Showing posts with label fall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fall. Show all posts

Friday, September 4, 2009

History of Labor Day

We are approaching another holiday weekend (HOORAY!). I thought I would take a moment and search the net and see what is posted as the "history" of this particular holiday.

Labor Day rose out of the struggles of Americans in the late 1800's and as a part of the labor movement of the day.
Labor Day History
As the Industrial Revolution took hold of the nation, the average American in the late 1800s worked 12-hour days, seven days a week in order to make a basic living. Children were also working, as they provided cheap labor to employers and laws against child labor were not strongly enforced.


With the long hours and terrible working conditions, American unions became more prominent and voiced their demands for a better way of life. On Tuesday September 5, 1882, 10,000 workers marched from city hall to Union Square in New York City, holding the first-ever Labor Day parade. Participants took an upaid day-off to honor the workers of America, as well as vocalize issues they had with employers. As years passed, more states began to hold these parades, but Congress would not legalize the holiday until 12 years later.


On May 11, 1894, workers of the Pullman Palace Car Company in Chicago struck to protest wage cuts and the firing of union representatives. They sought support from their union led by Eugene V. Debs and on June 26 the American Railroad Union called a boycott of all Pullman railway cars. Within days, 50,000 rail workers complied and railroad traffic out of Chicago came to a halt. On July 4, President Grover Cleveland dispatched troops to Chicago. Much rioting and bloodshed ensued, but the government's actions broke the strike and the boycott soon collapsed. Debs and three other union officials were jailed for disobeying the injunction. The strike brought worker's rights to the public eye and Congress declared, in 1894, that the first Monday in September would be the holiday for workers, known as Labor Day.


The founder of Labor Day remains unclear, but some credit either Peter McGuire, co-founder of the American Federation of Labor, or Matthew Maguire, a secretary of the Central Labor Union, for proposing the holiday.


Although Labor Day is meant as a celebration of the labor movement and its achievements, it has come to be celebrated as the last, long summer weekend before Autumn.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

I Found GREEN HORNED CATERPILLARS in my Garden Today!



I have lived in Las Vegas since 1985 and I have always loved to garden. Each year I grow basil, tomatoes and peppers. I have tried cucumbers, squash and a variety of other veggies without as much luck as tomatoes and peppers.
My tomato crop is over for this year, but I always have peppers (Anaheim chili peppers, jalapeno, habenero etc.) that grow into the late fall. I noticed this morning that my pepper plants were eaten on. I couldn't believe it because I just watered them yesterday and didn't notice anything unusual.
Upon closer inspection and much to my dismay, I pulled 9 huge green horned caterpillars off of my plants. Never in all of my years of gardening in Las Vegas have I come across such a large amount of caterpillars on my plants. In years past I have had a caterpillar or two...but never 9!!!!

I spoke with my mom in Minnesota and she said that there is an usual amount of activity in Minnesota with the green horned caterpillars as well.


Tomato Horn worm - are 3-4" long green caterpillars with diagonal lines on sides, prominent horn on rear end. Eat foliage and may take bites out of green fruit. Tomato horn worms are the larvae of 2 large moths: the Hawk moth and the Sphinx moth and overwinter in the soil in the pupal stage. Adult moths appear in late spring and lay single, pearl colored eggs on the undersides of plant leaves that hatch in about a week. Larvae feed on foliage for about a month before they enter the soil and pupate. They can be difficult to spot as coloring matches plant. Look for them on the undersides of leaf-stripped branches. They can easily be hand-picked and destroyed or if infestation is severe, use
Bt (Bacillius thuringiensis) dust or liquid (organic).
Braconid wasps will kill these caterpillars by implanting rice-like eggs on their backs.
It's great to garden, if you have kids it is a wonderful to work on garden projects with them and to watch the fruit and vegetables grow is spectacular. To sit down for a meal and eat your own home grown food is another perk in the process.
Brought to you by Kim Duclos Coldwell Banker Wardley www.CallKim.net