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On Creature Comforts, Kevin Farrell is joined by Dr. Troy Majure, veterinarian at the Animal Medical Center in Jackson and Libby Hartfield retired director of the Mississippi Museum of Natural Science.With Mississippi located in the center of the South, our state has many visitors stop to admire the scenery as they make their way to another destination. Our guest for the day has spent decades studying the visitors that pass through our state. Migratory bird expert, Dr. Frank Moore, joins to tell us about upcoming fall migrations and how our avian friends can complete these flights.To submit your own question for the show, email us at animals@mpbonline.org or send us a message with the Talk To Us feature in the MPB Public Media App. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On today's show we welcome Dr. Frank Moore, Distinguished Professor Emeritus University of Southern Mississippi. For over 30 years he, his students & other collaborators have studied the biology of migratory songbirds across North America, but most intensely along the northern coast of Gulf Mexico. Today we will talk about these migratory birds that visit Mississippi along their migration. As always, Dr. Troy Majure, DVM, with the Animal Medical Center and Libby Hartfield, Retired Director of the Mississippi Museum of Natural Science, is here if you have any concerns about your furry friends or general wildlife experiences. Email the show: animals@mpbonline.org. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Who are the worst censors—the Rightwing or the Left? Free Speech is under attack, but who causes more carnage & shuts down more Free Speech in today's Battle of the Bans? The lunatic ammosexual Religiofascist Right or the faux-“woke” neoliberal corporate Left? In terms of sex, politics, war, peace, “freedom,” universalism, “bonoboism,” art or culture, & in the “commons”—that is, social media— our virtual public squares, who truly honors Free Speech? Warning: Explicit Conversations About Politics, Culture, & Sexuality! Not that Capt'n Max and I (still Banned on Facebook) definitively answer these questions on this lively show, but we have a great, uncensored time speaking easy at the Speakeasy about them. Throughout civilized history, the Right, especially the Religious Right, has been the worst in terms of censoring facts, reason, diversity, justice & fairness, as well viciously & fascistically censoring millions of people's very lives. Though liberal Democrat Harry Truman certainly censored a lot of innocent people's lives in Hiroshima & Nagasaki, just to scare the Soviets. Furthermore, when it comes to censoring me on social media, the Leftwing has been worse than the Right. Though calling the faux woke Silicon Valley corporate billionaires of META, YouTube, Reddit & Spotify—& their AI (artificial ignorance) handmaids—“Left” is an insult to true Lefties like me. Most of our Lefty friends consider Twitter (now X) to be the WORST major social media, but for me, it's been the best (so far). After all, when you're being punched, kicked, terminated, ball-gagged and disabled by the “good guys,” & the bad guy offers you a hand—or at least leaves you alone—you appreciate it—Tweety Bird, X or O. Meanwhile, I continue to receive touching letters of solidarity that warm my heart, even as I'm frozen out of the social media Commons, including the latest missives from the late great artist Frank Moore's crew. Meanwhile we are taking Instagram to arbitration AND starting up a union for social media content creators. Join us! We also say RIP to Tony Bennett at the age of 96— fantastic singer & great Lefty who also appealed to the Rightwing, but always stood (& sang) for love, not war. We also pick up five passengers on this Love Train over the course of four fun Callin calls: 1) Joe on Universalism & “bonoboism” (his term for The Bonobo Way), the Right, the Left, the tRump (about to be indicted for the perfect charge, the “mob” allegation of “Racketeering” for his brazen attempt to subvert the 2020 election), interracial sex and p*rn on the floor of Congress (thx for that, Marjorie Taylor Greene, though considering you're a proven cheater, maybe you shouldn't be so hypocritical about Hunter Biden's sexcapades) 2) Chris G., sings a little “San Francisco,” & speaks out against censorship… 3) Dre Day points out that social media takes info from us, but never gives it up to us 4) Finally, BeDaLoveLive, aka Chef Belive & Daniele Watts, featured in many DrSuzy.Tv shows & bacchanals, including our Bonoboville Reunion (soon to air on Vice TV…unless it's censored like Vice's documentary about Ron DeSantis' Guantanamo torture times), talk about their current adventures & being shadow-banned +We discuss Barbie & Oppenheimer openings - Barbenheimer! - even though none of us have seen either film. The most explosive thing about Oppenheimer isn't the A-Bomb, but Florence Pugh bare boobs! Bonus: she plays a Communist. Free the nipple (Barbie doesn't even have them) & spread the wealth! Speaking of spreading the wealth, if you haven't already, please help 910 Weho And join Bonoboville & we just might fly you to the moon. Read more of my prose & watch the uncensored shows: https://drsusanblock.com/fdr-left-right Need to talk privately? Call the Therapists Without Borders of the Dr. Susan Block Institute anytime: 213.291.9497. We're here for YOU.
On today's episode listen to Sam Barber, Frank Moore, and Scott Rainey discuss our Journey of Grace Part 1: God Goes Before issue. How is God working in the world and in the lives of those who have yet to believe in Him? How do we, as Christians, recognize God working in our world so we can partner with Him and reveal His gracious actions to those in our family, community, nation, and world? Join Frank Moore, Scott Rainey, and Sam Barber as they discuss God's prevenient grace. This audio was created by Nazarene Discipleship International in collaboration with Holiness Today to discuss the journey of grace of the believer. This coincided with the Holiness Today issues related to this topic in 2020 and 2021 to see more videos and training materials like this please visit discipleshipplace.org.
Frank Moore and why he's running for State GOP Chairman, Joey Correnti weighs in. The destruction of our collective identity, gas stoves and more.
There isn't much that's known about Frank Moore. He's running for Wyoming Republican Party Chairman and claims that he wants to bring the party together. Judging by who is friends in the media are, that's the last thing that he wants. Senators are objecting to Sen Driskill's removal of Sen Kinskey as Appropriations Chair.
On today's show we welcome Dr. Frank Moore, Distinguished Professor Emeritus University of Southern Mississippi. For over 30 years he, his students & other collaborators have studied the biology of migratory songbirds across North America, but most intensely along the northern coast of Gulf Mexico. Today we will talk about these migratory birds that visit Mississippi along their migration. As always, Dr. Troy Majure, DVM, with the Animal Medical Center and Libby Hartfield, Retired Director of the Mississippi Museum of Natural Science, is here if you have any concerns about your furry friends or general wildlife experiences. Email the show: animals@mpbonline.org. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
March 7, 2023 Wentworth Town Council MeetingAGENDAArticle I. CALL TO ORDERArticle II. INVOCATIONArticle III. APPROVAL OF TOWN COUNCIL AGENDAA. Requests and Petitions of CitizensB. Approve/ Amend AgendaArticle IV. APPROVAL OF MINUTESA. Town Council Meeting – February 7, 2023Article V. OLD BUSINESSArticle VI. NEW BUSINESSA. Funding RequestsRockingham County Arts Council - $8,500 (Jenny Edwards)2. Museum & Archives of Rockingham Co - $12,000 (Coy Jacob Idol)3. Fine Arts Festival Association - $2,800 (Debbie Moore)4. Countywide Food Drive - $500 (Neil Jacques)5. Project Safe Rockingham Co - $782.25 (Frank Moore)6. Help Inc: Center Against Violence - $10,000/year for 5 years (Angela Boles)7. ReDirections of Rockingham Co - $2,458 (Alexey Ferrell)8. Rockingham Co Sheriff's Office - $6,228.89 (Jennifer Brown)9. PTO of the Griffins - $1,302.13 (Angela VanHook)10. Wentworth PTA Ball Program - $15,000 (Jordan Fargis)11. Rockingham Co Middle School Band - $5,500 (Brian Otter)12. Rockingham Co High School Band – TBA (Eli Wright)B. Wentworth Consolidated School Gym Asbestos and Lead Paint AbatementC. Wentworth Park Playground SunshadesD. Nixon Power Services Quote for Town Hall Generator MaintenanceE. Budget Amendment No 3 for FY 2022-2023Article VII. PUBLIC COMMENTSArticle VIII. ANNOUNCEMENTS The next regular meeting of the Wentworth Planning Board is scheduled for Tuesday, March 21, 2023 at 7:00 pm at the Wentworth Town Hall. The next regular meeting of the Wentworth Town Council is scheduled for Tuesday, April 4, 2023, at 7:00 pm at the Wentworth Town Hall.Article IX. ADJOURN###
This week, we sat down with blogger and lifelong Fortean, Stephanie Quick. We discussed the influence of growing up in the midst of the Bay Area's early-80s art scene, some of her early paranormal experiences, her near-death experience, and the meeting place between Western spiritualism and ritual magick. Stephanie is a brilliant and intoxicating person. I hope you find this conversation as entertaining and thought-provoking as we did. Enjoy! Campfire: Tales of the Strange and Unsettling is created for adult audiences only. The content and discussion in this show will necessarily engage with various accounts that include violence, anxiety, fear, and occasional body horror. Much of it will be emotionally and intellectually challenging to engage with. We will flag especially graphic or intense content so as to never put you in an uninformed or unprepared position. We will do our best to make this a space where we can engage bravely, empathetically, and thoughtfully with difficult content every week. This week's episode includes the following sensitive content: Suicidal IdeationsMedical Trauma Check it out! Strange Semanticshttps://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/strange-semantics/id1577035566?i=1000583282928 Forever Family Foundation https://www.foreverfamilyfoundation.org/ Frank Moorehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Moore_(performance_artist) Jeff Bealhttp://www.jeffbeal.com/ Guest Website:https://stephaniequick.home.blog/ Guest Socials:https://twitter.com/WanderinBritchz?s=20&t=EpRkshYvU2NFDhlNHmNGPQ https://www.instagram.com/dashing_eccentric/ Support Us on Patreon:https://www.patreon.com/campfiretalesofthestrangeandunsettling Satisfy All of Your Merch Needs:https://www.teepublic.com/stores/campfire-tales-of-the-strange-and-unsettling?ref_id=25702 Join the conversation on social media at www.campfirepodcastnetwork.com Discord: https://discord.gg/43CPN3rz Instagram:instagram.com/campfire.tales.podcast GoodPods:https://goodpods.app.link/T0qvGnXnplb Twitter:www.twitter.com/campfiretotsau Facebook:www.facebook.com/campfire.tales.podcast Visit Our Linktree for Any and All Campfire Info:https://linktr.ee/Campfirepodcast Special Thanks: Gregg Martin for music contributions! Go follow him on Instagram at Instagram.com/reverentmusic , on Bandcamp at https://reverentmusic.bandcamp.com/releases or on Spotify at https://open.spotify.com/album/6QVhQsYQeeBVOtxrelehTI?si=V5CAxS8sSXyVFn14G7j-GA Additional Music: "Out of Sight: The Cursed Piano" - Ghost Stories IncorporatedElias Armao for graphic design! Go follow him on Instagram at instagram.com/doggedlinedesignsupply Merch Designs by: Jonathan Dodd! Show him some love at https://linktr.ee/jonathandodd Easton Chandler Hawk! Support his work at https://linktr.ee/eastonhawkart The Crescent Hare! Support her work at https://linktr.ee/thecrescenthare Todd Purse at Create Magic Studios! Support his work at https://linktr.ee/Createmagicstudios
Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/392 Presented By: Zoe Angling Group, Drifthook, Range Meal Bars, Country Financial Sponsors: https://wetflyswing.com/sponsors Chris Santella, author of the 50 Places to Visit Before You Die series, is here to break down some of the best places to fish. We find out what was like to interview some of the greats in fly fishing and outdoor sports. We also talk about his band, Catch and Release, how they wrote songs, and their influences in music. You're gonna love this one! Show Notes with Chris Santella 11:30 - Chris caught his first steelhead on the North Umpqua River. 21:15 - He tells us how the idea for the book came about. 32:30 - Chris' first book was, Fifty Places to Play Golf Before You Die: Golf Experts Share the World's Greatest Destinations, published in 2004. 34:50 - He's done 16 other '50 Places' books after the golf one. 36:00 - The book about sailing was a challenge to write for him. That was his third '50 places' book written. 44:05 - Chris interviewed Frank Moore for his fly fishing book as well as other respected names in fly fishing and fly tying. 54:00 - Fifty Places to Drink Beer has done very well too. 55:15 - We talk about his music background. He had a band called, Catch and Release. They wrote and recorded original songs. Check out their music here. 1:00:00 - They play live regularly at the Oakshire Beer Hall in Portland. 1:02:00 - The Grateful Dead band was a great influence on Chris. His favorite song was Jack Straw. Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/392
This week we have a very special episode for you to celebrate the life of Frank Moore. I'm joined by Becky McRae, Karl Konecny, Dean Finnerty, Dale Greenley, and Jeffery Dose. We talk about meeting Frank, be it on the river, at a faire, or in the scouts, botany with Jeanne, wading upstream, "pick-pocketing," and so many other fantastic stories. If you would like to support some of the causes that Frank and Jeanne Moore have, look too: www.northumpqua.org, www.steamboaters.org, or www.glidewildflowershow.org
America Out Loud PULSE with Dr. Peter and Ginger Breggin – I learned the remarkable background of a Currier and Ives print on my wall, a gift from Ginger's mom, which depicts “George Washington's dream.” The dream is prophetic. We chat about how God and love keep us steady through the worst of storms. A show about fundamental values with Frank Moore...
America Out Loud PULSE with Dr. Peter and Ginger Breggin – I learned the remarkable background of a Currier and Ives print on my wall, a gift from Ginger's mom, which depicts “George Washington's dream.” The dream is prophetic. We chat about how God and love keep us steady through the worst of storms. A show about fundamental values with Frank Moore...
“Separation of Church and State” – “The Myth & The Mandate” – This is Pastor Tim White's version of Dan Fisher's Separation of Church and State. - The myth of “Separation of Church & State” & The Mandate to the American Church. – * Dr. William James “The Father of Modern Psychology” There is nothing so absurd but that if you repeat it often enough people will believe it.” * Proverbs. 18:17 The first to present his case seems right, till another comes forward and questions him. ** “Cancel Culture” works to keep the latter from happening, thereby suppressing truth and deceiving/controlling the people. * Frank Moore, 1862: “The preachers of the Revolution did not hesitate to attack the great political and social evils of their day …” * John Wingate Thornton - The Pulpit of the American Revolution 1860 ** “The Fathers of the Republic did not divorce politics and religion, but they denounced the separation as ungodly. … The state was dev-eloped out of the church – not the other way around.” * “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; …” ** Question: Who is being limited in the 1st Amendment? ** - the Government, NOT THE CHURCH! - There is so much more in this message. Please listen to this Podcast and get the .pdf version of Ps. Tim's PowerPoint presentation.
On today's show, we welcome Dr. Frank Moore, Distinguished Professor Emeritus University of Southern Mississippi. For over 30 years he, his students & other collaborators have studied the biology of migratory songbirds across North America, but most intensely along the northern coast of Gulf Mexico. Today we will talk about these migratory birds that visit Mississippi along their migration. As always, Dr. Troy Majure, DVM, with the Animal Medical Center, and Libby Hartfield, retired director of the Mississippi Museum of Natural Science, take your pet questions and talk about your latest brushes with nature! Join the conversation by email: animals@mpbonline.org. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Plagiarism: The practice of taking someone's work or ideas and passing them off on one's own. What we are saying 1. Ideas do not come out of a vacuum, they come out of a culture. Frank Moore, “No preacher is greater than the tradition itself.” Your perceived originality is overhyped. 2. As you're learning to turn the faucet on, you might need a clear springboard to get to your own idea. Where people get in trouble: They make no effort to make it their own. Originality is overstated. You have to copy before you can be original, you have to know the moves before you can make up your own steps.
Member of the Everything College Hockey team and Roosevelt men's ice hockey captain, Frank Moore joins the show to talk about RMU Illinois, the transition to Roosevelt and balancing school and hockey while working for Everything College Hockey.On this week's episode the boys discuss the most hated teams in the ACHA and CHF and give an update on Iowa State.
Accomplished actor Galen Howard joins Caitlin to talk about 1977's Rabid. Rabid is a Cronenberg movie, so you know body horror is on the table. We look at how mosquitoes inspired the creature design, how uniquely the zombie mechanics come together, and how our protagonist navigates her monstrous transformation with respect to gender. Rabid is a great movie, and we had a lot of fun talking about it. Be sure to check out our new single "Potato Man Loves Ketchup Man," coming soon to a radio near you. Find Galen Howard on instagram @galenhoward, and check him out in movies, on TV, and in music videos!
What are we leaving behind, forgetting, and obscuring as we remember AIDS activist pasts? VIRAL CULTURES is the first book to critically examine the archives that have helped preserve and create the legacy of AIDS activism of the 1980s and 1990s. Marika Cifor charts the efforts activists, artists, and curators have made to document the work of AIDS activism in the US and the infrastructure developed to maintain it, with attention on large institutional archives such as the New York Public Library, and those developed by community-based organizations such as ACT UP and VISUAL AIDS. This book explores the act of saving this activist past and reanimating it in the digital age. Cifor is joined here in conversation by Cait McKinney, K.J. Rawson, and Theodore (Ted) Kerr.Participant bios:Marika Cifor is a feminist scholar of archival and digital studies. Cifor is assistant professor in the Information School and adjunct faculty member in gender, women, and sexuality studies at the University of Washington. She is author of Viral Cultures: Activist Archiving in the Age of AIDS.Cait McKinney is assistant professor in the School of Communication at Simon Fraser University. McKinney's work includes media histories of LGBTQ+ activists and how they took up Internet technologies in the 1980s and 90s.K.J. Rawson is associate professor of English and women's, gender, and sexuality studies at Northeastern University. Rawson is founder and director of the Digital Transgender Archive and co-chair of the editorial board of the Homosaurus, an international LGBTQ+ linked data vocabulary.Ted Kerr is a writer and artist who teaches at The New School. Kerr is a founding member of the collective What Would an HIV Doula Do?, and is coauthor, with Alexandra Juhasz, of We Are Having This Conversation Now: The Times of AIDS Cultural Production.Works and people referenced in this episode:-Vincent Chevalier and Ian Bradley-Perrin (Your Nostalgia Is Killing Me!)-Avram Finkelstein-Hil Malatino-Debra Levine-David Hirsh and Frank Moore, Visual AIDS Archive Project (visualaids.org)-Maxine Wolfe-Stephen Shapiro-Nelson Santos -Kia LaBeija (Goodnight, Kia)-Demian DinéYazhi ́ (NDN AIDS Flag)-AfterLab (University of Washington, Information School)-Anna Lauren Hoffmann-Megan Finn-Tonia Sutherland-Marika Cifor: "Presence, Absence, and Victoria's Hair: Examining Affect and Embodiment in -Trans Archives." Transgender Studies Quarterly 2, no. 4 (2015): 645-649.-Lesbian Herstory Archives-Jih-Fei Cheng, Alexandra Juhasz, and Nishant Shahani, eds. AIDS and the Distribution of Crises. Durham, NC:: Duke University Press, 2020.-Homosaurus: An International LGBTQ Linked Data Vocabulary (homosaurus.org)-Digital Transgender Archive-What Would an HIV Doula Do? Collective-PosterVirus (AIDS ACTION NOW!)-Alexandra Juhasz and Theodore (Ted) Kerr, We Are Having This Conversation Now: The Times of AIDS Cultural Production. Durham, NC:: Duke University Press, 2022-Cait McKinney, Information Activism: a queer history of lesbian media technologies. Durham, NC:: Duke University Press, 2020-ACT UP-The Archive Project (Visual AIDS)-The Artist+ Registry (Visual AIDS)-New York University Fales Library and Special Collections-ACT UP/NY Records (New York Public Library)-New York Public Library-Alex Fialho (Visual AIDS)-Eric Rhein (Visual AIDS Archive Project)-Michelle Caswell and Marika Cifor. "From human rights to feminist ethics: radical empathy in the archives." Archivaria 81, no. 1 (2016): 23-43.-Cait McKinney and Dylan Mulvin. "Bugs: rethinking the history of computing." Communication, Culture & Critique 12, no. 4 (2019): 476-498.-Marika Cifor and Cait McKinney. "Reclaiming HIV/AIDS in digital media studies." First Monday (2020).-What Does a COVID-19 Doula Do? Zine (ONE Archives at University of Southern California) https://www.onearchives.org/what-does-a-covid19-doula-do-zine/)-Latino/a Caucus (ACT UP/New York)-Julián de Mayo
Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/306 Presented By: Reyr Gear, Dette Flies, Anglers Coffee, Togens Fly Shop Sponsors: https://wetflyswing.com/sponsors Jeff Coffey, founder of Fair Flies is here to share the story of how he created a company around fly fur and fly brush while making a positive impact on the world. Jeff tells us how the Zoe Angling Group gives employment opportunities for the survivors of human trafficking and for young men who just got out of prison. Find out how these fly brushes get 90% of your tying done within 2 minutes and how they are also made out of 90% recycled materials. Jeff gives us a peek at their new fly tying vise that is 5 years in the making, plus a new tackle box. Jeff's goal is to employ at least 10,000 victims of human trafficking before he retires and he tells us how we can help them achieve that. Fly Fur Show Notes with Jeff Coffey 03:52 - Jeff started fly angling at 14 years old and at 26 he was already guiding in Bend Oregon 04:42 - Jeff became passionate about what's going on in human trafficking around the world - he wanted to help those victims/survivors by giving them jobs, teaching them how to tie flies, and paying them double wage 05:19 - They started in the 2nd largest slum in the world - Kibera, Kenya. Since that time, they also have projects in Nepal, India, and Tunisia 05:40 - Jeff tells us which products are assigned for each country 10:10 - Nick Pionessa was on the podcast at WFS 288 where we also talked about commercial fly tying 10:40 - Jeff talks about how the complex flies that usually take 15 mins to tie now takes just 2 mins to get 90% done 13:05 - They took their first 5 patterns of brushes to ICAST in 2017 and they won Best to Show 14:02 - The Mind Bender brush has caught all the sport species in the world Sparse Mind Bender Red/Black 5D Brush 14:41 - About 90% of the mylars they use are recycled plastic 17:07 - If you're going for some big browns, the Spey Cream/Copper and Bleeding Leech works great 17:39 - Fair Flies developed fly fur 18:30 - Faux means fake fur or synthetic fur 20:47 - Jeff talks about how you actually use these fur for better results 24:19 - Scott Wilday was on the podcast at WFS 250 where we talked about Lid Rig products 27:15 - 3 years ago, they took over Wasatch Tools - Wasatch had 54 different fly tying tools before Jeff bought the company 28:49 - Wasatch is the only lifetime guaranteed tool - just give them a call and they'll send you another one 29:10 - Wasatch is coming up with a new vise - Jeff describes what it would look like and says we have not seen anything like this before - price is going to range from $225 to $750 33:08 - Jeff's goal is to create 10,000 jobs for exploited individuals 33:40 - Zoe in Greek means "a full life" 34:00 - Wasatch is going to start selling tube flies soon 37:56 - ZAG is partnering up with a group from Birmingham - they create employment opportunities for young men coming out of prison 39:57 - About 200 women have been brought out of human trafficking situation and were given decent jobs by ZAG 40:22 - Bucky Buchstaber was on the podcast at WFS 226 where we talked about human trafficking. Bucky is Jeff's good friend 48:29 - The average angler gets to fish 2 days a year - avid angler, it's a different game 51:10 - Their new vise has been in development for five years 58:33 - Jeff tells the story of when Steve Abel gave him an Abel vise for being good at selling it 59:24 - Jay Nicholas was on the podcast way back at WFS 003 - he's friends with Jeff 1:00:25 - We re-released Frank Moore's episode as a tribute for his very special life - WFS 300 1:01:51 - Each of their factories has a zero-waste policy 1:03:11 - Go to AnglerTradingPost.Com to check out their products - Orvis sell their stuff but check your local fly shop if they have those brushes 1:03:46 - Jeff gives us a peek at the tackle box that they're working on 1:05:21 - If Jeff was dropped on an island and can only take 1 beverage with him, it would be the Redbreast Cask Strength whiskey Fly Fur Conclusion with Jeff Coffey Jeff Coffey shared the story of how he created a company around fly brushes. We learned how the Zoe Angling Group gives employment opportunities for the survivors of human trafficking and young men who just got out of prison. We found out how these fly brushes get 90% of your tying done within 2 minutes and how they are also made out of 90% recycled materials. Jeff gave us a peek at their new fly tying vise that is 5 years in the making. Jeff's goal is to employ at least 10,000 victims of human trafficking before he retires and he tells us how we can help them achieve that. Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/306
Dr. Frank Moore, Distinguished Professor Emeritus at the University of Southern Mississippi, has studied the biology of migratory songbirds across North America, but most intensely along the northern coast of the Gulf of Mexico for over 30 years. Today we will talk about these migratory birds that visit Mississippi along with their flights and some of the hazards they tend to face. Also, we hear from David Mizejewski as the National Wildlife Federation works with Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom to celebrate National Wildlife Week (April 4-8). See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/300 Sponsors: https://wetflyswing.com/sponsors I am pleased to share my podcast interview with Frank Moore, one of the best episodes of the podcast year. Frank shares his amazing 95 years as a fly fisherman, WWII veteran, and conservationist. Frank takes us back to some amazing old stories of some of the famous people he has fished with over the years. He also shares some truly timeless steelhead tips. In fact, one of them already helped me land a steelhead! Show Notes with Frank Moore 14:25 - Frank talks about his experience storming the beaches during D- Day in World War II. Here's a video clip from the crazy moving Saving Private Ryan and that experience. Note - This video is intense and is not for the faint of heart. 20:00 - Curly Reynolds was a mentor for Frank early on in his life and the person who showed him the river. Although Curly always insisted that he fishes through first. 21:00 - Clarence Gordon is another friend and famous person on the North Umpqua. 29:00 - Romer Grey was a very good steelhead fisherman and the son of Zane Grey. 30:00 - Jack Hemmingway was the first person to bring the spey rod to the Umpqua. 41:00 - Jack Decius was a chemist, good friend, and steelhead addict. 49:00 - The movie Mending the Line is about Frank's life and his journey back to Germany and the rivers he saw while in the war. 52:00 - The movie Pass Creek was created because of the conservation work that Frank spearheaded back in the early 1960s. 55:50 - The Frank Moore Wild Steelhead Sanctuary Act= is a bill still working its way through Congress to protect a large tract of the Steamboat Creek watershed. 59:00 - The Skunk or the ugly Mudler are Frank's go-to flies. I put on an old skunk after the interview and caught a beautiful wild fish on one of Frank's classic pools! 59:40 - Dan Callaghan was the person who invented the Green Butt Skunk. 1:09:00 - The hyperbaric oxygen chamber has been noted as helping people with multiple sclerosis. 1:12:00 - Interview with Doug Stewart in episode 31 of the show. There were times in the interview where Frank reminded me of my dad, including the time when he noted why he never picked up spey casting. 1:20:00 - Project Healing Waters is an amazing national organization that is helping veterans by getting them into fly fishing and fly tying. At 95, Frank and Jeanne still help injured veterans at there place on the river. 1:24:00 - Joel runs the Royal Treatment Fly Shop and is a good friend of Frank and Jeanne. 1:24:00 - Here is the Dean Finnerty episode where we also covered fishing the North Umpqua. Conclusion with Frank Moore That was such a great experience for me and I hope you also appreciate that interview and the life Frank Moore has lived. At 95, he's still sharp and a pleasure to spend a few hours with Frank and Jeanne. Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/300
Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/296 Presented By: Trxstle, Togens Fly Shop, Anglers Coffee, Fly Fishing Film Tour Sponsors: https://wetflyswing.com/sponsors John Shewey, Editor of American Fly Fishing magazine, returns today to talk about the magazine, his new book, and the history of Oregon's original flies. It's been 3 years since we last spoke with John so he gives us an update on what's been going on with the magazine, being consolidated into one. We dig into his new book - the history of Oregon flies and its creators, favorite flies including my dad's Max Canyon. Check out John's Top 9 Favorite Flies for Trout! We also talk about his other books and he gives us some tips on writing - how to write like a journalist without coming from an egocentric standpoint. Find out why it's much easier to motivate people from the East to fish West than West to East. John tells us the characteristics of articles that make it to their magazine. 9 Favorite Flies for Trout Show Notes with John Shewey 03:17 - John was on the podcast for the first time at WFS 016 04:17 - Their 3 regional magazines, Northwest Fly Fishing Southwest Fly Fishing Eastern Fly Fishing, have been consolidated to just one called, American Fly Fishing 05:14 - The founding publisher of American Fly Fishing, Steve Cole sold the magazine company to Village Press (the publisher of Pointing Dog Journal) 07:40 - John's newfound passion is hunting Chukars and watching the dogs work 08:51 - Frank Moore passes away at 98.. A fly fish legend. He will surely be remembered - Frank was on the podcast at WFS 046 10:37 - We talked about another legend by the name of Lefty Kreh - how he was a genuine person and really passionate about what he did 15:30 - AFF issues 6 magazines per year 16:43 - John explains why it's a lot easier to convince people from the East to fish West than West to East 28:32 - They typically publish 36 feature-length articles per year 30:08 - Get the latest updates on AFF by subscribing here 31:00 - John's latest book is called, Favorite Flies for Oregon: 50 Essential Patterns from Local Experts - he gives an overview 32:07 - Randall Kaufmann is the best Oregon fly originator as John describes 33:54 - Dave McNeese was on the podcast at WFS 155 34:30 - Ken Morrish was on the podcast at WFS 181 34:44 - The Beetle Bug Coachman is one the great all-time dry flies 35:02 - Garrett Lesko was on the podcast at WFS 236 35:53 - John recently wrote a book about Hummingbirds - it's called The Hummingbird Handbook: Everything You Need to Know About These Fascinating Birds 38:03 - If Randall is not the best-known fly tier of all-time in Oregon, it's probably Polly Rosborough - Polly wrote a book called, Tying and Fishing the Fuzzy Nymphs 38:39 - One of John's favorite Polly fly is the Little Yellowstone Fly with the red butt 39:36 - Brian Silvey was on the podcast at WFS 148 - Brian ties beautiful flies - he's got an original fly called the Silvinator 40:23 - John tells us a little more about Polly 44:27 - The Morrish Mayday pattern is listed in John's book Photo courtesy of Caddis Fly Shop 45:21 - The Umpqua Special 45:33 - The Spruce Fly dates back to the early part of the 20th century - John tells us its history 46:59 - The Beetle Bug Coachman history 53:38 - John started commercial fly tying when he was in high school and he sold his first magazine article when he was a freshman in college 58:23 - Catching steelhead on flies, as history says, began in 1849 59:32 - John S. Ben, a famous fly angler from San Francisco, pioneered steelhead fly fishing on the Eel River in Northern California 1:00:20 - John has written about 20 books in total - see the list of his books here 1:02:11 - One of John's favorite steelhead patterns is the Golden Demon 9 Favorite Flies for Trout Conclusion with guest John and I talked about the magazine, his new book, and the history of Oregon original flies. We found out that their magazine has been consolidated into one - from 3 regional magazines to just American Fly Fishing. We talked about his other books and John gave us some writing tips if we want to write for the readers. We discovered 9 of his favorite flies that are also listed in his book. Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/296
Feb 22, 2022 - Frank Moore and Dan LeRoy come back on the show to talk about modern patriots and the fight for freedom in America. Dan LeRoy: https://www.danleroy.com America the Exceptional, by Frank Moore: https://www.americatheexceptional.us Listen live or get the podcast on the Veritas app: https://www.veritascatholic.com/listen
Oregon loses a legend. Frank Moore passed last night at the age of almost 99. He and his wife married 79 years ago. Tonight we remember him in a tribute about 30 minutes into this show. Also we talk about the days news which may not make you too happy and Any Lab Test Now shares why taking care of your health is becoming so important.
Nov 23, 2021 - Lt Frank Moore joins Joe & Joe to talk about his book: America the Exceptional. Lt Moore is a veteran of the FDNY who believes that God has visibly acted on behalf of this new country, and our freedoms cannot survive in a secular society. America the Exceptional: https://www.americatheexceptional.us Listen live or get the podcast on the Veritas app: https://www.veritascatholic.com/listen
In the first ever episode of Documenta & Son, Documenta Barbrism and Dingle Mary explore the work of painter Frank Moore, whose playful absurdism belied deep anger at the destruction of the planet by humans and of his body and community by AIDS. Moore left behind a collection of work at once tender and terrifying, zany and heartbreaking, taking in everything from medieval torture devices to Lady Bunny's pink d*ck.Twitter: @DocumentaBInstagram: @DocumentaBarbrismWebsite: DocumentaBarbrism.comEmail: buttstuff@documentabarbrism.comRelated links:Beehive by Frank Moore and Jim SelfTribute video by Frank's sisterMore Lifehttps://visualaids.org/projects/the-red-ribbon-project Sources:https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5021a1.htm https://visualaids.org/artists/frank-moore https://75.skowheganart.org/masterplan https://www.davidzwirner.com/exhibitions/2021/more-life/frank-mooreAffiliate links:I host House of Barbrism on Buzzsprout!I record Adventures in Gaybysitting on Riverside.fm!
June 7, 2021 Rockingham County Commissioners Meeting(Wentworth, NC) - Audio of the June 7, 2021 meeting of the Rockingham County Board of Commissioners. The meeting was held at the Rockingham County Governmental Center, located at 371 NC 65 in Wentworth, NC.AGENDA1. MEETING CALLED TO ORDER BY CHAIRMAN HALL2. INVOCATION-PASTOR KEVIN DUNOVANT, FIRST WESLEYAN CHURCH, EDEN3. PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE4. APPROVAL OF JUNE 7,2021 AGENDA5. CONSENT AGENDA (Consent items as follows will be adopted with a single motion, second and vote, unless a request for removal from the Consent Agenda is heard from a Commissioner)A) Jennifer Woods, Clerk to the BoardApproval of Minutes- May 3, 2021 Regular MeetingB) Pat Galloway, Director of Financial Services1. Approval- Increase transfer to capital reserve fund due to Tax CIP revenue collected over estimated FY 21 budget. Funds are required to be transferred to the County capital reserve fund.2. Approval- Reduce Youth Services Fresh Start Program bUdget $11,600. Program funds that were not able to be used during the fiscal year due to Covid 19 restrictions are being released back to the granting agency3. Approval- Appropriate $40,000 of available fund balance in the Sewer Enterprise Fund to cover estimated utilities costs through fiscal year end. The increase in cost is mainly due to increase in sewer charges that have resulted from draining the landfill leachate pond.4. Approval- Appropriate for a $9,461 Cooperative Extension Field Crops Program Fee that has been given to the County and requested that it go to the NC State Ag Foundation to the CES Endowment account.5. Approval- Increase Sheriff Department budget $5,000 for donation received that is designated by the donor to be used towards the purchase of a new K9 for the Rockingham County Sheriffs Office.C) Mark McClintock, Tax AdministratorApproval- Tax Refunds thru May 17, 2021D) Rodney Stewart, RCEMS Operations SupervisorApproval- EMS Financial Statement April 2021E) Lance Metzler, County Manager1. Approval- Request for Road Addition- Oakchester Court (0.075 miles) off Hush Hickory Trace (SR 2962) in the Reserve at Winsome Forest Subdivision- New Bethel Township2. Approval - Request for Road Addition - Commonwealth Crossing Parkway off Spencer Road (SR 1380) in the Commonwealth Crossing Centre Industrial Park Price TownshipF) Felissa Ferrell, Health and Human Services DirectorConsider the adoption of a proclamation proclaiming June 15, 2021 as World Elder Abuse Awareness DayG) Tara Muchini, Youth Services DirectorApproval- Reappointments I Appointments to the Juvenile Crime Prevention Council; terms to expiring June 30, 2023:Reappointments: Felissa Ferrell, Frank Moore, Tara Muchini, Sam Page, Charles Perkins, Reece Pyrtle, Jason RameyNew Appointments: Chief Court Counselor: Gayle Alston, NC Dept. of Public Safety Public Health Director: Trey Wright, Rockingham Co. DHHSH) Michael Roche, Library DirectorApproval - Reappointment to the Library Board of Trustees; term to expire June 30, 2024: Anne Lane, Valencia Abbott, Sandy Williams, Janice TimpsonI) Trey Wright, Public Health DirectorApproval- Fee Schedule revision increasing the Rabies Titer - Flat Rate (OS Program) fee from the current $100 to $125. This is our new cost to have the test completed by Quest Labs.J) Stacie S. Julian, Central Permitting AdministratorApproval- Resolution Appointing Antony Lynn Cochran as Plat Review Officer for Rockingham CountyK) Captain Jennifer Brown, Sheriffs OfficeApproval- Captain Marcus Marshall is retiring from the Rockingham County Sheriffs Office effective July 1, 2021 with over 24 years of service in law enforcement. He is requesting his duty weapon for $1 (gun permit attached).6. PUBLIC COMMENT7. PUBLIC HEARING -LANCE METZLER, COUNTY MANAGERFY 2021-2022 BUDGET8. STEVEN PULLIAM, DAN RIVERKEEPR & GOOD STEWARDS OF ROCKINGHAMPresentation of the Anti-litter and Awareness Campaign featuring river clean ups and the creation of public art with the recovered materials from the river called "Mythical Creatures of the Dan." Request for a $500 County donation to help pay for t-shirts for volunteers with Good Stewards of Rockingham.9. PAULA SEAMSTER, BOARD OF ELECTIONS DIRECTORApproval - Accept and appropriate $8,214 for the installation of security cameras at the Board of Elections office and for the annual maintenance. This will be paid for with HAVA funds.10. PAT GALLOWAY, DIRECTOR OF FINANCIAL SERVICESApproval- Adopt a Resolution to Establish and Maintain Rockingham County Administrative Capital.Approval- Approve Budget Amendment to transfer $4,500,000 of available fund balance in the General Fund to the Administrative Capital Reserve Fund for the following purposes:1) For Future Public Buildings2) For General Government Equipment3) For Public Safety Equipment$2,799,000$ 876,000$ 825,00011. RONNIE TATE, DIRECTOR OF ENGINEERING & PUBLIC UTILITIESConsideration & Approval - Water line construction on Newnam Road for new subdivision. Estimated project costs of $150,000 with funding from OSBM funds. Request approval for County Manager to approve change orders to contract up to $50,000 without Board approval.12. MARK MCCLINTOCK, TAX ADMINISTRATORTAX REVALUATION UPDATE13. NEW BUSINESS14. COMMISSIONER COMMENTS15. ADJOURN# # #
Check out this film's posts @ MovieJeff.com here » https://themoviereviewshow.blogspot.com/1977/04/rabid.htmland leave a comment. Also check out my David Cronenberg filmography watch project here » https://themoviereviewshow.blogspot.com/p/david-cronenberg.html Rabid is a 1977 body horror film written and directed by David Cronenberg. It features Marilyn Chambers in the lead role, supported by Frank Moore, Joe Silver and Howard Ryshpan. Chambers plays a woman who, after being injured in a motorcycle accident and undergoing a surgical operation, develops an orifice under one of her armpits that hides a phallic/clitoral stinger she uses to feed on people's blood. Follow the show... @ Twitter https://twitter.com/MOVIEREVIEWSH0W @ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpONT6Yp423GzUrHDDqBL3g @ LetterBoxd https://letterboxd.com/jeffmovie AND, FOR AS LITTLE AS $1/MONTH » https://patreon.com/dad SUPPORT THIS SHOW AND OTHER VENTURES FROM HTTPS://WWW.MYAMERI.CA INDUSTRIES • THANK YOU --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/the-movie-review-show/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/the-movie-review-show/support
Chester talks in-depth on hogs in Southeast Texas and Southwest Louisiana with hog expert Frank Moore.
Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/162 So Fly Gear: https://wetflyswing.com/sofly Fly Fishing and Tying Journal: https://wetflyswing.com/ftj Tom Bie, editor of the Drake Magazine, is here to share the story of how he got started and how the magazine came to be. Tom shares the story of how it all goes back to when he was a lifty at the ski resort. We hear about the influence from Powder magazine and the years leading up to the start of the Drake. Find out how Tom edits and chooses the essays to use in the magazine. He shares the one tip to get yourself published in the Drake Magazine. Show Notes with Tom Bie - The print version of Power Magazine just went out of business. - I noted the Marty Sheppard episode (not Sherman) sorry Marty. Here's the link to episode 76 with Marty and Mia. - Folsom Prison Blues - The 7th issue of Paddler magazine was the start of the Drake magazine. It got the Drake on the shelves of Barnes and Noble. - Field and Stream is no longer producing a print magazine but is different than the Drake as a vertical magazine. - Elliott Adler from the Drake was on the podcast in episode 54 here. - Elliott Adler's brother, Simon Adler, is a producer of the huge podcast Radio Lab. Here's Simon teaching podcasting. - John Gierach was on the podcast in episode 47 here. - I had Steve Duda on the Podcast here and the new editor of the FlyFish Journal, Jason Rolfe here. - The NewYorker is one of Tom's favorite magazines for a number of reasons. - Zach from Swing the Fly Magazine was on in episode 151 here. - Frank Moore's go fund me site and my interview with Frank here. - Wide Spread Panic, Phish and the Dead were all big bands for Tom in the day. - The Sweep Boats on the Middle Fork of the Salmon The Drake Magazine with Tom Bie at the Drake Magazine. Resources Noted in the Show Simon Adler Teaching Podcasting Videos Noted in the Show Sweep Boats on the Middle Fork Conclusion with Tom Bie We hear from Tom Bie, the editor of the Drake Magazine, one of the most respected fly fishing magazines on the planet. Tom shares the story of how he went into the army to pay for his journalism degree and other amazing stories from his life. We cover it all today including politics, conservation, fires and even a little on fishing. Leave a comment if you had a chance to listen to this episode with Tom Bie. Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/162
Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/160 I am very pleased to have the great Dave Whitlock on the podcast to share the story of how he made a life in fly fishing and in art. Dave provides some tips on fishing terrestrials and how the Dave’s Hopper became the fly he’s most known for. We hear about the impact of Joe Brooks, Lee Wulff, Davy Wotton and others who influenced Dave along the way. We dig into a little on the White River and focus on some of the terrestrial patterns that Dave has created over the years. Support Our Podcast Sponsors So Fly Gear: https://www.soflygear.com/ Fly Fishing and Tying Journal: https://ftjangler.com/ Show Notes with Dave Whitlock - Brian Wise was on the podcast in episode 157 here from Fly Fishing the Ozarks and talked about fishing streamers on the North Fork of the White River. - I note the Guide to Aquatic Trout Foods which is one of my goto bug books. - Dave is doing some artwork for Trout Magazine from Trout Unlimited. - Dave's Hopper is one of the most know fly patterns. - Here's a link to the Hopper DVD. - The Red Fox squirrel nymph - The Bright spot carpenter ant is another of Dave’s terrestrial patterns. - Davy Wotton was on the podcast in episode 35 and talked about fishing wet flies. - Brian Wise talked about the North Fork of the White River and was on the podcast here. - Rick Hafele was on the podcast is episode 37 and covered the basics of entomology. - Gary Borger was a big influence for Dave and was on our podcast in episode 45 here. Joe Brooks was Dave's first fly fishing mentor and his nephew was on our podcast here in episode 71. Here is a link to the Joe Brooks Documentary we talked about. - Lee Wulff was another huge mentor for Dave in conservation. I had Joan Wulff on here and we talked about Lee. - Al Mclane's fly fishing encyclopedia - Here's a link to a podcast with Emily and Dave Whitlock. - Frank Moore was on the podcast here in episode 46. You can find Dave at DaveWhitlock.com Conclusion with Dave Whitlock The great Dave Whitlock is on the podcast this week to share his amazing life story and some tips on fishing terrestrials. We hear about Dave Wotton and some of the other big mentors for Dave over the years. This one hits home for me because Dave is very similar in age to my dad and had a very similar life in fly fishing. Lot's of good stuff on the White River, Oklahoma and trout fishing. Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/160
Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/159 Fly Fishing and Tying Journal: https://ftjangler.com/ So Fly Gear: https://www.soflygear.com/ Richard Harrington, from the River Rambler Podcast, is on the today to share the fly fishing story of Oregon to New York and back again for steelhead. Richard also shares some great tips on steelhead fishing the North Umpqua. We talk about skating flies and the best way to hitch a fly behind the head so it skates up nicely for you. We get into a little bit of everything including who is the mastermind behind Richard's podcast and which spey rods he loves. Show Notes with Richard Harrington - Frank Moore was on the podcast here in episode 46. - Rick Pope was on the podcast here and we talked about the Flip Pallot episode with the $40k in cash story. - The Go Fund Me site for Frank Moore due to loosing his house from the fires. Here’s my episode with Frank Moore. - Here’s the skunk I used to catch the Frank Moore fish on the river. - John McMillan was on the podcast here and talked about the status of steelhead. - The River Why book was amazing and compared to the River Rambler here. - Currents Podcast is produced by Richard's daughter. - I noted the Zoom PodTrac P4 which I will be using and testing very soon. You can find my review of it on my other podcast here: The Outdoors Online Marketing Podcast. - Todd Hirano's blog is a great resource for dry flies for steelhead. The Riffle Hitch for skating flies for steelhead - The Blue Heron hooks and Dave McNeese was a guest on the podcast in episode 155 here. - I noted Moonshine Rods and some of the smaller companies that are out there. - The Drake Magazine forum is a good resource. - Burkheimer Rods, Gary Anderson, Meiser Rods are all big players in the Northwest spey game. - Todd Hirano's Wang fly is great for skating steelhead. - George Cook was on the Podcast here in episode 131. - John Larisons book, Dec Hogan's book, Todd Hirano's blog are great resources for dry fly fishing. - Richard C Harrington is the art side of Richard and where you can find his stuff. You can find Richard at TheRiverRambler.com and the SouthLimaSteelhead Society.com. Resources Noted in the Show Blue Heron hooks John Larison's Steelhead book Videos and/or podcasts Noted in the Show Frank Moore Podcast Video Bomber fishing for Atlantic salmon "You're not going to skate fish if you don't fish skaters." Conclusion with Richard Harrington We hear Richard Harrington’s amazing story of creating a steelhead focused podcast after being “stuck” in New York for 40 years prior to returning to the NW. Richard and I talk about everything in this one from D Day to the Wallows. We also dig into some resources and tips on skating flies for steelhead including some great blogs, books and videos that you'll love. click the link below to subscribe so you get updated when the next podcast drops. Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/159
Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/142 Jason Osborn is on the podcast to share the story of how he came to own the Portland Fly Shop and some tips on why they have been successful. Find out about the Kalama River and how Jason was able to catch fish year around on this river. Show Notes with Jason Osborn Northwest Fly Fishing Outfitters was Jason’s previous employer before opening up the Portland Fly Shop. Jason talks about Jim Teeny on the Kalama back in the day. Teeny was the Derek Jeeter of Fly Fishing. The Klamath skater, the bomber and the waller waker are all good flies. We talk about the riffle hitch when using wet flies for waking flies. I @ mentioned Jason on a salmon fly skater. a chubby Chernobyl might be the best skater for trout. Steven bird was on the podcast here to talk about trout spey Jerry French’s Camo squid Frank Moore was on the podcast here and noted the skunk as one of his patterns. Steelhead U Caddis Fly is a great resource Travis was on the podcast here. You can find Jason at the Portland Fly Shop here Resources Noted in the Show We talk about fall caddis and why they work later in the season. You can listen to Tom Larimer talk about summer steelhead here. Steelhead University Videos Noted in the Show Here’s a video on skating flies for steelhead on the Dean how to tie a chubby chernobyl Conclusion with Jason Osborn Jason Osborn describes the experience of opening and running a new fly shop. Find out why he quit guiding and why the new fly shop has been successful. We hear about the Kalama and other SW Washington rivers and how they have changed over the years We also dig into the Dean River and how you might use waking flies for steelhead on this great river. We also break out some skating tips for rainbow trout as well. https://wetflyswing.com/142
Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/141 I had the pleasure of interviewing AK Best to talk about tying dry flies and his life in fly fishing. We also hear some of the other influential parts of his life including how he survived his music night life. AK talks about absolute attention in music and in fly tying. Find out what makes a Colorado Green Drake such a killer pattern and why the wing tips are so critical for dry flies. Show Notes with AK Best - Production Fly Tying here was a big impact book for many fly tyers in the space. - The Colorado Green Drake from Charlies Fly Box. - In the Ring of the Rise - Vince Marinaro book on trout behavior. - Tom Whiting was on the podcast in episode 115 and talked about how he creates the perfect dry fly hackle. - The St. Vrain Caddis was a killer pattern if you need a goto pattern when nothing else is working. - The Colorado Caddis was a famous Colorado pattern. - A Red Quill Parachute in a size 18 is a great prospecting fly. Works great on the Frying Pan River. - John Gierach was on the podcast is episode 47 and talked about quitting drugs and alcohol. - I interviewed Joan Wulff here and Frank Moore who were two of the oldest guests I've had on the show. - The Winged beetle. - The Olive Quill Dun, The Red Quilled Parachute are two of AK's goto flies. - Danville 6/0 thread is the only thread you need. - Selective Trout by Swisher Richards - Henry's Fork Anglers You can find AK's book Production Fly Tying here. Resources Noted in the Show In the Ring of the Rise by Vincent Marinaro Videos Noted in the Show The Colorado Caddis A Red Quill Parachute Conclusion with AK Best AK Best who wrote one of the great fly tying books shares some of the great tips from this book and others from over the years. Find out why you should be clipping your dry fly hackles and some of his best Colorado patterns. Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/141
Thank you for joining us in the crypt. This time, Becky from “I Have a Strange Story” joins us to talk about 1977's movie Rabid. It stars Marilyn Chambers, Frank Moore, Joe Silver, and Howard Ryshpan. Rabid was written and directed by David Cronenberg and was filmed in Canada. Cronenberg originally wanted Sissy Spacek for the lead role but was vetoed by the studio. As a result, Marylin Chambers was cast in the lead role. Marilyn Chambers was considered, as she was looking to break into mainstream roles. "A young woman develops a taste for human blood after experimental plastic surgery, and her victims turn into blood-thirsty zombies, leading into a city-wide epidemic." Helping Indie Creators Indie creators and friends of the podcast could use your support right now. As a result of the current Covid-19 pandemic, they have lost their streams of income with all the canceled cons. Eli Wolff | http://eli-wolff.blogspot.com/ |@eli_wolff on twitter Brett Weldele | http://www.brettweldele.com/ Eddy Hedington | http://eddyhedington.com/ Jim Ferguson | http://Www.jimfergusonmakingascene.com/ Rich Werner | http://www.richwerner.com/ Chad Scheres | http://facebook.com/toyghoul Travis Bundy | http://www.thoughtboxcomics.com/ Jenna Ayoub | http://jennaayoub.com/ @Boneygjones You can follow Becky on Instagram or on Facebook. Listen to Becky and her sister, Linsey on I Have a Strange Story Follow us on social media:https://twitter.com/NerdsFTChttps://www.instagram.com/nerdsftchttps://ww.facebook.com/NerdsFTC Get our Merch:bit.ly/NerdsMerch Saul:https://twitter.com/Better_CallMe Greg:https://twitter.com/ThatAmazingTwithttps://www.instagram.com/thatamazingtwit David:https://twitter.com/DaveyDave503https://www.instagram.com/daveydave Theme by: Jake Lionharthttps://twitter.com/Jake_Lionheart
Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/122 I connected with Rick Saez to talk about the Outdoor Biz Podcast and some tips to help you find out more about building a business in the outdoor space. Rick is helping outdoor adventure businesses get into podcasting through his online courses. We hear about how Rick started at the bottom and worked his way up through the business via multiple companies along the way. Tons of shoutouts to companies and people in the outdoor and fly fishing industries. It was a fun chat to BS about the outdoors with Rick. Fly Fishing Trip Giveaway: https://wetflyswing.com/giveaway Show Notes with Rick Saez (Updated links here: https://wetflyswing.com/122) Eagle Creek, Dana Design, Umpqua Feather Merchants and Low Pro were all companies that Rick worked with before starting the Outdoor Biz Podcast. Tim Ferris is one of Rick's favorite podcast and one of the reasons that Rick jumped into podcasting. Fishpond, Far Bank, Tom Sadler, and Korkers have all been on the podcast with Rick. I had Tom Sadler on the podcast here in episdoe 98. You can check out some of the resources that Rick offers to help you start your own podcast. The Outdoor Retailer Show is a great event to attend if you want to network. Snews and the Voice Magazine was noted here in relation to new companies in the outdoor industry. I missed Rick who was at IFTD this year. Rick describes what the Outdoor Retailer Show is like after 20 years. We talk about the hosted trips that I'm doing with guides and lodges from guests I've had on the podcast. Gregg Bleakney is a good example of someone who quit the day job for the outdoor biz. Elliott Adler was on the podcast in episode 54 and talked about starting your podcast. The Wild Ideas Podcast got picked up by REI. Kelly Galloup was on the podcast in episode 52 to talk about streamers. I noted the upcoming hosted steelhead trip to the OP. You can check out the trip here and get more information here. I interviewed Frank Moore here about the North Umpqua. The Colorado Tear Drop episode was the most popular episode for Rick to this point. I noted Rent This Rod who was on the the podcast. We talk about overlanding and what it's all about. Maybe we need an overlanding guest like the AdventurePortal.com who covers all of this stuff and can explain the benefits. Roof Nest Tents were noted here and part of the overlanding groups out there. MontBell pillow or the Thermarest chair kit are our luxury hiking items. Tim Ferris and Entrepreneurs on Fire along with Channel Mastery Podcasts are all goto's for Rick. The Croatia podcast workshop is a new resource. Resources Noted in the Show The Wild Ideas Podcast Here's the Thermarest Chair I Love Videos Noted in the Show Frank Moore was on the podcast Conclusion with Rick Saez I had a fun chat with Rick Saez who is the host of the Outdoor Biz Podcast. We hear what a life in the outdoor industry feels like including what it's like to lose your job and find the next big thing in the outdoor industry. Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/122
Chester talks with Frank Moore about the growing danger of feral hogs.
Episode 173: The Crew's is running from zombies or vampires (they're not sure) as they discuss David Cronenberg's Rabid. It's an earlier Cronenberg film, and you can see the building blocks of his best work. Rabid, along with George Romero's The Crazies, influenced the zombie genre with the outbreaks having originated from a virus or drug. The film's low budget does show and who knew David Cronenberg worked with porn stars. Maybe that last part isn't surprising. Christopher M. O'Brien's books, "The Forrest J Ackerman Oeuvre", and "Lovecraftian Voyages" are available for purchase on Amazon. If you like our music intro, head over to Soundcloud and hear more amazing music from aquariusweapon. Aquariusweapon can also be found on YouTube. Runtime: 01:32:44 Contact: themoviecrewe@gmail.com
A full LumberKings report on one of the hottest teams in the Midwest League. Previous podcast guest right-hander Jake Walters has earned his first professional win, while the rest of the team's pitching staff is in flux following a pair of roster moves. Josh Roberson is due to make his long-awaited return from the injured list in the coming days. Hitting coach Frank Moore joins us (8:30) to discuss his experiences in the Marlins organization, the evolution of offensive strategy in baseball, and the development of particular LumberKings this season. Follow Erik Oas (@erik_oas) on Twitter and listen to all LumberKings radio broadcasts on 100.3 WCCI. Follow Fish Stripes on Twitter (@fishstripes) and stick with FishStripes.com for full coverage of the Marlins farm system this season. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A full LumberKings report on one of the hottest teams in the Midwest League. Previous podcast guest right-hander Jake Walters has earned his first professional win, while the rest of the team's pitching staff is in flux following a pair of roster moves. Josh Roberson is due to make his long-awaited return from the injured list in the coming days. Hitting coach Frank Moore joins us (8:30) to discuss his experiences in the Marlins organization, the evolution of offensive strategy in baseball, and the development of particular LumberKings this season. Follow Erik Oas (@erik_oas) on Twitter and listen to all LumberKings radio broadcasts on 100.3 WCCI. Follow Fish Stripes on Twitter (@fishstripes) and stick with FishStripes.com for full coverage of the Marlins farm system this season. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Show Sponsor: https://www.delifreshdesign.com/ I met Mia and Marty on the Deschutes to chat about their background guiding and running a business in fly fishing. We also go deep into John Day steelhead fishing and include some tips on getting started. They run through some smallmouth bass fishing tips and trips. They started as skate boarders and snow boarders and then transitioned into fly fishing. Marty talks about the feeling of catching his first steelhead and what you need to get started. Show Sponsors Deli Fresh Design: https://www.delifreshdesign.com/ (use the coupon code: wfs20 for 20% off) The Wet Fly Swing Members Society: https://wetflyswing.com/members Show Notes with Mia and Marty Sheppard (Updated show notes links and time: https://wetflyswing.com/76) In Dec Hogan's Book Dec talks about Steve Cruz. Steve is the guy that helped get Marty into steelhead. Marty talks about the first fly caught steelhead that he caught on the General Practitioner. Mia talks about winning the Spey O Rama and how she has won the event 3 times. Little Creek Outfitters is the business that they purchased and changed their lives over the last 16 years. Western Rivers purchased land on the John Day River and now there is some great public access. Cotton Wood State Park and Rock Creek are two public access points for the John Day River. The Dragon Fly Hatch on the John Day is epic. The Kids Fly Fishing Camp is a new program that they started about 3 years ago. John Ecklund sold Little Creek Outfitters to Marty and Mia. Marty tells the story here about how it all came to be. Oliver White tells his crazy story in episode 69 of the podcast. The take home message is that you shouldn't be afraid to take a chance and go for it. We talk about Martin's boat. You have to check out this video on boating the grand canyon with a drift boat. I talk about the Frank Moore podcast interview that I put together. I got my first North fish on the skunk. The Silvenator was noted as Marty's goto pattern. Sean Gallagher's Book on Wild Steelhead has a great chapter on the John Day River in it. Service Creek Gauge and McDonald Ferry Gauging Stations. The SuperSuckers. Seracione Fly Reels are their goto reels. Gary Anderson Rods You can reach Mia and Marty at Little Creek Outfitters here: http://fly-fishing-guide-oregon.com/ Resources Mentioned in the Show Sean Gallagher's book on Wild Steelhead Seracione Reels Videos Mentioned in the Show The General Practitioner Video The Story about Martin's Boat The Frank Moore Episode The SuperSuckers Conclusion with Mia and Marty Sheppard We cover steelhead and smallmouth bass fishing in this episode. Marty talks about the epic dragon fly hatch on the John Day River where bass are jumping out of the water like mad. We also get into some great steelhead tips on fishing the John Day plus a new kids fly fishing camp that they have going. Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/76
CMOtivated & Mizzou's own Josh Hesseltine break down the hottest topics to hit your timeline this week! 1. Hot button NEWS 2. Met Gala 3. NBA/ NHL Playoffs 4. NFL Table Talk 5. Avengers/ GOT Reviews 6. Frank Moore's NEW BLOG As always thanks for listening and send in any questions for the crew on Instagram or Facebook @dedicationperiod Check out all things DEDICATION. on our website www.dedicationperiod.com
On this month's episode Ben Gann, NLBMDA's Vice President of Legislative & Political Affairs, reunites with Frank Moore, former Regulatory Counsel for NLBMDA. The two pick up their discussion from January on OSHA's revisions to the Crane Rule. Tune in to learn more about the revisions to the rule, effective February 7, and how to carry out training, certification and evaluation for crane operators on your yard.
Ben Gann, NLBMDA's Vice President of Legislative & Political Affairs sits down with Frank Moore, former Regulatory Counsel for NLBMDA. The two discuss the certification requirements for the revised OSHA Crane Rule and dive deep into the evolution of the rule and what it means for dealers today.
Then there were 4... The NFL Playoffs have narrowed things down to the four best teams this NFL season and the Table Talk coverage is better then ever! We dive into the divisional round, Kyler Murray to the NFL, the never ending saga in Pittsburgh, and of course this weekends action! Chiefs / Pats Saints / Rams Who's going to the Super Bowl? Here's our take... www.dedicationperiod.com has you covered for all blogs from sports to whatever Frank Moore is coming up with next!
Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/george-daniel-podcast-interview-musky-joe-humphries-euro-nymphing-teaching/ I had the pleasure of talking with George Daniel on his teaching philosophy, guiding, Joe Humphries and a number of other great topics including fishing Musky. We talk about competition fly fishing, journaling, his blogging and his plans for the upcoming years. George tells a great story about the angling professors at Penn State and how it is a position that he would be interested in. Show Sponsors TheGreyDrake.com: https://www.thegreydrake.com/ The Portland Fly Shop: https://theportlandflyshop.com/ This episode is brought to you by support from our listeners via Patreon: https://wetflyswing.com/patreon Show Notes with George Daniel I note the Frank Moore podcast I did with another living legend. Joe Humphries was one of George's big mentors. Devin Olsen was on the podcast here. I interviewed John Gierach in episode 47. John Wooden was a mentor because of his teaching philosophy. Musky is his passion now especially while the spawn is occuring for trout. The Bug book is a great book on breaking down entomology to its basic level. Blain Chocolate, Joe Goodspeed on instagram @teeth_and_trout. The Orvis Learning Center is noted as a great resource for beginners and advanced anglers alike. You can reach George at Livinonthefly.com. Conclusion with George Daniel It was cool to hear George talk about Joe Humphries, some of his other mentors and the tips and resources he shared in this episode. Please leave a comment below if you have any feedback for this episode. Click below for the show notes links: Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/george-daniel-podcast-interview-musky-joe-humphries-euro-nymphing-teaching/
Ben Gann, NLBMDA's Vice President of Legislative and Political Affairs, sits down with Frank Moore, NLBMDA's Regulatory Counsel, to discuss the EPA's Lead: Renovation, Repair and Painting (RRP) rule. Ben talks about the latest developments with the rule and its implications for dealers. Please note that this episode was recorded in May 2018.
Show Notes: http://wetflyswing.com/52 I had the pleasure of interviewing Kelly Galloup, the man who changed the streamer game back in the day with the book Modern Streamers. We talk about his youtube channel and the large resource for fly tyers, his porn fly names, walking the dog with bass fishing and other techniques on making the fish react. This one was crazy good and a ride that was hard to jump off of. Hope you enjoy! Show Sponsors https://ascentflyfishing.com/ (coupon code: WETFLYSWING) https://www.thegreydrake.com/ This episode is brought to you by support from our listeners via Patreon: https://wetflyswing.com/patreon Show Notes with Kelly Galloup Gene Hering was on episode 23. Gene produced many of Kelly's DVD's through Fly Fish TV. Kelly wrote Modern Streamers which was a game changer in the streamer game back in the 1980's. Kelly notes his second book - Cripples and Spinners, which doesn't get talked as much about because of the popularity of the streamer book. The Zoo Cougar was Kelly's first big fly that was the start of a big change with streamers. Click the link above to watch Kelly tie it. Jim Teeny helped Kelly produce the first lines specifically for streamers back in the day. I note the Gary Borger podcast where he discusses being there in the early days where nymphing was frowned upon. Roman Moser started the beadhead madness back in the day. We talk about Gary Lafontaine and how he was probably 40 years ahead of his time in fly fishing. Here's an old youtube video with Gary. The Peanut Envy is another one of Kelly's popular patterns with a funny porn name. Joe Brooks had the Platinum Blonde fly pattern. Kelly wasn't the first person to come up with these types of names. Ray Schmidt was noted as a big Michigan guide. I interviewed John Gierach in this episode and I noted that I received some negative feedback for not going deep into fly fishing. We talk about the Fly Fisherman magazine article on the 50 most influential people in fly fishing. Kelly was not on the list and we talk about his take on this. John Randolph was the editor of Fly Fisherman magazine. Kelly describes his youtube channel in a few words. He didn't listen to the experts on youtube and went with his one process. Wax on Wax off with the Karate Kid was the analogy that Kelly used to talk about his favorite fly tying tip. The Frank Moore interview was noted in comparison to Kelly's age. Here is a link to the Q and A section or go onto youtube and leave a comment. You can find Kelly at the SlideInn.com or on youtube here. Conclusion with Kelly Galloup Crazy value from Kelly Gallop on streamers and the history and his connection in fly fishing. He talks about how the spey craze started, where the porn star names came from and the exact steps to get into the streamer game. So many good tips in this one. What was your favorite part of the episode? I loved when Kelly talked about bringing in the youth and all of the great people out there. Click the below for show notes links: http://wetflyswing.com/52
Take the survey: https://wetflyswing.com/survey Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/46 I am pleased to share my podcast interview with Frank Moore, one of the best episodes of the podcast year. Frank shares his amazing 95 years as a fly fisherman, WWII veteran, and conservationist. Frank takes us back to some amazing old stories of some of the famous people he has fished with over the years. He also shares some truly timeless steelhead tips. In fact, one of them already helped me land a steelhead! Show Notes with Frank Moore 14:25 - Frank talks about his experience storming the beaches during D- Day in World War II. 20:00 - Curly Reynolds was a mentor for Frank early on in his life and the person who showed him the river. Although Curly always insisted that he fishes through first. 21:00 - Clarence Gordon is another friend and famous person on the North Umpqua. 29:00 - Romer Grey was a very good steelhead fisherman and the son of Zane Grey. 30:00 - Jack Hemmingway was the first person to bring the spey rod to the Umpqua. 41:00 - Jack Decius was a chemist, good friend and steelhead addict. 43:00 - Colonel Hayden 49:00 - The movie Mending the Line is about Frank's life and his journey back to Germany and the rivers he saw while in the war. 52:00 - The movie Pass Creek was created because of the conservation work that Frank spear headed back in the early 1960's. 55:50 - The Frank Moore Wild Steelhead Sanctuary Act 59:40 - Dan Calahan was the person who invented the Green Butt Skunk. 1:09:00 - The hyperbolic chamber has been noted as helping people with MS. 1:12:00 - Interview with Doug Stewart in this episode. 1:18:00 - There are a few really cool campgrounds on the North Umpqua. 1:20:00 - Project Healing Waters is the amazing national orginization that is helping veterans by getting them into fly fishing. 1:24:00 - Joel runs the Royal Treatment Fly Shop. 1:24:00 - Here is the Dean Finnerty episode that I did with him. You can get information for the documentary Mending the Line which is based on Frank Moore. Conclusion with Frank Moore That was such a great experience for me and I hope you also appreciate that interview and the life Frank Moore has lived. At 95, he's still sharp and a pleasure to spend a few hours with Frank and Jeanne.
In this Octoberthon episode of the horror review/discussion show 'Screams After Midnight,' we discuss 'Rabid.'The film is Directed by David Cronenberg and stars Marilyn Chambers, Frank Moore & Joe Silver.patreon: https://www.patreon.com/mildfuzztv twitter: https://twitter.com/ScreamsMidnight facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mildfuzznetwork THE CRYPT: https://mildfuzztv.weebly.com/the-crypt.html
First installment of the NFL version of the CMOtivated Podcast features my boy Dalton Martin throughout and halfway through the episode my New York City slicker of a friend Frank Moore talks all things 2018-19 NFL season with us. We start with the AFC and break everything down by division and Frank joins us around the (40:00) minute mark to dive into the NFC. We make bold predictions and mainly have a blast, so enjoy the episode and much love!
Learn how to improve your attitude, behavior, and technique in active listening. Frank Moore talks about paying attention, paraphrasing, and other best practices for engaging conversations. The How to Succeed Podcast is a public and free podcast from Sandler Training, the worldwide leader in sales, management, and customer service training for individuals all the way up to Fortune 500 companies with over 250 locations around the globe. Find white papers, webinars, and more in our free Sandler E-Learning Library: https://www.sandler.com/sell Don't forget to subscribe and leave us a 5-star review in iTunes!
Learn how to improve your attitude, behavior, and technique in active listening. Frank Moore talks about paying attention, paraphrasing, and other best practices for engaging conversations. The How to Succeed Podcast is a public and free podcast from Sandler Training, the worldwide leader in sales, management, and customer service training for individuals all the way up to Fortune 500 companies with over 250 locations around the globe. Find white papers, webinars, and more in our free Sandler E-Learning Library: https://www.sandler.com/sell Don't forget to subscribe and leave us a 5-star review in iTunes!
Learn how to improve your attitude, behavior, and technique in active listening. Frank Moore talks about paying attention, paraphrasing, and other best practices for engaging conversations. The How to Succeed Podcast is a public and free podcast from Sandler Training, the worldwide leader in sales, management, and customer service training for individuals all the way up to Fortune 500 companies with over 250 locations around the globe. Find white papers, webinars, and more in our free Sandler E-Learning Library: https://www.sandler.com/sell Don't forget to subscribe and leave us a 5-star review in iTunes!
Show Notes: http://wetflyswing.com/19 There is no question that this will go down as one of the best podcasts on tactics for catching steelhead on the fly. Dean Finnerty breaks down how to fish the North Umpqua in detail. The North Umpqua, aka - Graduate school of steelhead fly fishing, is one of the most historied steelhead river in the world. We cover skating dries in the summer to getting down in the winter. Dean brings it all to the table so enjoy! Click below to listen to the Dean Finnerty Podcast: Find the show: itunes | stitcher | overcast Subscribe on Android Subscribe on Apple Podcasts Subscribe via RSS Show Notes with Dean Finnerty 04:30 - Mark Bachman, from Fly Fish USA was one of Dean's first mentors. Mark was working for Larry's Sporting Goods when Dean first met him 08:30 - Frank Moore was one of Dean's mentors and a legend on the North Umpqua. Here's a short clip from OPB on Frank Moore 08:45 - The TU Sportsman Conservation Project 14:50 - The North Umpqua Trail allows access to the other side of the river 26:50 - Simon Gawesworth was interviewed in this podcast 28:10 - The skagit switch line from Air Flo is Dean's goto on the North 32:15 - Scott McGarva talks about the Dean River in this podcast episode 34:45 - Peter Charles shows us how to keep your tube floating upright with this Egg shaped tube fly video 35:55 - Rainy's flies intruder patterns - Finnerty Intruder 47:40 - Delta spey line from Air Flo 1:12:00 - Science Friday with John from WildSteelheaders.org You can connect with Dean Finnerty by going to deanfinnerty.com. Conclusion with Dean Finnerty I wanted to give a big thank you to Dean for coming on the show today. He provided some amazing tips on finding and catching steelhead on the North Umpqua. If you found a tip or link helpful from this episode please share it with one person who is into steelhead fishing. If you want to grab the Steelhead Tips PDF Quick Guide that includes a summary of all of the best tips from my guests, click on the link below: http://wetflyswing.com/free
Show Notes: http://wetflyswing.com/16 The history of steelhead fly fishing and fly tying is covered in episode 016 of the fly fishing show. John Shewey breaks down the history of steelhead flies and how things have evolved over the years in steelhead fly fishing. John is the current editor-in-chief of the NW Fly Fishing group of magazines and has written some of the best and most beautiful steelhead books you've ever seen. We talk about swinging flies on the North Umpqua and North Santiam and how it all came to be. Click below to listen to the episode with John Shewey: Find the show: itunes | stitcher | overcast Subscribe on Android Subscribe on Apple Podcasts Subscribe via RSS Show Notes with John Shewey: 4:05 - Dave McNeese was the first fly shop and one of the first people to apply east coast salmon flies to steeelhead flies 6:40 - Sid Glasso is another huge name in fly fishing and influence to Dave McNeese 9:00 - The Eel River and John Ben is where steelhead fly fishing first began 14:14 - The Parmacheene Belle fly pattern and story told of a pattern that caught a lot of fish back in the day, but people quit fishing it and it disappeared. You can find a photo at the link above and by scrolling down on this page. 16:55 - Jay Nicholas episode of the fly fishing show 17:40 - Trey Combs Steelhead Fly Fishing and Flies is one of the most influential books in history 19:05 - Classic Steelhead Flies is already a classic book 21:05 - Modern Steelhead Flies by Jay Nicholas is a comparison that John makes 25:55 - The North Santiam was John's home river since the 1980's and a river where he has hooked into many summer steelhead 34:05 - John talks about the demographics of the NW Fly Fishing magazine and the difference between the Drake Magazine in readers 41:35 - Birds of the Pacific Northwest and Oregon Beaches showcase John's diversity of publishing 43:45 - Caddis Float Tubes and Bob Houston was a great opportunity at the time and opened some doors for John to continue moving forward 44:20 - Fly Tyer Magazine was John's first publication and he would continue to write for the magazine 45:05 - Steve Probasco was the editor of NW Fly Fishing Magazine and was John's predecessor 47:30 - Rob Bryce Interview on the Skeena basin 53:55 - Forrest Maxwell was a mentor and fishing and hunting buddy 55:15 - Spawning Purple Fly was a fly that developed from the connection with Forrest 1:02:40 - The NW Fly Tying Expo is one of the biggest fly tying events in the western US 1:03:30 - Frank Moore and Joe Howell were icons on the North Umpqua. This link on Mending the line is Frank Moore's story You can reach John at matchthehatch.com if you have any questions or want to check out NW Fly Fishing magazine. [caption id="attachment_2501" align="alignnone" width="442"] http://www.nwexpo.com/tyer_john_shewey.php[/caption] "It's an invitation, because I know that anything I produce out of my vice has an equal chance." -John Shewey [caption id="attachment_2510" align="alignnone" width="518"] http://nwexpo.com/legends_plate-2015.php[/caption] Conclusion with John Shewey I wanted to give a huge thanks to John for taking the time to come on the show and talk about the history of the sport we all love. Hearing John talk about how it all started on the Eel River with the first summer steelhead and has evolved into modern spey lines and flies. I especially loved the tips John shared about what it takes to be a writer or photographer in the fly fishing industry. It's a great story to hear how John got to the place he is at now in fly fishing.
Show Notes: http://wetflyswing.com/grabflies/ In episode 14 of the Fly Fishing Show I had the pleasure of interviewing Jeff Layton from Grabflies.com. Jeff talks about the patterns he does well on and sells in his fly shop along with some new and innovative products for attaching sinking tips. We cover the Olympic Pennisula rivers, the North Umpqua along with all of the flies that have helped a bunch of fisherman get into some really nice steelhead. Click below to listen to my Interview with Jeff Layton: Find the show: itunes | stitcher | overcast Subscribe on Android Subscribe on Apple Podcasts Subscribe via RSS Show Notes with Jeff Layton 4:05 - The Top Moal Leech patterns and how to tie them 4:10 - Mike Sturza and Lost Creek Flies is where the Moal leech first came from 9:10 - Here is the link to some of Jeff's fun videos 11:25 - Frank Moore and the North Umpqua River was a big influence for Jeff 14:50 - Where to get started on the North Umpqua River 16:20 - How to tie the Fish Taco 17:30 - Episode 002 of the fly fishing show with Jack Mitchell 18:00 - Derek Fergus talks about the Moal leech here 18:49 - The Skagit leech and the metow color shceme 22:35 - Infiniti Quick Tips and Swivel Tips 25:20 - Simon Gawesworth Interview on episode 009 of the Fly Fishing show 31:20 - Rob Bryce covers Skeena steelhead on episode 010 35:50 - Fairflies.com has a material brush that makes tying steelhead flies simple 45:40 - The Ho River is a good river to start for a newbie and Morgan's crossing is a great area. 48:35 - Pete Humphries spey casting podcast 54:40 - Jeff's real screaming video and other video links You can reach Jeff by going to Grabflies.com. While you are there check out some of his great videos and flies. "It's really about fishing a fly you have confidence in, that's the most important thing. -Jeff Layton from Grabflies.com I wanted to thank Jeff for coming on the show and sharing is OP and winter steelhead knowledge. The North Umpqua content was just a little bonus. Jeff has some cool stuff going on in the industry including some products and flies that will improve your success on the water. If you would like access to the Steelhead Tips PDF Quick Guide click on the button below to get started or goto WetFlySwing.com/Free.
EuroBSDcon trip report, how to secure OpenBSD's LDAP server, ZFS channel programs in FreeBSD HEAD and why software is storytelling. This episode was brought to you by Headlines EuroBSDcon Trip Report This is from Frank Moore, who has been supplying us with collections of links for the show and who we met at EuroBSDcon in Paris for the first time. Here is his trip report. My attendance at the EuroBSDCon 2017 conference in Paris was sprinkled with several 'firsts'. My first visit to Paris, my first time travelling on a EuroTunnel Shuttle train and my first time at any BSD conference. Hopefully, none of these will turn out to be 'lasts'. I arrived on the Wednesday afternoon before the conference started on Thursday morning. My hotel was conveniently located close to the conference centre in Paris' 3rd arrondissement. This area is well-known as a buzzy enclave of hip cafes, eateries, independent shops, markets, modern galleries and museums. It certainly lived up to its reputation. Even better, the weather held over the course of the conference, only raining once, with the rest of the time being both warm and sunny. The first two days were taken up with attending Dr Kirk McKusick's excellent tutorial 'An Introduction to the FreeBSD Open-Source Operating System'. This is training "straight from the horse's mouth". Kirk has worked extensively on The FreeBSD operating system since the 1980's, helping to design the original BSD filesystem (FFS) and later working on UFS as well. Not only is Kirk an engaging speaker, making what could be a dry topic very interesting, he also sprinkles liberal doses of history and war stories throughout his lectures. Want to know why a protocol was designed the way that it was? Or why a system flag has a particular value or position in a record? Kirk was there and has the first-hand answer. He reminisces about his meetings and work with other Unix and BSD luminaries and debunks and confirms common myths in equal measure. Kirk's teaching style and knowledge are impressive. Every section starts with an overview and a big picture diagram before drilling down into the nitty-gritty detail. Nothing feels superfluous, and everything fits together logically. It's easy to tell that the material and its delivery have been honed over many years, but without feeling stale. Topics covered included the kernel, processes, virtual memory, threads, I/O, devices, FFS, ZFS, and networking. The slides were just as impressive, with additional notes written by a previous student and every slide containing a reference back to the relevant page(s) in the 2nd edition of Kirk's operating system book. As well as a hard copy for those that requested it, Kirk also helpfully supplied soft copies of all the training materials. The breaks in between lectures were useful for meeting the students from the other tutorials and for recovering from the inevitable information overload. It's not often that you can get to hear someone as renowned as Dr McKusick give a lecture on something as important as the FreeBSD operating system. If you have any interest in FreeBSD, Unix history, or operating systems in general, I would urge you to grab the opportunity to attend one of his lectures. You won't be disappointed. The last two days of the conference consisted of various hour-long talks by members of each of the main BSD systems. All of them were fairly evenly represented except Dragonfly BSD which unfortunately only had one talk. With three talks going on at any one time, it was often difficult to pick which one to go to. At other times there might be nothing to pique the interest. Attendance at a talk is not mandatory, so for those times when no talks looked inviting, just hanging out in one of the lobby areas with other attendees was often just as interesting and informative. The conference centre itself was certainly memorable with the interior design of an Egyptian temple or pyramid. All the classrooms were more than adequate while the main auditorium was first-class and easily held the 300+ attendees comfortably. All in all, the facilities, catering and organisation were excellent. Kudos to the EuroBSDCon team, especially Bapt and Antoine for all their hard work and hospitality. As a long-time watcher and occasional contributor to the BSD Now podcast it was good to meet both Allan and Benedict in the flesh. And having done some proofreading for Michael Lucas previously, it was nice to finally meet him as well. My one suggestion to the organisers of the next conference would be to provide more hand-holding for newbies. As a first-time attendee at a BSD conference it would have been nice to have been formally introduced to various people within the projects as the goto people for their areas. I could do this myself, but it's not always easy finding the right person and wrangling an introduction. I also think it was a missed opportunity for each project to recruit new developers to their cause. Apparently, this is already in place at BSDCan, but should probably be rolled out across all BSD conferences. Having said all that, my aims for the conference were to take Dr McKusick's course, meet a few BSD people and make contacts within one of the BSD projects to start contributing. I was successful on all these fronts, so for me this was mission accomplished. Another first! autoconf/clang (No) Fun and Games (https://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article;sid=20170930133438) Robert Nagy (robert@) wrote in with a fascinating story of hunting down a recent problem with ports: You might have been noticing the amount of commits to ports regarding autoconf and nested functions and asking yourself… what the hell is this all about? I was hanging out at my friend Antoine (ajacoutot@)'s place just before EuroBSDCon 2017 started and we were having drinks and he told me that there is this weird bug where Gnome hangs completely after just a couple of seconds of usage and the gnome-shell process just sits in the fsleep state. This started to happen at the time when inteldrm(4) was updated, the default compiler was switched to clang(1) and futexes were turned on by default. The next day we started to have a look at the issue and since the process was hanging in fsleep, it seemed clear that the cause must be futexes, so we had to start bisecting the base system, which resulted in random success and failure. In the end we figured out that it is neither futex nor inteldrm(4) related, so the only thing that was left is the switch to clang. Now the problem is that we have to figure out what part of the system needs to be build with clang to trigger this issue, so we kept on going and systematically recompiled the base system with gcc until everything was ruled out … and it kept on hanging. We were drunk and angry that now we have to go and check hundreds of ports because gnome is not a small standalone port, so between two bottles of wine a build VM was fired up to do a package build with gcc, because manually building all the dependencies would just take too long and we had spent almost two days on this already. Next day ~200 packages were available to bisect and figure out what's going on. After a couple of tries it turned out that the hang is being caused by the gtk+3 package, which is bad since almost everything is using gtk+3. Now it was time to figure out what file the gtk+3 source being built by clang is causing the issue. (Compiler optimizations were ruled out already at this point.) So another set of bisecting happened, building each subdirectory of gtk+3 with clang and waiting for the hang to manifest … and it did not. What the $f? Okay so something else is going on and maybe the configure script of gtk+3 is doing something weird with different compilers, so I quickly did two configure runs with gcc and clang and simply diff'd the two directories. Snippets from the diff: -GDKHIDDENVISIBILITYCFLAGS = -fvisibility=hidden GDKHIDDENVISIBILITYCFLAGS = -ltcvprogcompilerrttiexceptions=no ltcvprogcompilerrttiexceptions=yes -#define GDKEXTERN attribute((visibility("default"))) extern -ltprogcompilernobuiltinflag=' -fno-builtin' +ltprogcompilernobuiltinflag=' -fno-builtin -fno-rtti -fno-exceptions' Okay, okay that's something, but wait … clang has symbol visibility support so what is going on again? Let's take a peek at config.log: configure:29137: checking for -fvisibility=hidden compiler flag configure:29150: cc -c -fvisibility=hidden -I/usr/local/include -I/usr/X11R6/include conftest.c >&5 conftest.c:82:17: error: function definition is not allowed here int main (void) { return 0; } ^ 1 error generated. Okay that's clearly an error but why exactly? autoconf basically generates a huge shell script that will check for whatever you throw at it by creating a file called conftest.c and putting chunks of code into it and then trying to compile it. In this case the relevant part of the code was: | int | main () | { | int main (void) { return 0; } | ; | return 0; | } That is a nested function declaration which is a GNU extension and it is not supported by clang, but that's okay, the question is why the hell would you use nested functions to check for simple compiler flags. The next step was to go and check what is going on in configure.ac to see how the configure script is generated. In the gtk+3 case the following snippet is used: AC_MSG_CHECKING([for -fvisibility=hidden compiler flag]) ACTRYCOMPILE([], [int main (void) { return 0; }], ACMSGRESULT(yes) enablefvisibilityhidden=yes, ACMSGRESULT(no) enablefvisibilityhidden=no) According to the autoconf manual the ACTRYCOMPILE macro accepts the following parameters: That clearly states that a function body has to be specified because the function definition is already provided automatically, so doing ACTRYCOMPILE([], [int main (void) { return 0;}], instead of ACTRYCOMPILE([],[] will result in a nested function declaration, which will work just fine with gcc, even though the autoconf usage is wrong. After fixing the autoconf macro in gtk+3 and rebuilding the complete port from scratch with clang, the hang completely went away as the proper CFLAGS and LDFLAGS were picked up by autoconf for the build. At this point we realized that most of the ports tree uses autoconf so this issue might be a lot bigger than we thought, so I asked sthen@ to do a grep on the ports object directory and just search for "function definition is not allowed here", which resulted in about ~60 additional ports affected. Out of the list of ports there were only two false positive matches. These were actually trying to test whether the compiler supports nested functions. The rest were a combination of several autoconf macros used in a wrong way, e.g: ACTRYCOMPILE, ACTRYLINK. Most of them were fixable by just removing the extra function declaration or by switching to other autoconf macros like ACLANGSOURCE where you can actually declare your own functions if need be. The conclusion is that this issue was a combination of people not reading documentation and just copy/pasting autoconf snippets, instead of reading their documentation and using the macros in the way they were intended, and the fact that switching to a new compiler is never easy and bugs or undefined behaviour are always lurking in the dark. Thanks to everyone who helped fixing all the ports up this quickly! Hopefully all of the changes can be merged upstream, so that others can benefit as well. Interview - David Carlier - @devnexen (https://twitter.com/devnexen) Software Engineer at Afilias *** News Roundup Setting up OpenBSD's LDAP Server (ldapd) with StartTLS and SASL (http://blog.databasepatterns.com/2017/08/setting-up-openbsds-ldap-server-ldapd.html) A tutorial on setting up OpenBSD's native LDAP server with TLS encryption and SASL authentication OpenBSD has its own LDAP server, ldapd. Here's how to configure it for use with StartTLS and SASL authentication Create a certificate (acme-client anyone?) Create a basic config file listen on em0 tls certificate ldapserver This will listen on the em0 interface with tls using the certificate called ldapserver.crt / ldapserver.key Validate the configuration: /usr/sbin/ldapd -n Enable and start the service: rcctl enable ldapd rcctl start ldapd On the client machine: pkg_add openldap-client Copy the certificate to /etc/ssl/trusted.crt Add this line to /etc/openldap/ldap.conf TLS_CACERT /etc/ssl/trusted.crt Enable and start the service rcctl enable saslauthd rcctl start saslauthd Connect to ldapd (-ZZ means force TLS, use -H to specify URI): ldapsearch -H ldap://ldapserver -ZZ FreeBSD Picks Up Support for ZFS Channel Programs in -current (https://svnweb.freebsd.org/base?view=revision&revision=324163) ZFS channel programs (ZCP) adds support for performing compound ZFS administrative actions via Lua scripts in a sandboxed environment (with time and memory limits). This initial commit includes both base support for running ZCP scripts, and a small initial library of API calls which support getting properties and listing, destroying, and promoting datasets. Testing: in addition to the included unit tests, channel programs have been in use at Delphix for several months for batch destroying filesystems. Take a simple task as an example: Create a snapshot, then set a property on that snapshot. In the traditional system for this, when you issue the snapshot command, that closes the currently open transaction group (say #100), and opens a new one, #101. While #100 is being written to disk, other writes are accumulated in #101. Once #100 is flushed to disk, the ‘zfs snapshot' command returns. You can then issue the ‘zfs set' command. This actually ends up going into transaction group #102. Each administrative action needs to wait for the transaction group to flush, which under heavy loads could take multiple seconds. Now if you want to create AND set, you need to wait for two or three transaction groups. Meanwhile, during transaction group #101, the snapshot existed without the property set, which could cause all kinds of side effects. ZFS Channel programs solves this by allowing you to perform a small scripted set of actions as a single atomic operation. In Delphix's appliance, they often needed to do as many as 15 operations together, which might take multiple minutes. Now with channel programs it is much faster, far safer, and has fewer chances of side effects BSDCan 2017 - Matt Ahrens: Building products based on OpenZFS, using channel programs -- Video Soon (http://www.bsdcan.org/2017/schedule/events/854.en.html) Software Is About Storytelling (http://bravenewgeek.com/software-is-about-storytelling/) Tyler Treat writes on the brave new geek blog: Software engineering is more a practice in archeology than it is in building. As an industry, we undervalue storytelling and focus too much on artifacts and tools and deliverables. How many times have you been left scratching your head while looking at a piece of code, system, or process? It's the story, the legacy left behind by that artifact, that is just as important—if not more—than the artifact itself. And I don't mean what's in the version control history—that's often useless. I mean the real, human story behind something. Artifacts, whether that's code or tools or something else entirely, are not just snapshots in time. They're the result of a series of decisions, discussions, mistakes, corrections, problems, constraints, and so on. They're the product of the engineering process, but the problem is they usually don't capture that process in its entirety. They rarely capture it at all. They commonly end up being nothing but a snapshot in time. It's often the sign of an inexperienced engineer when someone looks at something and says, “this is stupid” or “why are they using X instead of Y?” They're ignoring the context, the fact that circumstances may have been different. There is a story that led up to that point, a reason for why things are the way they are. If you're lucky, the people involved are still around. Unfortunately, this is not typically the case. And so it's not necessarily the poor engineer's fault for wondering these things. Their predecessors haven't done enough to make that story discoverable and share that context. I worked at a company that built a homegrown container PaaS on ECS. Doing that today would be insane with the plethora of container solutions available now. “Why aren't you using Kubernetes?” Well, four years ago when we started, Kubernetes didn't exist. Even Docker was just in its infancy. And it's not exactly a flick of a switch to move multiple production environments to a new container runtime, not to mention the politicking with leadership to convince them it's worth it to not ship any new code for the next quarter as we rearchitect our entire platform. Oh, and now the people behind the original solution are no longer with the company. Good luck! And this is on the timescale of about five years. That's maybe like one generation of engineers at the company at most—nothing compared to the decades or more software usually lives (an interesting observation is that timescale, I think, is proportional to the size of an organization). Don't underestimate momentum, but also don't underestimate changing circumstances, even on a small time horizon. The point is, stop looking at technology in a vacuum. There are many facets to consider. Likewise, decisions are not made in a vacuum. Part of this is just being an empathetic engineer. The corollary to this is you don't need to adopt every bleeding-edge tech that comes out to be successful, but the bigger point is software is about storytelling. The question you should be asking is how does your organization tell those stories? Are you deliberate or is it left to tribal knowledge and hearsay? Is it something you truly value and prioritize or simply a byproduct? Documentation is good, but the trouble with documentation is it's usually haphazard and stagnant. It's also usually documentation of how and not why. Documenting intent can go a long way, and understanding the why is a good way to develop empathy. Code survives us. There's a fantastic talk by Bryan Cantrill on oral tradition in software engineering (https://youtu.be/4PaWFYm0kEw) where he talks about this. People care about intent. Specifically, when you write software, people care what you think. As Bryan puts it, future generations of programmers want to understand your intent so they can abide by it, so we need to tell them what our intent was. We need to broadcast it. Good code comments are an example of this. They give you a narrative of not only what's going on, but why. When we write software, we write it for future generations, and that's the most underestimated thing in all of software. Documenting intent also allows you to document your values, and that allows the people who come after you to continue to uphold them. Storytelling in software is important. Without it, software archeology is simply the study of puzzles created by time and neglect. When an organization doesn't record its history, it's bound to repeat the same mistakes. A company's memory is comprised of its people, but the fact is people churn. Knowing how you got here often helps you with getting to where you want to be. Storytelling is how we transcend generational gaps and the inevitable changing of the old guard to the new guard in a maturing engineering organization. The same is true when we expand that to the entire industry. We're too memoryless—shipping code and not looking back, discovering everything old that is new again, and simply not appreciating our lineage. Beastie Bits 1st BSD Users Stockholm Meetup (https://www.meetup.com/en-US/BSD-Users-Stockholm/) Absolute FreeBSD, 3rd Edition draft completed (https://blather.michaelwlucas.com/archives/3020) Absolute FreeBSD, 3rd Edition Table of Contents (https://blather.michaelwlucas.com/archives/2995) t2k17 Hackathon Report: My first time (Aaron Bieber) (https://undeadly.org/cgi?action=article;sid=20170824193521) The release of pfSense 2.4.0 will be slightly delayed to apply patches for vulnerabilities in 3rd party packages that are part of pfSense (https://www.netgate.com/blog/no-plan-survives-contact-with-the-internet.html) Feedback/Questions Ben writes in that zrepl is in ports now (http://dpaste.com/1XMJYMH#wrap) Peter asks us about Netflix on BSD (http://dpaste.com/334WY4T#wrap) meka writes in about dhclient exiting (http://dpaste.com/3GSGKD3#wrap) ***
Loot e sangue! I temi e i livelli toccati in questo episodio sono riassumibili solamente con queste due parole! Episodio 11, l’ultimo prima del season finale, è l’episodio in cui gli zheroes comprendono appieno il significato del detto “high risk, high... Continue Reading →
Some months ago my friend and musical ally Robert Douglas (aka Carl Off) was asked to contribute music to a documentary project about American performance artist Frank Moore. His circumstances wouldn’t allow his participation, so he connected me to the producers, Linda Mac and Mikee LaBash. Carl and I had collaborated, previously, in the improvisational […]
Pastors have a wonderful opportunity to instill rich theological content in their churches through their leadership. Watch this Seven Minute Seminary as Dr. Frank Moore offers 5 ways pastors can be resident theologians.
Tune into a higher frequency in the fourth episode of the Being One Center Podcast. Frank Moore interviews Leslie Ramos a gifted medium, channeler, and intuitive healer. In this episode Leslie speaks about growing up with incredible gifts, working for the light, and selfless service with unconditional love. Leslie Ramos is a 5th Generation medium, channeler, healer, and spiritual teacher. She was blessed with the gifts of Clairvoyance, Clairsentience and Clairaudience at an early age and has been perfecting her gifts ever since.
Ninety-two year old Frank Moore is a fly-fishing legend. World War II veteran, long-time North Umpqua fishing guide, lodge owner, conservationist, devoted husband, father, friend… there are few people who meet Frank without leaving as a better person. In this episode of Anchored we discuss Frank's incredible life story. This episode is sponsored by Thump Coffee.
2011-11-06 Am I Like Travis - Dr. Frank Moore
2011-11-06 What Must I Do - Dr. Frank Moore
With Travis Munn, Tomek, Tha Archivez (aka Kene-J), Marz, Erika Shaver-Nelson, & Frank Moore. Recorded April 11, 2010.Photos of the evening can be seen here.
2011-11-04 Holiness Summit - Dr. Frank Moore
Frank Moore P.G.A has over 20 years of experience in golf instruction with an interesting teaching and playing background. Learning from many of today's golfing legends, Frank brings a unique blend of experience and perspective to the lesson tee. My first exposure to golf was in the early 70’s. I had a few lessons from the local pros. The first lesson, really sparked my interest in the golf swing. I improved quite a bit, and broke 80 that same year. Next, I took a few lessons from a pro that favored the Square to Square Method. I had a tough time with this, but I figured out a way to make it work. I went on to play college golf. I did fairly well, and made the All-Conference team one year. We had a good team, and won both the State Small College Tournament, and the District Tournament during my college years. I have now been in the golf business for over 20 years. I started as an assistant pro in Virginia. There I gave my first official golf lessons. The pro I was working for was interested in teaching, and seemed to like the Golf Digest instructors… Flick, Toski, etc.. I did the best I could to help the people, with what I knew. Later, I worked for a pro in North Carolina that favored Jimmy Ballard’s teaching methods. I learned a little about this type of teaching, and did use some of the ideas with my students. Next, I worked for a former tour player in Indiana. Here, we taught strictly according to the Jim Flick type format. We gave many, many group lessons, and did junior golf camps. The next several years I was back in North Carolina working as an assistant pro. I became a PGA Member during this time. I continued teaching, doing the best I could with the knowledge I had. I took a few lessons from an up and comming pro named David Leadbetter during this time. During these years I met a pro that was winning many local pro tournaments in the area. He actually played in the P.G.A. Championship, and made the cut. I found out he adhered to a method that had something to do with a machine concept. We met a few times. He gave me a few pointers, but later referred me to a teacher in South Carolina. I attended my first Golfing Machine School in 1988. The GSED was Tom Tomasello. I saw here a clear way to teach and learn the physics and geometry of a golf stroke. My teaching, and playing started to improve, as a result of my new knowledge. A year or so later, I attended the Advanced School that Tom offered. In attendance was Clarence Moore, 2 time U.S. Senior Amateur Champion. He gave a demonstration of his pattern. He was very impressive. He could Hit, or Swing equally well, at least it appeared that way to me. I picked up more useful information at this school, especially relating to the short game. I continued to work with Tom up to his death. I also worked some with Alex Sloan, GSED I gained more insight from Alex, although his methods were quite different from Tom’s. Later, I taught for 3 years with GSED George Kelnhofer. There, I was exposed to many tour caliber players, and good amateur players. David Duval, Larry Mize, Charley Rymer, Stuart Cink, Craig Perks, and Charles Howell were the many players that came through there. During the next several years I taught in Atlanta. During this time I knew, and worked periodically with Tom Ness, GSEM I learned a great deal from Tom, especially about the short game. I also knew, and worked some with Chuck Evans, GSED. I developed back problems later in my career. During this time I contacted David Lee, because I heard he had a method of swinging that was back friendly. I found that David had quite a knowledge of physics, as it pertains to golf. I taught briefly in his indoor facility, Gravity Golf, in Atlanta. A year or so later I met Lynn Blake, GSEM. Lynn has a unique level of understanding of The Golfing Machine, due to his personal involvement with the author, Homer Kelley. Through my involvement with Lynn, along with Ted Fort and Steve Ferguson, I gained an even greater insight into The Golfing Machine. I am currently the Director of Instruction at The Frank Moore Golf Academy at Dunes West Golf and River Club, in Mount Pleasant, SC. There is a link to me at duneswestgolfclub.com and my e-mail is fmoore59@gmail.com Visit the Golf Talk Radio sponsors and tell them GTRadio sent you they help make the show possible! Slickstix.com, Avila Beach Golf Resort, Blacklake Golf Resort, Avila Lighthouse Suites and Aramco Mortgage. Visit Golftalkradio.com for the latest show information, contests, videos and more!