Hitchhiker Fans Celebrate Towel Day with Towels, Twitter

By David 

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It’s Towel Day today, the annual celebration of the late Douglas Adams, author of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.

The most basic way to participate is to simply throw a towel over your shoulder and go about your business. Towelday.org has a list of ways to get involved around the world, and over on Twitter, #towelday is a good way to spot like-minded individuals.

Wired.com has the relevant passage, from Chapter 3 of the book:

A towel is about the most massively useful thing an interstellar hitchhiker can have. Partly it has great practical value. You can wrap it around you for warmth as you bound across the cold moons of Jaglan Beta; you can lie on it on the brilliant marble-sanded beaches of Santraginus V, inhaling the heady sea vapors; you can sleep under it beneath the stars which shine so redly on the desert world of Kakrafoon; use it to sail a miniraft down the slow heavy River Moth; wet it for use in hand-to-hand-combat; wrap it round your head to ward off noxious fumes or avoid the gaze of the Ravenous Bugblatter Beast of Traal (such a mind-boggingly stupid animal, it assumes that if you can’t see it, it can’t see you); you can wave your towel in emergencies as a distress signal, and of course dry yourself off with it if it still seems to be clean enough.

More importantly, a towel has immense psychological value. For some reason, if a strag (strag: non-hitchhiker) discovers that a hitchhiker has his towel with him, he will automatically assume that he is also in possession of a toothbrush, washcloth, soap, tin of biscuits, flask, compass, map, ball of string, gnat spray, wet-weather gear, space suit etc., etc. Furthermore, the strag will then happily lend the hitchhiker any of these or a dozen other items that the hitchhiker might accidentally have “lost”. What the strag will think is that any man who can hitch the length and breadth of the galaxy, rough it, slum it, struggle against terrible odds, win through, and still knows where his towel is, is clearly a man to be reckoned with.

There’s a special place for Adams in the heart of this GalleyCat editor, whose father’s attachment to the number ’42’ occasionally bordered on fanatical. But what about you, readers? Anyone carrying a towel today in Adams’ honor? Send us pictures.