Podcasts about onf

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Best podcasts about onf

Latest podcast episodes about onf

SOYONS GOURMANDS
Haguenau : Programme "Trésors cachés de la forêt indivise"

SOYONS GOURMANDS

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2025 2:00


L'arrivée du printemps marque le lancement de la neuvième édition des Trésors cachés de la forêt indivise de Haguenau, un programme porté par la Ville de Haguenau et l'Office National des Forêts. Au total, 44 balades, sorties et excursions en forêt seront proposées tout au long de l'année. Les précisions de Françoise Delcamp, Conseillère déléguée Ville accessible et touristique.Renseignements et inscriptions sur le site internet visithaguenau.alsace.Les interviews sont également à retrouver sur les plateformes Spotify, Deezer, Apple Podcasts, Podcast Addict ou encore Amazon Music.Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

ACTUALITES - AZUR FM
Partage de l'espace forestier entre les différents usages

ACTUALITES - AZUR FM

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2025 8:10


Que ce soit dans la forêt de l'Illwald, sur le massif du Haut-Koenigsbourg ou dans n'importe quelle forêt du territoire, la nature se doit d'être partagée entre différents usagers. Pratiquants de la chasse, de sport nature, ONF ou encore LPO, tous cohabite de manière différente dans un même espace. La question du partage des forêts est au cœur des discussions. Isabelle Wack, vice-présidente de la Fédération Française de la Montagne et l'Escalade, trésorière de la Ligue Grand Est, témoigne sur le sujet. Les interviews sont également à retrouver sur les plateformes Spotify, Deezer, Apple Podcasts, Podcast Addict ou encore Amazon Music.Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Là-haut sur la colline - Antoine Robitaille
Le transhumanisme peut avoir du bon, sauf si les Elon Musk s'en emparent

Là-haut sur la colline - Antoine Robitaille

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2025 25:43


Invitée: Dominique Leclerc, dramaturge, comédienne, réalisatrice de Posthumains, documentaire produit par l’ONF. Depuis 12 ans, Dominique Leclerc s'est plongée dans les univers des transhumanistes, biohackers, cyborgs et posthumanistes, lesquels «n'arrêtent pas d'évoluer, parce que la technologie change à une vitesse exponentielle». Diabétique de type 1, Leclerc nous présente sa quête d'une guérison, qui l'a amenée en Europe, aux États-Unis notamment, mais qui lui a permis de mieux comprendre ces courants de pensée qui rêvent de créer des hommes nouveaux. Mais les trans et posthumanistes se se contenteraient-ils de simple guérison? Ne souhaitent-ils pas plutôt amplifier les capacités physiques et intellectuelles des individus? Guérir et s'amplifier, est-ce si différent? Dominique nous livre un documentaire très personnel, fascinant, qui débouche sur des questions politiques très contemporaines, notamment la montée et les ambitions transhumanistes inquiétantes des oligarques du numériques comme Elon Musk. Pour écouter le documentaire: https://www.onf.ca/film/posthumains/Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr

BlushCat
Quality Over Quantity | Kpop Comebacks Review Feb. 2025 (IVE PLAVE EVNNE CHUNGHA ONF ZB1) | Ep. 79

BlushCat

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2025 86:32


There may not be as many Kpop comebacks to review from this month, but it doesn't mean that we don't have a lot to say! Hear our review of comebacks from IVE, PLAVE, EVNNE, CHUNGHA, ONF, and ZB1, as well as a brief look at the Hearts2Hearts debut!Let us know some of your favorite February 2025 Kpop comebacks!Like, subscribe, comment, and stay meowin'! Follow us on Spotify! sptfy.com/BlushCatFollow BlushCatTwitter: @BlushCat_twtInstagram: @BlushCatOfficialEdited by: @DevinCrystie0:00 Intro + Logo Motion0:13 Devin + Rhiley Opening Comments + Today's Topic1:08 IVE14:35 PLAVE29:32 EVNNE42:33 CHUNG HA53:29 ONF59:00 ZEROBASEONE1:20:15 Hearts2Hearts1:24:30 Subscribe, Notifications On, Like 1:26:17 MeowtroHowdy, Meowers! Check out the non-podcast kpop content only on YouTube + get new episodes earlier!https://www.youtube.com/@BlushCatOfficial#BlushCat #kpop #podcast #ive #plave #evnne #chungha #onf #zerobaseone #zb1 #hearts2hearts BlushCat is a K-Pop themed podcast airing every weekend. Devin and the ever name-changing Host #2 discuss everything from their favorite groups to popular shows starring everyone's favorite (and least favorite) idols.

DisKovery With A K
K-Pop in February: ZEROBASEONE, G-Dragon, IVE & the Month's Best

DisKovery With A K

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2025 49:20


February wasn't just about love—it was packed with incredible new music! From G-Dragon's long-awaited return to IVE's latest hits, plus fresh releases from PLAVE, ZEROBASEONE, ONF, CHUNGHA, and more, this month had something for everyone. Tune in as we break down the best songs of February 2025 and discover the tracks that stole the spotlight!

Les invités France Bleu Sud Lorraine
Dépôts sauvages : "ça va être de pire en pire", prévient la responsable ONF de la Forêt de Haye

Les invités France Bleu Sud Lorraine

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2025 5:12


durée : 00:05:12 - L'invité de la rédaction de "ici Sud Lorraine" - Des gravats, de la tôle, des pneus... C'est parfois l'arbre qui cache la déchetterie quand on se promène en forêt. Comment lutter contre ces dépôts sauvages ? Chantal Lemoine, responsable de l'unité territoriale de l'ONF en Forêt de Haye-Grand Couronnée est l'invitée d'ici Sud Lorraine.

SojuTalk Kpop Podcast
EP317: Hearts2Hearts, ZEROBASEONE, ONF!

SojuTalk Kpop Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2025 118:21


SojuTalk is back at it again as we discuss releases from Hearts2Hearts, ZEROBASEONE, ONF, Jennie, and KiiiKiii! As always, the Crew keeps you up to date with all the recent Kpop News/Events. And you know we gonna get hype as we declare this week's Spice King and give our State of the Nation!!!  Links ◆Email - sojutalkpodcast@gmail.com ◆Discord - discord.gg/3rb74x4 ◆Patreon - patreon.com/sojutalk Timestamps ◆Intro - 0:00 ◆Big New Releases - 1:00 ◆SojuScore - 1:14:30 ◆Show Winners - 1:26:18 ◆News - 1:28:14 ◆Afterhours - 

Choses à Savoir TECH VERTE
Les Vosges créent les forêts du futur ?

Choses à Savoir TECH VERTE

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2025 2:28


À 600 mètres d'altitude, dans un bois rocailleux de la vallée de Munster (Haut-Rhin), une petite révolution est en marche. Sur une parcelle de 6,5 hectares, un employé de la coopérative "Forêt d'ici" sème les dernières graines d'un projet inédit : tester de nouvelles essences d'arbres capables de résister au changement climatique. Sous le regard attentif de Claude Michel, du Parc régional des Ballons des Vosges, cette forêt devient un laboratoire à ciel ouvert. Propriétaire du terrain depuis 2018, Bernard Naegel a voulu anticiper l'impact du réchauffement sur les forêts vosgiennes. "Le changement climatique est une grande interrogation. Pourquoi ne pas expérimenter pour mieux s'y préparer ?", explique-t-il. L'enjeu est crucial : selon Météo France, la température en 2100 pourrait dépasser de 4 °C celle de l'ère préindustrielle, mettant en péril une large partie des 17 millions d'hectares de forêt française.La parcelle est divisée en plusieurs zones d'expérimentation. Première approche : la régénération naturelle. Les arbres adultes déjà présents – hêtres, sapins et épicéas – vont produire des graines qui se disperseront librement, permettant d'observer leur capacité d'adaptation. Deuxième axe : l'introduction de nouvelles essences. Dans de petits enclos en bois, des espèces venues de climats plus chauds prennent racine. Châtaigniers, érables, pins laricios de Corse grandissent aux côtés des essences locales pour former une "forêt mosaïque". Un écosystème plus diversifié, où les arbres se protègent mutuellement et limitent la propagation des maladies.Les forêts françaises souffrent déjà des effets du changement climatique. L'épicéa, par exemple, est ravagé par le scolyte, un parasite dont la prolifération est exacerbée par la hausse des températures. "Il y a une augmentation importante des récoltes d'arbres morts", observe Hubert Schmuck, expert à l'ONF dans le Grand Est. Selon l'Office national des forêts (ONF), seule la moitié des forêts françaises pourra s'adapter aux conditions climatiques de 2100. Contrairement aux forêts publiques, où l'ONF pilote des plans d'adaptation, les forêts privées, qui couvrent 75 % du territoire métropolitain, sont gérées librement par leurs propriétaires. L'objectif de cette expérimentation est donc clair : inciter les propriétaires privés à prendre les devants. Le projet, d'un coût total de 665 000 euros, est financé en partie par des partenaires locaux. Le producteur d'eau minérale Wattwiller apporte 30 000 euros, la Collectivité européenne d'Alsace 20 000 euros, le reste étant à la charge du propriétaire. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

BlushCat
Quality Over Quantity | Kpop Comebacks Review Feb. 2025 (IVE PLAVE EVNNE CHUNGHA ONF ZB1) | Ep. 79

BlushCat

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2025 86:32


There may not be as many Kpop comebacks to review from this month, but it doesn't mean that we don't have a lot to say! Hear our review of comebacks from IVE, PLAVE, EVNNE, CHUNGHA, ONF, and ZB1, as well as a brief look at the Hearts2Hearts debut!Let us know some of your favorite February 2025 Kpop comebacks!Like, subscribe, comment, and stay meowin'! Follow us on Spotify! sptfy.com/BlushCatFollow BlushCatTwitter: @BlushCat_twtInstagram: @BlushCatOfficialEdited by: @DevinCrystie0:00 Intro + Logo Motion0:13 Devin + Rhiley Opening Comments + Today's Topic1:08 IVE14:35 PLAVE29:32 EVNNE42:33 CHUNG HA53:29 ONF59:00 ZEROBASEONE1:20:15 Hearts2Hearts1:24:30 Subscribe, Notifications On, Like 1:26:17 MeowtroHowdy, Meowers! Check out the non-podcast kpop content only on YouTube + get new episodes earlier!https://www.youtube.com/@BlushCatOfficial#BlushCat #kpop #podcast #ive #plave #evnne #chungha #onf #zerobaseone #zb1 #hearts2hearts BlushCat is a K-Pop themed podcast airing every weekend. Devin and the ever name-changing Host #2 discuss everything from their favorite groups to popular shows starring everyone's favorite (and least favorite) idols.

The Vet Dental Show
Episode 157 - Managing Periodontal Disease Prior to Radiation

The Vet Dental Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2025 9:30 Transcription Available


Dr. Beckman's International Veterinary Dentistry Institute offers courses in all areas of vet dentistry.    Online & Live Courses for Vets and Techs https://veterinarydentistry.net/    To request an invitation to the VDP Program: https://ivdi.org/    Complications of Extractions or Oro-Nasal Fistula (ONF) Closure After Radiation in Humans and Dogs Introduction  Radiation therapy is a common treatment modality for certain cancers affecting the oral cavity in both humans and dogs. While effective for managing malignancies, radiation can lead to significant challenges in dental procedures, particularly tooth extractions and oro-nasal fistula (ONF) closures. This evaluation synthesizes literature discussing complications associated with these procedures in both species, highlighting parallels and species-specific differences.   Human Literature Osteoradionecrosis (ORN)  Pathophysiology: ORN is a major complication following extractions in irradiated fields. Radiation induces hypovascularity, hypocellularity, and fibrosis in the bone, reducing its ability to heal and resist infection. Incidence: Studies report ORN rates between 5% and 15% after dental extractions in irradiated patients. Risk Factors: Total radiation dose exceeding 60 Gy. Location: Mandible is more prone due to poorer vascular supply. Timing: Extractions performed within 6 months post-radiation have higher risks. Comorbidities: Diabetes, smoking, and poor oral hygiene exacerbate risks. Management: Prophylactic measures include hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT). Surgical debridement or segmental resection may be necessary for severe ORN.  Soft Tissue Complications Delayed Healing: Radiation-induced fibrosis and reduced vascularity lead to delayed mucosal healing. Infections: Secondary infections, such as osteomyelitis, are common due to impaired immune response and reduced tissue integrity. Dehiscence: Closure of oro-nasal fistulas is often complicated by wound dehiscence due to tension at the suture site and poor healing capacity. ONF Closure Challenges: High recurrence rates due to radiation-induced tissue fragility. Limited availability of local tissue for flap reconstruction. Surgical Options: Use of pedicled flaps, such as buccal or palatal flaps, has been successful. Free tissue transfers (e.g., radial forearm free flap) are utilized for extensive defects. Tissue engineering with growth factors or stem cells is an emerging area of interest. Pre-Surgical Preparation: Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT): While not universally applied, HBOT is frequently recommended before surgical interventions in patients at high risk for ORN. Protocols often involve 20-30 preoperative dives (2.0-2.5 ATA for 90-120 minutes per session) and 10 postoperative dives. Antibiotics: Broad-spectrum antibiotics may be prescribed prophylactically to reduce the risk of infection. Nutritional Optimization: Ensuring the patient's nutritional status is optimized can improve surgical outcomes. Veterinary Literature (Dogs) Osteoradionecrosis (ORN)  Pathophysiology: Similar to humans, radiation in dogs leads to hypovascularity and reduced bone turnover. The mandible is the most commonly affected site. Incidence: Published reports indicate a lower incidence of ORN in dogs compared to humans, possibly due to differences in fractionation protocols and total radiation doses. Risk Factors: Total radiation dose (commonly > 50 Gy). Larger tumor burden and proximity to the bone. Management: Conservative treatment includes antibiotics and analgesics. Surgical intervention involves debridement or mandibulectomy in severe cases. Soft Tissue Complications Delayed Healing: Radiation reduces epithelial turnover and fibroblast activity, delaying healing of mucosal wounds. Fistula Formation: ONF formation is common after radiation and can be exacerbated by dental extractions, particularly in the caudal maxillary region. ONF Closure Challenges: Dogs often have limited tissue for local flap reconstruction. Radiation reduces the availability and viability of tissue for surgical manipulation. Surgical Options: Buccal mucosal advancement flaps and rotation flaps are commonly used. Palatal flaps are an alternative for larger defects. Advanced techniques, such as axial pattern flaps, have shown promise. Adjunctive Therapies: HBOT has been explored in veterinary medicine with anecdotal success, though systematic studies are limited.   Comparative Analysis Common Complications Delayed Healing: Both species exhibit delayed healing due to radiation-induced vascular and cellular changes. ORN: A significant risk in humans and dogs, although reported incidences and management strategies differ. Wound Dehiscence: Tissue fragility and tension at surgical sites are common across species.   Species-Specific Differences Risk Factors: Humans are more affected by lifestyle factors such as smoking and systemic conditions like diabetes. Dogs are less influenced by these factors but may have different radiation fractionation protocols affecting outcomes. Management: Free flap techniques and tissue engineering are more advanced in human medicine. Veterinary approaches often rely on local flaps and less invasive options due to cost and availability constraints.   Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT) Protocol Human Protocol  Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) is commonly recommended presurgically for patients who have undergone radiation therapy, especially in the head and neck region, to reduce the risk of complications such as osteoradionecrosis (ORN) after oral surgery.   Typical HBOT Protocol for Pre-Surgical Cases: Presurgical Sessions: Number of Sessions: Usually 20-30 sessions. Duration of Each Session: Each session typically lasts 90 minutes at a pressure of 2.0 to 2.5 atmospheres absolute (ATA). Postsurgical Sessions: Additional 10-20 sessions may be recommended following the oral surgery to further promote healing and reduce the risk of complications. Scheduling: Presurgical HBOT is ideally started at least 3-4 weeks before the planned surgery to ensure adequate time to complete the prescribed sessions.   Why HBOT Helps: Increases oxygen delivery to tissues damaged by radiation. Promotes angiogenesis (growth of new blood vessels) in irradiated tissues. Enhances fibroblast function and collagen synthesis. Reduces infection risk by boosting tissue oxygen levels.   Important Notes: The specific number of sessions may vary depending on individual factors, such as the extent of prior radiation damage, the site of surgery, and the overall health of the patient. Close coordination between the oral surgeon, oncologist, and a hyperbaric medicine specialist is crucial for optimizing outcomes. Veterinary Protocol  The use of HBOT in dogs follows adapted protocols based on human medicine, with adjustments for size and species-specific factors. Presurgical Sessions: Number of Sessions: Typically 10-20 sessions are suggested. Duration of Each Session: Sessions last approximately 60-90 minutes at pressures of 1.5-2.0 atmospheres absolute (ATA). Postsurgical Sessions: Additional 5-10 sessions may be recommended depending on the dog's healing progress and surgical outcomes. Monitoring: Dogs should be carefully monitored for signs of oxygen toxicity or other adverse effects during HBOT. Sedation may be required for some patients. Future Directions Human Medicine: Further research into tissue engineering and stem cell therapies to improve healing. Optimization of prophylactic measures such as HBOT and pharmacologic agents. Veterinary Medicine: Development of standardized protocols for managing post-radiation complications, including recommendations for the use of hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) in veterinary medicine. Emerging guidelines suggest that HBOT can support pre-surgical preparation by improving tissue oxygenation, enhancing vascularization, and promoting healing. Typical protocols involve 10-20 sessions at 1.5-2.0 atmospheres absolute (ATA) for 60-90 minutes per session, with an additional 5-10 sessions postoperatively to ensure optimal healing. Further research is needed to validate these approaches and refine their application for specific conditions. Exploration of advanced reconstructive techniques and adjunctive therapies like HBOT in controlled studies. Cross-Species Insights: Comparative studies to assess shared pathophysiology and potential therapeutic strategies across species. Conclusion  Complications following extractions or ONF closures in irradiated fields pose significant challenges in both humans and dogs. While similarities in pathophysiology exist, differences in risk factors, management, and available interventions highlight the need for species-specific approaches. Continued research, particularly in cross-species translational medicine, is essential to improve outcomes for both populations.   Podcast Details Host: Dr. Brett Beckman, DVM, FAVD, DAVDC, DAAPM

Les matins
Faut-il dire adieu à nos beaux sapins, rois des forêts ?

Les matins

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2024 7:35


durée : 00:07:35 - La Question du jour - par : Antoine Dhulster - Sécheresse, vagues de chaleur, maladies, prolifération d'insectes... Les sapins de nos forêts en souffrent et pourraient, à terme, disparaître. Alors, dans l'hypothèse d'un réchauffement climatique de 4 degrés d'ici 50 ans, faut-il se préparer à dire adieu aux beaux sapins, rois des forêts ? - réalisation : Colin Gruel - invités : Brigitte Musch Généticienne au département recherche et développement de l'Office national des forêts (ONF).

L'info en intégrale - Europe 1
Budget : ONF, CNPF, ING... Ces organismes aux missions quasi identiques pour gérer les forêts

L'info en intégrale - Europe 1

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2024 1:08


Que faire pour réduire le déficit du budget ? Questionné sur le sujet ce week-end, le président du Sénat Gérard Larcher propose de supprimer certains organismes redondants. Car le système français est complexe et contient plusieurs organismes aux missions quasi identiques. C'est le cas pour la gestion des forêts.

Le journal - Europe 1
Budget : ONF, CNPF, ING... Ces organismes aux missions quasi identiques pour gérer les forêts

Le journal - Europe 1

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2024 1:08


Que faire pour réduire le déficit du budget ? Questionné sur le sujet ce week-end, le président du Sénat Gérard Larcher propose de supprimer certains organismes redondants. Car le système français est complexe et contient plusieurs organismes aux missions quasi identiques. C'est le cas pour la gestion des forêts.

Chaleur Humaine
REDIFF Comment agir pour nos forêts ?

Chaleur Humaine

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2024 45:09


CET EPISODE A ETE DIFFUSE UNE PREMIERE FOIS LE 13 JUIN 2023Les arbres et les forêts sont les parmi les meilleurs garants de notre vie sur cette planète. Et pourtant, le plus grand risque qui pèse sur eux, c'est l'activité humaine. Les sécheresses, les incendies, la perte de biodiversité menacent la forêt française. Comment son visage va changer avec le réchauffement climatique ? Quelles sont les actions qu'on peut mettre en oeuvre pour protéger les forêts et les arbres ?Laurent Tillon est biologiste et ingénieur forestier à l'Office national des forêts (ONF). Il vit au cœur de la forêt de Rambouillet, qui lui a inspiré "Être un chêne", paru en 2021 chez Actes Sud. Il est également l'auteur de l'essai Les Fantômes de la nuit, des chauves-souris et des hommes (2023).Vous pouvez retrouver les enquêtes spéciales du Monde sur la forêt dans le cadre du projet Adaptation ici : La forêt française sous le feu du réchauffementAvec notamment le reportage sur la disparition du hêtre, victime parfaite du réchauffement climatiqueEt celui sur le pin méditerranéen, qui devrait s'étendre dans les prochaines années« Chaleur humaine » est un podcast hebdomadaire de réflexion et de débat sur les manières de faire face au défi climatique. Ecoutez gratuitement chaque mardi un nouvel épisode, sur Lemonde.fr, Apple Podcast ou Spotify. Retrouvez ici tous les épisodes.Cet épisode a été produit par Adèle Ponticelli avec l'aide d'Esther Michon, réalisé par Solène Moulin. Musique originale : Amandine Robillard.Chaleur humaine c'est aussi un livre qui reprend 18 épisodes du podcast en version texte, que vous pouvez retrouver dans votre librairie favorite.C'est toujours une infolettre hebdomadaire à laquelle vous pouvez vous inscrire gratuitement ici. Vous pouvez toujours m'écrire et poser vos questions à l'adresse chaleurhumaine@lemonde.fr. Hébergé par Audion. Visitez https://www.audion.fm/fr/privacy-policy pour plus d'informations.

PODCAST 24 IMAGES
À la rencontre de Halima Elkhatabi

PODCAST 24 IMAGES

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2024 38:56


Cette semaine, Robert Daudelin rencontre Halima Elkhatabi pour discuter de COHABITER, son premier long métrage documentaire.Le balado 100% cinéma de la revue de cinéma 24 images

L'Histoire nous le dira
L'art d'ensemencer les nuages - L'Histoire vous le dira + - Discussions historiques # 2

L'Histoire nous le dira

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2024 45:11


On parle du droit des nuages, de la journée internationale des nuages et de l'ensemencement des nuages avec Mathieu Simonet. Abonnez-vous à la chaine: https://www.youtube.com/c/LHistoirenousledira Pour soutenir la chaîne, au choix: 1. Cliquez sur le bouton « Adhérer » sous la vidéo. 2. Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/hndl Les vidéos sont utilisées à des fins éducatives selon l'article 107 du Copyright Act de 1976 sur le Fair-Use. Sources et pour aller plus loin: Mathieu Simonet, La fin des nuages, Paris, Julliard, 2023. Claude Bérubé, L'incroyable histoire des machines à pluie, ONF, 2007. https://www.onf.ca/film/incroyable_histoire_des_machines/ Monsieur Moo. https://diffusingdigitalart.org/maxime-berthou_fr/ Autres références disponibles sur demande. #histoire #documentaire #nuage

Choses à Savoir
Peut-on vendre des champignons ramassés dans la forêt ?

Choses à Savoir

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2024 1:46


RediffusionLes dimanches d'automne, la cueillette des champignons est un loisir pratiqué par de nombreux promeneurs. Et il permet d'alimenter la table familiale en produits délectables.En effet, la cueillette est autorisée, du moins dans les forêts domaniales, mais jusqu'à une certaine limite. Elle est évaluée à l'équivalent d'un seau de champignons par famille.Il faut donc se limiter à une cueillette clairement destinée à la consommation familiale. Elle ne doit donc pas excéder une contenance d'environ 5 litres. Si vous en ramassez davantage, vous vous exposez, en cas de contrôle, à des amendes.Mais pouvez-vous vendre ces champignons à des particuliers ou à des restaurants par exemple ? On le sait, les champignons sont des produits savoureux et recherchés, qui se négocient à des prix assez élevés.Aussi ne peut-on vendre de champignons ramassés dans la forêt sans respecter certaines conditions.Une vente soumise au respect de certaines conditionsD'une manière générale, vous n'avez pas le droit de vendre des champignons dans une forêt appartenant à l''État ou à une collectivité territoriale. Dans une forêt domaniale, la mise en vente des champignons ramassés ne peut être envisagée, dans tous les cas, qu'avec l'accord explicite de l'Office national des forêts (ONF).Par contre, rien ne vous empêche de vendre le produit de votre cueillette si la forêt dans laquelle vous avez trouvé les champignons vous appartient. Il sera cependant nécessaire de déclarer les revenus tirés de cette vente à l'administration fiscale.Il sera alors préférable d'encadrer cette activité par la création d'une auto-entreprise, ou de toute autre structure comparable.Vous pourrez aussi écouler votre récolte si le propriétaire de la forêt vous autorise àramasser des champignons sur ses terres et même à les vendre. Pour vous mettre àl'abri de toute contestation, il vaut mieux solliciter une autorisation écrite.Il faut enfin rappeler que le propriétaire de la forêt n'est pas obligé de la clôturerpour faire valoir son droit sur la propriété du sol et donc des champignons. Il n'est pas tenu non plus d'en interdire la cueillette par des panneaux. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

Combats (Baleine sous Grav... SUR le front)
BEST OF D'ÉTÉ Redécouvrir les trognes 4/4 : Des trésors pour la biodiversité (Dominique Mansion, trognologue)

Combats (Baleine sous Grav... SUR le front)

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2024 7:19


Dominique Mansion est passionné par un type d'arbres très particulier : les Trognes. Ces arbres régulièrement élagués finissent par prendre la forme d'une grosse tête.   En vivant plus longtemps que des arbres non taillés et en produisant régulièrement du nouveau bois, les trognes permettent aux arbres de mieux stocker le carbone présent dans l'atmosphère. La pousse prolongée des trognes apporte une captation plus importante de dioxyde de carbone par rapport à des arbres conduits classiquement.   Les trognes sont des usines à photosynthèse et à bois et donc une solution pertinente dans le cadre de la lutte contre le réchauffement climatique.   Un arbre qui n'est pas en trogne va, par sa durée de vie inférieure et sa pousse limitée, plus rapidement plafonner en termes de croissance et donc de captation de carbone.   Ces arbres paysans, loin d'être des arbres mutilés, sont en réalité des solutions géniales pour répondre à nombre de défis climatiques, agricoles et environnementaux.   C'est le couteau-suisse de l'agroforesterie. _______ Pour les passionnés d'arbres, ne manquez pas nos épisodes avec Ernst Zürcher (le célèbre auteur d'Arbres, entre visible et invisible) : https://bit.ly/arbres_EZ1_BSG https://bit.ly/arbres_EZ2_BSG https://bit.ly/arbres_EZ3_BSG https://bit.ly/arbres_EZ4_BSG https://bit.ly/arbres_EZ5_BSG https://bit.ly/arbres_EZ6_BSG https://bit.ly/arbres_EZ7_BSG https://bit.ly/arbres_EZ8_BSG Et ceux avec David Happe, un autre dendrologue passionné : https://bit.ly/david-happe1_CBT https://bit.ly/david-happe2_CBT https://bit.ly/david-happe3_CBT https://bit.ly/david-happe4_CBT Ainsi que notre épisode sur le Garoé, un merveilleux ancien épisode, un des premiers : http://bit.ly/garoe_BSG Sans oublier celui sur la Bardane, qui a inspiré le Velcro : http://bit.ly/bardane_BSG _______   On aime ce qui nous a émerveillé … et on protège ce qu'on aime. Sous notre Gravillon vous trouverez... 4 podcasts, 1 site, 1 compte Instagram, 1 page + 1 groupe Facebook et 1 asso. Il nous serait très précieux et utile que vous partagiez ce lien : https://baleinesousgravillon.com/liens-2 Tous nos podcasts sont faits bénévolement. Ils sont gratuits, sans pub et accessibles à tous. Vous pouvez faire un don sur Helloasso (ou sur Tipeee), adhérer à l'asso BSG, ou installer gratuitement le moteur de recherche Lilo et nous reverser vos gouttes : https://bit.ly/helloasso_donsUR_BSG https://bit.ly/lien_magq_lilo_BSG http://bit.ly/Tipeee_BSG Baleine sous Gravillon,  Combats, Nomen et Petit Poisson deviendra Podcast (PPDP), sont "les 4 MousqueTERREs du Vivant". Chacun est indépendant, complémentaire des autres, et diffusé dans son canal. Pour nous aider, vous pouvez vous abonner et partager leurs liens, et nous laisser des étoiles et surtout un avis sur Apple Podcast et Spotify. Ainsi, nous serons ainsi plus visibles et mieux recommandés. Merci :) https://bit.ly/Smartlink_BSG https://bit.ly/smartlink_NOMEN https://bit.ly/smartlink_PPDP https://bit.ly/smartlink_COMBATS Vous voulez créer un podcast ? Nous vous formons et/ou accompagnons ! Nous proposons des Fresques de la biodiversité, des conférences et animons des tables rondes. Nous cherchons des sponsors et des partenaires : contact@baleinesousgravillon.com 

PODCAST 24 IMAGES
Enjeux à l'ONF / Numéro 211 de 24 images / Polar 80

PODCAST 24 IMAGES

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2024 46:33


Cette semaine, Bruno Dequen revient sur les enjeux entourant les changements prévus à l'ONF tout en présentant le plus récent numéro de la revue consacré aux adaptations littéraires québécoises. Puis Éric Falardeau rappelle la pertinence des films policiers français des années 1970-80 à l'occasion de la parution du livre POLAR 80.Le balado 100% cinéma de la revue de cinéma 24 images

CCTV: The Nonstop Pop Show
Pop Off: BABYMONSTER vs ONF vs KISS OF LIFE (April 2024 Comebacks)

CCTV: The Nonstop Pop Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2024 57:44


Join us as we dissect BABYMONSTER "SHEESH", ONF "Bye My Monster" and KISS OF LIFE "Midas Touch". We'll analyze each category and choose our winners, but we want to hear from you too! Which song made you groove the most? Which music video left you in awe? And who delivered the standout performance? Make sure to join in on the conversation! Share your thoughts on who wins in each round and who deserves the ultimate crown. Let the music showdown begin! Join us on Patreon!: https://www.patreon.com/CCTVPOPS Follow us on social media: https://linktr.ee/cctvpops References: BABYMONSTER - “SHEESH” MV https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2wA_b6YHjqQ&pp=ygUSYmFieW1vbnN0ZXIgc2hlZXNo BABYMONSTER - “SHEESH” Performance Video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kOanBE5Wg24&pp=ygUSYmFieW1vbnN0ZXIgc2hlZXNo KISS OF LIFE - “Midas Touch” MV https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oKVYm8mIUdo&pp=ygUXa2lzcyBvZiBsaWZlIG1pZGFzIHR1Y2g%3D KISS OF LIFE - “Midas Touch” Performance Video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nH6MOYPEvfY&pp=ygUXa2lzcyBvZiBsaWZlIG1pZGFzIHR1Y2g%3D ONF - “Bye My Monster” MV https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pOR8CUeTJpc&pp=ygUSb25mIGJ5ZSBteSBtb25zdGVy ONF - “Bye My Monster” Performance Video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8G-6a_y3Cxc&pp=ygUSb25mIGJ5ZSBteSBtb25zdGVy

Com d'Archi
[REDIFF] S4#15

Com d'Archi

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2024 53:43


In French in this CDA S4#15 (Monday online), "The wood at the cutting edge : the new ONF headquarter", an interview of Samuel Poutoux, Atelier Woa and Vincent Lavergne, VLAU, both architects- In English in CDA S4#16 (Wednesday online), "The wood at the cutting edge : the new ONF headquarter", a text written by Anne-Charlotte, and read by Esther.En français dans le CDA S4#15 (lundi en ligne), "Le bois à la pointe : le nouveau siège de l'ONF", une interview de Samuel Poutoux, Atelier WOA et Vincent Lavergne, VLAU, architectes– En anglais dans CDA S4#16 (Mercredi en ligne), "Le bois à la pointe : le nouveau siège de l'ONF, un texte écrit par Anne-Charlotte, et lu par Esther.____Le nouveau siège de l'Office National des Forêts ONF, tout juste livré en 2022, réalisé en bois, est plébiscité par la presse française généraliste et spécialisée ! Occasion d'un pas de côté dans Com d'Archi : organiser une interview sur ce projet innovant et exceptionnel plutôt que sur un parcours d'architecte. Une fois n'est pas coutume. Ainsi les dirigeants et fondateurs des agences VLAU et Atelier Woa, Vincent Lavergne et Samuel Poutoux, viennent présenter ce projet démonstrateur qui interroge la capacité de la France à organiser des filiales industrielles, de manière à assurer la transition écologique. Dans ce numéro, en évitant les redites autant que possible, ils parlent du projet de manière holistique et notamment, exposent les conditions de la commande et le parti architectural de cette œuvre située sur le site exceptionnel de l'Ecole Vétérinaire de Maisons-Alfort. Ces deux voix d'architectes, qui représentent respectivement leurs agences et leurs équipes, se font écho et finissent par fusionner dans un discours de passionnés, dédié à cette architecture exceptionnelle.Image teaser © Atelier WOA & VLAUIngénierie son : Julien Rebours____Si le podcast COM D'ARCHI vous plaît n'hésitez pas :. à vous abonner pour ne pas rater les prochains épisodes,. à nous laisser des étoiles et un commentaire, :-),. à nous suivre sur Instagram @comdarchipodcast pourretrouver de belles images, toujours choisies avec soin, de manière à enrichirvotre regard sur le sujet. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

BlushCat
April 2024 Kpop Comebacks (ONF DKZ IVE SEVENTEEN ZB1 TIOT) | BlushCat Podcast Ep. 54

BlushCat

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2024 50:39


We've been anticipating a DKZ comeback and TIOT's debut so we finally get to share our thoughts on those in this episode! We also cover comebacks from ONF, IVE, and SEVENTEEN, and discuss the pre-release from ZB1! There were a lot of April Kpop comebacks we enjoyed but didn't get a chance to cover this episode so tell us about your favorites in the comments and maybe we'll be able to talk about the ones we missed in a future episode! Like, subscribe, comment, and stay meowin'! Follow us on Spotify! sptfy.com/BlushCat Follow BlushCat Twitter: @BlushCat_twt Instagram: @BlushCatOfficial Edited by: @DevinCrystie 0:00 Intro + Logo Motion 0:11 Devin + Ertthurn Opening Comments + Today's Topic 1:21 ONF 6:54 DKZ 14:39 TIOT 26:53 ZEROBASEONE 31:49 IVE 38:50 SEVENTEEN 47:49 Subscribe, Notifications On, Like 50:24 Meowtro #BlushCat #kpop #podcast #onf #dkz #tiot #zerobaseone #zb1 #아이브 #세븐틴 Howdy, Meowers! Check out the non-podcast kpop content only on YouTube + get new episodes earlier! https://www.youtube.com/@BlushCatOfficial BlushCat is a K-Pop themed podcast airing every weekend. Devin and the ever name-changing Host #2 discuss everything from their favorite groups to popular shows starring everyone's favorite (and least favorite) idols.

PODCAST 24 IMAGES
À la rencontre d'Alanis Obomsawin

PODCAST 24 IMAGES

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2024 37:30


5:03 : "Dès le commencement, j'ai toujours enregistré beaucoup de voix. L'expérience et le son de la voix, c'est sacré pour moi."15:10 : "L'éducation, c'est là qu'est le pouvoir. Quand j'ai compris comment se perpétuait la persécution, il fallait que les enfants entendent une autre histoire."22:04 : "Je pense toujours au niveau éducationnel. C'est là qu'un enfant va apprendre à haïr ou à aimer. C'est une responsabilité énorme."31:55 : "Tout mérite qu'on en fasse un film. Je voudrais couvrir le monde entier !" Le balado 100% cinéma de la revue de cinéma 24 images

SojuTalk Kpop Podcast
EP277: Kiss of Life, ONF, Woo!ah!

SojuTalk Kpop Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2024 86:02


SojuTalk is back at it again as we discuss releases from Kiss of Life, ONF, and Woo!ah! As always, the Crew keeps you up to date with all the recent Kpop News/Events. And you know we gonna get hype as we declare this week's Spice King and give our State of the Nation!!!  Links ◆Email - sojutalkpodcast@gmail.com ◆Discord - discord.gg/3rb74x4 ◆Patreon - patreon.com/sojutalk Timestamps ◆Intro - 0:00 ◆Big New Releases - 2:15 ◆Spice King - 33:39 ◆Show Winners - 38:25 ◆News - 41:07 ◆Afterhours - 1:03:18

Version Longue #RFMStrasbourg
Forêt en scène: c'est samedi à Luxeuil

Version Longue #RFMStrasbourg

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2024 4:04


Des jeux de pistes à faire en famille,  une ballade commentée pour les adultes.  Pierre Louis Dietz nous parle de ce bel évènement dans ce podcast. Ecoutez

Franceinfo junior
franceinfo junior. Comment lutter contre la déforestation ?

Franceinfo junior

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2024 7:32


durée : 00:07:32 - franceinfo junior - C'est la journée internationale des forêts. Les enfants de franceinfo junior posent leurs questions sur ce sujet à Régine Touffait, ingénieure forestière à l'Office national des forêts (ONF).

Radio Monaco - Monte-Carlo Business Club
Un coup de cœur pour l'olivier millénaire de Roquebrune

Radio Monaco - Monte-Carlo Business Club

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2024 5:25


Réputé être le plus vieil arbre de France, l'olivier millénaire de Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, aux portes de Monaco, vient de recevoir une belle récompense. La marque L'Arbre Vert, partenaire du Concours de "L'arbre de l'année", organisé par l'ONF et Terre sauvage, a en effet décidé de lui attribuer son coup de cœur 2023. Né il y a environ 2000 ans et enraciné dans un mur de pierres, cet olivier monumental fascine Georges Feterman, président de l'association ARBRES, qui lui a décerné le label "Arbre remarquable" en 2016. Membre jury au concours de "L'arbre de l'année" , Georges Feterman nous explique ce qui fait de cet olivier azuréen "l'un des plus beaux arbres du monde". Il est l'invité de Nathalie Michet dans le Club Radio Monaco.

Light Reading Podcasts
Why the ONF shut down

Light Reading Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2024 28:10


Roy Chua, founder and principal of AvidThink joins the podcast to discuss the end of the ONF as we know it, but how three of its projects will continue under the purview of the Linux Foundation. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

K-pop Weekly Podcast
Episode 13: EVNNE, A.C.E., BOYNEXTDOOR, ONF, and PLAVE

K-pop Weekly Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2023 41:07


For the last episode of 2023, Emily shares five 2023 releases she feels deserve more attention. Listen to her reviews of EVNNE (2:31), A.C.E.(6:52), BOYNEXTDOOR (11:09), ONF (20:07), and PLAVE (23:24).Plus, K-pop Christmas picks (29:01) and predictions for 2024 (31:46). Episode playlist: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/4vxvdhL0V5LOfmTlOowvbI?si=2bfdd3a8b85a4b37Please subscribe and follow the show: TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@kpopweeklypodInstagram - https://www.instagram.com/kpopweeklypod/X - https://twitter.com/kpopweeklypodNewsletter - https://kpopweeklypod.substack.com/Discord - https://discord.gg/ez69Pjm3Email: kpopweeklypod@gmail.comSupport the show

K-pop Weekly Podcast
Episode 12: K-pop Weekly Awards and the Best of 2023

K-pop Weekly Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2023 59:54


This week, Emily announces the winners of the first annual K-pop Weekly Awards (2:55). She also shares her top twenty K-pop songs of 2023 (24:45) and top five albums (42:35). Plus, K-pop news, BTS enlists, and more!Please subscribe and follow the show: TikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@kpopweeklypodInstagram - https://www.instagram.com/kpopweeklypod/X - https://twitter.com/kpopweeklypodNewsletter - https://kpopweeklypod.substack.com/Discord - https://discord.gg/ez69Pjm3Email: kpopweeklypod@gmail.comSupport the show

DAY6의 키스 더 라디오
(10/13/금) 콩츄 초대석 with 온앤오프 (ONF)

DAY6의 키스 더 라디오

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2023 73:15


콩츄 초대석 with 온앤오프 (ONF)

Une histoire particulière, un récit documentaire
Issoudun : le legs Mousnier fait des heureux 1/2 : Portrait d'un philanthrope

Une histoire particulière, un récit documentaire

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2023 28:25


durée : 00:28:25 - Une histoire particulière - Le legs Mousnier doit son nom à François Mousnier, un riche bourgeois d'Issoudun, mort sans descendant en 1883. L'homme possédait un certain nombre de biens : des terres agricoles, deux fermes et 500 hectares de forêt, situés sur des communes voisines. - invités : Jean-Jacques Desormiers Historien, président de l'association « Les Amis du Vieil Issoudun »; Christophe Denis Agriculteur à Echinaut; Benoit Bert Technicien forestier à l'Office National des Forêts (ONF); André Laignel Maire d'Issoudun (PS) dans l'Indre, premier vice-président de L'Association des Maires de France; Pascal Pauvrehomme Maire de Sainte-Lizaigne

France Culture physique
Issoudun : le legs Mousnier fait des heureux 1/2 : Portrait d'un philanthrope

France Culture physique

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2023 28:25


durée : 00:28:25 - Une histoire particulière - Le legs Mousnier doit son nom à François Mousnier, un riche bourgeois d'Issoudun, mort sans descendant en 1883. L'homme possédait un certain nombre de biens : des terres agricoles, deux fermes et 500 hectares de forêt, situés sur des communes voisines. - invités : Jean-Jacques Desormiers Historien, président de l'association « Les Amis du Vieil Issoudun »; Christophe Denis Agriculteur à Echinaut; Benoit Bert Technicien forestier à l'Office National des Forêts (ONF); André Laignel Maire d'Issoudun (PS) dans l'Indre, premier vice-président de L'Association des Maires de France; Pascal Pauvrehomme Maire de Sainte-Lizaigne

Choses à Savoir
Peut-on vendre des champignons ramassés dans la forêt ?

Choses à Savoir

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2023 1:39


Les dimanches d'automne, la cueillette des champignons est un loisir pratiqué par de nombreux promeneurs. Et il permet d'alimenter la table familiale en produits délectables.En effet, la cueillette est autorisée, du moins dans les forêts domaniales, mais jusqu'à une certaine limite. Elle est évaluée à l'équivalent d'un seau de champignons par famille.Il faut donc se limiter à une cueillette clairement destinée à la consommation familiale. Elle ne doit donc pas excéder une contenance d'environ 5 litres. Si vous en ramassez davantage, vous vous exposez, en cas de contrôle, à des amendes.Mais pouvez-vous vendre ces champignons à des particuliers ou à des restaurants par exemple ? On le sait, les champignons sont des produits savoureux et recherchés, qui se négocient à des prix assez élevés.Aussi ne peut-on vendre de champignons ramassés dans la forêt sans respecter certaines conditions.Une vente soumise au respect de certaines conditionsD'une manière générale, vous n'avez pas le droit de vendre des champignons dans une forêt appartenant à l''État ou à une collectivité territoriale. Dans une forêt domaniale, la mise en vente des champignons ramassés ne peut être envisagée, dans tous les cas, qu'avec l'accord explicite de l'Office national des forêts (ONF).Par contre, rien ne vous empêche de vendre le produit de votre cueillette si la forêt dans laquelle vous avez trouvé les champignons vous appartient. Il sera cependant nécessaire de déclarer les revenus tirés de cette vente à l'administration fiscale.Il sera alors préférable d'encadrer cette activité par la création d'une auto-entreprise, ou de toute autre structure comparable.Vous pourrez aussi écouler votre récolte si le propriétaire de la forêt vous autorise àramasser des champignons sur ses terres et même à les vendre. Pour vous mettre àl'abri de toute contestation, il vaut mieux solliciter une autorisation écrite.Il faut enfin rappeler que le propriétaire de la forêt n'est pas obligé de la clôturerpour faire valoir son droit sur la propriété du sol et donc des champignons. Il n'est pas tenu non plus d'en interdire la cueillette par des panneaux. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

Choses à Savoir
Peut-on vendre des champignons ramassés dans la forêt ?

Choses à Savoir

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2023 2:09


Les dimanches d'automne, la cueillette des champignons est un loisir pratiqué par de nombreux promeneurs. Et il permet d'alimenter la table familiale en produits délectables. En effet, la cueillette est autorisée, du moins dans les forêts domaniales, mais jusqu'à une certaine limite. Elle est évaluée à l'équivalent d'un seau de champignons par famille. Il faut donc se limiter à une cueillette clairement destinée à la consommation familiale. Elle ne doit donc pas excéder une contenance d'environ 5 litres. Si vous en ramassez davantage, vous vous exposez, en cas de contrôle, à des amendes. Mais pouvez-vous vendre ces champignons à des particuliers ou à des restaurants par exemple ? On le sait, les champignons sont des produits savoureux et recherchés, qui se négocient à des prix assez élevés. Aussi ne peut-on vendre de champignons ramassés dans la forêt sans respecter certaines conditions. Une vente soumise au respect de certaines conditions D'une manière générale, vous n'avez pas le droit de vendre des champignons dans une forêt appartenant à l''État ou à une collectivité territoriale. Dans une forêt domaniale, la mise en vente des champignons ramassés ne peut être envisagée, dans tous les cas, qu'avec l'accord explicite de l'Office national des forêts (ONF). Par contre, rien ne vous empêche de vendre le produit de votre cueillette si la forêt dans laquelle vous avez trouvé les champignons vous appartient. Il sera cependant nécessaire de déclarer les revenus tirés de cette vente à l'administration fiscale. Il sera alors préférable d'encadrer cette activité par la création d'une auto-entreprise, ou de toute autre structure comparable. Vous pourrez aussi écouler votre récolte si le propriétaire de la forêt vous autorise à ramasser des champignons sur ses terres et même à les vendre. Pour vous mettre à l'abri de toute contestation, il vaut mieux solliciter une autorisation écrite. Il faut enfin rappeler que le propriétaire de la forêt n'est pas obligé de la clôturer pour faire valoir son droit sur la propriété du sol et donc des champignons. Il n'est pas tenu non plus d'en interdire la cueillette par des panneaux. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Les matins
Les Matins à Montmorency : la forêt face au changement climatique

Les matins

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2023 37:55


durée : 00:37:55 - L'Invité(e) des Matins d'été - par : Quentin Lafay - Emission spéciale depuis la forêt de Montmorency, atteinte de la maladie de l'encre, pour évoquer les risques auxquels sont confrontées les forêts françaises avec le changement climatique. - invités : Jean-Yves Caullet Ingénieur agronome, président du Conseil d'administration de l'Office national des Forêts (ONF); Denis Hemmer Technicien forestier pour l'ONF à la forêt de Montmorency; Claire Nowak responsable du service des forêts pour l'Office national des forêts (ONF)

Les matins
Montmorency : la forêt face au changement climatique / Jean Boucault et Johnny Rasse font comme l'oiseau

Les matins

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2023 120:09


durée : 02:00:09 - Les Matins d'été - par : Quentin Lafay - Les Matins à Montmorency : la forêt face au changement climatique / Jean Boucault et Johnny Rasse font comme l'oiseau - invités : Jean-Yves Caullet Ingénieur agronome, président du Conseil d'administration de l'Office national des Forêts (ONF); Denis Hemmer Technicien forestier pour l'ONF à la forêt de Montmorency; Claire Nowak responsable du service des forêts pour l'Office national des forêts (ONF); Jean Boucault Comédien, imitateur de chants d'oiseaux; Johnny Rasse Comédien, imitateur de chants d'oiseaux

Chaleur Humaine
Comment sauver les forêts françaises ?

Chaleur Humaine

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2023 45:09


**** Recevez gratuitement tous les mardis l'infolettre Chaleur humaine en vous inscrivant ici ****Les arbres et les forêts sont les parmi les meilleurs garants de notre vie sur cette planète. Et pourtant, le plus grand risque qui pèse sur eux, c'est l'activité humaine. Les sécheresses, les incendies, la perte de biodiversité menacent la forêt française. Comment son visage va changer avec le réchauffement climatique ? Quelles sont les actions qu'on peut mettre en oeuvre pour protéger les forêts et les arbres ?Laurent Tillon est biologiste et ingénieur forestier à l'Office national des forêts (ONF). Il vit au cœur de la forêt de Rambouillet, qui lui a inspiré Être un chêne, paru en 2021 chez Actes Sud. Il est également l'auteur de l'essai Les Fantômes de la nuit, des chauves-souris et des hommes (2023).Vous pouvez retrouver les enquêtes spéciales du Monde sur la forêt dans le cadre du projet Adaptation ici : La forêt française sous le feu du réchauffementAvec notamment le reportage sur la disparition du hêtre, victime parfaite du réchauffement climatiqueEt celui sur le pin méditerranéen, qui devrait s'étendre dans les prochaines annéesUn épisode produit par Adèle Ponticelli avec l'aide d'Esther Michon, réalisé par Solène Moulin. Musique originale : Amandine Robillard.« Chaleur humaine » est un podcast hebdomadaire de réflexion et de débat sur les manières de faire face au défi climatique. Ecoutez gratuitement chaque mardi un nouvel épisode, sur Lemonde.fr, Apple Podcast, Acast ou Spotify. Retrouvez ici tous les épisodes.Vous pouvez m'écrire pour me faire part de vos avis, idées, et de vos critiques à l'adresse chaleurhumaine@lemonde.fr. Je réponds chaque semaine dans la newsletter Chaleur humaine à une question sur le défi climatique. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

On n'est pas obligé d'être d'accord - Sophie Durocher
L'intégrale du vendredi 11 novembre

On n'est pas obligé d'être d'accord - Sophie Durocher

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2022 49:09


Entrevue avec Ariane Parent-Lemay, directrice des soins et services ET Karine Philipps, maman du Phare : chaque année, on peut donner notre fête en cadeau afin de faire une différence dans la vie des enfants gravement malades et de leur famille. Tous ceux et celles qui participent à « Donner ma fête en cadeau » peuvent proposer à leurs proches de faire un don en ligne pour le Phare, Enfants et Familles et maison de soins palliatifs pédiatriques.  Chronique de Steve E. Fortin, chroniqueur et blogueur au Journal de Montréal Journal de Québec : deux suggestions d'œuvres en lien avec le jour du Souvenir.  La rencontre Nantel-Durocher avec Guy Nantel : la maltraitance animale au Québec. Entrevue avec Maxime Laporte, président du Mouvement Québec français : le média anglophone Toronto Star a mis le blâme de la pénurie de Tylenol et d'Advil pour enfants sur le bilinguisme canadien. Selon eux, l'exigence d'étiquettes bilingues serait un des facteurs qui contribuerait à la crise.  Une production QUB radioNovembre 2022Pour de l'information concernant l'utilisation de vos données personnelles - https://omnystudio.com/policies/listener/fr

Vous êtes ici
L'or vert des forêts de France

Vous êtes ici

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2022 5:53


Les forêts couvrent près du tiers du territoire français. Si une partie de ces bois est protégée, une part grandissante est exploitée comme bois d'œuvre ou de chauffage. Mais comment gère-t-on cette ressource essentielle ? C'est là qu'interviennent les techniciens de l'Office national des forêts (ONF). Plus que de simples bûcherons, ils sillonnent chaque jour les massifs sylvicoles pour assurer le développement de cet or vert. Dans ces forêts, des particuliers font aussi leur marché et viennent couper eux-mêmes leur bois de chauffe, en accord avec les exploitants.

Com d'Archi
S4#15

Com d'Archi

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2022 53:43


In French in this CDA S4#15 (Monday online), "The wood at the cutting edge : the new ONF headquarter", an interview of Samuel Poutoux, Atelier Woa and Vincent Lavergne, VLAU, both architects- In English in CDA S4#16 (Wednesday online), "The wood at the cutting edge : the new ONF headquarter", a text written by Anne-Charlotte, and read by Esther.En français dans le CDA S4#15 (lundi en ligne), "Le bois à la pointe : le nouveau siège de l'ONF", une interview de Samuel Poutoux, Atelier WOA et Vincent Lavergne, VLAU, architectes– En anglais dans CDA S4#16 (Mercredi en ligne), "Le bois à la pointe : le nouveau siège de l'ONF, un texte écrit par Anne-Charlotte, et lu par Esther.____Le nouveau siège de l'Office National des Forêts ONF, tout juste livré en 2022, réalisé en bois, est plébiscité par la presse française généraliste et spécialisée ! Occasion d'un pas de côté dans Com d'Archi : organiser une interview sur ce projet innovant et exceptionnel plutôt que sur un parcours d'architecte. Une fois n'est pas coutume. Ainsi les dirigeants et fondateurs des agences VLAU et Atelier Woa, Vincent Lavergne et Samuel Poutoux, viennent présenter ce projet démonstrateur qui interroge la capacité de la France à organiser des filiales industrielles, de manière à assurer la transition écologique. Dans ce numéro, en évitant les redites autant que possible, ils parlent du projet de manière holistique et notamment, exposent les conditions de la commande et le parti architectural de cette œuvre située sur le site exceptionnel de l'Ecole Vétérinaire de Maisons-Alfort. Ces deux voix d'architectes, qui représentent respectivement leurs agences et leurs équipes, se font écho et finissent par fusionner dans un discours de passionnés, dédié à cette architecture exceptionnelle.___Image teaser © Atelier WOA & VLAUIngénierie son : Julien Rebours____Si le podcast COM D'ARCHI vous plaît n'hésitez pas :. à vous abonner pour ne pas rater les prochains épisodes,. à nous laisser des étoiles et un commentaire, :-),. à nous suivre sur Instagram @comdarchipodcast pourretrouver de belles images, toujours choisies avec soin, de manière à enrichirvotre regard sur le sujet. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

Ze Shows – Anime Pulse
Manga Pulse 476: Embers of Lust

Ze Shows – Anime Pulse

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2022 101:09


We don't have a lot of thoughts in the head today. It's probably all those fumes from trying to strike oil out in the field so we don't have to work anymore. That or it was getting beer bottles thrown at our head from digging in some random field looking for oil. Turns out property owners don't care for trespassers. At least we'll always have out manga. Tim has The Knight of Embers. There's some group of heroes called knights who have people try out to join their organization. Onf of them, Najin, goes home to visit before his chunnin, er, knight exam to visit with his twin, Nagyuun. Who … Continue reading "Manga Pulse 476: Embers of Lust"

Ze Shows – Anime Pulse
Manga Pulse 476: Embers of Lust

Ze Shows – Anime Pulse

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2022 101:09


We don't have a lot of thoughts in the head today. It's probably all those fumes from trying to strike oil out in the field so we don't have to work anymore. That or it was getting beer bottles thrown at our head from digging in some random field looking for oil. Turns out property owners don't care for trespassers. At least we'll always have out manga. Tim has The Knight of Embers. There's some group of heroes called knights who have people try out to join their organization. Onf of them, Najin, goes home to visit before his chunnin, er, knight exam to visit with his twin, Nagyuun. Who … Continue reading "Manga Pulse 476: Embers of Lust"

Oh My K-Pop
ONF

Oh My K-Pop

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2022 34:25


Today's K-Pop Musician is "ONF(온앤오프)" ONF(온앤오프) is a team with contrasting ON and OFF aspects. Their special combination of music and extravagant performances made them become known as the performance geniuses. They are the all-rounder group where all 6 members can sing and dance very well. Since all members rap as well, they are known to have ‘NO flaws', and the group with 6 main vocalists and main dancers. For each album, they bring us unique concepts and quality music. Today, we will be diving into ONF's music~

Du grain à moudre
Peut-on lutter contre la pyromanie ?

Du grain à moudre

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2022 43:28


durée : 00:43:28 - Le Temps du débat d'été - par : Quentin Lafay - Gironde, Dordogne, Ardèche… : l'ombre des pyromanes plane partout sur les incendies de l'été. Mais qui sont-ils ? Quelles sont leurs motivations ? Alors que gendarmes, pompiers, pouvoirs publics et psychiatres se mobilisent, comment lutter contre la pyromanie, qui emporte des hectares de fumée ? - invités : Joëlle Zask Philosophe, spécialiste de philosophie politique; Jean-Yves Caullet ingénieur agronome, président du Conseil d'administration de l'Office national des Forêts (ONF); Pierre Lamothe; Marina Litinetskaia Psychiatre

Splash
(Rediffusion) - Y-a-t-il trop d'arbres dans les forêts françaises ?

Splash

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2022 19:29


Dans cet épisode de Splash de 2021, Emmanuel Martin s'intéresse à 30 % du territoire français, dont on ne parle pas beaucoup : les forêts. Contrairement à ce que le pourrait penser, nos forêts françaises sont en pleine croissance malgré l'urbanisation du pays.Chaque année, 45 000 hectares de forêts sont coupés, sur plus de 90 000. Dans l'équipe (très) citadine de Splash, on s'est demandé comment nous gérions la forêt française. Faudrait-il en couper plus, faut-il protéger cette écrin de biodiversité, ou les deux sont-ils compatibles ? Pour répondre à ces questions, Emmanuel Martin a discuté avec l'économiste de l'environnement spécialisé dans les forêts, Philippe Delacote.Spla$h est une émission de Nouvelles Écoutes présentée et animée par Emmanuel Martin. Elle est produite et réalisée par Marine Raut. Coordonnée par Mathilde Jonin. Bibliographie :« Gérer les forêts », ONF.frEn France, filière bois = 400 000 emplois, + que l'industrie automobile. L'ONF fournit 40% du bois sur le marché en France.« Des forêts publiques aux différents visages », ONF.« En forêt publique, une gestion raisonnée de la ressource en bois », ONF.fr5« La forêt française poursuit son expansion pour atteindre aujourd'hui 31 % du territoire métropolitain », Environnement magazine« Gestion forestière, coupe et vente de bois », Maforêt.fr7. « En Sologne, pour la chasse, des kilomètres de grillages étouffent la forêt », Reporterre.net8Les chasseurs nourrissent le gibier pour pouvoir mieux le piéger ensuite. Souvent de riches propriétaires à la tête de domaines de plusieurs dizaines d'hectares.Bénédicte Rulleau, Jeoffroy Dehez, Patrick Point (2010), « Une approche multi-attributs de la demande de loisirs sur les espaces naturels : l'exemple de la forêt publique », Revue française d'économie, vol. XXV, n1, p. 175-211.Vous pouvez consulter notre politique de confidentialité sur https://art19.com/privacy ainsi que la notice de confidentialité de la Californie sur https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Seoulmates
Episode 213 - December Kpop Roundup

Seoulmates

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2021 33:41


No Christmas music here! In this episode, we cover songs from ONF, NCT U, Everglow, MoonByul, and more. Check out our Spotify playlist for this month here, and our YouTube playlist here. Follow us on...

Seoul Dive
Ep. 8 | Every Day Is A Tuesday: Somi, Ailee, 2AM, TO1, & ONF

Seoul Dive

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2021 47:34


This week's regular Seoul Dive is all about Queens, Kings, and our usual Wild Card, Mnet. Featuring Somi, Ailee, 2AM, VIXX's Leo, Astro's MJ, TO1, and ONF. Follow us on our social media! Twitter: https://twitter.com/seouldivepod Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seouldive

A Drink With a Friend

Walking is good for us, but it takes a while — it's not the most efficient mode of transportation. But it's not about efficiency; that's not the point. What about the other stuff in our life that can benefit from slowness? Seth and Tsh talk about being slow to reply, slow to respond, and slow to assume, and how we all need to do more of it. Seth: Newsletter | Twitter | Instagram | Website Tsh: Newsletter | Twitter | Instagram | Website Support the show — buy the next round of drinks! Subscribe to the show's Substack Find all the episodes Tsh's Rule of Life workshop Ancient Nutrition Bone Broth Mark Sparrow's tweet @findinginterestingpeople Atlas Obscura Podcast Scroll down for the transcript Tsh: This is A Drink With a Friend, I'm Tsh Oxenreider. Seth: And I'm Seth Haines. Tsh: Seth, what are you drinking this afternoon?  Seth: Have you ever heard of Ancient Nutrition? Tsh: No. I've heard of those two words.  Seth: The brand Ancient Nutrition. Yes, you know ancient and you know nutrition. The is a brand called Ancient Nutrition and they make bone broth. Powdered bone broth.  Tsh: Oh yeah. Seth: Today, I was noticing I was a little low on my protein intake which is to say a lot low. I need a lot of protein. I went to Ozark Natural Foods which is our local co-op, our local Whole Foods competitor. I try to go there any time I can instead of Whole Foods. I picked up a packet of Ancient Nutrition Chocolate Bone Broth that tastes amazing!  Tsh: Okay! This comes full circle to a few episodes ago when you talked about anything chocolate and healthy is terrible.  Seth: I know. Someone on A Drink With a Friend that sponsors the drinks has recommended some things which I have not gotten around to trying but in preparation for today while I was at ONF looking for high protein foods, I saw this and it was chocolate flavored and it was $3 and it had 20 grams of protein, less than sugar, very few carbs. I thought I'm going to try this and while I drink it on the air I'm going to report to the people about whether it's good or terrible as all healthful chocolate things are terrible, this is kind of amazing.  Tsh: Nice. I'm literally looking it up right now. Seth: I mixed it in, it recommends 12 ounces, it would probably be better, but I mixed it in 16 ounces of hot water. It would be super amazing in hot cashew milk or almond milk.  Tsh: That's great to know because bone broth drinks are expensive so to me, $3 is not that bad.  Seth: Well, for a packet. I use it as a meal supplement so I think the bigger tub of it is quite expensive but still amazing. If you use it as a snack or a supplement, I highly recommend it. Tsh: Very cool. Seth: I'm assuming I know what you're drinking because you texted me before we went on that you were running a few minutes late because you were making your drink which is… Tsh: Coffee. Black coffee. I don't drink coffee that much when we talk because I can't do caffeine after 2 pm but this is 1 pm so I can still do it, I'm in the window. It's just my standard Cafe Creole Ethiopian coffee that's just good. It's nothing fancy but it's really good coffee from the grocery store. I actually added a cinnamon stick because I was just reading cinnamon in the nutritional benefits so I'm just tossing it in there. I am actually testing out a theory. After we record, I'm going to take a 15-minute nap. I was just watching this YouTuber talk about the weird unknown effects of taking a power nap after drinking coffee and that it does something or other that I can't remember and I'm going to test to see if it's complete sh*t or if he's telling the truth. We'll see. I've never been able to take good naps but I'm desperate for some sleep.  Seth: Can you report back? Tsh: I will report back.  Seth: Interestingly you said, the amazing health benefits of a cinnamon stick and I don't know what that even means.  Tsh: It's like digestion, mental clarity, and what is that called? The bio-gut stuff. Whatever that's called. It promotes healthy bacteria growth, the good bacteria and not the bad bacteria. That is a very scientific way of explaining what I just said.  Seth: That sounds pretty amazing. Maybe I need to get eat a cinnamon stick today.  Tsh: Don't do that. That's probably toxic or something. We are not doctors.  Seth: Yes, that's right. Tsh: We're kicking off, I don't know if you want to call this a series because they're basically not non-sequiturs so in my mind they are kind of a series. This week and next week, we're going to talk about these two ideas we've had on our minds. Today, what's been on my mind because it's been on my mind all week, is this idea of slow. This is not new. I've talked about slow and moving slowly through life frequently in many different places so I'm kind of reinventing the wheel here except I want to talk about it in a slightly different way. The thing that's got me thinking about this is my current workout routine. I've been walking about six miles a day for the past seventeen days. Today's my eighteenth day of walking six miles a day.  Seth: Wow, that's amazing. How long does that take you to walk?  Tsh: Believe it or not, not as much as you think. Here's the thing, I don't do it in one sitting. I do it all throughout the day. I'm very grateful to live in a very walkable neighborhood. I've made this commitment post-Lent to walk anywhere a mile or less and so I've just been walking everywhere. I take a morning walk, afternoon, and evening walk but then I sometimes just get up and walk around the block. It's for mental clarity in a lot of ways but also for a lot of other health benefits. And it's really been a net positive for me. I was doing some reading about it. We all just know walking is good for us but here's the thing, it's really slow, that's a big duh, but it's a slow form of working out and it doesn't feel like you're doing a lot. It feels like you're doing the thing you've done since you were eighteen months old. It's gotten me thinking about what does it look like to move slower through life. I've been thinking about three different ways that I think we can all move a little slower. Before I get into those three things, unpack with me a little bit, Seth, what does slow look like for you right now? Are you able to be slow at all in any capacity in your life at the moment?  Seth: Yeah, in some capacities. I juggle a lot of hats from a courier perspective mostly because I've made now two career shifts in the last two years. One away from the practice of law and one back into the practice of law so I've had to juggle both of those transitions. I'm in the middle of one of those transitions right now. From a business perspective, I always feel like my hair is on fire. Everything moves so fast. The practice of law moves pretty fast anyway. The content development and coaching and book editing and writing move pretty fast, too, with the kind of work that I do in that space. My day feels pretty fast. In the last few months, I've really been focused on, we've talked about this before, I've been doing CrossFit now for almost a year and I've been focused on not just doing CrossFit but then building some endurance work on top of that that is intentionally steady state cardio which because I'm forty-three is much slower than when I was twenty-three. I have been intentionally seeking a slower rhythm and slower pace probably four to five times a week. Whether that's by sitting on a rower and just clocking off forty-five minutes or whether that's going on a long run to have that slower state cardio. That slow time is really helpful for me because it pulls me away from that breakneck speed and I find, actually yesterday, I had a slow row day and there was this issue I was having a hard time unlocking. Within ten minutes, I texted the answer to somebody. That slow, slowing down, being disconnected from the internet, being connected really only to yourself and your thoughts has been really helpful for me. I really have to seek it out. I am not as good at it probably as you are. I would love to hear more about your journey into slowness. But before, I have a couple of technical questions.  Tsh: Okay. Seth: One, is your morning, afternoon, and evening walk for mileage? Tsh: It's for steps officially but I also look at the mileage so I've got a Fitbit, our whole family has them now, actually. I wanted to track a number of things but yes, technically it is. I walk our dog most of those walks and I just keep track. I officially check for 10,000 steps a day but it roughly checks out at four to six miles a day what I end up clocking. I go for mileage. Seth: That was my second question, is how many steps is six miles? Tsh: 10,000 steps for me equal to about four miles. 15,000 steps get northward of six. The reason I'm going to switch to looking at more miles, now that I've got in the habit, it feels weird, eighteen days in a row of doing 10,000 plus steps, it feels normal to me. The thing I've thought about is everybody's steps are different, right?  Seth: Right. Tsh: My gait is a lot shorter than Kyle's because I'm a foot shorter than him. But five miles is five miles. That's why I'm using that as a metric more probably in the near future.  Seth: Those are my two questions. Miles and steps. I think that's good when we're talking about slow exercise or slowness in general, but with slow exercise, I think one of the things is having a consistent metric. When I think of rowing, for instance, yesterday I rowed a 10K and it took me forty-five minutes but I'm also really long and generate a lot of leverage and so somebody who rowing next to me and rowing a 10K who might be shorter, maybe like you, would have to pull a whole lot more and so the amount of energy generated isn't quite the same. That's why a lot of times people will say run for time, pull for time, and row for time when you're doing these slower cardio, steady-state cardio events. I like the idea of saying let's pick a metric that is the [inaudible] same and do that. Tsh: Yeah, for sure. For me, one of the things I've noticed the past few weeks is I started off doing it for the physical health benefits but the mental health and the emotional health have been right there with it to where that's one of the reasons why it starts feeling weird to me to not walk as much. Let's say I get closer to 10K versus 15K, I can feel the steps. I can feel it. For me, the gains have been mostly mental because let's face it, I'm not sore after walking six miles, it's not hard. It really is not. But the mental clarity and the emotional clarity have been so great and here's the reason. Our bodies release cortisol when we work out, that's just how they do it. Women, in particular, release more cortisol than men and that's the stress hormone. We need that stress hormone. It's not about getting rid of cortisol but it's about having it released at the right times or for the right reasons. Right now, I'm trying to lower my cortisol levels because I'm trying to get better sleep and I'm trying to work on my mental health, my constant monkey brain. I need to lower my cortisol levels and walking is a great way to do it because it's one of the only forms of active working out that lower cortisol level, not elevates it. That's why I feel like the mental and emotional benefits have been really solid for me. That's where I want to park on because as much as we like to talk about fitness and we will continue to, I think we all can relate a little bit to thinking slower and maybe reacting a little slower to the things in our life. We've all been through a global pandemic and I think most of us have experienced a slowing down of our life in the past twelve months because of our calendars, that they have emptied. I don't know about you, Seth, but that was to me, probably the best benefit of something like this that has not been a good thing. I have welcomed the lowered expectations of me needing to be somewhere at a certain time and having to run all over town to take kids places, stuff like that. It's been a really nice slowing down in that department.  Seth: I agree with you 100%. We were talking the other night about how there was a moment early in the pandemic when my business on one front slowed down so much that I was actually concerned. But by the same token, we were eating out zero, we were going zero, we were driving zero, and we started realizing maybe we're losing a little bit of money but we're also saving a ton of money just as a result of the slowness. Then we started realizing we're more connected, we're spending more time together, we see each other just because the pace of life had slowed down so much. Over the last six months, it's slowly creeped up and I miss some of those things, some of that slow time. I just miss it.  Tsh: Yeah, I do too. This is for me why it's a benefit to do something like walk because you can claim it. Walking is completely not efficient. You don't get anywhere quickly when you walk. If I choose to walk to the pharmacy to pick up a prescription or to the library to pick up a book, by walking I'm intentionally taking the harder, slower, more methodical route. But I welcome the space. Many times I listen to an audiobook or a podcast but I'm also really and truly embracing the being with my thoughts, especially in the Spring when I can hear birds and wind and things like that and I don't want to miss them.  What's been on my mind is this idea that we can all collectively understand, three different ways that we can embrace a more sacramental nature of slow and it all has to do with response. Responding to the world around us. The first one, and I'm curious what you think, Seth. Actually, while I pull it up, I'm pulling up a tweet that I retweeted. I didn't write it but I loved it, I read it last week. How quickly do you respond to email? Seth: I'm not super great at it. Some of it is that I put parameters around my time. If you shoot me a business email that's non-urgent after hours I'm not going to respond. Period. End of story. Until business hours. There are exceptions to that. I have a client who will periodically text me something and he's in a different time zone and will text and say I know it's after hours but will you look at the email, then yeah. I will do that. I am probably an efficient responder to emails but I'm not always timely because I don't respond after hours. I'm pretty slow.  Tsh: I'm very slow. No one will give me an award for inbox zero, ever. I saw this tweet, it's by a guy named Mark Sparrow, I don't know who it is but just says,  “Best email signature ever: It is normal for me to take a couple of days to read my emails and several more days to reflect on the matter and respond in a calm manner. The culture of immediacy and the constant fragmentation of time are not compatible with the kind of life I lead.”  Seth: That's amazing.  Tsh: I know. It feels a little stick it to the man-ish. I can see how somebody can read it and think who are you to say that this is not compatible with the life you lead? I need an answer ASAP. But I really like this because I think the point of an email signature like this is saying, listen, these things you are putting in my inbox, you're not owed a quick response. Someone even commented below that when they started work in the early 90s it was just a normal practice to not respond to a letter within two weeks. This sudden expectation for a same day, sometimes same hour response is just not realistic. I once heard my favorite definition of an email inbox, it was like a to-do list from somebody else, or a to-do list for someone else's time. I forget how they said it. Basically, it's people wanting things from you most of the time. For me, I really like this idea of embracing a slow to reply posture. I've done this for a long time. I've had this no-need-to-reply practice to my emails but to me, I feel like this might be an encouragement to anyone listening that there is perhaps not as urgent a need to reply to that email, to that Slack message, to that text, to that request to volunteer at your kid's end of the year banquet, all these things that you have permission to think it over before you reply to something like that. Seth: It seems to me that one of the benefits of your walking practice, if I'm thinking of it in practical terms, is if I were to walk more everywhere I went and an email came across on my way to the library, 1) I might not even see it unless I'm looking at my phone if I'm walking which feels antithetical to the whole point; but 2) even if you did receive it, are you going to stop on the side of the road and sit there and type it out with your thumbs? Probably not. It feels like even when you're talking about this, and maybe this is part of your initial point, is that as you go on these walks and as you slow down, the tyranny of the urgent actually can't reach out and grab you by the throat.  Tsh: 100%. That's one of the great beauties of this. I think just being outside at minimum is this invitation to detach from the ability to be immediate. In fact, I have been tempted by the idea of leaving my phone, which I know sounds like, just leave your phone, what's the big deal? But for me, because of the audiobook/podcast tethering, I haven't done it and I've been more reluctant but I think I'm going to try. Here's the thing. I barely check my email on the phone anyway but I'm still reachable. I still could be reached. That is one of the great beauties of a slower posture is intentionally making it inconvenient, let's just say, to reply quickly to things in life.  Seth: That's sort of a side practice. I've heard people talk about this with respect to social media. How do you slow down the onslaught of social media and social media demands on your time? Responding to every comment on any, choose your platform, or making sure that you post on, choose your platform, which is all pretty vacuous stuff, if we're being super honest. Although my beautiful thing that I'm going to share today is literally an Instagram profile. Anyway, that aside, I have often heard it said that if you want to live a slower life, if you want to not be dragged into the tyranny of the urgent, then make it more difficult to get to [insert the platform], your Instagram, your Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat, whatever the next thing is, make it inconvenient.  Tsh: Yeah, add some friction there. I don't have Twitter on my phone. I currently have Instagram on my phone because I was working on a thing. But for a better part of the pandemic, I deleted it and only downloaded it on Friday's and that was fantastic to where I had to intentionally go and download it, re-sign in, retell it yes, you can have access to my photo library, and it was really good for me because I wouldn't just mindlessly scroll when I was waiting at a checkout line. But I could still access it on my laptop but there's something a little more intentional about opening up your laptop and that's the same with Twitter. That's actually a nice segue to my second form of being slow and that's a flip side of the same coin, and that's being slow to respond, which I know is similar to slow to reply. It's this idea that something in this culture of ours has dictated that we should respond to situations right away if we're to be good people. I made the foolish decision the other day to scroll through my unsubscribe messages, why people unsubscribe from my email. I never do that. I know not to do that. Seth: A bad idea.  Tsh: It's never helpful. It's like looking at book reviews. They're not helpful for me. Seth: It's actually like going and asking people that hate you why they hate you to their face. Just let it go, who cares? It doesn't matter.  Tsh: I don't care why you've unsubscribed. But this one person unsubscribed from me because I did not respond to a current newsworthy event that happened not too long ago. I didn't make a statement in my weekly email and so she decided that was worth an unsubscribe and worth telling me. Here's the thing. I didn't even know what happened because I closed up all these links because I had a book deadline. I literally did not know what happened. My silence was for a reason. But here's the thing, even if I did know what happened, if I didn't reply to it, that doesn't make me a bad person. If anything, it simply made me a person who needed to think or maybe let other people who are wiser than me or have more ownership in the issue or stake in the issue, speak about the thing. I just find it interesting that we live in this world that says if you're remotely online, which is honestly all of us, most people have chosen to be on social media if they're listening to a podcast, that you need to say something. I just think that's really, really weird. I don't like it. Seth: Yesterday, I was watching some awkward Mark Zukerberg moments. That was the title of the YouTube video clip. I was actually looking for something to make this meta-joke. This is all getting really weird, what I'm about to tell you. I was looking for a clip to make a meta-joke on Instagram in a Reels post. It was going to be this really snarky meta-joke about Reels themselves.  Tsh: Got it. Seth: I started looking for awkward moments of Mark Zukerberg and I happened to run into this one and he was before Congress and they were asking him questions and they said something like, Mr. Zukerberg, you're not from here, you flew into DC to talk to us, would you mind telling us publicly where you stayed last night? He just stood there and laughed and said, no. Then they asked, would you mind telling us where you ate dinner last night? He said, no, I don't really want to do that either. They said would you at least tell us how much money you spent on dinner last night? He said no, I don't really want to do that either. They said, yet, you're providing this platform that encourages those people to do all of these things immediately. Everybody got a good chuckle out of it. He got a good chuckle out of it, too. The point held, was that we feel the need to instantly tell everybody everything about us just because we can. That feels bonkers and then when you bring that into a news response scenario, it gets really tricky because, in the last week and a half, three major news outlets have had to come out and say we missed a story. We missed it, we misreported, we gave some bad facts, we correct those facts, here are the facts. Facts are still bad but they were reported inaccurately. If you had spent the time to immediately respond to the inaccurate facts, then are you going to go back and immediately respond to the correction? It's a cycle that never ends and there are some things that just demand a lot more thought. On top of those two things, I look at some of the issues that make major news cycles these days and I think about systemic racism, which is in my opinion, a very real thing, a very terrible thing, that needs to be dismantled in the United States.  Tsh: Yep. Seth: And in my local town.  Tsh: Yeah. Seth: I know people who are doing amazing work in the realm of really dismantling these systems who are not on social media and who are very quietly doing amazing work. I would rather continue to watch them do amazing work than jump on to social media and always have to have a response. I've always felt like there are times that you do need to immediately say something if you know about it. Come out and say the thing, be clear, be honest, be who you are. But also, that's no substitute for doing really good quiet work that no one ever knows about. That is slow. That is not instant. Tsh: Exactly. That actually brings me perfectly to the third point, which is being slow to assume.  Seth: Yeah. Tsh: People are nuanced and the Internet, by and large, is not. People are three-dimensional, our screens are two-dimensional. It is hard to pick up on, not only tone and rhetoric but also what's not being said. Someone's silence could very well be because they're doing the on-the-ground, un-sexy, hard work of dismantling racism or sexism or poverty or whatever the issue is, in their local community and it is a better use of their gifts and resources and energy than having some kind of public statement in a tweet. Even when we're not talking about issues or newsworthy events, just looking at somebody online, looking at their body of work, and deciding why it may or may not be for you. To bring it back again to those unsubscribes, I noticed a few other people had mentioned that they decided to unsubscribe once they heard that we had joined the Catholic Church as a family, which is a whole other thing which maybe we can get to later on this podcast. The reason is that they assume that because we have basically put ourselves under the authority of the Catholic Church, then it means we believe and feel A, B, and C about a certain type of person, a certain belief, a certain you name it. They're jumping to this huge conclusion based on this one thing they know about me and they don't know me, really. Here's what it comes down to, I have messed up their idea of who they want me to be. Or I've messed with their version that they want about me and because I am not offering that now, they've been given another piece of information they don't know what to do with it and they just decided they can't have it. Here's the thing. I am all for the act of unsubscribing whenever you just flat out can't have something in your life for whatever certain reason. People are not for everyone and that's completely fine. I follow a podcast that I learn a lot from. I really do not like this podcaster's politics at all. We are on very opposite ends of the political spectrum but I still subscribe to his podcast because I can learn from him and I appreciate that his posture is one of humility and he is nuanced and I appreciate that. Let's be slow to assume. Seth: Again, part of the work of slowness and the work of slowly getting to know yourself and being comfortable with yourself and who you are, means that when people make snap judgments about you and you have clarity about who you are, what you believe, and what you're about, what you're supposed to be about, some of those things just roll off your back a little bit differently. If you have the confidence of someone who has done the slow, hard work and continues to do the slow, hard work and continues to change, and be open to new ideas and move in different ways, then some of that stuff can just float away. I will ask because I think it's a fascinating question, were the assumptions, based on your joining of the Catholic Church, were there both conservative and liberal people who assumed quasi opposite things about you as a result?  Tsh: 100%. It's fascinating to me. I think maybe this is why the Catholic Church can feel so uncomfortable to people because it's so old it doesn't fit into anybody's modern categories. It does a great job of pissing off both the liberals and the conservatives. It's uncomfortable for me. There are some things that I'm like, ehhhhh, I don't know.  Seth: Because you're human! Tsh: Exactly, that's what we're saying, right? Of course, this is just one example of nuance. I'm not at all implying that this is the book of where nuance lies. We can be nuanced and not be Catholic. This is just my reality at the moment. I'm rattling people's ideas of who they thought I was. They thought because I promoted candidate X, then, of course, I must believe this way theologically. Or because I make these decisions about my kids' education then, of course, I also think these other things. Nobody is one way. We are all just a mixed bag of stuff. I can't think of what it is.  Seth: I took some of that heat. Amber and I took some of that heat after the election. Go look through my profiles. I was very clear. I'll just say to the listener here, I voted for Joe Biden. I very much supported Joe Biden. Not because I agree with everything Joe Biden says and certainly not because I consider myself a Democrat. But I felt like we were at an imperative point in American history and I felt like, of the two candidates, there was one candidate that could get us where we needed to go out of that imperative moment at least head us in the right direction, point us in the right direction. Does that mean that I'm 100% pro-abortion? No. Not at all.  Tsh: Exactly. Seth: I've been very, very clear about that. Yet, I took heat from people saying that same thing. How could you ever support abortion? That's not what I was doing. I think part of the problem, and this is not to make it about politics. I have very good friends who will vote another way and I'm still very close friends with them and will continue to be. Typically when we get in a room I can vehemently disagree with their political opinion and we can still find common ground where we still love each other and still have productive conversations but that is primarily because we're in relationship not because we're in this weird subscriber/consumer/producer relationship. I think once we start to commodify each other and impute meaning to each other that maybe not warranted or not fair and in that commodity turn sour or disappoints then it's really easy to throw the commodity away and say Tsh, you're a commodity, I'm done with you. Seth, you're a commodity, I'm done with you. I do this to people, too. I'm a human too, so I have done this, too. I think part of what we have to get back to, again, back to your slowness, we have to get back to the slow art of paying attention. We talked about this a little bit with other writers, the art of paying attention a few years back. I don't know if you remember that. That's the primary work of the writer. I think that's actually the primary work of the writer because it's the primary work of the human. Paying attention. Slowing down. Listening to each other. Not being so quick to throw each other away. Listen, like you said, if I'm not for you, please go find the person that's for you. I'm totally cool with that. You're not hurting my feelings but don't throw your assumptions on me.  Tsh: Exactly. I think that seeing is the act of being sacramental. This morning I heard this fantastic definition of sacramentality, which is simply seeing the world as it really is. Since we like to talk about that here and since this episode, in particular, is about slowness, just to bring it full circle. We have a neighbor down the street, who during the election had all sorts of signs in their yard for the opposite candidate our family had signs in our yard for, or at least that we were voting for, they were Trump supporters, basically. They felt compelled to put signs out in their yard for that. I admit that I was probably quick to judge what they might have been like as people. Fast forward, in my walking habit, I nearly every day past their house. It is a sweet older couple who have a fantastic backyard garden that I can see because it's a corner lot. They are the nicest people. They say hello. They talk about our dog. Our neighbor across the street who drives a Harley, he's been over there. I've seen him in their garage chit-chatting. They are beacons of the neighborhood because they've been here a long time. I've really grown to appreciate who they are as people, just a sweet older couple. For me, that's my lesson. These people are nuanced and I slowed down enough to walk past their house and recognize that and I don't think I would have if I just drove by their house all the time.  Seth: I think that is key for this moment in our country, is just being slow enough to actually get to know each other as people not as avatars, not as thoughts or ideas on a screen. One of the things Amber and I have been talking about, we've actually talked about it on this podcast, Amber and I have been talking about why do Instagram quotables work to drive audience engagement? I just freaking refuse to do it. I refuse to do it. I know it would be good for my audience but I cannot do it. The reason I think that I push so much against it is just the instant gratification of quotable words in a moment that don't make us wrestle with the meaning of an image. Some of what I'm going to share today in what is beautiful to me right now is an artist who is legitimately the viewer wrestle with the art of an image and it takes time. You can't necessarily impute meaning and it's important.  Tsh: Go ahead and tell us about this then because that was going to be my next question is what's adding beauty to your life. Tell me more.  Seth: There's an account called @findinginterestingpeople. I actually sent you the link so that while we're talking you can pull it up, maybe. Tsh: I'm pulling it up right now.  Seth: If you look, it's just black and white street photography by I think a female artist who's just capturing the world through her lens. Every one of these photos is either an interesting composition or an interesting person and it really makes you stop and say, what is the story of that photograph. Again, you have to slow down and stop and look at these photos and spend time with them and say what is it about this that's compelling? And they're all compelling to me.  Tsh: These are fantastic. First of all, it's in New York, which has so many street images that it's just interesting to those of us that don't live in that environment. I love that she's done black and white and I like that it's not quotes. I agree. These are real photos.  Seth: I don't know why, my assumption is that it's a woman and I'm not 100% sure why because I'm looking at the profile and it doesn't really say that. What is super interesting is that I've already made an assumption based on these images and the way that these images have been captured makes me think this is a female looking at the world. Even that is just a fascinating assumption on my part. Tsh: You're the one that really gave me that idea last year about thinking of Instagram more as a museum and it has made me hate it so much less. I'm not yet at the point where I like it. I don't think I like it as much as you but I don't hate it like I used to, so I appreciate it.  Seth: The curation has made the world of difference in my life.  Tsh: Yeah. That's very cool. It's like visual poetry. Seth: 100%. I actually talked about this in my last newsletter because I've been having such a hard time writing. What I have found is that if I can find the right image, it somehow unlocks the words. These last three to four weeks of just having a real struggle writing, it's unlocking words for me.  Tsh: That's really cool. I think it's funny, I went to my homepage and it's literally @#!%. It is jarring. I'm unfollowing right now.  Seth: You've got to mute those things. What you should do is, Kyle, put a big long beep there and then me coming back and saying, you've got to mute those things.  Tsh: That's a good idea. Do that, Kyle. Seth: What are you listening to, watching, reading, that is making your life a little bit more good, true, beautiful? Tsh: Right now, it is a new-to-me podcast that I did not know existed because I thought they just did written stuff. Have you heard of the website Atlas Obscura?  Seth: No. Tsh: I think you would like it. It's a great travel website but apparently, they do a podcast and I started bingeing on this podcast the past week and it is a delight. One of the reasons I like it is because each episode is only fifteen minutes long. There's a place for shorter podcasts and I'm here for it. It is a podcast about the weird obscure, unknown places around the world that would never make a travel guide or you would walk by and never know. The first episode I listened to was from a few weeks ago and it was called Brooklyn Latrine and it was about this buried latrine before there was indoor plumbing in this guy's backyard. It's really well produced. The sound is great. It's like reporting but it's reporting about mundane things that we walk by and I thought it was perfect for this particular episode of talking about slow and walking because it feels like they discovered these things by going on walks and unpacking these unknown places. There's one about a sourdough library.  Seth: What?? Tsh: Yeah. There's the one about this tiny little place in Malawi. There's a thousand-year-old rose somewhere. There's a thing about communist mummies. Snake dens. There are just really cool, tiny, little, weird, bizarre places. I feel like it's a great audio form of armchair travel. If you're feeling the itch to get the heck out of dodge because of this pandemic and you still just can't, this is a really good podcast for that. Two thumbs up for me. I'm glad to have found a new travel podcast.  Seth: That sounds pretty amazing. I'm going to have to listen to that.  Tsh: It's really good. I think listeners of this show, if you like our show, you'll probably like this show.  Seth: That's awesome. Tsh: It's time to wrap up this episode. You can find this episode, as well as all episodes, at adrinkwithafriend.com. It's also where you can sign up for our new Substack space for the show, where we have plans for some pretty great extra stuff for you, and it's also where you can support this show for just a few bucks. If you like what we're bringing to your earbuds, we are almost 100% listener-supported and we like it that way — so again, all this is at adrinkwithafriend.com and in the show notes of this episode. You can find me and all my work at tshoxenreider.com — Seth, where can people find you? Seth: sethaines.com and like last week, follow me over on Instagram @sethhaines. Tsh: You're doing good work there. I appreciate it. Seth: Thanks, I appreciate it. I'm really excited about the next photo that I'm going to release which I found on my phone, taken in Kansas City in 2017. You will see it probably by the time this episode goes out.  Tsh: Very cool. Look forward to it. Music for the show is by Kevin MacLeod, editing is by Kyle Oxenreider, and Caroline TeSelle is our transcriber and assistant extraordinaire. I'm Tsh Oxenreider, and Seth and I will be back here with you soon. Thanks for listening. Subscribe at drink.substack.com This is a public episode. Get access to private episodes at thecommon.place/subscribe