You are currently viewing April 2023 Nature Culture Childhood Calendar

April 2023 Nature Culture Childhood Calendar

April 2022 A Month of  Birth, Transformation and Opening Up to the Fundamental Possibility of Goodness in the World

 

April is a time of transformation in the natural word with the earth teeming with new life. The earth is thawing out. Animals are returning from southern wintering grounds, waking up from hibernation, switching over to new diets, and giving birth. Trees are blossoming ( most trees reproduce by wind propagation which works best when there are no leaves on the trees!). The ephemerals are pushing up from the forest floor and flowers are beginning to blossom including the pink phlox that the Pink Full Moon ( April 6th) is named after. The water is high in the streams and rivers, the birds and the frogs are gathering nature’s orchestra, and there is more light everyday filling the ecosystem with more energy.

Cultures around the world, in the temperate regions, celebrate the rebirth of Spring in different ways: see Wendy Pfeffer’s,  A New Beginning: Celebrating the Spring Equinox, Hans Christian Anderson, the father of the modern fairy tale, was born April 2. Learn more about his childhood in the beautiful children’s book, The young Hans Christian Anderson, by Karen Hesse.

Both the Civil War (1861) and the Mexican American War ( 1846), began in April, reminding us of the horrors of war and their ongoing effects. How can we have developmentally appropriate conversations with children about difficult subjects ( Russia and Ukraine anyone?). How can we cultivate an anti-war culture especially with children fixated on swords, guns, weapons, violent super-heroes, first-person shooters, and a society whose default answers to deep, seemingly intractable problems are “solutions” steeped in violence?  How can  we “beat their swords into ploughshares, … their spears into pruning hooks;  [and live in a way where] nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more”?

Let Us Beat Swords into Ploughshares Statue given to the United Nations by the then Soviet Union

 

April is the month when we can get outside, garden, make animal friends, find new places to play, enjoy the freedom of getting out of our little bubble worlds, and experience the joy  of exploring, learning from, and connecting with where we live, this good earth. Earth Day, April 22nd, inspires us to get outside with our children, and reaffirm our fundamental belonging to the earth and our ancestral connections with the natural world. Children, like the birds making their nests and singing in excitement, like the plants pushing up towards the sun, like the new-born babies figuring things out, participate in the affirmation of the earth becoming into being

April 1st

April Fools Day

Let’s dive deep into the folly, play, and carnival at the roots of human culture

 

Gil Scott Heron, poet, musician, wrote The Revolution Will Not Be Televised, b. 1949

Netherlands becomes the first country to pass a same-sex  marriage equality law in 2001

Sacred Stone Camp founded at Standing Rock, ND to protest the Dakota Access pipeline, 2016

Many trees, including Willow, Eastern Cottonwood and Red Maple’s are flowering

April 2

World Autism Awareness Day ( that kicks off Autism Awareness Month)

International Children’s Book Day

Hans Christian Anderson,  author of the The Snow Queen and so many other fairy tales, b. 1805

Jeannette Rankin takes her seat as the first woman ever elected to the House of Representatives in 1917

Stanley Kubrick’s 2001, A Space Odyssey makes its world premiere in 1968

April 3rd

Find a Rainbow Day ( and if you can’t find one learn about them!)

Allen Ginsberg, Buddhist, beat poet, critic of capitalism and conformity, celebrant of life, b. 1926

Red-Shouldered Hawks Courting and Mating

First public cellular phone call placed on a Manhattan sidewalk in 1973

April 4th

School Librarian’s Day

Maya Angelou, author, poet Civil Rights activist, her classic memoir, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, banned from many high schools, was the first non-fiction bestseller by an African American woman, b. 1928

Many species of warblers that live primarily in Haiti, make their first migratory stop after crossing Long Island Sound  in East Rock Park, to find food, make nests and have babies (https://www.newhavenindependent.org/article/warbler_watcher_spins_stories_of_home)

April 5th

Anti War marches against the Vietnam War, in 50 U.S. cities, attract over 150,000 protesters

Booker T. Washington, born a slave, tireless advocate for African-American people,  founder of the Tuskegee Institute, and will always be remembered for his debates with W.E.B DuBois on the proper education for African American children and young people, b. 1856

 

Passover, Jewish celebration of freedom, Exodus, and unleavened bread

Palestine Children’s Day to commemorate and acknowledge the struggles Palestinian children have in accessing basic human rights under Occupation

Painted Turtles basking

April 6th

American Robins foraging for earthworms ( in the spring invertebrates make up 90 % of the Robin’s diet as opposed to 10 percent in fall and winter)

One of many U.S. slave revolts begins in New York, in 1712

Graeme Base, children’s author and illustrator of animals, magical creatures and wondrous beasts extraordinary, b.1958

 

Youth Movement is an Egyptian activist group established in Spring 2008 to support the workers in El-Mahalla El-Kubra, an industrial town, who were planning to strike on 6 April

Pink Full Moon

The Pink Full Moon is named after Pink Phlox that blooms this time of year

 

Billie Holiday, one of the most important vocalists in the history of the Blues and popular music in general, b. 1915

April 7th

The Advanced Research Projects Agency is awarded a contract to build a precursor to today’s world wide web in 1969

The World Health Organization is established in 1948

 

Paris Communards burn guillotine as a reactionary symbol of counter-revolution, 1871

Good Friday commemorating the crucifixion and death of Jesus  ( Christian)

Chipmunks are preparing nests and giving birth

April 8th

Eastern Newts migrating back to ponds as adults

Draw a Bird Day

COBOL, a programmatic computer language created by Grace Hopper, computer scientist, mathematician and United States Rear Admiral, 1959

Trina Schart Hyman, children’s illustrator of fairy tales, her own original stories, Herschel and the Hanukkah Goblins, and many other stories,  b. 1939

The birth of Gautama Buddha celebrated, b. 563 BC

April 9th

Paul Robeson, singer, athlete, political activist, renaissance man, b. 1898

Easter Sunday ( Christian), celebrating the resurrection of Christ and the rebirth of the world

Eastern Red-Backed Salamanders are emerging from hibernation and laying eggs

April 10th

Northern Cardinals singing, whereas males sing all year, females sing and vocalize mostly  from the nest during the Spring

Martin Waddle, author of Owl Babies, and many other delightful children books centered around animals, b. 1941

 

Mount Tambora, in Indonesia explodes in one of the largest volcanic eruptions in recorded history. At least 71,000 people were killed by the eruption, 1815

American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) is founded in in 1866

April 11th

Civil Rights Act of 1968 signed into law

Red Fox kits venturing out of their dens

The trial of Adolf Eichmann, one of the main architects of the Holocaust is put on trial in 1961 ( he was hanged the following year)

April 12

Beverly Cleary, author of the Beezus and Ramona Quimby books, among many others, b. 1916

Gary Soto, Mexican American author who wrote Too Many Tamales, and poetry for children and adults, b. 1952

https://www.sfmta.com/muni-art-2021-gary-soto-poet-page

 

American Civil War begins, 1861

Dennis Banks a leader of the American Indian Movement, author, educator, b. 1937

April 13th

Ospreys returning to nesting sites

British troops massacre 400 Indian civilians in the Amritsar Massacre to “punish the Indians for their disobedience” in 1919

CIA Director Allen Dulles, launches mind control program MKULTRA, 1953

Erik Christian Haugaard, Danish born illustrator, who fled from the Nazi invasion of Denmark, well known for his translations of Hans Christian Anderson, and adventure stories set in war torn and poverty stricken social milieus, b. 1923

Marguerite Henry, stricken with rheumatic fever as a young child, she created imaginary worlds around books and animals, writing the classic Misty of Chincoteague and many other horse and animal stories, b. 1902

April 14th

Celebrate Dolphins Day

David Buckel was an American LGBT lawyer and environmental activist who immolated himself in Prospect Park to protest fossil fuels in 2018

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/15/nyregion/david-buckel-brooklyn.html

 

Human genome project, the mapping of the complete sequence of the human genome, is declared “complete,” in 2003

Spring Peepers emerging from hibernation

Abraham Lincoln assassinated in 1865

April 15th

Jacqueline Briggs Martin, outstanding young children’s author of nonfiction books about nature including “Creekfinding: A True Story”, and “Snowflake Bentley”, b. 1945

Leonardo da Vinci, artist, inventor, thinker, b. 1452

250,000  attend nuclear disarmament rallies across Australia in 1984

Extinction Rebellion, committed to non-violent action to compel governments to act to prevent tipping points in the climate system, biological diversity loss, and ecological collapse,  staged its first international rebellion week, in 2019

Common loons find staging areas in rivers and ponds, free of ice, as they make their way northward

Eastman Kodak Company launches Kodachrome the most popular  media for professional and hobbyist photographers ( discontinued in 2009 because of the ubiquity of digital media), in 1935

April 16th

Common Garter Snakes emerging from hibernacula and mating

Charlie Chaplin, great actor of both the silver and silent screen, always memorable for his performance in Modern Times, b. 1889

A still from Charlie Chaplin’s must see film “The Kid’ where Chaplin’s down on his luck character “adopts” a kid, and raises him to be a partner in his schemes for fame and success

 

Garth Williams, brilliant children’s book illustrator of such classics as Stuart Little, Charlotte’s Web, Bedtime for Francis, and many others, b. 1921

April 17th

Easter Sunday

Carrion Beetles feeding on animal carcasses and the fly larva that are already eating the carcass

Great Egrets Migrating

 

April 18th

Afro-Asia conference of unaligned  nations ( neither communist or capitalist) in Bandung Indonesia, 1955

Snapping Turtles mating

Great San Francisco earthquake destroys much of the city in 1906

26,000 high school and college students, petitioned, marched and came to Washington, D.C. to demand the end of segregated schools, in 1959

April 19th

1943 Albert Hoffman, who had invented synthetic LSD a few days earlier, takes first intentional LSD trip and drives bike home from his lab, in 1943

 Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba, by Cuban exiles and funded and coordinated by the U.S. government, thwarted  in 1961

Wood frogs mating

New Moon

While Full Moons are often associated with natural cycles and phenomenon, New Moons are often associated with witchy, astrological stuff ( of course the two are not mutually exclusive). This new moon takes place in fiery Aires which suggests to some that you might stop sabotaging yourself and light a creative fire from within

 

April 20th

Joan Miro, Spanish surrealist painter that is particularly accessible to children, b. 1893

Tilled Field, Joan Miro

 

Porcupines giving birth

15 people die in the Columbine High School shooting in 1999

Prophet Muhammad ( Islam)  b. 571

Mary Hoffman, author of Amazing Grace, the story of a black girl who wants to play the role of Peter Pan in the school play, and The Great Big Book of Feelings, b. 1945

April 21

Charlotte Bronte, one of three Bronte sisters,  author of Jane Eyre, a trailblazing exemplar of the modern romance novel where a woman balances love and social achievement, b. 1816

John Muir, Scottish-American naturalist and author, who grew up in Wisconsin, invented things such a machine that tipped him out of bed before sunrise, went walking and sailing, fell in love with the Sierra Madre mountains and Yosemite Valley, started many National Parks, was the first president of the Sierra Club, and wrote, The Thousand Mile Walk, The Sierra Mountains, The Yosemite, The Story of my Boyhood and Youth, b. 1838 https://vault.sierraclub.org/john_muir_exhibit/life/muir_biography.aspx

Noah Webster publishes a two volume dictionary of American English, in 1828

Ephemerals, like Bloodroot, Trout Lilly, Dutchman’s Breeches, Wild Columbine, and wild ginger are springing up on the forest floor

Fish Migration Day

April 22nd

Earth Day

Get involved, get outside, and do something with your kids for Earth Day 2023

 

Common grackles nesting

Immanuel Kant, German philosopher, transcendental idealist, fundamental figure in the European Enlightenment, b. 1724

Me, Charlie Malone, reading The Day You Were Born at the top of Sleeping Giant on Earth Day 2020

Fernando Nicole Sacco, anarchist b. 1891

April 23

First  YouTube video posted in 2005, “Me at the Zoo”

Eastern tent caterpillars hatching and building tents

April 24

Hubble Space Telescope is launched out beyond the Earth’s atmosphere, in 1990

Image of the Crab Nebula taken by the Hubble telescope

 

Queen Bumble Bees flying and starting a new colony by themselves, building a nest and then laying eggs

April 25th

Ella Fitzgerald, musician, b. 1917

The beginning of the U.S. Mexico War that established the boundary between the United States and Mexico begins in 1846

Boundary between Mexico and United States before the US-Mexico War

 

One million people march in Washington D.C. for gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender rights, in 1993

Big Brown bats emerging from hibernation and females are forming maternity roosts

April 26th

Filiberto Ojeda Rios, Puerto Rican independence activist, b.  1933

National Student Strike enlists over one million students, across the United States, against the Vietnam War, 1968

Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant  melts down, spreading radiation globally, 1986

John James Audubon, bird and wildlife illustrator and environmental activist, b. 1785

https://digital.library.pitt.edu/collection/audubons-birds-america

 

Frederick Law Olmstead, utopian urbanist , park planner, designer of Central Park and Prospect Park, and hundreds of other reserves, and public places throughout the United States including Walnut Hill park in New Britain CT, b. 1822

Wild Leek leaves emerging

April 27th

Philippine’s natives kill Ferdinand Magellan, European explorer, after he found a passage from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean, and before the rest of his crew completed their circumnavigation of the world, 1521

Route of the Victoria, captained by Magellan, until he was killed by Philippine natives on the island of Mactan

 

Ludwig Bemelmans, author of the  Madeleine series, about an iconoclastic little girl asserting her individuality within regimented social institutions, b. 1898

Killdeer nesting on the ground

April 28th

Mothers hold first rally for the disappearance  at Plaza de Mayo, Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1977

Harper Lee, author of To Kill a Mockingbird, b. 1926

Mary Badham as Scout in the movie adaptation of To Kill A Mockingbird

 

Great Blue Herons mating

Oskar Schindler, who saved over 1200 Jewish people from the Holocaust, b. 1908

Take your Children to Work Day

April 29th

Arbor Day, United States

A crab apple tree that I planted two years ago when I proposed to my wife!

 

Duke Ellington, Jazz musician, b. 1899

 

International Dance Day

April 30th

International Jazz Day

Spring Peepers mating

Martin Luther King makes his “ Why I Am Opposed to the War in Vietnam” speech and praises Muhammad Ali’s position on the war in 1967

 

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