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Noah AsherTake a walk with me down Fascination Street as I get to know Noah Asher. Noah is a young man who grew up pretty involved in the church. Some things happened, and he ended up spending a little time in prison. While in prison, Noah found his life's purpose. He also wrote a book. In this episode, we discuss how he became involved with the church; even though most of his family was not. Then we dive into some of the events that led him down a path that would eventually lead to his incarceration. We jump around a bit and discuss everything from Zaxby's chicken to Chik-Fil-A, to Eeyore's birthday party, Lupis, and prison yoga. Noah also discusses his consultant company and shares some stories from being out in the field. Finally, we get into Noah's book. It's called 'Chaos: Overcoming the Overwhelming'. Noah tells me why he wrote it, who he wrote it for, and gives some book signing tips to new and upcoming authors. Anyone who has struggled with: religion, addiction, hope, illness, self-doubt, or adversity; should check out this book. It's a sort of road map to seeing things more clearly, and a guide to pulling yourself out of that mindset. Follow Noah on Instagram at TheNoahAsher, and drop him a line at thenoahasher.com
Oral Arguments for the Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
Lupis v. City of Texas City
Treating Respiratory Diseases & Inflammation w/ Stan Miele of Aqualung Therapeutics - BRT S04 EP14 (176) 4-2-2023 Things We Learned This Week Aqualung Therapeutics is treating inflammation in the lungs, getting people off ventilators (cut down 50%) & saving lives ARDS - Acute Respiratory Disease Syndrome - serious lung condition that causes low blood oxygen & fluid in the lungs Aqualung's novel therapeutics are also reversing fibrosis / scar tissue in lungs - could be used in future to treat other diseases Guest: Stan Miele President & CBO Aqualung Therapeutics Corp LKIN: HERE www.aqualungtherapeutics.com Stan Miele Bio: A recognized global executive with success in sales, marketing and P&L leadership in the pharmaceutical/medical device and biotech industries. Mr. Miele was formally the Chief Commercial Officer at bioLytical Laboratories and Sucampo Pharmaceuticals Inc. He was also President of Sucampo Pharma Americas for 6 years. He was instrumental on some key licensing agreements for Sucampo, inclusive of the agreement with Abbott Japan, and also Takeda Pharmaceuticals (now Shire). He is actively part of the team ensuring proper execution of clinical development, manufacturing, licensing, capital funding, alliances, and ensuring Aqualung meets all critical milestones. He will be helping the company move toward accelerating the pipeline/platform technology and moving eNamptor™ toward commercialization. Joe G.N. “Skip” Garcia, MD FOUNDER & CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Joe G. N. "Skip" Garcia, MD, is an internationally-noted pulmonary physician-scientist, an endowed professor of medicine at the University of Arizona College of Medicine – Tucson, and an elected member of the National Academy of Medicine. A noted academic health system administrator, scholar and educator, Dr. Garcia is a leading authority on the genetic basis of lung disease and the prevention and treatment of inflammatory lung injury. Dr. Garcia is internationally recognized for development of novel biomarkers and therapies for critically ill patients with acute inflammatory lung disease and for addressing health disparities in vulnerable populations. He has over 575 peer-reviewed publications, an expansive portfolio of NIH-sponsored research, and continues to direct large federally-funded programs. Aqualung Therapeutics Aqualung Therapeutics (ALT) is developing multi-pronged strategies to address the development of severe lung inflammation which is essential to the severity and outcomes of acute and chronic lung disorders such as acute lung injury, ventilator-induced lung injury (VILI), idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, and pulmonary hypertension. Effective FDA-approved drugs are either currently unavailable or extraordinarily modest in their ability to modify disease progression. No drug is currently available that is preventive or curative. Aqualung's strategies, which include deployment of a human monoclonal antibody which targets a novel inflammatory mediator (nicotinamide phosphoribosyltransferase or NAMPT) will address the unmet need for novel, effective therapies for VILI, IPF, and pulmonary hypertension. Notes: Seg 1 Cornerstone of health tech comes from biotech & spin offs from incubator universities – an idea with proof of concept becomes a company NIH investment – National Institute of Health has different divisions & a governing body, they review grant submissions from University level inception of biotech The idea is then sold to large pharmaceutical co. – the process is very expensive, takes decades of R & D to bring a product to market Grants – R41 or R42 as examples of investment from NIH NIH works w/ startups, biotech & universities – helps w/ early funding of $ thousands to millions Supports basic science & research, to fund an initial scientific thesis, this is pre-clinical and non-dilutive capital from NIH or Government This is important, because venture capital can be brought to raise more funding, and not be concerned with NIH having an equity position Aqualung is working on Unchecked or runaway inflammation in the lungs and body Deals with Fibrosis, scar tissue in lungs for example ARDS - Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome - serious lung condition that causes low blood oxygen & fluid in the lungs Aqualung Founder is Dr. Joseph Garcia, a physician / scientist who worked in ICU Their treatment can help with Covid 19 or Pneumonia Mechanical Ventilation (ventilator) – keeps patient alive, but exacerbates inflammation, 30-40% of death w/ ARDS the long one stays on a ventilator Aqualung – novel therapies to treat ARDS, with a 1X infusion & reduce inflammation, takes 20 mins. to administer, and can lessen days on a ventilator, saving lives less days Seg. 2 Covid 19 & ARDS – pneumonia & sepsis hypoxia – less oxygen & oxygenated blood flow, not enough, leads to fluid in lungs (edema), have nasal issues, use C pap machine, but if too severe then need ventilator to help w/ breathing Pulmonary edema is often caused by congestive heart failure. When the heart is not able to pump efficiently, blood can back up into the veins that take blood through the lungs. As the pressure in these blood vessels increases, fluid is pushed into the air spaces (alveoli) in the lungs. Covid – when people have severe Covid, lungs have too much fluid, do not work Ventilator increases significant inflammation – too much, storm of bad events, organs fail. Bottome line: Longer on ventilator, the worse things go Average ICU stay is 11-15 days for ARDS Aqualung tamps down inflammation, ‘turn dial down' w/drug, within 6hrs. of diagnosis, Aqualung should be given to a patient Reduce inflammation 50% & then reduce time 50% on vent. Life & Money saving as 1 day on ventilator = $30k Other areas Aqualung can help – fibrosis / Scar tissue in lungs, Covid long syndrome & could be a Radial therapy for cancer treatment Aqualung – tamp down inflammation to Reverse fibrosis, reverse course of diseases Also can assist with - Lupis, inflamed organs, Bowel diseases Aqualung has been funded by Funded by NIH Seg. 3 Aqualung produces Novel therapeutics, that can save lives, and help with breathing disorders or illnesses related to Covid or asthma, or Fibrosis in the lungs, kidney, or cardiac issues Aqualung Therapeutics is agnostic, process can treat all fibrosis as well as help prevent Organ failure. If inflammation or breathing issues persist can lead to failure of liver, kidney, then heart & brain Aqualung eliminated fibrosis in kidneys with testing on animals Improve functions of other organs in pre-clinical models in small & large animals Currently doing doses on human volunteers, and will soon be in 8 hospitals in U.S. & 2 in Australia Aqualung needs more funding for research, and is doing a Capital raise Future versions of their treatment could be in different formats, using IV version now in ICU & ER Other companies working on this type of research and care are Humira, treatment is a simple injection monthly Aqualung could be additional therapy for Pulmonary issues, or even a Radial therapy for cancer Multiple forms of delivery are possible like an in home injection Seg. 4 Received $25 million of non dilutive from NIH Had to validate their thesis, and was published in 10 publications Aqualung considered an IND (investigative new drug) Studies – Phase 1 – healthy Phase 2 – ARDS patients Phase 3 - 2 – 300 patients – large trial Need funding of $ hundreds millions – for testing IPO or series A-B & C fund raise Current trials will be a 5 year process thru 2026 Overall a 8-10 year process w/ 2-3 year studies, stats (genomics & priobiomics) MRNA work done years before to create the vaccine for COVID so luckily it was ready to go in 2020 Alignment on big pharma with this research and application, working in Oncology, immunology, cancer Fibrosis & immunology – Co's that can come in are Regeneron, Eli Lilly or Merch Big Pharma – equity investment has a venture arm within a corporation, to invest in thesis and then pre-human clinical round Called the ‘Creeping Acquisition Strategy' of a smaller company, with incremental investments until own the whole business ARDS – 500k patients in US dealing with ARDS & $2 mil globally, of which 30-40% will die. ARDS is a multi billion $ year market. ARDS grows 3-5% per year, with funding being a problem, plus other issues like limited therapies Companies working on the disease, must collaborate with the FDA Aqualung – raising funds, $10 mil series A, has $4 mil committed end of phase 1 with FDA meeting. Phase 2 study – get rolling & crucial long term, need clinical tests w/ humans Phase 1 study w/ animals very successful ** Thanks to Joan Kerber-Walker of AZ Bio for the intro to Stan. AZ Bio & Life Sciences Innovation w/ Joan Koerber-Walker - BRT S04 EP10 (172) 3-5-2023 FULL Show w/ Joan of AZ Bio: Click HERE AZ Tech Council Shows: HERE *Includes Best of AZ Tech Council show from 2/12/2023 Tech Topic: HERE Best of Tech: HERE ‘Best Of' Topic: https://brt-show.libsyn.com/category/Best+of+BRT Thanks for Listening. Please Subscribe to the BRT Podcast. Business Roundtable with Matt Battaglia The show where Entrepreneurs, High Level Executives, Business Owners, and Investors come to share insight and ideas about the future of business. BRT 2.0 looks at the new trends in business, and how classic industries are evolving. Common Topics Discussed: Business, Entrepreneurship, Investing, Stocks, Cannabis, Tech, Blockchain / Crypto, Real Estate, Legal, Sales, Charity, and more… BRT Podcast Home Page: https://brt-show.libsyn.com/ ‘Best Of' BRT Podcast: Click Here BRT Podcast on Google: Click Here BRT Podcast on Spotify: Click Here More Info: https://www.economicknight.com/podcast-brt-home/ KFNX Info: https://1100kfnx.com/weekend-featured-shows/ Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this program are those of the Hosts, Guests and Speakers, and do not necessarily reflect the views or positions of any entities they represent (or affiliates, members, managers, employees or partners), or any Station, Podcast Platform, Website or Social Media that this show may air on. All information provided is for educational and entertainment purposes. Nothing said on this program should be considered advice or recommendations in: business, legal, real estate, crypto, tax accounting, investment, etc. Always seek the advice of a professional in all business ventures, including but not limited to: investments, tax, loans, legal, accounting, real estate, crypto, contracts, sales, marketing, other business arrangements, etc.
Hello! This is Episode 263, and in it, I'm continuing my conversation with Melanie Lupis from Sustainability Certified about how to design and build an energy efficient, zero carbon home. [For all resources mentioned in this podcast and a free, downloadable PDF transcript, head to www.undercoverarchitect.com/263] This is Part 2 of my conversation. If you haven't listened to Part 1 yet, you can find it in Episode 262. Just head to www.undercoverarchitect.com/262 to listen now or download the free PDF transcript. As we continue the conversation in this episode, Melanie shares with me her thoughts on NatHERS and Passive House. Being certified to assess with both modelling tools, she has great perspective to share on them both. We also talk about the True Zero Carbon Challenge that Design Matters National ran in 2022, and Melanie entered with building designer, Lachy McEwan, from Harmonic Design. The aim of the True Zero Carbon Challenge was to design a home that not only produces more power than it uses over the year; through energy-efficient design, careful appliance selection, and photovoltaic integration. Entries also had to consider and calculate embodied carbon in material selection, and to put on enough extra photovoltaic panels to pay back the home's entire carbon debt by 2050* (based on today's carbon intensity). Thermal Performance Assessors or Energy Efficiency Assessors, as they're also known, paired up with Building Designers and Architects to create a home design and assess its energy efficiency and carbon footprint. At the time of recording this episode, Melanie and Lachy had submitted their entry, and were waiting to hear the results. Well, I'm super excited to share that they were declared the NSW State Winners - isn't that fantastic! You'll hear Melanie talk more in detail about how she and Lachy worked together to design and assess the home in preparation for entering, and what insights it gave her for all home designs. I think you'll find it really interesting. If you'd like to grab a full transcript of this episode, plus information on the resources we discuss, you can do that by heading to www.undercoverarchitect.com/263 Now, let's dive in! SHOW NOTES: If you're struggling with understanding the overall steps for your project, what you should be focussing on and when, or how to best invest your efforts, energy and money to get a great outcome in your future home, I've created something super helpful for you. Access my free online workshop “Your Project Plan” now >>> https://undercoverarchitect.com/projectplan This free workshop will really help you understand the best steps to take wherever you're at in your project, and how you can avoid some serious and expensive mistakes. Plus, I'll share with you what to focus on and when, so you know you're getting everything in order for a successful project and beautiful home. And you'll get access to some great bonuses as well. LISTEN TO THE PODCAST NOW. RESOURCES MENTIONED IN THIS PODCAST: For links and resources mentioned in this podcast, head to >>> www.undercoverarchitect.com/263 Access my free “Your Project Plan” online workshop and awesome bonuses now >>> https://undercoverarchitect.com/projectplan Access the support and guidance you need to be confident and empowered when renovating and building your family home inside my flagship online program >>> https://undercoverarchitect.com/courses/the-home-method/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Hello! This is Episode 262, and in it, I'm speaking with Melanie Lupis, from Sustainability Certified about the Residential Efficiency Scorecard for existing homes. [For all resources mentioned in this podcast and a free, downloadable PDF transcript, head to www.undercoverarchitect.com/262] Melanie is a NatHERS Accredited Assessor, Passive House Certified Consultant and Residential Scorecard Accredited Assessor. She owns her own business, Sustainability Certified, and is passionate about helping homeowners and designers achieve more sustainable, energy efficient and thermally comfortable outcomes in their designs and finished homes. In this episode, Melanie talks with us about the Residential Efficiency Scorecard Assessment process - or Scorecard, and her work as an Residential Scorecard accredited assessor. What is Scorecard? Scorecard is a national energy efficiency rating program for existing homes, the first of its kind in Australia. Scorecard rates your home's energy efficiency and comfort. Getting a Scorecard rating from a government-accredited assessor will help you make the best choices by providing targeted information to ensure that any money you spend on upgrades will lead to a cheaper to run, more comfortable home. The rating is like an Energy Star rating like you would see on a dishwasher or washing machine, and the more stars, the cheaper the home is to run. The Scorecard assessment reviews the building shell, including glazing, insulation, building materials, air leakage and then also examines your appliances, heating and cooling systems, hot water heating, any pool equipment and solar panels. If you're wanting to improve your existing home either before you renovate, or as part of your renovation, and you're keen to access more information about what to focus on specifically, this episode will be super helpful for you. And if you'd like to grab a full transcript of this episode, plus information on the resources we discuss, you can do that by heading to www.undercoverarchitect.com/262 Now, let's dive in! SHOW NOTES: If you're struggling with understanding the overall steps for your project, what you should be focussing on and when, or how to best invest your efforts, energy and money to get a great outcome in your future home, I've created something super helpful for you. Access my free online workshop “Your Project Plan” now >>> https://undercoverarchitect.com/projectplan This free workshop will really help you understand the best steps to take wherever you're at in your project, and how you can avoid some serious and expensive mistakes. Plus, I'll share with you what to focus on and when, so you know you're getting everything in order for a successful project and beautiful home. And you'll get access to some great bonuses as well. LISTEN TO THE PODCAST NOW. RESOURCES MENTIONED IN THIS PODCAST: For links and resources mentioned in this podcast, head to >>> www.undercoverarchitect.com/262 Access my free “Your Project Plan” online workshop and awesome bonuses now >>> https://undercoverarchitect.com/projectplan Access the support and guidance you need to be confident and empowered when renovating and building your family home inside my flagship online program >>> https://undercoverarchitect.com/courses/the-home-method/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Dr. Sarah Lupis completed her Ph.D. in 2016 with the Laboratory for Biological Health Psychology at Brandeis University. Her research focuses on the intersectionality of emotion and stress. This research examines how people react emotionally to psychosocial stress, and how this correlates to sympathetic nervous system and neuroendocrine stress responses. Her research interests also include predictors and moderators of these underlying mechanisms, including the effects of age, culture, gender, and body image. Website (BRAND NEW): http://www.psychobabblellc.com/ email: psychobabblellc@gmail.com Instagram: @PsychoBabbleLLC *Note: As always, this psych related podcast is for educational purposes only, so please rely upon and seek relevant professional help in your community if needed. Resources: 988lifeline.org https://khn.org/news/article/social-media-posts-criticize-988-suicide-hotline-calling-police/ How to support the podcast: - Please share, follow/subscribe, and rate/review in your favorite podcast app. - Buy the Doc a cup of coffee! Join our Discord Community for great Psych conversations! Email: PsychExplained@duck.com Twitter: @PSYCH_EXPLAINED Video Lectures --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/psychexplained/support
Snoop Dogg es un rapero de fama mundial, cuyo talento no se reduce a la música, sino que ha rebasado las barreras hasta convertirse en empresario. Y, en esta ocasión, lanza su cereal Snoop Loopz, para darle una toque más divertido a tu desayuno.
This episode of From The Patient's Eyes is brought to you by Orange Grove Bio and the Autoimmune Registry to feature Erin Schwindenhammer, a patient diagnosed with various autoimmune diseases, including Lupis, Antiphospholipid syndrome (APS), Addison's disease, and Pernicious Anemia. In this episode, Erin will be sharing her story and experiences as a patient and providing insight into the medical industry from her perspective as an individual with her given diagnoses.
Jim & Joni Lupis are pastors at Grace & Truth Church in Coram, New York. Jim is also on the board of directors of Kindest Hearts Foundation, a not-for-profit ministry to Haiti. They have four beautiful children and seven equally beautiful grandchildren. Jim's greatest enjoyment is preaching and teaching about the love of Jesus and the faithfulness of God. He desires to see all Christians come into the fullness of everything that the Lord has for them and to see many come into His saving grace. Pastor Joni is the President and Director of March for life N.Y. She is a Pro-Life Activist and Co-Pastor of Grace & Truth Church. She believes in the sanctity of all life, that all life comes from God, and that every unborn baby should have the opportunity to receive this precious gift of life. She founded M.F.L.N.Y. to fight against abortion and to help the many women and men who have suffered from the tragic after effects brought on by abortion. March for Life NY Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/march4lifeNY March for Life NY YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC2XODkmo5dSFCnJ6rMpsXCA BlogTalkRadio: https://www.blogtalkradio.com/march4lifeny-radio?fbclid=IwAR2cITj0o-B6Imws4Y8yqb1La1rGNqbar8T4HRAhWI3aItdOTDrFBJ662lE Website: https://marchforlifeny.org/ Follow Carl: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/carlbuccellatoofficial Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CarlBuccellatoAuthor LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/carl-buccellato-60234139 Website: https://toeverypageaturning.com Produced by Social Chameleon: https://socialchameleon.us/
Adam Lupis, film actor and host of The Up and Adam show, discusses his experiences pursuing a career in acting, venturing to produce his own podcast content, and the lessons he learned that define his success as a creator today. Youtube Channel: Daniel Calderone Instagram: @d.calderone All Rights Reserved - NinetyFour Productions Inc.
Shopify Masters | The ecommerce business and marketing podcast for ambitious entrepreneurs
You'll learn from an entrepreneur how she built a black-owned, luxury brand. Beneath Your Mask is a Black-owned brand that sells clean, sustainable, eco-luxe skincare formulated to repair the damage to skin and hair caused by illness, medications, and environmental stressors. For more on Beneath Your Mask and show notes: https://www.shopify.com/blog/beneath-your-mask-bootstrapping?utm_campaign=shopifymasters&utm_medium=description&utm_source=podcast Tune in to learn How this entrepreneur used her own traumatic experiences to build a business that helps others going through the same experience How do you make sure that contractors and employees are creating content that matches the voice and vision of your brand The specific ecommerce challenges when running a luxury Black-owned brand
Mike interviews Hardcore Italian affiliate Adam Lupis. Adam Lupis hosts the Up and Adam Show and Whaddya Hear Whaddya Say Podcast. He also runs his own company, Luna Grooming Co., and talks about his products and being Italian. Enjoy!
At the core of every mind numbing horror, there is a joke waiting for its time to shine. I dare you not to laugh out loud when listening to Kris Dikeman's perfectly paired story (read it with wine for the spit take), and Sam Schreiber takes you on a noir whodunnit with a werewolf too curious for his own good. "A Singular Event, In Several Courses" by Kris Dikeman, Read by Mary Boughey Kris Dikeman lives and works in New York City. Her stories have appeared in Lady Churchill’s Rosebud Wristlet, Beneath Ceaseless Skies, Strange Horizons, Analog and Mad Hatters and March Hares, among other places. She is currently at work on a novel about carnivorous plants. You can read more of her work at her website: www.krisdikeman.com. A career performer and storyteller, Mary Rodgershas acted in plays, musicals, television and film and was the lead singer/keyboardist for an all-women's rock band for a number of years. She is also a published novelist and screenwriter, with a focus on near-future science fiction, contemporary romance and fantasy. "Homo Homini Lupis" by Sam Schreiber, Read by Paul Karle Sam Schreiber is a writer living in Brooklyn, where he teaches science fiction and fantasy at New York University’s Tandon School of Engineering. He is an active member of the Brooklyn Speculative Fiction Writers as well as an associate member of Science Fiction Writers of America. Paul Karle is an actor living and working in New York City.
Selamat hari Senin! Buat yang sudah kangen sama PODOAE, langsung aja mulai podcast Serba Serbi Ramadhan ini untuk ngabuburit! Hari ini kita belajar membuat Lupis. Lupis adalah salah satu jajanan pasar melegenda! baik anak gang maupun anak komplek pasti setidaknya pernah coba karena abang lupis yang suara kentungan khasnya yang mudah dikenali. Mungkin karena saat keliling, selain sambil memukul kentungan, si abang juga sambil memukul mundur tentara Belanda ya (?) music by: Dunia Fana (feat. Derry Sulaiman) - Ecko Show
Lo scorso 20 marzo Stroncature ha ospitato la presentazione dell'ultimo libro di Marco Lupis (Il Mulino, 2021). Con l'autore dialoga Nunziante Mastrolia.
Having been in the roofing business since 2008, Victor has seen a lot of scam artists – and he wanted to do something different in the best interests of homeowners. Victor is the owner of Dynasty Building Solutions, a company that has grown to over 20 million dollars in revenue. He believes that Commercial and residential roofs in Central Florida have unique needs because of the tropical climate. As the experts in Tampa, Orlando, and Sarasota, Victor believes they have an advantage over other contractors. Dynasty Building Solutions has a motto, "Creating a Better Future, One Nail at a Time:. On this episode, we talk about how belief in your team, and having them believe in you back, will create success in your roofing business. Links: https://dynastybuildingsolutions.com/ For Tips, Strategies, and Free Downloads visit our website and join the Roofing Success Facebook Group: https://roofermarketers.com https://www.facebook.com/groups/1940365569408073/ The Roofing Success Podcast Text Jim @ (612) 512-1812 – Say Hi! I would love to hear your feedback, pros & cons! Please leave us a review!
Episode 271: An Invisible Enemy In 2001, Linda Manuel experienced physical and psychological trauma and was diagnosed with multiple life-threatening diseases including Lupis, Crones, Rheumatoid Arthritis, and depression along with other maladies that made life scary and almost impossible to live. In 2003, Linda discovered that the Deep State experimented with bio-weapons on American Citizens. In 2005, our guest found a treatment that reversed the diseases from which she suffered for four years. This led to the writing and publication of “Alternative Revelations: Redefining Cancer and Disease”.
Episode 271: An Invisible Enemy In 2001, Linda Manuel experienced physical and psychological trauma and was diagnosed with multiple life-threatening diseases including Lupis, Crones, Rheumatoid Arthritis, and depression along with other maladies that made life scary and almost impossible to live. In 2003, Linda discovered that the Deep State experimented with bio-weapons on American Citizens. In 2005, our guest found a treatment that reversed the diseases from which she suffered for four years. This led to the writing and publication of “Alternative Revelations: Redefining Cancer and Disease”.
Rover Dangerfield (1991)What? an animated movie about a singing dog on a podcast about anime!?That's right! Join brothers Robert and Richard as they re-live the chaotic animated world of the 90's. Our first movie is Rover Dangerfield, an animated vehicle for famed comedian Rodney Dangerfield. It's a Vegas fueled musical trip into the farmland as Rover gets lost away from home. Through his journey he finds loss, loves, and maybe sings a little song about pee. Can he find his way home, or does he want to stay a farm dog? Can the brothers stay sane working the land? Find out on Rover Dangerfield!"Smooth Lovin" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"Shiny Tech II" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"Aces High" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Follow us on Twitter!https://twitter.com/Noprobsrobshttps://twitter.com/Badbaronet
This week on the Ask Julie Ryan Show, psychic and medical intuitive Julie chats with Dr. Neil Lamb, a geneticist and molecular biologist about the Covid-19 pandemic. Dr. Lamb makes complex science understandable to regular folks. He has made short videos to help us separate Covid-19 fact from fiction. In addition, Julie scans and does a healing on a puppy with Cerebellar Hypoplasia and balance issues. Then Julie talks with a woman about her Lupus treatment and how to keep her immune system healthy. A caller asks Julie to scan her husband with hypertension and a nun calls in to report her thyroid cancer markers are down after a healing with Julie. A couple of callers ask Julie to scan loved ones or friends for tooth issues, indigestion, and other maladies and a woman asks Julie to heal the tear in her energy field membrane. As usual, Julie provides lots of suggestions and insights based on the psychic information she accesses and receives. The show is fascinating and fun. Please join us and call in with your question next week. Thursdays at 8pm ET, 7pm CT, 5pm PT. (712) 770-4160 Access Code: 533677# https://loaradionetwork.com/julie-ryan
Let’s welcome Carrie Drinkwine to Sauna Talk. We start our sauna rounds with wet hair. The oils of your own hair are healthy. Carrie’s medical history Dietetics and Nutrition Science major. Masters in Holistic Nutrition. Aligned with beliefs. Practicing as a nutritionists. Became ill with chronic problems. Lupis. Antibodies over 481. Hashimoto: an autoimmune disease where the body is attacking its own tissue. 6 years ago. Could not move from laying down to sitting up. Chronic pain. Everything was amplified. Chronic anxiety and depression. Could not sleep. She took Western medicine to “get through the day.” She kept getting more and more drugs diagnosed on her plate. Going Eastern Naturalpath doctor. A Western approach to Eastern thinking. The same approach wasn’t resonating with her. You couldn’t touch her skin because she was in such pain from Lupis. A God wink A regenerative detox beyond desperate and skeptical. Within 14 weeks she got a reversed diagnosis. Dr. Robert Morris. Certified regenerative detoxification expert. Dr. Pastick. Wise Wellness Working full time diligent detoxification work. A lot of hours being put in but she goes to bed each night knowing that she is helping people. Sauna as proper detox Sauna came into her life Dr. Morris. Specifically steam and wood fired but not infrared. Healing of lymphatic system. Get your body to an internal temperature the core body as well as your skin. Your skin is considered to be your third skin. Your body is always on your side. Your skin will help your kidneys if your kidneys are backed up. Kidneys need support. A kidney and lymphatic problem. Steroids dumb down the histamine being produced in your body. The root cause of. A top recommended protocol is sauna and cold bath. Skin cleaning, lymph cleaning, and helping your kidneys through detox. When your kidneys stop filtering, your body gets backed up. The pond becomes more like a lake. The five systems of flow. Expanding our cells. Bringing fluids and alkaline in. Shrinking of cells to purge waste. Minerals Hydration is a hot topic. How much mineral and water. Absorption is critical. Not so much volume. Intracellular water vs extracellular water. Acidic vs. alkaline. Getting minerals into the body. Cellular male-absorption. ion minerals. The body has 90 trace minerals. If you are eating a well balanced diet, you are usually getting your proper minerals. When you go into sauna, or excessive exercise, it’s important to be able to replace minerals. Your cells tested for absorption. 99% absorption rate to invite minerals into the cells. Water with proper minerals and absorption. Ion5 and Ionic Elements. A higher mineral diet Hunger is not often from the stomach. What your cells think is what your self thinks. “We need nutrition!” Organic fruits and vegetables Herbacides and pesticides. Decades of soil degradation. Came from a profit incentive. We are losing our nutrition and health. Weeds are important. We are not carrying the minerals and nutrition in our foods. Mineral replenishment is so critical. A day in the life of Carrie: diet and sauna Sauna day: 10 mineral drops in the AM. 10 mineral drops before sauna. 10 mineral drops after sauna. 8-10 oz. of water with your mineral drops if fine. Coconut water after sauna. wood fired sauna vs. health club sauna Organs getting hot vs. just your skin. Not feeling so zapped with a well ventilated sauna. Expanding lung capacity. Fresh cool down opportunities. It doesn’t smell like a pool or chemical. Earth elements Sauna is a priority for me You can get an equivalent of an hour or two of exercise with the cardiovascular health of sauna Living on the alkaline side of the fence. Alkalinity is something that heals the body. 80/20 rule. 80 percent of what i put into my body is alkaline. You want to have balance in your life. Maintaining an alkaline balance in our life. Alkalinity through deep breathing The breathe is very powerful for maintaining alkalinity. You want to deep breathe. Deep diaphragm breath. Soul breathing. “All breath is good.” Soul breathing allows for oxygen to get into the cells. No chest movement. 5 minutes of this is better than a cup of coffee. “100 breathes to joy.” Continuous flow to breathe. wisewellness.net. “meet your body where you are at.” If sauna makes you uncomfortable chances are your body is acidic. Non structured environment. We are all connected. This is as much as i can handle. Honoring that. Your body is designed to heal when you give it the right environment. The sauna is an absolutely vital part of this.
The guys go in on the series of supposed murders going on in Dallas and the D.R. ...they talk to Finesse about her battle with Lupis, and it's the National Holiday ...Black Men Don't Cheat
Can animals be allergic to humans? Why do people always go on holidays near water? Why do I sleep talk?
Can animals be allergic to humans? Why do people always go on holidays near water? Why do I sleep talk?
Our carrier pigeon has finally located Lupis Convoy...at Gencon 2018! Aaron being the carrier pigeon. Let's catch up on some things, pre-recorded live on the show floor.
Take a run with HPRS as we dive into more stories from our participants in the 2018 Stories Ultra. In this episode we dive deeper with the last of our featured runners Michelle Regn, Scott Phaler, and Kate Welle. Listen in as we discuss some of the psychology behind what moves us as ultra runners, and the lessons we learn along the way. Other topics of discussion include; the term "practicing medicine", the value in overcoming adversity, the pyschology of ethical deciet, fueling for ultra, and the power of having a plan.
Welcome to episode 57 of the Mountain Nature and Culture Podcast, I'm your host, Ward Cameron and I'm recording this on April 1, 2018. This week I look at three amazing fossils that are teaching palaeontologists about the evolution of some of the world's oldest creatures. I also look at the return of red fox to the Rocky Mountains. It's an action-packed episode so with that said, let's get to it. Some wisdom from John Muir I wanted to start today with a fabulous quote by John Muir. As a hiking guide and naturalist, I see too many people striding through the wilderness, eager to reach a destination, or bag a peak, yet they miss the beauty that's all around them. For me, the best way to enjoy nature is to simply bathe in it. Spend time in the wilderness and let the energy and the ambience wash over you. If you really want to experience the mountain west, then stop, sit down and listen. Wander slowly along trails while filling all of your senses with endless stimulation. Feel the bark of a tree; listen for the sounds that make up the unique chorus of each location; get down on your knees and look at the tiniest things you can find; and become a part of something far bigger than you. John Muir was one of the greatest naturalists, nature writers, and activists that the U.S. has ever produced, along with the likes of Edward Abbey, Rachel Carson, Ralph Waldo Emmerson, Henry David Thoreau, and Aldo Leopold. He explored the American west during the mid to latter parts of the 19th century and was instrumental in helping to protect landscapes like Yosemite, Sequoia National Park, and the Sierra Nevada Mountains. Muir first arrived in California in 1868 and soon after made a pilgrimage into the Yosemite Valley. Muir wrote that: "He was overwhelmed by the landscape, scrambling down steep cliff faces to get a closer look at the waterfalls, whooping and howling at the vistas, jumping tirelessly from flower to flower". He was one of the first people to recognize the action of glaciers on the landscape and helped debunk the existing beliefs that the vistas were the result of earthquakes as opposed to glaciers. Muir was instrumental in the creation of Yosemite National Park, first as a state park in 1890, and then as a national park in 1906. In 1892, he helped found the Sierra Club and served as its first president. By the time he died in 1914, he had published some 300 articles and 12 books. John Muir spent his entire life exploring, bathing in, documenting, and fighting to protect natural, intact ecosystems. The John Muir Trail is one of the U.S.'s most beloved trails, yet had you asked what he thought of hiking, this was his response: "I don't like either the word or the thing. People ought to saunter in the mountains - not hike! Do you know the origin of that word 'saunter?' It's a beautiful word. Away back in the Middle Ages people used to go on pilgrimages to the Holy Land, and when people in the villages through which they passed asked where they were going, they would reply, 'A la sainte terre,' 'To the Holy Land.' And so they became known as sainte-terre-ers or saunterers. Now these mountains are our Holy Land, and we ought to saunter through them reverently, not 'hike' through them." - John Muir I couldn't agree more. Next up more Burgess wonders New Burgess Shale Discoveries The various exposures of the Burgess Shales in Yoho and Kootenay National Parks continue to provide new and exciting discoveries. It seems that each year introduces us to species never before described, or spectacular new fossils of old friends that allow palaeontologists to reclassify them based on new evidence revealed. One such fossil is the newly described Habelia optata. This fossil is not new to palaeontology. In fact, Charles Walcott, the original discoverer of the Burgess Shales, described the first specimen in 1912, only three years after he first stumbled on this bonanza of ancient life. A recent study published in BMC Evolutionary Biology has shed some amazing new light on this unique creature according to lead scientist Cédric Aria. In a recent CBC article, he stated: "It's like a centipede or perhaps an insect that would have not one pair of mandibles, but five." One of the challenges with fossils of the Burgess Shales is that they are found between two layers of shale. This leaves a flattened, reflective film in the rock layers. Think of them as a two-dimensional black and white photograph of an ancient creature. This means that each fossil may represent an image of a different angle or aspect of the animal and thus reveal details not visible in earlier samples. It's this constant evolution of understanding that helps fossils to eventually be classified in a much more exacting way. At a minimum, palaeontologists need to see fossils samples that show the side, top, and front views in order to begin to get a better idea of the structure. As new fossils reveal new details, scientists get a deeper understanding of how the animal fits within classic scientific categories. Charles Walcott knew that Habelia was an arthropod, but he didn't have enough information to pin down where it fit within this huge group of animals. Arthropods are one of So, what would you be willing to endure to make it home for Christmas In these modern times? These days trips home usually involve expensive plane fares or long drives on winter roads made safer by winter tires, interior heaters, and modern clothing. What if you were faced with a 112 km snowshoe trek on an unbroken trail in a blizzard - you know, just like your parents told you what it was like to walk to school in the days of yore! Well, Tom Wilson was more than just a mountain man. He was the personal assistant of "Hells Bells Rogers" during his railroad surveys through the Rockies and later started the first guiding operation in the mountains. In December of 1904, Tom was determined to be home for Christmas dinner with his family. His route began at Kootenay Plains where he had his horse ranch. Today it's located along the David Thompson Highway east of the Saskatchewan River Crossing in Alberta. His route would have followed the Siffleur River Valley up and over Pipestone Pass. He then followed the Pipestone River towards its confluence with the Bow River, and then followed the Bow into Banff. He wasn't the first to follow that route. In August of 1859, James Hector of the Palliser Expedition had passed this way. He wrote in his journal: "After camping to the south of the pass, “…opposite to a waterfall which forms the source of Pipe Stone Creek, and where the stream leaps and rushes down a gutter-like channel, from a height of 450 feet,” they set out to, “ascend to the height of land by a steep rocky path that led at some places close by snow that was still lying from last winter. After five miles we got above the woods, and passed over a fine sloping prairie, with big bald mountains on either side. Plants with esculent roots were very abundant here, and many parts of the sward looked as if it had been ploughed, where the bears had been rooting them up like pigs….Two miles further we passed over a bleak bare “divide,” where there was no vegetation, and elevated about 2000 feet above last night’s encampment.” Others had also passed that way. They included Normal Collie, Hugh Stutfield, and Herman Wooley in 1898 as they headed north on an expedition that saw them discovering the Columbia Icefields. Just a few months after Hector had passed through, the Earl of Southesk, James Carnegie, also traversed the pass. These men were all seasoned travellers, but none of them attempted the route in winter. Tom, like all of his contemporaries, would have been kitted out in heavy woolen clothing with leather boots and snowshoes. Here is how Tom described his experience in a letter to pioneer surveyor and founder of the Alpine Club, A. O. Wheeler: "There is not much to tell of my trip over the Pipestone Pass. It was simply the case of a man starting on a seventy-mile snowshoe trip across the mountains to eat his Christmas dinner with his wife and family, and getting there and eating dinner, the pleasure being well worth the trip. I rode to within eight miles of the summit and started early the next morning on snowshoes to cross the pass (8,300 feet). It was snowing a little and very cold when I started and when I got opposite the Clearwater Gap, a blizzard came up. I could not see more than six or eight feet ahead in that grey snow light that makes everything look level. I was on the trail alongside a mountainside, and was afraid of falling down into one of those steep side collars (which you remember on that side), and of breaking my snowshoes, so I turned and went down the mountain to the creek bottom. The snow was seven or eight feet deep and I fell through a snow bridge, getting both feet wet. It was below zero and a long way up to timber whichever way I turned, but I'd never liked hitting the back trail. It was eight o'clock at night before I crossed the summit of the pass and reached the first timber. I got a fire started, but it was drifting and snowing so hard that the snow covered my socks and moccasins as fast as I could wring (sic) them dry, and, owing to the fierce wind, the flames leap in every direction , making it impossible to get near the fire, so at half past nine I gave it up, put on my wet foot gear and snowshoes and started down the valley. I could not see and felt my way with a stick. By daylight I had made three and a half miles; not much, but it kept the circulation going. In the heavy timber I made a fire and dried out. My feet were beginning to pain as they had been thawed out twice already. I made three miles more that day and finished the last of my grub. The big snowshoes sank fifteen inches in the soft new snow and were a big drag on my frozen toes. I saw it meant three or four more days tramping without grub to make Laggan. I made it in three, but the last day I could only make about fifty yards without resting, and my tracks did not leave a very straight line. The chief trouble I had was to keep from going to sleep; it would have been so much easier to quit than to go on. " Wheeler tried to bring some clarity to Tom's adventure. He wrote: "Think for a moment what it really meant; that every time he put on his snowshoes, his toes got frozen owing to the tight shoe straps; that every time he took them off, his feet had to be thawed out; that every step had to raise a load of ten to fifteen pound of soft snow; that wood had to be collected and cut to keep alive during the night; that the fierce pain would drive away sleep; that he had no food, and always before him those interminable, slow, dragging miles of snowy wilderness. It must have required iron determination to make it to the end of the never-ending track, to eat his Christmas dinner with his wife and family. " Like any winter backcountry traveller that has suffered from frostbite, Tom made his way to see Dr. Brett, Banff's resident physician. He is rumoured to have stated: "I hope I won't have to loose (sic) them Doc. I've hade (sic) 'em a long time and I'm sort of used to 'em." Tom was very lucky. He did lose several toes on each foot but he liked to joke that since the doc had removed the same number on each foot, he was still well balanced. I want to thank Roger Patillo for sharing this story in his book The Canadian Rockies Pioneers, Legends and True Tales. Click the title of the book if you'd like to purchase a copy. Tom was one of many early and modern mountain wanderers to lose toes to frostbite. Even today, it is a real danger for people out on snowshoes, as well as backcountry and cross-country skis. Always plan for changes in weather and remember, unlike Tom, you can always turn back if conditions change for the worse. Are wolves returning to the Bow Valley? The Bow River valley has not been a good home for wolves. Over the years, pack after pack has become established only to gradually get whittled away by vehicle and train impacts, and more recently, human food conditioning. The summer of 2016 was particularly bad for the Bow Valley wolf pack. The summer began on a very high note its 5 adults being joined by 6 new pups making for a total of 11 wolves in the pack. Unfortunately, this situation changed for the worse with four of the pups killed in two separate incidents with trains. The alpha female and another young female were both shot by Park Wardens after becoming accustomed to handouts from campers in the Two Jack Lake Campground. By the end of the season, none of the pups had survived. In a separate incident, one of the remaining wolves was shot by a hunter in B.C. By 2017, there were only two wolves remaining and they dispersed. As of Sept 2017, the alpha male had joined a pack in the southern part of Banff known as the Spray Pack. The surviving female had joined another male and possibly moved out of the area. Paul Paquette is a well-respected biologist who headed the largest wolf study ever undertaken in the Bow Valley. In recent years he was quoted as stating the following about the challenges for wolves in the Bow River valley: “It’s a wildlife ghetto. People need to understand, the Bow Valley has two townsites that are growing, two highways, a corridor for high transmission power lines, dams, golf courses, ski hills … They’ve got all that in the valley, so you can imagine the responses for the wolves and wildlife – it’s a ghetto for them and they’re trying to survive in there.” We are in a constant battle with developers and the town to try to make sure that we can keep wildlife like wolves and grizzly bears on the landscape. Recently, there seems to be a reason for cautious optimism. The Bow Valley is great habitat for wolves when you consider the high numbers of potential prey animals available to them. In a recent interview on CBC, Jesse Whittington, a wildlife ecologist with Parks Canada stated: "We're curious about what's going to happen," said Whittington. "Either the old male and the pack from the Spray could move back into the Bow Valley, or one of the neighbouring packs might slide in." In October of 2017, three wolves were spotted west of Banff near Castle Mountain. These were previously unknown wolves that may be looking for a new place to call home. As Jesse Whittington stated in an interview with the Rocky Mountain Outlook: "If you have a male and female who hook-up and have pups, all of a sudden you could have a pack of seven wolves, and if those pups survive and have pups again, you get a pretty large pack" The Bow Valley has not been kind to its wolves, but we still need them. They play a key role in keeping elk and deer populations in check. It's too easy to look at Banff today and point out the world-class wildlife crossings along the highway and assume that wolves will have an easy time coexisting with people. This couldn't be further from the truth. The section of highway that is fenced is primarily through Banff and a little to the east and west. Wolves cover vast ranges and the crossing structures only protect them in a small part of their range. The train tracks and Bow Valley Parkway also remain unfenced. Just this past November, two wolves were killed on the Trans-Canada Highway east of Canmore. It was trains that killed 4 of the pack's cubs in 2016. Parks Canada and Canadian Pacific Railway have been conducting ongoing research around the idea of fencing and other wildlife warning systems in areas of highest danger. We also have rampant development in areas like Canmore which can hamper movement through the valley to the east and south into Kananaskis and beyond. And finally, we have the challenge of people on the landscape. More than 90% of the use of our designated wildlife corridors in and around Canmore was by people. If the corridors are viewed as just another recreational trail, then eventually, the wildlife will simply avoid the corridor altogether. In the past, we've been lucky enough to have several wolf packs adjacent to the Bow Valley, for instance in the Cascade and Spray Valleys, but the Bow Valley Pack has come and gone repeatedly due to the many hazards that face them when they arrive in the valley. Let's keep our fingers crossed that these wolves do stick around. We need to do our part to make sure they have the best possible opportunity to survive and thrive. Here are a few things that we can do to help keep our wolves safe: Slow down on highways like the Trans-Canada, Bow Valley Parkway, Highway 40, and Spray Lakes Road Never ever feed wildlife or stand idly by while other people offer food. Keep your distance. Moving ever closer for that selfie puts your life, and the life of the animal, at risk. Obey trail closures. They are there for a reason. If we all make a point of doing what we can to keep wildlife safe and help to educate visitors who may not be aware of the consequences of their actions, then we may be able to help keep wolves on the landscape. Next up 10 New Years Resolutions for the Mountain Parks New Years Resolutions for the Mountain Parks The mountains are more than just a place to hike, bike and explore. They are home to 53 species of mammals, 260 species of birds, 996 species of vascular plants, 407 lichens, 243 mosses, and 53 liverworts (source: http://canadianparks.com/alberta/banffnp/page3.html). There are also almost 90 species of fungi in the mountain parks (source: http://cfs.nrcan.gc.ca/pubwarehouse/pdfs/11896.pdf). Everything we do in the mountains has an impact and here are some resolutions that will help you to better appreciate this beautiful place. Explore less busy sites. More than 95% of visitation to the mountain parks visits the same 2 or 3% of the park, essentially the paved corridors. Many of the attractions along these roads are in serious need of upgrades to help prevent the masses of tourists from creating permanent damage. Quiet Times are the Best Times. If you really want to get the experience that you saw on the brochure, get an alarm clock. The sun comes up early in the mountains during the summer months. If you're on the shores of Lake Louise or Moraine Lake at 6 am, you'll likely have the view all to yourself…and don't tell anybody, but those two sites are best when the sun first hits the mountains. Don't forget the evening though as well. Once the hordes head back to their hotels, the landscape quiets down again and you can have that great experience. Keep track of your sightings. If you see something exciting like a grizzly bear, wolf, cougar, or wolverine - report it. Park managers are always looking to keep tabs on wildlife and sightings helps to add another data point to their wildlife research. Support organizations like the Friends of Kananaskis and Friends of Jasper. These not for profit groups do an amazing job in helping to raise awareness of park issues, run educational programs, offer volunteer opportunities to make a difference on the ground and even operate gift shops and other facilities designed to raise money for their ongoing operation. Read a good book. Our connection to our sense of place always improves with knowledge and understanding. What once was an unknown wilderness suddenly becomes a community of plants, animals, birds, and other living beings - each with an important role to play in the maintenance of the community. Every book that helps you to understand the place you call home can only enhance your ability to feel an even stronger connection to that place. Meet your neighbours. The next time you walk one of the local trails, take the time to learn the story of one new plant, animal, bird, or other residents of the mountain landscape. I say "learn the story", because each one is much more than just their name. Why are they there? What role do they play? What's the coolest thing about them? As you repeat this process, the mountain landscape becomes much more familiar and ever more welcoming as you look forward to the acquaintances you've made and begin to mark the seasons by the comings and goings of old friends. Start up a neighbourhood watch. By this I mean keep an eye on your mountain community and look for changes. Are there new plants on the landscape that weren't there in the past? New birds? Changes in the community often reflect changes in the environment. Every resident of a particular community is there because that habitat offers all the essential requirements they need to survive. Plants need the right amount of moisture, sunlight, soil, nitrogen, and perhaps even a particular neighbour with whom they have a dependent relationship. Every plant will have a different list of needs, as will every bird and animal. A small change to the ecology will be reflected in changes to the individual plants and animals in that community. Simply sit down. We hike, mountain bike, cross-country ski, and snowshoe along the mountain trails season after season and year after year. Sometimes, the best experience can be had by simply sitting quietly and absorbing everything that's around you. Take off your shoes and socks (in the summer of course), and feel connected to the landscape. Listen to the sounds. Can you recognize all the birds around you? Watch the fish rising in the water to eat insects hatching on the surface. Smell the air. Are their particular smells that spark a memory? Smell is the sense most tied to memory and often a strong smell will instantly transport you to a particular place or time in your personal history. For me, the pungent sweet smell of wolf willow represents the smell of home. Talk to a senior. Our sense of place is more than just learning the natural history. To understand the natural history, we also have to understand the ways that people have interacted with it in the past. Somebody that's been on the land for 50 years can share insights that only come with the passing of the years and the experiences that those years brought. The elders are the keepers of the stories. They are a wealth of knowledge and wisdom and time spent talking with elders about their lifetime of adventures and understanding will always help guide you to a new appreciation of the world around you. Be a tourist now and then. Take a tour. Visit a museum or attraction. Fly in a helicopter. Often, we learn more about places we visit then we do about our own backyard. Make a point of seeing the mountains like visitors see them. Spending time with people that are seeing the Rockies for the first time is one of the things that I love the most about being a guide. Every tourist sees something different. They bring a new perspective born of a lifetime of experiences in their past. I'm constantly guided towards new perspectives simply because they are looking at a scene with fresh eyes. Why not make 2018 a year where we commit to understanding and connecting to the mountain landscape around us? If at the end of the year, you've learned a few new plants, or birds, or animals, and how they both benefit and are benefitting other members of the community, then you will have started on an exciting role that will deepen your personal sense of place. I hope to see you out there. Next up, what determines success when bears are relocated outside of their home range? Success of Relocating Grizzly Bears This past summer, people were stunned when Bear 148 was moved far from her home range. Unfortunately, she subsequently wandered across the British Columbia border and was legally shot by a hunter. The media covered this story extensively and in many cases used the wrong terminology. When wildlife managers move a bear to an area within its current home range, we call it relocating the bear. This term refers to moving a bear simply to another area that is still within its territory and within which it can comfortably survive. In cases, such as with 148, where the bear is moved far from its home range, the preferred term is translocated. This means that the bear is moved to completely unfamiliar territory where it doesn't know the seasonal food patterns or their locations. It doesn't know the landscape and it doesn't know the other resident bears into whose territory it has just been placed. As you can imagine, this puts the bear in a very high-risk situation, but just how high risk? What are its chances of surviving so far from its home range? This is one area of study that has been largely neglected until recently. There really had not been any peer-reviewed analyses of the factors that affected survival when a bear was translocated. An article published in the January 2018 issue of the Journal of Wildlife Management evaluated 110 different grizzly translocations within the Alberta Rockies and looked to determine what factors impacted successful movements and looked for ways to increase the success of future translocations. Biologist Sarah Milligan and her fellow researchers defined a successful translocation as one that required no additional management intervention and showed the bear surviving one entire year without returning to its home range. It's well known that the odds are not in favour of the non-resident bear when it is moved to unfamiliar territory. Of the 110 translocations examined, a full 70% were failures. A 30% success rate is still much higher than generally reported in the media. Translocations are never popular, but unfortunately, with some bears, the only other alternative is to shoot it. Conservation officers never make the decision to move a bear lightly. They know the dangers that it will face in its new home but their first priority is the safety of the community. While Bear 148 never injured anyone, it got to the point where conservation officers simply had to make the difficult decision to move her. In order to determine the success of bears in new habitats, biologists needed to better understand how bears currently living in the area use the landscape. Researchers tagged resident bears to learn how they used the landscape, feeding habits, and denning areas. Alberta also has a long history of monitoring bear movement with satellite and radio collars and this historical data is also helpful in studies like this one. One of the biggest challenges with translocating bears is their homing instinct. Many bears will simply abandon their new homes and travel back towards their home range. It is for this reason that Bear 148 was moved north of Jasper National Park. The further the movement, the lower the likelihood that the bear will return home. The quality of the habitat into which a bear is released can also have a strong bearing on reducing the homing instinct. Ideally, the release location should match, as much as possible, the home range in terms of available foods, movement corridors, and denning sites. The study found that the success rate was highest if bears were moved as early as possible in the season. Unfortunately, in many cases, the highest potential for human-grizzly conflicts occurs during buffaloberry season between mid-July and mid-September. Translocated bears also tended to have ranges some 3.25 times larger than resident bears. This shows they needed to cover more territory in order to find sufficient forage to survive. This is likely connected to their being unfamiliar with the landscape. While their home ranges did decrease over time, they continued to be larger than resident bears. Of the translocations that were considered failures, the primary causes were homing, new incidents of conflict, and mortality. Of the 77 failed translocations, 28 bears were killed because of management actions, and 30 failed due to homing. Bears translocated more than 200 km reduced the odds of homing by 95%. When it comes to the timing of winter denning, the study showed no significant difference between resident and translocated bears. The study concluded: "Repeated conflict and mortality were the greatest causes of translocation failure. Our results suggest that the most important factors for translocation success are the level of human-caused mortality risk at the release site and the time of year when the translocation occurred. Specifically, we found that the odds of translocation success decreased with increasing levels of mortality risk surrounding the release site. This result is likely related to the large post-release movements that are typical of many wide-ranging species, which can bring individuals near areas of conflict or mortality risk." Translocation remains an important management tool. Studies like this one help wildlife officers to make the best decisions to increase the opportunities for a successful movement. It's never an easy decision to move an animal away from its home range but the more we understand ways to increase their chances of success, the more the pendulum can move towards reduced mortality. In the central Rockies, people are the biggest problem. We need to work harder to coexist with bears and to respect closures. When people violate closures, it's always the bears that pay the price. And with that, it's time to wrap this episode up. Remember that Ward Cameron Enterprises is your source for snowshoe, nature, hiking, and photography guides across the mountain west. We've been sharing the stories behind the scenery for more than 30 years. Don't forget to check out the show notes at www.mountainnaturepodcast.com/ep054 for links to additional information. You can also comment on the stories and subscribe so that you don't miss a single episode. If you'd like to reach out personally, you can hit me up on Twitter @wardcameron and with that said, the sun's out and it's time to go snowshoeing. I'll talk to you next week.
It’s Wednesday August 16th, and it’s my last official day of Summer Vacation! I know I haven’t mentioned Jessica (https://jhedges.myrandf.com/) . Farm-To-Temple Affordable Meal Prep Delivered To Your Door Kickstarter (https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1281638315/affordable-farm-2-table-meal-prep-delivered-to-you?ref=nav_search) This is the RAW episode, I’ll try to edit asap. I’m excited to speak with people my stamp on how I’m trying Farm To Temple My business is called Farm to Temple (https://www.farmtotemple.com/) – My maiden last name is Temple a hiatis with the name Basically we offer meal prep (https://www.farmtotemple.com/) We cook the food in our kitchen locally sourced Baltimore, DC, and North Virginia area obtain all of our produce and our meat from local farms, butchers and bakeries. The Menu changes every week Order Online in quantities of 5, 10, 20 We deliver it to your house every Sunday and Monday. You just refrigerate it, heat it up in go! If it can be organic it will be organic. If it can be locally sustained it will be. It’s delicious food that’s clean and portion control so you don’t have to worry about cooking throughout the week! I’m gonna back up a little. You know what I love about the twist on your name is people are gonna look at my body’s a temple and it’s putting your personality into it! it’s really I really think your body is a temple I started this company. My undergrad in biz management. I was working there for 4 years. A really long time! OK I need to step my millennial back! It’s such a long time, basically I never was a gardener. I worked with a garden. I’m from Stocktan, California. My grandmother was one of those. very agriculutural fruits and vegetables in the backyard cooked, cleaned, homemade from scratch food. Like most millennials and went to college and didn’t eat so well and I basically got really sick. I was diagnosed with Lupis eventually they wanted to put me on a lot of medicine. I was against that. I really just started into dig deep into how do you heal yourself how do you live a preventative lifestyle and how to cure a chronic illness without taking a lot of medicine. I got my Masters in alternative medicine with a concentration in nutrition. Reinvented myself through food and lifestyle changes. That’s how the company came about! I’m always telling my grand-daughter Masters before marriage, mostly because I want my masters! I know now adays the food industry nutrition industry calorie counting is one of the biggest ones people stick to if I eat a 1000 calories a day going from eating 2500. Yes, that will help and drop the weight, but you can eat 1000 horrible nutritional counseliong 101 I’m all about eating organic food. truly makes a difference genetic makeup of what you’re putting in your body! If you’re eating a tomato that’s not really a tomato is it giving you the benefits of a tomato! It’s better then eating a McDonald’s cheeseburger of course! Because your body is a temple and it’s the only body you have clean means not the minimum calories clean means it hasn’t traveled overseas to get you grown in your own backyard. That truly makes a diffenece in how you feel. I just talked to this other millennial who has a business called Leanna Tu (https://organicgardenerpodcast.com/instagram-nutritionologie/) talked about clean food was a study that showed that food picked in season really has the most nutrients. I love your nutrition background. I’ve very excited to talk to you. Sticking to 2000 calories is too hard, so I need to boost my exercise! I’m not gonna eat less calories, I love food too much. I need to push up my... Support this podcast
It hasn't been an easy two weeks. Dan has been going through some serious stuff, which means he has been away from the news. Maureen has been keeping up, but she was also attacked by a fish, a cough, and a dog leash. Both try to parse the many feelings and sensations this news cycle brings about. To help bring clarity and actual INFORMATION, Radiotopia's Roman Mars and Constitutional law professor Elizabeth Joh come by to explain things like collision, obstruction of justice, the 25th Amendment, and lupus. (That last one, they do not explain, actually. But it comes up.) Also, there's an exciting new SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITY. Is Blue Apron in for some competition? Class is in session, SaysWhovians. Take a seat. SHOW NOTES: Listen to What Trump Can Teach Us About Con Law with Roman Mars and Elizabeth Joh The Preamble from Schoolhouse Rock. Here's the piece in which details NASA's denial that it has a child slave colony on Mars. Donald Trump is unclear whether wrestling is real Don't get this. All the times it wasn't Lupis. See Maureen live on stage with Mark and Hal at the Philadelphia Podcast Festival on July 21! Your Intrepid Hosts: Maureen Johnson and Dan Sinker Our awesome theme is courtesy of Ted Leo. Says Who's Logo was made by the one and only Darth
Living Podcariously Episode 53 Show Notes LP - Episode 53 - Devin Lupis Performs In Studio, Tach Gets a New Nick Name and We Talk Expensive Drinks - We talk Expensive liquors - Adam can't talk spansih to save his life - Were we racist a little? Nahhhh - Devin Lupis Interview - Devin Lupis Performance - "Ginger Fred Durst" describing Tach may be the best thing I have ever heard - Unleash the Shenaniganry with Jay - Andrea brings us another great Guy-a-ry Devin Lupis https://www.facebook.com/lupis0079 Shattering Silence (Devin's Band) https://www.facebook.com/ShatteringSilenceFl Link to Devin's Performance in Our Studio https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Kmhaozm2iY&list=PLvD02tGSqkJUXmHWVJWJO2p6gSuNIk_CW You're listening to Living Podcariously! Bringing real men's perspectives; unfiltered, unapologetic. Recorded live in the Living Podcariously studio in World Famous Cocoa Beach, FL. Hosted by Tach, Adam, Andrea and Jay! This podcast may contain vulgar, explicit content to include conversations about sex or sexual references, drug and alcohol references, and general things men are interested in. Boobs, games, sports, boobs, strippers, boobs, drinks, bars, bands, boobs, perverted news, etc. You get the idea. https://FaceBook.com/LivingPodcariously DJ Gil Lugo mail: djgillugo@gmail.com Facebook: facebook.com/djgillugo Twitter/Instagram/MixCloud: @djgillugo Music Provided by DJ Constant https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCi7nCO7WoMkeyUxsrIE0sVQ DJ Gil Lugo BenSound http://www.bensound.com Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Sam's son, Parker who's been away at boarding school, is coming home to visit. Hear about their plans. Jodi shares how long you're suppose to nap so that you wake up feeling refreshed and not drained. And we hear from you on the brand name items you just had to have growing up.
In the 25th and final episode of The Secret Origins Podcast Mike and Lupis recap Season 5 of Justice League and the series on a wholr. Join them as they conclude their League Business. Geeks: Mike “TFG1? Blanchard Lupis Convoy Subscribe to us using iTunes or use any other podcatching client by using: http://feeds.feedburner.com/GeekCastRadioTSOP Download ...
Well it's time to bring Justice League to a close. TFG1Mike and Lupis Convoy talk about the epic three part Season/Series Finale Starcrossed. With hot wing sex jokes now coming from Lupis here the guys talk about the overall awesomeness of Starcrossed and what is coming up on TSOP as we GO UNLIMITED. Geeks: Mike ...
In episode 04 of The Secret Origins Podcast, Lupis Convoy and TFG1Mike talk about Legends, Knight Of Shadows and Metamorpho. Mike makes a very bad joke about GL and Hawkgirl when they are missing from episodes. So bad that it makes Lupis twitch. Geeks: Mike “TFG1? Blanchard Lupis Convoy Subscribe to us using iTunes or ...