POPULARITY
A new MP3 sermon from East Georgia Road Baptist Church is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: How Clean is the Vessel Speaker: Donnie Lambert Broadcaster: East Georgia Road Baptist Church Event: Prayer Meeting Date: 7/17/2024 Bible: Galatians 2:20 Length: 43 min.
In this episode Patrick Broe and Benji Naesen discuss the past week in the world of pro-cycling and preview the next week of races. This show is sponsored by JOIN Cycling. Lanterne Rouge listeners can access JOIN Cycling with an exclusive risk free 30-day free trial period. Head over to our website for more information: https://join.cc/lanternerouge/How Clean is Cycling? Analysing the Anti-Doping Fight - https://lanternerouge.com/2023/03/26/how-clean-is-cycling-analysing-the-anti-doping-fight/Timestamps:00:00:00 Intro00:03:33 Race recaps00:29:27 Doping news00:53:33 Should substitutes be allowed in cycling?01:01:14 Race previews01:05:35 Wrap-upOur merch has dropped! Custom designs painstakingly crafted by Louemans on t-shirts, mugs and hats with all your favourite catchphrases from the podcast. Check it out at https://shop.lanternerouge.comIf you enjoy and want to directly support LRCP, you can send us a donation here https://ko-fi.com/lanternerougecyclingpodcast
How Clean is the Lens of Your Heart & Window of Your Life-Senior Pastor Kyle Widrick
Mariana Simões, Brazilian investigative journalist covering climate and the environment for City Limits, and Lawrence Levine, director of Urban Water Infrastructure and senior attorney at NRDC, talk about the cleanliness of the water off area beaches. →"Beach Season is Here. How Clean is the Water in NYC?" (City Limits, 5/30/23) →Larry Levy points out that Riverkeeper is asking the public to weigh in on water cleanliness standards for the Hudson. More info here.
Episode 16 This week on Small Screen 00s Barnes and AMJ continue their epic task to rate every 00s TV show out of 2000.Bear with us it's not as shit as it sounds.This week's TV show is How Clean is Your House? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Mike interviews Richard Codos Owner of SleepOvation Mattresses about Mattress Facts & Fiction. The SleepOvation “700 in One” Mattress is the brainchild of Richard Codos, our company Founder & CEO, and inventor of the “tiny mattress” independent support system. He holds 31 U.S. Patents and several hundred foreign patents. There is a good chance you're sleeping on a mattress that uses one of his inventions or has been made by the machine built with one of his inventions. SleepOvation Website: http://shrsl.com/1n2e2 Use Discount Code: FAMOUSPT ~~~~Time Stamps~~~~ 0:00 Intro Song 0:08 Richard Codos Introduction 0:36 Are Firmer Mattresses Better for Your Back? 2:10 Are Softer Mattresses Better for Your Back? 5:27 Are We Seeing the Best Mattress Tech Yet? 7:59 Mattress Technology Advancements 9:57 The Problem with Waterbeds 12:10 The Sleep-Wake Cycle and Mattresses 15:16 Optimal Sleeping Temperature 16:23 How Clean is Your Mattress 20:16 Are New Mattresses from a Store Clean & Harmless? 28:25 Is it Illegal to Remove a Mattress Tag? 30:56 Are Good Mattresses Too Expensive? 34:11 Chemicals that Most Import Mattresses Contain 36:26 How Mattress Show Rooms Work 41:54 How SleepOvation Ships Their Mattresses 45:45 Are Memory Foam Mattresses Better? 49:52 Top 3 Things to Look for When Buying a Mattress 54:12 SleepOvation Website & Discount 55:15 Last Remarks --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/bobandbrad/support
CLICK HERE to listen to episode audio (5:56).Sections below are the following: Transcript of Audio Audio Notes and Acknowledgments ImagesSourcesRelated Water Radio Episodes For Virginia Teachers (Relevant SOLs, etc.). Unless otherwise noted, all Web addresses mentioned were functional as of 12-30-22. TRANSCRIPT OF AUDIO From the Cumberland Gap to the Atlantic Ocean, this is Virginia Water Radio for the week of January 2, 2023. MUSIC – ~26 sec –Lyrics: “Bluer than the Blue Ridge, I was out at sea. Further than the farthest, Till you came for me. You're always welcome to this plunder, I was over my head, I am under, under your spell.” That's part of “Under,” by The Steel Wheels.” It's one of the songs heard on Virginia Water Radio in 2022, and it opens our annual episode where we listen back to some of the previous year's sounds and music. We start with a medley of mystery soundsand voices. Have a listen for about 50 seconds, and see how many you recognize. SOUNDS AND VOICES - ~51 sec 1. Voices: “The James River. The Ohio River. Dismal Swamp of Virginia and North Carolina.” 2. Voices: “American Sycamore.” “Atlantic White-cedar.” “Baldcypress. Black Gum.” 3. Voices: “Buttonbush.” “Coastal Dog-hobble.” “Elderberry.” “Possum-haw.” 4. Coyotes and Gray Treefrogs. 5. Great Yellowlegs. 6. Voices: “And we are here on the banks of the Clinch River in St. Paul, Virginia, today to talk about the Eastern Hellbender, which is one of our most unique amphibians here in Virginia and the central Appalachians.” “Remember: healthy forests produce clean water.” “And I hope you join us for another edition of ‘Fifteen Minutes in the Forest.' Have a great weekend.” If you knew all of most of those, you're a 2022 water-year winner!You heard names of some water places connected to U.S. civil rights history;names of some trees that grow in or near water, followed by names of some shrubs that do so;coyotes and Gray Treefrogs on a July night;the Greater Yellowlegs bird; andexcerpts from the video series “Fifteen Minutes in the Forest,” produced by Virginia Cooperative Extension's Forest Landowner Education Program. Thanks to Blacksburg friends for the call-outs; to Lang Elliott for permission to use the Greater Yellowlegs sound, from the Stokes Field Guide to Bird Songs; and to Jen Gagnon for permission to use excerpts from “Fifteen Minutes in the Forest.” We close out 2022 with a two-minute sample of music heard this year, with parts of ““Witch Hazel,” by Tom Gala; “New Spring Waltz,” by the late Madeline MacNeil; “Try to Change It,” by Bob Gramann; and “Rainy Night,” by the group Wake Up Robin. Thanks to all the musicians who gave permission to use their music, and thanks to Janita Baker for permission to use Madeline MacNeil's music. So long to 2022, and here's hoping for a 2023 with interesting sounds, evocative music, and the water the world needs. MUSIC – ~108 sec 1. From “Witch Hazel” - Lyrics: “And I tell my heart be strong, like the Witch Hazel flower, and you will not be injured by this dark and troubled time.” 2. From “New Spring Waltz” - Instrumental. 3. From “Try to Change It” - Lyrics: “Try to change it, but I can't change it; locomotive rolls on through hills and snow and rain. Try to change it, why can't I change it; strength of will, push and pull, I'm bettin' on that train. Strength of will, push and pull, I'm bettin' on that train.”. 4. From “Rainy Night” - Instrumental. SHIP'S BELL Virginia Water Radio is produced by the Virginia Water Resources Research Center, part of Virginia Tech's College of Natural Resources and Environment. For more Virginia water sounds, music, or information, visit us online at virginiawaterradio.org, or call the Water Center at (540) 231-5624. Thanks to Ben Cosgrove for his version of “Shenandoah” to open and close this episode. In Blacksburg, I'm Alan Raflo, thanking you for listening, and wishing you health, wisdom, and good water. AUDIO NOTES AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Click here if you'd like to hear the full version (2 min./22 sec.) of the “Shenandoah” arrangement/performance by Ben Cosgrove that opens and closes this episode. More information about Mr. Cosgrove is available online at http://www.bencosgrove.com. Sounds Used and Their Previous 2022 Virginia Water Radio Episodes (Listed in the order heard in this episode's audio) The people calling out names of water-related places connected to U.S. civil rights history were recorded by Virginia Water Radio in Blacksburg, Va., in March 2022. This was featured in Episode 619, 3-7-22. The people calling out names of some trees that grow in or near water were recorded by Virginia Water Radio in Blacksburg, Va., in Virginia Water Radio on April 21, 2022. This was featured in Episode 626, 4-25-22. The shrub name call-outs were recorded by Virginia Water Radio in Blacksburg on June 14-15, 2022. This was featured in Episode 630, 6-20-22. The Coyote and Gray Treefrog sounds were recorded by Virginia Water Radio in Blacksburg, Va., on July 5, 2022, at approximately 10:15 p.m. This was featured in Episode 634, 8-15-22. The sounds of the Greater Yellowlegs was taken from the Stokes Field Guide to Bird Songs-Eastern Region CD set, by Lang Elliott with Donald and Lillian Stokes (Time Warner Audio Books, copyright 1997), used with permission of Lang Elliott. Lang Elliot's work is available online at the “Music of Nature” Web site, http://www.musicofnature.org/. This was featured in Episode 636, 9-12-22. The excerpts from the “Fifteen Minutes in the Forest” series were taken from the following episodes: “Eastern Hellbenders,” Episode 68, January 2022; “Best Management Practices for Water Quality,” Episode 19, September 2020; and “How Clean is Your Creek,” Episode 26, November 2020; used with permission of Jennifer Gagnon, Virginia Tech Department of Forest Resources and Conservation and the Virginia Cooperative Extension's Forest Landowner Education Program. The full video series is available online at https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLOhBz_SGRw8UZo9aAfShRbb-ZaVyk-uzT. This was featured in Episode 637, 9-26-22. Musical Selections Used and Their Previous 2022 Virginia Water Radio Episodes (Listed in the order heard in this episode's audio) “Under,” from the 2019 album “Over the Trees,” is copyright by The Steel Wheels, used with permission. More information about The Steel Wheels is available online at https://www.thesteelwheels.com/. This music was used in Episode 630, 6-20-22, on shrubs. “Witch Hazel,” from the 2011 album “Story After Story,” is copyright by Tom Gala, used with permission. More information about Tom Gala is available online at https://open.spotify.com/artist/0kG6YXrfGPB6lygJwOUNqO. This music was used in Episode 639, 10-24-22, on the Witch Hazel plant. “New Spring Waltz” is from Madeline MacNeil's 2002 album “Songs of Earth & Sea”; copyright held by Janita Baker, used with permission. More information about Madeline MacNeil is available from Ms. Baker's “Blue Lion Dulcimers & Guitars” Web site, online at https://www.bluelioninstruments.com/Maddie.html. This music was used in Episode 627, 5-9-22, on some spring songbirds. “Try to Change It,” from the 2001 album “See Farther in the Darkness,” is copyright by Bob Gramann, used with permission. More information about Bob Gramann is available online at https://www.bobgramann.com/folksinger.html. This music was used in Episode 611, 1-10-22, on the 2022 Virginia General Assembly opening. “Rainy Night,” from the 2018 album “Wake Up Robin,” on Great Bear Records, by the group of the same name, is used with permission of Andrew VanNorstrand. More information about the album and band is available online at https://wakeuprobin.bandcamp.com. This music was used in Episode 642, 11-21-22, on water-related things for which people are thankful. IMAGES (Unless otherwise noted, photographs are by Virginia Water Radio.)An Image Sampler from Episodes in 2022 From Episode 616, 2-14-22: Sculpture in Birmingham, Alabama's, Kelly Ingram Park, recalling fire hoses being used on civil rights protestors in the 1960s. Photo by Carol M. Highsmith, March 3, 2010. Accessed from the Library of Congress, online at https://www.loc.gov/item/2010636978/, 2/15/22.From Episode 621. 3-21-22: “Benefits of Trees” poster from the Virginia Department of Forestry, accessed online at https://dof.virginia.gov/education-and-recreation/learn-about-education-recreation/benefits-of-tree/, 12-30-22. From Episode 626. 4-25-22: Swamp Tupelo photographed at First Landing State Park in Virginia Beach, Va., July 9, 2021. Photo by iNaturalist user karliemarina, made available online at https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/86317064(as of 4-25-22) for use under Creative Commons license “Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0.” Information about this Creative Commons license is available online at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.From Episode 630, 6-20-22: Silky Dogwood beside Stroubles Creek in Blacksburg, Va., June 9, 2022.From Episode 636, 9-12-22: Greater Yellowlegs, photographed at Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge in Virginia, August 11, 2022. Photo by iNaturalist user kenttrulsson, made available online at https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/132685927(as of 9-12-22) for use under Creative Commons license “Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0.” Information about this Creative Commons license is available online at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.
How Clean is The Water on Disney World Attractions? I know they have a. sophisticated water system, I'm still sceptical . --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/c-sincere/support
How Clean is Your House? October 16, 2022: Brother Dallas Horgeshimer
CLICK HERE to listen to episode audio (4:40).Sections below are the following: Transcript of Audio Audio Notes and Acknowledgments Images Sources Related Water Radio Episodes For Virginia Teachers (Relevant SOLs, etc.). Unless otherwise noted, all Web addresses mentioned were functional as of 9-23-22. TRANSCRIPT OF AUDIO From the Cumberland Gap to the Atlantic Ocean, this is Virginia Water Radio for the weeks of September 26 and October 3, 2022. This episode is part of a series this year of episodes related to trees and shrubs. SOUND – ~6 sec That call of Mountain Chorus Frogs opens an episode where we learn about the video podcast series, “Fifteen Minutes in the Forest.” Started in April 2020, the video series is produced by the Virginia Forest Landowner Education Program, conducted by Virginia Cooperative Extension. As of September 9, 2022, the series included 82 episodes, covering topics such as tree identification, forest soils, invasive plants, forest management, tree syrups, and weird trees. Several episodes are on specific water-related topics, like the Mountain Chorus Frogs you heard earlier. Have a listen for about 90 seconds to excerpts from five of those episodes. SOUNDS and VOICES - 1 min./29 sec “Hi everyone. Welcome to ‘Fifteen Minutes in the Forest.' I'm Jennifer Gagnon with the Forest Landowner Education Program at Virginia Tech. And today I'm joining you from Claytor Lake State Park in southwest Virginia.” From “Vernal Pools,” Episode 74, April 2022. “This is a vernal pool in Claytor Lake State Park. ...This pool at its largest is probably an acre in size. This pool is big enough that it has Painted Sliders, we saw a Snapping Turtle in here, we have a Green Heron out here. ...There's all kinds of animals. ...It's a beautiful pool.” From “Vernal Pools,” Episode 74, April 2022. “Our topic today is going to be about water quality. And this ties in nicely with forestry.” From “Best Management Practices for Water Quality,” Episode 19, September 2020. Today we're going to take a look at some of the best management practices that loggers and forestry operations can take in order to protect water quality.” From “Best Management Practices for Water Quality,” Episode 19, September 2020. “One of the reasons we're studying Mountain Chorus Frogs is we're really trying to get a good idea of their distribution in Virginia.” From “Mountain Chorus Frogs,” Episode 75, April 2022. “Hey everyone. My name is Wally Smith, and I'm an associate professor of biology at UVA-Wise. And we are here on the banks of the Clinch River in St. Paul, Virginia, today to talk about the Eastern Hellbender, which is one of our most unique amphibians here in Virginia and the central Appalachians.” From “Eastern Hellbenders,” Episode 68, January 2022. “Well thank for spending fifteen minutes in the creek with us, and thanks to Sally for for spending time with us outside to share her knowledge about water quality. And I hope you join us for another edition of ‘Fifteen Minutes in the Forest.' Have a great weekend.” From “How Clean is Your Creek,” Episode 26, November 2020. When COVID shut-downs began in 2020, the Virginia Forest Landowner Education team started the series as a way to stay engaged with clients. To the team's surprise, the series became very popular. Among the users are public school teachers, foresters, landowners, and other lovers of the outdoors. Along with the “Fifteen Minutes in the Forest” series, the Virginia Forest Landowner Education Program offers other short courses, conferences and workshops, Fall Forestry and Wildlife Field Tours, and retreats for beginning woodland owners. For more information about these learning opportunities, search online for the Virginia Forest Landowner Education Program, or phone Jennifer Gagnon at (540) 231-6391. Thanks to Ms. Gagnon for permission to use excerpts of “Fifteen Minutes in the Forest” episodes. And for a closing forest-and-water word, we end with a comment from Andrew Vinson, of the Virginia Department of Forestry, from the episode on best management practices for water quality. VOICE - ~4 sec - “Remember, healthy forests produce clean water.” SHIP'S BELL Virginia Water Radio is produced by the Virginia Water Resources Research Center, part of Virginia Tech's College of Natural Resources and Environment. For more Virginia water sounds, music, or information, visit us online at virginiawaterradio.org, or call the Water Center at (540) 231-5624. Thanks to Ben Cosgrove for his version of “Shenandoah” to open and close this episode. In Blacksburg, I'm Alan Raflo, thanking you for listening, and wishing you health, wisdom, and good water. AUDIO NOTES AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Virginia Water Radio thanks Jennifer Gagnon, Virginia Tech Department of Forest Resources and Conservation and the Virginia Cooperative Extension's Forest Landowner Education Program, for her help with this episode and for permission to excerpts of “Fifteen Minutes in the Forest” episodes. The full series is available online at https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLOhBz_SGRw8UZo9aAfShRbb-ZaVyk-uzT. Excerpts heard in this episode of Virginia Water Radio were taken from the following “Fifteen Minutes in the Forest” episodes:“Best Management Practices for Water Quality,” Episode 19, September 2020;“Eastern Hellbenders,” Episode 68, January 2022;“How Clean is Your Creek,” Episode 26, November 2020;“Mountain Chorus Frogs,” Episode 75, April 2022;“Vernal Pools,” Episode 74, April 2022. Click here if you'd like to hear the full version (2 min./22 sec.) of the “Shenandoah” arrangement/performance by Ben Cosgrove that opens and closes this episode. More information about Mr. Cosgrove is available online at http://www.bencosgrove.com.IMAGES Screenshot from the opening of the video for “Fifteen Minutes in the Forest” Episode 19, “Best Management Practices for Water Quality.”Screenshot from the opening of the video for “Fifteen Minutes in the Forest” Episode 59, “The S Curve of Forest Carbon.”Screenshot from the opening of the video for “Fifteen Minutes in the Forest” Episode 68, “Eastern Hellbenders.” SOURCES Used for Audio Virginia Forest Landowner Education Program, online at https://forestupdate.frec.vt.edu/. The “Fifteen Minutes in the Forest” program and other short course programs are available online at https://forestupdate.frec.vt.edu/landownerprograms/shortcourses/online.html. For More Information about Trees and Shrubs in Virginia and Elsewhere Center for Watershed Protection, “Trees and Stormwater Runoff,” online at https://www.cwp.org/reducing-stormwater-runoff/. Chesapeake Bay Program, “Field Guide: Plants and Trees,” online at https://www.chesapeakebay.net/discover/field-guide/critters?s=&fieldGuideType=Plants+%26+Trees&fieldGuideHabitat=. eFloras.org, “Flora of North America,” online at http://www.efloras.org/flora_page.aspx?flora_id=1. James P. Engel, “Shrubs in the Understory,” February 2012, online at http://www.whiteoaknursery.biz/essays/ShrubsinUnderstory.shtml. Oscar W. Gupton and Fred C. Swope, Trees and Shrubs of Virginia, University Press of Virginia, Charlottesville, 1981. Sanglin Lee and Alan Raflo, “Trees and Water,” Virginia Water Resources Research Center, Virginia Water Central Newsletter, pages 13-18, online at https://vtechworks.lib.vt.edu/handle/10919/49367. (A Virginia Cooperative Extension version of this article—“Trees and Water,” by Sanglin Lee, Alan Raflo, and Jennifer Gagnon, 2018—with some slight differences in the text is available online at https://www.pubs.ext.vt.edu/content/pubs_ext_vt_edu/en/ANR/ANR-18/ANR-18NP.html.) Penn State Extension, “Trees, Shrubs, and Groundcovers Tolerant of Wet Sites,” prepared by N. Robert Nuss, and reviewed and revised by Scott Guiser and Jim Smellmer, October 2007, online at https://extension.psu.edu/trees-shrubs-and-groundcovers-tolerant-of-wet-sites. Texas A&M University AgriLife Extension, “How Trees Grow,” online at https://agrilife.org/treecarekit/introduction-to-tree-care/how-trees-grow/. U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Forest Service, Forests of Virginia, 2018, Resource Update FS-264, Asheville, N.C., 2020; available online at https://www.fs.usda.gov/treesearch/pubs/59963. U.S. Department of Agriculture/U.S. Forest Service, “State and Private Forestry Fact Sheet—Virginia 2022,” online (as a PDF) at https://apps.fs.usda.gov/nicportal/temppdf/sfs/naweb/VA_std.pdf. U.S. Department of Agriculture/Forest Service/Climate Change Resource Center, “Forest Tree Diseases and Climate Change,” online at https://www.fs.usda.gov/ccrc/topics/forest-disease. U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)/Natural Resources Conservation Service, “PLANTS Database,” online at https://plants.usda.gov. Virginia Botanical Associates, “Digital Atlas of the Virginia Flora,” online at http://www.vaplantatlas.org/index.php?do=start&search=Search. Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation/Natural Heritage Program, “The Natural Communities of Virginia: Ecological Groups and Community Types,” online (as a PDF) at https://www.dcr.virginia.gov/natural-heritage/natural-communities/document/comlist07-21.pdf. Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation/Natural Heritage Division, online at https://www.dcr.virginia.gov/natural-heritage/. Virginia Department of Forestry, “Virginia's Forests,” online at https://dof.virginia.gov/. Some of the useful pages at that site are the following:“Benefits of Trees,” online at https://dof.virginia.gov/education-and-recreation/learn-about-education-recreation/benefits-of-tree/;“Common Native Trees of Virginia,” 2020 edition, online (as a PDF) at https://dof.virginia.gov/wp-content/uploads/Common-Native-Trees-ID_pub.pdf;“Forest Management and Health/Insects and Diseases,” online at https://dof.virginia.gov/forest-management-health/forest-health/insects-and-diseases/;Tree and Forest Health Guide, 2020, online (as a PDF) at https://dof.virginia.gov/wp-content/uploads/Tree-and-Forest-Health-Guide.pdf;“Virginia Trees for Clean Water Program,” online at https://dof.virginia.gov/urban-community-forestry/urban-forestry-community-assistance/virginia-trees-for-clean-water-grant-program/;“Virginia Statewide Assessment of Forest Resources,” November 2020, online (as a PDF) at https://www.stateforesters.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/2020-VA-Statewide-Assessment.pdf;“Tree Identification,” online at https://dof.virginia.gov/education-and-recreation/learn-about-education-recreation/tree-identification/. Virginia Forest Products Association, online at https://www.vfpa.net/. Virginia Native Plant Society, online at http://vnps.org/. RELATED VIRGINIA WATER RADIO EPISODES All Water Radio episodes are listed by category at the Index link above (http://www.virginiawaterradio.org/p/index.html). See particularly the “Plants” subject category. Following are links to other episodes on trees and shrubs. Introduction to trees and water – Episode 621, 3-21-22.American Sycamore – Episode 624, 4-11-22.American Witch Hazel – Episode 238, 10-31-14.Ash trees – Episode 376, 7-10-17 and Episode 625, 4-18-22.Early spring wildflowers in woodlands – Episode 573, 4-19-21.Forest lands and work in Virginia – Episode 623, 4-4-22.Maple trees – Episode 503, 12-16-19.Photosynthesis – Episode 602, 11-8-21.Poison Ivy and related plants, including the shrub Poison Sumac –
Message from Elder Simon Gidney entitled "How Clean are Your Feet?" For more information, visit sntandrews.org. © St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church
#024 - This week's episode is the third installment of my three part series on non-toxic ways to Clean Your Home. In the first week, episode #22, I covered cleaning the main parts of your home. In Episode #23 last week, I gave you my best tips for cleaning the kitchen. And this week, I'll be giving you my 17 best tips for cleaning your bathroom – one of those rooms of the house that can always use a good cleaning! When I look back to before I became aware of just how poisonous so many home cleaners are, I cringe thinking about some of the chemicals that I have used in my bathroom – and I definitely hadn't worn a mask while using them. I thank and celebrate my body for taking care of me after I put it through that and I'm relieved that I have a non-toxic options now.Since I started my health journey, I have kept digging deeper to find areas where I can better give my body what it needs and to remove more poisons and toxins around me. I recognize that it's a process, something that needs to be done layer by layer. It's much too overwhelming to try to do absolutely everything day one, plus it takes time to learn. So my hope is that this series will be here to help you when you're ready to dig a little bit deeper on this aspect of your own health journey. And for the record, I am not a cleaning maven, obsessed with every good trick and tip for cleaning my house, nor is my house always immaculate. I'm just a regular person who recognizes that I want my space to be reasonably clean. I don't like or want to spend all of my time cleaning, so a lot of my tips involve things where you put something on a surface, leave it to do its magic, and then come back and rinse it later. Spending a whole day cleaning the bathroom? Never going to happen. But laying the ground work for a few things that can soak or sit and then come back to rinse them off before I'm about to shower? That's right up my alley.And please stick around until the end when I share what I learned from shining a Black Light flashlight around my bathroom. THANK YOU FOR LISTENING! If you have been enjoying Quest for Healing, please hit subscribe so that you don't miss an episode! SHOW NOTESPodcast Episodes Mentioned - Quest for Healing, Episode #22: How Clean is Your House? Quest for Healing, Episode #23: How Clean is Your Kitchen?Medical Medium Podcast, Episode #13: Mold: The Crazy Maker (link to Apple Podcasts)($$) Branch Basics - use the code CAREFULLYHEALING for a 15% discount on any Starter Kit. This is an affiliate link, which means that I will earn a small commission if you buy through using this code at no extra cost to you. The Quest for Healing Podcast is hosted by Kerstin Ramstrom. For more information about Kerstin and her health coaching practice, Carefully Healing, please find her atCarefullyHealing.comFacebook at Carefully HealingInstagram If you want save up to 25% off supplements that you're taking every day, check out Wellevate in the Resources section of my website at CarefullyHealing.com/Resources and go to the Wellevate section. Shipping is FREE for orders over $49, US only. ($)
TV Star and cleaning expert Aggie Mackenzie shares research from Fog.Fan to combat Covid-19. She also shares her Top 3 Cleaning Tips for Christmas with me and tells me about her favourite natural products. What does she use pumice stone for? Desperate to see sorely missed loved ones, new research has revealed that 1:4 adults in the UK feel nervous about social gatherings during the festive period. So add a touch of reassurance, a large splash of hand-washing, mask-wearing, and social distancing to reduce extra pressure and anxiety during the festive period. It has never been more important to ask ‘How Clean is your Home' this Christmas?' 23 December 2020
Host Daniel Raimi talks with RFF postdoctoral fellow Brian Prest about a little-known topic: refined coal. Brian and coauthor Alan Krupnick have published a new RFF working paper that takes a close look at a $1-billion-a-year federal subsidy for refined coal. So, what is refined coal? What's the purpose of the subsidy? And does the subsidy deliver? References and recommendations: "How Clean is Refined Coal?" by Brian C. Prest and Alan Krupnick; https://www.rff.org/publications/reports/how-clean-is-refined-coal/ "The Last Lobster: Boom or Bust for Maine's Greatest Fishery" by Christopher White; https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250080851
Today on Cause Talk Radio, Megan and Joe talk to Debbie Sardone, President and Founder of Cleaning for a Reason, a nonprofit that gives the gift of free house cleaning to women undergoing treatment of any type of cancer. Cleaning for a Reason has worked with over 1,200 maid services to donate free housecleaning to women who are undergoing treatment for any kind of cancer. Since 2006, their partner maid services have volunteered their time to clean for over 20,000 women – valued at over $5,500,000. On the show, Megan, Debbie and Joe discuss: How “Clean homes make people feel good.” Amen! Cleaning for a Reason is free service to women battling cancer. How Cleaning for a Reason partners with maid services all over the country to help the community. How maid services benefit from Cleaning for a Reason in communications training and support soliciting local and national media coverage. How Debbie, the owner of a cleaning business of her own, developed the idea of Cleaning for a Reason by talking to people in the cleaning industry. The national exposure Cleaning for a Reason has received from The Ellen Show, People Magazine, Reader’s Digest, Buzzfeed and many others! How Debbie’s whole world is cleaning and founding Cleaning for a Reason was a natural extension of her brand that helped her business, other cleaning companies and the community. What maid services pay to be involved in Cleaning for a Reason, how much goes back to the charity and the firewall between Debbie’s business and her nonprofit. How starting a nonprofit has contributed to Debbie’s success and her bottom-line. Show Notes Cleaning for a Reason Cleaning for a Reason on Facebook Texas Woman Helps Women Battling Cancer Get Their Homes Cleaned – for Free! Firehouse Subs
Julie and Lian on a Tuesday: Election Day November is Alzheimer's Month: a movie and a book to recommend. Book: Click here for more information about the book Slow Dancing with Stranger News from the Satellite Sisters ArchivesL When the Tappet Brothers met the Satellite Sisters. A Good-bye to Tom from Car Talk Lisa Kudrow, our close personal acquaintance, on The Comeback Congratulations to the women of BlogHer! Hear about our connection Cleaning Quiz and How Clean is your Hotel Room? TV talk: Viking Crusies set sail with Masterpiece once again; The NYT writes about Red Wine on TV; and Death Comes to Pemberly... but not soon enough. And, Pottery Barn jumps the shark
Aggie MacKenzie, former MI6 operative turned presenter of ‘How Clean is Your House' inherits Donald Where's Your Troosers? by Andy Stewart and passes on Nina Simone's Here Comes The Sun.
How Clean and Healthy is your Conscience? - Part 1
How Clean and Healthy is your Conscience? - Part 2
How Clean and Healthy is your Conscience? - Part 3
How Clean and Healthy is your Conscience? - Part 4