
Friday was just past halfway from solstice to equinox
Friday's claim to exist in the depths of summer comes from its calendar position on the road from the summer solstice to the autumn equinox. Friday was 49 days since summer began with the solstice on June 20. On Friday 45 days remained until the autumn equinox on Sept. 22. So Friday fell seven weeks since the start of summer, and six and a half weeks until its end.

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Yahoo
22 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Yahoo polls: Who do you support in the Air Canada strike dispute? Yahoo Canada readers have their say
Canadians weigh in on Air Canada flight attendants' push for fair pay and U.S. travel hesitancy, revealing labour support and shifting loyalties. Yahoo News Canada polls this week tapped into Canadian sentiments on the ongoing tensions between Air Canada and its flight attendants as well as Canadians' shifting cross-border travel habits amid U.S. tariffs. From unfolding labour disputes to changing travel preferences, we asked our readers to weigh in on hot-button issues with their responses reflecting how they plan, spend and speak out. This weekly snapshot illustrates how Canadians are navigating uncertainty and asserting the values they hold true to their identity and sovereignty. Who do you support in the Air Canada strike dispute? Fair pay, unpaid labour and travel disruption were top of mind for Canadians as a national conversation on the Air Canada flight attendants strike mandate unfolded. With a staggering 99.7 per cent of CUPE members backing the strike, Canadians weighed their loyalty to workers against the anxiety of their summer plans being interrupted. A Yahoo poll asking who Canadians back in this fight had almost 4,000 votes by Friday afternoon with 75 per cent of the respondents siding with the flight attendants while demanding fair pay for all; 15 per cent of the voters were inclined to avoid disruption as they favoured Air Canada and the remaining 10 per cent were undecided. Two additional polls from Yahoo gauged public sentiment on fair pay for all hours worked and how the potential strike affected their travel plans, if any. Almost 90 per cent of the 2,000+ survey takers backed paying the flight attendants for all hours worked, including time on the ground. Flight attendants are currently paid an hourly rate only after the airplane takes off, which then stops upon landing. On the potential strike affecting travel plans, about 33 per cent of the respondents may be impacted with others having no immediate travels planned. Are you planning on taking a trip to the U.S. this summer? Canadian travel behaviour has evolved over the past couple of months owing to U.S. tariffs and Donald Trump's attacks on Canadian sovereignty following his White House inauguration, different surveys revealed. A Yahoo poll on whether Canadians planned to travel south of the border this summer mirrored the national sentiment with the geopolitical unease weighing heavy on everything from entirely pulling out of U.S. trips to backing the "Buy Canadian" movement. 73 per cent of the almost 2,000 Yahoo poll responders firmly rejected the idea of travelling south this summer, using the opportunity to "send a message." Another poll gauging how Trump tariffs changed the way Canadians shopped displayed a similar pattern with 49 per cent inclined to buying only Canadian products and 40 per cent backing local goods when they can. This shift aligns with data from other surveys suggesting more than two-thirds of Canadians plan to avoid U.S. goods and destinations this year. If you enjoy participating in Yahoo polls and making your voice heard, we'd love to hear from you in the upcoming polls. Stay tuned!


Fox News
32 minutes ago
- Fox News
Legendary surfer Dale Webster, who surfed every day for 40 years straight, dead at 76
Surfing icon Dale Webster, a California native who set the record for most consecutive days surfing, has died. Webster, also known as the "Daily Wavester" because of the incredible feat, passed away in Rohnert Park, Calif, his family confirmed to the New York Times and other outlets. CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON No cause of death was confirmed, but Webster's brother told the outlet that the surfer had been dealing with a decline in health in recent years. Webster was best known for setting the world record in February 2004 when he hit 10,407 consecutive days of surfing. According to the Guinness Book of World Records, that mark consisted of him surfing at least three waves to shore every day. In an interview with SURFER in 2015, Webster told the magazine that the idea for surfing came about from a friend after he had already been on the board every day for more than two months. "There was a solid south swell in September, and I surfed every day during the swell," Webster said at the time. "Each day the waves got better and better. After surfing 85 days straight, my friend said, 'You should try to surf for 100 consecutive days.' When I got to 100, the story was in the local newspaper. That publicity gave me a little pat on the back to make it to a year. So then the challenge became a year. And so forth." Webster began his journey on Sept. 3, 1975, in Bodega Bay, California. By the time he finished, he had surfed 14,642 days consecutively before having to break the record because of a minor medical procedure. That time totaled over 40 years of consecutive surfing. "He was a surfer, that was his main thing, that was his life ambition. I don't think he ever second guessed it," William Beal, a close friend of Webster's, told the SFGate following the news of his passing. "I know he had a lot of good years here when it was not that crowded. I think he had a pretty well-lived life."
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Union says 'nothing scheduled' with Air Canada as strike by flight attendants halts operations
The union representing Air Canada flight attendants says no talks are scheduled with the airline as a strike that began early Saturday led to the airline suspending operations. The union and airline met late Friday night before 10,000 flight attendants walked off the job at 12:58 a.m. ET, Wesley Lesosky, president of the Air Canada component of the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE), told a morning news conference. Lesosky said their last meeting was Friday night, but Air Canada offered "nothing of substance" to bring back to members. Asked when Canadians could expect to be back on flights, Lesosky said it's up to Air Canada, but that public pressure on the airline will make a "huge difference" in reaching a settlement. CBC News has reached out to Air Canada for comment and will update this story with any response. Jobs Minister Patty Hajdu also met with both the airline and union on Friday night. "It is unacceptable that such little progress has been made. Canadians are counting on both parties to put forward their best efforts," Hajdu said on social media platform X. Picket lines set up across Canada All Air Canada and Air Canada Rouge flights are suspended for now. Around 130,000 customers will be affected each day the strike continues, said the airline. Flights by Air Canada Express, which are operated by third-party airlines Jazz and PAL, are not affected. "Air Canada deeply regrets the effect the strike is having on customers," it said in a brief statement early Saturday morning. CUPE has set up picket lines at airports across Canada, including in Montreal, Toronto, Calgary and Vancouver. Striking flight attendants also plan to picket at airports in Halifax, Ottawa and Winnipeg. In the meantime, passengers around the world are feeling the effects of the flight attendants' strike. Keelin Pringnitz and her family are from Ottawa and were returning from a European vacation, but were left stranded after flights were cancelled. "It was an end of my maternity leave kind of trip. We went to the Faroe Islands and Norway, travelling through Air Canada to London," Pringnitz said from London's Heathrow Airport. She noted there was an option for travellers to go the U.S. but she and others were told there wouldn't be any further assistance once they landed in the U.S. "It didn't go over well with the line. Nobody really seemed interested, everybody seemed a little bit amused almost at the suggestion, or exasperated, because it is a bit ridiculous to offer to take stranded passengers to a different country to strand them there." For customers due to travel soon whose flights are not yet cancelled, Air Canada said it will allow them to rebook their travel or obtain a credit for future travel. Sides at an impasse on pay Air Canada and CUPE have been in contract talks for about eight months, but have yet to reach a tentative deal. Both sides say they remain far apart on the issue of pay and the unpaid work flight attendants do when planes aren't in the air. WATCH | Thousands of Air Canada flight attendants walk off the job: The airline's latest offer included a 38 per cent increase in total compensation, including benefits and pensions over four years, that it said "would have made our flight attendants the best compensated in Canada." But the union pushed back, saying the proposed 8 per cent raise in the first year didn't go far enough because of inflation. Government intervention Air Canada previously asked Hajdu to intervene by ordering the parties to enter a binding arbitration process — a power granted to the minister through Sec. 107 of the Canada Labour Code. On Friday, Hajdu urged Air Canada and the union to get back to the negotiating table, suggesting she's not ready to intervene. The minister said the union has indicated many of its demands have been met, suggesting there is a path forward to a deal. WATCH | The impact of the flight attendants' strike on travellers: Hajdu had asked the union to respond to the company's request. CUPE indicated Friday it opposed arbitration, instead maintaining its desire to solve the impasse through bargaining. Solve the daily Crossword