POPULARITY
Eric & Lucas thought it would be good to sit down and record what the show is about, who they are and why homesteading is the path forward for a sustainable future. Please join us on this journey and subscribe. Join Lucas on TIkTok @brokenshovelfarm email the show at brokenshovel802@gmail.com
Dans son apéro, JiC nous parle du match Capitals - Canadiens de jeudi et des matchs en soirée dans le circuit Bettman. Marc-André Perreault nous résume la journée du tricolore Pat Laprade nous raconte son séjour en Californie Anthony Martineau nous présente l'espoir du prochain repêchage Brayden Yager Arnaud Gascon-Nadon nous donne les dernières nouvelles dans le monde du football Tony Marinaro nous donne son point de vue sur l'actualité sportive En entrevue, JiC reçoit la poche bleue Michel Bergeron nous donne son opinion sur quelques dossiers de la LNH Dans son billet de saison, JiC fait un retour sur les 20 ans du combat Lucas - Beyer Éric Fichaud et Patrick Lalime se joignent à JiC pour le segment le Show Jean-Philippe Bertrand nous offre un café disco sur la durée des matchs de baseball Renaud Lavoie nous parle des objectifs du CH et de comment se remettre des défaites Philippe Boucher aborde plusieurs sujets touchant l'actualité de la LNH En entrevue, JiC reçoit Eric Lucas, Yvon Michel et Stephan Larouche en marge des 20 ans du combat Lucas - Beyer Une production QUB radio et TVA SportsAvril 2023Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr
In this episode, another friend drops by the P3 Studio, Eric Lucas discusses this list and may not agree with it?The Facts Are BackMusic by:KGN with his remix of Wish You Were Here by AfroJackIG - kgnmusicMore Zen
Former WBC world super-middleweight king Glenn Catley had a remarkable career that saw him recover from early setbacks and controversies to reign as a champion. He had an incredible run of fights in Canada, Germany and South Africa while at the top of the sport, having already won the British title. But, as they often do, hard times followed. Despite that, Catley has maintained a positive mindset thanks to the use of hypnotherapy, something he used for his major fights, and he's rightly proud and happy while reflecting on his career. Here, he talks about the hugely controversial loss of his title in South Africa, his big wins over Kirkland Laing, Neville Brown, Eric Lucas and Marcus Beyer, working as a security guard, as a haulage driver and the parrot in Jersey that set him up with his wife while he was in training camp with Steve Collins! This is funny, sad and uplifting.
Eric Lucas est délégué national à l'éducation et à la coopération du Syndicat National des Radios Libres (SNRL). Avec lui, Rémy et Martin explorent le rôle essentiel des radios associatives, véritables viviers de talents et d'actions dans l'éducation aux médias et à l'information. La séquence médiatique : Radio Cartable Les ressources : La carte des médias français (Le Monde diplomatique), La carte de la "presse pas pareille" (L'Âge de faire), La carte des médias scolaires (CLEMI), les cartographies sonores et la data visualisation
Viking Warrior Mikkel Kessler fought the likes of Joe Calzaghe, Carl Froch and Andre Ward in a decorated career that saw him capture the WBA and WBC titles at super-middleweight. From fighting early on in Las Vegas to being on the big Mike Tyson-Brian Neilsen bill at the Parken in Copenhagen, he was initially guided by Hall of Fame promoter Mogens Palle. He unified the titles and scored wins over Anthony Mundine, Marcus Beyer and Eric Lucas before his huge night in Wales against Calzaghe. Kessler fought in the brilliant Super Six series, learned to ride fast motorbikes and a comeback was curtailed after he was bitten by a tick and hospitalised. Here, he talks about the big nights, who would have won between Froch and Calzaghe and Calzaghe and Ward and much more. Now now he lives quietly in Denmark.
This feature is an interview between students and someone who has a unique perspective on maths. In this Between Two Episodes, students Logan and Mena interview Deputy Eric Lucas, a police officer with the Hanover County Sheriff’s Department. Find out what training police officers go through and if police officers ever use maths! Listen to find out why Deputy Lucas explains in 30 seconds why you should “Give Maths a Chance!”
O Dia do Autistão reuniu autistas de diferentes lugares do Brasil em Copacabana, no Rio de Janeiro, em 31 de março deste ano. Neste episódio, Tiago Abreu conversa com o organizador Eric Lucas e os participantes Erika Ribeiro, Geuvana Nogueira, Leonard Akira e Ludmila Leal para relatarem suas visões sobre o autismo e a importância de se trazer pessoas diagnosticadas para falar de suas condições em um evento como esse.
Eric Lucas, I have a question for your Q&A if you would like. I know this touches on a subject you have talked about in the past. The closest USPSA club to me is an hour away. They shut down fairly early in the season. Last summer I still wanted to do some more matches and the next closest match is a 3 hour drive one way. Their website said that set up was at 3pm, shooting started at 6pm and should be done by 9pm. It seemed to imply that being present for set up was mandatory. I called them and explained that it was going to be 6 hours of driving for me and asked if set up was mandatory. This resulted in a fairly insulting lecture on how important volunteering is in this sport but the guy never gave me a definitive answer to my question. Now I get how important volunteering is but I’m not sue I want to make a 12 hour day out of this. My response was to skip it and spend the time and money practicing. I’ll spend my money going to some lvl 2 matches next year. I don’t know what kind of stress the guy was dealing with but I wouldn’t feel welcome if I wasn’t there 3 hours early. What’s your take, should I reconsider or drive past to the next one 4 hours away? Also, I am working on a first match type voice mail that I hope to send soon. T. C. TC from Ft. Mill, SC here, with a question for the Q&A Show. How do you see competition shooting benefitting those who carry for self-defense purposes? We have all long heard the arguments from the “tactical” community about how competition shooting will get you killed on the street. How the competition “spray and pray” model of running about, disregarding cover and flinging bullets all over hell to breakfast is a sure fire formula for death and disaster on the mean streets of Anytown, USA. My own experience of being a 20 year veteran of federal law enforcement and competitive shooting, as well as infantry combat in both Iraq and Afghanistan, has underscored just how valuable competition shooting is, for me, when things get loud. I have never understood the perspective of those who believe that being able to operate your firearms efficiently, to be able to shoot fast and accurately, as one must to be successful in competition, is not tactically desirable. I am, however, very curious as to your take on the topic. Do you see competitive shooting as helpful for those who carry for self-defense, as you do? If so, what are those advantages? Do you see any disadvantages, and if so, what are they? Thanks for what you do. Carry on. Austin I know you have talked about this before, but when you bring a new to competition shooter to a match how much should you focus on them verse trying to shoot well, do you just write the match off and make sure they are doing what they are supposed to do? What are your thoughts? Brett I just started shooting USPSA in April. My wife and I both shoot and absolutely love the sport! My question is that I am now a high C with 58%. My last few classifiers had been in the mid 60% range. I would really like to end my first year as a B. I am shooting next week at Pitt County. The classifier is 99-22. Should I try to burn it down as fast as I can to try to get that high hit factor? Or play it conservatively to keep my high C? Of coarse when the buzzer goes off all plans go out the window! Anthony I was at a local USPSA club match a while back and a fellow shooter noticed I was dropping my head as I would address my sights. I didn't think much of it at the time when I was shooting my limited gun with iron sights. Now that I have decided to run carry optics it has became more obvious that I have been dropping my head to get a good sight picture. Is there any benefit to address sights without bringing your head down during the draw stroke and bringing sights up to your target focus area? Other than possible unproductive movement? Thanks. Ronald Should carry optic shooters be required to wear their underwear on their head? Ray What caliber and division would you start a new Jr shooter in, and what's the best way to get my daughter started? Drew Lucas, I went cheap to begin with on holsters and mag carriers to make sure I liked action pistol shooting. Now it's been about half a year and I'm more excited than ever. I'm shooting IDPA mostly, can you tell me what I should look for in better mag carriers? I'm using a double pouch now and have trouble indexing on the 2nd magazine. Kevin At what point on the draw do you put your finger on the trigger? Normally when I draw and shoot I have my trigger finger indexed on the side of the gun outside the trigger guard until I get close to on target and then I move my finger to the trigger. While dry firing I noticed I could speed up my shot time by getting my finger on the trigger sooner, prepping the trigger while still extending and getting a sight picture and then pressing the trigger the rest of the way once I had a good sight picture. I was worried I could DQ doing this for having my finger in the trigger guard on the draw if I put my finger in too soon, but 10.5.5.1 seems to say as long as I'm not sweeping myself with the finger in the trigger guard then it's not a rule infraction.
Drunken Lullabies EP 57 “Better Out Than In” FCF NETWORK * iTUNES * FACEBOOK * TWITTER *INSTAGRAM Drunkenlullabiespodcast@yahoo.com Band/Label/Artist/Beer Twitter Handles: @DESTIHLbrewery, @marzbrewing @narrowgaugebeer, @newglarusbeer, @yngndhrtlss Show Notes: The Voice in here to ring in the new year with his friends Brutal Eric, The Brutal Mistress, Liquid D, & Cruel Karen. Eric & Lucas brought some homebrew from Brutal Truth and Drinqwell Brewing along some beers from Marz, Narrow Gauge, and New Glarus; plus we enjoy a sponsor beer from FoBAB Gold Medal and GABF Silver Medal winners Destihl Brewery. Our Band of the Week is Young & Heartless and we play two songs from their newest album Stay Away on Hopeless Records. Topics discussed this week include Happy New Year, Sick on Christmas, Man Cannot Live By Brett Alone, Blueberries of the Beast, Sorry Winos, Fantasy Names, Winter Eczema, Buy Her a Corndog...., and Picks of the Week.
Welcome to another episode of Ask Coach Parry. Today we have a question from Eric Lucas as we inch ever closer to the Comrades Marathon. Eric lives in Quatar and says he has just completed his first marathon as a training run. He is following the Bill Rowan programme, even though he qualified with a 3.39. He says Quatar is fairly flat except for one hill which is about a 1% gradient over 1 kilometer. Nevertheless he completed 8 times that hill repeats, and then transitioned to a treadmill and then attempted to mimic the remainder of the first half of the Comrades Marathon route. It was very tough. He was thinking of continuing with this approach for his long runs. Is that the way to do it? Read More · Training Programs · www.CoachParry.com
TalkFEED — Welcome to another episode of Ask Coach Parry. Today we have a question from Eric Lucas as we inch ever closer to the Comrades Marathon. Eric lives in Quatar and says he has just completed his first marathon as a training run. He is following the Bill Rowan programme, even though he qualified with a 3.39. He says Quatar is fairly flat except for one hill which is about a 1% gradient over 1 kilometer. Nevertheless he completed 8 times that hill repeats, and then transitioned to a treadmill and then attempted to mimic the remainder of the first half of the Comrades Marathon route. It was very tough. He was thinking of continuing with this approach for his long runs. Is that the way to do it? Read More · Training Programs