July 23, 2025

By: Chris McLeod

23/7/2025

5 Things You Need To Know

July 23rd is the 204th day of the year. There are 161 days remaining until the end of the year.


The Chatham Concert Band is back on stage tonight.

This is the 96th year for the Summer Concert Series, the show is free beginning at 7p.m..

Conductor Vaughn Pugh will chat with CKMORNINGS at 6:50 this morning.


The CKRecreation Play Rangers are coming to Dresden this weekend!

The Play Rangers truck will be at the Dresden Fair on Friday 5:30-7:30 p.m. CKRec brings the fun with interactive games, playful activities, and lots of opportunities to move, laugh, and learn together at no cost.


If you felt like yesterday flew by, it kinda did.

Tuesday was 1.34 milliseconds short of 24 hours.

The length of a day is the time it takes for the planet to complete one full rotation on its axis —24 hours or 86,400 seconds on average. But in reality, each rotation is slightly irregular due to a variety of factors, such as the gravitational pull of the moon, seasonal changes in the atmosphere and the influence of Earth’s liquid core. As a result, a full rotation usually takes slightly less or slightly more than 86,400 seconds — a discrepancy of just milliseconds that doesn’t have any obvious effect on everyday life.

The concern is in the long run, these discrepancies can affect computers, satellites and telecommunications, which could lead to a scenario similar to the Y2K problem, which threatened to bring modern civilization to a halt.

Last year, on July 5, 2024, Earth experienced the shortest day ever recorded since the advent of the atomic clock 65 years ago, at 1.66 milliseconds less than 24 hours.


The northern lights could be seen all over Canada tonight.

The northern lights forecast from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) said the aurora could plunge south tonight. Usually, the northern lights appear a few hours after sunset and get more intense around midnight when the sky is darker.

The Canadian Space Agency has northern lights viewing tips that can help you.


The Unicode Consortium has approved a new batch of emojis.

The Unicode Consortium is a nonprofit that maintains the Unicode Standard, the universal character encoding system that ensures text and emoji appear consistently across platforms and devices. Every year, the Unicode Consortium accepts suggestions for new emojis — and nine new ones have officially been selected for the next rollout.

The new emojis include:

  • Treasure Chest
  • Orca
  • Trombone
  • Fight Cloud
  • Apple Core
  • Ballet Dancers
  • Landslide
  • Distorted Face
  • Hairy Creature aka Bigfoot

The new emojis should be ready for release late this year or early in 2026.


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