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Latest podcast episodes about north canada

The Richard Syrett Show
The Necropolis of the North: Canada's Descent into a Culture of Death

The Richard Syrett Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2025 97:55


MONOLOGUE The Necropolis of the North: Canada's Descent into a Culture of Death NEWSMAKER  Canada Post management that agreed to iron-clad job security for employees 40 years ago now finds the commitment “untenable,” says a federal report https://www.blacklocks.ca/cites-1985-no-layoff-promise/  Parliament must “take a stand” against Canadian companies that move jobs to the United States to bypass Trump tariffs, the nation's largest private sector union said yesterday. ⁠https://www.blacklocks.ca/tells-feds-to-take-a-stand/⁠ Tom Korski – Managing Editor of Blacklock's Reporter www.blacklocks.ca OPEN LINES THE CULT OF CLIMATE CHANGE Antarctica: why has ice increased despite global warming? https://evidencenetwork.ca/antarctica-why-has-ice-increased-despite-global-warming/ Global wheat yields would be ‘10%' higher without climate change https://www.carbonbrief.org/global-wheat-yields-would-be-10-higher-without-climate-change/   Tony Heller – Geologist, Weather Historian, Founder of www.realclimatescience.com THIS DAY IN ROCK HISTORY 1970 - Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young released the protest single Ohio, written and composed by Neil Young in reaction to the Kent State shootings of May 4, 1970, when unarmed college students were shot by the Ohio National Guard.   1971 - Marvin Gaye released his eleventh studio album What's Going On. The concept album consisting of nine songs tells the story from the point of view of a Vietnam veteran returning to the country he had been fighting for, and seeing only hatred, suffering, and injustice.   1977 - Stevie Wonder started a three week run at No.1 on the US singles chart with his tribute to Duke Ellington, 'Sir Duke', his sixth US No.1, it made No.2 in the UK. NEWSMAKER FBI's Kash Patel and Dan Bongino face MAGA fury over Jeffrey Epstein and ‘deep state' conspiracies https://www.yahoo.com/news/fbi-kash-patel-dan-bongino-184544903.html Jake Tapper Defends Biden Coverage When Relentlessly Grilled By Megyn Kelly in Heated Interview https://www.mediaite.com/media/news/jake-tapper-defends-biden-coverage-when-relentlessly-grilled-by-megyn-kelly-in-heated-interview/   David Freiheit aka Viva Frei popular YouTuber and Rumblerhttps://vivabarneslaw.locals.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Woodland Walks - The Woodland Trust Podcast
7. Christmas in the Cairngorms: visiting reindeer and Glencharnoch Wood

Woodland Walks - The Woodland Trust Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2024 41:54


Grab your hot chocolate (or mulled wine!) and get into the festive spirit with our Christmas special as we meet some reindeer, talk Christmas trees and explore a small but mighty wood with huge value for nature in the snowy Cairngorms National Park. We discover fascinating reindeer facts with Tilly and friends at The Cairngorm Reindeer Centre, and step into a winter wonderland at nearby Glencharnoch Wood with site manager Ross. We learn what makes a good Christmas tree, how the wood is helping to recover the old Caledonian pine forest of Scotland, why the site is so important to the community and which wildlife thrive here. You can also find out which tree can effectively clone itself, and is so tasty to insects that it developed the ability to shake them off! Don't forget to rate us and subscribe! Learn more about the Woodland Trust at woodlandtrust.org.uk Transcript You are listening to Woodland Walks, a podcast for the Woodland Trust presented by Adam Shaw. We protect and plant trees for people to enjoy, to fight climate change and to help wildlife thrive.  Adam: Well, today I'm in the Cairngorms in Scotland. In Scottish Gaelic, the area is called – I'm going to give this a go - Am Monadh Ruadh. Apologies for my pronunciation there, but we are in the midst of a mountain range in the Highlands, of Scotland obviously. Generally we're about 1,000 metres high here but the higher peaks I'm told get to about 1,300 metres odd, which is going on for, I don't know, 4,500 foot or so. So this is a very dramatic landscape. We have rocky outcrops, boulders, steep cliffs. It's home to bird species such as the dotterel, snow bunting, the curlew and red grouse, as well as mammals such as mountain hare. But the reason of course we are here this Christmas is because it is also home to Britain's only herd, I think, of reindeer. Now, the reindeer herder is Tilly. She is the expert here and I've been braving, I am braving the snow and icy winds to be introduced to her and the herd. And from there after that, we're going to take a drive to what I'm told is an amazing wooded landscape of Caledonian pine to talk all things pine, and of course, all things Christmas trees. But first of all, let's meet Tilly, who looks after the reindeer.  Adam: OK, we are recording.  Tilly: That's good. OK. I'd better not say anything naughty then.  Adam: I'll cut out any naughtiness, that's fine.  Tilly: This is a bit of a rustly bag. It's more rustly than normal but never mind.  Adam: What do the reindeer actually eat?  Tilly: Well, so. We're now up in their natural habitat and we're looking across a nice heathery hillside with sedges as well. You can just see them poking through the snow and they'll pick away at the old heather of the year and the sedges.  Adam: Right.  Tilly: But we manage the herd and we like to feed them. So what I've got in my bag is some food for them, which they love.  Adam: Right. And what's in your Santa sack of food now?   Tilly: Oh, that's a secret.   Adam: Oh, you can't tell me. Oh, God.  Tilly: No, no. I can tell you. So it's a cereal mix and there is something similar to what you would feed sheep. Bit of barley, bit of sheep mix.  Adam: That's awesome. So not mince pies and carrots? That's only reserved for Christmas Eve. That's probably not very good for them, I would have thought.  Tilly: Yeah, no, I hate to say this, but reindeer don't actually eat carrots.  Adam: Oh right okay, well, that's good to know.  Tilly: But if ever children bring carrots for them, I never turn them away because we're very good at making carrot soup and carrot cake.  Adam: Santa's helpers get the carrots.  Tilly: And I'm absolutely certain that Santa eats all the mince pies, so all good. So anyway, come on through here. We're going now into a 1000-acre enclosure. It just hooks on there, that's perfect, it goes right across. We could actually once we get close to these visitors are coming off from a hill visit this morning. So you'll be pleased to hear that I am the boss. I'm Mrs. boss man and I've been with the reindeer for 43 years. Now, their lifespan is sort of 12 to 15 years, so I've gone through many generations. I've known many lovely reindeer and there's always a favourite and you would have seen some real characters there today. And you couldn't see them in better conditions. Anyway, do get yourself down and warm yourselves up. Oh, you've done very well to bring a little one like that today.  Walker: He did pretty well until now!  Tilly: You've done extremely well. Of course they have. He's got very red, a bit like Rudolph. The thing is there's just that wind, and it's the wind that drops the temperature, that chill factor.  Adam: Yeah. So where are we going, Tilly?  Tilly: So we're heading out towards what we call Silver Mount. They're not in here all year. Different times of year, sometimes they're all free range, some of them are free ranging, some are in here.  Adam: When you speak about free range, literally they can go anywhere?  Tilly: Yes they can.  Adam: And they come back because they know where the food is?  Tilly: Yes they do. They know where the food is, they sort of know where the home is, but they do wander out onto the high ground as well, more in the summertime.   Adam: Right. And is that, I mean Scotland has different rules. There's a right to roam sort of rule here. Does that apply to reindeer? Is that the issue?  Tilly: That is a moot point.  Adam: Oh, really? We've hardly started and I've got into trouble.   Tilly: No. Well, we lease 6000 acres, right? So we lease everything out to the skyline.  Adam: So that's an extraordinary range for them.  Tilly: It is an extraordinary range, but they know no bounds. I have to say reindeer sometimes do just pop over the boundary.  Adam: And that causes problems with the neighbours?  Tilly: Well, some like it, some aren't so keen. And we herd them as well, so we can herd them home. And we herd them by calling them.  Adam: I was going to say, do you have a skidoo, or?  Tilly: No, no. Absolutely no vehicular access on the hill. It's all by Shanks's pony, everywhere.  Adam: Really. So you walk, and then you just ring a bell to herd them, or what do you do?  Tilly: And you ‘loooooow, come on now!' and they come to us.  Adam: Right. And so what was the call again?  Tilly: ‘Looow, come on now!'  Adam: Come on now, is that it? OK, very good. OK, I now move.  Tilly: Yes. But hopefully they won't all come rushing from over there.  Adam: I was going to say, yes, we've now called out the reindeer.  Tilly: We've just joined a cow and calf here, who have just come down to the gate, and you can see just for yourself, they're completely benign. They're so docile and quiet. There's no sort of kicking or pushing or anything. They're very, very gentle creatures.  Adam: And is that because they've been acclimatised because tourists come, or would that be their natural behaviour?  Tilly: It is their natural behaviour, bearing in mind that reindeer have been domesticated for thousands of years. We're not looking at a wild animal here that's got tame. We're looking at a domesticated animal.  Adam: Right.  Tilly: It's probably more used to people than some of the reindeer up in the Arctic. So we have domestication embedded in their genetics.  Adam: So what we're saying is, genetically, they're actually more docile. It's not because this particular reindeer is used to us. But originally then, if one goes back far enough, they were wilder?  Tilly: Yes so, it's a really interesting process of domestication of reindeer, which happened in the Old World, so Russia, Scandinavia, inner Mongolia, outer Mongolia. And that is reindeer and many, many reindeer in these Arctic areas, are domesticated. They're not wild.  Adam: And that started happening, do we have an idea when?  Tilly: Probably about 10,000 years ago. But if you go to the New World, to Alaska and North Canada, exactly the same animal is called a caribou. Caribou are never domesticated. The indigenous people of these areas never embraced the herding and enclosing of reindeer, which was caribou, whereas in the Old World it became very, very important to the men, the people's survival.  Adam: And then the caribou, do they have a different character?   Tilly: Yes, they're wilder. And it's a little bit difficult to show today – you see quite strong colour variation in reindeer, which you don't see in caribou, and colour variation is man's influence on selecting for colour. So you'd get very light coloured ones, you'd get white ones in reindeer, you'd get very dark ones, but in caribou they're all the same, brownie-grey colour. Yeah, they felt that the white reindeer were important in the herd for whatever reasons, Germanic reasons or whatever. Interestingly, the Sámi - and I'm not sure if there could be a white one up in the herd here at the moment - describe them as lazy reindeer, the white ones.  Adam: Why?  Tilly: Well, I didn't know why until I worked out why white reindeer are often deaf. So they sleep, they don't get up when everybody else gets up and moves, and this white reindeer doesn't realise that the herd has left them. So they're not all deaf, but certain white ones are.  Adam: Very important question, obvious but I didn't ask it to begin with because I'm a fool. Why are reindeer connected to Christmas?  Tilly: Well, that's a really good question, because actually they think it stems from a poet called Clement C Moore, who wrote a poem in America, he had Scandinavian Germanic connections, called The Night Before Christmas, where Donder, Blitzen, Cupid, Comet, fly through the air with Saint Nick in the sleigh, the little Santa.  Adam: Yeah.  Tilly: But, so that really set the scene of eight reindeer and the sleigh, and that was based on the Norwegian God Odin, who had eight legs and strode through the sky with these eight legs and eight reindeer. Then we have Rudolph, who turns up, but he doesn't turn up until the time of prohibition in America.  Adam: So Rudolph isn't in the original poem?  Tilly: Absolutely not. Rudolph is an impostor.  Adam: I didn't know that!  Tilly: He, so he, it was a marketing exercise for a department store during alcohol prohibition. And it was Rudolph with his red nose, and his red nose is because of alcohol.  Adam: Because he drank too much? So was it in favour of alcohol or was it going ‘what terrible thing happens to you when you drink'?  Tilly: I'm not terribly sure. But anyway, Rudolph the red-nosed reindeer was the song, so that adds to it. And then along comes Coca-Cola who used a red and white Santa to promote Coca-Cola at Christmas time. So the red and white Santa is Coca-Cola.  Adam: Right. And the red-nose reindeer is from alcohol and reindeer comes from an actual American poem, of which Rudolph wasn't part of anyway. That's all simple to understand then!  Tilly: Exactly. Perfect.  Adam: Well, we're moving up to some of the more exposed slopes. Tilly has gone ahead. I'm just going to catch up back with her, and ask how she started as one of UK's first reindeer herders. Well, certainly, one of our few reindeer experts.  Tilly: I came up to volunteer and I met the keeper who was looking after the reindeer for Dr Lindgren, who was the lady who brought them in with her husband, Mr Utsi, and he was quite good looking.   Adam: Is this a revelation you wish to make to them?  Tilly: And the reindeer were endearing, and the mountains were superb, and so I married the keeper.  Adam: Right, you did marry him! I thought you were telling me about another man other than your husband.  Tilly: So I married Alan. We married in 1983 and I've been here ever since.  Adam: And so the purpose of having reindeer here originally was what?  Tilly: Ah, good question. Mr Utsi came here and was very taken by the landscape and the environment, the habitat, because it was so similar to his own home country of north Sweden. And he begged the question where are the reindeer? Why are there not reindeer here? And it was on that notion that he and his wife, Dr Lindgren, devoted the latter half of their lives to bringing reindeer back to Scotland.  Adam: So that's interesting. So, it raises the difference of ecological or sort of natural question, of whether these are indigenous animals.  Tilly: Yes. So it's an interesting idea. Certainly, the habitat's available for them and they live in their natural environment. But when they became extinct, or not extinct, but when they weren't in Scotland, some people say as recently as 600 years ago and some people say as long as 2,000 years ago. If it's 2,000 years ago, they're described as a past native.  Adam: So OK, I didn't realise that, but is there any debate around whether they were originally - whatever originally is –  Tilly: They were definitely here.  Adam: So they are native? They're not sort of imported, they have died out and been brought back here.  Tilly: Absolutely. Yeah, yeah, they were reintroduced, but how, what that time span is, some people say sooner than later, and Mr Utsi certainly identified this as a very suitable spot for them.  Adam: Any idea why they might have died out? Do we know?  Tilly: Probably a bit of climate change and also probably hunting. Very easy animal to hunt. Are you OK with this chitter chatter going on?  Adam: Yes, it's all good, and a bit of, do you call it mooing?   Tilly: Oh no, the reindeer aren't making any noise, they're clicking.  Adam: Someone was mooing!  Tilly : I think it was the people.  Adam: I thought it was the reindeer making that noise.   Tilly: Not at all. They're very silent.   Adam: They'd have left this podcast thinking reindeer moo.  Tilly: They would have. Exactly. No, they are really, really silent animals.  Adam: There's a very large reindeer there coming down the road.  Tilly: Oh, that's OK, that's Akubra, he'll do nothing to you at all. He's an absolute genuine reindeer. He's lovely. But he listened to the clicking as they walk. You can't hear it because of your headphones.  Adam: OK, so I guess later on I'll put a microphone on a reindeer. That will be a first. One other thing I always imagined when you saw a set of antlers on a sort of grand Scottish mansion, I thought, oh well, they've killed that the reindeer. And actually, that's not true, is it? They fall off.  Tilly: They do. You're absolutely right. Having it depends how you see the antlers. If the antlers are still on a skull, that animal has been killed and there's nothing wrong with that. There is a, you know, the animals need to be controlled. But you're also right. Antlers are lost every year and regrown again, so they cast their antlers and they regrow their antlers. So in a reindeer's life, if a reindeer is 10 years old, he will have just grown his 11th set of antlers.  Adam: And the purpose of antlers is fighting? I'm a big girl, I'm a big boy, whatever.   Tilly: Yeah, mainly for fighting, a weapon. So for the big breeding males, it's for claiming harem for females, so in the breeding season. And those big breeding bulls will actually lose their antlers around about now, their antlers will fall off and then they won't regrow their antlers until next spring, right? The females, little females like this, keep those boney antlers all winter and they use them for competing for food, so they can jab another reindeer and push it off and they can get into the food as a result.   Adam: The other thing I can notice about some of them, but not the reindeer in front of us, but I think the one walking away, although this looks very bony, the other one has sort of felt on it, and what looks like blood. So what's going on there?  Tilly: Yes. So they are the velvet antlers on the Christmas reindeer that have finished growing, but they don't lose the velvet properly and there is still potentially blood in the bone, as it were.  Adam: So there's this sort of capillary underneath the felt.  Tilly: Yes, exactly, because the antler's a really interesting appendage because it grows from the tip. It doesn't grow from the base, so the blood supply has to go all the way to the tip to grow. And the velvet skin carries that blood supply.  Adam: Right. I see. So now the reindeer in front of us has no velvet so that can't grow.  Tilly: And no blood supply. Exactly. And the only way she can grow, get more antlers or bigger antlers, is to lose the whole thing and grow it again next year. Yes.  Adam: So any other serious facts we should note, to inform ourselves about reindeer?  Tilly: Oh, lots of serious facts. So they're the only deer species where the males and the females grow antlers. Every other deer species, it's only the males that grow the antlers. They are the only deer species that's been domesticated by man. All the other species of deer, we're talking about 40 different species, are all truly wild animals. They can survive in the coldest parts of the world, so in the middle of Siberia, the temperature can go down to -72 and reindeer are still living there quite happily.  Adam: It's cold today, but it's probably -2 or something.  Tilly: Exactly. Yeah, yeah. Man cannot live in the Arctic without an animal to live by, and it's reindeer that he lives by. Man would never have gone into these areas. Obviously now they're all digging up, you know, getting the oil and the gas and everything. But indigenous man can only survive in these areas if he has reindeer as his farm animal of the north, so they're really important to the indigenous people of the north.  Adam: And in that sort of role, then, you can clearly eat reindeer. Then what else does it provide us?  Tilly: Absolutely. So it provides with meat. There are indigenous people that milk them in season. They have these tremendous coats that are used for covering tents and for people's, you know, clothing. And the antlers? Not now, but the antlers would have been used as tools in the past.  Adam: And have you ever had reindeer milk?  Tilly: I have tried, yes, we have milked the odd reindeer for one reason or another. It's very rich, very rich.  Adam: You have! Rich, is that good or quite fatty? Is it drinkable?  Tilly: That's good. Yeah, it's totally drinkable. Totally nice.  Adam: Yeah, I think yaks or a drink made from yaks, which was disgusting, I found in Mongolia, but I really found it difficult. It wasn't my thing.  Tilly: But it wasn't the fermented one, was it? Because in Mongolia they're into fermented mare's milk.   Adam: That might be what I had.  Tilly: And that is revolting.   Adam: Yes, OK, that's maybe what I had. How unusual is reindeer milk then?  Tilly: Yeah. It's got a very high fat content. They produce very little milk, because if you had a great big swinging under in in freezing conditions, you'd have ice cream, you wouldn't have milk.  Adam: The other thing I noticed that we haven't talked about is their hooves which look quite large and they look, I mean just from a distance, quite mobile.  Tilly: Yes. They are very, very, very flexible animals and their feet, their hooves are very big. Of course, for snow. Walking on the snow, spreading the weight, but also great shovels for digging. So they dig. You know, if you're in two feet, three feet of snow in north Sweden, you've got to get to the food underneath and to get to it, they need to dig. So they're great diggers.  Adam: And your life now here. It's quite a change from where you grew up, I appreciate.  Tilly: Certain years, a very rural life I had then. I have an equally country-wise life now. I will go to my grave with reindeer. They are my complete nutter passion. They are the most wonderful animals to be amongst, they put a smile on your face. They live in a beautiful area. They're just, they're just lovely animals and they give me a lot of pleasure. Yeah, yeah.  Adam: Fantastic. And if people are in the Cairngorms and want to have their own trip to see the reindeer, they call the what?  Tilly: They call the Cairngorm Reindeer Centre. You could do it on the website, you can ring us up and they need to dress up. I'm sure you appreciate you, are your feet cold yet?  Adam: No, look, I stopped off and bought extra thermals on my way.  Tilly: Very good.  Adam: Well, thank you very much. It's been a real treat, thank you very much.  Tilly: Brilliant. Oh, well, thank you for coming.  Adam: Well, I'm afraid I'm having to leave the reindeer behind because we're now heading to a little lower ground to see what I'm told is an amazing forest of Caledonian pine. And to learn a bit more about the trees and their relative, the other pine, which we all know as the Christmas tree. And we're off to meet a guy who looks after the Glencharnoch Wood in Carrbridge, near the River Spey and Dulnain. And now, despite it, it's a quite a small forest, I think. But despite that, it's quite well known for being really important, really big on biodiversity. And it's home to a number of species including, but not just them, but including the red squirrel and the crested tit.  Ross: My name's Ross Watson. I'm the site manager for North Scotland for the Woodland Trust.  Adam: Brilliant. Ross, we have come on an extraordinary day. It has snowed. It looks picturesque, chocolate box, shortbread box maybe, type stuff, so fantastic. So just tell me where we are.  Ross: Well, we're in Glencharnoch wood. It's a wood that the Woodland Trust owns and it's part of a series of little woodlands on the back of Carrbridge between Carrbridge and the railway. And the Woodland Trust has had it for a number of years. It's a little site, only 36 acres, but it's a pine wood site and a really important pine wood site at that, in that it's a small part of much bigger Caledonian forests.  Adam: OK. Well, I want to talk to you about pine wood, because I think it just sort of gets dismissed – ‘oh this pine wood, not important, not interesting'. Apart from Christmas, perhaps, when suddenly it becomes really important, but I want to unpack all of that with you, but just explain to you we're going to go on a little walk. Hopefully you know where you're going. Good. All right, so just explain a bit about where we're going, give me a sense of the pattern of where we're going.  Ross: Absolutely. We're going to take a circular walk around the woodlands. The woodlands here, it's all about community. Everything we do here is around that tree. We're going to walk through a piece of land that's owned by the local authority and then go through our own land and onto privately owned land and then come back to our own land. And it really shows the connectivity of all these different habitats, all the different landowners. But really the path network is there for the community that's here and they are involved in practice as well.  Adam: So. Pine wood. Yeah, it sort of gets bunched all together, and especially the Scots pine I hear a lot about. But there are there are big, big differences and varieties are there? Tell me a bit about them.  Ross: The Scots pine we are walking through are really special species. That's the only native conifer in the UK, right? And that's why they're so special here. Really these Scots pine provide their own habitat all of their own. They're incredibly threatened. As a habitat in Scotland, we've got just a number of Caledonian pine inventory sites. We've got ancient woodlands, designated sites.  Adam: Sorry, just to stop you - Caledonian pine, Scots pine, interchangeable words?  Ross: Yeah, good point. The Great Wood of Caledon was the reference of the name of the forest that was here, the old, the original boreal forest that gradually reduced in size. Partly through climate change as the country became cooler and wetter, but also through human intervention through felling, fires, grazing, all that kind of thing. So now we tend to talk about Scots pine and Cally pine which can be fairly interchangeable, but the Cally pine tends to be the bigger, grander kind of granny pines, these really lovely old things you see in some of the landscapes.  Adam: But that's sort of just the way people use the word. Technically, they're the same thing, but we refer to the Caledonian pine as the big grand ones, and it comes from… so I just want to make sure I understood what you said. The word Caledonian pine then comes from a Caledonian, a forest called Caledonia?   Ross: Yeah, the Great Wood of Caledon.   Adam: Isn't that a brilliant name? So mystical and it sort of talks of Tolkien and other worlds. Wow, wow. OK. So we have the great Scots pine, the Caledonian pine. If people have a general thing in their mind about pine trees, what is special about Caledonian pine? How that distinguishes from pines in other parts of the world.  Ross: Well, Scots pine, as we're walking through this woodland, just now as you look up the trunks of the trees, as you look up the bark tends to go from a kind of grey-brown to a real kind of russety red, like a red squirrel colour. And that's a lot of the red squirrel camouflage comes from that, that rusty colour. So they're skittering around these treetops and they can be jumping around and they're nice and camouflaged because of that colour. So is that redness that you really see? But what we can see in here, a lot of these trees are very even age, it has been quite heavily thinned in the past, but then you come across a tree like this that's got a very deep crown. So you see there's live branches more than halfway down that tree, whereas there's a lot of these other trees -  Adam: Yes, I was going to say it's weird that they've got no foliage until very high.  Ross: Yeah, so this tree here, and foresters may call this a wolf tree, a tree that has occupied a space and it's just sat there and doesn't allow anything around it.   Adam: It's called a wolf tree?  Ross: Some people would refer to it as a wolf tree. What we would refer to that is it's a deep crown tree, not very imaginatively named, but a deep crown tree is really important here because of capercaillie. Now, capercaillie, you imagine a capercaillie's a big bird, a turkey-sized bird, almost waist height, a male capercaillie. And in the winter it will walk out across these branches and it will nibble away at some of the needles, and it will sit there and it will rely on that during deep snow for shelter, security, food. So without these deep crown trees, there isn't anywhere for them to go. So if you imagine a plantation, a very dense pine that are much denser than this and they don't have the chance for any deep crown trees. Then the opportunity for capercaillie here is much reduced.  Adam: Right. So there's sort of, I mean, look the elephant in the room. Well, it's Christmas around the corner. People have Christmas trees. Sort of most people know anything about pine, it's because they have it in their house at Christmas. That's not a Scots pine.  Ross: No, your traditional Christmas tree is a Nordmann fir. A fir tree tends to hold onto needles a little longer than a pine tree. And if you look after the pine, it will retain its needles, but quite often the pine trees will grow slightly too quickly, so it'll be a bit bare as a Christmas tree, whereas a fir tree is kind of hairy enough to be a good Christmas tree.  Adam: Right. And do we have, do we have them planted in the UK as well? I mean just for commercial cropping?  Ross: Yes, as a Christmas tree.  Adam: Right. So the other thing, look, we're in a really lovely forest at the moment. We're the only ones here. But Scotland, the iconic pictures of Scotland, are bare, bare mountains, aren't they? They're not wooded, and yet I've always read that that's not how it used to be. It used to be a wooded part of the country. Why did it lose so much of its woodland?  Ross: Well, it's looking back to, what, centuries ago as the climate became cooler and wetter, the tree line reduced in height. But more recently in the 1800s the Cultural Revolution created huge periods of felling where they needed this timber for industrialization. Trees from the woodlands near here were cut down, they were floated down to the river Spey and then out to Spey Bay and the Moray coast. They were used for underground water piping for ship's masts. Because these trees are, as you can feel today it's a cold place to be, they've grown very slowly. So because they're nice and straight as we can see, they are, the rings are very close together, so they're very sturdy. They're an ideal timber source. But then we start to look at deer numbers increasing and sheep numbers increasing. The more mouths on the hill meant that once you cut these trees down, it was much harder for the trees to come away again. And really, that's the landscape we're in now really. And when we're talking about those very large, deep crowned trees on open hillsides, these kind of granny pines are so picturesque, and really a lot of these trees, there was no timber value in them because they were already so crooked and they were left, and this is almost a remnant that's showcasing the old forest that once was standing there.  Adam: A lot of times, site managers, they're trying to keep things steady in a way, I suppose. Just trying to maintain what's going, keep that going, that's hard enough. Is that the job here or do you have bigger plans? Are there, you know, times are changing?  Ross: Well, this is one of eight woodlands I look after across the north of Scotland. Whenever we're doing anything, no matter what the scale of it, it's not just how do we keep the site going and kind of steady. It's about when we are doing work, how do we add value to that to make it better for the people that are living here? And how do we use that to continue to showcase these sites as the shop window for the Woodland Trust?  Adam: And is the idea here to try and remove the non-Scots pine, so you'd have a pure Scots pine forest?  Ross: Well, the Woodland Trust works on a on a threat basis really. So any tree is better than no tree, right? But if you have got a lot of spruce regeneration that's threatening this ancient wood then we need to begin to remove that. And that's been the case here.  Adam: Sorry I'm pausing because there's a lovely spaniel who I can see wants me to throw a stick, but I won't throw the stick. Very cool dog. There we are. Sorry, we were saying yes, so any tree is better than no tree. But are the other trees a threat then or not?  Ross: Well, the Norway spruce here has been seeding regeneration into the woodland areas and over the last few years we've cleared a lot of that and in some of these nice young spruce, we've been able to provide to the community for Christmas trees, which has been really handy. But all of that is gone now and we're left with this core of, of mature Norway spruce, that a number of them have started to snap so are becoming a safety issue for members of the public using footpaths next to it. But also there's an opportunity there where before that timber dies, we can extract it and it can be useful for the community.  Adam: And you'd replace it with Scots pines.  Ross: No, we're going to replace it predominantly with hazel and aspen. Because one of the slight concerns in having a single species stand, like we have here, where it's all Scots pine, is that there's only one species for the likes of red squirrels or the crossbills. And on a day like today we might hear crossbows coming over. There's only one species here for them, whereas if we're planting hazel, which is under-represented species here, that provides a different food for red squirrels in a different part of the woodland. And aspen is one of the most biodiverse species that we would have in this part of the world. And there are very, very few aspen.  Adam: When you say it's the most biodiverse species, you mean it attracts biodiversity?  Ross: Absolutely yes. In terms of the lower plant assemblage that's on there specifically and insects. And aspen, their Latin name is Populus tremula and the tremula comes from the oval shape on the leaf. Just in the slightest breeze, it's adapted that to try and shake off the insect burden because the leaves are so palatable for insects.  Adam: So the shape of the leaf in wind -  Ross: The shape of this stock of the leaf is oval.  Adam: And that helps shift any insects.   Ross: Yeah, yeah.   Adam: It's interesting because aspen, in my ignorance, I associate with aspen in America, but it's a native UK tree.  Ross: It is, yeah. And it will be one of the first colonisers after the Ice Age. That's, an aspen will have, the seed will have blown down as the ice is receding. But some of the aspen that are here now will be some of the oldest trees that exist in the UK and aspen generally now grows rhizomatously, so you'll see the roots through the forest and all of the suckers will pop out. And the aspen that we can see in the woodland today, they could have been here for hundreds, maybe thousands of years, and they've just, as the clone has marched through the landscape, it's just it's moved and colonised these different areas. They're fascinating trees. So when you look at some of the images in North America, you might see entire hillsides of aspen and that could all be the same tree essentially, they're amazing organisms.  Adam: That's amazing. So it's sort of cloning really.   Ross: Yeah, absolutely.  Adam: That's amazing. And also I can see right on the Scots pine behind you, beautiful lichen, which is just a real sign of the air quality here, isn't it? I mean, it doesn't grow and it's just often further south. We do see lichen, obviously, but often I see a bit. This is everywhere. It's a real sign this is good land.  Ross: Absolutely, yeah.  Adam: Good land, good air. Wonderful. Well, I'm going to take another shot of our colleague down below. Hello. Wearing a lovely red hat, almost looks like Santa. And then we'll move on. So we're going uphill a bit, you might just hear the snow crunching under my boots. So this is amazing. A wolf peeking out from the woods, which adds to the fairy tale quality of all of this forest walk. This is not a real wolf. This is carved in wood. It looks really beautiful and it's covered in snow at the moment, which maybe is why I didn't spot it at first. So what's the story here?  Ross: Well, the story here is that Carrbridge hosts the Scottish chainsaw carving competition every year at the end of August, and there are chainsaw artists coming from all over the world to compete here to do some incredibly elaborate carvings. They do benches and three-to-four-metre statues and it's absolutely incredible.   Adam: This is very delicate that I'm surprised this would be done with a chainsaw.  Ross: Yeah, it's a very specialist skill as you can see, and people have to be very artistic. You have to be very good with the saw, but also the bar of the saw is a specialist carving tool. But then they also can use all sorts of other implements to try and refine the artwork itself. And this is just one part of that much larger chainsaw carving trail that's in Carrbridge that really commemorates this annual event.  Adam: Amazing. Well, we'll leave the wolf. It's got even a little dark nose. Amazing. A little dog, a real dog this time. Well, yes, just to prove it. We've just seen some reindeer. Obviously they're a type of deer. Are they as much of a problem as the normal red deer that we know about? So what's your view on them?  Ross: Well, red deer, the numbers are extremely high in some places and in the Cairngorms, they're generally much better managed. But in other places where there just isn't that, that integration or the objectives are yet to be aligned with protected areas, the numbers in those places need to come down, but recognising that there are different objectives, there are different landowners who want to do different things with land. So in recognising and respecting those objectives, but generally, ideal numbers need to come down and they need to come down a lot in order for trees and woodland to recover.  Adam: But that's deer in general, just because it's Christmas, I just have reindeer on the mind. You don't see many reindeer here. Or any reindeer here?  Ross: No, you see them up in the Cairngorms, right?   Adam: Right. Another pitstop. I see some lichen with some snow on it. I should turn them into Christmas cards. I won't, but that's what I should do. So if there was a sort of a final thought you wanted people to take away about this forest or about Caledonian pines you're trying to protect and grow here, what might that be?  Ross: Well, for this woodland, and as I say, it's only 36 acres in size, it's a fairly small wood. But it's not to discount that, and we talk about the hundreds of ants nests, the crossbills, the crested tits, it's woodlands like this can punch way above their weight. But also woodlands like this connected together provide a much larger, integrated robust habitat. And it's just thinking along these lines that this, this woodland, although it has the A9 on one side, it's got roads on two other sides, it's got a forest adventure park there and to the other side, it feels like a woodland that could be squeezed, but it can also feel like a woodland that is a part of this much larger landscape and contributing to that. And I suppose in part it depends on how you view that, yeah. But the woodland is connected to its woodlands round about, so it's definitely playing its part and part of that recovery of the old Caledonian pine forest of Scotland, as small as it is.  Adam: It's been a real treat for you to guide us through it on such a special snowy Christmas-y day. So thank you very much indeed.   Ross: No problem.   Adam: Well, it's been a fantastic day. Which leaves me just say from the land of reindeer and Caledonian pine, can I wish you a very happy, peaceful and joyous Christmas and New Year? And I do hope that wherever you are, you are able to share the joy of this season and that you'll join us in the New Year for lots more podcasts and tree adventures. Until then, from all of us in the Woodland Trust podcast team, to all of you, can we wish you a happy Christmas and a great New Year and of course, happy wanderings.  Thank you for listening to the Woodland Trust Woodland Walks. Join us next month when Adam will be taking another walk in the company of Woodland Trust staff, partners and volunteers. And don't forget to subscribe to the series on iTunes or wherever you are listening. And do give us a review and a rating. If you want to find out more about our woods and those that are close to you, check out the Woodland Trust website. Just head to the visiting woods pages. Thank you. 

That Sounds Gay
The Queens of the North (Canada's Drag Race S1 Pt. 1)

That Sounds Gay

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2024 93:31


This week, Jesse and I are heading up north to Canada where we talk about the ICONIC cast of the first season! We loved this group of queens, and what they brought to this incredible first season of Canada's Drag Race! Twitch

Nation To Nation
NDP calls for an overhaul of Nutrition North Canada after APTN report

Nation To Nation

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 29, 2024 25:11


An investigation by APTN Investigates has Parliament buzzing about food prices in the north. Forever chemicals and the push to ban them. And First Nation fishers prepare for elvers season – an industry that could be shut down. That's on Nation to Nation.

forever nutrition parliament overhaul aptn north canada aptn investigates
King Of The Lifts
The King in the North: Canada's #1 ranked lifter Kafui Hotsonyame

King Of The Lifts

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2023 122:13


Kafui Hotsonyame joins KOTL to discuss taking the #1 lifter position (Dots & GL points) in Canada, the competitive rivalry in Canada between the 83s (Nick Manders & Adam Jansson), looking to compete in his 4th Open Worlds, the recent addition of Russel Orhii to the IPF, the Worlds best 83s, training with The Strength Guys, how the NAPFs can improve, and much more. Hosted by 6 Pack Lapadat

Tragical
An-sisters

Tragical

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2023 57:23


Cat and Melissa breakdown why Brother Bear is Tragical! Get ready for North Canada and a slutty little bear. Meeses!TRAGICAL PODCAST DOT COM

As Goes Wisconsin
Looking North: Canada’s Population Growth Rate (Hour 1)

As Goes Wisconsin

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2023 44:20


Canada's people-to-maple-tree ratio is getting bigger, as its population recently became 40 million strong. How'd they get there? By politely telling foreign workers, students, and refugee to come on in. Over a million foreign arrivals that Canada welcomed in 2022 accounted for 96% of its headcount growth last year, according to Statistics Canada. That puts its population growth rate at 2.7%, making it the fastest growing high-income economy in the world, per Bloomberg. Should the US follow suit? We spend the first hour discussing the pros and cons or trying to aggressively increase our population by encouraging immigration.

The John Batchelor Show
#Bestof2021: The Polite Greens of the North: #Canada's climate voices, and all those envied natural resources. @ConradMBlack @NationalPost (Originally posted May 13, 2021)

The John Batchelor Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2023 11:40


Photo: No known restrictions on publication. canada files from provincial archives of alberta parades in alberta smoky lake alberta @Batchelorshow #Bestof2021: The Polite Greens of the North: #Canada's climate voices, and all those envied natural resources. @ConradMBlack @NationalPost (Originally posted May 13, 2021) https://nationalpost.com/opinion/conrad-black-the-climate-of-fear-that-gave-way-to-unjustifiable-environmental-policies :  

The Global Detail
True North: Canada, Cinema and the Diversity Dialogue (with Sugith Varughese)

The Global Detail

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2022 56:39


Sugith Varughese is an Indian Canadian actor, writer, and director best known for his performance as Mr. Metha on the hit show Kim's Convenience. He discusses working in film & television in Canada and the various aspects of diversity and representation in the entertainment business.Sugith Varughese on Twitter: https://twitter.com/SugithVarugheseSugith Varughese on IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0890268/?ref_=nv_sr_srsg_0Music:Opening Theme Music by Brandon Duke"Positive Vibes" by Boris Skalsky (licensed through Storyblocks).Produced by Karkata Media LLC in association with Perspicacity Media LLC.Copyright 2022, Karkata Media LLC.

Get In The Hole
60. LIVin La Vida Loca, PGA North Of The Border, + Rickie Stays Missin'

Get In The Hole

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 7, 2022 65:32


Steve and John are back and the golf world is being turned on its head as DJ, Phil, and more are heading to the LIV. The guys discuss what this means for the PGA, the legitimacy of the LIV, and what the golf world might be moving forward. Then they talk about Rickie Fowler continuing to miss cuts, the PGA heading to North Canada, and give their #BeerMoney Picks of the Week. Follow Us! Twitter: @GetInTheHolePod @UndergroundPHI Steven: @StevenMcAvoy_ John: @iMakePars Brittney: @brittneykwilbur Ben: @pirro_ben Instagram: @GetInTheHolePod @undergroundphi YouTube: https://youtu.be/z0es2c6Xoow Twitch: Twitch.tv/UndergroundSportsPHI Website: undergroundsportsphiladelphia.com Manscaped.com | Promo Code: "USP" for 20% off AND free shipping! Tomahawk Shades Promo Code: "USP" to save 25% off at checkout! statesidevodka.com | Promo Code: "USP" for 10% off the 1L Vodka Bottle (Must be 21+ to purchase. Please drink responsibly)

HOMEgirlsco
WALKER ADAIR: How Going from Being Homeless Helped to Build his Business

HOMEgirlsco

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2021 47:39


Walker Adair is our good friend from the North (Canada.) His story saw him go from homeless and sleeping in his car to super agent. Listen to Walker speak about how while homeless he learned every neighborhood in his area and turned a horrible situation into an unreal business in his early 20s!   Follow Walker on Facebook Follow Walker on Instagram   Follow the HOMEgirls on Facebook Follow the HOMEgirls on Instagram Follow Angela Follow Jessica Follow Lyndsie www.therealHOMEgirlspodcast.com  

The Nielson Show
TALES OF THE NORTH!!! - Canada v. Mexico - 11/16/21

The Nielson Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2021 1:44


TALES OF THE NORTH!!! - Canada v. Mexico - 11/16/21 by The Nielson Show

canada mexico tales north canada nielson show
Zero To Hero
Appreciation Vs Unappreciation...

Zero To Hero

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2021 23:25 Transcription Available


We look to our friends to the North (Canada) and got inspired to cover the topic of Gratitude in a new light. How to snap out of downward, self destructive, spirals and turn them into positive mindsets and outcomes.Follow us on Social Media and be part of the conversation!http://www.facebook.com/zero2heroacademyFollow us on Instagram:@rayraystar1or @niinortey_engmann

It Takes 2 with Amy & JJ
Update from up north.. Canada! w/ Richard Cloutier

It Takes 2 with Amy & JJ

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2021 13:03


When will the border open again? What are restrictions like in Canada? Richard Cloutier from CJOB joins Amy & JJ.  See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Common Fan Commentary
Episode 1: Talkin' Hockey, Bama Dynasty, and Where on Earth is Kyrie Irving?

Common Fan Commentary

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2021 30:29


Adam and Nick talk 2020-2021 NHL season predictions, Evander Kane's financial debacle, how the North (Canada) division will continue to disappoint, Saban's sorcery, and the breakdown of where Kyrie Irving is and why he continues to refuse to play!

My Guest List Pod
Ep2: Cole-'Super Fun Time Trivia'

My Guest List Pod

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2020 66:38


This week, I speak to the host of a very funny and very adult trivia show. Cole Fournier, hosts a live trivia show in North Canada and publishes these shows as a podcast each week. He and his co-host Kevin, have a fantastic comedic dynamic and I guarantee you have never heard trivia like this before. The best thing is that both guys seem to have as much fun as the audience at their shows.   I talk to Cole about life in lockdown in North Bay, his show and obviously about our countdown, which this week is top 10 scariest horror movies. We also get to learn about Cole's musical talents and discover some nerdy interests he and I have in common. Its a fun one!    SuperFunTimeTrivia Links: Website- superfuntimetrivia.com Instagram- @superfuntimetrivia Twitter- @sftimetrivia Facebook- Super Fun Time Trivia Cole's Music- White Coals Cole’s List: 10. Saw 9. The Thing 8. The Guest 7. Freddy 3: Dream Warriors 6. The Descent 5. Cabin In The Woods 4. The Invitation 3. All The Boys Love Mandy Lane  2. Behind The Mask, The Rise of Leslie Vernon 1. Martyrs My Links: Website- MyGuestListPod Email- myguestlistpod@gmail.com Instagram- @myguestlistpod Twitter- @myguestlistpod Facebook- MyGuestListPod Support- Patreon Music: Intro- 'X Ray Vision-Slynk'-youtube.com/audiolibrary Outro-'We Could Reach'-Freedom Trail Studio-youtube.com/audiolibrary

behind the mask fun time north bay freedom trail studio north canada all the boys love mandy lane
ForgettingWalls
Episode 28 - Canada, Music, and Faith: Special Interview feat. Darcy Rumble from Giants in the Sound

ForgettingWalls

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2020 108:07


In Episode 28, Keith W. and Justin sit down with Darcy Rumble from the music review site Giants in the Sound. The guys ask him questions about his past, his love of music and punk shows, and how he eventually became a Christian. Also, since he hails from the great land up North (Canada), they ask questions about the recent events in America (Charleston, SCOTUS ruling) in order to get his perspective on these issues. This is by far one of the their favorite interviews, so be sure to not miss this! Also, Justin brings in stories of high huskies, crazy contraband, and lucky lottery tickets. Be sure to rate, subscribe and leave a comment for us on iTunes! Let us know what you think! Show Notes: Featured Guest: Darcy Rumble - Giants in the Sound - Facebook & Twitter References: Same Sex Marriage Article from Canada UK Livestock Theft Report The High Husky Blind Luck Music: Intro - Bensound.com First Break - Salus Suas Extanderealas Concedit - AkissforJersey Second Break - Hope - We Came as Romans --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/forgettingwalls/support

sound giants rumble scotus keith w canada music north canada
UW PM Podcast
Kevin Lau: Product Manager at Uber and Co-Founder of Hack the North

UW PM Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2020 32:16


Kevin is a product manager on the Uber Eat's team and has extensive knowledge in product and engineering, as well as leadership activities back when he was a student at Waterloo. Being a Kleiner Perkins fellow and a founder of Hack the North (Canada's largest hackathon), he bring many great suggestions and expertise to the table. In this episode, Kasey and Kevin chat about Kevin's journey to PM and his advice to aspiring product folks!

Where Come From Japan Podcast
Where Come From Japan Podcast #6 - Ibaragi

Where Come From Japan Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2020 58:09


For most of my long term viewers you will be already quite aware of my good friend Dave who is also a fellow Youtuber.  Dave hails from good ol' snowy maple syrup land to the North (Canada) and has been in Japan now for over 7 years and is a private highschool teacher and makes very professional and philosophically deep videos  sharing his mindset and way of living.  Dave lived in Ibaragi prefecture for over 3 years and shares with us some of his stories and love for the prefecture he lives in.   DAVE'S LINKS: https://www.youtube.com/user/DaveTrippin  

Moments for Missions
#190819 - Article - 10/40 North - Canada

Moments for Missions

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2019


Article - 10/40 North - Canada

north canada
Adventure Games Podcast
Episode 12 - Reviews of Truberbrook, Firewatch and The Long Dark

Adventure Games Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2019 76:05


In episode 12 I go from from watching for forest fires in Wyoming to trying to survive in the cold barren wilderness of North Canada in the middle of winter as I review Firewatch and The Long Dark. Meanwhile Tomas journeys to 1960’s Germany and lets us know what he thinks of Truberbrook and whether this is a destination worth taking. We also discuss whether games should have different difficulty setttings and we discuss new games announced and released this week.Links:Whispers of a MachineHeaven's VaultLord Winklebottom Investigates KickstarterJust Another Hero StoryEncodyaFirewatchTruberbrookThe Long DarkGame Difficulty ArticleIf you enjoyed this episode and would like to hear more interviews with more adventure game developers then please subscribe, rate and review wherever you listen to podcasts.More details about this podcast here:www.adventuregamespodcast.comYou can find links to my social media links here:FacebookTwitterInstagramDiscordYou can also listen to this podcast on Itunes and Spotify and all other major Podcast Platforms!You can also find the RSS feed here:http://www.adventuregamespodcast.com/podcast?format=rssAdventure Game Podcasts logo by Jake Vest. You can check out his work here:https://jake.re/Music is Speedy Delta (ID 917) by Lobo Loco and can be found here:http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Lobo_Loco/Welcome/Speedy_Delta_ID_917_1724

Tough Girl Podcast
Jenny Tough - Running across 2 mountain ranges - the Atlas of Morocco, and the Bolivian Andes!

Tough Girl Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2019 53:08


Jenny is passionate about human powered endurance challenges and loves combining this with her love of the mountains. At the moment, Jenny is making her way around the globe, running across a mountain range on every continent. In 2016 she ran across the Tien Shan of Kyrgyzstan, in 2017 she ran across the Atlas of Morocco, and most recently ran across the Bolivian Andes. In 2019 Jenny will be tackling her fourth expedition, the Southern Alps in New Zealand!  Jenny first came on the tough girl podcast in February 2017 when she shared more about her first challenge, exploring the Yukon of North Canada by cycling over 3,000 km. After her ride to Yukon, suddenly being fit enough to take on a running endurance challenge seemed like a possibility. Jenny decided to run solo, self-supported across Kyrgyzstan over 900km! On the Tough Girl podcast, Jenny Tough shared stories from several of her adventures and the lessons she learned along the way. Whether you’re thinking about a major challenge or want a little more adventure every day, you can learn something from this incredible woman. Show notes Her next big challenge  How the idea came about Loving the mountains and her passion for running Being looked after by local people Deciding on her 2017 challenge Getting into the zone Moving from the survival stage to the thriving stage The Atlas Mountains in Morocco The planning of the trip Making it up as she goes along (to a certain extent!) The excitement! Getting in shape for the challenge Getting injury proof The gear:- backpack - poles - shoes Fast packing Why weight is everything Mental preparation and dealing with the unknown The fear and doubt Be the expedition buddy you wish you had brought Tricking your brain Covering 55k on her first day Meeting the Berbers Over coming language barriers The beauty of the desert The challenges of North Africa Dealing with the Police Not being able to enter cafe and restaurants Helping to change attitudes Adventure blues and finishing the challenge Recovery time after a challenge Trying to get better at patience Her 3rd run- October 2018 heading off to Bolivia Dealing with the altitude Dealing with bad weather and storms Doing constant risk assessments Insurance Paying for the challenges Her plans for New Zealand - only 1200 km! Being an introvert and dealing with the remoteness Being more mindful when using a camera Social Media Check out Jenny’s website - www.jennytough.com Jenny is on Twitter @JennyTough  

Hemp Radio
Hempisode #90 - A Few Good Men!

Hemp Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2013 65:30


PatiCakes, Queen of Cannabis and Dr.T, the Almighty One, talk with Guests Joseph Slopin and Mathew Hudson of MJCharts' Cannabis Price Index....... It's all about the price of pot..............Find out where the most expensive pot is! MJCharts offers the most accurate daily regional consumer price indexes in cannabis, hemp, and related industries. Their indexes are derived firsthand from legal sales only, sourced from current public advertisements. They believe that their metrics are the most accurate when they do not rely upon black market or survey information. Great information that everyone needs!! The Canadian Government to pump $1.3 Billion into new pot growing project. While the U.S. government teeters precariously on the edge of complete shutdown, hinging on a hyperbole-ridden argument over whether or not its citizens deserve proper basic health care, North Canada is on the verge of another revolutionary leap in government-backed healthcare reform. The Canadian government will begin to pump $1.3-billion dollars into its Health Canada program, earmarked specifically to prop up large-scale free market medical marijuana growing operations across the country, in a move that is expected to create not only jobs and revenues, but hundreds of thousands of new medical marijuana patients as well. BRAVO CANADA! A big WIN for California: "Obama Administration Drops Asset Forfeiture Case Against Anaheim Landlord".................... Boston University School of Medicine says, "Smoking Weed Has No Negative Effect On Health"!! HELLO! WE KNOW THAT......... Tune in next week to listen to Diana Oliver & her "Buds" as they tell us about their film, Hempsters: Plant The Seed........... A documentary film about the struggle to legalize industrial hemp in the US- featuring Woody Harrelson, Ralph Nader, Julia Butterfly ...If you have not see it, please check it out & you will become Hemptucated!! In the 1700s, American farmers were required by law to grow hemp in Virginia and the other colonies. It was a widely used crop for hundreds of years in the United States. Cut to 1957 when the U.S. government banned hemp over confusion about its relationship to marijuana, and the plant from which the paper for the The Declaration of Independence was sourced was gone from America's soil. Until now....................................... Be Save Be Smart Have A Fabulous Time http://www.mjcharts.com/ http://hempradio.com/ http://orangecountynorml.org/ http://normlwomensalliance.org/