Somewhere under that dense fog, the people of Somerset county in southwest England may be marching from house to house, singing songs and dancing, and asking for a drink or snack in return. If that sounds like Christmas caroling, you’re right. But it’s the English tradition of wassailing—a practice that usually takes place on Twelfth Night, which marks the coming of the Epiphany and takes place on January 5th or 6th. So why do the people living in this farmland moor wassail on January 17? Because in Somerset, the locals observe the pre-Gregorian calendar Twelfth Night, which falls on January 17. They may even stage an ‘apple wassail’ with a trip to a local cider orchard, to sing and make noise for a good harvest in the new year.
A wassailing we go
Today in History
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Big Bend National Park anniversary
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Penguins can t fly!
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Kangaroo family for National Hugging Day
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Sailing on thick ice
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World Honey Bee Day
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Welcome to the Alien Egg Hatchery
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Happy trees = Clean air
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A stroll above the stratosphere
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National Cherry Blossom Festival
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World Rainforest Day
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A fair that s star-studded
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Atolls in the Maldives
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Southern gemsbok in the savannah, Botswana
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Juniper Springs, Florida
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Heceta Head Light, Florence, Oregon
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National Take a Hike Day
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International Day of Human Space Flight
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It’s National Dolphin Day!
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The mountain of 30,000 sakura
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Social climbing
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Folegandros Island, Cyclades, Greece
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Hello, spring!
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Assembling the Smithsonian
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It s harvest time on World Food Day
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Art in the chapel
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Boxing Day
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Moody skies over Valletta
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Harbin International Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival, China
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The island fox’s incredible comeback
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A garden of prickly delights
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