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#65 - Join us for a wonderful conversation with Rev. Selena Fox on Nature spirituality and connecting with the magical aspects of herbs long associated with Samhain and Halloween.In this episode, Selena shares beautiful wisdom on plant allies of the season such as Mugwort in experiences of inner vision, Mullein when lighting ceremonial bonfires, and Rosemary for remembrance when honoring those who have passed. She offers insights into age-old Samhain rituals such as Turnip carving, the significance of Apple trees, honoring cycles, and the interconnectedness of all life. Selena also shares her inspiring experience of legacy in prairie restoration and building community across generations as the Circle Sanctuary celebrates its 50th anniversary this coming Samhain. Selena Fox is the Executive Director of Circle Sanctuary, Nature Preserve, a two-hundred acre Nature sanctuary located in the Driftless bioregion of southwestern Wisconsin. An EcoActivist for more than fifty years, Selena was among the organizers of events for the first Earth Day on April 22, 1970 and is the founder of Circle Cemetery, one of the first Green cemeteries in North America. Also known as Reverend Selena Fox, she is Senior Minister of Circle Sanctuary which has been serving Nature Spirituality practitioners worldwide since 1974. Selena writes and speaks on a variety of topics, including Celebrating the Seasons, Herbology, Pagan Ways, and Life Passages. She hosts the monthly podcast, Circle of Nature and shares rituals, chants, and teaching on social media.You can find Selena at: https://www.circlesanctuary.org/IG: https://www.instagram.com/selenafox/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SelenaFoxUpdatesTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@selenafxcircleYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/SelenaFoxFor more info visit Sara's website at: https://www.multidimensionalnature.com/ IG: https://www.instagram.com/multidimensional.nature/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/saraartemisia.ms/Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/plantspiritherbalismYoutube: https://www.youtube.com/@saraartemisiaTikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@multidimensional.naturePinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/multidimensionalnature/Etsy: https://www.plantspiritdesigns.comLearn how to communicate with plant consciousness in the free workshop on How to Learn Plant Language: https://www.learnplantlanguage.com/
Money used in Kevin de León's run for re-election raises eyebrows. We speak with correspondent Frank Stoltze. Orange County Supervisors met today amid calls for Andrew Do to resign. Progress on a plan to turn a former oil field into a nature preserve. Plus, more. Support The L.A. Report by donating at LAist.com/join and by visiting https://laist.com.Support the show: https://laist.com
Information Morning Moncton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)
A New Brunswick family is helping preserve an important seaside forest in memory of Austin Brown. Jeanne Armstrong spoke to Paula Noel with the Nature Conservancy of Canada about plans for the property in St. Martins.
Information Morning Saint John from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)
A New Brunswick family is helping preserve an important seaside forest in memory of Austin Brown. Jeanne Armstrong spoke to Paula Noel with the Nature Conservancy of Canada about plans for the property in St. Martins.
Information Morning Fredericton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)
A New Brunswick family is helping preserve an important seaside forest in memory of Austin Brown. Jeanne Armstrong spoke to Paula Noel with the Nature Conservancy of Canada about plans for the property in St. Martins.
Have you visited Plano's Oak Point Park and Nature Preserve? Plano's largest park is 800 acres. Trail lovers will enjoy the nearly eight miles of concrete trails and five miles of soft surface trails located along Rowlett Creek. Bring your own kayak, canoe or SUP and enjoy paddling around the park's pond. Zipline through the forest canopy and over the creek beds. Nature lovers will enjoy a day of bird watching and wildlife tours in this certified Audubon Cooperative sanctuary. The Nature and Retreat Center is the perfect venue for corporate meetings, special events and retreats. Kelley Crimmins joins Plano Mayor Summer Intern Alexa on a walk-and-talk through Oak Point Park in this bonus episode. Links in this episode Oak Point Park and Nature Preserve The Nature and Retreat Center Go Ape Zipline
Information Morning Moncton from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)
We hear what it took to turn private land into a nature preserve in Grande-Digue, before developers got a hold of it. CBC's Jonna Brewer spoke to Jean-Claude Gagnon, president of the Sentier Pluriel de Grande-Digue.
Information Morning Saint John from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)
We hear what it took to turn private land into a nature preserve in Grande-Digue, before developers got a hold of it. CBC's Jonna Brewer spoke to Jean-Claude Gagnon, president of the Sentier Pluriel de Grande-Digue.
We hear what it took to turn private land into a nature preserve in Grande-Digue, before developers got a hold of it. CBC's Jonna Brewer spoke to Jean-Claude Gagnon, president of the Sentier Pluriel de Grande-Digue.
History, Nature, and Community Impact at the Autrey Mill Nature Preserve, with Lizen Hayes, Executive Director (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 784) In this episode of North Fulton Business Radio, host John Ray interviews Lizen Hayes, the Executive Director of Autrey Mill Nature Preserve in Johns Creek. They discuss the history of the preserve, its unique […]
History, Nature, and Community Impact at the Autrey Mill Nature Preserve, with Lizen Hayes, Executive Director (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 784) In this episode of North Fulton Business Radio, host John Ray interviews Lizen Hayes, the Executive Director of Autrey Mill Nature Preserve in Johns Creek. They discuss the history of the preserve, its unique […]
Pre-order the Freaky Folklore Compendium https://eeriecast.com/freak Read our new wendigo horror novel https://eeriecast.com/lore Sign up for Eeriecast PLUS for bonus content and more https://eeriecast.com/plus Get our merch http://eeriecast.store/ SCARY STORIES TIMESTAMPS: 0:00 INTRO 0:39 I Work in a Haunted Press Office from Anonymous 5:39 Horror on the Preserve from Theo 15:04 No Normal Asylum from badbadger 30:56 The Creepy School from Marshall787 34:45 Working Late from rio 40:22 The Apparition Transfers Over from Walker11 55:31 Nightshift Nightmare from GamingWaffles Join my Discord! https://discord.gg/3YVN4twrD8 Follow the Unexplained Encounters podcast! https://pod.link/1152248491 Follow and review Tales from the Break Room on Spotify and Apple Podcasts! https://pod.link/1621075170 Follow us on Spotify! https://open.spotify.com/show/3mNZyXkaJPLwUwcjkz6Pv2 Follow and Review us on iTunes! https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/darkness-prevails-podcast-true-horror-stories/id1152248491 Submit Your Story Here: https://www.darkstories.org/ Subscribe on YouTube for More Stories! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh_VbMnoL4nuxX_3HYanJbA?sub_confirmation=1 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The Nature Trust of New Brunswick is opening its newest protected area. Starting Saturday, the Keiko and Errol Nature Preserve will be open to the public but getting there might be trickier than you think.
The Nature Trust of New Brunswick is opening its newest protected area. Starting Saturday, the Keiko and Errol Nature Preserve will be open to the public but getting there might be trickier than you think.
The Nature Trust of New Brunswick is opening its newest protected area. Starting Saturday, the Keiko and Errol Nature Preserve will be open to the public but getting there might be trickier than you think.
Dr. Nathan S. French A school field trip to Washington, D.C. is a formative rite of passage shared by many U.S. school students across the nation. Often, these are framed as “field trips.” Students may visit the White House, the U.S. Capitol Building, the Supreme Court, the Library of Congress, Declaration of Independence (housed in the National Archive), the National Museum of the American Indian, the National Museum of African American History and Culture, the Jefferson Memorial, Arlington National Cemetery, or the Smithsonian Museum – among others. For many students, this is the first time they will connect the histories of their textbooks to items, artifacts, and buildings that they can see and feel. For those arriving to Washington, D.C. by airplane or bus, the field trip might also seem like a road trip. Road trips, often involving movement across the U.S. from city-to-city and state-to-state are often framed as quintessential American experiences. Americans have taken road trips to follow their favorite bands, to move to universities and new jobs, to visit the hall of fame of their favorite professional or collegiate sport, or sites of family history. As Dr. Andrew Offenberger observes in our interview, road trips have helped American authors, like Kiowa poet N. Scott Momaday, make sense of their identities as Americans. What if, however, these field trips to Washington, D.C. and road trips across the country might amount to something else? What if we considered them to be pilgrimages? Would that change our understanding of them? For many Americans, the first word that comes to mind when they hear the word, “pilgrimage,” involves the pilgrims of Plymouth, a community of English Puritans who colonized territory in Massachusetts, at first through a treaty with the Wampanoag peoples, but eventually through their dispossession. For many American communities, the nature of pilgrimage remains a reminder of forced displacement, dispossession, and a loss of home and homeland. Pilgrimage, as a term, might also suggest a religious experience. There are multiple podcasts, blogs, and videos discussing the Camino de Santiago, a number of pilgrimage paths through northern Spain. Others might think of making a pilgrimage to the Christian, Jewish, or Muslim sacred spaces in Israel and Palestine often referred to as the “Holy Land” collectively – including the Temple Mount, the Dome of the Rock, and the Church of the Holy Sepulchre (among others). Mark Twain's Innocents Abroad, is a classic example of this experience. Some make pilgrimage to Salem, Massachusetts each October. Others even debate whether the Crusades were a holy war or pilgrimage. American experiences of pilgrimage have led to substantial transformations in our national history and to our constitutional rights. Pilgrimage, as a movement across state, national, or cultural boundaries, has often been used by Americans to help them make sense of who they are, where they came from, and what it means, to them, to be “an American.” The word, “pilgrimage,” traces its etymology from the French, pèlerinage and from the Latin, pelegrines, with a general meaning of going through the fields or across lands as a foreigner. As a category used by anthropologists and sociologists in the study of religion, “pilgrimage” is often used as a much broader term, studying anything ranging from visits to Japanese Shinto shrines, the Islamic pilgrimage of Hajj, “birthright” trips to Israel by American Jewish youth, and, yes, even trips to Graceland in Memphis, Tennessee – the home of Elvis Presley. Arnold van Gennep (1873-1957) defined pilgrimage as one of a number of rites of passage (i.e., a rite du passage) that involves pilgrims separating themselves from broader society, moving themselves into a place of transition, and then re-incorporating their transformed bodies and minds back into their home societies. That moment of transition, which van Gennep called “liminality,” was the moment when one would become something new – perhaps through initiation, ritual observation, or by pushing one's personal boundaries outside of one's ordinary experience. Clifford Geertz (1926-2006), a contemporary of Turner, argued that a pilgrimage helps us to provide a story within which we are able to orient ourselves in the world. Consider, for example, the role that a trip to Arlington National Cemetery or the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier plays in a visit by a high school class to Washington, D.C. If framed and studied as a pilgrimage, Geertz's theory would suggest that a visit to these sites can be formative to an American's understanding of national history and, perhaps just as importantly, the visit will reinforce for Americans the importance of national service and remembrance of those who died in service to the defense of the United States. When we return from those school field trips to Washington, D.C., then, we do so with a new sense of who we are and where we fit into our shared American history. Among the many examples that we could cite from American history, two pilgrimages in particular – those of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X – provide instructive examples. Held three years after the unanimous U.S. Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board of Education, the 1957 “Prayer Pilgrimage for Freedom,” led by Dr. King brought together thousands in order to, as he described it, “call upon all who love justice and dignity and liberty, who love their country, and who love mankind …. [to] renew our strength, communicate our unity, and rededicate our efforts, firmly but peaceably, to the attainment of freedom.” Posters for the event promised that it would “arouse the conscience of the nation.” Drawing upon themes from the Christian New Testament, including those related to agape – a love of one's friends and enemies – King's speech at the “Prayer Pilgrimage” brought national attention to his civil rights movement and established an essential foundation for his return to Washington, D.C. and his “I Have a Dream Speech,” six years later. In April 1964, Malcolm X departed to observe the Muslim pilgrimage ritual of Hajj in the city of Mecca in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Hajj is an obligation upon all Muslims, across the globe, and involves rituals meant to remind them of their responsibilities to God, to their fellow Muslims, and of their relationship to Ibrahim and Ismail (i.e., Abraham and Ishamel) as found in the Qur'an. Before his trip, Malcolm X had expressed skepticism about building broader ties to American civil rights groups. His experience on Hajj, he wrote, was transformational. "The holy city of Mecca had been the first time I had ever stood before the creator of all and felt like a complete human being,” he wrote, “People were hugging, they were embracing, they were of all complexions …. The feeling hit me that there really wasn't what he called a color problem, a conflict between racial identities here." His experience on Hajj was transformative. The result? Upon return to the United States, Malcolm X pledged to work with anyone – regardless of faith and race – who would work to change civil rights in the United States. His experiences continue to resonate with Americans. These are but two stories that contribute to American pilgrimage experiences. Today, Americans go on pilgrimages to the Ganges in India, to Masada in Israel, to Mecca in Saudi Arabia, and to Bethlehem in Palestine, and to cities along the Trail of Tears and along the migration of the Latter-Day Saints church westward. Yet, they also go on pilgrimages and road trips to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, to the baseball hall of fame in Cooperstown, to the national parks, and to sites of family and community importance. In these travels, they step outside of the ordinary and, in encountering the diversities of the U.S., sometimes experience the extraordinary changing themselves, and the country, in the process. * * * Questions for Class Discussion What is a “pilgrimage”? What is a road trip? Are they similar? Different? Why? Must a pilgrimage only be religious or spiritual? Why or why not? How has movement – from city to city, or place to place, or around the world – changed U.S. history and the self-understanding of Americans? What if those movements had never occurred? How would the U.S. be different? Have you been on a pilgrimage? Have members of your family? How has it changed your sense of self? How did it change that of your family members? If you were to design a pilgrimage, what would it be? Where would it take place? Would it involve special rituals or types of dress? Why? What would the purpose of your pilgrimage be? How do other communities understand their pilgrimages? Do other cultures have “road trips” like the United States? Additional Sources: Ohio History and Pilgrimage Fort Ancient Earthworks & Nature Preserve, Ohio History Connection (link). National Geographic Society, “Intriguing Interactions [Hopewell],” Grades 9-12 (link) Documentary Podcasts & Films “In the Light of Reverence,” 2001 (link) An examination of Lakota, Hopi, and Wintu ties to and continued usages of their homelands and a question of how movement through land may be considered sacred by some and profane by others. Melvin Bragg, “Medieval Pilgrimage,” BBC: In our Time, February 2021 (link) Bruce Feiler: Sacred Journeys (Pilgrimage). PBS Films (link) along with educator resources (link). The American Pilgrimage Project. Berkley Center, Georgetown University (link). Arranged by StoryCorps, a collection of video and audio interviews with Americans of diverse backgrounds discussing their religious and spiritual identities and their intersections with American life. Dave Whitson, “The Camino Podcast,” (link) on Spotify (link), Apple (link) A collection of interviews with those of varying faiths and spiritualities discussing pilgrimage experiences. Popular Media & Websites “Dreamland: American Travelers to the Holy Land in the 19th Century,” Shapell (link) A curated digital museum gallery cataloguing American experiences of pilgrimage to Jerusalem, Israel, and Palestine. LaPier, Rosalyn R. “How Standing Rock Became a Site of Pilgrimage.” The Conversation, December 7, 2016 (link). Talamo, Lex. Pilgrimage for the Soul. South Dakota Magazine, May/June 2019. (link). Books Grades K-6 Murdoch, Catherine Gilbert. The Book of Boy. New York: Harper Collins, 2020 (link). Wolk, Lauren. Beyond the Bright Sea. New York: Puffin Books, 2018 (link). Grades 7-12 Chaucer, Geoffrey. The Canterbury Tales. New York: Penguin Books, 2003 (link). Malcolm X. The Autobiography of Malcolm X: As Told to Alex Haley. New York: Ballantine Books, 1992 (link). Melville, Herman. Clarel: A Poem and Pilgrimage in the Holy Land. New York: Library of America, n.d. (link). Murray, Pauli. Song in a Weary Throat: Memoir of an American Pilgrimage. New York: Liveright, 1987 (link). Reader, Ian. Pilgrimage: A Very Short Introduction. New York: Oxford University Press, 2015 (link). Twain, Mark. The Innocents Abroad. New York: Modern Library, 2003 (link). Scholarship Bell, Catherine. Ritual Theory, Ritual Practice. New York: Oxford University Press, 2009. Bloechl, Jeffrey, and André Brouillette, eds. Pilgrimage as Spiritual Practice: A Handbook for Teachers, Wayfarers, and Guides. Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 2022. Frey, Nancy Louise Louise. Pilgrim Stories: On and Off the Road to Santiago, Journeys Along an Ancient Way in Modern Spain. First Edition. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998. Lévi-Strauss, Claude Patterson, Sara M., “Traveling Zions: Pilgrimage in Modern Mormonism,” in Pioneers in the Attic: Place and Memory along the Mormon Trail. New York: Oxford University Press, 2020 (link). Pazos, Antón. Redefining Pilgrimage: New Perspectives on Historical and Contemporary Pilgrimages. London: Routledge, 2014 (link). Reader, Ian. Pilgrimage: A Very Short Introduction. New York: Oxford University Press, 2015 (link). Van Gennep, Arnold. The Rites of Passage. Translated by Monika B. Vizedom and Gabrielle L. Caffee. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1960 (link)
Learn more at TheCityLife.org --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/citylifeorg/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/citylifeorg/support
This week learn about one family who made it their mission to preserve nature in the heart of a growing city – and they succeeded!
Spring bird activity in a maple forest Intro: Bittersweet by Kevin MacLeod (License)
February 27th: James Hutchinson Killed(2021) Not everyone is meant to, or wants to become a parent. On February 27th 2021 a young boy whose mother did not want him was abandoned in the middle of the night. A boy who fought to come back to her and lost his life in the process. https://charleyproject.org/case/james-robert-hutchinson, https://www.wlwt.com/article/what-happened-to-james-hutchinson-a-timeline-of-events-that-led-to-6-year-olds-death/35702780#, https://www.journal-news.com/crime/attorneys-mom-and-boyfriend-were-truthful-about-throwing-boys-body-in-the-ohio-river/HHXIBRDTUBHGRKBXIHRAWIP6D4/, https://www.journal-news.com/crime/james-hutchinson-case-court-says-appeal-of-man-connected-to-boys-death-is-wholly-frivolous/IBPR5M7HORFCBDX2HVC7RPD22U/, https://www.cleveland.com/crime/2021/10/ohio-man-sent-to-prison-in-death-of-6-year-old-james-hutchinson.html, https://www.fox19.com/2021/03/24/new-court-records-detail-abuse-leading-up-james-hutchinsons-death-3/, https://www.fox19.com/2021/11/10/mothers-confession-how-detectives-solved-6-year-old-boys-murder/, https://www.whio.com/news/crime-and-law/timeline-how-investigation-into-james-hutchinsons-death-unfolded/NN6MRKAYVFENTJSEHDGV52KKRY/, https://local12.com/news/local/police-6-year-old-boy-missing-in-middletown-james-cincinnati-ohio Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Escape to the tropics, without leaving SJC. Dr. John Rossi and Kaitlyn Fair from St. Johns Botanical Garden & Nature Preserve tell us about this big secret here in town.
Windy day in an oak stand. Intro: Bittersweet by Kevin MacLeod (License)
February 2 is World Wetlands Day, Midland County's newest nature preserve just got a boost. For more, visit https://mrgreatlakes.com/
We are joined today by Eric Paulus, Operations Director and Land Manager for Ecology Action in Austin, Texas. In this episode, you'll hear how they took a former landfill and turned it into an amazing nature preserve. Bret and I have hiked it and it's gorgeous, not to mention the good they are doing for animals and plants. To learn more about the Circle Acres Nature Preserve, check out Ecology-Action.org.
Windy day in a freshly burned oak stand (still smelled like fire). Mixed audio mono due to the right microphone peaking due to the wind. Constant distant traffic due to proximity to Interstate 80/90. Intro: Bittersweet by Kevin MacLeod (License)
Under eastern red cedar surrounded by oaks on a windy day. Constant distant traffic due to proximity to Interstate 80/90. Crows, bluejays, and rustling oak leaves throughout. Intro: Bittersweet by Kevin MacLeod (License)
Tiny Sue my Degree. Passing on a Family Plant. Blame the Vegans for Shitting on a Nature Preserve. Vabbing. The Gooch. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/vividapplejuice/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/vividapplejuice/support
Return to Glacial Esker Nature Preserve (Ep. 103), but a different area. Oak, maple, and hackberry forest adjacent to Bowen Lake with wet snow. Intro: Bittersweet by Kevin MacLeod (License)
An interview about restoring ʻāina and creating a place of refuge for people dispossessed of the their land with Keoki Fukumitsu and Jasmine Slovak from Hoʻi Hoʻi Ea. Hoʻi Hoʻi Eaʻs mission is to (re)establish sovereignty through the reclamation of land, water, and nearshore marine estuaries in mālama ʻāina traditions and responsive campaigns, embodying the concept of aloha ʻāina. They are a multi-generational hui composed of traditional agricultural practitioners, educators, and organizers. Hoʻi Hoʻi Ea is currently focusing its efforts on the restoration of 29 acres of loʻi kalo in the Waikāne Nature Preserve in Waikāne Valley. Tags: Hawaiʻi, Hawai'i, Hawaii Website: hoihoiea.org
On today's show, a private nature preserve is being constructed on the site of the former Dogpatch USA amusement park in northern Newton County. Also, Trout Fishing in America is visiting the Aud in Eureka Springs later this month for the 76th annual Original Ozark Folk Festival. Plus, touching base with two actors from the cast of TheatreSquared's “The Band's Visit.”
Listen to the water hitting the shore, wind blowing through the branches of the trees and birds chirping at Naval Live Oaks Nature Preserve.
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We're fact checking the governor on recent tribal compact claims.Oklahoma's blacklist of financial companies is changing.Oklahoma City is getting a new nature preserve.You can find the KOSU Daily wherever you get your podcasts, you can also subscribe, rate us and leave a comment.You can keep up to date on all the latest news throughout the day at KOSU.org and make sure to follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram at KOSU Radio.This is The KOSU Daily, Oklahoma news, every weekday. Mentioned in this episode:Stitcher Notice (kill 8/29)
Welcome to another exciting episode of The Backyard Naturalists, the award-winning podcast that delves into all things connected with nature. We're thrilled to have been selected as the favorite podcast by the readers of The Matthews Mint Hill Weekly, and we're humbled to be listened to in all 50 states and over 100 countries worldwide. This week, your enthusiastic hosts Debbie and Laurie have a special treat in store for you as they sit down with the esteemed Pepe Chavez, Director of the Reedy Creek Nature Preserve, and a recognized Central Carolinas Master Naturalist. Pepe is also a member of the National Association for Interpretation Board of Directors. Together, they'll dive into the captivating world of the upcoming Hummingbird Festival. Join us as we explore the festival's significance, the inspiring story behind its creation, and get a sneak peek into some of the fascinating happenings and the detailed schedule of events. So, grab a cup of tea, sit back, and let's celebrate nature's delicate gems in this must-listen episode! If you have ideas for topics that you'd like us to pursue, send us a message either on our Facebook page or our website. We would really like to hear from you. We start this episode by talking about creating wildlife habitats. That initial episode of Creating Wildlife Habitats is still in the top three listened episodes for us. These principles have overlapped with almost every episode we've had. It's a really good guiding network for us to keep in mind. Connect with the Backyard Naturalists on the Web, Facebook and Instagram. Please visit and support our presenting sponsor, Backyard Birds at http://www.thebirdfoodstore.com/. A mecca for bird lovers and bird watchers, Backyard Birds is an independent family-owned business located in Matthews, NC (next to Dairy Queen), just southeast of Charlotte. Thanks for listening to The Backyard Naturalists. We hope you have a day filled with the wonders of nature. Get outside and take a walk on the wild side! Please don't forget to leave a 5-star review for The Backyard Naturalists podcast. Production services for The Backyard Naturalists podcast are provided by Downtown Podcasting. To start a conversation on how you can have a podcast, simply send an email to info@downtownpodcasting.com. While recording the Backyard Naturalists podcast, Debbie and Laurie enjoy coffee provided by the Good Cup Coffee Company in Matthews, North Carolina. Follow Good Cup Coffee on Instagram and look for them at the Matthews Community Farmer's Market this Saturday morning.
As Jim Carpenter tells it, he was “an unemployed bird watcher” in 1981 when he decided to open a feed store in Broad Ripple called Wild Birds Unlimited. Today, there are 365 franchised locations in the chain founded by Carpenter and his wife, Nancy—and the couple has a jaw-dropping new roost for watching birds. In 2021, they bought a former golf course in northern Zionsville so it could it slip back into its natural state. The decision to buy the 215-acre Wolf Run Golf Club for $5.5 million was a bit of a gamble. The Carpenters were banking on Zionsville officials to buy the land from them—albeit at a discount from their purchase price—so it could be a town nature park. It took about two years, but the town council agreed last month to free up funds to pay $4.5 million for the land—which is now assessed at $6 million—and another $1 million to help prepare for its launch as Carpenter Nature Preserve. Jim and Nancy Carpenter have for years practiced this kind of conservation philanthropy. They hosted the IBJ Podcast outside Wolf Run's old clubhouse—amid a cacophony of songbirds—for an interview to discuss why they took a chance on buying the golf course, how they'll stay involved with the preserve, and how they envision the property evolving. They also provide an update on how Wild Birds Unlimited fared during the pandemic, riding the sudden wave of interest in backyard recreation. The IBJ Podcast is brought to you by Taft.
Discover the history of White Point Nature Preserve. Our guests for this episode are Zoe Allen, the Education Program Director, and Dave Pilon, the Chair of the Development Committee. They both work for the Palos Verdes Land Conservancy which operates a variety of conservation efforts across the Peninsula, including our beloved White Point Nature Preserve. Listen in as they reveal fascinating insights into the land's historical uses over time. Learn about the area's past as a hot springs resort spa operated by the local Japanese fishing community and how it's now home to one of the rarest butterflies in the world. Don't miss out on this captivating episode that will leave you wanting to explore the preserve for yourself. Share this episode and information with friends, family or co-workers and leave us a review. Follow and subscribe to the podcast so you never miss an episode. You can also support the podcast by becoming a patron at patreon.com/hellosanpedro where you'll get access to bonus episodes and more. Follow us on instagram for more San Pedro content at @hellosppodcast. Thanks for listening, – Amanda + Jess Our website https://www.hellosanpedro.com/ White Point Nature Preserve 1600 W. Paseo del Mar, San Pedro, CA 90731 Palos Verdes Peninsula Land Conservancy https://pvplc.org/ Thank you to Rock Ashfield at Palm Realty Boutique for the generous recording space! Rock Ashfield https://rockthehouse.prbhomes.com/ Palm Realty Boutique San Pedro 255 W 6th St. San Pedro, CA 90731
Lots of birds active in a sparse and open black walnut stand along Loon Lake. Chipmunk scurrying at 9:50. Intro: Bittersweet by Kevin MacLeod (License)
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David William Carson's heart lives among the tall trees and endless oceans. This environmental scientist, entrepreneur and artist was raised in the forests of upstate New York. He earned a Master's degree in Environment and Resource Management in Amsterdam after pivoting from a rocky career in tech and finance. Now 31, David recently started his dream job as executive director of the Rogers Center, a 600-acre nature sanctuary and environmental education facility in upstate New York whose historic lands have been cherished by four generations of his family. David is elated to be living and working close to family, back in his hometown as a steward of the forest he grew up in. Learn more at www.friendsofrogers.orgShare your Swan Dive at www.swandive.us
Return to Fogwell Forest Nature Preserve (original Ep. 23). Oak and maple stand in a classic flatwoods. I would normally remove more traffic noise, but the spring birds were active. Intro: Bittersweet by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3440-bittersweet License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license
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Mixed hardwood forest with snow and ice falling from the trees. Intro: Bittersweet by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3440-bittersweet License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license
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The Supreme Court of the United States issues its first orders and opinions of the new year. UT Legal scholar Steven Vladek on the impact and what to watch for today. Other stories we’re tracking: the week ahead at the Texas lege: Sergio Martinez-Beltrán of the Texas newsroom on attention turning to teachers and the […]
The episode opens with Alyssa opening her Christmas gift from Jamie and they talk a little about foraging. Alyssa dives into the wonderful world of gender reveal parties, created by…carvin titties. Write us some of your cringe stories at [nervouslaughterpodcast@gmail.com](mailto:nervouslaughterpodcast@gmail.com)The socials: [Instagram](https://www.instagram.com/nervouslaughterpodcast) | [Facebook](https://www.facebook.com/NervousLaughterPodcast) | [Twitter](https://twitter.com/NervouslaughPod)
In the Houston area, winter is the best season to be outdoors. But if you want to immerse yourself in nature, where do you go? Consider the Big Thicket, a national preserve that's less than two hours from Houston. Rice University biologist and City Cast contributor Scott Solomon explains. Learn more about the Big Thicket National Preserve. Our morning newsletter Hey Houston brings updates on local news to you daily. Sign up here. Make sure you stay connected to us by following us on Twitter and Instagram @CityCastHouston Or leave us a voicemail/text us at +1 713-489-6972 with your thoughts! We love hearing from you! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
(From 12.03.22, Segment 3) Do you currently reside in the Charlotte area? If so, it is a common assumption that you have to travel to the mountains to get out of the city and into nature. The truth is there are plenty of nature preserves and natural resources in and around Charlotte, NC! This episode will share some awesome places to get some fresh air as Bill and Wes chat with Chris Matthews, Division Director for the Nature Preserve and Natural Resources Division at Mecklenburg County Park and Recreation. Need some shoes, water bottle, hat, or pack for the outdoors? Jesse Brown's Outdoors has it all!
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