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5:45a Sarah and Vinnie are back and already reminiscing about the Cache Creek live show. A fan gave Sarah a vintage Alice jean jacket, and it reminds Vinnie that he gave his away 20 years ago. Matty is clumsy, the Warriors need Steph tomorrow to survive, and the status of the man bun: In or Out?
We all remember that one friend's mom who was there for us - wish her a Happy Mother's Day too! Justin Bieber skipped out on the Met Gala because he's in Iceland recording a new album. Tons of new music out today including Blake Shelton, Arcade Fire, Counting Crows, and Maren Morris. Matty keeps falling over at the live show, Walton Goggins is on SNL this weekend, Uma Thurman joins the cast of The Old Guard 2, and Owen Wilson has a new show coming to Apple TV+. Plus, Cache Creek is hosting an open casting call for Survivor this summer, and a live show means our listeners get to join in on a game!
LIVE from Cache Creek Casino it's Sarah and Vinnie! There's nothing like a great dinner and a hotel night's sleep. There's a new pope in the Vatican, and he's probably eaten a few Chicago dogs before the papacy. Brie Larson wrote a cookbook, the future is unknown for The Kelly Clarkson Show, and Lorde is going on tour! Justin Bieber skipped out on the Met Gala because he's in Iceland recording a new album. Plus, Cache Creek is hosting an open casting call for Survivor this summer, and you better not forget your mom this Sunday.
GS#988 Summary This week's guest is Will Foust from Cache Creek Casino Resort and the Yocha Dehe Golf Course in Northern California. They discuss the history and development of the Yocha Dehe Golf Course, the management practices that keep the course in top condition, and the unique relationship between the casino and the Yocha Dehe Wintun Nation. The conversation also touches on the geographical appeal of the resort, the networking within the golf industry, and the challenges and successes of operating a golf course in Northern California. In this conversation, Will shares the unique features and playability of the Yocha Dehe Golf Course, emphasizing its beautiful landscape, accessibility for golfers of all skill levels, and the various practice and instructional opportunities available. He highlights the strategic elements of the course, including the distinctive first hole and key holes that challenge players while providing enjoyable experiences. TakeawaysThe integration of golf and casino experiences has proven successful.High standards from ownership contribute to the course's success.The Yocha Dehe Golf Course is recognized for its excellent condition.Networking with Troon Golf enhances operational success.The course's location offers a unique natural setting for golf.The casino remains the primary business focus at Cache Creek.The course design prioritizes natural landscapes over residential developments.The Yocha Dehe Golf Course offers a unique landscape with vineyards and orchards.The course is designed to be very walkable and accessible for all players.The first hole provides a stunning elevated tee shot, setting the tone for the round.Strategic play is essential on key holes, particularly on par fives and threes.The greens are large and undulated, requiring careful consideration for putting.The course is designed to be fair and enjoyable for both beginners and advanced players.Please check out our new and updated website at golfsmarter.com! While there, you'll receive three free gifts when you post an honest review about Golf Smarter the podcast. You can also get free gifts for recording a show opening by clicking on "Record Your Show Open Here!" tab on the right side of the page. Please take a few minutes to fill out our survey, which will also provide you with a link to Tony Manzoni's video! Follow @golfsmarter on Instagram, X, Facebook, TikTok, YouTube. See our daily highlights and helpful insights from our interviews on the podcast. Thanks so much for checking it out and providing your feedback. This episode is sponsored by Indeed. Please visit indeed.com/GOLFSMARTER and get a $75 SPONSORED JOB CREDIT. Terms and conditions apply. This episode is sponsored by HIMS. Start your free online visit today HIMS.com/golfsmarter and received personalized ED treatment options.This episode is also sponsored by SelectQuote. Make sure you get the right life insurance for YOU, for LESS, at selectquote.com/golfsmarter today and get started.
Experience unparalleled service, amenities, and course conditions at Yocha Dehe Golf Club at Cache Creek Casino Resort. Consistently ranked as a top golf course in the United States and California, they take pride in making their guests part of this experience. Enjoy over 7,300 yards of championship golf.Carolyn talks to Will Foust, Director of Golf/Hospitality at Cache Creek Casino Resort.
One of Northern California's best-kept secrets, C2 Steak & Seafood offers big-city dining in their relaxed, yet elegant, new dining room. Listen as Carolyn talks to Andrew Kingsbury, Manager of Cache Creek's C2 Steak & Seafood!
Let go of all your stress at The Spa at Cache Creek. The Spa has everything you need to unwind from a long week, and it's the perfect way to kick off an amazing day. The Spa offers a variety of signature massages, body wraps, manicures and pedicures. Listen, as Carolyn talks to Cache Creek Casino Resort Spa Manager Jenna Hellinger!
This month we are welcoming Jenna McRae, Owner of the McRae Taxidermy. About Jenna: Jenna McRae is the Owner/operator of McRae Taxidermy which operates out of Mission BC. Jenna has a long background with farming, fishing and hunting and growing up was raised in a farm to plate type of lifestyle. Her experience with raising animals developed her a keen eye for the structure and mechanics of the animal body. Her creativity and attention to detail lead her to passionately pursue taxidermy where she, after many years of looking, landed a spot as an apprentice under a seasoned taxidermist. She spent a year and a half learning the skills of animal artistry and has since taken off with great speed in the wildlife taxidermy world. Growing up she spent a lot of time at her family cabin located in Loon Lake just outside of Cache Creek. There she spent Fall and winter hunting deer and moose with her dad and grew to become an avid waterfowl hunter. While in the spring and summers hiking with her belly boat on her back into remote fly fishing lakes targeting Rainbow trout. In the Her passion for fishing eventually expanded to chasing salmon on the river and ocean in Haida Gwaii as well as fly fishing for bonefish and barracuda on the Mexican warm water flats. Her passion for hunting turned into an obsession for chasing deer with her bow. Jenna enjoys shooting skeets and is a member at her local rod and gun club. Jenna's love for the outdoor world has made her very passionate about animal conservation and feels if you take, you must give back double. She is proudly involved with the Canadian Coalition for Firearm Rights, The Wild Sheep Society, periodically writes for articles BC Outdoors Magazine and has been a part of numerous conservation groups including the Ducks Unlimited. Where ever she can dip her feet into the industry to help spread knowledge she is there. About SHE SHOOTS PODCAST: SHE SHOOTS is a podcast for women in the shooting community and for those interested in learning more about it. It is hosted by women who shoot, hunt, and instruct and most importantly share a passion for introducing new ladies to the sport. Coming to you on the second Tuesday of every month, the objective of SHE SHOOTS is to showcase various activities in the shooting sports and highlight the people who participate. We hope this will help you find something you are interested in learning more about and various ways to get involved. Did you know the shooting community proudly boasts over 250,000 licensed women who participate across Canada? This sport has something for everyone and it's easy to get out and give it a try. Join us every month when we host SHE SHOOTS on a variety of social media platforms. This exciting collaboration is brought to you by the Canadian University Shooting Federation, Project Mapleseed and LadyGuns.
After a TikTok video went viral about water pollution in East Cache Creek, City of Lawton officials have explained their plan to restore water levels.Mentioned in this episode:Social Media tags
If you commute north, south, east or west - THIS home is for YOU! You'll love how close it is to I-80 for the Sacramento or San Francisco commute! Heading to Tahoe or Reno? Don't waste time just GETTING TO THE FREEWAY! If you travel to Chico, Redding, Cache Creek, Winters or Portland - 505 is just a hop, skip and a jump away from your front door! LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION! Click here to check out all the info and pics for this home! If you would like help finding YOUR dream home or if you're moving into or out of the area, (Solano, Contra Costa, Marin, Sonoma and SF Bay Area), or know someone who is, contact me any time... 707-373-7416 or melaniehallam1@gmail.com. If you'd like to share your home buying story/experience with me on the air I would love for you to join me! For those of you who have trusted me with your real estate needs and have referred your friends and family to me, I give you my heartfelt thanks!
Half of B.C. remains under the threat of flooding due to rain and warm weather. And while there's some relief as water levels have started to recede in certain areas, the village of Cache Creek is still in a state of emergency Guest: David Campbell, Head of the River Forecast Centre Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Seg 1: Almost 30,000 people have been forced to leave their homes because of the ongoing wildfires in Alberta Guest: Neetu Garcha, Global News Reporter Seg 2: Workers from PSAC have reached a tentative agreement with the federal government in Canada. Guest: Eli Sopow, Associate Professor, MBA Faculty of Leadership & People Management, University Canada West Seg 3: Vancouver city council is set to vote on reversing an increase in the empty homes tax. Guest: Lisa Dominato, ABC City Councillor Seg 4: Half of B.C. remains under the threat of flooding due to rain and warm weather. And while there's some relief as water levels have started to recede in certain areas, the village of Cache Creek is still in a state of emergency Guest: David Campbell, Head of the River Forecast Centre Seg 5: Extraordinary British Columbians - Part 1 Guest: Ron Brar, CEO of Evergreen Herbs Limited and Owner of the Surrey Eagles Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
BC is offering protection for people's intimate online images. David Hutton is a North Vancouver resident who is also a humanitarian – he's created a non profit organization called Grassroots Hero Foundation – focusing on getting aid to people on the frontlines in Ukraine directly. Cache Creek flooding is continuing to cause more infrastructure damage. Award-winning Vancouver Foodie Tours welcomes guests to explore Gastown's Gastronomic fare!
Welcome back everybody! Thank you for joining mom and I as we dive into the shocking conclusion of the Cache Creek murder mystery! Be sure to reach out to us on social media and let us know who you think is responsible for these gruesome killings.https://www.facebook.com/northernnightmarespodhttps://www.patreon.com/northernnightmaresnorthernnightmarespod@gmail.comhttps://twitter.com/nn_podhttps://www.instagram.com/northernnightmarespodcast/@northernnightmarespod on Tik Tok for 3 minute one part videos about content covered fully here on the podcastConsider buying us a coffee! A small one time donation without any subscription necessary!https://www.buymeacoffee.com/northernnightIf you're interested in checking out the book I read to research this case, you can purchase it here:https://www.amazon.com/Mystery-Cache-Creek-Murders/dp/1594336652Sources: The Mystery of the Cache Creek Murders: A True Story by Roberta Sheldon Support the show
Welcome back everybody! Today we have a twisted tale from one of Alaska's oldest mining communities. Join us as Mom and I dive in to the circumstances of the time and talk about some of the wild characters who made this area their home so many years ago.Be sure to reach out to us on social media and let us know your thoughts! What do you think is going to happen next??https://www.facebook.com/northernnightmarespodhttps://www.patreon.com/northernnightmaresnorthernnightmarespod@gmail.comhttps://twitter.com/nn_podhttps://www.instagram.com/northernnightmarespodcast/@northernnightmarespod on Tik Tok for 3 minute one part videos about content covered fully here on the podcastConsider buying us a coffee! A small one time donation without any subscription necessary!https://www.buymeacoffee.com/northernnightSources: The Mystery of the Cache Creek Murders: A True Story by Roberta SheldonSupport the show
Hear about a visit by Wet'suwet'en Hereditary Chiefs to the RBC AGM in Toronto and what it means for the Coastal GasLink pipeline. Labour shortages are challenging employers, and the historic Hat Creek Ranch in Cache Creek is getting ready to open after floods, fires, and the ongoing pandemic.
Money often leads to greed and sometimes even to murder, so we should not be surprised to learn about a miner killing other miners for their gold, the rawest form of currency. This story sounds believable from our jaded twenty-first-century perspective. In 1939, though, to the miners in Cache Creek country, the residents of Talkeetna, and people in Anchorage, the murders at Cache Creek represented the worst type of betrayal of the code of trust and respect followed by the independent men and women who labored in the mud to eke out a living and extract a valuable mineral from the earth. When the FBI did not quickly apprehend the killer, miners began to lock their cabins and fear their neighbors. Sources: I based this story almost entirely on the book The Mystery of the Cache Creek Murders by Roberta Sheldon, published in 2001. I have only outlined the basics of the murders in this newsletter, so if you want more details, not only about the murders but also about the life of a gold miner in Alaska in the 1930s and 40s, I recommend Ms. Sheldon's book. She presents the context of these murders against the backdrop of the years leading up to WWII, and she gives the reader a glimpse of how the FBI operated in those years and the near lack of law enforcement in the wilderness of Alaska. Sheldon, Roberta, 2001. The Mystery of the Cache Creek Murders. Publication Consultants. Alaska's “Gold Rush” Years 1832 – 1913. History of Mining in Alaska. http://www.alaskaminers.org/mining-history-in-ak Dunham, Mike, 2012. Fire destroys historic Forks Roadhouse in Susitna Valley. Anchorage Daily News.https://www.adn.com/alaska-news/article/fire-destroys-historic-forks-roadhouse-susitna-valley/2012/04/05/ _____________________________________________________________________________________________ If you would like to support Murder and Mystery in the Last Frontier? Become a patron and join The Last Frontier Club. Each month I will provide one or more of the following to club members. · An extra episode of Murder and Mystery in the Last Frontier available only for club members. · Behind the scenes glimpses of life and wildlife in the Kodiak wilderness. · Breaking news about ongoing murder cases and new crimes in Alaska · Merchandise or discounts on MMLF merchandise or handmade glass jewelry. Become a Patron! _________________________________________________________________________________________ Check out the store: Murder and Mystery in the Last Frontier merchandise. ______________________________________________________________________________________________ Subscribe to my free, monthly Murder and Mystery Newsletter for more stories about true crime and mystery from Alaska. Join me on: Facebook Instagram Twitter LinkedIn Visit my website at http://robinbarefield.com Check out my books at Author Masterminds ____________________________________________________________________________________________ NEW BOOK RELEASE ____________________________________________________________________________________________ Robin Barefield is the author of four Alaska wilderness mystery novels, Big Game, Murder Over Kodiak, The Fisherman's Daughter, and Karluk Bones. Sign up to subscribe to her free, monthly newsletter on true murder and mystery in Alaska.
We are so excited to introduce Bonnie Lepine Antoine to you. Bonnie attends Kamloops Alliance Church. She is proud of her Metis heritage and shares so much wisdom and knowledge about her story, her upbringing, and her faith.Originally form Victoria, BC and Québec City, Bonnie has been living on the traditional territory of the Secwepemc people for the past 14 years. She is a member of the Métis Nation and her ancestral people are from Batoche, SK. She is married to Kukpi7 (Chief) Frank Antoine of the Bonaparte Indian Band of Cache Creek. They have three beautiful children: Séquoia, Maya, and Riel. Their youngest, Riel, recently underwent cancer treatment over the past two years at BC Children's hospital, and in this podcast, she talks about her fears and how her son's journey deepened her faith is Christ. Bonnie's sports-minded family spends a lot of time in the rinks and on the field. She believes that sports are a therapeutic way to heal, and sports have allowed her to remain focused most of her life. Bonnie is a passionate teacher with the Francophone School District of BC, teaching grade six through eight. She is passionate about Aboriginal Education and has previously been the District Resource Teacher for many years. In this episode, Bonnie and Chris talk about what it looks like to love our community well. She shares her journey with God and her hard work to educate her children about their Indigenous culture. She shares the importance of partnering with our Indigenous communities so we as a community can learn from their perspective, and at end of the podcast, she sheds light on the recent discoveries at the Kamloops Residential School where 215 unmarked graves were found. We are so appreciative of Bonnie for her authenticity and bravery as she shares her heart, her past, her current struggles, and her hope for Indigenous people in Kamloops, and in Canada.
Rico Omarr Harris, known to the world of basketball and all who followed his career as simply “Rico,” was an extroverted, athletic, and one time world renowned basketball prodigy. His energetic, entertaining skillset, followed by a courageous battle against addiction and apparent recovery, was cut short by an unexplainable, untraceable vanishing in October of 2014, leaving all who knew him, from college basketball fans in Los Angeles to the Harlem Globetrotters, grasping for answers in a sea of evidence that drowned us all in doubt. As a hope to provide more substantial reasoning built upon observable evidence and situational analysis, this is an examination of the disappearance of Rico Harris, and the mystery in Yolo County and the surrounding hills of Cache Creek... #coldcase #truecrime --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/atruecrimepodcast/message
Historic Indigenous village unearthed by wildfire in Cache Creek; Eli Glasner reviews Nomadland; Birthday parade for 102-year-old WWII vet and gardener in Fort St. John; Protecting culturally modified trees; Relay for Life goes virutal again; Shirley Bond on pandemic response; From the Ledge panel on vaccine rollout; Remembering Prince Phillip.
The non-profit sector seems dauntingly different from the corporate world; instead of focusing on profit margins and competition, you are focusing on the multifaceted and sensitive realities of humanity. On this episode we explore the actualities of non-profit work through our conversation with Bernadette Siracky, Executive Director of the Kamloops Food Bank.The Boss Chicks had the immense privilege of chatting with Bernadette about the career she has built through her compassion for our communities. Bernadette began her career as a teacher in Alberta before pursuing her Masters of Education, after which she held roles in Labour Relations, human resources and in District level positions coordinating staff and programming for students with learning disabilities.In addition to her unique professional journey, Bernadette shares her best decision-making advice, the initiatives she has implemented at the Food Bank, and the lessons she has learned about leaning on your strengths to help you get through professional and personal struggles.We highly encourage you to consider donating to the Kamloops Food Bank to directly help feed families in our community. The charity provides food hampers to those in need, food to various charitable kitchens in the city, and meal programs to 10 local schools. The Kamloops Food Bank is also a hub for the entire Kamloops-Thompson area, providing donations to other communities such as Chase, Barriere, and Cache Creek. Food security has become a greater issue since the beginning of the pandemic, and with restrictions to volunteer opportunities, cash donations are more necessary than ever to end hunger in Kamloops.If you are interested in more information about the Food Bank, Bernadette, or volunteer opportunities, check out www.kamloopsfoodbank.org and follow the Food Bank on Instagram @kamloopsfoodbank for upcoming community fundraising events.Follow the Boss Chicks on Instagram @thebosschickproject, @kenn_gabrielle_ and @cassandramilk and check out our website for more information on episodes at www.thebosschickproject.comDM us if you have any questions or comments to be featured on an upcoming podcast episode.
There is a tremendous amount of work that goes into discipling the nations. Reaching the American Indians has been one of the most incredible stories when it comes to mission work around the world. The Pawnee, Comanche, Navajo, etc. have been reached by faithful men and women who have given all for Christ. In this edition of Generations Radio, Kevin Swanson interviews Faith M. Martin on her book, The White Chief of Cache Creek, chronicling the work that William Work Carithers did in Oklahoma as he sought to bring the Gospel to the American Indians.--This program includes---1. The World View in Five Minutes with Adam McManus -CA judge- San Jose's Calvary Chapel must pay -1 million COVID fine, God's lobster shell inspiring stronger concrete, Generation Z- 60- are lonely, 40- religiously unaffiliated---2. Generations with Kevin Swanson
A new MP3 sermon from Generations Radio is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Bringing the Gospel to America – The White Chief of Cache Creek Speaker: Kevin Swanson Broadcaster: Generations Radio Event: Radio Broadcast Date: 1/27/2021 Length: 32 min.
Chapter 1: It was a remarkable year in terms of setting historic records in areas we never would have anticipated. Unemployment spiked like we’ve never seen before, and it highlighted how many people don’t have the financial stability to weather even temporary layoffs. Guest: Darrell Bricker, IPSOS Public Affairs CEO. Chapter 2: A fully intact, 57-thousand year old mummified wolf puppy was found in the thawing permafrost outside Dawson City, Yukon in 2016. It’s believed this is the most complete wolf mummy that has ever been found. Now after four years of study, researchers say they know more about this very special puppy. Chapter 3: It’s critically important that care homes mitigate the impact of isolation on their residents. For more on how they can do that we’re joined by Dan Levitt, the executive director of Tabor Village and an instructor at Simon Fraser University. Guest: Dan Levitt, teaches long term care administration at Simon Fraser University, Executive Director of Tabor Village. Chapter 4: It’s the end of an era as this morning we learned legendary French designer Pierre Cardin has passed away at age 98. Guest: Meera Estrada, Culture and Fashion expert Chapter 5: If your New Year’s celebrations typically involve a big night out with friends, you should pay attention to what the rules are regarding gathering in restaurants right now. BC Restaurant and Foodservices Association CEO Ian Tostenson joins us to talk about how the holiday season is going for their members, and what they expect to see on Thursday night. Guest: Ian Tostenson, President/CEO BC Restaurant and Foodservices Association. Chapter 6: A couple of diaries left in a Toronto home DECADES ago have found their way back to their rightful owner. Vancouver musician Alison Jenkins joins us to talk about how a flood of messages on social media alerted her to something she’d likely forgotten all about. Chapter 7: There’s some things you just don’t expect people to steal, like a 1,300 kilogram boulder! Well some enterprising thieves did just that, removing the jade boulder in front of a gift shop in Cache Creek earlier this month. Hedi Roy is the owner of Cariboo Jade and Gifts and she joins us to talk about this bizarre story. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A cool morning breeze keeps the mosquitoes down as we pack our kayaks and gear for today's paddling journey. It is day four of our holiday, with two days driving up from Vancouver to Cache Creek, past the Eocene insect and plant site at McAbee, the well-bedded Permian limestone near Marble Canyon and onto Bowron Provincial Park, a geologic gem near the gold rush town of Barkerville. The initial draw for me, given that collecting in a provincial park is forbidden and all collecting close at hand outside the park appears to amount to a handful of crushed crinoid bits and a few conodonts, was the gorgeous natural scenery and a broad range of species extant. It was also the proposition of padding the Bowron Canoe Circuit, a 149,207 hectare geologic wonderland, where a fortuitous combination of plate tectonics and glacial erosion have carved an unusual 116 kilometre near-continuous rectangular circuit of lakes, streams and rivers bound on all sides by snowcapped mountains. We're making our trek in low profile, Kevlar style. One single & one double kayak would be our faithful companions and mode of transport. They will be briefly conscripted into service as a bear shield later in the trip. Yes, a grizzly bear encounter! Versatile those kayaks. The Bowrons — from all descriptions, something like heaven.
I chat about Golden, Revelstoke, Cache Creek, Whistler and the Sunshine Coast. (Painting in progress) --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/wendy-mcgean/message
Rico Omarr Harris, known to the world of basketball and all who followed his career as simply “Rico,” was an extroverted, athletic, and one time world renowned basketball prodigy. His energetic, entertaining skillset, followed by a courageous battle against addiction and apparent recovery, was cut short by an unexplainable, untraceable vanishing in October of 2014, leaving all who knew him, from college basketball fans in Los Angeles to the Harlem Globetrotters, grasping for answers in a sea of evidence that drowned us all in doubt…As a hope to provide more substantial reasoning built upon observable evidence and situational analysis, this is an examination of the disappearance of Rico Harris, and the mystery in Yolo County and the surrounding hills of Cache Creek...This is Cold Case Detective.Rico Harris Case File Photographs: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/16swcOTWAh3QVzauaXnvyX3wBiz248CjX?usp=sharingAdditional Research:[Breaking News Video][Investigation Discovery Episode][DLP Media Short Documentary][Q13 Spot][Rico Harris Wiki][LA Times Article (w/ his mother’s perspective)][Q13 Article (w/ his girlfriend’s perspective)][Reddit Thread][Websleuths] Researched and written by TJ RueschEpisode narrated by Top5sMusic by CO.AG________Our episodes deal with serious and often distressing incidents. Listener discretion is advised.Submit a Cold Case - https://forms.gle/usZ7B2vJeWwDjzJ19Visit our YouTube channel for more True Crime content - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdjslyNQupPSFxK_mSPcG-g
An epic Bike trip through the Coast Mountains of British Columbia. We started this trip by breaking down our bikes and stuffing them in the back of a 60's 3 seater Cessna plane. We took off from Squamish at Sunrise and flew over the Coast mountains to Cache Creek where we would start the 285km ride back home. Starting in Cache Creek, we then road through Lilloet, Pemberton, Whistler then arrived in Squamish. An epic day where nothing went right and still remains one of my favourite days on the bike or in the mountains. Carl is the furthest thing from a road cyclist, comes from a background of ski mountaineering and general Alpinism. He just got the bike and this would more than double his previous longest ride but with the attitude of a Golden Retriever headed out for a walk, this was set to be a memorable day.
Chapter 1: The tragedy in Nova Scotia continues to grip the country as the death toll increased again yesterday. Guest: Sarah Ritchie, Global News Anchor and Reporter in Halifax. Chapter 2: We've seen a very encouraging trend in the number of transmissions of COVID-19 in BC, Ontario Premier Doug Ford has said that BC is three weeks ahead of them when it comes to flattening the curve. Provincial Health Officer Dr. Bonnie Henry is now saying we could see some social distancing measures relaxed in mid-May. Guest: Shane Woodford, Freelancer in Denmark, former CKNW reporter. Chapter 3: It's been well over a month since many hair salons closed their doors due to the pandemic. Have you been brave enough yet to try to cut your own hair? Sara Rose is a hairstylist with Brush Salon in East Vancouver. She spoke to our Niki Reitmayer to get some tips for men and women who are hoping to cut their hair at home. Chapter 4: Warnings and evacuations are being issued as flooding is starting to impact the village of Cache Creek. Guest: Wendy Coomber, Village of Cache Creek spokesperson Chapter 5: BC is Preparing to test select groups of people for coronavirus antibodies. Guest: Dr. Horacio Bach, UBC Adjunct Professor, Division of Infectious Diseases Chapter 6: Getting outdoors can make physical distancing difficult, but we've heard repeatedly how important it is to get out of the house and exercise. Vancouver city councillor Lisa Dominato is one of the voices calling for more action when it comes to creating space outdoors where people can practice physical distancing. Guest: Lisa Dominato, Vancouver City Councillor Chapter 7: Around Vancouver, 250 EVO cars will be dedicated to frontline healthcare workers. Guest: Eric Hopkins, CEO of BCAA.
Rico Omarr Harris, known to the world of basketball and all who followed his career as simply “Rico,” was an extroverted, athletic, and one time world-renowned basketball prodigy. His energetic, entertaining skillset, followed by a courageous battle against addiction and apparent recovery, was cut short by an unexplainable, untraceable vanishing in October of 2014, leaving all who knew him, from college basketball fans in Los Angeles to the Harlem Globetrotters, grasping for answers in a sea of evidence that drowned us all in doubt. As a hope to provide more substantial reasoning built upon observable evidence and situational analysis, this is an examination of the disappearance of Rico Harris, and the mystery in Yolo County and the surrounding hills of Cache Creek...Original video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zc4FQhxNSpUSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/Top5sOffical)
On today's Woodford Show we begin discussing with former Cache Creek mayor John Ranta whether or not there are enough transportation options in the interior six months after Greyhound packed it in. Then NL News Director Shane Woodford is joined by ICBC expert Richard McCandless to discuss today's changes. We then turn our attention to a pair of weekend wildfires and concerns over the removal of land title records from Kamloops with Neskonlith First Nations Chief Judy Wilson. We finish the show putting the focus back on ICBC with former Premier Ujjal Dosanjh who is blasting the government of the day.
Greyhound is announcing an end to almost all of its service in Western Canada. What does this mean for the people up in areas of B.C. where transit and other means of transportation aren't as handy? Mayor John Ranta of Cache Creek tells us how his community feels.
Forest Fires Spreading across British Columbia and now threaten parts of Alberta When I wrote last week's fire focused episode, little did I know that my own community of Canmore would be smelly and smoky this week as fires continue to spread and the number of evacuees in British Columbia climbs. The hot dry weather is showing no signs of abating and over the past week, the number of people forced out of their homes and communities in British Columbia has swelled from 14,000 to more than 45,000 as of July 18, 2017. This makes it one of the largest mass evacuations in the history of the province. The previous record was an evacuation of 50,000 due to fires near Kelowna in 2003. Heat waves that year also caused massive fires across both Alberta and British Columbia. Over this past weekend, high winds caused a number of fires to rapidly expand in size and has subsequently resulted in more evacuations. In other areas, the fires around Williams Lake and 100 Mile House have stayed fairly stable over the past few days allowing firefighters to make some headway. Some people are being allowed to return to their communities, although many may return to find their homes have been destroyed. Members of the Ashcroft Indian Reserve and the community of Cache Creek are returning home after an 11-day absence. Residents of 100-Mile House may also be returning home soon. Province-wide, there are still 155 active fires burning and there is still no sign of significant rain on the horizon. Closer to the Alberta border, a fire in the Verdant Creek area of Kootenay National Park ignited last week. This fire puts flames within just 2.5 kilometres of Sunshine Village in Banff National Park. In just 24 hours it swelled in size by a factor of 10, growing from a few hundred hectares on Sunday to some 2,000 ha by Monday. The fire is considered to be out of control and crews are working in the Sunshine area to try to prevent the loss of any structures should the fire continue to spread eastward. Huge water pumps are also at the ready in order to keep buildings wet if the fire encroaches the resort area. As you can imagine, there is now a total fire ban throughout the mountain national parks. Kootenay National Park has also closed the Verdant Creek area all the way to the Simpson River in the south and Banff has closed Sunshine Meadows and Village, as well as access to the Egypt Lake area, Healy Pass, Citadel Pass, Whistling Valley and Pharaoh Pass. I would expect additional closures to occur as the conditions continue to evolve. Even in towns like Canmore and Banff, the mountains are barely visible and the air quality is dropping fast. Currently, the Verdant Creek fire is approximately 24 km from Banff and 31 km from Canmore. Environment Canada has issued an air quality warning for Banff, Canmore and Kananaskis warning that: "Due to the smoke, the AQHI (Air Quality Health Index) will likely reach 10, or high risk, in parts of Central and southern Alberta on Wednesday. There is some uncertainty as to where the thickest smoke will set up, but current indications are that the corridor of thickest smoke and poorest air quality will be between Hinton, Red Deer, and Edmonton." "Individuals may experience symptoms such as increased coughing, throat irritation, headaches or shortness of breath. Children, seniors, and those with cardiovascular or lung disease, such as asthma, are especially at risk." "In general, wearing a mask is not the best way to protect your health during a smoke event. In fact, masks may lead to a false sense of security, which may encourage increased physical activity and time spent outdoors, meaning increased exposure to smoke. They can also make breathing more difficult." The smoke is not only affecting communities in the Rockies, but it has spread as far west as Vancouver and as far east as Lloydminster, Saskatchewan. These smoke plumes can carry for hundreds of kilometres and as the fires continue to spread, we can expect air quality to suffer along with it. In the interior of B.C., near Williams Lake, the Air Quality Index was reportedly as high as 23, and that is on a scale of 1 to 10 with a 10+ reserved for very high-risk air quality. Today should see some of the winds shifting to send more wind westward to the coast, but the eastern slopes are still completely smoked in. Also in last week's episode, I talked about the need to ramp up our use of prescribed burns as we see summer weather regimes shift with the shifting of climate norms. As summers see more and more prolonged droughts, separated by severe storms, lightning caused fires may become far more prevalent. To complicate matters, we have had years of fire suppression leaving many of our western forests susceptible to large fires. Even places like British Columbia's Interior Rainforest, some of which may not have burned for a millennium or more, are susceptible to large fires if their normal weather regiments continue to change. The interior rainforest is unique on the planet as more than 97% of all rainforests occur in coastal areas. However, while it is considered a rainforest, it doesn't get enough rain to truly qualify. What it does get is huge accumulations of snow. The slow melting of this snow releases vast amounts of moisture and essentially allows it to simulate a true rainforest. Should that change, these forests could also burn. With changing climates we need to look at fire in a very different way. After my comments last week, I came across a CBC News article that interviews a fire ecologist by the name of Robert Gray, of R.W. Gray Consulting. Gray consults with communities to help them reduce their overall fire risk and he echoes my previous comments. He recommends a minimum of doubling the current number of prescribed burns - especially if we see a continuation of the hot summer drought conditions that are becoming more common in the mountain west. The extreme heat this summer created tinder that was ignited by thousands of dry lightning strikes. According to David Phillips, senior climatologist with Environment and Climate Change Canada, the number of lightning strikes increases by 15% for every additional degree of warming. To complicate things further, years of mountain pine beetle infestations have left tens of thousands of standing dead trees which are extremely flammable. While the potential for large, catastrophic fires has been building over the past decade, the incidence of prescribed burns has dropped in British Columbia from 150-200,000 hectares in the 1980s to just 5,000 in the past few years. Prescribed burns are a hassle. They're smoky and smelly, and tourists hate them, but they are still a way better option than ignoring the problem and waiting for conflagrations to ignite. For generations, first nations used prescribed fires in order to improve wildlife habitat. We need to recognize that these forests are going to burn, there is nothing we can do to prevent it. Robert Gray is very clear that there is no way to avoid smoke in a prescribed burn, but as he puts it: "There is no 'no smoke' option…How do you want your smoke — wild or controlled?" Recent studies have also shown that by having smaller, more controlled burns, the amount of smoke is reduced as are the amount of unhealthy particulates that are floating through the air at the moment. Let's use this as a wake-up call to begin looking at our forests and our climate as a pair. As the climate warms, the fires burn. Let's ramp our prescribed burn schedules up to help keep the mountain west a little safer. For some areas of B.C., fire breaks are being created the hard way at the moment. Let's try to make the next decade one of adaptation to new fire realities. Bear 148 Gets a Reprieve In episode 34, I talked about the challenges that the Provincial conservations officers seem to be having when dealing with Grizzly 148, the daughter of Banff's beloved Bear 64. If you'd like to listen to the story, check it out at www.mountainnaturepodcast.com/ep034. After an incident in the Peaks of Grassi area where 148 bluff charged a man with a stroller and two dogs, conservation officers live-trapped her and relocated her back to her home turf in Banff. They also made it clear that they planned to euthanize her should a similar incident occur in the future. This was despite the fact that a bluff charge is simply a way of telling an intruder that she is in charge. Bluff charges are especially common when people bring dogs into bear country as dogs are easily perceived as a threat by bears. She was in a designated primary wildlife corridor doing exactly what she was supposed to be doing. The people were in her turf, not the other way around. As we encroach more and more on wilderness corridors, we can only expect to see more and more incidents like this one. After the relocation, a petition was started that attracted more than 4,000 signatures from people that did not want to see 148 killed for no good management reason. Even the individual that was involved in the bluff charge encounter supports the right of 148 to use that particular corridor. She is just at the age where she may have mated for the first time and female bears are critical to the stability of the local bear population. After this huge public outcry, conservation officers have softened their stance on 148. Alberta officials are now talking about a partnership with Banff Park Wardens when dealing with bears like 148 when she leaves the boundaries of the park and wanders into Provincial lands. Despite this, Conservation Officer Jay Honeyman did reiterate that "bears cannot be within the developed footprint of the Town of Canmore", despite the fact that the designated corridors force them to be within this supposed no-go zone. In a recent article in the Rocky Mountain Outlook Honeyman was quoted: “When that bear comes out we’re trying to do what we can to enable her to live on the landscape without causing public safety concerns,” Honeyman said. “Nobody is taking this lightly. Nobody, more so people who work with wildlife, want to harm or euthanize wildlife … but we can’t and won’t ignore public safety.” This is particularly important as the area she was spending time is an area where buffaloberries are now ripening. Many more bears will be attracted to the lower Bow Valley over the next several weeks as these berries ripen. If you don't know how to recognize this plant, then stop right now and watch this safety video that I've put together to help you understand the critical importance of buffaloberries. Buffaloberries mean bears and so over the next 6-8 weeks, or until the first frost of the season, bears will descend to the valley bottom to feast on these critical berries. Don't walk along the town trails without bear spray on your belt - especially in the areas around Quarry Lake and the Peaks of Grassi primary wildlife corridors. Things are only going to get tougher for bears in the Canmore/Quarry Lake area as the Town of Canmore pushes forward with its proposed mountain bike park in the Quarry Lake area. Mayor John Borrowman supports this ecological madness, continually claiming that the area is NOT a habitat patch and therefore not of importance to wildlife. This is something that I have a lot of background in. I wrote two books on mountain biking, including Mountain Bike! The Canadian Rockies and Mountain Bike! Southwestern British Columbia. I also designed the original route for the famous Trans Rockies Challenge that ran from Fernie British Columbia to Canmore. It was called the "Toughest Race in the World" by both Mountain Bike and Bike magazines. I've spent the past 30 years out on foot and pedal and, as a biologist, I'm always working to educate people on bear safety. I understand the Mayor saying that there are already too many pirate trails that go through wildlife corridors and they should be dismantled. Wildlife corridors should be signed and marked off limits. This would have to be tempered by the reality that the corridors west of the Peaks of Grassi are already mostly useless - especially if we punish bears for using them. Areas adjacent to the corridors are NOT places to put intensive development. If a bear is using the corridor and feels crowded, it will move into adjacent habitats. New trails will be used by bears if they are perceived to be quieter than the wildlife corridor due to less human use. Building trails does NOT mean that bears will not use them, just ask the Nordic Centre. I would also argue that the off-leash park should also be moved to an area not adjacent to critical habitat - especially since the town does NOT enforce illegal off-leash use outside of the dog park. It's time for this community to make a choice. Do we stand with wildlife, or do we stand with development? Do we want a vibrant community surrounded by intact ecosystems or do we want Disney? If you want the latter, hang out in Silver Tip as they are planning a wildlife apocalypse. Please join with me in opposing this bike park, regardless of the faulty reasoning that the mayor presents to share its ecological basis. His logic is false and his support of this development indicates that maybe it's time for a change at the helm. Next up…no national bird for Canada No National Bird for Canada Way back in Episode 14, recorded in November of last year, I talked about an effort to get the government of Canada to designate a national bird. If you'd like to hear more about the story, check out the full episode at www.mountainnaturepodcast.com/ep014. When I first began writing this story, I was unaware that Canada DIDN'T already have a national bird. After all, we had a national animal, a national tree and even a national horse - but alas, no bird. In 2016, the Royal Canadian Geographic Society sought to put an end to this obvious oversight by doing a national poll to see what bird should win the right to be Canada's feathered flagbearer. There were many contenders. People were invited to submit their suggestions for the best avian representatives and these were compiled to create a feathered list of frontrunners for a national vote. The ballot contained a list of birds that would make an Canuck proud. They included the black-capped chickadee, the Canada goose, the snowy owl, the loon and the Gray (or Canada) Jay. There were ardent avian allies of all the birds submitted. Any Canadian that has set up a winter bird feeder knows the black-capped chickadee with its habit of chirping its name as it collects sunflower seeds. It is a steadfast Canadian and refuses to leave in even the harshest of winters. They are friendly, and faithful to feeders from coast to coast. The Canada goose is another bird known to all. However it has, a dark side as one of very few waterfowl that do most of their feeding on land. This leads them to gather on golf courses and public parks where they have become a nuisance, so their votes suffered accordingly. The snowy owl seemed like a good options, but it is only known to a few dedicated birders and as a result, never garnered the numbers needed for a win. Now the loon. That was one that I thought would be a shoe in. Most of its worldly breeding range is in Canada and its call has become symbolic with the northern wilderness. Few Canadians don't recognize the haunting call of the loon and it has made many a camping trip memorable as campers try to imitate the call with their hands cupped tightly. The Gray (or Canada) Jay has been selected as Canada's candidate for a National Bird The rightful winner was the Gray jay. It's a bird with many names, gray jay, Canada jay, camp robber, whiskey jack, Perisorius canadensis…take your pick. It's an ever present companion to most outings in the wilds of Canada. Gray jays will quietly stalk your forays and appear just when the sandwiches are ready to be eaten. Turn your back on them and you may catch your corned beef flying off into the spruce and pine forest. I was an early advocate of the loon, but I la ter sang the praises of the gray jay and it ended up taking the title of the bird most likely to become Canada's National Bird. Alas, this hope all came crashing down earlier this month when the federal government sent a terse message that they were not considering any additional national symbols at this time. Is that the end of it? I hope not. Perhaps a flock of crafty camp robbers will roost on Parliament Hill and carry off politicians lunches until they cry "uncle" and demand the liberals move forward with this feathered designation. And with that said, it's time to wrap this episode up. If you would like to explore the Canadian Rockies, Ward Cameron Enterprises is your one-stop shop for step-on and hiking guides, nature workshops and keynote presentations. We will make sure that your next mountain experience is one to remember. And with that said, the valley is smoky, so I'm hanging out with the ashes. Talk to you next week.
Forest Fires in B.C. Recent forest fires in British Columbia have once again raised the horror of forest fires to the top of the news feeds. The hot dry weather that has been a constant companion for the past few weeks has allowed the number of fires to escalate in the interior of British Columbia and has sky watchers in Alberta thankful for the good soaking we finally received after some record hot temps. B.C. has issued a state of Emergency due to the hundreds of forest fires and thousands of homes evacuated. This gives the province additional authority in times of emergency. The last time a province wide state of emergency was issued was in 2,003 which was another extreme year for fires. As of July 8, there were still 9 major fires burning out of control in the province. They were located throughout the dry interior and Caribou regions. Thousands had been evacuated with little time to grab personal belongings, or deal with animals and livestock. Numerous fires forced evacuations of the airport near Williams Lake. Firefighters are also arriving from numerous other provinces, police are moving inland from Vancouver and the military has been placed on standby to assist where possible. The Canadian Red Cross has also begun to accept donations to provide assistance to those affected by the fires and evacuations. They are also helping to supply bedding and cots to people displaced by the flames. In one day, on July 7, 142 new fires broke out across B.C. bringing the total to 182. By Monday, the number of fires had grown to 225. Some of the largest fires are burning near Princeton and Ashcroft. The Princeton fire swelled by a factor of 7 in just a few days. As of Saturday, July 8, it was engulfing some 1,500 hectares. The Ashcroft fire is more than 4,000 hectares in size. Cache Creek was also evacuated as a result of this fire. As the fire moved through Cache Creek, it burned two airport hangers and 30 homes in a Boston Flats trailer park. It also burned through the Ashcroft Indian Reserve. A 3,200 ha fire near 100 Mile House forced evacuation of the entire town on Sunday, July 10. To complicate matters, they had to drive through the night to make their way to Prince George as Kamloops was already inundated with people that had been displaced by other fires. The evacuation of 100 Mile House brought the number of evacuees in British Columbia to more than 14,000. For firefighters, it seems that every tiny bit of progress on one fire is countered by new outbreaks, changes in the winds or fires closing in on new communities. Williams Lake, a town of 10,500 now has fires closing in on three sides with a total of 5 fires burning in the area. Alberta fire crews are heading to B.C. to help with the firestorm and thankfully, many areas in Alberta got a good dousing of rain today. This should help reduce our hazard level and free up more firefighters to travel west. In an outpouring of generosity, Fort McMurry has reached out to help British Columbians. After enduring devastating fires last summer, the community is sending trailers full of bottled water, toiletries, medical supplies, food and fuel to Kamloops and Prince George. This time last summer, they were the people in desperate need of assistance. Fort Mac lost thousands of homes and resulted in one of the largest evacuations in Canadian history. The fire was so massive and unpredictable that it was dubbed "the beast". No matter what fire crews did, the fire seemed to thwart their efforts. Youtube videos showing the evacuation are absolutely terrifying as some 60,000 people tried to head out of town on Highway 63, only single highway leading into and out of fort McMurray. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ieTQvIdG-Vo Canadians take care of each other. The Red Cross is now taking donations to provide relief to displaced families in British Columbia. To donate you can simply text 'FIRES' to 45678 and you'll make a $10 donation to the Red Cross BC Fires Appeal. Cash is always the best way to donate. Goods are much more difficult to manage and involve larger logistic challenges. If you want to do more, hold a fundraiser and donate the proceeds to the Red Cross or another organization assisting in the locally affected areas. Please focus on cash as local agencies are already overwhelmed and unable to accept donations of clothing and toys. If you need to donate goods, contact local agencies and find out what they need before collecting materials and assuming there will be facilities and personnel to store and distribute it. Also, like Fort McMurray, the residents of affected areas will need help long after the flames have subsided. With changing climates, large fires are likely to become more explosive AND more prevalent. Even here in Alberta, while we are seeing more total moisture over the course of the year, we are seeing it in fewer, more extreme storms. Just today we ended a dry heatwave with a huge thunderstorm that produced prodigious amounts of precipitation. For days, we have been in a similar situation to our neighbours in B.C. but we dodged the bullet with the large downpouring of rain. As we look to the future, we also have to look at the changing climate realities. Longer droughts mean larger fires. Prescribed burns reduce the fuel available to potential fires, but they also provide natural fire breaks in the case of major fire seasons like this year, and 2003 which saw fires burning extensively through the Rockies. That summer huge fires burned around the Blairmore area in the Crowsnest Pass as well as a huge area of Kootenay National Park. At its peak, three fires converged near Vermillion Pass in Kootenay National Park and made a run for the Alberta border and the adjacent Bow Valley. It took heroic efforts by fire fighters to keep that fire from sweeping towards communities like Banff. It's time to look at stepping up our programs of prescribed burns to keep up with the changing realities of climate change. This summer, the mountain parks are planning a number of burns. There are numerous reasons for planning prescribed fires. They include improvement of wildlife or plant habitat, reduction of disease or invasive species, and most importantly at this time, they provide firebreaks and fuel reduction. Ecologically fire is essential to most mountain landscapes. If we look beyond the immediate danger, the role of forest fires on ecosystems is a key process that helps drive the ecology of the mountain west. While fire near communities is both inevitable and destructive, that's where fuel reduction and prescribed burns can help provide effective barriers to conflagrations like the current ones being experienced. Outside of communities, fire is a critical part of mountain ecological processes. In nature, any time there is a regular and inevitable disturbance, nature will learn to take advantage of it. That's why the two landscapes in the Rockies that we, as humans, see devastation…forest fire sites and avalanche slopes, nature sees opportunity. They are too of the most productive habitats in the mountain west. If we look at our local trees, many are particular fire adapted. Douglas-fir trees sport thick cork layers that allow them to survive all but the largest fires. Core samples from large Douglas-firs help fire ecologists to determine local fire histories often spanning centuries. Trembling aspen trees are a truly unique plant. One tree will grow from a seed. It will then send out roots horizontally just below the surface. Periodically they will emerge as new shoots or suckers. That's why if you have an aspen in your yard, every time you cut the lawn, you're cutting down newly sprouted suckers that will quickly take over your property if you don't stay on top of them. Clonal groves of aspen can be enormous, spanning hundreds of hectares, all representing a single organism, joined by a common root system. They are also some of the oldest living things. Although individual stems are not particularly long lived, the root systems can live for tens of thousands of years. One particular grove in Utah, in the Fishlake National Forest, is estimated to be some 80,000 years old…yowza. A single organism has been alive since long before humans made their way to the new world. Aspen groves living today could have witnessed the extinctions of the woolly mammoth. They could have witnessed the disappearance of the Neanderthal in Europe where their relatives also exhibit the same longevity. When a fire comes through, the shoots are killed, but the roots survive. Before long, they begin to send up new shoots to greet the new firescape. This brings us to the lodgepole pine. This common low elevation pine tree can't even reproduce on a large scale without the help of fire. Its cones are sealed with a hard wax that will only melt when the temperature reaches approximately 45 C. In this area, that means fire. It just doesn't get that hot…at least not yet. They've actually taken this adaptation to fire one step further. They have perfected something that most gardeners would kill for, they're a self-pruner. Any branch that doesn't get enough sunlight, they shut off the power and let that branch die. That does two things. It lets them operate more efficiently in a harsh climate, much like a lot of corporations these days…killing off the unprofitable branches. But it does one other thing; how much do you think it will take to light those dry, dead branches on fire? Not much. In a way, they've found a way to attract fire, and through death comes life, comes a new generation of lodgepole pines. This is a good strategy for lodgepole pines, and in the east, jack pines, because they can't live in any shade at all. Not even the shade of another lodgepole pine. If a fire doesn't shake things up every 90 to 130 years, eventually the shade tolerant white spruce will shade them out and they'll disappear. About this time, people say, "but what about the animals…we've all seen Bambi". In reality, Bambi was not very realistic. Very few animals die in forest fires. A natural fire is not like a tsunami of death. It moves more like a tornado. It leaves almost as much unburnt as it burns. To fly over a natural fire, you will see something that looks like a patchwork quilt of burned and unburned areas. It moves much more like a tornado than a wave of destruction. It is a very chaotic movement. If you watch coverage from the Fort McMuray fires of 2016, you're constantly struck by the fact that while communities were devastated, individual homes somehow survived in the middle of the conflagration. Animals take advantage of this pathwork character and pick their way between the burned and unburned areas to stay away from the flames. However, imagine life as a common animal, a red squirrel. Now imagine spending your life chewing open the rock hard cones of the lodgepole pine, trying to get at the few seeds that are inside; it's a whole lot of work for a few seeds. But suddenly, as those flames flicker out, for as far as the eye can see, the ground is covered with millions upon millions of juicy, tasty, succulent, chewy seeds. They'll move back into that fire site as fast as their little legs can carry them, and hot on their tails will be every other seed eating bird and animal, and they'll have the biggest feeding frenzy they'll ever have in their lives…but even at their best, they can't eat all those seeds. At the same time, before the trees even stop smoldering, hundreds of large black beetles will descend on the scene. These are the white-spotted sawyer beetle. They're several centimetres in length and then they have antennae that are as long as their body. I don't care how tough you are, if you look at your shoulder and see one of these beetles, you scream like a school girl. These are wood boring beetles and they lay their eggs in the newly burned wood. Well beetles don't arrive in a vacuum. Hot on their trail will be an in migration of woodpeckers. The woodpecker population can increase by 500% following a forest fire as the woodpeckers are attracted to the insects that are attracted to the dead wood. Well, what do woodpeckers do to trees? They bore holes in them. Those holes are what many of our native songbirds need to nest and so the songbird population also increases after a forest fire. On the ground, for the first time in perhaps a hundred years, sunlight bakes the forest floor. This will spur an explosion of wildflowers, followed by a larger explosion of new shrubs and trees. This new growth is the food the animals most people visiting the mountains are here to see. The word moose, is an Algonkian native term that literally translates to 'twig eater'. They need the new twigs, the new growth that comes in after a forest fire. In Montana, they did a study of grizzly bears and they found that of the foods important to grizzlies, almost all were more common in areas that regularly had fire, which simply means more bears in areas that regularly burn. This includes buffaloberries which represent the single most important food to black and grizzly bears in the Rockies. They have just ripened locally and they line most low elevation trails and roads. Expect closures as bears are attracted to these critical foods. An adult grizzly can eat the equivalent of 75 Big Macs a day for the next 6 weeks. Fire makes fat bears. Fire is as much a part of our mountain landscape as bears, berries, glaciers and global warming. As communities, they are our greatest fear and our hearts go out to our British Columbia brothers and sisters. However in the larger ecosystem they are critical. As we look towards a future of changing climatic norms, we need to carefully consider the role fire will play in this changing landscape. Prescribed burns can allow fuel to burn on our schedule rather than that of the fickle finger of fate. For the past 30 years the mountain west has been slowly ramping up the use of prescribed fires in order to improve habitat, reduce the rate that invasive species can move and in this story, most importantly, reduce the likelihood of large fires sweeping through our communities. We really need to support our B.C. neighbours as fire terrorizes their communities at the moment. They will need our help for some time to come. At the same time, we need to also realize that fire is an integral part of our landscape. We can't stop it without compromising the ecology that has evolved over millions of years around fire created ecosystems.
On October 9th, 2014, 37 year old Rico Harris began a 1,000 drive from Alhambra, California to Seattle, Washington. Rico was moving in with his Fiancee and it was a major step in a new life away from the demons of his past. In the early morning hours, Rico sent a last text message and mysteriously vanished. Two days later his car was found in the Lower Site parking lot of Cache Creek in Yolo County California. The investigation to discover what happened to Rico will uncover multiple pieces of evidence showing Rico's presence in the area, and possibly his disoriented state of mind but opinions and theories will fall on opposite sides, with investigators believing one way, and Rico's family firmly believing the other. Join host Steven Pacheco as he explores this baffling disappearance.For more information please visit:https://www.trace-evidence.comhttps://www.patreon.com/traceevidence Social Media:https://twitter.com/TraceEvPodhttps://www.instagram.com/traceevidencepod/https://www.facebook.com/groups/traceevidencepodMusic Courtesy of: "Lost Time" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/Sources: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rico_Harris | https://www.latimes.com/sports/sportsnow/la-sp-missing-basketball-player-20190316-story.html | https://q13fox.com/2014/10/21/seattle-girlfriend-of-missing-former-harlem-globetrotter-confident-he-will-come-home/ | https://www.nbcnews.com/feature/missing-in-america/four-years-dateline-s-missing-america-90-still-missing-n826516 | https://www.imdb.com/title/tt5336204/
Lecture 7 (lecture 6 was not recorded): Landscape architect Sally Barrett discusses this Yolo County non-profit agency.