” (Podcast).

Did you know . . . ?

• In the course of 55 million years, the horse has developed from a small animal the size of a cat, into the many varieties of horses we have today.

• The use of horses by humans began roughly 5,500 years ago on the windswept grasslands of the Pontic-Caspian Steppe.

• Today there are more than 600 horse breeds.

• Horses come in all shapes and sizes, and hundreds of different horse breeds exist today. Before being domesticated, horses ran wild. Over time, humans caught and trained horses, and then they started to strategically breed them to refine certain desirable traits.

• Horses “lock” their legs to avoid collapsing while sleeping standing up.

• Horses have a “stay apparatus” in their hind legs that allows them to lock their legs without having to use their muscles to support themselves.

• According to Equus, horses have a 350-degree view of the world, compared to a human’s view of about 90 degrees. Since a horse’s eyes are positioned on the sides of their head, they can see almost everything around them without turning their head. Horses can’t see a very narrow area directly in front of and behind them.

• Horses use several different types of communication. They use body language to communicate with other herd members, and everything from the twitch of an ear to the position of a horse’s tail can carry a message.

• Horses can use their eyes together in a form of binocular vision, but they can also use their eyes independently in monocular vision. Essentially, a horse can look at an object using their right eye while also looking behind themselves with their left eye. Each eye delivers information to a different half of the horse’s brain, and those brain halves work independently.


A hatful of smiles

Hattingdon was created to raise money to provide for the protection of horses. We are retired now, but we thought you might enjoy seeing “the hatted one” here from time to time. We hope it gives you “a hatful of smiles”.

Updated 25 July 2025.


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