Friday Afternoon Bacon Blogging — International Bacon Day Edition

Filed in National by on September 4, 2009

International Bacon Day? Who Knew?

September 5 is International Bacon Day and Metromix Baltimore has done the world proud with its Sixteen Degrees of Craving Bacon photo essay.

My favorites:

Finding out St. Anthony is the Patron Saint of Bacon
Bacon Tuxedo! I think we found the DL uniform for the Boys here.
Wake nā€™ Bacon alarm clock — to go with the coffee maker and bread machine that deliver automatic goodness in the AM.

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"You don't make progress by standing on the sidelines, whimpering and complaining. You make progress by implementing ideas." -Shirley Chisholm

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  1. Blogging – blogging trackback | SEO Mixer Blog | September 5, 2009
  1. Hey Cass! I sent Geek a Bacon Blogging (although it wasn’t bacon, but fried-everything goodness) email tip today. Did you get it?

  2. cassandra_m says:

    This is Smitty’s link (I was saving it for later):

    Deep Fried Butter!

  3. Ack. Sorry! I wasn’t trying to push you into publishing it, just seeing if you got it. I use much better methods to “butter” people up into doing things rather than commenting on blogs! šŸ˜‰

  4. cassandra_m says:

    It is OK! I can still use it later — but man is that crazy. Especially the flavors — cherry fried butter. Go to the Texas State Fair and be sure to bring your own stent.

  5. cassandra_m says:

    More for International Bacon Day:

    Bacon Cotton Candy

  6. anoni says:

    Arctic researcher flees after wolves gorge on bacon

    Edmonton Journal ^ | September 5, 2009 | Elise Stolte
    EDMONTON ā€” A University of Alberta researcher was surrounded by wolves, had to cancel her research season and be evacuated from the high Arctic earlier this summer after a pilot with an ecotourism agency left cardboard boxes of bacon and sausage on the tundra near their camp. The wolves ripped open the boxes of meat and gorged themselves. Catherine La Farge, who studies the colonies of moss exposed by retreating glaciers, was not attacked during the incident on Ellesmere Island, but she and her field assistant spent three hours cleaning up food and debris strewn across the landscape. Then they…