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EPISODE 62 of Five At The Door features an energetic and insightful conversation with the members of Garden Home, a band that has been making waves in the diy music scene. Join us as we delve into their creative journey, the evolution of their sound, and the excitement surrounding the release of their latest record, which has already made a significant impact on fans and critics alike.In this episode, Dylan, Mike, and JD share their experiences of living and creating music together, reflecting on their unique dynamics and the collaborative spirit that drives their songwriting. They discuss the challenges and triumphs of building a setlist that balances new hits with beloved fan favorites, revealing the stories behind their most popular tracks, including the unexpected success of "Ghost."Listeners will gain a deeper understanding of Garden Home's recording process, including the influence of producer Cody Ratley and the spontaneous moments that shaped their album. The band opens up about the importance of genuine connections in their creative process, highlighting how their friendship contributes to their music's authenticity.Get ready to hear "False Spring," the standout track that encapsulates the essence of Garden Home's artistry and showcases their growth as musicians. This episode is a celebration of friendship, creativity, and the power of music to bring people together.Here's a taste of the track that captures the heart of Garden Home. Tune in:[https://open.spotify.com/track/1lg2OITTgTa8JYRWpCtHt8?si=0adae7ee4efc49b5]Remember, whether you're navigating your own creative journey or simply enjoying the vibrant world of music, it's the connections we forge that inspire us all.Don't miss this episode as we explore the world of Garden Home, where every song tells a story and every moment is an opportunity for connection.Show notes penned by your favorite chronicler of the musical journey at Five At The Door.(00:00) Introduction with Garden Home(01:15) Morning routines and living arrangements(04:30) Reflecting on the success of their latest record(10:00) The evolution of their sound and songwriting(15:45) Balancing new music with older tracks in setlists(22:00) Insights into their recording process with Cody Ratley(30:15) The impact of the local Milwaukee music scene(35:00) Future plans and upcoming performances
Let's review our lesson on Leaving the Garden Home through songs: “Who Am I?”, “We're GladToday”, “Jesus is Happy When I Obey”, and our memory verse Isaiah 7:16 “Refuse the evil andchoose the good.”Recorded and produced by: Ashley B. LarsonDon't forget to check out the coloring pages that go along with each lesson! https://startingwithjesus.com/spb-cp/If you have enjoyed this program and would like to know more, go to our website:www.startingwithjesus.comThe Bible and nature story material used in today's devotional podcast has been used withpermission from My Bible First. If you would like your own copy, please visit their website-orcall 1-877-242-5317.If you would like to purchase your own Memory Verse CD or Songbook, go to Ouachita HillsStore (https://www.ouachitahillsacademy.org/store?page=1&store_category_id=0&sort_by=title&is_ascending=1&search=).Songs from: Little Voices Praise Him, SDA Hymnal, Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, NewSabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, Memory Verse Verse Songs for Cradle Roll, Children's Songs ForJesus, and Scripture Songs and Little LessonsAll Bible verses are from the NKJV.Singers for this Quarter: Tory, Caleb, and Enoch Hall, Hudson Reeves, Michael and Amy NelsonEditing assist: Dillon Austin and Josh LarsonMusic Recording and Editing: Rachel Nelson and Kristy HallColoring Pages: Rachel Lamming, Lily Canada, and Evie RodriguezTheme Music: Lindsey Mills- www.lindseymillsmusic.comGod: who gives talents for us to use for Him
Leaving the Garden Home answers the question why people, animals, and plants get hurt anddie. It encourages us that when we love and obey Jesus, He will give us everlasting life. Memvs. Isa. 7:16. Check out this week's coloring pages https://startingwithjesus.com/spb-cp/.Child helpers: Patience, Kent, Audrey and HeidiRecorded and produced by: Ashley B. LarsonDon't forget to check out the coloring pages that go along with each lesson! https://startingwithjesus.com/spb-cp/If you have enjoyed this program and would like to know more, go to our website:www.startingwithjesus.comThe Bible and nature story material used in today's devotional podcast has been used withpermission from My Bible First. If you would like your own copy, please visit their website-orcall 1-877-242-5317.If you would like to purchase your own Memory Verse CD or Songbook, go to Ouachita HillsStore (https://www.ouachitahillsacademy.org/store?page=1&store_category_id=0&sort_by=title&is_ascending=1&search=).Songs from: Little Voices Praise Him, SDA Hymnal, Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, NewSabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, Memory Verse Verse Songs for Cradle Roll, Children's Songs ForJesus, and Scripture Songs and Little LessonsAll Bible verses are from the NKJV.Singers for this Quarter: Tory, Caleb, and Enoch Hall, Hudson Reeves, Michael and Amy NelsonEditing assist: Dillon Austin and Josh LarsonMusic Recording and Editing: Rachel Nelson and Kristy HallColoring Pages: Rachel Lamming, Lily Canada, and Evie RodriguezTheme Music: Lindsey Mills- www.lindseymillsmusic.comGod: who gives talents for us to use for Him
Leaving the Garden Home answers the question why people, animals, and plants get hurt anddie. It encourages us that when we love and obey Jesus, He will give us everlasting life. Memvs. Isa. 7:16. Check out this week's coloring pages https://startingwithjesus.com/spb-cp/.Child helpers: Patience, Kent, Audrey and HeidiRecorded and produced by: Ashley B. LarsonDon't forget to check out the coloring pages that go along with each lesson! https://startingwithjesus.com/spb-cp/If you have enjoyed this program and would like to know more, go to our website:www.startingwithjesus.comThe Bible and nature story material used in today's devotional podcast has been used withpermission from My Bible First. If you would like your own copy, please visit their website-orcall 1-877-242-5317.If you would like to purchase your own Memory Verse CD or Songbook, go to Ouachita HillsStore (https://www.ouachitahillsacademy.org/store?page=1&store_category_id=0&sort_by=title&is_ascending=1&search=).Songs from: Little Voices Praise Him, SDA Hymnal, Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, NewSabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, Memory Verse Verse Songs for Cradle Roll, Children's Songs ForJesus, and Scripture Songs and Little LessonsAll Bible verses are from the NKJV.Singers for this Quarter: Tory, Caleb, and Enoch Hall, Hudson Reeves, Michael and Amy NelsonEditing assist: Dillon Austin and Josh LarsonMusic Recording and Editing: Rachel Nelson and Kristy HallColoring Pages: Rachel Lamming, Lily Canada, and Evie RodriguezTheme Music: Lindsey Mills- www.lindseymillsmusic.comGod: who gives talents for us to use for Him
On this episode I sit down with Garden Home, a screamo/post-hardcore band from Milwaukee, WI. We dive right into their debut LP "Garden Home", from early singles and signing to Thumbs Up Records to its final form. We also talk about some key moments in certain songs and the story behind them. Before we get to stories we talk about hitting the road for Gnargaritaville and Fuaxchella. Be sure to follow Garden Home and check out "Garden Home"!!! This episode features the songs "Past Life" and "False Spring" from the album Garden Home. You can find Red Sun at the following links: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/gardenhomewi Twitter: https://twitter.com/gardenhomewi Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GardenHomeWI Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@gardenhomewi/ Bandcamp: https://gardenhome.bandcamp.com/music Merch: https://thumbsuprecords.limitedrun.com/products/769503-garden-home-s-t Website: https://www.teensintrouble.net Everywhere else: https://linktr.ee/Gardenhome _______________________________________ You can find Beers With Bands here: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BeersWithBands2 Twitter: https://twitter.com/BeersWBandsPod Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/beerswithbandspod/ Bandcamp: https://beerswithbands.bandcamp.com Everywhere else: https://linktr.ee/BeersWithBands Logo and Banner design by Kaylyn Chileen Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/madam.fortress.mommy/ Website: https://kaylynchileen.art Beers With Bands intro by Thomas Allen of Say Days Ago and Last Autumn Say Days Ago: https://www.instagram.com/saydaysagoband/ Last Autumn: https://www.instagram.com/lastautumnband/ --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/beers-with-bands/support
On Tuesday's Morning Focus, Alan Morrissey was joined by Tom Stewart from Keane's Garden Centre in Kilcolgan. On this week's In The Garden, Tom provided listeners with all the tips and tricks for growing tomatoes. If you have a question for Tom, contact the show on 0818 400 964 or send a text or Whatsapp to 086 1800 964.
Paul Allen Smith Jr is the oldest of four children, was born on March 12, 1960, in Little Rock, Arkansas. He grew up in McMinnville, Tennessee, in the Cumberland Mountains, where his father's family had farmed for several generations and also operated an ornamental plant business. Smith calls himself a fourth-generation nurseryman and horticulturist. The family moved back to Little Rock when Smith was twelve due to a career opportunity for his father, who unexpectedly died just three months later. To cope with his grief, Smith planted a small garden in the backyard and began raising chickens. After graduating from Little Rock's McClellan High School in 1979, he attended Hendrix College in Conway to major in biology, with plans of becoming a veterinarian. After graduation in 1983, he earned a Rotary International scholarship to study ornamental horticulture, garden design, and history during an eighteen-month stay at the University of Manchester in England. After returning home to Little Rock, Smith entered the nursery and garden design business with his family. He also became a private tour guide to European gardens and began teaching gardening workshops at the nursery. Regular appearances on local radio led to a weekly gardening segment on Little Rock television station KATV's Daybreak show in 1989. It soon led to a syndicated program starting in 2000, P. Allen Smith's Gardens, which was largely shot at Smith's historic home in Little Rock's Quapaw Quarter. The original Garden Home is a 1904 Colonial Revival cottage surrounded by a series of garden rooms designed by Smith. He purchased the house for one dollar and relocated it to a 15,000-square-foot vacant lot. Smith divides his time between that home and his 650-acre Garden Home Retreat at Moss Mountain Farm in Roland, Arkansas, which overlooks the Arkansas River Valley. At Moss Mountain Farm, Smith promotes the local-food movement, organic gardening, and the preservation of heritage poultry breeds. Smith founded the Heritage Poultry Conservancy in 2009. Smith is a Certified Fellow of the Royal Horticultural Society and a board member of the Royal Oak Foundation, the U.S. affiliate of the National Trust of England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. His awards and recognitions include the 2009 Arkansas Cultural Enrichment Award from the Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival, the 2011 4-H Celebration of Excellence Award, the Medal of Honor from the Garden Club of America, Garden Communicator Award from the American Nursery and Landscape Association (ANLA), Horticultural Communicator Award from the American Horticultural Society (AHS), and the Odyssey Award from the Hendrix College Board of Trustees honoring the achievements of Hendrix College alumni.
Let's review our lesson on Leaving the Garden Home through songs: “Who Am I?”, “We're Glad Today”, “Jesus is Happy When I Obey”, and our memory verse Isaiah 7:16 “Refuse the evil and choose the good.”Recorded and produced by: Ashley B. LarsonDon't forget to check out the coloring pages that go along with each lesson! https://startingwithjesus.com/spb-cp/If you have enjoyed this program and would like to know more, go to our website: www.startingwithjesus.comThe Bible and nature story material used in today's devotional podcast has been used with permission from My Bible First. If you would like your own copy, please visit their website-or call 1-877-242-5317.If you would like to purchase your own Memory Verse CD or Songbook, go to Ouachita Hills Store (https://www.ouachitahillsacademy.org/store?page=1&store_category_id=0&sort_by=title&is_ascending=1&search=).If you would like to purchase the full Scripture Songs and Little Lessons CD, go to thehomeplace.org.Songs from: Little Voices Praise Him, SDA Hymnal, Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, New Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, Memory Verse Verse Songs for Cradle Roll, Children's Songs For Jesus, and Scripture Songs and Little LessonsAll Bible verses are from the NKJV.Singers for this Quarter: Tory, Caleb, and Enoch Hall, Hudson Reeves, Michael and Amy NelsonEditing assist: Dillon Austin and Josh LarsonMusic Recording and Editing: Rachel Nelson and Kristy HallColoring Pages: Rachel Lamming, Lily Canada, and Evie RodriguezTheme Music: Lindsey Mills- www.lindseymillsmusic.com God: who gives talents for us to use for Him
Leaving the Garden Home answers the question why people, animals, and plants get hurt and die. It encourages us that when we love and obey Jesus, He will give us everlasting life. Mem vs. Isa. 7:16. Child helpers: Patience, Kent, Audrey and HeidiRecorded and produced by: Ashley B. LarsonDon't forget to check out the coloring pages that go along with each lesson! https://startingwithjesus.com/spb-cp/If you have enjoyed this program and would like to know more, go to our website: www.startingwithjesus.comThe Bible and nature story material used in today's devotional podcast has been used with permission from My Bible First. If you would like your own copy, please visit their website-or call 1-877-242-5317.If you would like to purchase your own Memory Verse CD or Songbook, go to Ouachita Hills Store (https://www.ouachitahillsacademy.org/store?page=1&store_category_id=0&sort_by=title&is_ascending=1&search=).If you would like to purchase the full Scripture Songs and Little Lessons CD, go to thehomeplace.org.Songs from: Little Voices Praise Him, SDA Hymnal, Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, New Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, Memory Verse Verse Songs for Cradle Roll, Children's Songs For Jesus, and Scripture Songs and Little LessonsAll Bible verses are from the NKJV.Singers for this Quarter: Tory, Caleb, and Enoch Hall, Hudson Reeves, Michael and Amy NelsonEditing assist: Dillon Austin and Josh LarsonMusic Recording and Editing: Rachel Nelson and Kristy HallColoring Pages: Rachel Lamming, Lily Canada, and Evie RodriguezTheme Music: Lindsey Mills- www.lindseymillsmusic.com God: who gives talents for us to use for Him
Leaving the Garden Home answers the question why people, animals, and plants get hurt and die. It encourages us that when we love and obey Jesus, He will give us everlasting life. Mem vs. Isa. 7:16. Child helpers: Patience, Kent, Audrey and HeidiRecorded and produced by: Ashley B. LarsonDon't forget to check out the coloring pages that go along with each lesson! https://startingwithjesus.com/spb-cp/If you have enjoyed this program and would like to know more, go to our website: www.startingwithjesus.comThe Bible and nature story material used in today's devotional podcast has been used with permission from My Bible First. If you would like your own copy, please visit their website-or call 1-877-242-5317.If you would like to purchase your own Memory Verse CD or Songbook, go to Ouachita Hills Store (https://www.ouachitahillsacademy.org/store?page=1&store_category_id=0&sort_by=title&is_ascending=1&search=).If you would like to purchase the full Scripture Songs and Little Lessons CD, go to thehomeplace.org.Songs from: Little Voices Praise Him, SDA Hymnal, Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, New Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, Memory Verse Verse Songs for Cradle Roll, Children's Songs For Jesus, and Scripture Songs and Little LessonsAll Bible verses are from the NKJV.Singers for this Quarter: Tory, Caleb, and Enoch Hall, Hudson Reeves, Michael and Amy NelsonEditing assist: Dillon Austin and Josh LarsonMusic Recording and Editing: Rachel Nelson and Kristy HallColoring Pages: Rachel Lamming, Lily Canada, and Evie RodriguezTheme Music: Lindsey Mills- www.lindseymillsmusic.com God: who gives talents for us to use for Him
This week we talked to Milwauke's post-rock screamo band, Garden Home. Some members of the band are frequent skaters and more frequent avoiders of kids on scooters. Milwauke's growing DIY scene intersects with their brewery connections, with small festivals being played at bars and new collaborators beings introduced. Their most ‘Past Life' kicks off the new cycle of music with Thumbs Up Records, paired with a video of them using sick new gear in a music store. They're currently working on an LP set to be released in 2024 creating a range of sound that reflects their current listening habits. Find more from them @ Spotify Instagram Find more from us @ Instagram Twitter
From her beautiful farm in Maine, Lisa has contributed her sage advice to the backyard chicken keeping community for more than a decade and has recently entered the culinary arena with the release of her first cookbook, The Fresh Eggs Daily Cookbook.Dubbed "Queen of the Coop" by the media, she's an author, 5th generation chicken keeper, Maine master gardener and "coop to kitchen" cook and has been featured on The View, Martha Knows Best on HGTV, NPR's Here & Now, Dr. Oz, P. Allen Smith's Garden Home on PBS, and the Hallmark Home & Family Show. https://www.fresheggsdaily.blog/p/lisa-steele.htmlhttp://www.yourlotandparcel.org
Let's review our lesson on Leaving the Garden Home through songs: “Who Am I?”, “We're Glad Today”, “Jesus is Happy When I Obey”, and our memory verse Isaiah 7:16 “Refuse the evil and choose the good.”Recorded and produced by: Ashley B. LarsonDon't forget to check out the coloring pages that go along with each lesson! https://startingwithjesus.com/spb-cp/If you have enjoyed this program and would like to know more, go to our website: www.startingwithjesus.comThe Bible and nature story material used in today's devotional podcast has been used with permission from My Bible First. If you would like your own copy, please visit their website-or call 1-877-242-5317.If you would like to purchase your own Memory Verse CD or Songbook, go to Ouachita Hills Store (https://www.ouachitahillsacademy.org/store?page=1&store_category_id=0&sort_by=title&is_ascending=1&search=).If you would like to purchase the full Scripture Songs and Little Lessons CD, go to thehomeplace.org.Songs from: Little Voices Praise Him, SDA Hymnal, Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, New Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, Memory Verse Verse Songs for Cradle Roll, Children's Songs For Jesus, and Scripture Songs and Little LessonsAll Bible verses are from the NKJV.Singers for this Quarter: Tory, Caleb, and Enoch Hall, Hudson Reeves, Michael and Amy NelsonEditing assist: Dillon Austin and Josh LarsonMusic Recording and Editing: Rachel Nelson and Kristy HallColoring Pages: Rachel Lamming, Lily Canada, and Evie RodriguezTheme Music: Lindsey Mills- www.lindseymillsmusic.com God: who gives talents for us to use for Him
Leaving the Garden Home answers the question why people, animals, and plants get hurt and die. It encourages us that when we love and obey Jesus, He will give us everlasting life. Mem vs. Isa. 7:16. Check out this week's coloring pages https://startingwithjesus.com/spb-cp/. Child helpers: Patience, Kent, Audrey and HeidiRecorded and produced by: Ashley B. LarsonDon't forget to check out the coloring pages that go along with each lesson! https://startingwithjesus.com/spb-cp/If you have enjoyed this program and would like to know more, go to our website: www.startingwithjesus.comThe Bible and nature story material used in today's devotional podcast has been used with permission from My Bible First. If you would like your own copy, please visit their website-or call 1-877-242-5317.If you would like to purchase your own Memory Verse CD or Songbook, go to Ouachita Hills Store (https://www.ouachitahillsacademy.org/store?page=1&store_category_id=0&sort_by=title&is_ascending=1&search=).If you would like to purchase the full Scripture Songs and Little Lessons CD, go to thehomeplace.org.Songs from: Little Voices Praise Him, SDA Hymnal, Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, New Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, Memory Verse Verse Songs for Cradle Roll, Children's Songs For Jesus, and Scripture Songs and Little LessonsAll Bible verses are from the NKJV.Singers for this Quarter: Tory, Caleb, and Enoch Hall, Hudson Reeves, Michael and Amy NelsonEditing assist: Dillon Austin and Josh LarsonMusic Recording and Editing: Rachel Nelson and Kristy HallColoring Pages: Rachel Lamming, Lily Canada, and Evie RodriguezTheme Music: Lindsey Mills- www.lindseymillsmusic.com God: who gives talents for us to use for Him
Leaving the Garden Home answers the question why people, animals, and plants get hurt and die. It encourages us that when we love and obey Jesus, He will give us everlasting life. Mem vs. Isa. 7:16. Check out this week's coloring pages https://startingwithjesus.com/spb-cp/. Child helpers: Patience, Kent, Audrey and HeidiRecorded and produced by: Ashley B. LarsonDon't forget to check out the coloring pages that go along with each lesson! https://startingwithjesus.com/spb-cp/If you have enjoyed this program and would like to know more, go to our website: www.startingwithjesus.comThe Bible and nature story material used in today's devotional podcast has been used with permission from My Bible First. If you would like your own copy, please visit their website-or call 1-877-242-5317.If you would like to purchase your own Memory Verse CD or Songbook, go to Ouachita Hills Store (https://www.ouachitahillsacademy.org/store?page=1&store_category_id=0&sort_by=title&is_ascending=1&search=).If you would like to purchase the full Scripture Songs and Little Lessons CD, go to thehomeplace.org.Songs from: Little Voices Praise Him, SDA Hymnal, Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, New Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, Memory Verse Verse Songs for Cradle Roll, Children's Songs For Jesus, and Scripture Songs and Little LessonsAll Bible verses are from the NKJV.Singers for this Quarter: Tory, Caleb, and Enoch Hall, Hudson Reeves, Michael and Amy NelsonEditing assist: Dillon Austin and Josh LarsonMusic Recording and Editing: Rachel Nelson and Kristy HallColoring Pages: Rachel Lamming, Lily Canada, and Evie RodriguezTheme Music: Lindsey Mills- www.lindseymillsmusic.com God: who gives talents for us to use for Him
On this special episode, I am joined by Jennifer Chapin and Karol Johnston of the Garden Home Recreation Center. The center is having a Canine Community Carnival on Sunday, August 21st from 10 am-1 pm at the Recreation Center at 7475 SW Oleson Rd Portland, OR 97223. There will be vendors of all kinds, lots of fun activities for every family member, those with four legs and with two, and a raffle for amazing prizes. To learn more about the Tualatin Hills Parks and Recreation District, check out their website at http://www.thprd.org/. If you have enjoyed this episode and want to learn more about all things pet in Portland, join our Facebook group at https://www.facebook.com/groups/pdxpetconnection. Come join the fun.
On today's episode of the Entrepreneur Evolution Podcast, we are joined by Jerry Meek, Founder and CEO of Desert Start Construction. Known by clients and industry colleagues as “the best team in the luxury home business,” the last decade has been focused on continuous growth and expansion of the DSC brand, whose results have been published in dozens of magazines and earned honors such as multiple Gold Nugget Awards, Phoenix Home & Garden Home of the Year, Southwest Contractor, and NAHB Custom Home of the Year. In 2017, Jerry was the first-ever luxury custom home builder to receive Phoenix Home & Garden's Master of the Southwest, an award program in its 30th year that recognizes the best in design and craftsmanship. Jerry also served as the founding president of the Phoenix Dream Center Foundation, which aids young survivors of human trafficking. Jerry is an expert and addition to multiplication – how to scale your business and make an impact. He knows the critical and fundamental role client service plays in growing an influential business and he teaches how to make people your business while your revenue flourishes. We would love to hear from you, and it would be awesome if you left us a 5-star review. Your feedback means the world to us, and we will be sure to send you a special thank you for your kind words. Don't forget to hit “subscribe” to automatically be notified when guest interviews and Express Tips drop every Tuesday and Friday. Interested in joining our monthly entrepreneur membership? Email Annette directly at yourock@ievolveconsulting.com to learn more. Ready to invest in yourself? Book your free session with Annette HERE. Keep evolving, entrepreneur. We are SO proud of you! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/annette-walter/support
Subscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart Support The Daily Gardener Buy Me A Coffee Connect for FREE! The Friday Newsletter | Daily Gardener Community Historical Events 1735 Birth of Charles-Joseph Lamoral, French Field Marshal, writer, and member of the princely family of Ligne ("Leen-ya"). Charles once wrote, I should like to inflame the whole world with my taste for gardening. There is no virtue that I would not attribute to the man who lives to project and execute gardens. 1812 Birth of Edward Lear, English artist, musician, and writer. Edward is remembered for his literary nonsense in poetry and prose. He once wrote, As for myself, I am sitting up today for the first time - partly dressed - [something] the cucumber said when oil and vinegar were poured over him, salt & pepper being omitted. Edward also popularized the limerick. Here's an Edward Lear limerick for gardeners. There was an old person so silly, He poked his head into a lily; But six bees who lived there, filled him full of despair, For they stung that old person so silly. 1820 Birth of Florence Nightingale (books about this person), English social reformer, statistician, and founder of modern nursing. Florence earned the moniker "The Lady with the Lamp" during the Crimean War because she would make her rounds to visit wounded soldiers with a lamp during the night. The American poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow used the term in his poem Santa Filomena, which he wrote in honor of Florence's work in Scutari Hospital. Florence was named after Florence, Italy - the city where she was born. As a young girl, she and her sister had their garden to plant and tend. When Florence was 13, she collected flowers with a 77-year-old botanist named Margaret Stovin. Together they gathered and pressed over 100 different species of plants. This charming story was featured in a 2008 book by Richard Mendelsohn. Today, Florence and Margaret's flowers are housed at the Natural History Museum in London. As an adult, Florence wrote, Poetry and imagination begin life. A child will fall on its knees on the gravel walk at the sight of a pink hawthorn in full flower, when it is by itself, to praise God for it. As a nurse, Florence believed flowers helped with the morale and recovery of her patients. And personally, the foxglove was her favorite flower. And Florence received a lovely bouquet every week from William Rathbone, the man who founded the Queen Victoria Jubilee Institute for Nurses. In 2020, one of the anticipated gardens was dedicated to Florence during the pandemic. The year 2020 marked the 200th Anniversary of her birth, and the garden was to be called The Florence Nightingale Garden - A Celebration of Modern Day Nursing. Instead, the garden debuted at the Chelsea Flower Show in 2021. The garden featured “Images from Florence Nightingale's pressed flower collection and echoes of her handwriting … on… the timber walls.” Today Florence is remembered in the Florence Nightingale Museum in London, which celebrates the life and work of the best-known figure in nursing history. She is also honored with the Florence Nightingale rose — a pretty pale pink fragrant rose. 1856 Birth of Andreas Franz Wilhelm Schimper, German botanist and phytogeographer Andreas was a significant player in the early days of plant ecology. In 1901, his work was cut short due to his untimely death at 45 after contracting Malaria in Cameroon. Andreas coined the terms tropical rainforest and sclerophyll and is honored in many species names. Grow That Garden Library™ Book Recommendation P. Allen Smith's Garden Home by P. Allen Smith This book came out in 2003, and the subtitle is Creating a Garden for Everyday Living. Well, to me, this book is a garden classic. You get to know a little bit about P. Allen Smith's biography. His family's love of gardens, his experience working in the nursery business - plus all of the great relationships that he made working in some of England's top gardens. (He could write a book on that alone.) Fascinating stories. But in all seriousness, this book is so foundational to gardening. It's a great book to give new gardeners. And it's also an excellent book for gardeners who are considering a redesign or, after a long winter, feel like they need to brush up on their skills. The bulk of this book is dedicated to Allen's twelve garden design principles. He'll talk about aspects like framing a view, having texture in the garden, rhythm, pattern, color, etc. Now I thought I'd share this little excerpt from Allen's introduction. And here he's talking about how he created the garden rooms on his own property. He writes, I began working out the various outdoor rooms to see how they related to the house itself. The shape to one another and to the of the house and the lot created a series of rectangular spaces. I recognized an opportunity to design strong unbroken lines of sight or axes from one garden room into the next. Like an open door, these visual sight lines would allow visitors to stand in one room and see directly into the next. After positioning these openings through portals or entries further divided the rectangles into nine garden rooms and began to imagine how each space could have its own personality yet remain a part of a cohesive whole. And then I love what he says next. Because he's talking about paths, and I always feel like paths are so underrated; they're almost an afterthought for so many gardeners. So Allen says, As I laid out this plan on paper, I added an entire circuit or path that looped around the house, connecting one garden room to the next. From here, I imagined hedges and fences that would serve as "walls" for each room, with arbors and gates as "doorways." And then, he goes on to talk about more ways that he created these garden rooms. And so, in this book, Allen not only goes through his 12 principles of design, but he also takes you on tour. Through each of his garden rooms because they help illustrate each of those principles. It's a fabulous book. It's a garden basic - and it's so affordable now that it's been on the market so long. This book is 224 pages of P. Allen Smith's expertise, his twelve principles of garden design, and his fantastic personal garden. You can get a copy of P. Allen Smith's Garden Home by P. Allen Smith and support the show using the Amazon link in today's show notes for around $3. Botanic Spark 1943 On this day, the Belvidere Daily Republican posted an article entitled Gardeners Get Nine-Point Plan On Care Of Hose. If mindful of the rubber shortage, you're wondering how to coddle your garden hose through its important Victory-garden job this year, an expert here has a "nine-point program" for hose care that may mean the difference between a backyard farmer's success or failure. W. S. Richardson, manager of the industrial products division of B. F. Goodrich, outlines his nine points as follows: 1. Never drive a car over your hose. 2. Don't leave it lying in the sun 3. Coil it neatly and hang it up. 4. But not on a spike or sharp-edged stick. 5. Be sure it's drained first, for water left in the hose will damage the fabric reinforcement. 6. Don't turn off the water at the nozzle. 7. Don't try to stop the flow by doubling the hose back on itself for either way may give you a 'blow-out.' 8. Don't drag a hose over sharp stones in a rock garden. 9. Don't pick an oily spot on the driveway or floor of your garage as the place to coil it. He concludes, "[Oil] destroys most rubber, and you might end up with a leaky hose and a once-promising Victory garden 'burned up' by drought. Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener And remember: For a happy, healthy life, garden every day.
Join Kosta and his guest, Dawson Davidson: Agricultural Advocate, Television Show Personality, Host and Tastemaker. Throughout his work as an advocate and host Dawson has built awareness and community for the most valuable resources in Tennessee as a four time National American Poultry Association title holder, recognized Tennessee State Agriculture Advocate, 2022 Best in Fair Champion and Guest Host on P. Allen Smith's CBS show “Garden Home”.Today we're talking about the future of agriculture, representation and how to find your voice in any industry. Better Together with Kosta Yepifantsev is recorded in Cookeville, TN.Find out more about Kosta and all the ways we're better together:http://kostayepifantsev.com/Find out more about Dawson Davidson:https://www.definitelydawson.com/
Let's review our lesson on Leaving the Garden Home through songs: “Who Am I?”, “We're Glad Today”, “Jesus is Happy When I Obey”, and our memory verse Isaiah 7:16 “Refuse the evil and choose the good.”Recorded and produced by: Ashley B. LarsonDon't forget to check out the coloring pages that go along with each lesson! https://startingwithjesus.com/spb-cp/If you have enjoyed this program and would like to know more, go to our website: www.startingwithjesus.comThe Bible and nature story material used in today's devotional podcast has been used with permission from My Bible First. If you would like your own copy, please visit their website-or call 1-877-242-5317.If you would like to purchase your own Memory Verse CD or Songbook, go to Ouchita Hills Store (https://www.ouachitahillsacademy.org/store?page=1&store_category_id=0&sort_by=title&is_ascending=1&search=).If you would like to purchase the full Scripture Songs and Little Lessons CD, go to thehomeplace.org.Songs from: Little Voices Praise Him, SDA Hymnal, Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, New Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, Memory Verse Verse Songs for Cradle Roll, Children's Songs For Jesus, and Scripture Songs and Little LessonsAll Bible verses are from the NKJV.Singers for this Quarter: Tory, Caleb, and Enoch Hall, Hudson Reeves, Michael and Amy NelsonEditing assist: Dillon Austin and Josh LarsonMusic Recording and Editing: Rachel Nelson and Kristy HallColoring Pages: Rachel Lamming, Lily Canada, and Evie RodriguezTheme Music: Lindsey Mills- www.lindseymillsmusic.com God: who gives talents for us to use for Him
Leaving the Garden Home answers the question why people, animals, and plants get hurt and die. It encourages us that when we love and obey Jesus, He will give us everlasting life. Mem vs. Isa. 7:16. Check out this week's coloring pages https://startingwithjesus.com/spb-cp/. Child helpers: Patience, Kent, Audrey and HeidiRecorded and produced by: Ashley B. LarsonDon't forget to check out the coloring pages that go along with each lesson! https://startingwithjesus.com/spb-cp/If you have enjoyed this program and would like to know more, go to our website: www.startingwithjesus.comThe Bible and nature story material used in today's devotional podcast has been used with permission from My Bible First. If you would like your own copy, please visit their website-or call 1-877-242-5317.If you would like to purchase your own Memory Verse CD or Songbook, go to Ouchita Hills Store (https://www.ouachitahillsacademy.org/store?page=1&store_category_id=0&sort_by=title&is_ascending=1&search=).If you would like to purchase the full Scripture Songs and Little Lessons CD, go to thehomeplace.org.Songs from: Little Voices Praise Him, SDA Hymnal, Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, New Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, Memory Verse Verse Songs for Cradle Roll, Children's Songs For Jesus, and Scripture Songs and Little LessonsAll Bible verses are from the NKJV.Singers for this Quarter: Tory, Caleb, and Enoch Hall, Hudson Reeves, Michael and Amy NelsonEditing assist: My hubby Josh LarsonRachel Nelson: Music Recording and EditingRachel Lamming, Lily Canada, and Evie Rodriguez: Coloring Pages Lindsey Mills: Theme Music www.lindseymillsmusic.comGod: who gives talents for us to use for Him
Leaving the Garden Home answers the question why people, animals, and plants get hurt and die. It encourages us that when we love and obey Jesus, He will give us everlasting life. Mem vs. Isa. 7:16. Check out this week's coloring pages https://startingwithjesus.com/spb-cp/. Child helpers: Patience, Kent, Audrey and HeidiRecorded and produced by: Ashley B. LarsonDon't forget to check out the coloring pages that go along with each lesson! https://startingwithjesus.com/spb-cp/If you have enjoyed this program and would like to know more, go to our website: www.startingwithjesus.comThe Bible and nature story material used in today's devotional podcast has been used with permission from My Bible First. If you would like your own copy, please visit their website-or call 1-877-242-5317.If you would like to purchase your own Memory Verse CD or Songbook, go to Ouchita Hills Store (https://www.ouachitahillsacademy.org/store?page=1&store_category_id=0&sort_by=title&is_ascending=1&search=).If you would like to purchase the full Scripture Songs and Little Lessons CD, go to thehomeplace.org.Songs from: Little Voices Praise Him, SDA Hymnal, Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, New Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, Memory Verse Verse Songs for Cradle Roll, Children's Songs For Jesus, and Scripture Songs and Little LessonsAll Bible verses are from the NKJV.Singers for this Quarter: Tory, Caleb, and Enoch Hall, Hudson Reeves, Michael and Amy NelsonEditing assist: My hubby Josh LarsonRachel Nelson: Music Recording and EditingRachel Lamming, Lily Canada, and Evie Rodriguez: Coloring Pages Lindsey Mills: Theme Music www.lindseymillsmusic.comGod: who gives talents for us to use for HimRecorded and produced by: Ashley B. Larson
Com a pandemia, o home office ganhou ainda mais força e muitas empresas passaram a adotar este modelo de trabalho, que possui suas vantagens e desvantagens. Por isso, uma evolução deste conceito surgiu, ganhou o mundo e virou nicho de mercado: o home garden office. Confira! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Guests Suzanne Strydom | A Senior Buyer for the store @Home, which is part of The Foschini Group Robyn Lane | Editor of Livingspace magazine See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ep 241 | Aired 4/28/2021 This week on Up in Your Business with Kerry McCoy we are replaying my interview with the well-known TV personality and gardener, P. Allen Smith. We talk about his home, Moss Mountain Farm, his involvement in the local food movement, organic gardening, and his passion: the Heritage Poultry Conservancy that he founded in 2009 to educate the public and preserve endangered poultry breeds. Like so many successful people, Allen has turned strife into success. Overcoming his shy demeanor, he has parlayed himself into a national phenomenon with not one but two nationally syndicated PBS TV shows: P Allen Smith’s Garden Home and P. Allen Smith’s Garden to Table. He is also the author of five best-selling books. Listen to learn about his long family history in farming and horticulture and about his childhood passion for urban farming “before it was cool."
Shelley Moise leads Noelle's Garden Home & Body and she is a master soap formulator and instructor. She specializes in natural artisan home and skincare products for all skin types.Host Paul enjoyed interviewing Shelley and she shares her greatest business challenge and her greatest personal challenge which was donating her kidney to her mother, it goes to show you that she is a very loving and focused woman, human being, and caregiving entrepreneur.Shelley served over 20 years in the United States Air Force and just as she served with distinction in the military, she brings the gifts of leadership, working with people, making a positive difference in the lives of others, exceptional communications skills, and more to the table leading her business. Her target market is women because she knows how hard women work on their job, as entrepreneurs, as parents, and more.Learn more about Shelley Moise at Clubhouse, her Club is called, The Soap and Candle Maker's Club, they meet every Sunday at 7 PM (EST) to discuss topics surrounding soap and candlemaking. Shelley's mission is skincare and to lead her community into self-care through healthy skin, healthy eating, and exercise. Discover more about Shelley Moise at www.noellesgarden.comEmail- info@noellesgarden.com
Leaving the Garden Home answers the question why people, animals, and plants get hurt and die. It encourages us that when we love and obey Jesus, He will give us everlasting life. Memory Verse Isaiah 7:16. Check out this week's coloring pages https://startingwithjesus.com/spb-cp/SEEDPOD for Beginners is for the youngest of children til 5 years old to start their day with Jesus. In just 7-9 minutes they will learn songs, including scripture and shortened hymns, learn the Bible story and memory verse that follows the MBF lesson, and be encouraged to love Jesus through nature and the Bible. This podcast includes little children answering questions, singing and praying.Meet the Beginner's Podcaster Ashley Larson is a mother of two playful daughters and lives with her husband, Josh, in Northern California. She became a Seventh-Day Adventist as a young teenager. She is currently a stay-at-home mom and Beginner's Sabbath School leader. Prior to motherhood, she worked as a Physical Therapist Assistant in pediatrics, a colporteur, and Bible worker in the Central California Conference. Ashley loves the outdoors, singing, and playing with her girls.CreditsRecorded and produced by: Ashley B. LarsonIf you have enjoyed this program and would like to know more, go to our website: www.startingwithjesus.comThe Bible and nature story material used in today’s devotional podcast has been used with permission from My Bible First. If you would like your own copy, please visit their website-or call 1-877-242-5317.If you would like to purchase your own Memory Verse CD or Songbook, go to Ouchita Hills Store (https://www.ouachitahillsacademy.org/store?page=1&store_category_id=0&sort_by=title&is_ascending=1&search=).If you would like to purchase the full Scripture Songs and Little Lessons CD, go to thehomeplace.org.Songs from: Little Voices Praise Him, SDA Hymnal, Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, New Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, Memory Verse Verse Songs for Cradle Roll, Children's Songs For Jesus, and Scripture Songs and Little LessonsAll Bible verses are from the NKJV.Special thanks to children helpers for Bible readings, closing prayers, and lesson interaction: Patience, Kent, Audrey and HeidiSingers for this Quarter: Tory, Caleb, and Enoch Hall, Hudson Reeves, Michael and Amy NelsonEditing assist: My hubby Josh LarsonRachel Nelson: Music Recording and EditingRachel Lamming: story coloring pages Lindsey Mills: Theme Music www.lindseymillsmusic.comGod: who gives talents for us to use for Him
Leaving the Garden Home answers the question why people, animals, and plants get hurt and die. It encourages us that when we love and obey Jesus, He will give us everlasting life. Memory Verse Isaiah 7:16. Check out this week's coloring pages https://startingwithjesus.com/spb-cp/SEEDPOD for Beginners is for the youngest of children til 5 years old to start their day with Jesus. In just 7-9 minutes they will learn songs, including scripture and shortened hymns, learn the Bible story and memory verse that follows the MBF lesson, and be encouraged to love Jesus through nature and the Bible. This podcast includes little children answering questions, singing and praying.Meet the Beginner's Podcaster Ashley Larson is a mother of two playful daughters and lives with her husband, Josh, in Northern California. She became a Seventh-Day Adventist as a young teenager. She is currently a stay-at-home mom and Beginner's Sabbath School leader. Prior to motherhood, she worked as a Physical Therapist Assistant in pediatrics, a colporteur, and Bible worker in the Central California Conference. Ashley loves the outdoors, singing, and playing with her girls.CreditsRecorded and produced by: Ashley B. LarsonIf you have enjoyed this program and would like to know more, go to our website: www.startingwithjesus.comThe Bible and nature story material used in today’s devotional podcast has been used with permission from My Bible First. If you would like your own copy, please visit their website-or call 1-877-242-5317.If you would like to purchase your own Memory Verse CD or Songbook, go to Ouchita Hills Store (https://www.ouachitahillsacademy.org/store?page=1&store_category_id=0&sort_by=title&is_ascending=1&search=).If you would like to purchase the full Scripture Songs and Little Lessons CD, go to thehomeplace.org.Songs from: Little Voices Praise Him, SDA Hymnal, Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, New Sabbath Songs For Tiny Tots, Memory Verse Verse Songs for Cradle Roll, Children's Songs For Jesus, and Scripture Songs and Little LessonsAll Bible verses are from the NKJV.Special thanks to children helpers for Bible readings, closing prayers, and lesson interaction: Patience, Kent, Audrey and HeidiSingers for this Quarter: Tory, Caleb, and Enoch Hall, Hudson Reeves, Michael and Amy NelsonEditing assist: My hubby Josh LarsonRachel Nelson: Music Recording and EditingRachel Lamming: story coloring pages Lindsey Mills: Theme Music- www.lindseymillsmusic.comGod: who gives talents for us to use for Him
I sat down w hardcore band Garden Home (Mike Holloway, Dylan Mazurkiewicz, Mitchell Pratt, and John Doyle), whose debut EP "Disposable” came out in May 2019. They did a split w fellow hardcore band American Bandit for Valentine's Day earlier this year. We had some drinks as we discussed Garden Home's formation, the EP, new material, the shows we've been watching, and how it feels to be creating right now. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ben-slowey/support
(Featuring P. Allen Smith, landscape designer, conservationist, author, and television host) Landscape designer, conservationist, author, and television host P. Allen Smith discusses the shift towards walkability, density, and community accelerated by the COVID-19 crisis. https://www.afire.org/podcast/lookingforcommunity/ With more drastic climate change effects on the near horizon, and COVID-19 still in the room, it will be critical for investors to track policies and regulations alongside changing social attitudes. As the pandemic continues, healthy buildings aren't just engineering novelties and shiny facades for trade magazines—they're the new baseline for ensuring safe experiences in the built environment at all scales, including an increasingly popular trend in sustainable, walkable, and community-focused exurban developments. In this podcast, P. Allen Smith, prolific designer, author, and host of the P. Allen Smith's Garden Home and P. Allen Smith's Garden to Table series on American Public Television (and keynote speaker at this year's AFIRE Winter Conference in New York) discusses the need for a shift in thinking about value in real estate. What's the real difference between real estate that takes a myopic view of maximizing value per square foot, with little regard for context, and more thoughtful and integrated approaches to urban design, development, and value creation?
Fellow massage therapist, Daniel Bettencourt is on the Massage HodgepodgCAST! His practice, Kaizen Massage & Bodywork is the Garden Home area just outside of Portland, OR. I had such a great time discussing a variety of topics ranging from very specific practice building tips to the energy of the universe. Topics discussed in this episode: Daniel’s path to massage therapy Meaning of Kaizen Practice building - a practical, organic approach that is a great model for students Being a male massage therapist Self care practices Float tanks Longevity as a therapist Top of mind techniques / muscles The energy of the universe Find Daniel! Website | Facebook ========== LINKS Trader Joe’s Ensõ Float Muscle Manual by Dr. Nikita A. Vizniak Oculus Go - VR Headset Human Anatomy in VR Miss Renée - tarot reading ========== Video of this episode available on the Massage Hodgepodge YOUTUBE CHANNEL. **Music** "Swing House" by RKVC via Youtube Audio Library Please subscribe to the show and pass this along to a friend or two or ten.
Listen as we discuss how chickens and ducks can be utilized to improve your garden, the importance of eating pasture-raised eggs and poultry, and Lisa’s hopes for the future of agriculture. Bio: Lisa Steele is a 5th-generation chicken keeper, Maine Master Gardener and lifelong thrifty New Englander. She’s the founder of Fresh Eggs Daily®, the popular natural chicken keeping site which has been named one of the top ten garden blogs by Better Homes & Gardens magazine. The author of several books including Fresh Eggs Daily: Raising Happy, Healthy Chickens Naturally (St. Lynns Press, 2013), Gardening with Chickens (Quarto, 2016), and most recently 101 Chicken Keeping Hacks (Quarto, 2018), she has appeared on Home and Family on the Hallmark channel, P. Allen Smith’s Garden Home on NPR, Good Morning Maine, Great Day Houston, Good Day Columbus, and San Antonio Living among others, and has been featured on the front page of the Wall Street Journal. In addition to writing books and handling her social media, Lisa hosts a “country lifestyle” television show on NBC in Maine and New Hampshire called Welcome to my Farm. From the farm in central Maine where she and her husband reside, and she’s carrying on her family tradition raising a mixed flock of chickens, ducks and geese, and growing vegetables and herbs while inspiring others with her natural, fun and accessible approach to integrating gardening and backyard chickens for a more productive flock and a more bountiful harvest. Learn more about gardening and chickens by visiting Lisa’s website https://www.fresheggsdaily.com/
Famed gardener, TV host, author, conservationist, artist, and long-time museum friend, P. Allen Smith joins Museum Way. Allen and our host, Stace Treat swap stories about art, nature, sustainability, homes, and diversity. Allen gives us an update on Moss Mountain, the 600-acre farm in Little Rock, Arkansas, talks pollinators, aging, and more! This podcast was filmed in front of a live audience in one of the museum’s many glass reflection areas, highlighting the natural surroundings, as well as the art and architecture. Learn more about the P. Allen Smith team's visit to Crystal Bridges, both in the galleries and on the trails HERE.
In this VLOG, Garden Home host P. Allen Smith gives a Masterclass on easy to grow herbs. Everything from growing and cooking tips to decorating the Allen has you covered in this episode. Topics Include: Uses for Rosemary Types of Basil Growing Herbs in Containers Raised Bed Herb Gardening Tips for Lavender Rooting Mint Essential Oils Allium Varieties The Many Flavors of Herbs Mixing Herbs & Flowers “If you are thinking about growing some of your own food for the first time, I encourage you to start with herbs. The plants are the perfect combination of beauty and function so you can plant herbs anywhere in the garden. Mix them with flowers, grow them along paths, by the kitchen door, or plant them in containers both indoors or out. They are also extremely easy to grow. All most herbs really need are average soil, good drainage, consistent moisture and sunlight.” ~P. Allen Smith ----- Would you like to explore the gardens at Moss Mountain Farm and have a chance to be a part of the live studio audience? Go to: https://pallensmith.com/tours/ --- This video replay of P. Allen Smith's podcast is made possible by P. Allen Smith & Associates. Need help designing, planting, or maintaining your garden? Let P. Allen Smith & Associates make your dreams come true! Learn more: http://www.pallensmithandassociates.com/ For a full list of sponsors please visit my website: https://pallensmith.com/brandswelove/ --- The podcast can be found here: Apple - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/garden-home/id1456182776 SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.com/garden-home --- Want more Allen? Allen's Official Website: http://www.pallensmith.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pallensmith Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pallensmith/ Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/pallen_smith/ Twitter: http://twitter.com/pallensmith
n this VLOG, Garden Home host P. Allen Smith answers viewer questions about summer gardening. Topics Include: How to Make Hydrangeas Bloom Annabelle Hydrangeas Dwarf and Ornamental Trees Hydrangeas for Zone 5B Limelight Hydrangeas Hydrangeas for Shade Hydrangeas for Zone 7A Mites on Roses (Treatment) Treating Rose Rosette Dealing with Slugs Eliminating Japanese Beetles Deer Resistant Plants Conserving Water in Containers "When it comes to gardening, we have to think a season ahead, don't we? It's hard sometimes to slow down and appreciate the preset. I think it's important, though, that we savor all the goodness that summer gives us." ~ P. Allen Smith --- Would you like to explore the gardens at Moss Mountain Farm and have a chance to be a part of the live studio audience? Go to: https://pallensmith.com/tours/ --- This replay of P. Allen Smith's podcast is made possible by P. Allen Smith & Associates. Need help designing, planting, or maintaining your garden? Let P. Allen Smith & Associates make your dreams come true! Learn more: http://www.pallensmithandassociates.com/ For a full list of sponsors please visit my website: https://pallensmith.com/brandswelove/ --- The podcast can be found here: Apple - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast... SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.com/garden-home --- Want more Allen? Allen's Official Website: http://www.pallensmith.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pallensmith Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pallensmith/ Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/pallen_smith/ Twitter: http://twitter.com/pallensmith
In this VLOG, Garden Home host P. Allen Smith answers viewer questions about summer gardening. Topics Include: How to Make Hydrangeas Bloom Annabelle Hydrangeas Dwarf and Ornamental Trees Hydrangeas for Zone 5B Limelight Hydrangeas Hydrangeas for Shade Hydrangeas for Zone 7A Mites on Roses (Treatment) Treating Rose Rosette Dealing with Slugs Eliminating Japanese Beetles Deer Resistant Plants Conserving Water in Containers "When it comes to gardening, we have to think a season ahead, don't we? It's hard sometimes to slow down and appreciate the preset. I think it's important, though, that we savor all the goodness that summer gives us." ~ P. Allen Smith --- Would you like to explore the gardens at Moss Mountain Farm and have a chance to be a part of the live studio audience? Go to: https://pallensmith.com/tours/ --- This replay of P. Allen Smith's podcast is made possible by P. Allen Smith & Associates. Need help designing, planting, or maintaining your garden? Let P. Allen Smith & Associates make your dreams come true! Learn more: http://www.pallensmithandassociates.com/ For a full list of sponsors please visit my website: https://pallensmith.com/brandswelove/ --- The podcast can be found here: Apple - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/garden-home/id1456182776 SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.com/garden-home --- In this VLOG, Garden Home host P. Allen Smith talks about houseplant care and tips. He also shows us some of his all-time favorites. Topics Include: How to Care for Houseplants Fertilizing Houseplants Outdoor Houseplants Tropical Houseplants How to Water Houseplants Air Purifying Plants Indoor Plant Decor Types of Palms FAQ "In general, most houseplants do well in bright, indirect light, so be aware of the room’s light conditions when selecting where to display your plants. If the room is dimly lit, such as a bathroom or an area with north-facing windows, choose plants that do well in low light, such as a fern, dracaena, ivy or peace lily. Check the plant tag when purchasing your houseplants so you’ll know what light conditions are best for each plant." ~ P. Allen Smith ----- Would you like to explore the gardens at Moss Mountain Farm and have a chance to be a part of the live studio audience? Go to: https://pallensmith.com/tours/ --- This video replay of P. Allen Smith's podcast is made possible by P. Allen Smith & Associates. Need help designing, planting, or maintaining your garden? Let P. Allen Smith & Associates make your dreams come true! Learn more: http://www.pallensmithandassociates.com/ For a full list of sponsors please visit my website: https://pallensmith.com/brandswelove/ --- The podcast can be found here: Apple - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/garden-home/id1456182776 SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.com/garden-home --- Want more Allen? Allen's Official Website: http://www.pallensmith.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pallensmith Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pallensmith/ Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/pallen_smith/ Twitter: http://twitter.com/pallensmith
In this podcast, Garden Home television Host P. Allen Smith tells us about some of his favorite purple perennials & annuals, companion plants for purple plants and answers some some frequently asked questions. (Episode 13) Topics Include: Purple Perennials Purple Annuals Color Combinations in the Garden Garden Design Companion Planting Garden FAQ "There is a reason why purple is the color of royals. It’s a powerful hue. From sparkling lavender to sultry eggplant this color is pure luxury. In the garden you can use the various shades of purple to add dimension to a flower border or container combination. Pale purples reflect light and will jump forward while darks absorb light and recede. If you have a flat composition adding lilac or perhaps a deep violet will create a feeling of undulation." ~ P. Allen Smith --- Many of the plants discussed in this VLOG can be purchased at: https://www.gilberthwild.com/ Get 10 free daylilies with your first order! Use code: TV10 For a full list of sponsors please visit my website: https://pallensmith.com/brandswelove/ Would you like to explore the gardens at Moss Mountain Farm? Go to: https://pallensmith.com/tours/ Want more Allen? Allen's Official Website: http://www.pallensmith.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pallensmith Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pallensmith/ Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/pallen_smith/ Twitter: http://twitter.com/pallensmith
In this VLOG, Garden Home television host P. Allen Smith explores the Flexitarian diet and sits down with Wye Mountain Mushroom Farmer Jess Wilkins to specifically talk about fungi. The pair explore four different types of mushrooms and simple ways to prepare them. (Episode 9) Topics Include: Flexitarian Diet Mushroom Farming Types of Mushrooms King Oyster Mushroom Chestnut Mushroom Blue Oyster Mushroom Lion's Mane Mushroom Mushroom Cooking Techniques For more information on the Flexitarian Diet check out my website: www.pallensmith.com For more information on Wye Mountain Mushroom Farm check out: https://www.facebook.com/Wyemountainmushroomfarm/
Topic: Beau from Molbak's Garden & Home sets us up with Spring home & gardening action, along with some suggestions on what mom would like for Mother's Day Website(s): Molbaks.com / NicoleMangina.com
01-Penny DeHaven- Down In The Boondocks 02-Del Reeves and Penny De Haven- Crying In The Rain 03-Big Wheel Cannonball-Dick Curless 04-Roy Drusky- Long Long Texas Road 05-Tammy Wynette-Bedtime story 06-Freddie Hart-My hang up is you 07-Ricky Nelson-Garden-party 08-Baby's Smile, Woman's Kiss-Johnny Duncan 09-Countryfied- Mel McDaniel 11-Dottie West-Are you happy baby 12-Emmylou Harris-Rose of cimarron 13-Highway 40 Blues - Ricky Skaggs 14-Johnny Lee - My Baby Don't Slow Dance 15-Glen Campbell-Letter To Home 16-Willie Nelson- old five dimers like me 17-Charley Daniels Band - Drinkin' My Baby Goodbye
P. Allen Smith gets us excited about Spring on a day where the windchill is 20 below.
Ep 108 | October 5, 2018 Kerry McCoy sits down with P. Allen Smith on Up In Your Business Paul Allen Smith Jr., the oldest of four children, was born on March 12, 1960, in Little Rock, Arkansas. He grew up in McMinnville, Tennessee, in the Cumberland Mountains, where his father’s family had farmed for several generations and also operated an ornamental plant business. Smith calls himself a fourth-generation nurseryman and horticulturist. Regular appearances on local radio led to a weekly gardening segment on Little Rock television station KATV’s Daybreak show in 1989. It soon led to a syndicated program starting in 2000, P. Allen Smith’s Gardens, which was largely shot at Smith’s historic home in Little Rock’s Quapaw Quarter. The original Garden Home is a 1904 Colonial Revival cottage surrounded by a series of garden rooms designed by Smith. He purchased the house for one dollar and relocated it to a 15,000-square-foot vacant lot. Smith divides his time between that home and his 650-acre Garden Home Retreat at Moss Mountain Farm in Roland, Arkansas, which overlooks the Arkansas River Valley. At Moss Mountain Farm, Smith promotes the local-food movement, organic gardening, and the preservation of heritage poultry breeds. Smith founded the Heritage Poultry Conservancy in 2009. Smith is a Certified Fellow of the Royal Horticultural Society and a board member of the Royal Oak Foundation, the U.S. affiliate of the National Trust of England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. His awards and recognition's include the 2009 Arkansas Cultural Enrichment Award from the Hot Springs Documentary Film Festival, the 2011 4-H Celebration of Excellence Award, the Medal of Honor from the Garden Club of America, Garden Communicator Award from the American Nursery and Landscape Association (ANLA), Horticultural Communicator Award from the American Horticultural Society (AHS), and the Odyssey Award from the Hendrix College Board of Trustees honoring the achievements of Hendrix College alumni.
Get RIGHT ON-AIR - No Waiting! Introducing Our *New VIP Membership: AngelPractitioners.com/VIP Hosts Claudia Ibarra and Sundi Sturgeon will be chatting about How to Attract Fairies in your Mini Garden/Home….Plus Mini Contest ...Plus they will be Taking Your Calls, for Angel Messages and Mini-Readings! On Sundays we discuss Fairies, Angels, Fairy Realms, Angelic Realms, and much MORE! Visit Our Website: www.AngelPractitioners.com Become a Referring Angel! ...and make money! AngelPractitioners.com/Affiliates AngelPractitioners.com/Facebook ** AngelPractitioners.com/Twitter
The Garden of Eden (821.1) 73:0.1 THE cultural decadence and spiritual poverty resulting from the Caligastia downfall and consequent social confusion had little effect on the physical or biologic status of the Urantia peoples. Organic evolution proceeded apace, quite regardless of the cultural and moral setback which so swiftly followed the disaffection of Caligastia and Daligastia. And there came a time in the planetary history, almost forty thousand years ago, when the Life Carriers on duty took note that, from a purely biologic standpoint, the developmental progress of the Urantia races was nearing its apex. The Melchizedek receivers, concurring in this opinion, readily agreed to join the Life Carriers in a petition to the Most Highs of Edentia asking that Urantia be inspected with a view to authorizing the dispatch of biologic uplifters, a Material Son and Daughter. (821.2) 73:0.2 This request was addressed to the Most Highs of Edentia because they had exercised direct jurisdiction over many of Urantia’s affairs ever since Caligastia’s downfall and the temporary vacation of authority on Jerusem. (821.3) 73:0.3 Tabamantia, sovereign supervisor of the series of decimal or experimental worlds, came to inspect the planet and, after his survey of racial progress, duly recommended that Urantia be granted Material Sons. In a little less than one hundred years from the time of this inspection, Adam and Eve, a Material Son and Daughter of the local system, arrived and began the difficult task of attempting to untangle the confused affairs of a planet retarded by rebellion and resting under the ban of spiritual isolation. 1. The Nodites and the Amadonites (821.4) 73:1.1 On a normal planet the arrival of the Material Son would ordinarily herald the approach of a great age of invention, material progress, and intellectual enlightenment. The post-Adamic era is the great scientific age of most worlds, but not so on Urantia. Though the planet was peopled by races physically fit, the tribes languished in the depths of savagery and moral stagnation. (821.5) 73:1.2 Ten thousand years after the rebellion practically all the gains of the Prince’s administration had been effaced; the races of the world were little better off than if this misguided Son had never come to Urantia. Only among the Nodites and the Amadonites was there persistence of the traditions of Dalamatia and the culture of the Planetary Prince. (821.6) 73:1.3 The Nodites were the descendants of the rebel members of the Prince’s staff, their name deriving from their first leader, Nod, onetime chairman of the Dalamatia commission on industry and trade. The Amadonites were the descendants of those Andonites who chose to remain loyal with Van and Amadon. “Amadonite” is more of a cultural and religious designation than a racial term; racially considered the Amadonites were essentially Andonites. “Nodite” is both a cultural and racial term, for the Nodites themselves constituted the eighth race of Urantia. (822.1) 73:1.4 There existed a traditional enmity between the Nodites and the Amadonites. This feud was constantly coming to the surface whenever the offspring of these two groups would try to engage in some common enterprise. Even later, in the affairs of Eden, it was exceedingly difficult for them to work together in peace. (822.2) 73:1.5 Shortly after the destruction of Dalamatia the followers of Nod became divided into three major groups. The central group remained in the immediate vicinity of their original home near the headwaters of the Persian Gulf. The eastern group migrated to the highland regions of Elam just east of the Euphrates valley. The western group was situated on the northeastern Syrian shores of the Mediterranean and in adjacent territory. (822.3) 73:1.6 These Nodites had freely mated with the Sangik races and had left behind an able progeny. And some of the descendants of the rebellious Dalamatians subsequently joined Van and his loyal followers in the lands north of Mesopotamia. Here, in the vicinity of Lake Van and the southern Caspian Sea region, the Nodites mingled and mixed with the Amadonites, and they were numbered among the “mighty men of old.” (822.4) 73:1.7 Prior to the arrival of Adam and Eve these groups — Nodites and Amadonites — were the most advanced and cultured races on earth. 2. Planning for the Garden (822.5) 73:2.1 For almost one hundred years prior to Tabamantia’s inspection, Van and his associates, from their highland headquarters of world ethics and culture, had been preaching the advent of a promised Son of God, a racial uplifter, a teacher of truth, and the worthy successor of the traitorous Caligastia. Though the majority of the world’s inhabitants of those days exhibited little or no interest in such a prediction, those who were in immediate contact with Van and Amadon took such teaching seriously and began to plan for the actual reception of the promised Son. (822.6) 73:2.2 Van told his nearest associates the story of the Material Sons on Jerusem; what he had known of them before ever he came to Urantia. He well knew that these Adamic Sons always lived in simple but charming garden homes and proposed, eighty-three years before the arrival of Adam and Eve, that they devote themselves to the proclamation of their advent and to the preparation of a garden home for their reception. (822.7) 73:2.3 From their highland headquarters and from sixty-one far-scattered settlements, Van and Amadon recruited a corps of over three thousand willing and enthusiastic workers who, in solemn assembly, dedicated themselves to this mission of preparing for the promised — at least expected — Son. (822.8) 73:2.4 Van divided his volunteers into one hundred companies with a captain over each and an associate who served on his personal staff as a liaison officer, keeping Amadon as his own associate. These commissions all began in earnest their preliminary work, and the committee on location for the Garden sallied forth in search of the ideal spot. (822.9) 73:2.5 Although Caligastia and Daligastia had been deprived of much of their power for evil, they did everything possible to frustrate and hamper the work of preparing the Garden. But their evil machinations were largely offset by the faithful activities of the almost ten thousand loyal midway creatures who so tirelessly labored to advance the enterprise. 3. The Garden Site (823.1) 73:3.1 The committee on location was absent for almost three years. It reported favorably concerning three possible locations: The first was an island in the Persian Gulf; the second, the river location subsequently occupied as the second garden; the third, a long narrow peninsula — almost an island — projecting westward from the eastern shores of the Mediterranean Sea. (823.2) 73:3.2 The committee almost unanimously favored the third selection. This site was chosen, and two years were occupied in transferring the world’s cultural headquarters, including the tree of life, to this Mediterranean peninsula. All but a single group of the peninsula dwellers peaceably vacated when Van and his company arrived. (823.3) 73:3.3 This Mediterranean peninsula had a salubrious climate and an equable temperature; this stabilized weather was due to the encircling mountains and to the fact that this area was virtually an island in an inland sea. While it rained copiously on the surrounding highlands, it seldom rained in Eden proper. But each night, from the extensive network of artificial irrigation channels, a “mist would go up” to refresh the vegetation of the Garden. (823.4) 73:3.4 The coast line of this land mass was considerably elevated, and the neck connecting with the mainland was only twenty-seven miles wide at the narrowest point. The great river that watered the Garden came down from the higher lands of the peninsula and flowed east through the peninsular neck to the mainland and thence across the lowlands of Mesopotamia to the sea beyond. It was fed by four tributaries which took origin in the coastal hills of the Edenic peninsula, and these are the “four heads” of the river which “went out of Eden,” and which later became confused with the branches of the rivers surrounding the second garden. (823.5) 73:3.5 The mountains surrounding the Garden abounded in precious stones and metals, though these received very little attention. The dominant idea was to be the glorification of horticulture and the exaltation of agriculture. (823.6) 73:3.6 The site chosen for the Garden was probably the most beautiful spot of its kind in all the world, and the climate was then ideal. Nowhere else was there a location which could have lent itself so perfectly to becoming such a paradise of botanic expression. In this rendezvous the cream of the civilization of Urantia was forgathering. Without and beyond, the world lay in darkness, ignorance, and savagery. Eden was the one bright spot on Urantia; it was naturally a dream of loveliness, and it soon became a poem of exquisite and perfected landscape glory. 4. Establishing the Garden (823.7) 73:4.1 When Material Sons, the biologic uplifters, begin their sojourn on an evolutionary world, their place of abode is often called the Garden of Eden because it is characterized by the floral beauty and the botanic grandeur of Edentia, the constellation capital. Van well knew of these customs and accordingly provided that the entire peninsula be given over to the Garden. Pasturage and animal husbandry were projected for the adjoining mainland. Of animal life, only the birds and the various domesticated species were to be found in the park. Van’s instructions were that Eden was to be a garden, and only a garden. No animals were ever slaughtered within its precincts. All flesh eaten by the Garden workers throughout all the years of construction was brought in from the herds maintained under guard on the mainland. (824.1) 73:4.2 The first task was the building of the brick wall across the neck of the peninsula. This once completed, the real work of landscape beautification and home building could proceed unhindered. (824.2) 73:4.3 A zoological garden was created by building a smaller wall just outside the main wall; the intervening space, occupied by all manner of wild beasts, served as an additional defense against hostile attacks. This menagerie was organized in twelve grand divisions, and walled paths led between these groups to the twelve gates of the Garden, the river and its adjacent pastures occupying the central area. (824.3) 73:4.4 In the preparation of the Garden only volunteer laborers were employed; no hirelings were ever used. They cultivated the Garden and tended their herds for support; contributions of food were also received from near-by believers. And this great enterprise was carried through to completion in spite of the difficulties attendant upon the confused status of the world during these troublous times. (824.4) 73:4.5 But it was a cause for great disappointment when Van, not knowing how soon the expected Son and Daughter might come, suggested that the younger generation also be trained in the work of carrying on the enterprise in case their arrival should be delayed. This seemed like an admission of lack of faith on Van’s part and made considerable trouble, caused many desertions; but Van went forward with his plan of preparedness, meantime filling the places of the deserters with younger volunteers. 5. The Garden Home (824.5) 73:5.1 At the center of the Edenic peninsula was the exquisite stone temple of the Universal Father, the sacred shrine of the Garden. To the north the administrative headquarters was established; to the south were built the homes for the workers and their families; to the west was provided the allotment of ground for the proposed schools of the educational system of the expected Son, while in the “east of Eden” were built the domiciles intended for the promised Son and his immediate offspring. The architectural plans for Eden provided homes and abundant land for one million human beings. (824.6) 73:5.2 At the time of Adam’s arrival, though the Garden was only one-fourth finished, it had thousands of miles of irrigation ditches and more than twelve thousand miles of paved paths and roads. There were a trifle over five thousand brick buildings in the various sectors, and the trees and plants were almost beyond number. Seven was the largest number of houses composing any one cluster in the park. And though the structures of the Garden were simple, they were most artistic. The roads and paths were well built, and the landscaping was exquisite. (824.7) 73:5.3 The sanitary arrangements of the Garden were far in advance of anything that had been attempted theretofore on Urantia. The drinking water of Eden was kept wholesome by the strict observance of the sanitary regulations designed to conserve its purity. During these early times much trouble came about from neglect of these rules, but Van gradually impressed upon his associates the importance of allowing nothing to fall into the water supply of the Garden. (825.1) 73:5.4 Before the later establishment of a sewage-disposal system the Edenites practiced the scrupulous burial of all waste or decomposing material. Amadon’s inspectors made their rounds each day in search for possible causes of sickness. Urantians did not again awaken to the importance of the prevention of human diseases until the later times of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Before the disruption of the Adamic regime a covered brick-conduit disposal system had been constructed which ran beneath the walls and emptied into the river of Eden almost a mile beyond the outer or lesser wall of the Garden. (825.2) 73:5.5 By the time of Adam’s arrival most of the plants of that section of the world were growing in Eden. Already had many of the fruits, cereals, and nuts been greatly improved. Many modern vegetables and cereals were first cultivated here, but scores of varieties of food plants were subsequently lost to the world. (825.3) 73:5.6 About five per cent of the Garden was under high artificial cultivation, fifteen per cent partially cultivated, the remainder being left in a more or less natural state pending the arrival of Adam, it being thought best to finish the park in accordance with his ideas. (825.4) 73:5.7 And so was the Garden of Eden made ready for the reception of the promised Adam and his consort. And this Garden would have done honor to a world under perfected administration and normal control. Adam and Eve were well pleased with the general plan of Eden, though they made many changes in the furnishings of their own personal dwelling. (825.5) 73:5.8 Although the work of embellishment was hardly finished at the time of Adam’s arrival, the place was already a gem of botanic beauty; and during the early days of his sojourn in Eden the whole Garden took on new form and assumed new proportions of beauty and grandeur. Never before this time nor after has Urantia harbored such a beautiful and replete exhibition of horticulture and agriculture. 6. The Tree of Life (825.6) 73:6.1 In the center of the Garden temple Van planted the long-guarded tree of life, whose leaves were for the “healing of the nations,” and whose fruit had so long sustained him on earth. Van well knew that Adam and Eve would also be dependent on this gift of Edentia for their life maintenance after they once appeared on Urantia in material form. (825.7) 73:6.2 The Material Sons on the system capitals do not require the tree of life for sustenance. Only in the planetary repersonalization are they dependent on this adjunct to physical immortality. (825.8) 73:6.3 The “tree of the knowledge of good and evil” may be a figure of speech, a symbolic designation covering a multitude of human experiences, but the “tree of life” was not a myth; it was real and for a long time was present on Urantia. When the Most Highs of Edentia approved the commission of Caligastia as Planetary Prince of Urantia and those of the one hundred Jerusem citizens as his administrative staff, they sent to the planet, by the Melchizedeks, a shrub of Edentia, and this plant grew to be the tree of life on Urantia. This form of nonintelligent life is native to the constellation headquarters spheres, being also found on the headquarters worlds of the local and superuniverses as well as on the Havona spheres, but not on the system capitals. (826.1) 73:6.4 This superplant stored up certain space-energies which were antidotal to the age-producing elements of animal existence. The fruit of the tree of life was like a superchemical storage battery, mysteriously releasing the life-extension force of the universe when eaten. This form of sustenance was wholly useless to the ordinary evolutionary beings on Urantia, but specifically it was serviceable to the one hundred materialized members of Caligastia’s staff and to the one hundred modified Andonites who had contributed of their life plasm to the Prince’s staff, and who, in return, were made possessors of that complement of life which made it possible for them to utilize the fruit of the tree of life for an indefinite extension of their otherwise mortal existence. (826.2) 73:6.5 During the days of the Prince’s rule the tree was growing from the earth in the central and circular courtyard of the Father’s temple. Upon the outbreak of the rebellion it was regrown from the central core by Van and his associates in their temporary camp. This Edentia shrub was subsequently taken to their highland retreat, where it served both Van and Amadon for more than one hundred and fifty thousand years. (826.3) 73:6.6 When Van and his associates made ready the Garden for Adam and Eve, they transplanted the Edentia tree to the Garden of Eden, where, once again, it grew in a central, circular courtyard of another temple to the Father. And Adam and Eve periodically partook of its fruit for the maintenance of their dual form of physical life. (826.4) 73:6.7 When the plans of the Material Son went astray, Adam and his family were not permitted to carry the core of the tree away from the Garden. When the Nodites invaded Eden, they were told that they would become as “gods if they partook of the fruit of the tree.” Much to their surprise they found it unguarded. They ate freely of the fruit for years, but it did nothing for them; they were all material mortals of the realm; they lacked that endowment which acted as a complement to the fruit of the tree. They became enraged at their inability to benefit from the tree of life, and in connection with one of their internal wars, the temple and the tree were both destroyed by fire; only the stone wall stood until the Garden was subsequently submerged. This was the second temple of the Father to perish. (826.5) 73:6.8 And now must all flesh on Urantia take the natural course of life and death. Adam, Eve, their children, and their children’s children, together with their associates, all perished in the course of time, thus becoming subject to the ascension scheme of the local universe wherein mansion world resurrection follows material death. 7. The Fate of Eden (826.6) 73:7.1 After the first garden was vacated by Adam, it was occupied variously by the Nodites, Cutites, and the Suntites. It later became the dwelling place of the northern Nodites who opposed co-operation with the Adamites. The peninsula had been overrun by these lower-grade Nodites for almost four thousand years after Adam left the Garden when, in connection with the violent activity of the surrounding volcanoes and the submergence of the Sicilian land bridge to Africa, the eastern floor of the Mediterranean Sea sank, carrying down beneath the waters the whole of the Edenic peninsula. Concomitant with this vast submergence the coast line of the eastern Mediterranean was greatly elevated. And this was the end of the most beautiful natural creation that Urantia has ever harbored. The sinking was not sudden, several hundred years being required completely to submerge the entire peninsula. (827.1) 73:7.2 We cannot regard this disappearance of the Garden as being in any way a result of the miscarriage of the divine plans or as a result of the mistakes of Adam and Eve. We do not regard the submergence of Eden as anything but a natural occurrence, but it does seem to us that the sinking of the Garden was timed to occur at just about the date of the accumulation of the reserves of the violet race for undertaking the work of rehabilitating the world peoples. (827.2) 73:7.3 The Melchizedeks counseled Adam not to initiate the program of racial uplift and blending until his own family had numbered one-half million. It was never intended that the Garden should be the permanent home of the Adamites. They were to become emissaries of a new life to all the world; they were to mobilize for unselfish bestowal upon the needy races of earth. (827.3) 73:7.4 The instructions given Adam by the Melchizedeks implied that he was to establish racial, continental, and divisional headquarters to be in charge of his immediate sons and daughters, while he and Eve were to divide their time between these various world capitals as advisers and co-ordinators of the world-wide ministry of biologic uplift, intellectual advancement, and moral rehabilitation. (827.4) 73:7.5 [Presented by Solonia, the seraphic “voice in the Garden.”]
This episode's special guest is Mark Chisholm of Aspen Tree Expert Co. and STIHL. One part acrobat, one part expert rope climber, one part tree physiologist, and several parts competitor and thrill seeker Chisholm is a third-generation, certified arborist with his family-owned Aspen Tree Expert Company in New Jersey. His expertise in tree care has made him a sought-after consultant and industry spokesperson for the world of arboriculture, and he regularly travels the globe to consult with international arborist associations and conducts educational sessions nationwide on behalf of STIHL Inc.Mark discusses how to properly start, grow or integrate tree care into your current business in a safe and professional manner. We will focus on such topics as: -In-house tree work vs. subcontracting (or out-house) -Safety gear (PPE) and safety training (where to get it) -Managing "downed" trees -Proper tree care before, during and after construction -Mulch mountains and volcanoes -Importance and value of certification and professional associationsUp in the trees, navigating the Web, or educating and learning from tree experts, Chisholm is the embodiment of the well-rounded arborist. For Chisholm, this is more than just his life's work; it's also a family affair. He works with his father Steve, mother Laura, and brother Steve at Aspen. He doesn't just have the physical strength and flexibility of an athlete required to elevate among the highest limbs in nature, though. He has acquired a vast knowledge of tree climbing wisdom. He knows the ropes, inside and out, about crane removals, aerial rescue, cabling and bracing, proper pruning techniques, and complex climbing and rigging techniques, not to mention tree physiology. He has assisted the USDA in scouting out the spread of the insidious Asian long horned beetle throughout the Northeast. He has been featured in the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, and on CNN. He has also appeared on P. Allen Smith's Garden Home on PBS and the syndicated show P. Allen Smith Gardens. The shows featured Chisholm pruning centuries-old post oaks at the Garden Home Retreat in Arkansas of TODAY Show garden expert P. Allen Smith. He has also appeared on DIY Network's Deconstruction.Chisholm has won every International Society of Arboriculture (ISA) New Jersey Chapter Tree Climbing Championship for the last 19 years. He has conquered the wider tree-climbing world on three occasions, most recently in 2010.The competitive nature in Chisholm finds its release in an arena far away from chalkboards and text books – it's high in the trees where guys like him make their living working with incredible speed and agility at dizzying heights. Competitors come from all over the country – and world – to put their skills to the test, because when they're hundreds of feet in the air, it helps to keep sharp – and at the very top of their games – so to speak.Another endeavor on which Chisholm has set his eyes is forming a stronger community within the arboriculture industry via the development of his website treebuzz.com, with climber, innovator, friend, and fellow arborist, Tom Dunlap. Chisholm is very enthusiastic about the dynamic website that is designed to move and shake with this ever changing industry. By pooling common resources and contacts in arboriculture that Tom Dunlap and himself have accrued over the course of their successful careers, along with offering the most innovative technology and newest information, he hopes this tool will be just as valuable to tree professionals as their pruning saws, ropes and rigging.Chisholm is as dedicated to the science of trees as he is to the competition, and is a part of the overarching community of tree climbers, arborists and enthusiasts the world over.For more information on Mark Chisholm and tree care, visit www.treebuzz.com or www.treesaregood.org.
This episode's special guest is Mark Chisholm of Aspen Tree Expert Co. and STIHL. One part acrobat, one part expert rope climber, one part tree physiologist, and several parts competitor and thrill seeker Chisholm is a third-generation, certified arborist with his family-owned Aspen Tree Expert Company in New Jersey. His expertise in tree care has made him a sought-after consultant and industry spokesperson for the world of arboriculture, and he regularly travels the globe to consult with international arborist associations and conducts educational sessions nationwide on behalf of STIHL Inc. Mark discusses how to properly start, grow or integrate tree care into your current business in a safe and professional manner. We will focus on such topics as: -In-house tree work vs. subcontracting (or out-house) -Safety gear (PPE) and safety training (where to get it) -Managing "downed" trees -Proper tree care before, during and after construction -Mulch mountains and volcanoes -Importance and value of certification and professional associations Up in the trees, navigating the Web, or educating and learning from tree experts, Chisholm is the embodiment of the well-rounded arborist. For Chisholm, this is more than just his life's work; it's also a family affair. He works with his father Steve, mother Laura, and brother Steve at Aspen. He doesn't just have the physical strength and flexibility of an athlete required to elevate among the highest limbs in nature, though. He has acquired a vast knowledge of tree climbing wisdom. He knows the ropes, inside and out, about crane removals, aerial rescue, cabling and bracing, proper pruning techniques, and complex climbing and rigging techniques, not to mention tree physiology. He has assisted the USDA in scouting out the spread of the insidious Asian long horned beetle throughout the Northeast. He has been featured in the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, and on CNN. He has also appeared on P. Allen Smith's Garden Home on PBS and the syndicated show P. Allen Smith Gardens. The shows featured Chisholm pruning centuries-old post oaks at the Garden Home Retreat in Arkansas of TODAY Show garden expert P. Allen Smith. He has also appeared on DIY Network's Deconstruction. Chisholm has won every International Society of Arboriculture (ISA) New Jersey Chapter Tree Climbing Championship for the last 19 years. He has conquered the wider tree-climbing world on three occasions, most recently in 2010. The competitive nature in Chisholm finds its release in an arena far away from chalkboards and text books – it's high in the trees where guys like him make their living working with incredible speed and agility at dizzying heights. Competitors come from all over the country – and world – to put their skills to the test, because when they're hundreds of feet in the air, it helps to keep sharp – and at the very top of their games – so to speak. Another endeavor on which Chisholm has set his eyes is forming a stronger community within the arboriculture industry via the development of his website treebuzz.com, with climber, innovator, friend, and fellow arborist, Tom Dunlap. Chisholm is very enthusiastic about the dynamic website that is designed to move and shake with this ever changing industry. By pooling common resources and contacts in arboriculture that Tom Dunlap and himself have accrued over the course of their successful careers, along with offering the most innovative technology and newest information, he hopes this tool will be just as valuable to tree professionals as their pruning saws, ropes and rigging. Chisholm is as dedicated to the science of trees as he is to the competition, and is a part of the overarching community of tree climbers, arborists and enthusiasts the world over. For more information on Mark Chisholm and tree care, visit www.treebuzz.com or www.treesaregood.org.