Podcasts about dec jan

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Best podcasts about dec jan

Latest podcast episodes about dec jan

The Orvis Hunting and Shooting Podcast
In Memoriam - Leigh H. Perkins, Sr.

The Orvis Hunting and Shooting Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2021 24:21


In reflecting on the passing of Leigh H. Perkins, Sr., Reid shares a story he wrote about the legacy of the Perkins family, and the history of Orvis under their ownership. This story, first published in Covey Rise Magazine, Dec/Jan 2017 was the result of several interviews and conversations with three generations of Perkins family members. It describes their genuine love of adventure, dogs, outdoor pursuits, and family, and discusses the legacy of which LHP was justifiably proud.

AudioFile
AUDIOFILE Magazine #2108 Dec/Jan #9, 02/18/21

AudioFile

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2021 27:24


Feature: The Best of Audiobooks and narrators of 2020 - Romance: Reviews: Romance; Feature: Learning by Ear

AudioFile
AUDIOFILE Magazine #2107 Dec/Jan #8, 02/11/21

AudioFile

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2021 28:02


Feature: Audiobooks and Literacy: For Science minded kids; Feature: The Best of list - Young Adult Listening; Reviews: Young Adult Listening

DCL Podcast
183 Cruising to the Galapagos Islands

DCL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2021 52:08


Listener Jen joins us again this week to discuss her family’s once in a life time trip to the Galapagos Islands this past Dec/Jan. Their trip was a 7 day cruise to the North and Western part of the Galapagos Islands, and was booked through Ecoventura. Jen and her family have travelled with Adventures by […]

AudioFile
AUDIOFILE Magazine #2106 Dec/Jan #7, 02/04/21

AudioFile

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2021 28:14


Feature: The Best of list - Children and Family Listening; Narrator Interview:Adam Lazarre Smith; Reviews: Children and Family Listening; Reviews: Children and Family Listening

AudioFile
AUDIOFILE Magazine #2104 Dec/Jan Week #5, 01/21/21

AudioFile

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2021 27:15


Feature: The Best of Audiobooks and narrators of 2020-Mystery/Suspense; Narrator Interview: Behind the Mic with Robert Bathhurst; Reviews: Mystery/Suspense

AudioFile
AUDIOFILE Magazine #2103 Dec/Jan #4, 01/14/21

AudioFile

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2021 27:34


Feature: Listening With; Feature: The Best of Audiobooks and narrators of 2020 -Memoir; Reviews: Memoir

A Heavy Metal Podcast - The Mighty Decibel
DOOM METAL NEW RELEASES - Dec/Jan 2021

A Heavy Metal Podcast - The Mighty Decibel

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2021 43:30


It's Monday, so it's time for our NEW RELEASE MONDAYS podcast series. This edition we're focusing on Doom Metal where we spotlight new and upcoming releases in doom metal/rock, including stoner of course. This episode we look at December 2020 and January 2021 releases. We're all doomed! (0:00) MISS LAVA - Doom Machine (Samll Stone) https://smallstone.bandcamp.com/album/doom-machine (3:46) DAR STELLABOTTA - True Warrior https://darstellabotta.bandcamp.com/ (8:32) HAUNTED CENOTAPH - Abysal Menace https://hauntedcenotaph-pl.bandcamp.com/ (9:36) MONSTROID - Burnt Sky https://monstroidfuzz.bandcamp.com/releases (13:10) EVANGELIST - Ad Mortem Festinamus (Nine Records) https://evangelistdoom.bandcamp.com/ (19:54) STONE LOTUS - Convene In Silence https://stonelotus.bandcamp.com/ (23:43) THREE EYES LEFT - Legione https://threeeyesleft.bandcamp.com/ (29:01) CARDINAL WYRM - Devotionals https://cardinalwyrm.bandcamp.com/ (34:02) BIRDS OF NAZCA - Birds Of Nazca https://birdsofnazca.bandcamp.com/ (37:18) YETI - The Pact https://yetifinland.bandcamp.com/album/the-pact (40:35) PARASITE CASTE - Arid and Archaic https://parasitecaste.bandcamp.com/album/arid-and-archaic

AudioFile
AUDIOFILE Magazine #2102 Dec/Jan Week #3, 01/07/21

AudioFile

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2021 28:03


Feature: Editors’ Picks; Feature: The Best of Audiobooks and narrators of 2020 - History/Biography; Reviews: History/Biography

The Travis Jones Show
Grow by 5+ clients weekly through Dec & Jan

The Travis Jones Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2020 44:59


Often in December businesses around the world take their foot off the gas and slow down. I see it all the time with business owners telling me that people don’t want to sign up to a gym in December. In this podcast we tell you what to market, how to market and what to do to increase your business by 5-9 clients every week over Dec and Jan.

Food Safety Matters
Ep. 78. Jespersen, Tanner, and Coole: Sustaining Food Safety Culture

Food Safety Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2020 68:52


Lone Jespersen is the principal at Cultivate, an organization dedicated to helping food manufacturers globally make safe, great-tasting food through cultural effectiveness. Lone has significant experience with food manufacturing, having previously spent 11 years with Maple Leaf Foods. Following the tragic event in 2008 when Maple Leaf products claimed 23 Canadian lives, Lone led the execution of Maple Leaf's food strategy and its operations learning strategy. She holds a master's degree in mechanical engineering from Syd Dansk University (Denmark), and an M.Sc. and Ph.D. in food science from the University of Guelph (Canada).   Marie Tanner joined the Dairy Farmers of America in 2017. She is currently the senior vice president of food safety and quality. Prior to that, Marie was the global chief food safety and quality, health, safety, and environment management at Kerry. Before Kerry, Marie held various quality leadership roles at PepsiCo and Godiva (Ulker). Marie holds an M.Sc. in food science from Rutgers University. She formally served on the board of SSAFE, a global nonprofit working to integrate food safety, animal health, and plant health across food supply chains.  Neil Coole is the director of food and retail supply chain at BSI Americas. In 2015, Neil joined BRC Global Standards to head up their global key account strategy, engaging key industry brand owners, manufacturers, and retailers to understand their requirements from a risk solutions perspective. He was the subject matter expert on BRC Global Standards' new strategy on food safety and quality culture excellence, working with manufacturers on how to embed a culture of food safety and training food manufacturers, brand owners, and suppliers on the important topic of food safety and quality culture excellence.  In this episode of Food Safety Matters, we speak to the panel [11:46] about: Organizational culture and how it influences food safety How a company's culture is created from the top down  How food safety culture can and should give an organization a competitive edge COVID's impact on food safety culture Why the idea of "implementing" a food safety culture is problematic Some wrong ways to go about creating change within an organization's culture Diversity and inclusion, and how they play a role in changing a company's culture How to begin undoing a history of complacency within a company's current culture Tips for improving and sustaining a positive culture Food Safety Culture Articles  Supply Chain and Food Safety Culture - Feb/March 2017  The Supply Chain and Food Safety Culture: Primary Production - April/May 2017  The Supply Chain and Food Safety Culture: Distribution - June/July 2017  The Supply Chain and Food Safety Culture: Processing - Aug/Sep 2017   The Supply Chain and Food Safety Culture: Foodservice - Oct/Nov 2017   The Supply Chain and Food Safety Culture: Retail - Dec/Jan 2018  Supply Chain and Food Safety Culture: Sector Leaders Sharing Their Challenges and Recommended Practices - Feb/March 2018 Resources Cultivate Maturity Model BSI - Cultivate Food Safety Culture Postcard  BSI - COVID-19 Safe Working Guidelines  BSI - Workplace Hygiene Solutions Brochure  BSI - Workplace Hygiene Solutions Video BSI - UK's National Standards Body - COVID-19 Response  News Mentioned in This Episode EU's Draft Amendment of Hygiene Legislation Includes Focus on Food Safety Culture [2:07] - see official draft regulation document  FDA Announces the Voluntary Phase-Out of by Industry of Certain PFAS Used in Food Packaging [3:46] | The Growing Challenge of Safe Water Use for Food Processing Operations UMASS Food Scientist Secures Grant to Develop New Method for Cleaning Peanut Butter Off Food Processing Equipment [7:42]  Keep Up with Food Safety Magazine Follow Us on Twitter @FoodSafetyMag and on Facebook  Subscribe to our magazine and our biweekly eNewsletter We Want to Hear From You! Please share your comments, questions, and suggestions. Tell us about yourself—we'd love to hear about your food safety challenges and successes. We want to get to know you! Here are a few ways to be in touch with us. Email us at podcast@foodsafetymagazine.com Record a voice memo on your phone and email it to us at podcast@foodsafetymagazine.com

Jihočeši
Vědec Jan Kopecký ve volném čase fotografuje zvířata, převléká se přitom za hejkala

Jihočeši

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2020 24:43


Viry a nákazami, které postihují především zvířata, se celý život zabývá profesor Jan Kopecký. O imunologii přednáší na Přírodovědecké fakultě Jihočeské univerzity v Českých Budějovicích, ve vědecké práci se věnuje především klíšťatům.

AudioFile
AUDIOFILE Magazine #2007 Dec/Jan 2020 #9, 02/13/20

AudioFile

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2020 28:04


Reviews: Fiction; Reviews: Mystery and Suspense; Reviews: Biography/Memoir

AudioFile
AUDIOFILE Magazine Dec/Jan #8 02/06/20

AudioFile

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2020 28:06


In the Studio: The Audiobook Musical, Puss in Boots; Reviews: Reviews: Full Cast Audio for Kids; Reviews: Children and Family Listening

AudioFile
AUDIOFILE Magazine Dec/Jan #7, 01/30/20

AudioFile

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2020 28:14


Special: Remembering Cokie Roberts; Feature: Learning by Ear; Reviews: Contemporary Culture

AudioFile
AUDIOFILE Magazine Dec/Jan #6, 01/23/20

AudioFile

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2020 28:07


Listening With Artist Owen Gildersleeve; Reviews: YA Listening

The Daily Gardener
January 15, 2020 Scent in the Winter Garden, Top British Garden Shows, William Starling Sullivant, Nathaniel Lord Britton, Frances Benjamin Johnston, Sarah Plummer lemon, Cultivating Delight by Diane Ackerman, Buffalo Plaid Garden Apron, and The British M

The Daily Gardener

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2020 28:40


Today we celebrate a bryologist who Asa Gray called, "a noble fellow" and the botanist who, along with his wife, helped found the New York Botanic Garden in the Bronx. We'll learn about one of the first and most prolific professional female garden photographers and the female botanist with a mountain named in her honor. Today’s Unearthed Words feature poetry that's all about using our imagination and memory when it comes to our gardens in the dead of winter. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book that helps us appreciate our garden through our senses during all four seasons. I'll talk about a garden item that is cute and functional and can be used outside of the garden as well, and then we’ll wrap things up with the anniversary of the opening of the museum that was started with the estate of the botanist Sir Hans Sloane. But first, let's catch up on a few recent events.   Subscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart   Curated Articles Gardening with Dave Allan: Scent in the winter garden | HeraldScotland Here are some great suggestions from Dave Allan about sweetly scented flowering shrubs for your Winter Garden: Take the small cream flowers of shrubby Lonicera fragrantissima(Common Name: sweet breath of spring): They suffuse the air with compelling fragrance. You know they’re frustratingly close but sometimes must act as a sniffer dog to track them down, hidden in a tangle of leaf-stripped twigs. I can’t see beyond Viburnum bodnantense ‘Dawn.’It’s always a joy to have a whiff every time I pass by on the way up to the duck run. A flush of little buds readily replaces any that have been blasted brown by frost and snow. Viburnum farreri and V. tinus also faithfully flower from November to February. I’m thinking of shrubs like Mahonia japonica and M. x media (Common Name: Oregon grape-holly). These evergreens do boast highly scented sprays of the tiniest yellow buttons, so don’t banish them to the gloomiest corner just because they’re tough woodland edge plants. Why not plant them where you’ll actually see them?   6 must-visit garden shows for 2020 From House Beautiful (ww.housebeautiful.com) | @hb: “What are the best British garden shows to visit in 2020? From the prestigious Chelsea Flower Show to fringe events like Seedy Sunday, these gardening events are perfect for the green-fingered horticultural lover, regardless of whether you’re a budding beginner or a seasoned pro.”   Now, if you'd like to check out these curated articles for yourself, you're in luck, because I share all of it with the Listener Community in the Free Facebook Group - The Daily Gardener Community. There’s no need to take notes or search for links - the next time you're on Facebook, search for Daily Gardener Community and request to join. I'd love to meet you in the group.   Important Events 1803Today is the birthday of William Starling Sullivant. Sullivant was born to the founding family of Franklinton, Ohio. His father, Lucas, was a surveyor and had named the town in honor of the recently deceased Benjamin Franklin. The settlement would become Columbus. In 1823, William Sullivant graduated from Yale College. His father would die in August of that same year. Sullivant took over his father's surveying business, and at the age of thirty, he began to study and catalog the plant life in Central Ohio. In 1840, Sullivant published his flora, and then he started to hone in on his calling: mosses. Bryology is the study of mosses. The root, bryōs, is a Greek verb meaning to swell. It's the etymology of the word embryo. Bryology will be easier to remember if you think of the ability of moss to swell as it takes on water. As a distinguished bryologist, Sullivant not only studied and cataloged various mosses from across the United States, but also from as far away as Central America, South America, and from various islands in the Pacific Ocean. Mosses suited Sullivant's strengths, requiring patience and close observation, scrupulous accuracy, and discrimination. His first work, Musci Alleghanienses, was: "exquisitely prepared and mounted, and with letterpress of great perfection; ... It was not put on sale, but fifty copies were distributed with a free hand among bryologists and others who would appreciate it." In 1864, Sullivant published his magnum opus, Icones Muscorum. With 129 truly excellent illustrations and descriptions of the mosses indigenous to eastern North America, Icones Muscorum fixed Sulivant's reputation as the pre-eminent American bryologist of his time. In 1873, Sullivant contracted pneumonia - ironically, an illness where your lungs fill or swell with fluid - and he died on April 30, 1873. During the last four decades of his life, Sullivant exchanged letters with Asa Gray. It's no wonder, then, that he left his herbarium of some 18,000 moss specimens to Gray's beloved Harvard University. When Sullivant was still living, Gray summoned his curator at Cambridge, Leo Lesquereux, (pronounced "le crew"), to help Sullivant, he wrote to his friend and botanist John Torrey: "They will do up bryology at a great rate. Lesquereux says that the collection and library of Sullivant in muscology are Magnifique, superb, and the best he ever saw.'" On December 6, 1857, Gray wrote to Hooker, "A noble fellow is [William Starling] Sullivant, and deserves all you say of him and his works. The more you get to know of him, the better you will like him." In 1877, four years after Sullivant's death, Asa Gray wrote to Charles Darwin. Gray shared that Sullivant was his "dear old friend" and that, "[Sullivant] did for muscology in this country more than one man is likely ever to do again." The Sullivant Moss Society, which became the American Bryological and Lichenological Society, was founded in 1898 and was named for William Starling Sullivant.   1859Today is the birthday of the American botanist and taxonomist Nathaniel Lord Britton. Britton married the famous bryologist Elizabeth Gertrude Knight. Together, they used Kew Gardens in London as their inspiration for the New York Botanical Garden. An obituary of Britton, written by the botanist Henry Rusby shared this charming anecdote - an exchange that happened some few years back between Nathaniel and Henry: "Attracted one day, by the beauty of some drawings that lay before him, I inquired as to their source. When told that he, himself, was the artist, I asked in astonishment, 'Can you draw like that?' 'Of course,' he said. 'What you suppose I did all that hard work in the drawing class for?'"   1864Today is the birthday of Frances Benjamin Johnston - who always went by Fannie. Fanny was a photographer, and she took the portraits of many famous people during her career. Some of her famous subjects included Mark Twain, Susan B Anthony, Booker T. Washington, and Teddy Roosevelt. In 1897 the magazine Ladies Home Journal featured in an article that was written by Fanny called "What a Woman Can Do with a Camera." But gardeners should also know the name Frances Benjamin Johnston because Fannie also took incredible photos of gardens - public and private - during the early to mid part of the 1900s. Her garden photography of the elite was used in magazines and periodicals like House Beautiful and Country Life. And Fannie went around the country using lantern slides of gardens as visual aids for her lectures on topics like "The Orchids of the White House," "American Gardens," and "Problems of the Small Gardener," to name a few. One newspaper account said Fannie, “presented with the enthusiasm of a true garden lover.” Frederick Law Olmsted Jr. wrote that Fannie’s photographs were “the finest existing on the subject of American gardens.” Over her career, Fannie was recognized as one of the first female press photographers in America. And if you’re a gardening cat lover, you’ll be pleased to know she had two cats; Fannie named them Herman and Vermin.   1923 Today is the anniversary of the death of Sara Plummer Lemmon. Lemmon is remembered for her successful 1903 piece of legislation that nominated the golden poppy (Eschscholzia californica) as the state flower of California. Asa Gray named the genus Plummera in honor of Sara Plummer Lemmon. Plummera is yellow wildflowers in the daisy family, and they bloom from July through September in southeastern Arizona. Lemmon and her husband, John Gill Lemmon, were both botanists. Her husband always went by his initials JG. Although Sara partnered equally with her husband on their work in botany, their papers were always published with the credentials "J.G. Lemmon & Wife." The Lemmons had found each other late in life in California. They had both suffered individually during the civil war. John was taken prisoner at Andersonville. He barely survived, and his health was impacted for the rest of his life. Sara had worked herself ragged - tending wounded soldiers in New York - while teaching. In 1881, when Sara was 45 years old, the Lemmons took a honeymoon trip to Arizona. They called it their "botanical wedding trip." The Lemmons rode a train to Tucson along with another passenger - President Rutherford B. Hayes. When they arrived, the Lemmons set off for the Santa Catalina Mountains. In Elliot's history of Arizona, he recounts the difficulty in climbing the mountain range: "The Lemmons often sat on the stone porch of their cave and dug the thorns and spines out of their hands and feet." Once, they saw, " . . . a lion so large he carried a huge buck away without dragging feet or antlers." When they returned to Tucson unsuccessful and discouraged, they were told to meet a rancher named Emerson Oliver Stratton. Thanks to Stratton, they were able to ascend the Catalinas from the backside. When they arrived at the summit, Stratton was so impressed with Sara's drive and demeanor he named the mountain in her honor - Mount Lemmon. Sara was the first woman to climb the Catalinas. Twenty-five years later, in 1905, the Lemmons returned to celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary. When they climbed the Catalina's in celebration, Stratton was again at their side, helping them retrace the steps of their "botanical wedding trip" to the top of Mount Lemmon.   Unearthed Words Today we hear some poetry about the importance of using imagination and memory in regards to our gardens during the winter months.   From December to March, there are for many of us three gardens -  the garden outdoors,  the garden of pots and bowls in the house,  and the garden of the mind's eye. — Katherine S. White, Garden Author   Soon will set in the fitful weather, with fierce gales and sullen skies and frosty air,  and it will be time to tuck up safely my roses and lilies  and the rest for their winter sleep beneath the snow,  where I never forget them,  but ever dream of their wakening in happy summers yet to be. — Celia Thaxter, American Poet & Storyteller   Of winter's lifeless world each tree Now seems a perfect part; Yet each one holds summer's secret Deep down within its heart. — Dr. Charles Garfield Stater, Methodist Pastor & West Virginian Poet, Buckwheat Fields, and Brush Fences   Gardeners, like everyone else, live second by second and minute by minute. What we see at one particular moment is then and there before us. But there is a second way of seeing. Seeing with the eye of memory, not the eye of our anatomy, calls up days and seasons past, and years gone by. — Allen Lacy, Garden Writer   In winter's cold and sparkling snow, The garden in my mind does grow. I look outside to blinding white, And see my tulips blooming bright. And over there a sweet carnation, Softly scents my imagination. On this cold and freezing day, The Russian sage does gently sway, And miniature roses perfume the air, I can see them blooming there. Though days are short, my vision's clear. And through the snow, the buds appear. In my mind, clematis climbs, And morning glories do entwine. Woodland phlox and scarlet pinks, Replace the frost, if I just blink. My inner eye sees past the snow. And in my mind, my garden grows. — Cynthia Adams, Winter Garden, Birds and Blooms magazine, Dec/Jan 2003   Grow That Garden Library Cultivating Delight by Diane Ackerman This book came out in 2002, and the subtitle to Cultivating Delight is "A Natural History of My Garden. This book was the sequel to Diane's bestseller, "A Natural History of the Senses." In this book, Diane celebrates the sensory pleasures of her garden through the seasons in the same vein as Tovah Martin's "The Garden in Every Sense and Season." Diane is a poet, essayist, and naturalist, and she writes in lyrical and sensuous prose. Let me give you an example. Here's how Diane starts her section on spring: “One day, when the last snows have melted, the air tastes tinny and sweet for the first time in many months.That's settled tincture of new buds, sap, and loam; I've learned to recognize as the first whiff of springtime.Suddenly a brown shape moves in the woods, then blasts into sight as it clears the fence at the bottom of the yard. A beautiful doe, with russet flanks and nimble legs, she looks straight at me as I watch from the living room window, then she drops her gaze." The Boston Globe praised this book, saying Ackerman has done it again... one of the most buoyant and enjoyable garden reads... uplifting and intelligent. The New York Times review said: “Understated elegance, lush language, historical and scientific nuggets, artful digressions, and apt quotations, Ackerman's book reminds us that we, too, can make our paradise here and that tranquility can be achieved by contemplating the petals of a rose.” You can get a used copy of Cultivating Delight by Diane Ackerman and support the show, using the Amazon Link in today's Show Notes for under $2.   Great Gifts for Gardeners DII Men and Women Kitchen Shamrock Green Buffalo Check Apron, Green and White Buffalo Check $14.99 I have a thing for aprons. I love looking for them.  I like to have my student gardeners use them, and I often get a set of aprons to bring to family gatherings. They make for cute pictures of us all working in the kitchen together. This year for the garden, I found this adorable shamrock-green buffalo-check apron, and it's perfect for my student gardeners. It has a little pocket in the front for their phones, and it's so cheerful. I can't wait to see them all and their aprons. Now, if you're not a fan of shamrock green, but you do like buffalo plaid, this apron comes in several colors. You can get red and white, or red and black, pink and white, blue and white, a tone on tone gray, and a black and white. So, tons of options ONE SIZE FITS MOST: The apron measures 32" x 28", with an adjustable extra-long strap to warp around the neck and waist, one size fits most men and women. EASY CARE LONG-LASTING MATERIAL: 100% Cotton Fabric, Machine Washable. Wash with Cold Water in Gentle Cycle & Tumble Dry Low. Do not bleach them or run them through a hot dryer A PERFECT GIFT WITH CUSTOMIZED LOGO SPACE: Plenty space for logo printing, monogram, and embroidery make the apron a great gift for birthdays, Mother's day, holidays, housewarming, and hostess gifts.   Today’s Botanic Spark 1759The British Museum opened. (261 years ago). The British Museum was founded in 1753 when Sir Hans Sloane left his entire collection to the country of England. At first glance, a personal collection doesn't sound worthy of starting a museum. But over his lifetime, Sloane ended up becoming a one-man repository for all things relating to the natural world. Sloane outlived many of the explorers and collectors of his day, and as they would die, they would bequeath him there herbariums and collections. So when Sloane passed away, he essentially had become the caretaker of the world’s Natural History, aka the British Museum. Today the British Museum is the largest indoor space captured by Google Street View. Google mapped the museum in November of 2015, and so it's now available online to all of us. When your friends ask you what you're doing, you can say, "I'm going to tour the British Museum. What are you up to?"      

AudioFile
AUDIOFILE Magazine Dec/Jan #5, 01/16/20

AudioFile

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2020 28:25


Listening With Artist Owen Gildersleeve; Reviews: YA Listening

VeloNews Podcasts
PYSO Ep. 36 | The Off-Season

VeloNews Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2019 47:19


Bobby and Gus bring you this special edition of PYSO from Pace Ranch in Tucson, AZ. And not only are the guys together in the same room, but they have a special guest too. Nicola Cranmer, the founder and GM of the TWENTY20 Women’s Pro Cycling Team joins the podcast. The trio talk cover a variety of topics including: * What riders do during their off-season (spoiler alert: not much according to Bobby) * The physical & mental importance of taking time off the bike * The cancellation of the Amgen Tour of California & what it means for American cycling * Weekly Zwift rides with Team Twenty20 - join them!! * Ad hoc Fall training camps (Bobby despises them), and formal Dec/Jan camps. * New kits, new bikes, and new teams. Got questions for Bobby and Gus? Send them over to SuperFan@Velonews.com. If they answer your question you'll get a pair of PYSO socks.

VeloNews Podcasts
PYSO Ep. 36 | The Off-Season

VeloNews Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2019 47:19


Bobby and Gus bring you this special edition of PYSO from Pace Ranch in Tucson, AZ. And not only are the guys together in the same room, but they have a special guest too. Nicola Cranmer, the founder and GM of the TWENTY20 Women’s Pro Cycling Team joins the podcast. The trio talk cover a variety of topics including: * What riders do during their off-season (spoiler alert: not much according to Bobby) * The physical & mental importance of taking time off the bike * The cancellation of the Amgen Tour of California & what it means for American cycling * Weekly Zwift rides with Team Twenty20 - join them!! * Ad hoc Fall training camps (Bobby despises them), and formal Dec/Jan camps. * New kits, new bikes, and new teams. Got questions for Bobby and Gus? Send them over to SuperFan@Velonews.com. If they answer your question you'll get a pair of PYSO socks.

Put Your Socks On
Ep. 36 | The Off-Season

Put Your Socks On

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2019 47:19


Bobby and Gus bring you this special edition of PYSO from Pace Ranch in Tucson, AZ. And not only are the guys together in the same room, but they have a special guest too. Nicola Cranmer, the founder and GM of the TWENTY20 Women’s Pro Cycling Team joins the podcast. The trio talk cover a variety of topics including: * What riders do during their off-season (spoiler alert: not much according to Bobby) * The physical & mental importance of taking time off the bike * The cancellation of the Amgen Tour of California & what it means for American cycling * Weekly Zwift rides with Team Twenty20 - join them!! * Ad hoc Fall training camps (Bobby despises them), and formal Dec/Jan camps. * New kits, new bikes, and new teams. Got questions for Bobby and Gus? Send them over to SuperFan@Velonews.com. If they answer your question you'll get a pair of PYSO socks.

The Heart of Markness Led Zeppelin Podcast
Episode 24 - Led Zeppelin - Opening Act January '69

The Heart of Markness Led Zeppelin Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2019 45:57


I talk about the very first tour of the United States, Dec/Jan 1969. They were an opening act, unknowns (except for Jimmy + the Yardbirds). I play 3 tracks from a wild, almost out of control young band, fresh out of the gate. The songs (from excellent soundboard audio) are As Long As I Have You, Train Kept A Rollin', and For Your Love (insane pysch hard rock version of the Yardbirds hit).

SUPERWHITE
The Highlight Reel (Dec/Jan)

SUPERWHITE

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2019 32:10


A jumble of highlights, stories, and funny moments from December and January Follow the podcast on your chosen podcast listening app, Twitter @suprwhite, IG @superwhiteinc Follow Kase on Twitter and IG @kaselarsen Follow Dallin on Twitter @dallinmcquivey and IG @dallin.mcquivey Feel free to donate to the support link, any help is very much appreciated --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/superwhite/message

Kifarucast
Compton Traditional Bowhunters

Kifarucast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2019 78:10


Dave Hewett, Vice President of Compton Traditional Bowhunters, joins the podcast to discuss the growing community of traditional bowhunters.   Compton Traditional Bowhunters Traditional bowhunters talked about having their own organization for years, but it wasn't until May of 1999, at the Pope and Young Club Awards Banquet, that a meeting of interested bowhunters was held to discuss the possibilities of such an organization. An article by Glenn St. Charles, “IT’S TIME,” appeared in the Dec/Jan 1996 issue of TRADITIONAL BOWHUNTER MAGAZINE encouraging traditional bowhunters to form their own organization, and to create a separate identity distinct from the modern bowhunter. Many bowhunters agreed with Glenn, feeling it was, indeed, time. Out of this initial meeting came a second, smaller, meeting held in conjunction with the “Traditional Bowhunter’s Nationals,” which were held each year in Cloverdale, Indiana. The 15 to 20 bowhunters who attended this meeting became the nucleus of the steering committee which formed COMPTON TRADITIONAL BOWHUNTERS. Glenn St. Charles attended both meetings and was a major contributor to the formation of the organization. Glenn also formed the famed Pope and Young Club in the late 1950's to show the hunting world of the day that the longbow and recurve bow and arrow was a worthy hunting weapon and should be taken seriously...goals that few of today’s bowhunters recognize as necessities in that era.

Soul Horizon & After Dark Mix Sessions
Soul Horizon & After Dark Mix Sessions Dec/Jan 2019

Soul Horizon & After Dark Mix Sessions

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2018 120:00


Part 1: Soul Horizon Cool Million Feat Boogie Back & David A Tobin - Save Your Love - Extended Mix (Sedsoul) Tasha LaRae - Ready - Original Mix (Quantize) Round Shaped Triangles - Better Apart - Art Of Tones Remix (Sub_Urban) Big Tune: Hugo Mari Feat Zodiac - Get Loose - Original Mix (Heist Recordings) Kyoto Jazz Sextet - Mission - Jaxx Madicine Remix (Local Talk) Juan Hoerni Feat Terry Dexter - Wildness Of The Heart (Cha Cha Recordings) Reelsoul Feat Rose Windross - We Are One - John Morlaes M+M Alternate Mix (Reelsoul Music) Carla Prather - Gotta Be Present - Original Mix (Check It Out Records) Stewart, Andy Edit & Dana Weaver - It's Up To Me - Fabrizio La Marca's Deep N Dirty Edit (Wiggly Worm Records) Loui & Scibi Feat Alec Sun Drae - Who Am I - Classic Re-Touch (Deepalma Soul) From The Vault: 1990 Rio Rhythm Band - Carnival Da Casa - Mixa Da Vitoria Da Conquista (Hooj Choons) Part 2: After Dark Mix Sessions Cosmonection - Menorca - Original Mix - Delusions Of Grandeur BiGz, Malkov, Below Bangkok - Eastern Lights - Original Mix (Wind Horse Records) Shur-I-Kan - Three Of A Kind - State Of Emergency EP (Freerange) AphroDisiax Feat Tiger S - Killing Time - Craig Stewart Remix (Universe Media) CeCe Rogers Chopstick & Johnjon - What Is House Music - Atjazz Remix Remix (Suol) Big Tune: Jovonn - Goldtone Edits EP - Pianos Of Gold - Ian Pooley Mix (Clone Royal Oak) BiGz & Stan Kolev - Go Bye! - Original Mix (Be Adult Music) Mia Mendi & Rafael Cerato - Soethis - Timid Boy El galactico Remix (Jannowitz Records) Fer Olivera - OVA - Original Mix (Monog Records) From The Vault: 1985 J.M. Silk - Music Is The Key - Basement Key (DJ International)

Quietmind Astrology — Learn Vedic Astrology with Jeremy Devens
Dec / Jan Horoscope & Practices: Winter Solstice, Sun in Sagittarius, New Year Intentions

Quietmind Astrology — Learn Vedic Astrology with Jeremy Devens

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2018 24:39


Learn more at http://www.quietmind.yoga --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/astrology/message

Research Minutes
Books, Tablets and Screens: The Science of Reading in a Digital Age

Research Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2018 29:41


Maryanne Wolf, renowned literacy scholar and author of "Proust and the Squid," joins CPRE Director Jonathan Supovitz to discuss the latest scientific research on reading, learning, and the impact of digital screens. She also shares insights from her upcoming book "Reader Come Home: The Reading Brain in a Digital World," her new article in Kappan Magazine, and offers advice for teachers, leaders, and everyday readers hoping to adapt to a digital world. Part of the CPRE Knowledge Hub and Kappan Magazine's 'What We've Learned About Learning" podcast series. To read more about learning science and education, pick up the Dec/Jan 2018 issue of Kappan Magazine or visit www.kappanonline.org.

Research Minutes
Learning from Cognitive Psychology: Four Strategies for the Classroom

Research Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2018 18:06


Renowned cognitive scientist, author, and former K-12 teacher Pooja Agarwal joins CPRE senior researcher Abigail Gray to share four simple, science-backed strategies to improve teaching and learning. She also shares insights from her upcoming book "Powerful Teaching: Unleash the Science of Learning," her new article in Kappan Magazine, and provides a wealth of free resources for teachers and policymakers hoping to close the gap between learning science and the classroom. Part of the CPRE Knowledge Hub and Kappan Magazine's 'What We've Learned About Learning" podcast series. To read more about learning science and education, pick up the Dec/Jan 2018 issue of Kappan Magazine or visit www.kappanonline.org/

Research Minutes
Neuromyths: What We Know About the Learning Brain

Research Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2018 23:32


Renowned researcher, author, and former teacher Tracey Tokuhama-Espinosa joins CPRE Director Jonathan Supovitz to discuss "neuromyths," those false or misinterpreted facts we continue to believe about the human brain. She also shares insights from her new book "Neuromyths: Debunking False Ideas About the Brain," her new interview in Kappan Magazine, and offers suggestions for teachers, education researchers, and policymakers hoping to move past debunked theories and bring the latest brain science to the classroom. Part of the CPRE Knowledge Hub and Kappan Magazine's 'What We've Learned About Learning" podcast series. To read more, pick up the Dec/Jan 2018 issue of Kappan Magazine or visit https://www.kappanonline.org/

Solomon's Porch
Solomon’s Porch - Episode 13

Solomon's Porch

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2018


Spirituality Join best-selling author, Dr. Steven Smith, for the last episode of 2017!! The next wepisode (#14) will resume Jan. 28. In this episode, Dr. Smith concludes his discussion of the Jewish Tabernacle of the wilderness. He also unveils TWO SURPRISES. Listen in to hear about how you can STAY CONNECTED to "The Outer Court" community over the next month (Dec-Jan). Solomon's Porch is an outreach of THE OUTER COURT, a growing community of people seeking God's temple presence in Scripture, in the Church and in the world, and in our lives. www.Facebook,com/TheOuterCourt. Support this Podcast and the Breadbox Media network with your Premium Membership and unlock your deals today! https://www.breadboxmedia.com/dr-steven-smith-support.html

Solomon's Porch (HOTL) Podcast
SOLOMON'S PORCH - EPISODE 13

Solomon's Porch (HOTL) Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2017 42:43


Join best-selling author, Dr. Steven Smith, for the last episode of 2017!! The next wepisode (#14) will resume Jan. 28. In this episode, Dr. Smith concludes his discussion of the Jewish Tabernacle of the wilderness. He also unveils TWO SURPRISES. Listen in to hear about how you can STAY CONNECTED to "The Outer Court" community over the next month (Dec-Jan). Solomon's Porch is an outreach of THE OUTER COURT, a growing community of people seeking God's temple presence in Scripture, in the Church and in the world, and in our lives. www.Facebook,com/TheOuterCourt.

Solomon's Porch (HOTL) Podcast
SOLOMON'S PORCH - EPISODE 13

Solomon's Porch (HOTL) Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2017 42:43


Join best-selling author, Dr. Steven Smith, for the last episode of 2017!! The next wepisode (#14) will resume Jan. 28. In this episode, Dr. Smith concludes his discussion of the Jewish Tabernacle of the wilderness. He also unveils TWO SURPRISES. Listen in to hear about how you can STAY CONNECTED to "The Outer Court" community over the next month (Dec-Jan). Solomon's Porch is an outreach of THE OUTER COURT, a growing community of people seeking God's temple presence in Scripture, in the Church and in the world, and in our lives. www.Facebook,com/TheOuterCourt.

Bandana Blues, founded by Beardo, hosted by Spinner
Bandana Blues #579 Lotsa cover...

Bandana Blues, founded by Beardo, hosted by Spinner

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2015 119:00


show#57902.15.15 Lotsa covers...David Maxwell & Louisiana Red - Stop Your Crying from You Got to Move 2009 (7:01)Smokin' Joe Kubek & Bnois King - Lone Star Lap Dance from Fat Man's Shine Parlor 2015 (3:44)Anders Osborne - Jealous Love from Three Free Amigos 2013 (2:44)Spoonful of blues - Chasin` that devil`s music from Chasin` that devil`s music 2005 (5:18)My Own Holiday - On the Floor Blues from Reason To Bleed 2015 (4:46)Johnny Winter - My Babe from Step Back 2015 (4:25)Big Dave McLean - Don't Get Mad, Get Even from Faded But Not Gone 2015 (4:39)The Climax Chicago Blues Band - Don't Start Me Talking [Live] from 25 Years 1968-1993 Disc 2 1994 (4:05)King Biscuit Boy - Ain t Broke and Ain t Hungry from 35 Years of Stony Plain 2011 (2:51)Hiram Bullock - You Got Me Floatin' from Gypsy Blood: A Tribute To Jimi Hendrix, Vol. 2 2005 (3:31)Igor Prado Band - Rooster Blues from Way Down South 2015 (5:03)Billy Jones - Ain't Good Lookin from Blues + Beat (mp3) 2011 (6:13)Bugs Henderson - The Vent from Stormy Love (4:05)The Twisters - Going, Goin', Gone from After the Storm 2007 (2:56)Lucky Peterson - Ventilator Blues from Exile on Blues Street 2003 (5:39)Johnny Dyer - Everything's Gonna Be Alright from Live at Ground Zero, Vol. 1 2009 (3:58)The Delta Rhythm Boys - Long Gone Baby from (2:35)Charlie Wood & the New Memphis Underground - Don't Let the Money Get Funny, Honey from Blues Revue 2008 Dec-Jan 1996 (3:38)Eric Gales - Trampled Underfoot from Whole Lotta Blues - Songs of Led Zeppelin 2000 (4:49)Repeat of a Spinner's section of 10 years ago(from Bandana Blues show #79)an odd selection of coversArno: mother's little helperArthur Ebeling: troubleGary Moore: looking for somebodyJerry Portnoy: mistyHerman Brood: hard to handleDr. Feelgood: don't worry babyArthur Ebeling: danger zoneArno: death of a clown

Tips For Travellers
144: Sydney Australia (Revisited)

Tips For Travellers

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2014 36:32


Gary Bembridge of Tips for Travellers shares observations, tips and advice for visitors to Sydney in Australia.Subscribe free to the show on iTunes, Stitcher Radio or TuneIn RadioThis show covers among other topics: General Observations Harbour area around circular quay is magical and the iconic view of Australia and Sydney. Beyond the harbour bay is less compelling and different to any city. Architecture not that exciting. Not a big a city in world league just 4 million but is  young ( ve age is 36) 19% Asian Casual outdoor lifestyle and informal Mix of colonial roots from UK and American feel Festivals important to the city to attract visitors and create excitement and energy - film / food/ mardi gras Expensive city - accom, food, coffees, going out etc History Settlement was named after UK Home Secretary (Lord Sydney) when Penal colony was established. Year after most of indigenous population wiped out by lack of resistance to European diseases. Not the capital - Canberra is. Rivalry between Melbourne and Sydney meant it would be neither. Getting there Lots of flying options. Cruise Ships now fast growing way to get there too. Need Visa, which can get online. Smart Gate Fast track entry for electronic passports including UK, NZ, Swiss, Singapore, US Global entry Customs very strict - border control tv show - disease obsessed Best timeSouthern Hemisphere so Summer peak is Dec / Jan and coldest in July.Getting around Traffic quite congested - large use of public transport by locals Taxi -  expensive , Train system - good, Bus system good and inexpensive -  buy ticket or cards at newsagents / convenience stores Where to stayHarbour areaTop things to doHarbour AreaDo harbour tour HOHO or tours from Circular Quay (explain options)The RocksMuseum of Contemporary Art - stunning building - renovated and expanded 2012Explore the iconsSydney Harbour Bridge - bridge walk - 4 hours long short 1,5 hourOpera House - behind scene tours and backstage tours -Visit the beachesBondi - use 333 bendy bus - train to Bondi a Junction then busManley - harbour trip there scenic - surfing - snorkel - penguinsDarling HarbourBuzzy and busy with many tourist attractions:Sealife AquariumAustralian National Maritime MuseumIMAXMadame tussardsPowerhouse MuseumSydney Tower and SkywalkShoppingWestfield SydneyQueen Victoria buildingPitt street - the 5th Ave of SydneyOxford street OtherOlympic Park TourGardens - Hyde park, Botanical gardens, Chinese gardensLuna Park

Desert Vision
Desert Vision - Dec/Jan Holiday

Desert Vision

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2011


This edition features the draw down of the final troops processing through Kuwait out of Iraq, National Guard birthday run, Arifjan's Army Safe Driving Course, Soldiers handling holiday mail call, a story time visitor in Sumter, SC, and the latest edition of the Blackjack Express from the 1st TSC. Produced by Third Army Public Affairs, Camp Arifjan, Kuwait.

Geek Out Loud – Geek Out Loud
Episode 8 – Chestnuts Roasting

Geek Out Loud – Geek Out Loud

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2008 110:52


Episode 8 from Dec/Jan ’07/’08: Before I get into the show description, I apologize that this took so long to get out.  I have 50 different reasons why, but let’s be honest, I wouldn’t accept the excuses so neither should you, the listener have to.  There are some things said that are a little dated.  Like “Merry Christmas”, “Happy New Year”, “How about […]

National Gallery of Australia | Audio Tour | National Indigenous Art Triennial 07

The customary greeting between male relations and family members in Thompson’s The Sixth Mile and Desert Slippers both created 2006 are profoundly moving in the intensely personal rituals revealed to an unaware public audience. Thompson inhabits many bodies – young, male, urban, Blak, androgynous, playful, mimic, and performative – always Bidjara.1 [The video work] presents the viewer with a very intimate, family ritual. We see the artist and his father involved in what could be interpreted as a greeting ceremony. Speaking in Bidjara, their bodies turned towards each other, the men are engrossed in acting out the same gestures repetitively. The non-Bidjara viewer, who can’t understand what is being said, is nonetheless invited into this private space of communication and learning between father and son. The artist explains that this work follows on from earlier videos that similarly focused on Bidjara rituals, made visible by means of a Western visual language. It forms a response to the increasingly conservative government policies and, in particular, to the recent media coverage of dysfunction in Indigenous communities, something described by the artist as ‘Aboriginal man-bashing.’ Choosing video because of its potential for direct and intense audience engagement, Thompson offers insight into Indigenous rituals and notions of masculinity and father-child relationships in personal and challenging ways. Marianne Riphagen, ‘Intersections in the screen pit’, RealTime, no.76, Dec–Jan, 2006, p.54. Notes 1 The term ‘Blak’ was first used by Destiny Deacon in the exhibition Kudjeris at Boomalli Aboriginal Artists Co-operative, 1991, with one of her works titled Blak lik mi.