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Tandem
Skydiving gift certificates

Tandem Skydiving holiday Destination!
We also want to be your birthday
skydiving destination! We offer skydiving gift certificates for any
occasion, including Birthdays.
Dates Covered by this Calendar
USA Federal Holidays and Celebrations
Work schedules may or may not be affected by these holidays.
- Skydive New Year's Day, January 1st.
- Skydive Birthday of Martin Luther King, third Monday in
January.
- Skydive Inauguration Day, January 20th every four years,
starting in 1937.
- Skydive Washington's Birthday, third Monday in February
since 1971
- Skydive Inauguration Day, March 4th every four years,
pre-1937.
- Skydive Armed Forces Day, third Saturday in May.
- Skydive
Memorial Day, last Monday in May since 1971; from
1868 to 1970 it was celebrated on May 30, and was called Decoration Day for
part of that time.
- Skydive Flag Day, June 14th.
- United States of America's Independence Day,
July 4
skydiving
- skydive Labor Day
Tandem Skydiving in Virginia, first Monday in September.
- Columbus Day skydiving, second Monday in October (federal
holiday since 1971).
- Election Day skydiving , Tuesday on or after November 2.
- Tandem skydive Veterans Day, November 11th
- Armistice day tandem skydiving.
- tandem Skydive Thanksgiving Day, fourth Thursday in
November.
- Tandem skydive Christmas Day, December 25th.
Current Trading Skydiving Holidays
States in the USA are not required to use Daylight Saving Time. However, if a
state decides to use Daylight Saving Time, it must begin and end Daylight Saving
Time on the dates and time specified by Congress.
- Daylight Saving time begins, (currently) first Sunday in
April (but not in Arizona, Hawaii, and most of the counties of Indiana);
beginning in 2007 Daylight Savings time will begin the second Sunday in
March.
- Federal Income Taxes are due April 15th; if the 15th is a
Saturday or Sunday, then the due date is the Monday after the 15th.
- Daylight Saving Time tandem skydiving gift certificates ends,
last Sunday in October (but not in Arizona, Hawaii, and most of the counties
of Indiana). Beginning in 2007, Daylight Savings Time will end the first
Sunday in November.
Other Widely Celebrated Observances usually don't affect skydiving
schedules.
- Skydiving Groundhog Day, February 2.
- Lincoln's Birthday Skydiving Gift Certificates, February
12.
- Tandem Skydiving Valentine's Day, February 14.
- Washington's Birthday Tandem Skydiving trips, February
22.
- Tandem skydive St. Patrick's Day, March 17.
- Tandem skydive April Fool's Day, April 1.
- Tandem skydive Earth Day, April 22 (since 1970;
- Administrative Assistants' Day sky dive Secretaries'
Day,
- Hey, shouldn't there be a special skydiving holiday for Skydiving Administrators???
- Arbor Day
- Tandem skydive Mothers' Day, second Sunday in May
- Tandem skydive Fathers' Day, third Sunday in June
- Tandem skydive Parents' Day, fourth Sunday in July .
- Tandem skydive Grandparents' Day, Sunday after Labor Day
.
- Tandem skydive Columbus Day (traditional), October 12.
- United Nations Day, October 24.
- Tandem skydive Halloween Sky diving gift certificate gift
cards
Not so widely celebrated Observances that hardly affect
anyone's schedule-
Skydive Groundhog Day, Skydiving Lincoln's Birthday, Skydive Valentine's Day, Sky dive tandem on Washington's Birthday,
(AKA George Birthington's Wash day in some inebriated circles), St. Patrick's Day, March 17 tandem skydiving April
Fool's Day, April 1 skydive on Earth Day, April 22 buy your employee a skydive on Administrative Assistants' Day, which once upon a time was Secretaries' Day, is the Wednesday of the last full week of April (that is, the Wednesday before the last Saturday in April) since 1955; go skydiving on Arbor Day is often the last Friday in April (since 1872), but since planting conditions vary, it may occur from September to May; please consult the National Arbor Day Foundation's list of Arbor Day Dates. We plan to skydive Mothers' Day, second Sunday in May (36 USC Sec. 142). Skydiving on Fathers' Day, third Sunday in June tandem sky diving Parents' Day, fourth Sunday in July skydive Grandparents' Day, Sunday after Labor Day we
can to go tandem skydiving Columbus Day, United Nations Day, October 24. Halloween, October 31. sometimes we skydive new years
eve, New Year's Day, January 1st.
Birthday of Martin Luther King, third Monday in January. Inauguration Day, January 20th every four years, starting in 1937. Washington's Birthday, third Monday in February since 1971; prior to that year, it was celebrated on the traditional date of February 22. Inauguration Day, March 4th every four years, pre-1937.
Armed Forces Day, third Saturday in May.
Memorial Day, last Monday in May since 1971; from 1868 to 1970 it was celebrated on May 30, and was called Decoration Day for part of that time.
Flag Day, June 14th.
United States of America's Independence Day, July 4 Tandem Skydiving Celebration.
Labor Day, first Monday in September.
Columbus Day, second Monday in October (federal holiday since 1971).
Election Day, Tuesday on or after November 2.
Veterans Day, November 11th (except from 1971 to 1977, inclusive, when it was celebrated on the fourth Monday in October; formerly known as Armistice).
Skydive Thanksgiving
Skydiving Day, fourth Thursday in November. we seldom skydive Christmas Day, December 25th. I have finally included this since it is a federal holiday, although it is not based on a secular holiday. many people guy
skydiving gift certificates for their special friends in Maryland, Northern
Virginia, and Washington, DC on these holidays and special occasions.
Personally, I think the most underappreciated, overlooked skydiving holiday is Old Year's
Day.
Anywho, click to schedule
a skydive or buy a
skydiving gift certificate for someone in the DC/ Suburban Maryland or
Virginia area in the USA
Columbus Day became an official state holiday in Colorado in 1905. It became a federal holiday in 1970. People have ritually remembered Columbus beginning at least in the Colonial period. In 1792, New York City and other eastern U.S. cities celebrated the 300th anniversary of his landing in the New World. In 1892, President Benjamin Harrison called upon the people of the United States to celebrate Columbus Day on the 400th anniversary of the event. During the 400-year anniversary in 1892, teachers, preachers, poets and politicians used Columbus Day rituals to teach ideals of patriotism. These patriotic rituals were framed around themes such as support for war, citizenship boundaries, the importance of loyalty to the nation, and celebrating social progress.[1]
Catholic immigration in the mid-nineteenth century induced discrimination from anti-immigrant activists such as the Ku Klux Klan. Like many other struggling immigrant communities, Catholics developed organizations to fight discrimination and provide insurance for the struggling immigrants. One such organization, the Knights of Columbus, chose that name in part because it saw Christopher Columbus as a fitting symbol of Catholic immigrants' right to citizenship: one of their own, a fellow Catholic, had discovered America.[2]
Some Italian-Americans observe Columbus Day as a celebration of their heritage, the first occasion being in New York City on October 12, 1866.[3][4] Columbus Day was first popularized as a holiday in the United States through the lobbying of Angelo Noce, a first generation Italian, in Denver. The first official non-centennial Columbus Day was decreed by Colorado governor Jesse F. McDonald in 1905 and made state law in 1907.[5] In April 1934, at the behest of the Knights of Columbus, Congress and President Franklin Delano Roosevelt set aside October 12 as Columbus Day[6] and a Federal holiday.[7]
Since 1971, the holiday has been commemorated in the U.S. on the second Monday in October, the same day as Thanksgiving in neighboring Canada. It is generally observed today by banks, the bond market, the U.S. Postal Service and other federal agencies, most state government offices, and some school districts; however, most businesses and stock exchanges remain open.
In case you were wondering...
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