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Kerbal Calendar


Superfluous J

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Because of some Jebfoolery over on the Empire Strikes Back thread I got it in my head that Kerbalkind needs a Calendar - or a Kalendar if you will. I spent about an hour on this which is likely about 55 minutes more than I should have, and figured if I had to waste my time on it so should you all have to waste your time reading it.

I started with the Kerbal year, which is about 426 days* long, the Mun orbit, which is about 6.5 days, and Minmus' orbit, which is about 56.5 days.

56 is conveniently divisible by 7, and we have 7 days a week here on Earth, so I immediately gravitated toward a 7-day "week" and an 8-week "month." Weeks are based on Mun and Months on Minmus. I originally called them "Munths" and "Minths" but "Munths" sounds too close to (read: exactly like) "months" so decided to change it to "leeks", for loonar-weeks. Not super happy with that name but finding another would take even more time.

So the leekdays - of which there are 7 - can conveniently match with the 7 planets, giving us Mohday, Eveday, Kerbday, Dunday, Dresday, Joolsday, and Eeloosday. In my mind, Joolsdays and Eeloosday are the leekend, while Kerbals get a "case of the Mohdays" and "Thank the Kraken It's Dresday"

There are 8 Minths, and I did not name them because if it's not obvious by now I'm out of creativity to give this project. However, in my brain Kerbals are smarter than us and instead of breaking days, leeks, minths, and years up in weird ways they decided to keep it simple. A Leek is 7 days. A Minth is 8 Leeks or 56 days. A Year is 8 Minths and the 8th Minth is only 5 Leeks (34 or 35 days) long. Sometimes the last Leek of the year is 6 days long, sometimes it's 7. No big whoop. The first day of every year is a Mohday.

Click here for the Kalendar, if you dare.

Spoiler

Kerbin Calendar Mohday Eveday Kerbday Dunday Dresday Joolsday Eeloosday
Minth 1
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31 32 33 34 35
36 37 38 39 40 41 42
43 44 45 46 47 48 49
50 51 52 53 54 55 56
Minth 2
57 58 59 60 61 62 63
64 65 66 67 68 69 70
71 72 73 74 75 76 77
78 79 80 81 82 83 84
85 86 87 88 89 90 91
92 93 94 95 96 97 98
99 100 101 102 103 104 105
106 107 108 109 110 111 112
Minth 3
113 114 115 116 117 118 119
120 121 122 123 124 125 126
127 128 129 130 131 132 133
134 135 136 137 138 139 140
141 142 143 144 145 146 147
148 149 150 151 152 153 154
155 156 157 158 159 160 161
162 163 164 165 166 167 168
Minth 4
169 170 171 172 173 174 175
176 177 178 179 180 181 182
183 184 185 186 187 188 189
190 191 192 193 194 195 196
197 198 199 200 201 202 203
204 205 206 207 208 209 210
211 212 213 214 215 216 217
218 219 220 221 222 223 224
Minth 5
225 226 227 228 229 230 231
232 233 234 235 236 237 238
239 240 241 242 243 244 245
246 247 248 249 250 251 252
253 254 255 256 257 258 259
260 261 262 263 264 265 266
267 268 269 270 271 272 273
274 275 276 277 278 279 280
Minth 6
281 282 283 284 285 286 287
288 289 290 291 292 293 294
295 296 297 298 299 300 301
302 303 304 305 306 307 308
309 310 311 312 313 314 315
316 317 318 319 320 321 322
323 324 325 326 327 328 329
330 331 332 333 334 335 336
Minth 7
337 338 339 340 341 342 343
344 345 346 347 348 349 350
351 352 353 354 355 356 357
358 359 360 361 362 363 364
365 366 367 368 369 370 371
372 373 374 375 376 377 378
379 380 381 382 383 384 385
386 387 388 389 390 391 392
Minth 8
393 394 395 396 397 398 399
400 401 402 403 404 405 406
407 408 409 410 411 412 413
414 415 416 417 418 419 420
421 422 423 424 425 426 427

 

*All days are Kerbin, 6-hour days.

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1. I can't believe it took this long for someone to do something like this.

2. I can't believe Squad or Intercept didn't do it first.

3. Steal some days from the other minths to even out Minth 8. Kind of the way our months are the length of a lunar cycle, but not really. One is four weeks, some are 30 days, some are 31. Nobody cares. The lunar cycle doesn't line up with them anyway, and neither will yours. 

4. Hold a contest to name the minths.

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Okay, so I put some more thought into this this afternoon while I should have been doing other stuff.

  • Since the week is based on the munar cycle, call it a munar week, or meek.
  • Split the days of the year up relatively evenly between the eight months. This gives you two months of 54 days and six months of 53 days. That's close enough to Minmus' synodic period to say it's based on it.
  • I ran some names out of a random name generator and came up with some that I thought sounded regal enough to use for the names of months. Replace as desired.

This is what I wound up with:

Spoiler

  Meek
Minths Mohday Eveday Kerbday Dunday Dresday Joolsday Eeloosday
Daarin
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30 31 32 33 34 35
36 37 38 39 40 41 42
43 44 45 46 47 48 49
50 51 52 53 54 1 2
Thuan
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
31 32 33 34 35 36 37
38 39 40 41 42 43 44
45 46 47 48 49 50 51
52 53 1 2 3 4 5
Ibris
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31 32 33
34 35 36 37 38 39 40
41 42 43 44 45 46 47
48 49 50 51 52 53 1
Aslin
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 31 32 33 34 35 36
37 38 39 40 41 42 43
44 45 46 47 48 49 50
51 52 53 1 2 3 4
Utes
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31 32
33 34 35 36 37 38 39
40 41 42 43 44 45 46
47 48 49 50 51 52 53
54 1 2 3 4 5 6
Nordos
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31 32 33 34
35 36 37 38 39 40 41
42 43 44 45 46 47 48
49 50 51 52 53 1 2
Quidis
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
31 32 33 34 35 36 37
38 39 40 41 42 43 44
45 46 47 48 49 50 51
52 53 1 2 3 4 5
Maros
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31 32 33
34 35 36 37 38 39 40
41 42 43 44 45 46 47
48 49 50 51 52 53  

 

According to the Wiki, Kerbin's year is actually 426 days, 32 minutes, 24.6 seconds long. That would mean that every 11 years would be a leap year, adding one day to one of the short months. Let's pick Maros for that. And every tenth leap year you skip.

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On 4/3/2024 at 9:32 AM, Superfluous J said:

However, in my brain Kerbals are smarter than us and instead of breaking days, leeks, minths, and years up in weird ways they decided to keep it simple.

^ Precisely!

If I adopted this kalendar, I would make a royal dekree that the last day of your year (all of 32m24.6s) is an intergalactic public holiday.  (I don't think the employers should mind!  :) )

For the same reason, months ('munks minks' ('meeks' & 'minks')) would be easy(er) to remember, or more systematic anyway:

  1. unoker
  2. duoker
  3. tresker
  4. quaker
  5. quinker
  6. sexker
  7. sepker
  8. oktoker

And, naturally, like the rest of the whole universe (with the exception of a backwater known as Earth) zero-counting the days: 0..426 in the year and 0..55 within your 'minth'.

(Ah, and finally, for consistency, should those be 'Joolday' and "Eelooday'?  (Actually, a day pronounced/spelled 'diah', after the imperial inventor of the kalendiah...)  'Eloodiah'.  (But I'm OK with 'day'; I am not a stickler or anything!  :))

UPDATE: I read the OP again and saw that months are based on Minmus, so the 'minth' makes sense, although I would now call them 'minks' (not 'munks').  In any case, all good work, all above.

Edited by Hotel26
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30 minutes ago, Hotel26 said:

^ Precisely!

If I adopted this kalendar, I would make a royal dekree that the last day of your year (all of 32m24.6s) is an intergalactic public holiday.  (I don't think the employers should mind!  :) )

For the same reason, months ('munks' ('meeks' & ' munks')) would be easy(er) to remember, or more systematic anyway:

  1. unoker
  2. duoker
  3. tresker
  4. quaker
  5. quinker
  6. sexker
  7. sepker
  8. oktoker

And, naturally, like the rest of the whole universe (with the exception of a backwater known as Earth) zero-counting the days: 0..426 in the year and 0..55 within your 'minth'.

(Ah, and finally, for consistency, I think OP wanted(?) 'Eelooday'.  (Actually, a day pronounced/spelled 'diah', after the imperial inventor of the kalendiah...)  'Eloodiah'.  (But I'm OK with 'day'; I am not a stickler or anything!  :))

Maybe. Buuuut...usually calendars are developed early in a civilization, when it is still operating with a certain amount of illogic. So expecting a civilization's calendar to be 100% logical is, well, illogical.

And, besides, "sexker" doesn't make it through the content filter on Bob's laptop. ;)

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52 minutes ago, TheSaint said:

a certain amount of illogic

It's just a phobia of mine, but I play games precisely to get away from the 'real' world.  (I don't even like to use the term 'game' because I so much prefer 'pedagogical pursuit'.)

I thought about 'sekker' but the Latin word for six is sextus; nothing dirty...  I am, in fact, a sexagenarian ('look it up'), so I deeply resemble your remark.  :)

                                                                               

Incidentally, there have been some very credible attempts at a Kerbal Calendar in the past, so I'll see if I can make a webography of them to post here:

Edited by Hotel26
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Posted (edited)

My reasoning for making the calendar minths and years all start at day 1 on Mohday is entirely 100% because I don't want the calendar to be complicated. It's nice that the 158th day of *EVERY* year is the 46th Day of the 4th Minth and is always a Dunday.

I don't mind spreading entire Leeks (or Meeks or whatever) around to even out the Minths, but I really like how there are a semi-exact number of Leeks in a Minth AND in the Year, so am leery to break Minths up into non-exact-Leek lengths.

Regarding Joolsday and Eeloosday vs Joolday and Eelooday, I just liked the way it sounded and set the weekends off from the weekdays very slightly.

I like the months being named after the numbers, but we could harken to the Mexican roots of the game and use Spanish.

  1. Unoker
  2. Dosker
  3. Tresker
  4. Quaker (I like the spelling of Quaker over Cuaker)
  5. Cinker
  6. Seiker
  7. Sietker
  8. Ochker (Because "o-choke-her" just sounds bad)

So here's attempt #... 4 I think it is, though only 2 for me, at the Kalendar.

Spoiler

  Mohday Eveday Kerbday Dunday Dresday Joolsday Eeloosday
Unoker
1 (1) 2 (2) 3 (3) 4 (4) 5 (5) 6 (6) 7 (7)
8 (8) 9 (9) 10 (10) 11 (11) 12 (12) 13 (13) 14 (14)
15 (15) 16 (16) 17 (17) 18 (18) 19 (19) 20 (20) 21 (21)
22 (22) 23 (23) 24 (24) 25 (25) 26 (26) 27 (27) 28 (28)
29 (29) 30 (30) 31 (31) 32 (32) 33 (33) 34 (34) 35 (35)
36 (36) 37 (37) 38 (38) 39 (39) 40 (40) 41 (41) 42 (42)
43 (43) 44 (44) 45 (45) 46 (46) 47 (47) 48 (48) 49 (49)
50 (50) 51 (51) 52 (52) 53 (53) 54 (54) 55 (55) 56 (56)
Dosker
1 (57) 2 (58) 3 (59) 4 (60) 5 (61) 6 (62) 7 (63)
8 (64) 9 (65) 10 (66) 11 (67) 12 (68) 13 (69) 14 (70)
15 (71) 16 (72) 17 (73) 18 (74) 19 (75) 20 (76) 21 (77)
22 (78) 23 (79) 24 (80) 25 (81) 26 (82) 27 (83) 28 (84)
29 (85) 30 (86) 31 (87) 32 (88) 33 (89) 34 (90) 35 (91)
36 (92) 37 (93) 38 (94) 39 (95) 40 (96) 41 (97) 42 (98)
43 (99) 44 (100) 45 (101) 46 (102) 47 (103) 48 (104) 49 (105)
Tresker
1 (106) 2 (107) 3 (108) 4 (109) 5 (110) 6 (111) 7 (112)
8 (113) 9 (114) 10 (115) 11 (116) 12 (117) 13 (118) 14 (119)
15 (120) 16 (121) 17 (122) 18 (123) 19 (124) 20 (125) 21 (126)
22 (127) 23 (128) 24 (129) 25 (130) 26 (131) 27 (132) 28 (133)
29 (134) 30 (135) 31 (136) 32 (137) 33 (138) 34 (139) 35 (140)
36 (141) 37 (142) 38 (143) 39 (144) 40 (145) 41 (146) 42 (147)
43 (148) 44 (149) 45 (150) 46 (151) 47 (152) 48 (153) 49 (154)
50 (155) 51 (156) 52 (157) 53 (158) 54 (159) 55 (160) 56 (161)
Quaker
1 (162) 2 (163) 3 (164) 4 (165) 5 (166) 6 (167) 7 (168)
8 (169) 9 (170) 10 (171) 11 (172) 12 (173) 13 (174) 14 (175)
15 (176) 16 (177) 17 (178) 18 (179) 19 (180) 20 (181) 21 (182)
22 (183) 23 (184) 24 (185) 25 (186) 26 (187) 27 (188) 28 (189)
29 (190) 30 (191) 31 (192) 32 (193) 33 (194) 34 (195) 35 (196)
36 (197) 37 (198) 38 (199) 39 (200) 40 (201) 41 (202) 42 (203)
43 (204) 44 (205) 45 (206) 46 (207) 47 (208) 48 (209) 49 (210)
50 (211) 51 (212) 52 (213) 53 (214) 54 (215) 55 (216) 56 (217)
Cinker
1 (218) 2 (219) 3 (220) 4 (221) 5 (222) 6 (223) 7 (224)
8 (225) 9 (226) 10 (227) 11 (228) 12 (229) 13 (230) 14 (231)
15 (232) 16 (233) 17 (234) 18 (235) 19 (236) 20 (237) 21 (238)
22 (239) 23 (240) 24 (241) 25 (242) 26 (243) 27 (244) 28 (245)
29 (246) 30 (247) 31 (248) 32 (249) 33 (250) 34 (251) 35 (252)
36 (253) 37 (254) 38 (255) 39 (256) 40 (257) 41 (258) 42 (259)
43 (260) 44 (261) 45 (262) 46 (263) 47 (264) 48 (265) 49 (266)
Seisker
1 (267) 2 (268) 3 (269) 4 (270) 5 (271) 6 (272) 7 (273)
8 (274) 9 (275) 10 (276) 11 (277) 12 (278) 13 (279) 14 (280)
15 (281) 16 (282) 17 (283) 18 (284) 19 (285) 20 (286) 21 (287)
22 (288) 23 (289) 24 (290) 25 (291) 26 (292) 27 (293) 28 (294)
29 (295) 30 (296) 31 (297) 32 (298) 33 (299) 34 (300) 35 (301)
36 (302) 37 (303) 38 (304) 39 (305) 40 (306) 41 (307) 42 (308)
43 (309) 44 (310) 45 (311) 46 (312) 47 (313) 48 (314) 49 (315)
50 (316) 51 (317) 52 (318) 53 (319) 54 (320) 55 (321) 56 (322)
Sietker
1 (323) 2 (324) 3 (325) 4 (326) 5 (327) 6 (328) 7 (329)
8 (330) 9 (331) 10 (332) 11 (333) 12 (334) 13 (335) 14 (336)
15 (337) 16 (338) 17 (339) 18 (340) 19 (341) 20 (342) 21 (343)
22 (344) 23 (345) 24 (346) 25 (347) 26 (348) 27 (349) 28 (350)
29 (351) 30 (352) 31 (353) 32 (354) 33 (355) 34 (356) 35 (357)
36 (358) 37 (359) 38 (360) 39 (361) 40 (362) 41 (363) 42 (364)
43 (365) 44 (366) 45 (367) 46 (368) 47 (369) 48 (370) 49 (371)
Ochker
1 (372) 2 (373) 3 (374) 4 (375) 5 (376) 6 (377) 7 (378)
8 (379) 9 (380) 10 (381) 11 (382) 12 (383) 13 (384) 14 (385)
15 (386) 16 (387) 17 (388) 18 (389) 19 (390) 20 (391) 21 (392)
22 (393) 23 (394) 24 (395) 25 (396) 26 (397) 27 (398) 28 (399)
29 (400) 30 (401) 31 (402) 32 (403) 33 (404) 34 (405) 35 (406)
36 (407) 37 (408) 38 (409) 39 (410) 40 (411) 41 (412) 42 (413)
43 (414) 44 (415) 45 (416) 46 (417) 47 (418) 48 (419) 49 (420)
50 (421) 51 (422) 52 (423) 53 (424) 54 (425) 55 (426) 56 (427)*

 

 

Edited by Superfluous J
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24 minutes ago, Superfluous J said:

we could harken to the Mexican roots of the game and use Spanish

heartily seconded and in that case 'dia' from Jebediah.  (but your work, your call; I admit 'Evedia' is a bit harder to say)

Edited by Hotel26
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Well, my Old Fashioned decided that I'm done thinking about this. I'm going to use the calendar I came up with for my next mission report. The good news is that Kerbal Space Program is just about the most libertarian video game I've ever seen. You can use whatever calendar you want to. I am (very honestly) curious to see what you decide upon.

(Because people who are more enthusiastic about their calendar choices in their saves are more interesting to me.)

Edited by TheSaint
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1 hour ago, TheSaint said:

calendar choices

Beautiful!  Leaving the question of how one does actually 'implement' it.  :)

OK, so I see my production world is in year 8, Unoker 55, 2h3m.  A Joolday Jooldia.

Am I implemented?  :) 

Edited by Hotel26
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7 minutes ago, Hotel26 said:

Beautiful!  Leaving the question of how one does actually 'implement' it.  :)

OK, so I see my production world is in year 8, Unoker 55, 2h3m.  A Joolday Jooldia.

Am I implemented?  :) 

Yes. :)

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4 hours ago, Superfluous J said:

I don't mind spreading entire Leeks (or Meeks

Any reason odd  minths couldn't have 8 meeks and even ones 7?  Or vice versa (better), as an aid to figuring out how many meeks in a particular minth?

You're showing Tresker and Quaker both having 56 days.  (Shades of Earth illogic requiring rote memory: like July & August (the Caesar months) both having 31 days.)

Edited by Hotel26
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Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, Hotel26 said:

Any reason odd  minths couldn't have 8 meeks and even ones 7?  Or vice versa (better), as an aid to figuring out how many meeks in a particular minth?

You're showing Tresker and Quaker both having 56 days.  (Shades of Earth illogic requiring rote memory: like July & August (the Caesar months) both having 31 days.)

There are 8 Minths. 3 of them have 7 Leeks and 5 have 8 Leeks. There is no way to set them up as you describe.

(I like Leeks over Meeks simply because Minths already starts with an M)

We could have a more traditional 12 Minths, all of them with 5 Leeks except either 1 has 6, or the final Leek of the Year is "New Year's Meek" :D

Edited by Superfluous J
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Posted (edited)

And because nobody asked for it and I have far better things to do with my time, here's a 12-Minth Calendar that I quite like, except for the sad part that "minths" are no longer related to Minmus' orbital period at all.

Spoiler
  Mohday Eveday Kerbday Dunday Dresday Joolsday Eeloosday
Unoker
1 (1) 2 (2) 3 (3) 4 (4) 5 (5) 6 (6) 7 (7)
8 (8) 9 (9) 10 (10) 11 (11) 12 (12) 13 (13) 14 (14)
15 (15) 16 (16) 17 (17) 18 (18) 19 (19) 20 (20) 21 (21)
22 (22) 23 (23) 24 (24) 25 (25) 26 (26) 27 (27) 28 (28)
29 (29) 30 (30) 31 (31) 32 (32) 33 (33) 34 (34) 35 (35)
Dosker
1 (36) 2 (37) 3 (38) 4 (39) 5 (40) 6 (41) 7 (42)
8 (43) 9 (44) 10 (45) 11 (46) 12 (47) 13 (48) 14 (49)
15 (50) 16 (51) 17 (52) 18 (53) 19 (54) 20 (55) 21 (56)
22 (57) 23 (58) 24 (59) 25 (60) 26 (61) 27 (62) 28 (63)
29 (64) 30 (65) 31 (66) 32 (67) 33 (68) 34 (69) 35 (70)
Tresker
1 (71) 2 (72) 3 (73) 4 (74) 5 (75) 6 (76) 7 (77)
8 (78) 9 (79) 10 (80) 11 (81) 12 (82) 13 (83) 14 (84)
15 (85) 16 (86) 17 (87) 18 (88) 19 (89) 20 (90) 21 (91)
22 (92) 23 (93) 24 (94) 25 (95) 26 (96) 27 (97) 28 (98)
29 (99) 30 (100) 31 (101) 32 (102) 33 (103) 34 (104) 35 (105)
Quaker
1 (106) 2 (107) 3 (108) 4 (109) 5 (110) 6 (111) 7 (112)
8 (113) 9 (114) 10 (115) 11 (116) 12 (117) 13 (118) 14 (119)
15 (120) 16 (121) 17 (122) 18 (123) 19 (124) 20 (125) 21 (126)
22 (127) 23 (128) 24 (129) 25 (130) 26 (131) 27 (132) 28 (133)
29 (134) 30 (135) 31 (136) 32 (137) 33 (138) 34 (139) 35 (140)
Cinker
1 (141) 2 (142) 3 (143) 4 (144) 5 (145) 6 (146) 7 (147)
8 (148) 9 (149) 10 (150) 11 (151) 12 (152) 13 (153) 14 (154)
15 (155) 16 (156) 17 (157) 18 (158) 19 (159) 20 (160) 21 (161)
22 (162) 23 (163) 24 (164) 25 (165) 26 (166) 27 (167) 28 (168)
29 (169) 30 (170) 31 (171) 32 (172) 33 (173) 34 (174) 35 (175)
Seiker
1 (176) 2 (177) 3 (178) 4 (179) 5 (180) 6 (181) 7 (182)
8 (183) 9 (184) 10 (185) 11 (186) 12 (187) 13 (188) 14 (189)
15 (190) 16 (191) 17 (192) 18 (193) 19 (194) 20 (195) 21 (196)
22 (197) 23 (198) 24 (199) 25 (200) 26 (201) 27 (202) 28 (203)
29 (204) 30 (205) 31 (206) 32 (207) 33 (208) 34 (209) 35 (210)
Sietker
1 (211) 2 (212) 3 (213) 4 (214) 5 (215) 6 (216) 7 (217)
8 (218) 9 (219) 10 (220) 11 (221) 12 (222) 13 (223) 14 (224)
15 (225) 16 (226) 17 (227) 18 (228) 19 (229) 20 (230) 21 (231)
22 (232) 23 (233) 24 (234) 25 (235) 26 (236) 27 (237) 28 (238)
29 (239) 30 (240) 31 (241) 32 (242) 33 (243) 34 (244) 35 (245)
Ochker
1 (246) 2 (247) 3 (248) 4 (249) 5 (250) 6 (251) 7 (252)
8 (253) 9 (254) 10 (255) 11 (256) 12 (257) 13 (258) 14 (259)
15 (260) 16 (261) 17 (262) 18 (263) 19 (264) 20 (265) 21 (266)
22 (267) 23 (268) 24 (269) 25 (270) 26 (271) 27 (272) 28 (273)
29 (274) 30 (275) 31 (276) 32 (277) 33 (278) 34 (279) 35 (280)
Nuevker
1 (281) 2 (282) 3 (283) 4 (284) 5 (285) 6 (286) 7 (287)
8 (288) 9 (289) 10 (290) 11 (291) 12 (292) 13 (293) 14 (294)
15 (295) 16 (296) 17 (297) 18 (298) 19 (299) 20 (300) 21 (301)
22 (302) 23 (303) 24 (304) 25 (305) 26 (306) 27 (307) 28 (308)
29 (309) 30 (310) 31 (311) 32 (312) 33 (313) 34 (314) 35 (315)
Diezker
1 (316) 2 (317) 3 (318) 4 (319) 5 (320) 6 (321) 7 (322)
8 (323) 9 (324) 10 (325) 11 (326) 12 (327) 13 (328) 14 (329)
15 (330) 16 (331) 17 (332) 18 (333) 19 (334) 20 (335) 21 (336)
22 (337) 23 (338) 24 (339) 25 (340) 26 (341) 27 (342) 28 (343)
29 (344) 30 (345) 31 (346) 32 (347) 33 (348) 34 (349) 35 (350)
Onceker
1 (351) 2 (352) 3 (353) 4 (354) 5 (355) 6 (356) 7 (357)
8 (358) 9 (359) 10 (360) 11 (361) 12 (362) 13 (363) 14 (364)
15 (365) 16 (366) 17 (367) 18 (368) 19 (369) 20 (370) 21 (371)
22 (372) 23 (373) 24 (374) 25 (375) 26 (376) 27 (377) 28 (378)
29 (379) 30 (380) 31 (381) 32 (382) 33 (383) 34 (384) 35 (385)
Doceker
1 (386) 2 (387) 3 (388) 4 (389) 5 (390) 6 (391) 7 (392)
8 (393) 9 (394) 10 (395) 11 (396) 12 (397) 13 (398) 14 (399)
15 (400) 16 (401) 17 (402) 18 (403) 19 (404) 20 (405) 21 (406)
22 (407) 23 (408) 24 (409) 25 (410) 26 (411) 27 (412) 28 (413)
29 (414) 30 (415) 31 (416) 32 (417) 33 (418) 34 (419) 35 (420)
New Year's Meek 1 (421) 2 (422) 3 (423) 4 (424) 5 (425) 6 (426) 7 (427)*

 

 

Edited by Superfluous J
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Posted (edited)

Okay I swear this is the last time I'll post a new calendar for at least the next couple hours.

This calendar takes the "New Year's Leek" idea and uses it to make the 8 Minths alternate 7/8/7/8/7/8/7/8 Leeks, making them very easy to remember.

Spoiler
  Mohday Eveday Kerbday Dunday Dresday Joolsday Eeloosday
Unoker
1 (1) 2 (2) 3 (3) 4 (4) 5 (5) 6 (6) 7 (7)
8 (8) 9 (9) 10 (10) 11 (11) 12 (12) 13 (13) 14 (14)
15 (15) 16 (16) 17 (17) 18 (18) 19 (19) 20 (20) 21 (21)
22 (22) 23 (23) 24 (24) 25 (25) 26 (26) 27 (27) 28 (28)
29 (29) 30 (30) 31 (31) 32 (32) 33 (33) 34 (34) 35 (35)
36 (36) 37 (37) 38 (38) 39 (39) 40 (40) 41 (41) 42 (42)
43 (43) 44 (44) 45 (45) 46 (46) 47 (47) 48 (48) 49 (49)
Dosker
1 (50) 2 (51) 3 (52) 4 (53) 5 (54) 6 (55) 7 (56)
8 (57) 9 (58) 10 (59) 11 (60) 12 (61) 13 (62) 14 (63)
15 (64) 16 (65) 17 (66) 18 (67) 19 (68) 20 (69) 21 (70)
22 (71) 23 (72) 24 (73) 25 (74) 26 (75) 27 (76) 28 (77)
29 (78) 30 (79) 31 (80) 32 (81) 33 (82) 34 (83) 35 (84)
36 (85) 37 (86) 38 (87) 39 (88) 40 (89) 41 (90) 42 (91)
43 (92) 44 (93) 45 (94) 46 (95) 47 (96) 48 (97) 49 (98)
50 (99) 51 (100) 52 (101) 53 (102) 54 (103) 55 (104) 56 (105)
Tresker
1 (106) 2 (107) 3 (108) 4 (109) 5 (110) 6 (111) 7 (112)
8 (113) 9 (114) 10 (115) 11 (116) 12 (117) 13 (118) 14 (119)
15 (120) 16 (121) 17 (122) 18 (123) 19 (124) 20 (125) 21 (126)
22 (127) 23 (128) 24 (129) 25 (130) 26 (131) 27 (132) 28 (133)
29 (134) 30 (135) 31 (136) 32 (137) 33 (138) 34 (139) 35 (140)
36 (141) 37 (142) 38 (143) 39 (144) 40 (145) 41 (146) 42 (147)
43 (148) 44 (149) 45 (150) 46 (151) 47 (152) 48 (153) 49 (154)
Quaker
1 (155) 2 (156) 3 (157) 4 (158) 5 (159) 6 (160) 7 (161)
8 (162) 9 (163) 10 (164) 11 (165) 12 (166) 13 (167) 14 (168)
15 (169) 16 (170) 17 (171) 18 (172) 19 (173) 20 (174) 21 (175)
22 (176) 23 (177) 24 (178) 25 (179) 26 (180) 27 (181) 28 (182)
29 (183) 30 (184) 31 (185) 32 (186) 33 (187) 34 (188) 35 (189)
36 (190) 37 (191) 38 (192) 39 (193) 40 (194) 41 (195) 42 (196)
43 (197) 44 (198) 45 (199) 46 (200) 47 (201) 48 (202) 49 (203)
50 (204) 51 (205) 52 (206) 53 (207) 54 (208) 55 (209) 56 (210)
Cinker
1 (211) 2 (212) 3 (213) 4 (214) 5 (215) 6 (216) 7 (217)
8 (218) 9 (219) 10 (220) 11 (221) 12 (222) 13 (223) 14 (224)
15 (225) 16 (226) 17 (227) 18 (228) 19 (229) 20 (230) 21 (231)
22 (232) 23 (233) 24 (234) 25 (235) 26 (236) 27 (237) 28 (238)
29 (239) 30 (240) 31 (241) 32 (242) 33 (243) 34 (244) 35 (245)
36 (246) 37 (247) 38 (248) 39 (249) 40 (250) 41 (251) 42 (252)
43 (253) 44 (254) 45 (255) 46 (256) 47 (257) 48 (258) 49 (259)
Seiker
1 (260) 2 (261) 3 (262) 4 (263) 5 (264) 6 (265) 7 (266)
8 (267) 9 (268) 10 (269) 11 (270) 12 (271) 13 (272) 14 (273)
15 (274) 16 (275) 17 (276) 18 (277) 19 (278) 20 (279) 21 (280)
22 (281) 23 (282) 24 (283) 25 (284) 26 (285) 27 (286) 28 (287)
29 (288) 30 (289) 31 (290) 32 (291) 33 (292) 34 (293) 35 (294)
36 (295) 37 (296) 38 (297) 39 (298) 40 (299) 41 (300) 42 (301)
43 (302) 44 (303) 45 (304) 46 (305) 47 (306) 48 (307) 49 (308)
50 (309) 51 (310) 52 (311) 53 (312) 54 (313) 55 (314) 56 (315)
Sietker
1 (316) 2 (317) 3 (318) 4 (319) 5 (320) 6 (321) 7 (322)
8 (323) 9 (324) 10 (325) 11 (326) 12 (327) 13 (328) 14 (329)
15 (330) 16 (331) 17 (332) 18 (333) 19 (334) 20 (335) 21 (336)
22 (337) 23 (338) 24 (339) 25 (340) 26 (341) 27 (342) 28 (343)
29 (344) 30 (345) 31 (346) 32 (347) 33 (348) 34 (349) 35 (350)
36 (351) 37 (352) 38 (353) 39 (354) 40 (355) 41 (356) 42 (357)
43 (358) 44 (359) 45 (360) 46 (361) 47 (362) 48 (363) 49 (364)
Ochker
1 (365) 2 (366) 3 (367) 4 (368) 5 (369) 6 (370) 7 (371)
8 (372) 9 (373) 10 (374) 11 (375) 12 (376) 13 (377) 14 (378)
15 (379) 16 (380) 17 (381) 18 (382) 19 (383) 20 (384) 21 (385)
22 (386) 23 (387) 24 (388) 25 (389) 26 (390) 27 (391) 28 (392)
29 (393) 30 (394) 31 (395) 32 (396) 33 (397) 34 (398) 35 (399)
36 (400) 37 (401) 38 (402) 39 (403) 40 (404) 41 (405) 42 (406)
43 (407) 44 (408) 45 (409) 46 (410) 47 (411) 48 (412) 49 (413)
50 (414) 51 (415) 52 (416) 53 (417) 54 (418) 55 (419) 56 (420)
New Year's Leek 1 (421) 2 (422) 3 (423) 4 (424) 5 (425) 6 (426) 7 (427)*

 

 

1 hour ago, The Aziz said:

It's one step from quacker, so in that case a honker is required as well.

Quaker is the only Minth name that's an actual English word :D

Edited by Superfluous J
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3 hours ago, Superfluous J said:

There are 8 Minths. 3 of them have 7 Leeks and 5 have 8 Leeks

My mistake; thanks for the correction.   

Spoiler

But, in my putative  version, I'll just put the 8-week minths first; then the 7-week ones last.  Not being a farmer, "time is just a way to prevent everything all happening at once".

UPDATE: your New Year's Leek is even better.

 

3 hours ago, Superfluous J said:

(I like Leeks over Meeks simply because Minths already starts with an M)

 

Spoiler

I like the term "leek day" for that last 32m of the year, is my (meaningless) bias.  And the alliteration of "meeks and minks" [in my case].

UPDATE, "leek meek", for that last holiday meek.  :)  

OK, I will relent on this on.  :) 

 

2 hours ago, Superfluous J said:

making them very easy to remember

OK, this I like!  Thumbs up.  What's not to like about a holiday week -- by royal dekree!

 

2 hours ago, Superfluous J said:

Quaker is the only Minth name that's an actual English word

Info: Latin 'Quattro' is the origin of Spanish "Cuatro'.  I guess I feel that 100,000 Kerbals, sitting at typewriters, tapping at keys in their own language are, sooner or later, going to manage to typo an 'English' word.

Your idea about switching to Spanish (as homage to Felipe) is very appealing, though!  "Cuatker'.  I feel it is OK (because I am learning Spanish) as long as people would feel comfortable about how to pronounce it "Kwotker").   See how other people weigh in...?

(I'll hold my fire now: I'm down in the weeds, anyway.  Love what you've done!)

Edited by Hotel26
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Why would the Kerbals need a solar "year", when their equator tilt iz zero, so the Kerbin doesn't have seasons, and thus the vegetation period of their autotrophs doesn't depend on their Sun at all?

It depends only on the chemical reactions rate, on day-night number, and maybe on the munar tides (as they live at the coastline).

How could they even know about the solar year except from the nerdish astronomy studies? They don't have equinoxes and solstices.

They can see bright spots in the sky: Sun, Mun, and to some extent Minmus.

They can see that the Kerbin solar day = 21 600.000 s
 

They know about the Mun phases, and about the ecliptic line.
So, by counting the Mun passes in front of the Sun, they know the Mun synodic orbital period  = 141 115.4 s

Thus they know that the Mun is passing in front of the Sun every 141 115.4 / 21 600.0 ~= 6.53312 solar days ~= 6 16/30 solar days (almost precisely).
(They had calculated it by dividing 196 days by 30 passes they took).

As 196 days is very close to the Earth plants vegetation period, the Kerbal autotrophic organisms probably have something similar.

Thus, the equivalent of the Earth's agricultural solar year on Kerbin is a 196 days period (= 4 x 7 x 7), which consists of 30 Mun phase periods, which are basically Kerbal week.
This gives to them a 7-day long civil week, a 4-week = 28-day long civil month, and 7-month = 28-week = 196-day long civil year.
It exactly matches the 30-lunar-month long lunar year. Both start from New Mun.
So, the civil Kerbals have 7 equal months in a year, and 7 days in a week. This is obviously a tip from above.

They are aware, that their Sun is moving straightly in fron of the stars, returning to the same position every
Sidereal orbital period  =  9 203 545 s  = 426 d 0 h 32 m 24.6 s

So what who cares of those silly dots on the sky?
They are funny for nerds, but make no effect in the Kerbal life, as they don't have seasons to say: "Look, the Sun is almost at the Kraken Minor eye. We have ten days to prepare our harvesting tools."
The stars mean nothing for the Kerbals.

As nothing means the solar year.

Of course, the Kerbal nerds know that the Sun returns to the Kraken Minor eye every 426 days (and 32 minutes) = 2 x 3 x 71 days, but so what?
Nobody else cares.

Look at the Muslim calendar. It doesn't refer to the Sun at all. When you live close to the equator in a desert with rare rains, the seasons differ much less than at the Polar Circle. Actually you barely need the "year" at all.

426 / 196 = 2.173469 ~= 2 3/17
So, they know that every 17 returns of Sol to the Star, and every 37 phase periods of Mun-Sun (30 Mun phase periods each).
It's very nice for their astronomers, but has no effect on nything else.
This 17-solar-year period is like the "indiction" in medieval year counting (just the Earthlings had it 15-year long). Had no sense in daily life, but was always mentioned in chronology and used in religious practice.

So, every 37 civil years they celebrate the jubilee, The New Indiction.
It's 37 x 196 x 6 /24 / 365.2422 ~= 5 human years.

 

They are aware of Minmus, and that its Sidereal orbital period = 1 077 311 s ~= 49.875 Kerbin solar days.
The Minmus is too small, its phases are barely visible, and its 49.875 days period is too blurry, so it doesn't play a role in Kerbal civil life.

But it doesn't mean it's meaningless at all.  Vice versa, it's significant.

It's period = 49.8755 days = 7 x 7 + 6/7 days.
As the Kerbal civil week is 7 day long, and the civil year is 7 month long, and there are 7 visible major planets (Sun, Mun, Moho, Eve, Dune, Jool, Eeloo), the Kerbal mysticism is based on the septenary of something, just like the human one.

Thus as the Minmus period is basically seven of seven days, or seven weeks, and only the wizards can see the dim light of its phases, the Minmus is also known as The Moon Of Mages, The Night Crystal, The Cold Eye of Heaven/Abyss (a long-lasting scholastic debate between different mystic  schools), and plays an important role in Kerbal mysticism and magikk.

Thus, the Kerbal mages operate with a (7 x 7 + 6/7) x 7 = 349 day long period, which they call a wizards' year.
The Moon of Mages (aka Minmus) makes 7 full passes around the star sky, and then the mystical cycle repeats.

This period doesn't match any profane activity, it's purely mystical.
As 349 is prime number, and 196 isn't, it again highlights the superiority of the wizards' world over the mundane one.

Every 349*196 = 68 404 Kerbal solar days the year beginnings match each other, and thus every 349 civil years (i.e. once per  human century) Kerbals fear of Kraken, destroying the Universe.
Even more potentially dangerous are every 17th of such dates, when not just a civil year, but an indiction starts together with the wizards' year, every 53 civil years.

Thus, the 349 civil year long period is called Kraken's year, while 5 933 civil years are a Kraken's indiction (about 1483 human years).
The Kerbals believe that the world appeared when the Sun, the Mun, and the Minmus were in conjunction.

 

Now let's have a look at the days.
The civil year is 7 x 4 x 7 = 196, the lunar year is 30 x 6 16/30= 196.
Both begin simultaneously.
The civil months and the Mun periods don't match each other, they are 28:30 per year.
This means that any day is integer itself, but contains a non-integer part of the lunar period.
Two civil weeks repeat every fortnight, two Mun periods repeat every ~13 days (6.53312 * 2 = 13.066).

196 = 14 * 2 * 7 and ~15 * 13

This adds two more intervals to the Kerbal time measurement system, a civil fortnight (14 Kerbal days) and a lunar fortnight (13 Kerbal days).
Also, it adds the 13 (a Mun dozen) to the Kerbal numerology an mysticism, as a sign of superiority of Kerbal sapient nature above the blind natural forces, giving them one more day per fortnight.
The Kerbals believe that low-level species have a 13 fortnight, while Kerbal have two 7-day weeks.
13 is a wild nature (some say, Kraken's), chaotic number, while 7 is a number of the sapient Kerbal order.

Thus, every day of the civil year belongs to a civil fortnight, and to a lunar fortnight.
The day, when the lunar period is changed, is mystically significant.

It happens every 6 16/30th day, on the days of year:

0 32 4/15 64 14/15 97 3/5 130 8/15 163 1/5
6 8/15 38 4/5 71 7/15 104 2/15 137 1/15 169 11/15
13 1/15 45 1/3 78 110 14/15 143 3/5 176 4/15
19 3/15 51 13/15 84 8/15 117 7/15 150 2/15 182 4/5
25 11/15 58 2/5 91 1/15 124 156 2/3 189 1/3

So, as we can see, some fixed days of civil year are New Muns, and some of them have >1/2 as fraction part (i.e. mostly from the previous/current Munar period, while others have < 1/2. The 78th and the 124th seem integer, but just due to the rounding error between 6.53312 and 6 16/30.)

1 match 33 new 65 prev 98 prev 131 prev 164 new
7 prev 39 prev 72 new 105 new 138 new 170 prev
14 new 46 new 79 match 111 prev 144 prev 177 new
20 prev 52 prev 85 prev 118 prev 151 new 183 prev
26 prev 59 new 92 new 125 match 157 prev 190 new

The Kerbal civil months are 28 days long: 1..28, 29..56, 57..84, 85..112, 113..140, 141..168, 169..196 day of year.

So, the New Muns are distributed between civil months this way:

doy dom newmun   doy dom newmun   doy dom newmun   doy dom newmun   doy dom newmun   doy dom newmun   doy dom newmun
1 1 match   29 1     57 1     85 1 prev   113 1     141 1     169 1  
2 2     30 2     58 2     86 2     114 2     142 2     170 2 prev
3 3     31 3     59 3 new   87 3     115 3     143 3     171 3  
4 4     32 4     60 4     88 4     116 4     144 4 prev   172 4  
5 5     33 5 new   61 5     89 5     117 5     145 5     173 5  
6 6     34 6     62 6     90 6     118 6 prev   146 6     174 6  
7 7 prev   35 7     63 7     91 7     119 7     147 7     175 7  
8 8     36 8     64 8     92 8 new   120 8     148 8     176 8  
9 9     37 9     65 9 prev   93 9     121 9     149 9     177 9 new
10 10     38 10     66 10     94 10     122 10     150 10     178 10  
11 11     39 11 prev   67 11     95 11     123 11     151 11 new   179 11  
12 12     40 12     68 12     96 12     124 12     152 12     180 12  
13 13     41 13     69 13     97 13     125 13 match   153 13     181 13  
14 14 new   42 14     70 14     98 14 prev   126 14     154 14     182 14  
15 15     43 15     71 15     99 15     127 15     155 15     183 15 prev
16 16     44 16     72 16 new   100 16     128 16     156 16     184 16  
17 17     45 17     73 17     101 17     129 17     157 17 prev   185 17  
18 18     46 18 new   74 18     102 18     130 18     158 18     186 18  
19 19     47 19     75 19     103 19     131 19 prev   159 19     187 19  
20 20 prev   48 20     76 20     104 20     132 20     160 20     188 20  
21 21     49 21     77 21     105 21 new   133 21     161 21     189 21  
22 22     50 22     78 22     106 22     134 22     162 22     190 22 new
23 23     51 23     79 23 match   107 23     135 23     163 23     191 23  
24 24     52 24 prev   80 24     108 24     136 24     164 24 new   192 24  
25 25     53 25     81 25     109 25     137 25     165 25     193 25  
26 26 prev   54 26     82 26     110 26     138 26 new   166 26     194 26  
27 27     55 27     83 27     111 27 prev   139 27     167 27     195 27  
28 28     56 28     84 28     112 28     140 28     168 28     196 28  

As the first civil month starts on New Mun, and contains 5 newmuns, we can call the first civil month Munuary.
Kerbals can do it, too.

Following the traditional schemes of 7-into-12 mapping
Sun (Leo) - Moon (Cancer)
Mercury (Gemini - Virgo)
Venus (Taurus - Libra)
Mars (Aries - Scorpio)
Jupiter (Sagittarius - Pisces)
Saturn (Capricorn - Aquarius)
and
Sunday - Monday
Tuesday (Tyr - Mars)
Wednesday (Wodan/Odin - Mercury)
Thursday (Thor - Jupiter)
Friday (Freya - Venus)
Saturday (Saturn)
or
dies Lunae
dies Martis
dies Mercurii
dies Iovis
dies Veneris
dies Saturni
dies Solis

we can identify the 7th month as Sunuary (Sunday before Monday, Sun next to the Mun in zodiac),
6th month as Eeluary (if Saturn matches Eeloo, precedes Sun in weekday names and in zodiac),
but Mohuary, Evuary, Jooluary, and Dunuary in the human systems look broken, as the weekdays don't match the zodiac signs.

Looking at these two systems, we can notice that the astrological one is more reasonable.
fast Mercury follows faster Moon, is followed by less fast Venus;
slowest Saturn follows slow Jupiter;
and Mars is in the middle.

So, we can consider the astrological system more sane, and follow it.

Kerbal civil month are: Munuary, Mohuary, Evuary, Dunuary, Jooluary, Eeluary, Sunuary. Each of four civil weeks or two civil fortnights.
Kerbal civil weekdays are: Munday, Mohday, Eveday, Dunday, Joolday, Eelday, Sunday.

The civil year is 196 solar days long, consists of 7 civil months or 30 lunar weeks, or 15 lunar fortnights (13 days each).

Indiction = 37 civil years.
The solar year is just a 1/17th part of the civil indiction and interests anyone not more that the date when the Earth is passing her periapsis.

Wizards' year is 349 solar days long.

Kraken's year is 349 civil years long (~102 human years)
Kraken's indiction is 5 933 civil years long (~1 483 human years).

Minmus, aka The Moon of Mages, is not included, due to its specific status. A cursor, a joker.

Dres does not exist.
Can you find its astrological or weekday equivalent? Thus, Dres is something wrong.

Basically, so.

Edited by kerbiloid
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you know kerbin doesn't have any axial tilt and its orbit is circular. part of the reason our calendar is what it is was because it was designed with agriculture in mind. but on a planet without seasons, there is no reason to have a complex calendar. meeks and minths does let you track tidal events (along with time of day for solar tides), which will be the primary use of the calendar. kerbin has enough water, and kerbals float, so there was likely a rich seafarer tradition amongst the ancient kerbals (fishing for skwids, a common snack when deep fried, marketed as skwideos or kraken-rings). tides would also indicate when it is safe for landlubbers and sailors to visit the sea shore, as 3 tidal sources stacking is likely going to cause some flood issues, or reduce navigable waterways for the stacked low tides. something to think about.

 

interesting factoid, ancient kerbal lore states that a skwid once grew so angry with the kerbal's insatiable lust for their primary snakstuff, that it swore an oath to destroy all that kerbalkind has created. some say though some magic and others by consuming a very large number of klankton (small singlecellular organisms abundant in the kerbin oceans), the kraken grew to massive proportions and started hunting kerbal skwiding boats. a brave kerbal by the name of jibidia kerman (jebediah kerman's ancestor) set out in a grand quest to slay the kraken. thus he sailed a skwiding ship full of explodium into the depths of the great kerbin sea. when the kraken swallowed the ship whole, with jibidia at the helm, it is said that the kraken was cast out beyond the mun, perhaps even beyond minmus to lie in wait while it plotted its revenge. at least that's the story on the back of the kraken-rings bag.

Edited by Nuke
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What about holidays? Squad made animations for various holidays, here are a few.

 

How would these fit into the 8-month Kalendar?

edit: In the kerbal holiday video, you see a clock that clearly reads December 24. 

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Here are some month names, if I may make a suggestion:

  1. Launchuary - Starts the year off
  2. Feblast - This is my least favorite one.
  3. Sprorbit - First Minth of Spring
  4. Mayday - May + Mayday.  Or just mayday I guess.
  5. Jebedune - First Minth of Summer - Mix of Jebediah, Duna, and June
  6. Jooly - Should be selfexplanatory
  7. Astronautumn - First Minth of Autumn
  8. Docktober - Docking + October

Feel free to disregard if you hate them!

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On 4/4/2024 at 8:38 AM, kerbiloid said:

Why would the Kerbals need a solar "year", when their equator tilt iz zero, so the Kerbin doesn't have seasons, and thus the vegetation period of their autotrophs doesn't depend on their Sun at all?

It depends only on the chemical reactions rate, on day-night number, and maybe on the munar tides (as they live at the coastline).

How could they even know about the solar year except from the nerdish astronomy studies? They don't have equinoxes and solstices.

They can see bright spots in the sky: Sun, Mun, and to some extent Minmus.

They can see that the Kerbin solar day = 21 600.000 s
 

They know about the Mun phases, and about the ecliptic line.
So, by counting the Mun passes in front of the Sun, they know the Mun synodic orbital period  = 141 115.4 s

Thus they know that the Mun is passing in front of the Sun every 141 115.4 / 21 600.0 ~= 6.53312 solar days ~= 6 16/30 solar days (almost precisely).
(They had calculated it by dividing 196 days by 30 passes they took).

As 196 days is very close to the Earth plants vegetation period, the Kerbal autotrophic organisms probably have something similar.

Thus, the equivalent of the Earth's agricultural solar year on Kerbin is a 196 days period (= 4 x 7 x 7), which consists of 30 Mun phase periods, which are basically Kerbal week.
This gives to them a 7-day long civil week, a 4-week = 28-day long civil month, and 7-month = 28-week = 196-day long civil year.
It exactly matches the 30-lunar-month long lunar year. Both start from New Mun.
So, the civil Kerbals have 7 equal months in a year, and 7 days in a week. This is obviously a tip from above.

They are aware, that their Sun is moving straightly in fron of the stars, returning to the same position every
Sidereal orbital period  =  9 203 545 s  = 426 d 0 h 32 m 24.6 s

So what who cares of those silly dots on the sky?
They are funny for nerds, but make no effect in the Kerbal life, as they don't have seasons to say: "Look, the Sun is almost at the Kraken Minor eye. We have ten days to prepare our harvesting tools."
The stars mean nothing for the Kerbals.

As nothing means the solar year.

Of course, the Kerbal nerds know that the Sun returns to the Kraken Minor eye every 426 days (and 32 minutes) = 2 x 3 x 71 days, but so what?
Nobody else cares.

Look at the Muslim calendar. It doesn't refer to the Sun at all. When you live close to the equator in a desert with rare rains, the seasons differ much less than at the Polar Circle. Actually you barely need the "year" at all.

426 / 196 = 2.173469 ~= 2 3/17
So, they know that every 17 returns of Sol to the Star, and every 37 phase periods of Mun-Sun (30 Mun phase periods each).
It's very nice for their astronomers, but has no effect on nything else.
This 17-solar-year period is like the "indiction" in medieval year counting (just the Earthlings had it 15-year long). Had no sense in daily life, but was always mentioned in chronology and used in religious practice.

So, every 37 civil years they celebrate the jubilee, The New Indiction.
It's 37 x 196 x 6 /24 / 365.2422 ~= 5 human years.

 

They are aware of Minmus, and that its Sidereal orbital period = 1 077 311 s ~= 49.875 Kerbin solar days.
The Minmus is too small, its phases are barely visible, and its 49.875 days period is too blurry, so it doesn't play a role in Kerbal civil life.

But it doesn't mean it's meaningless at all.  Vice versa, it's significant.

It's period = 49.8755 days = 7 x 7 + 6/7 days.
As the Kerbal civil week is 7 day long, and the civil year is 7 month long, and there are 7 visible major planets (Sun, Mun, Moho, Eve, Dune, Jool, Eeloo), the Kerbal mysticism is based on the septenary of something, just like the human one.

Thus as the Minmus period is basically seven of seven days, or seven weeks, and only the wizards can see the dim light of its phases, the Minmus is also known as The Moon Of Mages, The Night Crystal, The Cold Eye of Heaven/Abyss (a long-lasting scholastic debate between different mystic  schools), and plays an important role in Kerbal mysticism and magikk.

Thus, the Kerbal mages operate with a (7 x 7 + 6/7) x 7 = 349 day long period, which they call a wizards' year.
The Moon of Mages (aka Minmus) makes 7 full passes around the star sky, and then the mystical cycle repeats.

This period doesn't match any profane activity, it's purely mystical.
As 349 is prime number, and 196 isn't, it again highlights the superiority of the wizards' world over the mundane one.

Every 349*196 = 68 404 Kerbal solar days the year beginnings match each other, and thus every 349 civil years (i.e. once per  human century) Kerbals fear of Kraken, destroying the Universe.
Even more potentially dangerous are every 17th of such dates, when not just a civil year, but an indiction starts together with the wizards' year, every 53 civil years.

Thus, the 349 civil year long period is called Kraken's year, while 5 933 civil years are a Kraken's indiction (about 1483 human years).
The Kerbals believe that the world appeared when the Sun, the Mun, and the Minmus were in conjunction.

 

Now let's have a look at the days.
The civil year is 7 x 4 x 7 = 196, the lunar year is 30 x 6 16/30= 196.
Both begin simultaneously.
The civil months and the Mun periods don't match each other, they are 28:30 per year.
This means that any day is integer itself, but contains a non-integer part of the lunar period.
Two civil weeks repeat every fortnight, two Mun periods repeat every ~13 days (6.53312 * 2 = 13.066).

196 = 14 * 2 * 7 and ~15 * 13

This adds two more intervals to the Kerbal time measurement system, a civil fortnight (14 Kerbal days) and a lunar fortnight (13 Kerbal days).
Also, it adds the 13 (a Mun dozen) to the Kerbal numerology an mysticism, as a sign of superiority of Kerbal sapient nature above the blind natural forces, giving them one more day per fortnight.
The Kerbals believe that low-level species have a 13 fortnight, while Kerbal have two 7-day weeks.
13 is a wild nature (some say, Kraken's), chaotic number, while 7 is a number of the sapient Kerbal order.

Thus, every day of the civil year belongs to a civil fortnight, and to a lunar fortnight.
The day, when the lunar period is changed, is mystically significant.

It happens every 6 16/30th day, on the days of year:

0 32 4/15 64 14/15 97 3/5 130 8/15 163 1/5
6 8/15 38 4/5 71 7/15 104 2/15 137 1/15 169 11/15
13 1/15 45 1/3 78 110 14/15 143 3/5 176 4/15
19 3/15 51 13/15 84 8/15 117 7/15 150 2/15 182 4/5
25 11/15 58 2/5 91 1/15 124 156 2/3 189 1/3

So, as we can see, some fixed days of civil year are New Muns, and some of them have >1/2 as fraction part (i.e. mostly from the previous/current Munar period, while others have < 1/2. The 78th and the 124th seem integer, but just due to the rounding error between 6.53312 and 6 16/30.)

1 match 33 new 65 prev 98 prev 131 prev 164 new
7 prev 39 prev 72 new 105 new 138 new 170 prev
14 new 46 new 79 match 111 prev 144 prev 177 new
20 prev 52 prev 85 prev 118 prev 151 new 183 prev
26 prev 59 new 92 new 125 match 157 prev 190 new

The Kerbal civil months are 28 days long: 1..28, 29..56, 57..84, 85..112, 113..140, 141..168, 169..196 day of year.

So, the New Muns are distributed between civil months this way:

doy dom newmun   doy dom newmun   doy dom newmun   doy dom newmun   doy dom newmun   doy dom newmun   doy dom newmun
1 1 match   29 1     57 1     85 1 prev   113 1     141 1     169 1  
2 2     30 2     58 2     86 2     114 2     142 2     170 2 prev
3 3     31 3     59 3 new   87 3     115 3     143 3     171 3  
4 4     32 4     60 4     88 4     116 4     144 4 prev   172 4  
5 5     33 5 new   61 5     89 5     117 5     145 5     173 5  
6 6     34 6     62 6     90 6     118 6 prev   146 6     174 6  
7 7 prev   35 7     63 7     91 7     119 7     147 7     175 7  
8 8     36 8     64 8     92 8 new   120 8     148 8     176 8  
9 9     37 9     65 9 prev   93 9     121 9     149 9     177 9 new
10 10     38 10     66 10     94 10     122 10     150 10     178 10  
11 11     39 11 prev   67 11     95 11     123 11     151 11 new   179 11  
12 12     40 12     68 12     96 12     124 12     152 12     180 12  
13 13     41 13     69 13     97 13     125 13 match   153 13     181 13  
14 14 new   42 14     70 14     98 14 prev   126 14     154 14     182 14  
15 15     43 15     71 15     99 15     127 15     155 15     183 15 prev
16 16     44 16     72 16 new   100 16     128 16     156 16     184 16  
17 17     45 17     73 17     101 17     129 17     157 17 prev   185 17  
18 18     46 18 new   74 18     102 18     130 18     158 18     186 18  
19 19     47 19     75 19     103 19     131 19 prev   159 19     187 19  
20 20 prev   48 20     76 20     104 20     132 20     160 20     188 20  
21 21     49 21     77 21     105 21 new   133 21     161 21     189 21  
22 22     50 22     78 22     106 22     134 22     162 22     190 22 new
23 23     51 23     79 23 match   107 23     135 23     163 23     191 23  
24 24     52 24 prev   80 24     108 24     136 24     164 24 new   192 24  
25 25     53 25     81 25     109 25     137 25     165 25     193 25  
26 26 prev   54 26     82 26     110 26     138 26 new   166 26     194 26  
27 27     55 27     83 27     111 27 prev   139 27     167 27     195 27  
28 28     56 28     84 28     112 28     140 28     168 28     196 28  

As the first civil month starts on New Mun, and contains 5 newmuns, we can call the first civil month Munuary.
Kerbals can do it, too.

Following the traditional schemes of 7-into-12 mapping
Sun (Leo) - Moon (Cancer)
Mercury (Gemini - Virgo)
Venus (Taurus - Libra)
Mars (Aries - Scorpio)
Jupiter (Sagittarius - Pisces)
Saturn (Capricorn - Aquarius)
and
Sunday - Monday
Tuesday (Tyr - Mars)
Wednesday (Wodan/Odin - Mercury)
Thursday (Thor - Jupiter)
Friday (Freya - Venus)
Saturday (Saturn)
or
dies Lunae
dies Martis
dies Mercurii
dies Iovis
dies Veneris
dies Saturni
dies Solis

we can identify the 7th month as Sunuary (Sunday before Monday, Sun next to the Mun in zodiac),
6th month as Eeluary (if Saturn matches Eeloo, precedes Sun in weekday names and in zodiac),
but Mohuary, Evuary, Jooluary, and Dunuary in the human systems look broken, as the weekdays don't match the zodiac signs.

Looking at these two systems, we can notice that the astrological one is more reasonable.
fast Mercury follows faster Moon, is followed by less fast Venus;
slowest Saturn follows slow Jupiter;
and Mars is in the middle.

So, we can consider the astrological system more sane, and follow it.

Kerbal civil month are: Munuary, Mohuary, Evuary, Dunuary, Jooluary, Eeluary, Sunuary. Each of four civil weeks or two civil fortnights.
Kerbal civil weekdays are: Munday, Mohday, Eveday, Dunday, Joolday, Eelday, Sunday.

The civil year is 196 solar days long, consists of 7 civil months or 30 lunar weeks, or 15 lunar fortnights (13 days each).

Indiction = 37 civil years.
The solar year is just a 1/17th part of the civil indiction and interests anyone not more that the date when the Earth is passing her periapsis.

Wizards' year is 349 solar days long.

Kraken's year is 349 civil years long (~102 human years)
Kraken's indiction is 5 933 civil years long (~1 483 human years).

Minmus, aka The Moon of Mages, is not included, due to its specific status. A cursor, a joker.

Dres does not exist.
Can you find its astrological or weekday equivalent? Thus, Dres is something wrong.

Basically, so.

what

is there a day where the Kerbals just eat snacks?

that is all i need to know.

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