Farmers Almanac

Current Moon Phase

Waning Gibbous
75% of full

Farmers Almanac
The 2012 Farmers Almanac
Farmers' Almanac

Welcome to the Almanac Green Blog

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Nam consequat. Donec porttitor massa vitae turpis. Duis massa. Nam eu libero. Nam quis pede aliquet leo faucibus venenatis. Suspendisse ac augue. Duis porta ornare justo. Suspendisse quam ligula, dictum dapibus, faucibus nec, laoreet at, nisi. Vestibulum aliquet. Nulla gravida dui id metus. Integer tincidunt, velit nec condimentum condimentum, eros magna fermentum risus, posuere tempor arcu leo vitae nisl. Morbi dictum pede sed dolor. Cum sociis natoque penatibus et magnis dis parturient montes, nascetur ridiculus mus. Donec viverra. Ut bibendum, sem et tristique vulputate, purus nisi bibendum tortor, quis commodo nisi sapien non turpis. Curabitur venenatis euismod ipsum. Praesent quis risus. Vivamus accumsan, risus eget interdum ullamcorper, ante lorem tempus enim, et faucibus metus dui ac turpis. Nulla suscipit ante et turpis.

Curabitur purus mauris, venenatis eget, posuere eget, tincidunt ac, pede. Quisque faucibus odio id nisl. Aenean ullamcorper ornare ipsum. Cras ut urna. Donec ullamcorper. Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Donec sit amet arcu nec nulla molestie ultrices. Fusce sed nunc in odio molestie dictum. Nam venenatis. Donec lectus arcu, rhoncus a, malesuada vitae, lobortis eget, mauris. Phasellus lorem est, vestibulum iaculis, porttitor in, tincidunt vitae, sem. Aliquam erat volutpat. In mattis. Duis posuere faucibus massa. Pellentesque congue, libero et luctus consequat, mauris ipsum pharetra sapien, sit amet viverra justo lorem at magna. Vivamus a nunc ac pede ullamcorper aliquet. Integer eros. Vivamus non sem ac odio imperdiet fringilla.

If you notice a hole in the upper left-hand corner of your Farmers' Almanac, don't return it to the store! That hole isn't a defect; it's a part of history. Starting with the first edition of the Farmers' Almanac in 1818, readers used to nail holes into the corners to hang it up in their homes, barns, and outhouses (to provide both reading material and toilet paper). In 1910, the Almanac's publishers began pre-drilling holes in the corners to make it even easier for readers to keep all of that invaluable information (and paper) handy.

qrcode