It's Odd Day

No, the title doesn't contain a typo; it is really, officially Odd Day, a day when three consecutive odd numbers make up the date, an event that only occurs six times in each century, according to the Odd Day Web site.

Today marks the half-way point in this century's Odd Days. The previous cycle began Jan. 3, 1905 (1/3/5), followed, naturally, by March 5, 1907 (3/5/7), May 7, 1909 (5/7/9), July 9, 1911 (7/9/11), Sept. 11, 1913 (9/11/13) and Nov. 13, 1915 (11/13/15).

Europe, which generally writes numerical dates putting the day first, doesn't celebrate Odd Day on the same days; Europe's first Odd Day this century was March 1, 2005 (1/3/5), where ours was Jan. 3, 2005.

Of course, if you're using a Gregorian, Mayan or Chinese calendar, all bets are off. You're on your own figuring out your own Odd Days.

Happy Odd Day, y'all.

Previous Comments

ID
147045
Comment

That is odd... Happy Odd Day!

Author
chip
Date
2009-05-07T13:32:51-06:00
ID
147056
Comment

Everyday's an Odd Day to me.

Author
golden eagle
Date
2009-05-07T14:17:28-06:00
ID
147058
Comment

golden eagle: You're just odd. But it takes one to know one. :)

Author
Lady Havoc
Date
2009-05-07T14:24:10-06:00
ID
147061
Comment

Ha ha ha.

Author
golden eagle
Date
2009-05-07T14:36:37-06:00
ID
147109
Comment

No wonder I've been feeling, well, odd all day.

Author
LatashaWillis
Date
2009-05-07T19:12:48-06:00

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