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To be a good Doctor and to do good health you really need to understand farming and agriculture, because good farming also equals good health and overall wellness, once said Wendell Berry. Dr. Camilla Petersen owns her own concierge medical practice in Missoula Montana where creating good health starts with what we are putting into our bodies. Camilla is a ND, MD, FAAFP who grew up in the Ukraine and has practiced in Africa, South America, New Zealand, all over the USA and now in Missoula Montana where she is also a wife, mother of two, member of the Montana Medical Board, and a business owner. www.petersenconciergemedical.com
We're getting you prepped up for Pearl Jam's second North American leg of the Dark Matter tour by once again featuring shows in the locations that they'll be playing. First up is a hometown show for Mr. Jeff Ament as we cover the Missoula show from 1995. This is the beginning of the Vitalogy era and is the send off show before they embarked on a trip through the Pacific Rim. As always with this era, this show is all about Jack Irons leading the charge. His time in the band was still in its infancy, but you can see the direction that the band wanted to go with him. While the brand new Vitalogy songs were squarely in the forefront, it pushed aside songs from Ten that had been extremely popular only three years prior. There's only two songs from Ten in this show (feel free to include State Of Love And Trust from the time period) and the way those songs were attacked was in a way to trying something different to make them feel fresh. Porch was lifted from it's normal closing role to the fifth spot in the set that saw it's typically iconic live solo abridged, Even Flow experimented with a new intro and pieces of the song that strayed from the radio version, and SOLAT is a completely different monster that they did not continue moving forward with. This show also has killer versions of Spin The Black Circle, Immortality and one of three full versions of W.M.A. that Jack has played on. Also, we have a song that's a Live On 4 Legs first at this show! Javier's segment will focus on that incredibly insane version of W.M.A. and we invite one half of the Hallucinogenic Recipe podcast, Patrick Boegel, to break down the circulation of the bootleg tape from this show. Visit the Concertpedia - http://liveon4legs.com Contact The Show - liveon4legspodcast@gmail.com Donate to the Show - http://patreon.com/liveon4legs
This episode talks about recent storms in Missoula Montana and the aftermath of the clean up.
Gabs Conway is a sculptural ceramic artist based in Missoula Montana. Having grown up in Missoula, she was excited to return - as she relentlessly considers it home - after earning her BFA at the University of Wisconsin – Stout. Gabs' work stems from the playful, mundane experiences of living. She explores relationships, such as that of siblings, friends, and lovers. Interested in creating forms for the reflection of human experience; asking the viewer to consider their appreciation of life, and to humble the adornment of our physicality. Gabs remains curious of the inherent biological responses of living, and what it means to exist together in an ever changing world. http://ThePottersCast.com/1052
In this episode of ALPS In Brief, our Risk Manager Mark Bassingthwaighte sits down with Troy De Baca, the man behind The Silk Screen Machine, Inc. to talk about life, risk taking, and an ice cream dream. Hello. I'm Mark Bassingthwaighte, the risk manager here at ALPS. And welcome to ALPS in Brief, the podcast that comes to you from the Historic Florence Building in beautiful downtown Missoula Montana. I'm here on a business trip at the mothership, the home office here, and we've had some interesting speakers the past couple of days. And the one that I have enjoyed the most, and have been it's just got all kinds of things gone in my head here, just a lot of things to chew on in terms of life insights is a presentation given by Troy De Baca. And I just want to sit down, and we're just going to chat a little bit. For those of you that have listened somewhat rightly, or more rightly on all that I've done with podcasts, I've done several on listening to your life. I am going to add this discussion to this series, if you will, because man, oh man, is there a lot here. So Troy, welcome. It's a pleasure. Troy De Baca: Mark, great to meet you. Thanks for having me. Mark Bassingthwaighte: You're most welcome. And before we jump into just having a chat, can you tell our audience a little bit about who you are, and what you are in life I guess? Troy De Baca: Sure. Sure. So out of the many titles that you can be given, I've magically found myself in this role of entrepreneur, and I know that's a very big buzzword right now, but yeah. I basically am an American entrepreneur, who creates very outside of the box thinking in terms in the world of advertising, and marketing, and promotional items. And what my job is for the most part is when people ask me, "What do you do for a living," I say, "I'm a professional solutionist," because that encapsulates everything that I do. My job is to find solutions primarily for Fortune 500 companies to go out, and do experiential marketing, which is basically finding a company's demographic, or target demographic audience, and then providing them with an experience that they then hold onto, and they have a positive moment with, that they'll hopefully buy the brand, or support the brand. Mark Bassingthwaighte: I love that. I love that, professional solutionist, and boy, trust me, folks, when he talks about what he's done here, it's just like, good for you. God bless. Man oh man, are you freaking kidding me? Got to stop. Troy De Baca: You're too much. Mark Bassingthwaighte: You talked in this presentation yes a word that it explains some things, but entrepreneurs is not necessarily a word you use comfortably to describe yourself. You just don't see yourself that way. Troy De Baca: Right. Mark Bassingthwaighte: But you talk about all of this being unexpected. Troy De Baca: Yeah. Yeah. Mark Bassingthwaighte: What does that mean? You are in a great place, and tremendous success, but it's very unexpected. What's the journey? Troy De Baca: Yeah. So what I'm realizing now that I didn't know growing up is that I've just deeply been passionate about art and creativity. I didn't really know how to express myself. And that got me down paths that as most artists or creatives, there's a dangerous side to it, because you want to explore everything. And then that can be hurtful or harmful when you're not fully in control of your art, or your craft. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Okay. Troy De Baca: So growing up, I took a lot of [inaudible 00:04:15]. I wanted to get into everything, and explore everything. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Right. Troy De Baca: And through doing that, like many artists, I got involved with drugs, and I went down a rabbit hole pretty deep. I got addicted to heroin, and I spent about six years of my life pursuing that. And it took me to some really deep, dark places. And I also overdosed a few times, and was considered legally dead two of those times. So I consider myself very lucky for making it out of that realm. But the process of getting through that, and becoming a normal person again was probably one of the most beneficial points in my entire life. Learning the strength that I had to overcome something so damaging, and through that process, it encouraged me that I can conquer big goals, and big dreams. And to date, that's by far the biggest goal and dream that I've ever conquered. I've been clean for 27 years. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Just an incredible account. Troy De Baca: And when I say clean, I need to actually, for the listeners, I don't know if some people call me out, because I do drink occasionally, and I dabble in marijuana edibles when I can't sleep. But when I say clean, I mean specifically clean from heroin, because to me, that was the anchor that was going to take me out. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Yeah. Right. Troy De Baca: And I've not touched it in 27 years, and I'm very proud of that moment when I decided that I'm going to do every single thing it takes to never go back. So with that confidence of being able to maintain that goal, and maintain that dream, it's given me confidence in other elements of my life as far as business, and being an entrepreneur, building companies, and really seeing those things through. Mark Bassingthwaighte: What I find interesting about this is how I hear it and respond to what you're saying is you had a period in your life that was just deep darkness. Troy De Baca: Absolutely. Mark Bassingthwaighte: And to have the strength and fortitude to come out of that, and then realize the positive side of all this, if you will, that there's this internal strength, and desire, and say, what I'm trying to do here is, to me, this is it's a big life lesson, or listening to you. It's not. Sometimes things that we look at in our life and miss at times are small, but this is a big thing. Troy De Baca: Yeah. Absolutely. It was the fork in the road as it were. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. But you had the courage to really do something that, and I have tremendous respect for this. I don't think this happens a lot. Certainly, a lot of people struggle at times with, and have dark, whether it's mental illness, or drugs, and they can come out the other side, and be better for the experience, but this journey is, our story is a story of extremes. That's what I hear. And the fact that you did this is just crazy cool to me. I want to throw out a few words. Troy De Baca: Sure. Mark Bassingthwaighte: And just if it fits into the story, what's your response? What do you think? Fears, how do you deal with fears, and explore that with me, because I think, again- Troy De Baca: I love it. I love it. So when I originally took the steps to get clean, I went through what they call, I believe they call it now more of a therapeutic bootcamp. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Okay. Troy De Baca: But I went through a pretty hardcore intense program, and through that, I was given this book called Feel the Fear and Do It Anyway. And I read that. It was the first book that I can honestly say I read cover-to-cover, and multiple times. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Yes. Troy De Baca: And I still to this day when I feel like I'm being circled by my fears, and there's no way out, I still turn to this book. And I couldn't even quote anything from it. It's just the magic that I get by reading it, and allowing myself to really walk through the fear, and get to the other side. So I've also given this book over 100 times. I've given it out to people who I saw that were in some pretty fearful moments, and pivotal moments in their life. And my process now really goes back to who am I at my core? I'm an artist, and with my art, my mediums are almost anything I can touch, but I have many, many fears. And the easiest way for me to overcome those is to literally just go back to the fact that I know my purpose on this planet, and it's to create, and it's to create my value, and my art. And when I do that, and I see a project come to a close that I was so fearful about, it gives me this magical confidence, and these magical openings to take further steps into the unknown. And that leads me to a risk category. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Yeah. That's what's going to talk about next. So let's go there. Let's go there. Troy De Baca: This leads me to a risk category that many people, I scare a bunch. I scare a lot of people. Many days I scare my wife, because she sees me taking these bold steps, and these bold, literal, just my entire being going into projects that sometimes I'm ill-equipped to be in, but I do this purposely to challenge myself, and to keep myself responsible, and absolutely there for my craft. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Yeah. Troy De Baca: When I do that, the rewards are beyond monetary. They're beyond. They're almost magic is only thing I can say. Mark Bassingthwaighte: How I respond to that, and again, just boy would I love to have you around for a long time just as a friend to get together and chat. Oh my gosh. Troy De Baca: I'll have to come down to Florida and visit. Mark Bassingthwaighte: You'd be welcome. Anytime. What I'm hearing is taking risks, and really daring to go way beyond your comfort zone is how you obtain. It's how you discover who you are, and it's how you grow. Troy De Baca: Absolutely. Mark Bassingthwaighte: And that's what I'm hearing the returns are. Troy De Baca: Absolutely. Mark Bassingthwaighte: We're not. Yes, I'm sure there's some financial benefits to a lot of these risks. Troy De Baca: Yeah. Mark Bassingthwaighte: So you wouldn't be where you are, but that's not really what this game is about to you. Troy De Baca: No. It's- Mark Bassingthwaighte: This is about, "What am I capable of?" And I love it when people dare to see how far they can go. Troy De Baca: Absolutely. Mark Bassingthwaighte: In my mind, I think that's a huge limitation to so many people. Troy De Baca: I agree. Mark Bassingthwaighte: We don't dare to put it all out there. And again, it's not about throwing all the money. Sometimes people take- Troy De Baca: Money is nice. Don't get me wrong. It's nice. Mark Bassingthwaighte: No, but I'm saying even risking a lot of money to do something. Troy De Baca: Absolutely. Mark Bassingthwaighte: And yes. Money is nice. I agree. But the real reason that people are doing this I think is for the excitement, for the fear, for the growth, for the, "It's just life is too short as it is. Let's see what I can get out of this." Troy De Baca: Mark, you nailed it right there. I want to tell you a sign that I saw hanging on the wall of the place that I'm staying. When I landed in Missoula, I go into the bathroom, and on the wall is this picture that says, "You only get one life, and if you do it right, one is all you need." Mark Bassingthwaighte: Yeah. And that's so good. Troy De Baca: I saw that, and it struck a chord with me, because I'm squeezing this lemon for all it's worth. Mark Bassingthwaighte: That is clear. Troy De Baca: Robert plant. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Yeah. Yeah. Troy De Baca: No. I just am really, I'm here for it. And this is now, I think it is very tied to my addiction as far as getting that dopamine hit. I do the same scary thing in business when I build these companies, and when I build these dreams. When I get the reward of the accomplishment, it is truly the biggest fix of life. Mark Bassingthwaighte: I love that. Troy De Baca: I still get that strange risk, because it's very risky behavior. I put a lot of money on the line. Sometimes I put my entire reputation, and what I am on the line, but then when I see it through, and I see it on the other side, holy cow. Yeah. The reward is immeasurable. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Again, here's how I respond to this, and I love it. Taking these risks, I think you're comfortable at it. And I'm trying to solidify the learning for me, and I'm trying to share, and express this. So I got to think out loud here, and I got all kinds of planes up. But that response does not surprise me at all, because I think what, again, how I respond to this, here's a guy who is willing to take great risks, but actually comfortable in doing so, because you have traveled this extreme, the strength necessary to do that you know is there. The faith that you can get there is there. Troy De Baca: Yeah. Mark Bassingthwaighte: And when it hits, you want to talk about self-validation, and people, we are only capable of validating ourselves. Troy De Baca: Yeah. Mark Bassingthwaighte: No one else can validate us. That's false. That's a false flag. Troy De Baca: Sure. Mark Bassingthwaighte: So may I ask you? I'm going to go on a tangent here for a second. Troy De Baca: Please. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Every risk that you take is not going to play out. Troy De Baca: Yes. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Okay. Troy De Baca: Yes. Mark Bassingthwaighte: How do you respond to that? Troy De Baca: I've had massive risks that I've taken that have completely fallen through. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Right. Troy De Baca: And what's strange about it, I know that it's been said many times. I can't even pinpoint the first person I've heard or read that said this, but essentially fail fast. When you put yourself out there, and you challenge the norm, you challenge everything that you're doing, the quicker you fail, the quicker you get to the solution, the learning. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Right. Troy De Baca: And without the learning, if every project you did came out perfect, if every cake you bake is perfect, then it's going to taste like shit. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Right. Troy De Baca: It's not all built to taste good without that failure. And I've got probably 30-70 split ratio. I don't know. I don't know that the ratio. I like pie charts, but one of the biggest gambles that I've taken recently, and this is just post-COVID, we were going into the year 2000. We had approximately 1/4 of a million dollars already booked into that year with clients, and then COVID happened. And every single one of those obviously backed out. And our livelihood, and the company that I had built from this dream literally was at risk. And what I started doing was thinking of ways that we could abide by a six-foot rule, or I wasn't sure if we'd ever be able to do live events again, because we obviously couldn't gather, and that's our bread and butter. So what we started doing, and especially when Zoom came on the scene, and it blew up, we started doing virtual conferences with some of our clients, and they had very cold feet about it. That went over okay. It was mediocre. By the way, the company is called The Silk Screen Machine. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Yeah. No. Please fill us in a little bit. Troy De Baca: Our primary goal is to do live customization of promotional products for customers. So we do a lot in the conference and convention space. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Right. Troy De Baca: We're in Vegas a ton because of that reason. And when we had all these big clients back out due to COVID, it shook me to the core. In talking about being fearful, every moment of my life was, "How do we?" And I'm going to use words that I don't really necessarily like, but there are buzzwords that you'll understand is, "How do we pivot?" Mark Bassingthwaighte: Right. Troy De Baca: "We know our skillset. How do we showcase what we can do in a Zoom call? Or how do we take orders from guests over Zoom in a virtual conference of thousands of people, and then manage that in-house, and provide these guests with a package that shows up on their doorstep?" Mark Bassingthwaighte: Mm-hmm. Troy De Baca: And that's what we did. Then coming out of that cloud, I was riding a high, because this really worked. This was working. We were making money. We were profitable in the virtual space. So then when conferences started, when we were able to gather, but it was still six feet distance, I came up with this plan. Here's the failure attempt. I came up with this plan to devise an app that you could scan. Instead of standing in tight lines, and being on top of each other, you scan the QR code. It's your leisure, and it's a drag and drop T-shirt builder. So you could scan an event design, drag it to your T-shirt, place it wherever you want it on the T-shirt, hit send. It would then spit back to our printers that were live. They would then print the item, the garment, or the bandana, or the tote bag, or what have you, and we would be able to hand it over to the guest, put it on a table, walk away. They know it's theirs, staying distant. So great concept. Right? Mark Bassingthwaighte: Yeah. Troy De Baca: Beautiful. The idea is phenomenal. The reality of it were things that I didn't foresee. The truth of the matter is, and I'm sure all of us know this, because we've all been in conference space, data sucks. Your cellular sucks. You typically don't have a Wi-Fi. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Boy do I know that. Troy De Baca: The free Wi-Fi is garbage. Mark Bassingthwaighte: It is. Troy De Baca: You're not getting anything accomplished on that. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Right. Troy De Baca: So what would happen is we would bottleneck, because no one's cell service could actually send it to our printers. So then we would always have a backup method, which was handwriting it, and then handing off tickets. The app actually we sold it for a good deal of money. And the other beautiful thing about the app, which I expressed earlier, was we were collecting people's data, and selling it back to our client, which is very valuable. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Right. Troy De Baca: So anyway, we actually, we were making great money with it, but it was a failed product or service. And what ended up happening with it, this is when I had to give it up, and I kept trying, and kept trying, and kept trying it. And eventually what happened is we get this giant bid from Microsoft to go to their, basically it's an intern day. They have people from around the world, all these candidates from around the world. I think it was 3,000 to 5,000 kids that were genius on the computer. And someone hacked our system, and literally sent bogus names, funny names, weird names to our brain, the system. And we had over 50,000 order requests. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Oh my God. Troy De Baca: They just kept coming in, and we had no idea whose was real, whose wasn't. So it failed miserably. We had huge backlogs. People were pissed. It was not comfortable. And here I am watching the ship burn, and there's nothing I can do about it. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Yeah. Troy De Baca: It was embarrassing. It was Microsoft for crying out loud, and technology for crying out loud. And here I am botching the worst experience. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Oh my God. Troy De Baca: So making it through that immediately got me to the point where I go, "Okay. This isn't going to work, and if it was to work, we need to put a lot more money behind it." And that was a huge learning lesson. And it's weird, because I have this other ability that's very uncanny, and I think most humans don't share this with me, is that I don't care about being embarrassed. I don't care being the butt of a joke. I don't care looking like an asshole. I don't care looking like an idiot, because that's one of the fears that I dealt with most of my life. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Right. Troy De Baca: And it would always prevent me from pulling out my best art. So that's one of those things about caring about what other people think. I had to completely relearn, reteach myself to not give a shit, and just do it, and put myself out there in the most embarrassing moments. And that's actually paid off. It's a weird strategy. When you laugh at yourself first, and everyone's in the joke with you, it goes over a lot easier. It's a lot easier to stomach. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Absolutely. Troy De Baca: So I don't fake the funk now. If I'm going down, I'm going down hard, and you get to watch it. So yeah. Mark Bassingthwaighte: My suspicion is as we talk about fears, and failures, and all, if you have two choices in life, you're going to pick the one that scares the shit out of you the most. Troy De Baca: Absolutely. Mark Bassingthwaighte: And that's the one to go down. Troy De Baca: Every single time. Mark Bassingthwaighte: And I love that though- Troy De Baca: Every time. Mark Bassingthwaighte: ... because you're not afraid of failure. It's how you grow. It's how you learn, and it's how you push boundaries. It's a lesson I learned a long time ago myself. I've had multiple times where, "Do I take the safe play, or the other play?" Troy De Baca: Isn't it funny how those forks in the road are very vivid now? Mark Bassingthwaighte: Oh. They are. Absolutely. Troy De Baca: And they're some of your best growing tools. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Yes. Now, I always go toward the one that says, "It makes me uncomfortable. I'm afraid. I don't know. This is scary as shit." Troy De Baca: Absolutely. Mark Bassingthwaighte: But you have to have some faith, and go, because there's no other way. Again, why are we here? Troy De Baca: Right? If you play it safe, your couch is only going to get you so far in life. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Yeah. Troy De Baca: You got to get out there. You got to get off the couch, and you got to do it. And obviously, my risks are very different than I think we all have our own set parameters. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Yeah. What we might consider risky is going to differ between. Yeah. Troy De Baca: I think that one of the coolest things now about risk, and management, and fear is you gain wisdom, and you gain what works, and what doesn't with you. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Yeah. Troy De Baca: And because you're more comfortable with who you are in your space, it allows you to almost not predict the future, but see things a little bit clearer for what a lot of times our fears are complete absurdity. The things that I'm afraid of at night, that keep me awake don't ever come true. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Right. Troy De Baca: But the things that do come true, that are factual, that are fact-based evidence, those things, you become intuitive, and you become a little wiser when you approach things in situations. So I'm very grateful for that side of it. It's another feather in the cap. Mark Bassingthwaighte: One final word, and I want to have you tell one very short story. Troy De Baca: Sure. Mark Bassingthwaighte: What does the word relationship mean to you, and how does that play into your story, if you will? Troy De Baca: Wow. That's a great question. I think that I know now today that without relationships, I don't exist. Whether that be personally, whether it be professionally, I know that if I'm not tending to the garden, so to speak, I'm not doing it right. If I don't listen to people, if I don't hear people in their perspectives, I'm not doing something right. Relationships to me are the ultimate key to almost everything. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Would it be fair to say that there are relationships at all stages, at either end of your story, that there are relationships there that are a foundation for you to stand on? Or would this story have happened absent relationships? Troy De Baca: Absolutely not. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Okay. So it's not all you. Troy De Baca: Yeah. Mark Bassingthwaighte: But you had to do all the hard work. Don't get me wrong at all. But I really want to. I guess what I'm trying to get to, and ask in a roundabout way is it's important I think, to recognize that we are not alone. Did you prioritize? Did you nurture these relationships? Do you continue to do that? Is that fundamental to, again, your story, and where you're at? Troy De Baca: I think that I have been bad at relationships the majority of my life. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Okay. Troy De Baca: And one of the biggest, biggest relationships that I've been bad at is the relationship with myself. Personally, I wasn't good to me for most of my life. I had a lot of negative self-talk. I had a lot of doubts about who I am, and where I want to be. So I think one of the greatest gifts that I've come away with over these years is letting myself off the hook, and taking it easier on myself. No one's perfect. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Oh. Absolutely. Troy De Baca: And I actually embrace my imperfection. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Okay. Troy De Baca: I know now that without a really healthy relationship with myself, I can't have relationships with other people. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Yes. Yes. I love this. Troy De Baca: And saying that- Mark Bassingthwaighte: That's so important. Troy De Baca: I've had fallings out with my family all my life, especially due to my drug use. There were years that I didn't speak to my closest people, my loved ones, my mom and dad, and my brother. And they stuck through it all. Incredibly strong people that sat by my side in the darkest times of my life, and I still wasn't able to be there for them. And I'm so, so happy that I can say that one of the biggest gifts in my life now is my wife, and my relationship with her. None of this, the business elements, and where we're at, and at the level that we execute would not be possible without her. And she's believed in me, and my ridiculous schemes, and dreams, and goals. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Yeah. Troy De Baca: She's been right there on the sidelines, cheering me along. And a lot of times, she gets in the game with me now. Now we travel all over the world doing what I love, which is providing these promotional products for companies. And she came on board full-time about two years ago, and it's helped us accelerate. It's just put the pedal to the metal. So shout out to my wife Katie, because she's amazing, and she's the backbone of this operation. Mark Bassingthwaighte: This story, let's talk about the dream, and one of the learnings from that. I'll let you fill folks in. Troy De Baca: This is probably the coolest part of my day. And again, going back to my wife, she hears the story, she's like, "I hear it one more time, I'm going to blow up." So she's heard it way more than most. Anyway, really, I started a screen printing company in 2007 in Denver, Colorado with $1,000 loan from my dad. And he put me up in his garage, and he gave me the time and the space to dedicate my life to learning about this craft, and this skill. And through that, I started the company, and was just doing bars, and restaurants, and friends' bands, and things like that. And the medical marijuana industry popped up in Colorado. And that was a big. That really put us on the map. We started getting our name passed around the craft beer industry. Of course, we started doing things there, and those were all goals of mine too back then. So when I started playing with some of the biggest brewers out there, it was really a proving ground, and it gave me a lot of faith in our abilities, and what we do. And then in 2012, this is the dream. I had a dream. I was chasing an ice cream truck, and it was this alien spaceship ice cream truck. It had LEDs, and smoke machines, and laser beams, and it was wild. And it was so vivid. And I ran up to the truck, and I asked the team that was on the truck, if I could have a Rocket Pop, and a Fudgsicle. And instead of them handing me ice cream, they printed tee-shirts off this truck. I woke up the next morning, and my head was on fire. I couldn't get this dream out of my head. So I went to Google, and I started googling every instance of Screen Printing Truck, and Trucks that Screen Print, and Print Truck, any phrase, and it didn't exist. There were no hits coming back. And A, that blew my mind. But B, it was like, "Wow. Am I onto something?" And then C, I was like, "Let's go build this thing." So I built the first truck in Denver, Colorado. Mark Bassingthwaighte: As an aside folks, it's a freaking awesome truck. I've seen photos of this. Oh my God. It's awesome. Troy De Baca: It's wild. I had a graffiti artist from Mexico City who was new to Denver. He painted my truck for very, very cheap. I got a bargain. He didn't know his value, because he's very prominent in Denver now. But his art was just so explosive on this thing. It really carried my vision. And we got this truck on the road, and the next thing, Red Bull came across us, and saw what we were doing, live screen printing, and handing out these promotional items to target demographic audiences. So they picked us up, and they wanted the truck in Los Angeles. And we didn't have a truck there. So we shipped out the truck from Denver, and we did a 30-day marketing campaign with them. And it really set things in motion. I realized right then, "Wow. This is bigger than me." This idea was bigger. And that's really where things took off. Mark Bassingthwaighte: I love it. Troy De Baca: And then the fact that this wasn't even on my radar at the time, but they wanted to wrap the truck. And boom, there's another revenue stream, is making a billboard truck for clients. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Right. Troy De Baca: So yeah. That really, that was the pivotal moment, again, seeing the fork in the road. Mark Bassingthwaighte: But what is the learning? You talk about if you're going to Google something, when you say- Troy De Baca: Oh. Yeah. Bottom line. Honestly, when I speak, when I talk to people about it, I go, "If you Google something, and it doesn't exist, it is your job. It's the universe selecting you out of all the people on the planet to go make this thing, to put it on Google. It's your now job." Mark Bassingthwaighte: Go build it. Troy De Baca: If the universe gives you a nudge like that, you got to take the blinders off, and you got to look further than where the blinders are. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Right. Troy De Baca: We spoke about that a little bit, but yeah. Take those cues, because they're there for a reason. Mark Bassingthwaighte: And that's where I want to leave it with your story. Again, folks, I'd like to share a couple of comments. And if you have something to add, please do. We have talked about it. And in my experience, and just personal learning as well, I have a different life story, but a lot of the lessons have been learned are somewhat similar. Troy De Baca: Mm-hmm. Mark Bassingthwaighte: We do need to take blinders off, and we do need to look for the sounds, the things that your life is saying to you, the opportunities. Yes. They may be fearful. Yes. They may be risky, but again, if you're trying to set up a new law practice, or you're walking into a firm as an associate on the first day, and it's normal and natural to have these fears, but don't say no to opportunities. Look for them. I love it. You talk about the universe giving you this little nudge. I see it as your life is speaking to you, and there's an opportunity here. Only you can see it. Only you get to choose what do you do with it. But if you, for out of fear, not wanting to take risks, all reasons that we don't want to do this, because life's comfortable right now, and it's good, but you're not growing. You're not doing anything. Troy De Baca: Get off the couch. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Just get off the couch. That's exactly right. So that's the point. And I just have loved visiting with you. It really just- Troy De Baca: Oh. It's been so fun, Mark. Mark Bassingthwaighte: And I want you to hear just guy to guy. I find, here's how I want to say this, to have the opportunity to have met you, to have some discussion yesterday, and today, and to listen to you speak, I feel quite privileged to visit with you. I really do. Troy De Baca: That's heartfelt Mike. Mark Bassingthwaighte: I want to say, well done. Troy De Baca: Thank you. Mark Bassingthwaighte: You're somebody I really look at, and admire, and respect for just the courage to do all that you've done, and we could talk for a long time yet about what's coming. Troy De Baca: Oh. And we will. We will, offline. Yeah. No. I don't take that lightly. I really, really thank you for that. I'm so grateful to have this opportunity with you, and it's been fantastic to get to know you, and chat about life, and everything that goes with it. Mark Bassingthwaighte: Well, I hope we can stay connected. That's it, folks. Before I sign off, I just want to remind all of you that while I am the risk manager here at ALPS, I am not a traditional corporate risk manager. I am hired by ALPS to be your risk manager, a risk manager for the bar at large, nationwide. So feel free to reach out anytime if you have questions, concerns, anything that I could do to try to help. Whether it's risk management in your practice, law practice management, ethics, the list just goes on and on. Even want to talk insurance, now, there's an exciting topic, but I'm happy to explain all kinds of things. You can reach me at mbass, M-B-A-S-S @alpsinsurance. That's one word, A-L-P-S insurance.com. That's it. Thanks all. Bye-Bye.
Host Luke Barrett is joined by the Great Chiropractor Dr. Davis to discuss health and wellness, self care, Fire, and not taking short cuts in life. Dr. Davis explains the power and benefits of Chiropractic care such as removing interference caused by a part of the body being out of alignment. I highly recommend giving Dr. Davis a visit at his clinic Life Chiropractic in Missoula Montana. For my brothers and sisters in the Fire community I recommend a visit to the Chiropractor before fire season, during fire season as much as you can, and post fire season.
The College Football Experience (@TCEonSGPN) on the Sports Gambling Podcast Network gives you a bonus Dan Hawkins Interview episode. Pick Dundee aka (@TheColbyD) interviews the former Boise State Broncos, Colorado Buffaloes and UC Davis Aggies head coach as they talk about the future of college football heading into the 2024 season. Did Dan Hawkins start the Boise State dominance and what was their secret? Does Dan Hawkins believe in the transfer portal and will the portal slow down some in the future? How did Coach Hawkins grade his son's first season performance as head coach of the Idaho State Bengals? Will Dan Hawkins try to get back into coaching after stepping down last season? If Dan Hawkins had the Colorado Buffaloes job all over again what things would he do differently? How impressive is Dan Hawkins coaching tree with Chris Peterson, Bryan Harsin and now Cody Hawkins?What does Coach Hawkins think of Deion Sanders at Colorado? Did the Auburn Tigers give Bryan Harsin a fair shake as a head coach? What things did Coach Hawkins do to help create a buzz around Boise State way back in the late 90's? Also Coach Hawkins talks about the impact Mike Leach left on the sport of football let alone college football on every level. Plus Coach Hawkins talks about coaching football in several other countries including playing a game on top of a shopping mall in Europe. JOIN the SGPN community #DegensOnlyExclusive Merch, Contests and Bonus Episodes ONLY on Patreon - https://sg.pn/patreonDiscuss with fellow degens on Discord - https://sg.pn/discordDownload The Free SGPN App - https://sgpn.appCheck out the Sports Gambling Podcast on YouTube - https://sg.pn/YouTubeCheck out our website - http://sportsgamblingpodcast.comSUPPORT us by supporting our partnersNYRA Racing code SGPN25 - $25 FREE BET and $200 Deposit Bonus - https://racing.nyrabets.com/sign-up-bonus/sgpn25?utm_source=sgpn&utm_medium=paid_social&utm_campaign=sgpn_25&utm_content=1080x1080Underdog Fantasy code TCESGPN - 100% Deposit Match up to $100 - https://play.underdogfantasy.com/p-sgpnGametime code SGPN - Download the Gametime app, create an account, and use code SGPN for $20 off your first purchase - https://gametime.co/Football Contest Proxy - Use promo code SGP to save $50 at - https://www.footballcontestproxy.com/ADVERTISE with SGPNInterested in advertising? Contact sales@sgpn.io Follow The College Experience & SGPN On Social MediaTwitter - https://twitter.com/TCEonSGPNInstagram - http://www.instagram.com/TCEonSGPNTikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@TCEonSGPNYoutube - https://www.youtube.com/@TheCollegeExperienceFollow The Hosts On Social MediaColby Dant - http://www.twitter.com/thecolbydPatty C - https://twitter.com/PattyC831NC Nick - https://twitter.com/NC__NicK
On today's episode of the Occult Symbolism and Pop Culture with Isaac Weishaupt podcast we head back to the Grey Lodge in this bonus Twin Peaks episode only for supporters! This episode we're covering Twin Peaks S2E7 "Lonely Souls"- one of THE BEST episodes in the Twin Peaks story! We'll talk about Laura's Secret Diary, samsara circular nature of reality (e.g. fans, records, donuts), moon goddess sacrifice symbolism, apocalyptic visions, BOB and Missoula MONTANA in today's episode! It is happening again- so join us!EXCLUSIVE GREY LODGE SHOWS NOW UP ONLY ON AD-FREE SUPPORTER FEEDS!See images discussed on Isaac's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/isaacweishaupt/Index of Twin Peaks Grey Lodge series: https://illuminatiwatcher.com/twin-peaks-occult-symbolism-guide-enter-the-grey-lodge/Links:SUPPORTER FEEDS: Go ad-free with 160+ bonus episodes, early access and books!Patreon.com/IlluminatiWatcher,VIP Section (*with comparsion of Apple vs Patreon vs VIP vs Rokfin): https://illuminatiwatcher.com/members-section/Apple Podcasts Premium! You can now go ad-free with ALL the bonus episodes on the Apple app- just open up the podcast and subscribe!
Host Luke Barrett is joined by the Legendary CJ to promote 3 amazing fundraiser events in beautiful Missoula Montana. The 105th Foresters' Ball, Fire on Ice Hockey Tournament, and the Putt & Pull Golf and Trap Shoot. The Foresters' Ball supports scholarships for Forestry Students, Fire on Ice Hockey tournament along with the Putt & Pull support firefighters and the amazing work of the Wild Land Firefighter Foundation.
In this episode of the podcast, a child, traveling alone, encounters hotel trouble, a young woman begins her healing journey thanks to a sexual assault victim’s advocate, a woman recovering from open heart surgery finds respite with a gruff nurse and post-avalanche, Missoula unites. Four storytellers share their true personal stories on the theme “The Kindness of Strangers”. Their stories were recorded live in person in front of a sold-out crowd on December 06, 2023, at The Wilma in Missoula, MT. Steve Rosbarsky journeys alone to the Junior Nationals tournament in Minneapolis. The absence of parental guidance sets the stage for a misadventure leading to trouble at a hotel. Stranded without a coach, an unexpected savior, Martin Martin, rescues the young athlete from a precarious situation. A series of escapades involving hotel ice baths, wheelchair races, and rooftop pool revelry culminate in a disciplinary showdown with the coaches. Steve calls his story “Three Days, Two Coaches, One Martin Martin“. Steve Rosbarsky was born and raised in Missoula Montana. He has two beautiful children, Lydia and Eddie. He is so grateful to his partner Gwen and the joy that he feels being the long-term parental type figure to Evani and Cecelia. Steve is also proud of his beautiful granddaughter Ronnie. He owns and operates a Taekwondo School here in Missoula. Steve is a sustainable project coordinator for Missoula Habitat for Humanity. He holds gratitude for all the moments this life has provided. Learn more about Steve at Missoula Taekwondo Center. Maria Merkley’s traumatic encounter, guided by her sexual assault victim’s advocate’s support, led to resilience and empowered her to begin her healing journey. Maria calls her story “The Advocate”. Maria LaDonna Merkley is a proud full-time single mother to her beautiful 18-month-old daughter, Sophia- LaDonna Merkley. Maria was born in Whitefish, Montana, and grew up in Hamilton, Montana, and has had the pleasure of calling Oregon, Arizona, and Washington states home. She is a full-time student at the University of Montana, working on her Bachelor’s degree with a major in Psychology and a minor in History, with a Secondary Education licensure. She hopes to share her love for traveling with her daughter and travel to all 50 states before Sophia is ten years old. Her long-term goal is to move abroad to live and teach anywhere there is a mild winter! In 2020, Mandy faced heart surgery complications, feeling alone in a hospital amid COVID restrictions. Mandy tries to put on a brave face for her family and friends and her emotions and feelings build inside her to a fever pitch. A gruff nurse, Keith, changed everything with empathy, teaching her to accept help and cherish human connection. Mandy calls her story “Open Heart”. Mandy Northcott is a mom, wife, pet parent, and general outdoors-loving 47-year-old woman. She left the flatlands of Iowa for the mountains of Montana 25 years ago and hasn't looked back. Mandy has been a farmer, tree planter, grocery store clerk, stay-at-home mom, and non-traditional student, and now works as a medical coder and biller. She loves hot springs, African drumming, dog walks, deadheading flowers, gazing at trees, and the quiet time in the morning before everyone else is up. Currently, you will find her on the weekends cold dipping in the Clark Fork River and Rattlesnake Creek with like-minded souls. You can find Mandy on Facebook. Katrina Angelina Schull recalls a community’s resilience that shines post-avalanche. Strangers become neighbors, uniting in kindness and help, showing for Missoula’s strength to endure hardships. Katrina calls her story “Extraordinary Neighbors”. Katrina Angelina Schull is a born and raised Missoulian who initiated Amplify Film Group in 2009 after studying at the University of Montana. She later worked as a news reporter for KTMF ABC|FOX, focusing on crafting impactful narratives in positive media. Katrina embraces projects with enthusiasm and enjoys aviation, hiking, fishing, and Jiu-Jitsu outside of work. Katrina is committed to visual storytelling, extending her efforts to creative copywriting, and has initiated Be the Light International, supporting communities in need through her team’s work. You can learn more about Katrina and her work at Amplify Film Group.
Starlight Thursdays Episode 191 f Welcome DJ Reed to the series. How long have you been DJing? I started to pick it up in college in 2015, and started to take it more seriously around 2016/2017, so around 7 years earnestly. Why did you get into it? Got into it as I lived in a party house with two other guys that liked to mess around & were maybe a year into learning how to DJ, they showed me what they knew & pretty soon I was hooked. Around that time i was just getting into festivals & was promoting local raves in Portland, OR. I used to hang out with a crew based out of Olympia Washington that would put on renegade events in the forests in between Olympia & Portland. I got to play for two hours at one of those campout quarry parties & immediately knew it was something I wanted to pursue more. After that I played a lot of house parties/college bars, and kept at it when I moved to Missoula. What events have you played? In Missoula I've played extensively at the Badlander/Monks/VFW along with a handful of opening gigs for touring artists (SkiiTour, Polish Ambassador, etc) & several local electronic showcases at the Top Hat. I've played at boutique festivals (Jammin in the Gulch, Womple Blossom, etc). Beyond that, I've played Missoula staples (Disco Bloodbath, events in Caras park, Socotra after parties) and I put on a handful of outdoor parties every summer in Missoula & surrounding areas with my good friends under the name AlpenGlow Social Club, and have played at quite a few renegade events in OR/WA/MT/CA over the last 7 years (never Forest Creatures). I am very tight with the Royale crew & played a handful of shows for them back in the day as well. Currently I'm working on a new residency at a bar project in Missoula that should open by next year. Where are you from? Missoula Montana! What inspires you? The feeling you get on the dancefloor where everything else falls away & you're just focused on the music and dancing! To me it's very meditative & healing to get down with your friends, and the communities I've met through music festivals/underground parties are some of the kindest friends I know. What genres are in your mix? Disco, Tech House, Bass House, Progressive House. A few words about your mix? This is an exploration of contemporary house music. Who are some of the artists in your mix? Eli Brown, Kyle Watson, Joshwa, Eden Prince, John Summit, Salvatore Ganacci, Renato Cohen, LPZ, etc. Link to your sound cloud or other? https://on.soundcloud.com/hwZzFHXB1a1eGHsf8
In this week's episode, Kayla and Taylor are honored to chat with Chris La Tray, newly appointed Montana Poet Laureate. We talk about books, winter, writing, and the state of Indigenous writing and activism today. Check out Chris's website hereSign up for his wonderful newsletter, An Irritable Métis, hereClick on the following links to purchase Chris's books from Missoula MT-favorite indie bookstore Fact & Fiction: Descended From a Travel-worn Satchel: Haiku & HaibunOne-Sentence Journal: Short Poems and Essays from the World at LargeFollow us on Instagram @literatureandlibationspod.Visit our website: literatureandlibationspod.com to submit feedback, questions, or your own takes on what we are reading. You can also see what we are reading for future episodes! You can email us at literatureandlibationspod@gmail.com.Please leave us a review and/or rating! It really helps others find our podcast…and it makes us happy!Purchase books via bookshop.org or check them out from your local public library.
The US Cyclocross Series came to an end in Falmouth this weekend. Noah and Issam talk about the wins of White & Rochette, the podiums of Van Kempen & Zakrasjek as well as some strong Canadians. They then take a look ahead at the Pan American cyclocross championships taking place in Missoula Montana.
This week, Artistic Director of the Montana Film Festival Mike Emmons returns to the podcast to tell us about everything that's happening at this year's MTFF! From exciting new features like THE ROYAL HOTEL, THE PEOPLE'S JOKER, and THE SWEET EAST to incredible shorts an a 35mm screening of Clint Eastwood's UNFORGIVEN (featuring a Q&A with LA Times film critic Kenneth Turan), there's going to be something for everyone from October 12th through 15th at The Roxy Theater (the indie theater near Mike Smith's house in Missoula Montana where he also works).
The Brew Crime guys are back with your “daily” BrewVerie Report for this month! Sadly Paige could not make it this time. Sourceshttps://news.sky.com/story/guinness-world-records-astronauts-jugglers-and-cuddly-toys-who-has-made-it-into-the-book-for-2024-12960510 https://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2023/08/30/canada-bees-fall-truck-Burlington-Ontario/1291693426092/ https://www.newser.com/story/338616/dog-detects-burglar-accepts-belly-rub.htmlhttps://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2023/09/19/squirrels-three-power-outages-Missoula-Montana/8551695154082/ https://www.frontpagedetectives.com/p/cannibalism-eternal-youth-money-sentence-california https://wdwnt.com/2023/09/update-bear-in-a-tree-reportedly-causes-adventureland-frontierland-and-liberty-square-to-fail-to-open-with-the-park/https://ca.yahoo.com/news/protective-moose-tramples-hiker-trail-174022332.html https://ca.news.yahoo.com/rare-photo-shows-macaque-riding-215808249.html https://www.businessinsider.com/cuba-teen-took-russia-construction-job-ended-up-fighting-ukraine-2023-9 https://www.nytimes.com/2023/09/18/world/canada/canada-india-sikh-killing.html https://globalnews.ca/news/9938774/air-canada-vomit-seat-passenger-apology/This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/3268019/advertisement
Gabs Conway is a sculptural ceramic artist based in Missoula Montana. Having grown up in Missoula, she was excited to return - as she relentlessly considers it home - after earning her BFA at the University of Wisconsin – Stout. Gabs' work stems from the playful, mundane experiences of living. She explores relationships, such as that of siblings, friends, and lovers. Interested in creating forms for the reflection of human experience; asking the viewer to consider their appreciation of life, and to humble the adornment of our physicality. Gabs remains curious of the inherent biological responses of living, and what it means to exist together in an ever changing world. http://ThePottersCast.com/947
Chief Executive Officer for Gaize, Ken Fichtler, joins Mining Minds from Missoula Montana to talk about impairment. Ken discusses his early career as an entrepreneur, working with infrared optics technologies and his time as an Economic Development Director in Montana. We walk through Gaize and their innovative way to detect substance impairment through VR headsets and micro-movements of the eyes. We talk about the potential impact this type of detection system can have on an industry like mining and the many opportunities it may bring to the workforce and their organizations. Join Mining Minds as we welcome Ken Fichtler to the Face! Gaize FAST2 Mine Motor Mission Rubicon Mechanical Ill Zakiel
I met the guy you are about to hear from at a mall in Missoula Montana. His story is sad but yet this guy doesn't make anyone or need anyone's sympathy.
IVPodcast 86 - MMIWG2S Day is May 5 We're just under a month away from the National Day of Awareness for Missing & Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls. This May 5th Indigenous Vision will be taking part at events in Missoula MT, Phoenix AZ, and Las Vegas NV. We're currently putting together self defense kits to hand out to our community members and are still looking for volunteers in the Missoula area. If you're available in Missoula on the afternoon and evening of May 5th please email: soutacl@indigenousvision.org Can't make an event and don't know what to do? Donate to our MMIW efforts: https://www.indigenousvision.org/donate/ Read the MMIW Report: http://www.uihi.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/Missing-and-Murdered-Indigenous-Women-and-Girls-Report.pdf Cultural Humility Training May 2023! Learn more about Cultural Humility: https://www.indigenousvision.org/culturalhumility Submit a report to our Citizens Science Project here: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfMfsPtQrkj19GpLk1eVQKlY1-xOFc50FmOXQFbHVe-wpDuYg/viewform MMIW Warriors:https://www.indigenousvision.org/mmiwarriors/ Donate to Indigenous Vision: https://www.indigenousvision.org/donate Learn about us here: https://www.indigenousvision.org/Follow Souta: @lastwarcry on TikTokIndigenous Vision on IG: @indigenousvisionmedia The IV Podcast is hosted by Indigenous Vision's Executive Director Souta Calling Last (Blackfoot) and produced by co-host Melissa Spence (Anishinaabe).
Starlight Thursdays Episode 153 Featuring goodgoodrum. Originally from Bloomington, Indiana now residing in Missoula Montana. He's been DJing for the past 3 years, performing at area 406 and Legacy Lounge. This will be the second mix of his in this series. I'm really digging the deep vibe he put out in this one. - BK Love- Crafting this mix has been an exercise in slowing down and allowing each song to speak for itself, playing them front to back, and uninterrupted (mostly). -goodgoodrum- Full Track list: My Life - ZHU, Tame Impala In Too Deep - Franc Moody Elastic - Joey Purp Pelota (Cut A Rug Mix) - Khruangbin, Quantic HSKT (Hercules & Love Affair Bleeps and Vox Mix) - Sylvan Esso Patience (Maurice Fulton Remix) - Tame Impala Moonlight - Disclosure These Are Just Places To Me Now - Folamour Witchoo - Durand Jones & The Indications, Aaron Frazer Fresh Static Snow (Last Island Remix) - Porter Robinson Illumination - DJ Koze, Róisín Murphy Goodbye To A World - Porter Robinson For more goodgoodrum check out https://soundcloud.com/goodgoodrum/tracks
Sean McCoy from Franks Little Farm in Missoula MT is back to talk about what to look for this time of year to get ready for the gardening season! @frankslittlefarm StHealthy Nutrition - CBD/CBN Melatonin FREE Sleep Gummies back in stock! Mixed Berry and Sour Peach! Get $300 off your Harvest Right Freeze Dryer! Happy Valentines! Go to Western Hunting Summit and get your 2022 ticket! Use STHEALTHY for $100 off. Give GOHUNT a try for Insider! Use STHEALTHY at checkout! Get the CLEANEST Pre-Workout on the Market! KONO for 10% off use code STHEALTHY Watch this podcast and other great videos on our StHealthy Hunter YouTube! New StHealthy Production Films coming 2023! Join Locals- Gritty/StHealthy and Hunt Harvest Health. Support GRITTY FILMS! Leave us a review on iTunes! This podcast is sponsored by StHealthy Hunter and StHealthy Nutrition Use code STHEALTHY when you purchase Treeline Pursuits E-Scouting for Elk. Use code StHealthy at Peax to get your Sissy Stix, Gators, and Backcountry Duo Headlamp! 10% OFF Sheep Feet Orthotics - Visit sheepfeethoutdoors.com and use code STHEALTHY10 See the amazing deals at Harvest Right Freeze Dryers for making your own backcountry food! To schedule with Dr. Hillary visit her Montana clinic, Elevate Health. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Gabs Conway is a sculptural ceramic artist based in Missoula Montana. Having grown up in Missoula, she was excited to return - as she relentlessly considers it home - after earning her BFA at the University of Wisconsin – Stout. Her work stems from the playful, mundane experiences of living. She explores relationships, such as that of siblings, friends, and lovers. Interested in creating forms for the reflection of human experience; asking the viewer to consider their appreciation of life, and to humble the adornment of our physicality. She remains curious of the inherent biological responses of living, and what it means to exist together in an ever changing world. You can follow Gabs and her work on Instagram and her Website. Follow along with the podcast on Instagram.
On 1/21/2023 Hank Donovan of Rattlesnake Cable Company and I sat down in his shop in beautiful Missoula Montana to discuss his high quality product line of cables and sonic utilities. I also had the honor of getting to dig a bit into Hank's musical gear history, talk shop on gear innovations, and share a delicious bottle of whiskey with him and his wife Amy. I'm also excited to reveal Science of Sound Radio's first featured artist single at the end of the show so make sure to listen till the end.Episode Guest Links - Rattlesnake Cable Company, Rattlesnake Cable Company IG, Rattlesnake Cable Company YoutubeScience of Sound Radio Featured Artist - Sandrider, Satanik Royalty RecordsTo like, follow, and subscribe to our audio and video podcast, you can also check us out at www.scienceofsound.us, @scienceofsound on Youtube, and @scienceofsoundoffial on Instagram.
Our first storyteller is Jim Harte. Jim has always loved film, ever since he was a boy. When the distributors forget to send the second reel of “Wild in the Streets”. Jim gets creative in the way that he avoids giving refunds. Jim calls his story “More Than a Movie”
AboutMontana is the birthplace of mountain flying. This museum seeks to interpret and preserve the history of mountain flying in Montana and the Northern Rockies. There are aircraft displays as well as interactive history displays. Contact MAILING ADDRESS 713 South Third Street Missoula, MT 59801 CONTACT406-721-3644 FAX406-728-9280 Details SEASON Memorial day - Mid September HOURS Daily: 10:00am - 4:00pm PAYMENT METHODS Cash, Master Card, Personal Check (In State), Personal Check (Out Of State), Travelers Checks, Visa RESERVATIONS Reservations Accepted, Walk-Ins Welcome DISCOUNTS Senior Citizens --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/loren-alberts/message
Host Luke Barrett is joined by Ally Gue owner of micro greens business Hilltop Acres located near Missoula Montana. We discuss the benefits of micro greens, jiu jitsu, James Nestors book Breath, Parenting, and the constant fight for self improvement. New Year New YOU!
The Museum's exhibits and programs cover US military history from the Revolutionary War to the present War on Terror, with an emphasis on the interwar US Army (1920-41). By special arrangement with the Montana National Guard the Museum's main exhibit building is located in Building T-316, Fort Missoula – the former headquarters for the Fort Missoula District of the US Covilian Conservation Corps. During the Great Depression of the 1930's Army and civilian CCC personnel in Building T-316 oversaw the processing, equipping and training of over 40,000 CCC corpsmen. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/loren-alberts/message
”We have really seen our church grow over the last year, and most importantly, we are seeing lives changed and people discipled.” With the help of Free Will Baptists across the nation, Summit Church Missoula was able to purchase a building for their church plant, and having a building has had a profound impact on the way the church is able to minister to its community. Josh and Kimberly Hampton share the exciting things taking place there. You can support church planting efforts through Free Will Baptist North American Ministries by giving to the Mission North America Offering, Sunday, November 20. Find more at http://www.fwbnam.com/mna/. #NAFWB #BetterTogether #ChurchPlanting
Mike Foote is a pro mountain runner, race director, public lands conservation advocate, and new dad. He has been pushing the limits of mountain endurance for over a decade across the globe, but now Mike's most important focus is at home - in his home region, on his home trails, in his backyard with his family. We talk about the value and public land stewardship, what it's like having a little kid as a pro athlete, why knowing where your food comes from is so important, and how conservation brings together multiple stakeholders for ecosystem resilience.thebackyardstories.comIG @the.backyard.storiesWritten column TRAIL RUNNER MAGWhere to find MIKE FOOTE:IG @MIKEFOOTEMTCreator and host Jonnah Perkins IG @_.jonnahThe Backyard Stories is presented by Protect Our Winters and Trail Runner Magazine Editing by Jesse PerkinsOriginal music by Dudley Noon
Gabe puts the accident in car accident. Upcoming shows10/27 Billings MT, 10/28 Bozeman MT, 10/29 Missoula MT, 10/30 Helena MT11/4 Hood River OR, 11/5 Whidbey Island WATicket links here https://www.gabrielrutledge.com/#tour Get full access to The Drive Home with Gabriel Rutledge at gabrielrutledge.substack.com/subscribe
TN Vols vs Bama at Neyland Stadium Knoxville. House Music. This is the 1st hour of The Land of Make Believe with Old Man Ratchet that aired on Saturday October 15th, 2022 from 8 to 9 pm (est) on WOZO-LP 103.9 FM Knoxville, TN and streamed online at wozoradio.com. This hour was mixed using Algoriddim's DJay Pro software on a Ipad Pro 4th Gen using a Pioneer DDJ-Rev1 Dj controller. Additional editing, vocals and production was done with Audacity Freeware for noncommercial use. WOZO is a non-commercial radio station that relies on listener support. To help us stay on the air, please consider a donation through Venmo @WozoFM The Vols Beat Bama and Knoxville went nuts. Track Listing Hour 2 Station I.D. - The PotatoStation ID - Lay off the Q ANONPSA - He Man Bad TouchShow Intro Method Man - Bring The Pain (Instrumental) Phish - Rocky Top (Live at Missoula MT 10.8.1995)Phish - Also Sprach Zarathustra 2001 (Alpharetta Encore 8.5.2018 )Itchy-O - SaptalokaRobert Anton Wilson - Self Confessed Cosmic Schmuck Captain Sky - Don't Touch That Dial.mp3 Bernie Sanders QuoteRevolting Cocks - Gila Copter Incredible Bongo Band - Apache (Grandmaster Flash Mix)Biz Markie - Country (Interlude) Beastie Boys - Egg Man J-Fresh One - Enter the robots 4 song mix Beasties- Mario Brothers- A Tribe Called Quest A Tribe Called Quest - Push It AlongPSA - CootiesWOZO I.D. - Rusted Out Dryer
The So Fly Crew sit with Kate and Scotty Sherin to discuss their recent trip to Montana with the Redington team. Kate and Scotty are two very fishy anglers from the east coast of Canada. Together along with Mitch and Aldo, they went to Missoula Montana and spent a week fishing trout on incredible rivers with the whole Redington squad! In this episode, the four Canadians talk about travelling down to this Montana region for the first time (well, Aldo's been). Special thanks and all the love to Ethan, DL, Allie, Clay, Jeff, Kayla, KC, Mario, Jean and Juniper. It was a very special trip with a very special crew. FIND KATE AND SCOTTY: http://sherincreative.com/
Courtney Townley is a mover, a shaker and a healthy people maker. She is the founder of Grace and Grit, where she helps women reclaim their health and happiness.Courtney has spent time as a dancer, movement teacher, gym owner, health coach, self-development junkie, and motivation speaker. She graduated from the University of Michigan and is fully certified PILATES® instructor, National Strength and Conditioning personal trainer, ACE Health Coach, Precision Nutrition Level 2 Coach, and has hosted over 250 episodes of her podcast Grace and Grit. She is also a very proud student of the Ido Portal Method. Her YouTube video that highlights her training under Ido has over 355k views. She is most recently a graduate of one of the most respected life coaching programs in the world, The Life Coach School. Courtney lives in Missoula MT with her husband, son, and massive Great Dane Sully.Courtney was a prior guest on our show and a true pleasure to speak with. She works with hundreds of clients and guides them to improving their overall physical and mental health. She walks the walk on a daily basis and is an authentic, high-energy human. Courtney was the first person I thought of when this particular topic came to mind, so sit back and enjoy the show!Courtney Townley Links:Grace and Grit Website: https://graceandgrit.com/Grace and Grit Programs: https://graceandgrit.com/programs/Grace and Grit Podcast: https://graceandgrit.com/podcast-2/Sponsors: NativePath:Follow the link below to see all of NativePath's Pure Grass-Fed, Organic, Clean Supplements and use the CoMo15 code at checkout for 15% off!https://www.nativepath.com/Lombardi Chiropractic:https://www.lombardichiropractic.com/Mention the Co-Movement Gym Podcast when scheduling your initial appointment for 50% off Initial Consultation and X-Rays!Redmond:redmond.lifeOur team at Co-Movement Gym has used Redmond's Real Sea Salt, Seasonings, Re-Lyte Electrolyte drink and other products for years! This is a U.S. company whose products are simple, clean and taste great. Support them by using the link above or entering the code CoMo15 at checkout and you will receive 10% OFF your order!Reach out to us at info@co-movement.com or visit our website co-movement.com and learn more on how we can assist you in achieving your maximum health and fitness potential!Help us spread these fitness truths to as many people as possible by sharing this podcast with your friends and family! There is a lot of fitness information out there and we want everyone to know what really works! The information we provide in this podcast series has helped thousands of clients here in Upstate NY, and we hope to help you achieve your fitness goals too!Check out our Online Private Coaching at www.co-movement.com/onlinecoachingCheck out our main website www.co-movement.comCheck out our Video Podcast Clip on our YouTube Channel Co-Movement
Finishing the week with a Jiu Jitsu specific Q and A. Travis Davison is a black belt in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, the owner of Straight Blast Gyms in Kalispell, Whitefish, and Missoula Montana, as well as the Vice President of SBG International. John Frankl is a 5th-degree black belt in Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, a professor in Seoul, and the man responsible for bringing BJJ to the Korean peninsula. Enjoy
Evangeline is parked in a big campground in the middle of a strip mall in Missoula Montana and finally everyone is getting cleaned after a long stretch without showering! After yesterday's difficult campground, this chain campground with his full hookups and level sites is a dream.
Brennan Mickelson is entering his 5th season, and 3rd full season with the Settle Mariners. He hasbeen a strength coach in the AZL, short season, and at full season affiliates. He has a Bachelor ofScience degree in Sports Science with a minor in Strength and Conditioning from WashingtonState University, and a Master of Science degree in Health and Human Performance from theUniversity of Montana. During his studies at both WSU and the U of M he was a howitzercannoneer in the Marine Force Reserves, a personal trainer, teaching assistant, and strengthand conditioning intern. He resides in Missoula Montana with his wife Chloe and his dogHamilton.Topics covered in this episode:-Being named a Minor League Strength and Conditioning Coach of the Year-Conditioning -His best professional baseball storyQuotes:-"Intern is not the most glamorous job, but it can really pay dividends, especially in pro ball because you get all that experience" (3:51)-"Plans are worthless, but planning is everything" (10:29)-"I think programming for baseball is the hardest" (20:27)If you would like to learn more from Brennan, you can follow him on social media:Instagram:@coachmickelson
To finish our Vault series, we turn to the final Vault on our list - the Missoula 2005 show. This comes at an unfortunately opportune time a week after Jeff tested positive for Covid-19 forcing Pearl Jam to cancel the rest of their tour, but also we take the time to honor him and send our best wishes while covering a show in his home state. This was the first of a few Montana shows that doubled up as a campaign for US Senator John Tester, who in 2005 was looking to win the seat. This was the first show of the 2005 tour featuring legs in Canada and South America, so it could be seen as kind of a tune up in a way. But this was also a good indicator for some things that would happen during that tour year. There were some rarities broken out on this night that hadn't been played since the mid-90's. Bee Girl made an appearance for the first time since 1994 thanks to Jeff's song writing prowess on it, and Black, Red, Yellow is played for the first time since 1996 thanks to Phil Jackson being in the crowd. This show also gets highly political with the climax happening in Daughter getting some aggression out against Fox News. Visit the concertpedia - http://liveon4legs.com Donate - http://patreon.com/liveon4legs
Hi everybody. And welcome to today's episode of attendance bias. I am your host, Brian Weinstein. Today's guest is the founder of the Oceans of Osyrus message board, Damon Callisto. For today's conversation, Damon picked Phish's show from October 8th, 1995 at the Adams Fieldhouse at the University of Montana in Missoula. Now, this is a pretty unique pick for a number of reasons. Number one, it was played in 1995. And as I combed back through the Attendance Bias episodes, the only other show from that year was December 31st, 1995; the legendary New Year's Eve show. And yet the fact that so many fans cited as their favorite year of Phish, I was just. surprised that no one else had picked a show from '95. So I was really glad that Damon chose it. Also, it's a show from Montana. And if you look up the statistics, Phish has played Montana just twice in their whole career. And Damon did a really great job melding the history of Montana and the culture of Montana with this show that was played at the Adams Fieldhouse in 1995. So, I was thrilled to learn a little bit more background about the show and about the state. Something that really surprised me was the amount of bluegrass that fish played in the show. And Damon is really wonderful at explaining how it made him feel throughout the entire show, because it felt like a hometown show and you don't get to say that very often if you live in Montana. So let's join Damon to talk about one of the best message boards out there for Phish and Phish related content, to hear about the history of Montana and Phish, and also to hear why "Suspicious Minds" should make a comeback as we talk about Phish's show from October 8th, 1995 at the Adams Fieldhouse at the University of Montana in Missoula.Oceans of Osyrus message boardAudio used for today's episode
Sean McCoy of Frank Little's Farm in Missoula is back to talk all about SEEDS! Today's resident expert is Sean McCoy of Frank's Little Farm in Missoula MT. Frank's Little Farm is an urban farm in the heart of Missoula, and Sean is our good fried who we turn to for the difficult task of making things grow in dry, windy Montana. Follow Sean @frankslittlefarm - Ask questions for future podcasts. Get your Western Hunting Summit 2022 ticket! Use code HHH at checkout for $100 off! This podcast is sponsored by StHealthy Hunter and StHealthy Nutrition :) Try our Full Spectrum CBD Soft Gels StHealthy Nutrition - CBD, Immune Support, Protein! Join our subscription service for a monthly discount! Use code StHealthy at Peax to get your Sissy Stix and Gators! Join the HUNT HARVEST HEALTH Locals community with Dr. Hillary Join the GRITTYSTHEALTHY Locals community and SUBSCRIBE to see all the best GRITTY FILMS To download your FREE StHealthy Dehydration and Canning Guide go here... Burch Barrel is the funnest way to grill this summer! Use code STHEALTHY at checkout. Made with Meat is our favorite food processing equipment! Check them out! 10% OFF Sheep Feet Orthotics - Visit sheepfeethoutdoors.com and use code STHEALTHY10 HeatPraxia in CDA - Use the code STHEALTHYHUNTER and bring a friend for FREE and pay 45$ for your first visit. Also make sure to sign up for their email list to get $50 off any membership! To schedule with Dr. Hillary visit her Montana clinic, Elevate Health. Follow us on Instagram @huntharvesthealth Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Sean McCoy of Frank Little's Farm in Missoula is back to talk about getting your garden planned! Today's resident expert is Sean McCoy of Frank's Little Farm in Missoula MT. Frank's Little Farm is an urban farm in the heart of Missoula, and Sean is our good fried who we turn to for the difficult task of making things grow in dry, windy Montana. Sean has agreed Today we talk about what to look for when planning to grow a garden. Follow Sean @frankslittlefarm - Ask questions for future podcasts. Get your Western Hunting Summit 2022 ticket! Use code HHH at checkout for $100 off! This podcast is sponsored by StHealthy Hunter and StHealthy Nutrition :) Try our Full Spectrum CBD Soft Gels StHealthy Nutrition - CBD, Immune Support, Protein! Join our subscription service for a monthly discount! Use code StHealthy at Peax to get your Sissy Stix and Gators! Join the HUNT HARVEST HEALTH Locals community with Dr. Hillary Join the GRITTYSTHEALTHY Locals community and SUBSCRIBE to see all the best GRITTY FILMS To download your FREE StHealthy Dehydration and Canning Guide go here... Burch Barrel is the funnest way to grill this summer! Use code STHEALTHY at checkout. Made with Meat is our favorite food processing equipment! Check them out! 10% OFF Sheep Feet Orthotics - Visit sheepfeethoutdoors.com and use code STHEALTHY10 HeatPraxia in CDA - Use the code STHEALTHYHUNTER and bring a friend for FREE and pay 45$ for your first visit. Also make sure to sign up for their email list to get $50 off any membership! To schedule with Dr. Hillary visit her Montana clinic, Elevate Health. Follow us on Instagram @huntharvesthealth Resources: All of these can be found on our Amazon page Rodalle's Encyclopedia of Organic Gardening Seed to Seed. Susan Atworth Teaming with Microbes Organic Gardening in Cold Climates Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In today's episode, we have Ronda Loftus-Helit, who is the EVS Director at Hillside Health & Rehab in Missoula Montana, where she grew up. Ronda joins us to share her journey from working as a cleaner, to becoming McDonald's assistant general manager at 21 and then later joining the janitorial business. With all her experience in the industry now, she agrees that the floor should be the main focus when it comes to keeping a facility clean. Ronda also talks about how COVID-19 changed her working environment and the strategies she used to ensure they remained adequately staffed during the period. Tune in for this and many exciting topics. Key Highlights[02:40] Growing up in Missoula [04:37] Working as a cleaner and at McDonald [08:06] Managing housekeepers is different [09:20] Quitting McDonald [10:29] What is a group home for boys? [14:50] Becoming a housekeeping manager [18:33] What Ronda misses working in a hotel [20:20] Tipping your housekeeper in a hotel [26:07] Importance of keeping your facility clean [31:02] Tools for cleaning the floor [36:51] Keeping business during COVID [39:44] Peterson's fun COVID-19 story [41:38] How COVID changed the work environment [44:28] How do you provide floor care when COVID is airborne? [48:25] How ABM survived through COVID [53:18] Married to a CNA Notable Quotes● I didn't just like the housekeeping part of it. I liked getting to know the building to even the maintenance part of it. ● I also didn't know that you should tip your housekeepers at a hotel. I didn't know that was a thing. ● Housekeeping really, in my eyes is your first impression, because their work is the first impression that people see. ● You never notice whether or not there's a cobweb. You always notice the floor. ● All of our jobs are hard. My job in cleaning up after others is hard. Taking care of others is hard. Being a resident in a nursing home is hard. ● It's hard on all of us. But when we make it harder than it needs to be, what are we doing? ResourcesIf you are interested in learning more about our management training program specifically for housekeeping managers who work in health care, visit https://promotions.ralphpetersonschoolofmanagement.com/housekeeping-leadership-academy-1/ (housekeepingleadershipacademy.com)
Should teachers be asking questions about sexuality without a parents consent? That issue is causing division in Missoula Montana and we talk with a member of the board and a parent who are not happy about it at all. Also, a whale washes up on the Oregon coast and news of Oregon...some you won't like.
Watch on YouTube HERE This evening 5 of us sit down for a roundtable to talk learnings from the Missoula Montana card show. Enjoy conversation from @BreakerCulture | ENERGIZE your Side Hustle! @Baseball Collector @Breakout Cards & Tyson, Matt from @Bench Clear Media - Sports Card Network #SportsCards #TheHobby #CollectBench Clear Media Production Check out Bench Clear at: http://www.benchclear.us
Today's resident expert is Sean McCoy of Frank's Little Farm in Missoula MT. Frank's Little Farm is an urban farm in the heart of Missoula, and Sean is our good fried who we turn to for the difficult task of making things grow in dry, windy Montana. Today we learn about Sean's history, why he named his farm after a guy named Frank, and he answers questions related to getting your garden ready for planting, root structure, soil, compost, and patience. Sean has agreed to be a consistent guest to help us get back to our "roots" and to help get our garden growing! Follow Sean @frankslittlefarm - Ask questions for future podcasts. Get your Western Hunting Summit 2022 ticket! Use code HHH at checkout for $100 off! This podcast is sponsored by StHealthy Hunter and StHealthy Nutrition :) Try our Full Spectrum CBD Soft Gels StHealthy Nutrition - CBD, Immune Support, Protein! Join our subscription service for a monthly discount! Use code StHealthy at Peax to get your Sissy Stix and Gators! Join the HUNT HARVEST HEALTH Locals community with Dr. Hillary Join the GRITTYSTHEALTHY Locals community and SUBSCRIBE to see all the best GRITTY FILMS To download your FREE StHealthy Dehydration and Canning Guide go here... Burch Barrel is the funnest way to grill this summer! Use code STHEALTHY at checkout. Made with Meat is our favorite food processing equipment! Check them out! 10% OFF Sheep Feet Orthotics - Visit sheepfeethoutdoors.com and use code STHEALTHY10 HeatPraxia in CDA - Use the code STHEALTHYHUNTER and bring a friend for FREE and pay 45$ for your first visit. Also make sure to sign up for their email list to get $50 off any membership! To schedule with Dr. Hillary visit her Montana clinic, Elevate Health. Follow us on Instagram @huntharvesthealth Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
LUKE RUFFNER ROBINSON from https://www.montanafruittrees.com/ (Montana Fruit Trees) An aspiring architect, Luke interned on a farm in Portugal to design a bathroom and became fascinated by the farm's ability to mimic nutrient and energy cycling in forests. Luke withdrew his architecture plans and began research in Systems Ecology. Luke holds an MS in Systems Ecology from the University of Montana and a BA in drawing and drafting. Golden Seeds from Luke: "Actually that was what got me really interested in, I call it the systems based approach to growing food, you know, which I think, or get organic can fall into that permaculture, regenerative, agriculture. I mean, there's all these words, but I think, I think anytime you're using a systems based approach, I think that's really, when you start to see benefit in productivity, in all of these different properties that can emerge from the system beneficially, I think." "I want to just tell what any of your listeners that might be, that might, that they're listening to what I was saying about specifically watering towards the end of the year. You do want to give them one, all the trees you'll cut them off. You'll cut the water off. I mean, in our climate in August, but then towards maybe after leaf drop, give them a final drink to get them through the winter" Resources Luke referenceHoward T. Odum https://www.emergysociety.com/howard-t-odum/ (Emergy Society)https://wwoof.net/ (WWOOF Worldwide Opportunities on Organic Farms)https://oikostreecrops.com/ (Oikos Tree Crops) https://www.gardenfit.fit/ (GardenFit on PBS)https://roguehoe.com/ (Rogue Hoe Tools) https://www.montanafruittrees.com/ Let's take a minute to thank our sponsors and affiliate linksWanna donate to the show! You can https://www.buymeacoffee.com/vlnjczo ("buy me a cup of coffee") where your https://www.buymeacoffee.com/vlnjczo (donation) goes directly to support the https://www.buymeacoffee.com/vlnjczo (GREEN Organic Garden Podcast) to help pay for things like hosting the mp3 files or maintaining the website. [gallery ids="137595,137597,137596" type="rectangular"] https://growers.co/ (Growers & Co)https://mailchi.mp/7d7096fe8752/grow-live-with-patti-and-jackie-ask-question-here () Ask Your https://mailchi.mp/7d7096fe8752/grow-live-with-patti-and-jackie-ask-question-here (questions here)https://youtu.be/2S9tbLIIhy4 https://goodseedco.net/ (The Good Seed Company)Now Let's Get to the Root of Things! http://organicgardenerpodcast.us11.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=e3e16d6ddb7c0acd9e17348ed&id=b6a8f6bd31&e=e16e7400c4 () We'd love if you'd join http://organicgardenerpodcast.us11.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=e3e16d6ddb7c0acd9e17348ed&id=b6a8f6bd31&e=e16e7400c4 (Organic Gardener Podcast Facebook Community!)https://amzn.to/2PEYW6c () https://amzn.to/2PEYW6c (Get Your Copy of the The Organic Oasis Guidebook!)Twelve Lessons designed to help you create an earth friendly landscape, some deep garden beds full of nutrient rich healthy food or perhaps even develop a natural market farm. https://amzn.to/2PEYW6c (Get a copy on today printed in the USA from Amazon) https://amzn.to/2PEYW6c () The Organic Gardener Podcast is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com If you like what you heard on the Organic Gardener Podcast we'd love it if you'd give us review and hopefully a 5 star rating on iTunes so other gardeners can find us and listen to. Just click on the https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/organic-gardener-podcast/id962887645 (link here). and don't forget if you need help getting started check out our new https://mailchi.mp/5611bc3d7dfd/free-garden-course (Free Garden Course.com)https://mailchi.mp/5611bc3d7dfd/free-garden-course ()...
On episode 56, we travel beyond Glacier National Park to Big Hole National Battlefield and Missoula Montana. If you are buying an airplane ticket to get to Glacier National Park, consider spending some extra time in the state. This episode continues a series of extra adventures beyond GNP. This podcast is part of a multi-episode journey through Montana. It wraps up our review of travel options you can explore while visiting Montana. Big Hole National Battlefield Big Hole National Battlefield is about 5.5 hours south of Glacier National Park. On August 9, 1877 gun shots rained down from a hillside onto a sleeping camp of Nez Perce in the early morning hours. By the time the smoke cleared on August 10, almost 90 Nez Perce were dead along with 31 soldiers and volunteers. Big Hole National Battlefield was created to honor all who were there. On this episode, we discuss our stops for the final leg of our Montana journey: Big Hole National Battlefield The Historical Museum at Fort Missoula St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church Downtown Missoula and more On our Foodie Corner, we stop at Tamarack Brewing Company. Recommended Reading on Big Hole National Battlefield Nez Perce Summer 1877 by Jerome A. Greene The Last Indian War: The Nez Perce Story by Elliott West Thunder Rolling Down The Mountain: The Story of Chief Joseph and the Nez Perce by Agnieszka Jòzefina Biskup, Rusty Zimmerman Planning A Trip To Glacier National Park Be sure to catch our prior episodes on Glacier National Park. Episodes 50 through 52 covered planning a trip to GNP, and deep dives into the west and east sides of the park. Links are provided below: Episode 50: Planning A Trip To Glacier National Park Episode 51: Glacier National Park - The West Side Episode 52: Glacier National Park - The East Side Beyond Glacier National Park If you are in Montana to visit Glacier, why not add a few more days to soak up some more attractions? We share the things we did beyond Glacier National Park on our podcast. In addition to this episode, also check out our prior podcasts in the Beyond Glacier series Great Falls Montana Grant-Kohrs Ranch and Deer Lodge Montana Helena Montana Travel Resources And while preparing to visit the National Park, you can find links to a number of books to get you in the travel mindset on our Amazon Store Page - check out the section: Books That Inspire Travel We also invite you to visit our Amazon Storefront for more travel resources that we recommend - all of which, we personally use in our travels. GET YOUR TRAVEL GEAR HERE! - The Places Where We Go Amazon Storefront Thanks for you support! Visit Montana We hope this episode inspires you to consider a visit to Montana. Which activities will you plan on a trip to Montana? Drop us a line if you have an adventure in this city. The Places Where We Go Podcast: The Places Where We Go Podcast is released every other week in your favorite podcast app along as well as on our website at www.theplaceswherewego.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theplaceswherewego Twitter: https://twitter.com/theplaceswhere1 Email: Write to us at comments@theplaceswherewego.com We'll see you at the places where we go. Julie & Art AFFILIATE LINK DISCLOSURE: One small way you can support The Places Where We Go, is through our affiliate links. A simple click on these links helps us bring additional videos to you. It's kind of like tipping, but costs you nothing! Any items purchased that you navigate to via our links, provides a small (very small) contribution to our endeavor. Every little bit helps. Happy travels – and we hope to see you, at the places where we go.
Welcome Dylann Agnew from Missoula, MT. I met Dylann where she was working at her mom's Thyme Out Cafe, serving up delicious, fresh, prep meals. I had a coffee. In our conversation we talk about Missoula, hippies, cowboys, vegans, school, travel, road trip, skateboarding, and more. Dylann plans to take off sometime next year to work with WWOOF (Worldwide Opportunities of Organic Farming)- an organization which allows one to travel the world and experience a cultural and educational exchange through organic farming. Basically farmers around the world can sign up to participate and host WWOOFer's at their farms. Everybody wins. The farms get cheap labor and the experience of hosting, the WWOOFers learn much and experience more. Thank you, Dylann! Looking forward to following your Irish WWOOF!
Episode 39: Dr. Dr. Hayley Miller of Mountain States Diabetes - Missoula, MTDr. Miller is a self proclaimed "diabetes nerd" as well as an incredible physician! Practicing internal medicine with a focus on diabetic care, you'll learn that the best question in terms of her coverage area is, "Where is she NOT licensed!" In her interview she not only goes into her practice that spans multiple states, she shares about her own history of having diabetes and how that constantly fuels her passion to care for others with the same diagnosis. This is My DPC Story, a podcast about the doctors doing direct primary care and direct specialty care.Find it on all major podcast platforms!-> Sign up HERE for Dr. Lauren Hedde's FREE fireside chat on JUNE 9th! Have a question you want Dr. Hedde to answer? Please leave your questions here @ our speakpipe!->Be a My DPC Story INSIDER! Head over to mydpcstory.com today and sign up for our INSIDER NEWSLETTER!For more information on this episode and much more, please visit mydpcstory.com.Also, for up to date information on DPC, visit DPCnews.com!The Hint operating system securely handles and automates member enrollment, employer plan administration, eligibility management, billing, invoicing, payments, collections, and more! Discover Hint today!Support the show (https://www.paypal.com/donate?hosted_button_id=U8K8HM52SPQ38)
On this episode of the Paranormal Portal Podcast, Don and I discuss our recent investigation at Coloma Ghost Town in Montana. On July 10th, Don and I traveled to Coloma Ghost Town on the outskirts of Missoula Montana to investigate. We were joined by 3 listeners of the show and had an magical time with some incredible EVP evidence along with some amazing responses on other Instrumental Trans Communication (ITC) devices. We play clips from our investigation and discuss them on today's podcast. Join us as we discuss this and so much more! Enter the Paranormal Portal...if you dare! If you like what you hear, please subscribe and if you have a story of your own, and would like to be a guest on the show, please email us at paranormalportalradio@gmail.com! Our podcast is released weekly on Sunday! If you enjoy the podcast, please leave us a review to help others find the Paranormal Portal! Facebook: facebook.com/paranormalportalradio YouTube: youtube.com/paranormalportal Twitter: twitter.com/paranormalportl