The document contains monthly calendars from January 2013 through November 2014. Each calendar shows the days of the week and dates for that month. Weekends are highlighted. The calendars are arranged chronologically with the year and month labeled above each new calendar.
The first 8 slides each contain a block of 50 years, with each year being assigned a letter. The next 168 slides are calendar months, each identified with a month name and a letter.
To find a date, simply look up the letter for the year, then look up the month you want that is followed by that letter.
For example, let's say you want to find out on what day of the week June 13, 2067 falls. First, look up 2067, which has the letter G next to it. Next, look up "June G", and you'll see that June 13, 2067 falls on a Monday!
Need a year that isn't listed? The calendar repeats exactly every 400 years, so as long as your year is after 1752 (when the Gregorian calendar was adopted), you simply have to adjust your date in multiples of 400. When was July 4, 1776? That's 400 years away from 2176, which uses calendar I. Looking at July I, we see July 4, 1776 fell on a Thursday!
The first 8 slides each contain a block of 50 years, with each year being assigned a letter. The next 168 slides are calendar months, each identified with a month name and a letter.
To find a date, simply look up the letter for the year, then look up the month you want that is followed by that letter.
For example, let's say you want to find out on what day of the week June 13, 2067 falls. First, look up 2067, which has the letter G next to it. Next, look up "June G", and you'll see that June 13, 2067 falls on a Monday!
Need a year that isn't listed? The calendar repeats exactly every 400 years, so as long as your year is after 1752 (when the Gregorian calendar was adopted), you simply have to adjust your date in multiples of 400. When was July 4, 1776? That's 400 years away from 2176, which uses calendar I. Looking at July I, we see July 4, 1776 fell on a Thursday!
Attached you will find a copy of the first Takahashi Dojo 2013 Judo Community Calendar. It is a volunteer effort inspired by Sonny Lundahl who enlisted Rick Davies and Tracey P. Lauriault into the endeavour respectively as photographer & critic and artistic director. Sonny became the project manager and the layout designer. Photos come from multiple sources: the cover and January photos were kindly donated by Dan Plouffe (http://sportsottawa.com/), Frédéric Blanchett is the photographer for the red and white belts on the cover, and for the May photo of Ben and Jacob (https://www.facebook.com/Fredblanchetphotographe). Sensei's June and Tina Takahashi also provided a number of photos from their répertoire, Sensei David Kiang provided the photos for July, Jose provided a photo for November, and Tracey provided a few photos from her archive. The bulk of the photography however was done by our very own Rick Davies from his extensive collection.
You can download this calendar from Slideshare if you have an account. You can also grab the code and embed it into your own blog or webpage. You are welcome to make copies, recognizing that you will have to find a colour printer and will need to bind it yourself. You can email tlauriau@gmail.com and Tracey will send you a copy.
Next year, with more lead time and based on your comments, we could
produce another with staged photos, we could also potentially do a
print run and charge a small fee to cover printing costs and for
fundraising purposes.
You however cannot sell this calendar nor use it as a fundraiser as
the professional photographers have not provided the rights to do so.
The calendar was registered under a This work is licensed under the
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported
License. To view a copy of this license, visit
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/.
The Xylo Xperience Calendar 2011 is compiled of the Xperiences submitted by Xylo fans on the Facebook page. This is a tribute to all the fans & their contributions to the community.