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Addicted to the Mouse: Planning Disney World, Disneyland, and All Things Disney
On today's Disney Podcast, we are taking you with us to Epcot's Flower & Garden Festival 2026 for opening week. We spent two afternoons here enjoying everything this spring time festival has to offer, from food and drinks to topiaries and merch. Come with us as we try some amazing dishes and figure out what our favorites were from this year's Flower and Garden Festival. Enjoy! This episode is sponsored by Fantastical Vacations. For free concierge vacation planning, specializing in Disney and Universal Vacations, visit https://www.fantasticalvacations.com We would love you to join us on Patreon! Thanks so much for supporting the show. We also have Addicted to the Mouse Merchandise! You can check it out at https://addictedtothemerch.com Thanks so much for listening! If you like what you hear, please subscribe and catch us every Sunday for the podcast. Join us every Sunday and Wednesday evening as we take you to Walt Disney World, Disneyland, on Disney Cruise Line, Universal Studios and everywhere in between! We can be found at www.addictedtothemouse.com and be reached at danandleslie@addictedtothemouse.com Please also connect with us here: Patreon – https://www.patreon.com/addictedtothemouse Youtube – https://www.youtube.com/@AddictedtotheMouse Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/AddictedtotheMouse/ Instagram – https://instagram.com/addictedtothemouse/ The post 2026 EPCOT Flower & Garden Festival – Food, Merch, and More | On the Go appeared first on Addicted to the Mouse.
More On tonight's Aztecs GameSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Week 18 Brings Win or go home scenarios, More On the Final Week of the NFL Season, Ben Strober on the Surging Wizards
In the final hour of the show; --More On the Lamar Jackson to the Dolphins trade rumors. - Which 5 Dolphin players would you keep from this 2025 roster? - Final You're Dead To Me for 2025
Thank you Neurodivergent Hodgepodge, P. J. Schuster, JN, Karen Andrews, Karen C-Collector of Books
SDSU Begins Their Final MWC Reg Season Tonight Vs Air Force. More On the Padres Non activity This Off Season.
SDSU Begins Their Final MWC Reg Season Tonight Vs Air Force. More On the Padres Non activity This Off Season.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
More On the Padres. Jims Backpage.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
More On the Padres Ownership Situation. Is Tonight A Must Win For SDSU Basketball?
More On the Padres Ownership Situation. Is Tonight A Must Win For SDSU Basketball?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
WhoBarry Owens, General Manager of Treetops, MichiganRecorded onJune 13, 2025About TreetopsClick here for a mountain stats overviewOwned by: Treetops Acquisition Company LLCLocated in: Gaylord, MichiganYear founded: 1954Pass affiliations: Indy Pass, Indy+ Pass – 2 daysClosest neighboring ski areas: Otsego (:07), Boyne Mountain (:34), Hanson Hills (:39), Shanty Creek (:51), The Highlands (:58), Nub's Nob (1:00)Base elevation: 1,110 feetSummit elevation: 1,333 feetVertical drop: 223 feetSkiable acres: 80Average annual snowfall: 140 inchesTrail count: 25 (30% beginner, 40% intermediate, 30% advanced)Lift count: 5 (3 triples, 2 carpets – view Lift Blog's inventory of Treetops' lift fleet)Why I interviewed himThe first 10 ski areas I ever skied, in order, were:* Mott Mountain, Michigan* Apple Mountain, Michigan* Snow Snake, Michigan* Caberfae, Michigan* Crystal Mountain, Michigan* Nub's Nob, Michigan* Skyline, Michigan* Treetops, Michigan* Sugar Loaf, Michigan* Shanty Creek – Schuss Mountain, MichiganAnd here are the first 10 ski areas I ever skied that are still open, with anything that didn't make it crossed out:* Mott Mountain, Michigan* Apple Mountain, Michigan* Snow Snake, Michigan* Caberfae, Michigan* Crystal Mountain, Michigan* Nub's Nob, Michigan* Skyline, Michigan* Treetops, Michigan* Sugar Loaf, Michigan* Shanty Creek – Schuss Mountain, Michigan* Shanty Creek – Summit, Michigan* Boyne Mountain, Michigan* Searchmont, Ontario* Nebraski, Nebraska* Copper Mountain, Colorado* Keystone, ColoradoSix of my first 16. Poof. That's a failure rate of 37.5 percent. I'm no statistician, but I'd categorize that as “not good.”Now, there's some nuance to this list. I skied all of these between 1992 and 1995. Most had faded officially or functionally by 2000, around the time that America's Great Ski Area Die-Off concluded (Summit lasted until around Covid, and could still re-open, resort officials tell me). Their causes of death are varied, some combination, usually, of incompetence, indifference, and failure to adapt. To climate change, yes, but more of the cultural kind of adaptation than the environmental sort.The first dozen ski areas on this list are tightly bunched, geographically, in the upper half of Michigan's Lower Peninsula. They draw from the same general population centers and suffer from the same stunted Midwest verticals. None are naturally or automatically great ski areas. None are or were particularly remote or tricky to access, and most sit alongside or near a major state or federal highway. And they (mostly) all benefit from the same Lake Michigan lake-effect snow machine, the output of which appears to be increasing as the Great Lakes freeze more slowly and less often (cold air flowing over warm water = lake-effect snow).Had you presented this list of a dozen Michigan ski areas to me in 1995 and said, “five of these will drop dead in the next 30 years,” I would not have chosen those five, necessarily, to fail. These weren't ropetow backwaters. All but Apple had chairlifts (and they soon installed one), and most sat close to cities or were attached to a larger resort. Sugar Loaf, in particular, was one of Michigan's better ski areas, with five chairlifts and the largest in-state vertical drop on this list.My guess for most-likely-to-die probably would have been Treetops, especially if you'd told me that then-private Otsego ski area, right next door and with twice its neighbor's skiable acreage, vertical drop, and number of chairlifts, would eventually open to the public. Especially if you'd told me that Boyne Mountain, the monster down the road, would continue to expand its lodging and village, and would add a Treetops-sized cluster of greens to its ferocious ridge of blacks. Especially if you'd told me that Treetops' trail footprint, never substantial, would remain more or less the same size 30 years later. In fact, just about every surviving Michigan ski area on that list - Crystal, Nub's, Caberfae, Shanty Schuss - greatly expanded its terrain footprint. Except Treetops.But here we are, in the future, and I just skied Treetops 10 months ago with my 8-year-old son. It was, in some ways, more or less as I'd left it on my last visit, in 1995: small vert, small trail network, a slightly confusing parking situation, no chairlift restraint bars. A few improvements were obvious: the beginner ropetows had made way for a carpet, the last double chair had been upgraded to a triple, terrain park features dotted the east side, and a dozen or so glades and short steep shots had been hacked from the woods of the legacy trail footprint.That's all nice. But what was not obvious to me was this: why, and how, does Treetops the ski area still exist? Sugar Loaf was a better ski area. Apple Mountain was closer to large population centers. Summit was attached to ski-in-ski-out accommodations and shared a lift ticket with the larger Schuss mountain a couple miles away. Was modern Treetops some sort of money-losing ski area hobby horse for whomever owned the larger resort, which is better known for its five golf courses? Was it just an amenity to keep the second homeowners who mostly lived in Southeast Michigan invested year-round? Had the ski area cemented itself as the kind of high-volume schoolkids training ground that explained the resilience of ski areas in metro Detroit, Minneapolis, and Milwaukee?There is never, or rarely, one easy or obvious explanation for why similar businesses thrive or fail. This is why I resist pinning the numerical decline in America's ski area inventory solely to climate change. We may have fewer ski areas in America than we had in 1995, but we have a lot more good ski areas now than we did 30 years ago (and, as I wrote in March, a lot more overall ski terrain). Yes, Skyline, 40 minutes south of Treetops, failed because it never installed snowmaking, but that is only part of the sentence. Skyline failed because it never installed snowmaking while its competitors aggressively expanded and continually updated their snowmaking systems, raising the floor on the minimal ski experience acceptable to consumers. That takes us back to culture. What do you reckon has changed more over the past 30 to 40 years: America's weather patterns, or its culture? For anyone who remembers ashtrays at McDonald's or who rode in the bed of a pickup truck from Michigan to Illinois or who ran feral and unsupervised outdoors from toddlerhood or who somehow fumbled through this vast world without the internet or a Pet Rectangle or their evil offspring social media, the answer seems obvious. The weather feels a little different. Our culture feels airlifted from another planet. Americans accepted things 30 years ago that would seem outrageous today – like smoking adjacent to a children's play area ornamented with a demented smiling clown. But this applies to skiing as well. My Treetops day in 1995 was memorably horrible, the snow groomed but fossilized, unturnable. A few weeks earlier, I'd skied Skyline on perhaps a three-inch base, grass poking through the trails. Modern skiers, armed with the internet and its Hubble connection to every ski area on the planet, would not accept either set of conditions today. But one of those ski areas adapted and the other did not. That's the “why” of Treetops survival. It was the “how” that I needed Barry Owens to help me understand.What we talked aboutLast winter's ice storm – “it provides great insight into human character when you go through that stuff”; record snowfall (204 inches!) to chase the worst winter ever; the Lake Michigan snowbelt; a golf resort with a ski area attached; building a ski culture when “we didn't have enough people dedicated to ski… and it showed”; competing with nearby ski areas many times Treetops' size “we don't shy away from… who we are and what we are”; what happened when next-door-neighbor Otsego Resort switched from a private to a public model in 2017 – “neither one of us is going to get rich seeing who can get the most $15 lift tickets on a Wednesday”; I attempt to talk about golf and why Michigan is a golf mecca; moving on from something you've spent decades building; Treetops' rough financial period and why Owens initially turned down the GM job; how Owens convinced ownership not to close the ski area; fixing a “can't-do staff” by “doing things that created the freedom to be able to act”; Treetops' strange 2014 bankruptcy and rebuilding from there; “right now we're happy” with the lift fleet; how much it would cost to retrofit Treetops' lifts with restraint bars; timeline for potential ski expansion at Treetops; bargain season passes (as low as $125); and Indy Pass' network power.What I got wrong* I said “Gaylord County,” but the city of Gaylord is in Otsego County.* I said that Boyne Resorts, operator of 11 ski areas, also runs “10 or 11 golf resorts.” The company operates 14 golf courses.* I said that Michigan had a “very good” road network and that there was “not a lot of traffic,” and if you live there, you're reaction is probably, “you're dumb.” What I meant by “very good road network” is this: compared to most ski regions, which have, um, mountains, Michigan's bumplets sit more or less directly alongside the state's straight, flat, almost perfectly gridded highway network. Also, the “not a lot of traffic” thing does not apply to special situations like, say, northbound I-75 on a July Friday evening.* I said that Crystal, Nub's, Caberfae, and Shanty Creek were “close” – while they're not necessarily all close to one another, they are all roughly equidistant for folks coming to them from downstate.* I said that Treetops was “the fifth or sixth place I ever skied at,” but upon further review, it was number eight (which is reflected in the list above).Podcast NotesOn the ice stormAn ice storm hammered Northern Michigan in late March of this year:On the lightning strike on Treetops' golf courseOn the Midwest's terrible 2023-24 ski seasonSkier visits cratered in the Midwest during the 2023-24 ski season, the region's worst on record from a snowfall point of view. Weather - and skier visits - settled back into normal ranges last winter:This is a bit hard to see with any sort of precision, but this 10-year chart gives a nice sense of just how abnormal 2023-24 was for the Midwest:On Michigan's ski areasMichigan is home to 44 active ski areas - more than any state other than New York. Many of them are quite small, operate sporadically, and run only surface lifts, but Treetops is close to a bunch of the better lift-served outfits, including Boyne Mountain, Nub's Nob, and The Highlands (the UP ski areas may as well be in another state). It helps Treetops that so many of the state's ski areas have also joined Indy Pass:On Otsego ResortFor decades - I'm not certain how long, exactly - Otsego Resort, right next door to Treetops and with roughly double the vertical drop and skiable acreage, was private. In 2017, the bump opened to the public, considerably amping up competition. Complicating the matter further, Otsego sits a bit closer to Michigan's Main Street - I-75 - than Treetops.On Snow OperatingOwens mentioned working with “TBL” – he was referring to Terrain Based Learning, Snow Partners' learn-to-ski program. That company also runs the Snow Cloud operating system that Owens refers to at the end.On Treetops' rough period I quoted this Detroit Business News article at length in the interview. It goes deep on Treetops' precarious early 2000s history and the resort's broken employee culture at the time.On people being nice at ski areasYeah I'm super into this:On the hedgehog conceptOwens mentions “the hedgehog concept,” which I wasn't familiar with. It sounded like a business-book thing, and it is, adapted by author Jim Collins for his book Good to Great and described in this way on his website:The Hedgehog Concept is developed in the book Good to Great. A simple, crystalline concept that flows from deep understanding about the intersection of three circles: 1) what you are deeply passionate about, 2) what you can be the best in the world at, and 3) what best drives your economic or resource engine. Transformations from good to great come about by a series of good decisions made consistently with a Hedgehog Concept, supremely well executed, accumulating one upon another, over a long period of time.More:On safety-bar requirements in New York and New EnglandThis is kind of funny…That's my 8-year-old son, who's skied in a dozen states, taking his first ride on a lift with no safety bar, at Treetops last December. Why such machines still exist in 2025, I have no idea - this lift rises about 30 feet off the ground. In the East, all chairlifts are equipped with bars, and state law mandates their use in New York, Massachusetts, and Vermont (and perhaps elsewhere). I don't advocate for rider mandates, but I do think all chairlifts ought to have bars available for those who want them. Owens and I discuss the resort's plans to retrofit Treetops' three chairlifts - CTEC machines installed between 1984 and 1995 - with bars. The cost would be roughly $250,000. That's a significant number, but probably a lot less than the figure if, say, someone has a heart attack or seizure on the lift, falls off, then sues the resort. Besides, as Owens points out, chairlifts must be equipped with restraint bars for summer use, which would open new revenue streams. Why are bars required for summer activities, but not winter? It's a strange anachronism, unique among the ski world to America.On “Joe from SMI”I mentioned “Joe from SMI” offhand. I was referring to SMI Snowmakers President Joe VanderKelen, who appeared on the podcast back in 2022:On potential expansion Owens discusses a potential expansion looker's left of Chair 1, which would restore lost terrain and built upon that. This 1988 trailmap shows a couple of the trails that Treetops eliminated to make way for its current top-to-bottom access road (trails 1 through 4):The Storm explores the world of lift-served skiing year-round. Join us. Get full access to The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast at www.stormskiing.com/subscribe
More On the NBA Scandal. Jims Backpage.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
More On the NBA Scandal. Jims Backpage.
The Wrap. More On the NBA Returning To NBC And Padres Manager Talk.
More On the Padres And NBA Opening Night. Jims Backpage.
MORE ON 4-STAR LB COMMIT JACOB CURRY AND A NEW OFFER AT WIDE RECEIVER.
More On the Padres And Their Chances At Winning The NL West. More Reaction To MNF.
The Wrap. More On the Padres And NFL Week 1.
Dr. Gerald Horne on Trump's D.C Take Over & More On today's podcast Dr. Gerald Horne and Dominique discuss “Black August”, Trump's D.C takeover, Gaza,and Trump's bullying of South Africa. As well as Shedeur Sanders first pre-season game.Dr. Horne is the author of more than thirty books and one hundred scholarly articles and reviews. Dr. Horne received his Ph.D. in history from Columbia University and his J.D. from the University of California, Berkeley and his B.A. from Princeton University.https://www.instagram.com/diprimaradio/?utm_source=ig_embed&ig_rid=50dea908-0941-43ca-98f9-3d746f7c47c9
Our Padres Insider From The UT Kevin Acee Joins Us LIVE From St Louis For Padres Cards Game 2, And Gives Us The Latest Deadline rumors. More On the Deadline.
On this week's show:Legendary Radio Host Michael Medved on The American Miracle; The Cultural Moments of Karen Read and Blake Lively; Time For Another Fiery But Mostly Peaceful Summer with ICE Riots; MORE On this week's show:Karen Read Defense is Collapsing; #FreePalestine is the New Allahu Akbar and Media is Ignoring It; FBI Had a Secret "Prohibited Access" System; Pride Month Isn't Landing Like It Used To; Democrats Sending Out Morbidly Obese Woman to Attract Straight Men; MORETHE ANGELA BOX SHOW'S APPLE, SPOTIFY, and IHEART RADIOiHeart: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/269-the-angela-box-show-88287019/Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-angela-box-show/id1591500325Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1J5hSQA0LxkyZLKq9jdsbf?si=203fa05c97204ea8Rumble: https://rumble.com/AngelaBoxShowBitchute: https://www.bitchute.com/AngelaBoxShowYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@AngelaBoxShowTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@theangelaboxshowAll content: AngelasSoapBox.comSocials:Twitter/Instagram: @theboxthatroxxFacebook: @AngelaBoxShowTruth Social: @AngelaBox
Brewers Padres Game 1. More On the NBA Finals. Jims Backpage.
More On the Padres And If Byrd Will Stay Or Go. Brents Backpage.
More On the Padres. Jims Backpage Could 100 Men Beat A Gorilla In A Fight ? Lol
More On the Padres. We Have A Show 1st For The Wrap. Team Jon Vs Team Jim.
More On the Padres. The Wrap. Team Jon Vs Team Jim.
More On the News That Profar Has Been Suspended. The Wrap. Team Jon Vs Team Jim
More On the Padres Win Yesterday And We Preview Tonights Game. Jake Zivin, MLS Season Pass Joins the Guys To Talk SDFC VS LAFC Tomorrow Night At Snapdragon.
More On the Padres. Jims Backpage.
We talk More On the Aztecs Big Win Last Night. Jims Backpage.
More On the Padres And Super Bowl 59
Join me for my next live video in the app* Biden Signs ‘First Social Security Expansion in Decades' as GOP Eyes Cuts: Social Security expansion is the “bipartisan solution that most Americans want,” said one group, “even though some on Capitol Hill have proposed to slash benefits.” [More]* On the anniversary of the Jan 6 terrorist coup attempt of the USA, we certify the coup leader: The insurrection on Jan 6, 2021, was an attempted coup via a terrorist attack on the USA. Unfortunately, the U.S. gullibly elected the leader of the coup. [More]* My answer to my daughter's concern that immigrants have more hope in America than born Americans: My daughter made a statement that surprised all the immigrants at Christmas dinner in our home. Here is my answer to her statement that immigrants are too hopeful about America. [More] To hear more, visit egberto.substack.com
Today we will be toxic traits and relationship building. The word toxic is tossed around quite a bit in connection pertaining to other people but have you ever considered the toxic connections you may have when it comes to thinking patterns and behaviors. The reality of the matter is that relationships are just a reflection of what's happening within the people in the relationship. Let's dive in to how to release those toxic traits in order establish thriving relationships. LifeWork Based on this session, set aside at least 10 minutes, and begin to reflect on and consider the following: 1. Complete this sentence, if I am being honest I practice the toxic trait of ____. Fill in the blank. Remember toxicity is poisonous in nature in other words it is a habit or thinking pattern that goes against what one is seeking to build. 2. Now, consider how this toxic trait tends to show up in relationships? How does it disrupt the building of healthy strong bonds? 3. Think about at least one relationship (and this can even be the relationship you have with yourself). What are some toxic traits that tend to sabotage what you hope can be built? Is is the habit of saying one thing yet doing another? How often do you do and says things that take away from what you genuinely desire? Remember the power of agreement and the importance of clarity. Be sure to journal your experience. And feel free to share that experience in the comment section. About LifeClub The Podcast LifeClub w/ Tashima Jones is a feel-good podcast. It can be seen as a mini coaching sessionwith Tashima, complete with LifeWork and action steps to take after the show. With listeners in over 10 countries across 6 continents, LifeClub the Podcast focuses on personal development and delivering practical tips & tools on building inner-wealth. About Tashima Jones Tashima Jones is an author, life coach, brand consultant, and founder of Connects (a philanthropic endeavor). Her debut book, Being Broke Made Me Rich, received reviews from the co-author of the New York Times best seller, The Millionaire Next Door, who happened to be her professor. As a Life Coach, she supports women who are ready to shift from survival mode to inner-wealth based living. Tashima holds a bachelor's degree in business & marketing, and studied psychology on a master's level but her greatest classroom has been personal life experience. She uses both her personal life (including her lowest moment after the degree, house, luxury car, and platinum wedding ring), and professional experience (in tech, wealth management marketing, luxury brand buying, real estate, and radio) to organically coach those who are desire authentic change in their lives. More On: https://www.tashimajones.com/coaching https://instagram.com/tashimajonesmedia https://www.youtube.com/tashimajonesmedia Podcast Available On: TashimaJones.Com + YouTube + iHeart + iTunes + Spotify + Audible This content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Voice/Content © Tashima Jones/Tashima Jones Media LLC | Music "Consideration".
Happy Friday everyone!Tune in to episode 28 and let's kickoff June with: Top 10 on Being Young, Wild and WorkingIn this episode, we chat with our lovely summer interns Lilah and Ashley and unpack on topics like: sharing your life at work, dressing the professional part, social event etiquette and the scoop on in-office romances, nailing the world of networking, navigating stress interviews, showcasing your skills and building that authentic resume on the journey of being the professional you!We'll be here - every Friday - celebrating with you!Connect with us @ friday-feels.co▶ Podcast Chapters00:55 Welcome Summer Interns Lilah & Ashley!02:45 Dress and Express: The professional you!06:20 Less is More: On sharing your life at work…08:28 Speak up! Maxing the summer vibes and management styles12:37 Haywire or Having fun? That office social etiquette…17:36 On matters of the heart: The Office romance - Yay or Nay?21:15 Stress Interviews: Hard-asses and Proving your value28:38 Advice on Starting out …32:19 Strengths for Success: Be open and Resilient33:30 Winning connections authentically42:19 Flying it Solo in the whole new world of networking50:53 Highlighting your Skillset55:28 The Resume: Your Digital Presence and on using AI01:00:43 Final Thoughts, Next week's Top 10 and Farewell
The industry is abuzz with changes, and one of the biggest realignments has happened down in Houston, TX, where Joey Savage (formerly of Glaxon) has started his own consulting firm, Savage Nutra. Joey Savage Launches Savage Nutra Consulting This podcast was recorded at the Arnold Sports Festival in early March 2024. At the time of recording, Joey had already announced his venture into consulting with Savage Nutra, so Mike and Ben dig deeper to see what he really wants to work on in his perfect world. The conversation is as wild and interesting as you'd think it would be, with a lot of discussion on novel probiotics, performance, the perfect stool, and crashing rockets into the firmament where water bears survive thanks to the carbohydrate trehalose. Joey's not interested in making pre-workout after pre-workout, but if you've got an epic idea for him to work on, then he's all ears. Only the most special projects will get the official Savage Nutra collab label, though. Note: Since recording this podcast, there have been updates to Joey's employment situation, which are discussed in a disclaimer in the beginning of the show. https://blog.priceplow.com/podcast/joey-savage-nutra-129 Video: Mike, Ben, and Joey at the 2024 Arnold Sports Festival https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EAo1CBD5E4c (0:00) – Disclaimer – Joey is No Longer with Glaxon / Zero Day Nutrition (5:00) – Sponsored by Path Forward Formulator (5:45) – Interview With Joey Savage Begins (Savage Nutra Scoop) (7:00) – What About Glaxon? (7:45) – What Is Savage Nutra All About? Any Collabs (12:00) – Joey's 5-Year Plan: Beyond Sports Nutrition and Ideal Projects? (14:00) – Joey's Ideal Microbiome: The Human Trash Compactor (15:45) – More On the Microbiome (16:50) – Vulture Story Background and Vulture Power (19:00) – Joey's Passion: Lots of bacteria! (21:45) – Importance of Protecting Intellectual Property (23:00) – Hordenine's Legality (24:45) – Giving Back to the Industry (25:50) – Industry Ignorance (26:30) – How To Plan New Supplement Research (29:00) – Advantages of Probiotics and Real-World Precedents (30:00) – Next Research Step After Caco-2 (34:00) – Digital Biomarkers (35:40) – Cannabis and Melatonin (39:15) – BHB in beverages? (42:15) – Caffeine vs. BHB and BHB with Carbs? (49:30) – Tardigrades (53:45) – Carbs and electrolytes (56:45) – Potassium (1:00:35) – Potassium problems (1:03:15) – Fiber Fusion (1:07:00) – Fiber and psyllium husk (1:08:45) – Niacin and The Flush (1:14:00) – Niacin Pre-Workout and Reduced Performance (1:16:00) – Passing THC Tests? (1:20:15) – Cannabis enhancement supplement (1:23:30) – Microplastics (1:25:45) – Food source adaptation (1:28:00) – The state of the supplement industry (1:30:45) – A new generation of supplement industry leaders (1:35:00) – The regulatory battleground (1:41:30) – The danger of precedent Where to Find Joey Instagram: @SavageNutra LinkedIn:… Read more on the PricePlow Blog
More On the Padres. Our Padres Insider From The UT Kevin Acce Joins Us From Padres Spring Training. Jims Backpage.
More On the Padres. Our Padres Insider From The UT Kevin Acce Joins Us From Padres Spring Training. Jims Backpage.
More On the Padres Soto Dilemma. We Replay Our Talk With The New Aztec HC Sean Lewis. Jims Backpage.
More On the Padres Soto Dilemma. We Replay Our Talk With The New Aztec HC Sean Lewis. Jims Backpage.
More On the Padres Slim Postseason Chances. SDSU RB Kenan Christon Joins The Guys To Talk About Being Named Captain And Preview The Season Opener Vs Ohio. Jims Backpage.
More On the Padres Slim Postseason Chances. SDSU RB Kenan Christon Joins The Guys To Talk About Being Named Captain And Preview The Season Opener Vs Ohio. Jims Backpage.
In this episode:A different way to look at "farm to table"Where to start when analyzing your garden soilHow to start with the outliers when analyzing your soil (regardless if it's macronutrient or micronutrient or ph)How Agronomy--large agriculture farming--analyzes a soil testHow the example of vitamins added to a poor diet correlates to soil supplements added to unhealthy/dead soilHow this soil test doesn't record minerals in soil that are tied up, only ones that are available to plantsSigns of healthy, alive soilSigns of unhealthy soilWhy manure, humates, compost, sea minerals, and volcanic minerals are the best additions to most gardensWhy a book may not be your best resource when trying to learn about improving your soilHelpful, hands-on resources to learn more about soil healthTested results of using chicken manure as a soil amendmentThe most convenient animal poo to use as soil amendmentThe "More-On" principleThe importance of balance in your garden soilHow big should your garden be before you do a soil test?Best plan for testing the soil in raised bedsDoes healthy soil produce more nutrient-rich food?Is homegrown food genuinely superior to large-scale farming food?The value of bentonite clay to garden soilWhat Cation Exchange Capacity is and why every gardener should know about itWhy & how salt and clay add different value to your garden soilWhat humates are and how they improve cation exchange capacityWhere (and WHY) to get salt for you, your garden, and your livestock. Resources: Soil Test Kit Karson & I were geeking out over: https://bit.ly/3Nx2PXfBRAND NEW soil amendment Karson mentioned (use code SOULYRESTED): stay tuned... available soon right here.)The bulk size bag of salt I love (use code SOULYRESTED for 15% off anytime): https://bit.ly/3XCHJeo Follow Guest:on Instagram: https://instagram.com/redmondagricultureon YouTube: Redmond Agriculture https://www.youtube.com/@redmondagriculture2794website: https://redmondagriculture.com/ This Episode is Brought to you by:Redmond Salt is unrefined salt with over 60 trace minerals. It's the only salt I've used for many years. Check out my all-time favorite Redmond items and grab a SWEET discount here: https://soulyrested.com/salt/ Other Articles & Resources You Might Enjoy:Growing Seedlings for Profit (article)My 7-page Pantry Checklist (free download)My Poor Soil Results & What I Did About it (article)
This week we deep dive into some of the new comics that are on shelves now! Learn about Xanthe from Spirt World #1, Simon Kudranski's Something Epic,and Zeb Well's Amazing Spider-man. What Happened to Mary Jane!!Also we discuss Jason Aaron's Avengers Run, Kevin Smith interview with Men's Health, and Part 2 of our Power Rangers Lost Galaxy Review! Plus Robbie guest stars as a Firefighter Kitty. All This and More On this Weeks EpisodeCheck Out our YouTube Page for the Power Rangers Video
1 - 13 - 23 MORE ON 5 BONUS MINUTES AFTER DEATH by Maine's Coast 93.1
Gaming this Week: Ted Lasso, Iron Man, GTA VI, Halo & More On this episode Jacob, Ryan, and Nick discuss this week in gaming. Follow us on Twitter: @BuschLeagueGMNG. You can email us at BuschLeagueGames@gmail.com. You can also listen to this episode on all podcast platforms. If you like what you hear you can financially support the show at patreon.com/BuschLeagueGaming or you can buy some merch on our website. BuschLeagueGaming.com Thanks for watching! Busch League Gaming produces a weekly gaming podcast every Monday. Timecodes: 0:00 Intro 2:47 Thanks VGC 3:13 Ted Lasso in FIFA 23 4:54 New Iron Man Game 12:04 The Sims 4 Free to Play 16:48 Easy Come Easy Golf 18:16 Overwatch 2 26:12 Dunkey Becoming a Publisher 31:13 GTA VI Hack 37:38 Halo Infinite 52:46 PSVR2 57:34 Serious Questions with Ryan 1:02:45 What Have We Been Playing 1:10:17 Upcoming Game Releases 1:10:48 Housekeeping
More On the Presidents Trip To The Middle East. Plus The Latest On Governor Newsome And If He Could Be Getting Ready To Run In 2024.