Here’s an idea on disposal of worn U.S. flags
I think the worst thing I ever saw, flag-wise, was a flag in a puddle at the bottom of a tall pole in front of a youth center.
Driving rainstorm or not, I was out of the car in a heartbeat and rescued the soggy cloth.
The next day, after I’d dried the flag, I took it back
— Before to the center, and it turned out that the teens responsible for raising and lowering the flag were all in the rec room.
Never one to let a teaching moment pass, I ended up giving the kids a few instructions for the proper care and handling of the flag.
To their credit, they took it
seriously, working out daily
assignments for putting the
Before the flag up and taking it down.
They practiced folding and clipping the flag to the halyard.
One thing led to another, and those kids developed their own project: Over the next year they’re going to hold fundraisers to replace the worn flags on the poles
outside the stores along the
main drag of our town.
the next Next summer they’ll take all those worn flags and participate in the flag-retiring ceremony at the local American Legion.
Posts of the American Legion hold flag retirements, called The Ceremony for Disposal of Unserviceable Flags, each year on Flag Day,
June 14.
You know where I’m going
next domino with this, right?








