POPULARITY
Weather History and Forecast Historical weather event (May 15, 1968): Major tornado outbreak in Iowa with two F5 tornadoes Caused significant damage in Charles City, Oelwein, Maynard, and other areas 20 total fatalities and over 600 injuries Current forecast: Transitioning weather pattern with thunderstorms possible Potential for 2+ inches of rain across Iowa in the coming week Brief cold snap with temperatures dropping to high 40s in central Iowa Moving from "comfortably warm" conditions to more seasonable temperatures Climate Outlook Moving past the "spring barrier" in forecasting (transition from synoptic to mesoscale/convective weather patterns) June outlook: Warmer temperatures expected across the entire U.S. June-July outlook: Warmer temperatures with drier conditions possible Soil moisture through end of May and early June will be critical for summer conditions Crop Management and Irrigation Recent conditions: Warm with minimal rainfall (only about 0.05" statewide in the past week) Importance of irrigation for early plant growth and nutrient uptake New irrigation tool mentioned: Sumisensu watering hose from Japan Pest Management Striped cucumber beetles emerging as a major pest issue Overwinter as adults and carry bacterial wilt disease Prefer cucumber family crops, especially cucumbers, cantaloupe, and maxima-type squash Control methods: Exclusion (row covers and high tunnel screening with ProtekNet) Parthenocarpic varieties that don't require pollination Kaolin clay applications on young plants Organic pesticide options (azadirachtin, pyrethrins) Soil drenches with beneficial nematodes or entomopathogenic fungi Podcast summary generated by Claude.ai
00:00:00 Julien Fade - Losing You (Extended) 00:04:36 Kryoman, Samuel Miller, Luxe Agoris - Sunbeam (Club Mix) 00:08:44 Mary Mesk - Cocoon (Extended Mix) 00:12:50 Progruss - Tape Echoes (Extended Mix) 00:18:27 Saidorsen - Irena (Extended Mix) 00:23:01 CamelPhat - Deep Inside (Original Mix) 00:28:18 Christian Nielsen - World Is Free (Extended Mix) 00:32:44 Paul Anthonee - Metensarcosis (Original Mix) 00:38:25 Symmetic, Ewelina Koll - Forbidden Love (Marc van Linden & D-Gor Rework) 00:44:08 Solee - Zeitgeist (Original Mix) 00:48:07 Bicep, Clara La San - Water feat. Clara La San (Original Mix)
During this episode of the Indiana Agronomy podcast, hosts Carl Joern and Ben Jacob discuss wheat, the weather, and whether an extreme cold snap can kill tar spot. "I'm not under the impression that cold temperatures have any impact on tar spot. It's a fungus, and I'm not aware of any published research that shows that extreme cold kills off those spores," says Joern. Spoiler alert: Insects are resilient, and they will overwinter. It takes temperatures of -40 degrees celsius to kill off many insects that affect crop health. Further reading: What makes winter winter, "winter?" https://extension.sdstate.edu/what-makes-winter-wheat-winter-wheat
On this episode, Sean shares his theory why it's perfectly fine to overwinter your plants in self-watering containers and how to do it! Listen to hear his theory and definitely check out Crescent Garden self-watering containers at crescentgarden.com . Make sure to use our coupon code: SPOKENGARDEN15 at checkout (if you are buying any of their AMAZING planters) to get 15% off your purchase! Also, visit spokengarden.com to find out more about us and to checkout our seed sowing tools! You can buy your own Dibby seed sowing tools on Etsy or Amazon! All rights reserved for Spoken Garden. Music by Briar Edwards.
Welcome to the KSL Greenhouse show! Join hosts Maria Shilaos and Taun Beddes as they talk about all things plants, tackle your toughest gardening questions, and offer tips that can help you maintain a beautiful yard. Listen on Saturdays from 8am to 11am at 102.7 FM, 1160 AM, kslnewsradio.com, or on the KSL NewsRadio app. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram at @kslgreenhouse. Happy planting! #KSLGreenhouse Guest: Nate Porter, Executive Director of The Beaumont Assisted Living and Memory Care 10:05 Feature: How to Overwinter Plants 10:20 Is there any way I can save trees that were scraped by buck deer? What’s causing poor production on my potted tomato plants? Should I water my large trees if the grass around them is very dry right now? 10:35 How do I overwinter my patio rose? Can I eat the tubers from ornamental sweet potato plants? Is it too late to transplant a trumpet vine? Will wrapping arborvitae be effective? Why did my new tree split, and what can I do to save it? Can my potted English lavender plants be left out for the winter? Can a micro tomato be grown hydroponically? How do I winterize pines? 10:50 How much of the grape vine do I need to save to continue getting grapes if it’s grown into a tree that has to be removed? If I save my sweet potato tubers this year, will they grow next year? What tree trunks should be wrapped?
Send us a textHi, I'm Roz, and welcome to The Cut Flower Podcast! In today's episode, I'll be answering your most burning questions about seasonal flower gardening, particularly focusing on autumn tasks. From bulb planting to how to care for your dahlias as winter approaches, we're covering it all. Whether you're a seasoned gardener or just starting, I've got practical advice to help you get the most out of your flower patch.This episode dives into some of the most common questions I receive from my membership groups and courses, including how to handle bulbs like Narcissi and Tulips during autumn. I break down why October is ideal for planting Narcissi, but why it's crucial to wait until November or December to plant Tulips to avoid diseases like tulip fire. We also talk about planting hardy annuals like Larkspur and Cornflowers to overwinter, offering practical tips on how to ensure they thrive when spring comes.We also explore the hot topic of dahlia care. Should you lift or leave them in the ground? I explain the factors that go into making that decision, including your climate and soil type. You'll learn about mulching techniques to protect dahlias and other tender plants from the frost, as well as the best ways to store tubers if you decide to lift them.Finally, I answer your questions about roses, manure, and the benefits of sowing green manures like Phacelia. Whether you're wondering if it's too late to plant perennials or how to best prepare your garden for winter, this episode is packed with useful advice for gardeners of all experience levels.Key Takeaways:Patience is key when planting Tulips: Wait until November or even December to avoid fungal diseases.Overwinter hardy annuals: By planting them now, you'll have stronger plants ready to bloom in the spring.Dahlia care: Depending on your climate, you may leave them in the ground or lift them. Either way, mulching is crucial for frost protection.Mulching your flower beds: Applying organic matter like compost in October helps suppress weeds and improves soil structure for next year's blooms.Leave your garden a little wild: Resist the urge to "tidy up" your patch entirely; seed heads and hollow stems benefit wildlife over winter.Thank you for joining me on this episode of The Cut Flower Podcast! Don't forget, if you have any questions, I'm always here Visit Https://audioandco.com for all your audiobook, video and podcast needs. https://fieldgateflowers.kartra.com/page/newsletters Flower Farmers Retreat 2024 (21 &22 September): https://fieldgateflowers.kartra.com/page/businessretreat2024 2024 Farm Day at Field Gate Farm (10 August): https://fieldgateflowers.kartra.com/page/farmvisit A Cut Above Waitlist: https://fieldgateflowers.kartra.com/page/ACutAboveWaitlist The Growth Club: https://fieldgateflowers.kartra.com/page/thegrowthclub Lots of free resources on our website: https://thecutflowercollective.co.uk/cut-flower-resources/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fieldgateflowers Facebook Group 'Cut Flower Farming - Growth and Profit in your business' https://www.facebook.com/groups/449543639411874 Facebook Group 'The Cut Flower Collection' https://www.facebook.com/groups/cutflowercollection
In this behind-the-scenes look at the latest Not About Lumberjacks story, “Overwinter,” I talk about why I wrote a very quiet story for introverts. As always, this commentary contains spoilers from the latest story, so you might want to listen to that first. Links to things mentioned in this commentary: Transcript >>
The Gardening with Joey & Holly radio show Podcast/Garden talk radio show (heard across the country)
#gardening #podcast #gardentalk #vegetablegarden #radio #influencer #gardentip #gardentalkradio #backyardgarden Email your questions to Gardentalkradio@gmail.com Or call 1-800-927-SHOW Segment 2: fall clean up, pick up or leaveSponsors of the show for 2024 Phyllom BioProducts of http://www.phyllombioproducts.comHoney B Healthy of https://www.honeybhealthy.com/ 10% discount on an 8 oz. bottle of Honey B Healthy® Original enter discount code BEEGARDEN at checkout. Proplugger of https://proplugger.com/Rootmaker of https://myrootmaker.com/ Use coupon code Root24 at checkout and save 15% off your orderPomona pectin of https://pomonapectin.com/Dripworks of https://www.dripworks.com/Deer defeat https://deerdefeat.com/ use code Radio at check out to save 10% on your orderBlue ribbon organics http://blueribbonorganics.com/Walton's Inc of https://www.waltonsinc.com/ Us code grow50 and save 10% off your order of $50 or more Natural green products of https://www.natgreenproducts.com/ use promo code freeship4meany size No More Bugs!Rescue of https://rescue.com/Jung Seeds of https://www.jungseed.com/ use code 10GT24 to save 10% off ordersSoil Savvy of https://www.mysoilsavvy.com/Wind River Chimes of https://windriverchimes.com/Wisconsin Greenhouse Company of https://wisconsingreenhousecompany.com/Mantis of https://mantis.com/Soil Diva of https://soildiva.net/Summit Chemical of https://summitchemical.com/Aerobin find at https://www.homedepot.com/p/Exaco-113-gal-Composter-Aerobin-400/202060687Rubio Mono Coat USA of https://www.rubiomonocoatusa.com/ use code Joey to save 10% off your order Iv organics of https://ivorganics.com/ Use radio10 to save 10% off your orderSoilmoist.com of https://www.soilmoist.com/products/soil-moist.phpDavid J Frank of https://davidjfrank.com/Bale buster of https://strawbalegardens-com.myshopify.com/collections/balebuster-bale-preparation-formulaTimber Pro Coatings of https://timberprocoatingsusa.com/products/internal-wood-stabilizer/Mega Catch Mosquito Trap of https://megacatch.com/ use coupon code Joeyb to save 20% off your orders Hoselink of https://www.hoselink.com/?utm_source=radio&utm_medium=website_social&utm_campaign=Joey&Holly&utm_term=april_may use code Radio10 to save 10 dollars off your order Eaton Brothers of https://eatonbrothers.com/product-category/soaker-hose/Water supply Tanks of https://www.watersupplytanks.com/ Use code Gardening10 to save 10% off your order Megacatch of https://megacatch.com/ use code Joeyb to get 20% off your order MrCooldiydirect of https://mrcooldiydirect.com/ USE CODE GARDEN for a special discount and free nationwide shippingAmazon #Influencer page #commission with products we use and trust from gardening to camping, household goods and even cat stuff. Over 500 items list https://www.amazon.com/shop/thewisconsinvegetablegardener?ref=ac_inf_hm_vp
The Gardening with Joey & Holly radio show Podcast/Garden talk radio show (heard across the country)
#gardening #podcast #gardentalk #vegetablegarden #radio #influencer #gardentip #gardentalkradio #backyardgarden Email your questions to Gardentalkradio@gmail.com Or call 1-800-927-SHOW Segment 1 5 keys to a better garden Sponsors of the show for 2024 Phyllom BioProducts of http://www.phyllombioproducts.comHoney B Healthy of https://www.honeybhealthy.com/ 10% discount on an 8 oz. bottle of Honey B Healthy® Original enter discount code BEEGARDEN at checkout. Proplugger of https://proplugger.com/Rootmaker of https://myrootmaker.com/ Use coupon code Root24 at checkout and save 15% off your orderPomona pectin of https://pomonapectin.com/Dripworks of https://www.dripworks.com/Deer defeat https://deerdefeat.com/ use code Radio at check out to save 10% on your orderBlue ribbon organics http://blueribbonorganics.com/Walton's Inc of https://www.waltonsinc.com/ Us code grow50 and save 10% off your order of $50 or more Natural green products of https://www.natgreenproducts.com/ use promo code freeship4meany size No More Bugs!Rescue of https://rescue.com/Jung Seeds of https://www.jungseed.com/ use code 10GT24 to save 10% off ordersSoil Savvy of https://www.mysoilsavvy.com/Wind River Chimes of https://windriverchimes.com/Wisconsin Greenhouse Company of https://wisconsingreenhousecompany.com/Mantis of https://mantis.com/Soil Diva of https://soildiva.net/Summit Chemical of https://summitchemical.com/Aerobin find at https://www.homedepot.com/p/Exaco-113-gal-Composter-Aerobin-400/202060687Rubio Mono Coat USA of https://www.rubiomonocoatusa.com/ use code Joey to save 10% off your order Iv organics of https://ivorganics.com/ Use radio10 to save 10% off your orderSoilmoist.com of https://www.soilmoist.com/products/soil-moist.phpDavid J Frank of https://davidjfrank.com/Bale buster of https://strawbalegardens-com.myshopify.com/collections/balebuster-bale-preparation-formulaTimber Pro Coatings of https://timberprocoatingsusa.com/products/internal-wood-stabilizer/Mega Catch Mosquito Trap of https://megacatch.com/ use coupon code Joeyb to save 20% off your orders Hoselink of https://www.hoselink.com/?utm_source=radio&utm_medium=website_social&utm_campaign=Joey&Holly&utm_term=april_may use code Radio10 to save 10 dollars off your order Eaton Brothers of https://eatonbrothers.com/product-category/soaker-hose/Water supply Tanks of https://www.watersupplytanks.com/ Use code Gardening10 to save 10% off your order Megacatch of https://megacatch.com/ use code Joeyb to get 20% off your order MrCooldiydirect of https://mrcooldiydirect.com/ USE CODE GARDEN for a special discount and free nationwide shippingAmazon #Influencer page #commission with products we use and trust from gardening to camping, household goods and even cat stuff. Over 500 items list https://www.amazon.com/shop/thewisconsinvegetablegardener?ref=ac_inf_hm_vp
Welkom bij de Better United Podcast!Wat gaat Ajax doen met 4 spitsen? Wat blijft er over bij Feyenoord? Heeft Earnest Steward gefaald? Wat is het minimum aantal punten wat een club nodig heeft om te overwinteren in de Champions League? Waarom neem Mbappe de pingels niet bij Real Madrid? Wie brengt Forbs in de bakfiets naar Lyon? Is Bakayoko een voetballiefhebber of een gek? Zal Arne Slot direct een tik uitdelen aan Erik ten Hag? Wat komt er allemaal nog binnen bij Ajax, PSV en Feyenoord? En wat vond Dave van Ajax - Jagiellonia? Je hoort het in de Better United Podcast!Je komt voor de tips, maar blijft voor de humor!Volg ons ook op Petje Af: https://petjeaf.com/bet-boys
In this celebration of solitude, Daniel's life is changed forever after spending 5 months alone on an island 13 miles off the Maine coast. Content Advisory: “Overwinter” deals with a job change, longing, solitude vs. loneliness, and does contain a couple words you've probably heard on TV or at work this week. There are also […]
"Glads" are tall, showy perennials and are part of the iris family. Their tall stems flower with multiple blooms along the stalk and come in many colors and heights.
Thank You for support !!! &ME, Black Coffee, Keinemusik - The Rapture Pt.III (Original Mix) NILU (DK) - U Promised (Original Mix) Lake Avalon - Velorum (Original Mix) Nihil Young - 1998 (Extended Mix) Vakabular - Proper Time (Extended) &ME - L.I.F.E (Original Mix) Carlo Whale - Comet (Original Mix) Hunter_Game, Hollt - Closure (Original Mix) Meeting Molly - Outlaw (Not Demure Remix) Boris Brejcha - LSD Waterpipe (Original Mix) Quivver, Dave Seaman - Liquid Nights (Original Mix) Kaufmann (DE) - In Control (Original Mix)
Thank you for this year! Denney - Lies (Gorge & Nick Curly Extended Remix) Dilby, Liv Campbell - Trippin' (Extended Mix) Gorge, Greater Than Us, DÉ SAINT. - Wasted Time (feat. DÉ SAINT.) (Gorge Extended Remix) Ice X Diaz - Roll The Dice (Extended Mix) Kevin Yost, Peter Funk - Trust (Original Version) Markus Homm - Don't Care Who You Are (Original Mix) ColorJaxx - Sing The Sound (Original Mix) Hannah Wants, Clementine Douglas - Cure My Desire feat. Clementine Douglas (Extended Mix) Robyn Balliet - Torio (Original Mix) Paluma - Rapture (Kevin McKay Extended Remix) Hardy Heller, Alex Connors - Remembrance (Extended Version) Kevin McKay - Tom's Diner (Extended Mix) Savi Leon, Freddy Be - Say What You Wanna Say (Gorge Remix) The Blessed Madonna, Fred again.. - Marea (we've lost dancing) (Original Mix) Kevin McKay, Notelle, Lux Velour - Body (Extended Mix) DAVI - Future Avenue (Original Mix) Maori, Adam Ten - Spring Girl (Vintage Culture Remix (Extended)) Nick Curly - Skyfall (Original Mix) Steve Kelley - Right Now (Dub Mix) Dilby - Barricade (Extended Mix) Mallin - Set Me Free (Extended Mix)
If you love your outdoor plants and want to keep them alive during the cold season, this podcast episode is for you. We'll share some tips and tricks on how to overwinter your plants indoors, from choosing the right containers and soil, to adjusting the light and temperature, to watering and fertilizing. Tune in and learn how to make your plants happy and healthy until spring comes again.Tips for moving houseplants indoors and overwinter careHow to transition potted plants indoors for winterQuestions/Comments/Feedback/Suggestions for Topics: hortculturepodcast@l.uky.eduCheck us out on Instagram!
Dahlia blooms grow well in Vermont's climate, but they are too delicate to overwinter in the ground. Now is the time to dig them up and get them cozy for a long winter's nap so you can plant them again for more blooms next spring.
Got begonias, fuschia and geraniums still growing in containers on your back porch? Now is the time to bring these tender annuals indoors to overwinter.
Nutgrass is a major weed that can infest not only our lawns but also our landscapes and Gardens. We'll tell you how to control nutgrass In our first segment! Do you had any houseplants or Tropical Plants outside this summer. We'll tell you what you need to do for a smooth transition indoors in our 2nd segment! Is it true Hummingbirds "ride" on the back of other birds during their migration across the Gulf of Mexico? We'll give you the answer in our 3th segment. Prof. Steve is a loyal listener and friend of Bloomers. He left a commentary and objective view on gardens. We'll discuss his call during our fourth segment! What's Buggin You? It's scary to look at but it's not as menacing as it appears. Cicada Killer Wasps Hear all about it in our final segment!!
Joy Longfellow is a flowers trial technician on the flowers team at Johnny's research farm. I invited Joy to speak about their overwinter flower trials and the info they have gathered over the past few years. The Johnny's research farm is 200+ acres acres in size with 60+ acres in crop production that includes both field and greenhouse growing for plant breeding, seed production, trialing, and cover crop rotation. The overwintering flower trials focus on cool season annuals, and a few perineal, biannual, and bulb crops. Everything is grown for research purposes. Using unheated high-tunes and meticulous record keeping, they're able to determine the best timing of the top five flower crops to grow in an over-winter tunnel for northern climates. All of their work is a great free resource for farmers interested in getting early high quality flower crops without having to do the tie consuming and often costly experimentation on their own. Joy offers a wealth of of information about growing, selecting, and managing overwinter flowers and her expertise is an excellent resource for winter growers. Folks who make the show possible... SeedTime Planner crop planning tool for home gardeners and market farmers. Get your free account and $5 seed coupon ->> seedtime.us/notillpodcast Vermont Compost Company premium living soils, composts, and potting mixes. Invest in your soil! Johnny's Selected Seeds vegetable, flower, and cover crop seeds. Visit the Growers Library for a wealth of growing resources. RIMOL Greenhouses quality greenhouses and high-tunnels.
Joy Longfellow is a flowers trial technician on the flowers team at Johnny's research farm. I invited Joy to speak about their overwinter flower trials and the info they have gathered over the past few years. The Johnny's research farm is 200+ acres acres in size with 60+ acres in crop production that includes both field and greenhouse growing for plant breeding, seed production, trialing, and cover crop rotation. The overwintering flower trials focus on cool season annuals, and a few perineal, biannual, and bulb crops. Everything is grown for research purposes. Using unheated high-tunes and meticulous record keeping, they're able to determine the best timing of the top five flower crops to grow in an over-winter tunnel for northern climates. All of their work is a great free resource for farmers interested in getting early high quality flower crops without having to do the tie consuming and often costly experimentation on their own. Joy offers a wealth of of information about growing, selecting, and managing overwinter flowers and her expertise is an excellent resource for winter growers. Folks who make the show possible... SeedTime Planner crop planning tool for home gardeners and market farmers. Get your free account and $5 seed coupon ->> seedtime.us/notillpodcast Vermont Compost Company premium living soils, composts, and potting mixes. Invest in your soil! Johnny's Selected Seeds vegetable, flower, and cover crop seeds. Visit the Growers Library for a wealth of growing resources. RIMOL Greenhouses quality greenhouses and high-tunnels.
They're like a flurry of snow in the Montana summer. American white pelicans breed among the prairies, deserts, and forests of the western North American interior, from California and Colorado to Alberta and Manitoba. Across this diverse geographical expanse, they nest in dense colonies, choosing islands within certain marshes or lakes that provide some protection from predators. The nests, often spaced just a few feet apart, can number a thousand or more in a colony. None of this is out of the ordinary. It's just the wonderful, striking yearly rhythm of our American white pelicans, these flamboyant fishers of inland marsh and ocean coast. But what is out of the ordinary is to find a pelican – this social bird of the Montana summer – somehow surviving an inland winter among the ice.
On Cincinnati Edition's monthly gardening show, our panel of experts is ready to answer your questions about all things plants, trees, flowers, crops, and more.
Growing berries in Wisconsin can be tricky. We talk with an expert about getting your plants through the winter months and how to get a bumper crop next season.
Growing berries in Wisconsin can be tricky. We talk with an expert about getting your plants through the winter months and how to get a bumper crop next season.
This episode we're going to tackle one way to grow onions for spring, depending on our location. We haven't done a full onion episode yet and I promise we will because there's a lot to unpack there, but since now is the time to get some types of onions in the ground depending on your goals, we'll cover some of the basics and the how and why for overwintering. We'll also review the Question of the Week, which is actually more of a discussion than a question surrounding the difference between hardiness zone and climate and how growing degree days are affected by each of those. Understanding each of these terms and how your garden will react to each can go a long way toward better timing of your succession plantings in the garden. Let's dig in! Just Grow Something Gardening Friends Facebook Group Check out how you can become a patron on Patreon Follow me on Instagram JustGrowSomethingPodcast.com Merchandise | Just Grow Something Positively Farming Media Podcast Playlist on Spotify Get a Free Bloom Juice from Elm Dirt: Use Code JustGrow Black Rifle Coffee Club! References: Hardiness zone - Wikipedia USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map DK Earth: Climate Zones (factmonster.com) Map & Key Features of Long-Day, Intermediate-Day & Short-Day Onions (johnnyseeds.com) Choosing Onions – Short Day or Long Day? - Farm Homestead --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/justgrowsomething/message
Some Illinois farmers grow mums and know how you can keep them looking great now and maybe have them return for an encore performance next year too. Jenny Matheny, who farms with her family in Fayette County, and Carl Smits, who farms with his family in Cook County, provide all the mumbo-jumbo and more on Illinois-grown mums.
Join Richard on this weeks veg grower podcast. This week Richard is starting to grow some chillies to over winter and preparing to get started with overwintering broad beans. Richard also shares the latest from the plots. This week Richard has tackled a number of tasks on the plot including Hung wire in the greenhouse to hang hanging baskets from overwinterTidied up the mint in a Belfast sinkBought home the onions from the grandads greenhouseHarvested a disappointing spring sown onion crop Much more on the podcast How to grow overwinter chillies and broad beans Late Summer often is overlooked as an ideal chance to sow more seeds but with a little planning, there's much to sow. One thing well worth sowing is some chillies. Richard loves chillies but does find they need a long growing period. Because of this he has started sowing some chillies no to over winter. Richard also loves to grow over winter broad beans. These will grow in the ground over winter and make the plot look like something is happening in the deepest darkest depths of winter. In this podcast Richard shares how he goes about growing both of these plants over the winter months. Recipe of the week This weeks recipe is onion loaf and that recipe will be out on Wednesday. Let Richard know what you think of anything mentioned in this podcast
On this episode I'm joined by John Vaughan, bassist of the band SPACED. We sit down to chat about his coffee origin story, his love of Kevin Malone, making third wave coffee approachable, the rapid success of SPACED and their upcoming tours. During the episode John was drinking and anaerobic Ethiopian coffee from Overwinter and I was having a cup of Baroida Estate from Goshen. Baroida Estate is a blend of three processes of the same bean giving it flavors of caramelized banana, cherry, and pistachio. Episode Links: https://overwinter.coffee/ https://goshencoffee.com/ https://spaced.bandcamp.com/releases https://postprom.bandcamp.com/ https://www.beansandbreakdowns.com/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/beansandbreakdowns/message
00:00:00 Dkeymusik - Beyond the Horizon (Original Mix) 00:06:52 Anikey - Alter Ego (Original Mix) 00:12:36 Marius Drescher - Hunter (Original Mix) 00:18:03 Whoriskey, Jordan Gill - Heaven (Original Mix) 00:24:49 Gulec - Rush (Original Mix) 00:30:35 Dish Dash, Alex Lur - Let Love Shine (Tone Depth Remix) 00:35:40 Cid Inc., Dmitry Molosh - Coalition (Original Mix) 00:42:38 Chihaka - Kangwana (Original Mix) 00:46:35 D.J. MacIntyre, Nomas - Elysium (Basil O'Glue Remix) 00:51:55 Ziger - Sky Is the Limit (Mind Conspiracy Remix) 00:56:28 Morttagua - The Parallel (Miss Monique Remix) 01:02:27 PACS - Rupture (Original Mix) 01:08:26 Brann (AR) - Brighter (Original Mix) 01:13:46 Der Effekt - Das Licht (Original Mix) 01:18:50 Anyma (ofc) - Forevermore (Original Mix) 01:22:44 Marius Drescher - Memory Lane (Original Mix)
Happy New Year! In my opinion ^-^ love all!+++) 00:00:00 Diana Miro, 8Kays - Easy (Original Mix) 00:06:18 Parra for Cuva - Her Entrance (Innellea's Interstellar Remix) 00:12:24 Rob Hes - Brave New World (Original Mix) 00:17:07 Marino Canal- Vangelis (Dreams Baime Remix) 00:24:03 Josh Butler, Dennis Cruz - Ahora Todo Va (Gorgon City Remix) 00:30:33 Sun Ra, Armonica - Door Of The Cosmos (Armonica Cosmos Mix) 00:35:30 Anyma (ofc) - Walking (Original Mix) 00:39:42 Ben Böhmer - Beyond Beliefs (Original Mix) 00:46:24 Baime - Satara (Original Mix) 00:52:30 Delhia De France, Janus Rasmussen, Anyma (ofc) - Claire (Original Mix) 00:56:09 Baime - Satara (Original Mix) 01:01:21 Ivory (IT) - Mandorle (Original Mix) 01:06:33 Tim Green - Her Future Ghost (Dave DK Remix) 01:11:43 S.ONE - Innerspace (Original Mix) 01:16:40 Mind Against - Changes (Original Mix) 01:21:20 Anden - Rewind (Yotto Remix) 01:26:33 Adriatique - Trance Lesson (Original Mix) 01:32:48 Stylo, Space Motion - Player (Original Mix)
Callers want to know how to keep mini roses and butterfly bushes alive overwinter in pots. And is it too late to fertilize the lawn? What about tulips - can we still plant them? And is it possible to grow vegetables indoors over the winter? Listen live every Saturday at 9am on Zoomer Radio
Jesse Frost, aka Farmer Jesse, is a certified organic market gardener, freelance journalist, and the host of The No-Till Market Garden Podcast. He is also a cofounder of notillgrowers.com, where he helps collect the best and latest no-till insights from growers in the United States, Canada, the UK, and Europe. He and his wife, Hannah Crabtree, practice no-till farming at Rough Draft Farmstead in central Kentucky.Please support this podcast by checking out Steward: https://gosteward.com/EPISODE LINKSRough Draft Farmstead Website: https://roughdraftfarmstead.com/No-Till Growers Podcast: https://www.notillgrowers.com/podcastThe Living Soil Handbook: https://www.chelseagreen.com/product/the-living-soil-handbook/?gclid=CjwKCAiA7dKMBhBCEiwAO_crFI65AsgrFkVxULLkG81o-IjJCkNRDy8b2YEt2Bh6TKpry1Nn7QSiDBoCdbIQAvD_BwEPODCAST INFOApple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/regenerative-agriculture-club/id1589813038Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/3NcUjBj2OIXjjcQBV0rPv2?si=ruFlImdlTvK9NBkTh1ptOQRSS Feed: https://feeds.buzzsprout.com/1847147.rssYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqEOn-dUAkZxJzkzuRfs8ygOUTLINE:0:00 Introduction03:53 What was the evolutionary path of your career?08:03 Products grown on Rough Draft Farmstead09:51 Overwinter production10:48 No-Till Market Garden Podcast13:53 Living Soil Handbook15:32 Understanding soil health18:45 Use of Compost22:41 Where are you sourcing your compost for your farmstead?24:14 Using different mulchesGET IN TOUCHIf you would like to connect, I would love to hear from you. Feel free to email me at don@raclub.coPODCAST SOCIAL MEDIAFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/regenerativeagricultureclub/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/regenerativeagricultureclub/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/donpdavidson/
As the colder weather settles in, many gardeners wonder what to do with annual plants that are still alive. One of the tougher annuals is the geranium. Geraniums or Pelargoniums are mostly grown as potted plants because of their penchant for flowering non-stop all summer and fall. If you have a variety you particularly love you can easily overwinter it indoors. Here's how. The first way is simple. Bring the potted geranium indoors to a sunny, South facing window and grow it there all winter. Before you bring it in, cut back the foliage to 1/3rd and spray with insecticidal soap and Neem oil. This will kill any hitch hiking insects. Quarantine the plant for a few weeks indoors to check for any insects you missed. Of course, the plant has to be small enough to fit in the window. If not, consider taking 4- to 6-inch long cuttings. Remove all but the top leaves, dip the cut end in rooting hormone powder and stick the cutting in a pot filled with moistened potting soil. In a few weeks they will root and last all winter indoors. If you don't have room in your house for plants in a window, you can overwinter geraniums in the basement. Cut back the tops and cover the plant with a paper bag, and place in a cool, dark basement. Or remove the plant from its pot, remove all the soil and place the bare rooted geranium upside down in a paper bag. Check monthly and mist if it's drying out. It will stay dormant until spring, then start growing.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Can mini roses survive outside overwinter? Can Hosta plants survive in pots? And how come my Plum tree never has any plums?
Should you or should you not overwinter plants from your garden? Maybe you are and you don't even realize it. What do you think? Learn to Grow. Grow for Change. Help support the podcast Become a Patron to grow our community garden- https://www.patreon.com/backyardgardens One time donation- Donate Here Products we recommend for your garden- https://www.amazon.com/shop/thebackyardgardner Check out our new tshirt line- https://teespring.com/stores/backyard-gardens-tv More Gardening stuff for you Youtube- www.youtube.com/backyardgardens Instagram- www.instagram.com/backyardgardenstv Website- www.backyardgardenstv.com
If you are like us, you have added colorful, bright blooming potted mums to your garden this fall. You aren't sure what to do with them after they are done flowering and would hate to be wasteful and throw them out, so what can you do? Listen to this episode to hear how you can keep them coming back for bright and beautiful blooms every fall! Go to spokengarden.com/215 for more information, and also, check out our YouTube #shorts video showing you how to do each of these three steps. If you are gathering seed sowing tools and supplies, or shopping for holiday gifts, make sure to checkout The Little Dibby! Go to etsy.com/shop/spokengarden to buy today! We'll see ya in the garden! All rights reserved for Spoken Garden. Music by The Lookers.
Do you want to have a headstart for your plants in next year's garden? We have the details on bringing in geraniums, rosemary, and peppers. The harden off/soften on method, the pruning, misting, microclimating, and dormancy inducing techniques that help your plants survive the winter in your house. Plus how to grow plants from cuttings. As well as a question about broccolini, a story about beavers, a 172 lb. cabbage, and a 76 pound rutabaga. It's a supersized episode! Both of us laugh, both of us cry, but one of us is just kidding. Support UDT by joining our Garden Party and get fun rewards! Get a UDT Coffee Mug or other cool Merch! Visit our website for pix, good info and Upside Down Dictionary Click here to write to us!
ชอบบรรยากาศตอนตี 3 จัง เป็นเวลาที่ท้องฟ้ามืดสนิทจนเห็นดาว แอร์ในห้องเริ่มเย็นฉ่ำทำให้สบายตัว มีแต่ความเงียบสงบ ไม่วุ่นวายเหมือนตอนกลางวัน เป็นเวลาเดียวที่เราจะได้อยู่กับตัวเอง ปราศจากการรบกวนจากทุกสิ่งอย่าง อยากยืดเวลานี้ออกไปให้นานที่สุด ยังไม่อยากนอนเลย ไม่ว่าคุณจะกำลังนอนไม่หลับ (หรือไม่ได้คิดจะนอน ^^) ขอให้เพลย์ลิสต์นี้อยู่เป็นเพื่อนคุณไปจนเช้านะ Curated by Anchidtha Lomthampinij, Saowapha Thosawat สำหรับเพื่อนๆ ที่คิดถึงรายการ ‘Talk Therapy' มีเรื่องอยากปรึกษาหรืออยากระบาย DM มาคุยชีกันที่ Twitter: @igtalktherapy หรือ IG: @icehuajai, @gggeegee ได้เหมือนเดิมนะคะ มาโต้รุ่งไปด้วยกัน :) Playlist 00:00 Intro 00:10 Hard To Say Good Bye - Johnny Stimson 02:47 Heavenly Bliss - Shangrii La 06:30 Breakin' My Heart - STVN 08:45 Catch Me On A Wave - Jacob Steele 11:35 Tired Eyes - Besphrenz 14:56 Past life - Kaptan 18:27 I Got U - Skyline Brigade 21:29 Lightning Bug - Besphrenz 24:04 Alike You - Twiceyoung 27:11 Angel - Supercuts 30:03 Good Life - Dazy Chain 33:11 Easier - Breakup 36:02 Okay - Dante bowe 38:39 Innocence - Tim Halperin 41:55 Honest - Noelle Johnson 44:58 Crystal Castle - ICELANDIA 48:49 Overwinter ft. Alifry - Max Fry 51:27 Walk Without Sound - Red Licorice 54:44 Flower - Johnny Stimson 57:37 Rulebreaker - Jason Dering 01:00:00 Take it slow ft. Lhasa - Maxfry 01:03:00 Goodnight (?) Photo by Lisa from Pexels
This is the last winter episode, spring is coming ... Thanks for your support !!! 00:00:00 Made in Paris - Wonderlust feat. Simonne Jones (Original Mix) 00:04:47 Matt Fax - Lyra (Extended Mix) 00:10:35 Grum, ANUQRAM - Can't Let Go (Extended Version) 00:15:18 Alex Morelli - Crimson Idol (Original Mix) 00:21:48 SHMN, Gabriel Lynch - Used by You Feat. Gabriel Lynch (Matchy Remix) 00:28:35 Whoriskey - Insation (Original Mix) 00:35:17 Karmarin - Selene (Extended Mix) 00:41:44 Fur Coat - The Mist (Original Mix) 00:48:30 Yeadon - Back To Me (Extended Mix) 00:55:02 Nora En Pure - World of Rules (Extended Mix) 01:00:08 Trentemoller - Moan (Tim Engelhardt Remix)
00:00:00 Jan Blomqvist - Winter (RoadsExtended Mix) 00:06:30 Beckers, D-Nox - Reception (Hasith Remix) 00:11:39 Kidnap, Leo Stannard - Moments feat. Leo Stannard (Ben Böhmer & Nils Hoffmann Extended Remix) 00:16:25 Analog Jungs - Punilla (Dio S Remix) 00:21:28 Sebastian Moore, DJ San - Accretion (Kamilo Sanclemente Remix) 00:28:19 F.A.R - Dushan (Original Mix) 00:35:11 Namatjira - Humores (Original Mix) 00:41:24 Nōpi - Creative Sheet (Original Mix) 00:47:45 Morttagua - Pallas (Nick Warren & Nicolas Rada Remix) 00:54:08 Rancido - Clocks (Original Mix) 00:58:53 Frost - Overtones (PROFF Extended Mix)
Welcome to good progressive house and melodic techno. Thanks for the support! 00:00:00 Beacon, Jerro - Go Back Now (feat. Beacon) feat. Beacon (Extended Mix) 00:06:36 Gux Jimenez, Juan Pablo Torrez, Luli Diaz - Let Me Love You (Extended Mix) 00:13:07 Hidden Empire - Resurgence (Original Mix) 00:18:50 Stefanie Raschke - Amethyst (Original Mix) 00:23:38 Rauschhaus, GRAZZE - Panaji (Original Mix) 00:29:19 djimboh - Undertow (Extended Mix) 00:34:32 Angelov - Tesera (Original Mix) 00:40:15 SKIY, Galexis, SKIY, Galexis - Lunar (Extended Mix) 00:45:57 Galexis - Aurora (Original MIx) 00:52:19 Rick Pier O'Neil - Rebrox (Original Mix) 00:57:44 Bronson, Cassian, GALLANT - KNOW ME feat. Gallant (Cassian Remix)
The best progressive house and melodic techno dives in my style! Fresh and cold. Thanks for the support! 00:00:00 EarthLife - Senza Fine (Original Mix) 00:07:50 Axel Zambrano - Epic Game (Original Mix) 00:13:34 Grum, Nick Hayes - Blackhole (Nick Hayes Remix) 00:19:02 Stylo, Space Motion - Monster (Extended Mix) 00:24:47 Futur-E, Hasith - Omega (Hasith Remix) 00:31:17 Coeus - Hyper (Original Mix) 00:35:42 Midnight Traffic - Uprising (Original Mix) 00:42:55 Fabrication - Change (Original Mix) 00:47:26 Analog Context - Under the Sky (Original Mix) 00:54:01 Da Fresh, Randy Seidman - On It (Original Mix) 00:58:46 Fabrication - Hot Foot (Original Mix)
The best dives from the progressive house and melodic techno on my vibe. Thank you for support! 00:00:00 Max Freegrant, Kamilo Sanclemente - Singularity (Original Mix) 00:07:05 Max Freegrant, Subandrio, Miss Monique - Stranger Things (Subandrio Remix) 00:13:38 Nihil Young, Talal, Amy Wawn - Touch Feat. Amy Wawn (Original Mix) 00:20:27 Rick Pier O'Neil, Matan Caspi - Behind You (Rick Pier O'Neil Remix) 00:26:37 Avar Garden - Spirits (Original Mix) 00:32:55 Stylo, Goom Gum - Teleport (Original Mix) 00:37:15 Rich Vom Dorf - Feeling Down (Original Mix) 00:43:16 Haze-M, Circle of Life - Lpd (Haze-M Remix) 00:48:13 Rauschhaus, Peer Kusiv - Mesopotamia (Extended Mix) 00:55:22 Cowlam, Jordan Gill - Controversy (Cowlam Remix) 01:02:00 Analog Jungs, KYOTTO - Finding Estrella (Analog Jungs Remix)
Taking you on a journey from beginning to the end with a great vibe. 00:00:00 D-Nox, Gai Barone - Painkiller (Original Mix) 00:08:08 Monkey Safari, Nils Hoffmann, Ben Bohmer, Nils Hoffmann & Ben Böhmer - Second Sun (Monkey Safari Remix) 00:13:52 Imar - Losing My Mind (Original Mix) 00:19:51 Stan Kolev, Q.U.A.K.E, Aaron Suiss - Redemption (Q.U.A.K.E & Aaron Suiss Remix) 00:25:34 Ewan Rill - Distance Between Us (Original Mix) 00:30:46 Stereo Express - Rebirth (Original Mix) 00:38:03 Space Motion, AfterU - Milky Way (Original Mix) 00:42:44 Brian Cid - Sol De Rosas (Original Mix) 00:49:46 Ziger, Kenan Savrun - Lunar Taste (Kenan Savrun Remix) 00:55:29 Roger Martinez, GMJ, Matter - 80s (GMJ & Matter Remix) 01:02:46 Einmusik, Stereo Express - Endurance (Original Mix)
Today, I want to tell you if you have flowering bulbs in your garden, then you need to know (and maybe you already do) these 3 reasons if you can leave them in the ground or not over the winter months. Listen to learn more. To find out how hardy specific daffodils, tulips, crocus, muscari, crocosmia, dahlias, and others are, go to spokengarden.com/171 to see the a hardiness temperature table. Find other quick-tip garden topics at spokengarden.com and click the Listen tab. And subscribe! We'll see ya in the Garden! All rights reserved for Spoken Garden. Music by The Lookers.
Praise? Dislike? Questions? Comments? Fightcusp@gmail.com Twitter @fightcusp Astrological Readings From Dave? Kernunnos1963@gmail.com www.alchemicalwedding.com/astrology Content Creation by www.avantgardenmediaphl.com Mixie Plum’s Twit @syleesage Intro/Outro Themes by Overwinter www.instagram.com/overwinterphl Twit @overwinter_ Find out more at https://fight-cusp.pinecast.co This podcast is powered by Pinecast.
Praise? Dislike? Questions? Comments? Fightcusp@gmail.com Twitter @fightcusp Astrological Readings From Dave? Kernunnos1963@gmail.com www.alchemicalwedding.com/astrology Content Creation by www.avantgardenmediaphl.com Mixie Plum’s Twit @syleesage Intro/Outro Themes by Overwinter www.instagram.com/overwinterphl Twit @overwinter_ Find out more at https://fight-cusp.pinecast.co This podcast is powered by Pinecast.
Ladies Sing The Blues Praise? Dislike? Questions? Comments? Fightcusp@gmail.com Twitter @fightcusp Astrological Readings From Dave? Kernunnos1963@gmail.com Content Creation by www.avantgardenmediaphl.com Mixie Plum’s Twit @syleesage Title Art by Caricatoonz@gmail.com Intro/Outro Themes by Overwinter www.instagram.com/overwinterphl Twit @overwinter_ Kings Highway - "Summertime" https://youtu.be/7Mtu4faMuWU Find out more at https://fight-cusp.pinecast.co This podcast is powered by Pinecast.
Overwinter #3 - the best progressive house & melodic techno. Thanks for the support!!! 00:00:00 HOSH, 1979, Jalja - Midnight (Original Mix) 00:07:13 Dido, Meduza Music, R Plus - My Boy (Meduza Remix) 00:12:39 Monolink, ARTBAT - Return to Oz (ARTBAT Remix) 00:19:30 Chus & Ceballos, CASSIMM - Dances with Wolves (Chus & Ceballos Remix) 00:24:12 Paul Angelo, Don Argento, OIBAF&WALLEN - Hela (Paul Angelo & Don Argento Remix) 00:30:08 Space Motion, Fuenka - Vagabundo (Fuenka Extended Remix) 00:35:35 Boris Brejcha - Never Look Back (Original Mix) 00:42:14 Moonwalk - Elessar (Original Mix) 00:47:39 CamelPhat, Jake Bugg - Be Someone (Extended Mix) 00:53:04 Matchy - Irreversible (Original Mix) 00:59:07 Paul Angelo, Don Argento - Deer Cave (Original Mix) 01:04:44 1979 - Where Are You (Original Mix) 01:10:05 Sunscreem, Patrice Baumel - Perfect Motion (Patrice Bäumel Renaissance Remix) 01:16:43 Mathame - Skywalking (Original Mix)
I am sending you on a journey from start to finish with a great mood. Thanks for the support!!! 00:00:00 Fairmont - Plastic Head TV (Original Mix) 00:06:46 Helen&Boys - Follow Me (Original Mix) 00:12:14 Chaim - Pow Pow (Original Mix) 00:17:38 Steve Bug, Animal Trainer, Uner - Mantis On The Moon (Animal Trainer Remix) 00:23:06 Eli & Fur, Black Circle - Into The Night (Black Circle Extended Mix) 00:30:54 Tony Casanova, Jonas Saalbach - Kap Suzette (Jonas Saalbach Remix) 00:36:45 Nüur - Aliens (Original Mix) 00:42:55 Morttagua - Redelties (Original Mix) 00:49:08 Rick Pier O'Neil, Dimuth K - Cancun (Dimuth K Remix) 00:56:23 Ziger, Fuenka - Pleasure (Fuenka Remix) 01:01:19 Ziger - Humanism (Original Mix) 01:08:02 Stefano Richetta - Area 53 (Original Mix) 01:13:27 Orsen, Rudy UK - Real You (Orsen Remix) 01:19:39 Paul Hamilton, Livia Andrei, Valentin Ilie - Afar (Paul Hamilton Remix)
Taking you on a journey from beginning to the end with a great vibe. 00:00:00 Jerome Isma-Ae, Orkidea - Nana (Jerome Isma-Ae In Search Of Sunrise Remix) 00:04:28 Kamilo Sanclemente - Mishaa (Original Mix) 00:11:32 Moritz Hofbauer - Styx (Original Mix) 00:17:34 Juan Sapia, Bluum - Magic Moon (Bluum Remix) 00:22:49 Carlos Pires - Driver (Original Mix) 00:28:04 Evans - The Art Of Noise (Original Mix) 00:34:06 Colyn - Khazad Dum (Original Mix) 00:39:25 Fernando Olaya, Sebastian Haas - In the Middle of the Night (Sebastian Haas Rmx) 00:45:38 Juan Sapia, Parallel Universe - Baham (Parallel Universe Remix) 00:51:36 Marcus Meinhardt - Lost Paradise (Original Mix) 00:57:33 Rob Hes - The Age Of Innocence (Original Mix) 01:02:50 Melody Stranger, Riamiwo - Spektralradius (Melody Stranger Vocal Remix) 01:08:14 Fideles - The Secret of Eos (Original Mix) 01:13:23 Morttagua - Redroids (Original Mix)
Occasional RealAg Radio host Lyndsey Smith steps in to host today, and she’s got a lot to say about farm safety and making it part of the culture of agriculture. Also on today’s show, you’ll hear: A lightning round of news with Jessika Guse; Belinda Bowman on her upcoming trip to Africa with Project One... Read More
EP-007 Honey Bee My Teacher PodcastHosted by Patti HainesProduced by Jay FrattFlexibility is the key as a beekeeper. It's not your plan ultimately, it's your colony's plan. A quick Fall season threw Patti's plans out the window, but quick reactions, a positive attitude, and confidence allowed a safe response. Patti goes through her overwinter hive management plan, and learned words on the flexibility required to manage and nurture bees.Enjoy the great information and Patti's charming personality. Stick around for a question and answer session at the end of the pod: Time Management. Bee Advocacy.What's the buzz about?Join our little hive Community: Facebook PageYouTubeSponsors: SmokinJs.com - Use Code HONEY for 15% off at checkout.StonerHoroscope.comListen: Listen here or find us on any major podcast app Watch:Intro and Outro Music Credit: Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons "Attribution 3.0"
Join me I. This week's podcast where I'll be discussing a few of my crops that I plan to overwinter. We also have the layaway from the plots. The diary This week's tasks include Weeding Moving the baby quails to a new home Potting on chilli plants And much more. Check out this week's episode to find out more. Crops I plan to overwinter. Every year I like growing crops over winter. I find it a lot easier to grow overwinter then at other tones of the year as Mother Nature os doing a lot of the work for you. In this podcast I discuss a few of the crops that I'll be growing over this winter and why.In this episode the crops I plan to grow are Lettuce particularly a variety called winter destiny Salad leaf Spring onions Pak Choi Choy sum Carrots a variety called adalaide I will be trailing Chilli Onions Garlic Peas kelvendon wonder Broad beans aquadulce Claudia Chard or perpetual spinach Spring cabbages. I mention cloches from amazon please click here for that.
My regular monthly Questions and Answers podcast with some timely questions about feeding bees overWinter.Check out my full range of microscopes and books on my website www.norfolk-honey.co.ukYou can find Randy Oliver's website at www.scientificbeekeeping.com
The Gardening with Joey & Holly radio show Podcast/Garden talk radio show (heard across the country)
Replay of segment 1 of The Wisconsin Vegetable Gardener Radio Show from 10-20-18 on 860AM WNOV and W293cx 106.5 FM Milwaukee WI, Thank you for listening and downloading the show Topics: Joey and Holly talk about Overwintering plants, Overwinter plants Kale – carrots – beets – Brussels sprouts – kohlrabi - chard https://thewisconsinvegetablegardener.com/radio/ check out highlights of past show podcast and video https://thewisconsinvegetablegardener.com/video-series/highlights-podcast/ Email your questions to TWVGshow@gmail.com tweet us as #twvg or @twvgshow The show runs March - Oct Saturday morning’s 9-10am cst Check out the following sponsors that Make the radio show possible: IV Organics: http://ivorganics.com/ MI Gardener: http://migardener.com/ Use coupon code SHARE10 to save 10% off your 1st order. Beans & Barley: http://www.beansandbarley.com/ Bobbex: http://www.bobbex.com/ Rootmaker: https://rootmaker.com/ Plant Success organics: https://plantsuccessorganics.com/ Woodmans Food Stores: https://www.woodmans-food.com/ Root assassin shovel: https://rootassassinshovel.com/ Bluemel's Garden & Landscape Center Family owned, independent garden and landscape center that has been servicing the metro-Milwaukee area since 1955. 4930 W. Loomis RD. 414-282-4220 http://bluemels.com/ Hoss Tools of www.hosstools.com Tree Diaper of www.treediaper.com Seedling Square of www.seedingsquare.com Rebel green of www.rebelgreen.com Use coupon code WIVEG15 to save 15% at www.rebelgreen.com/shop Dripping Springs OLLAS of www.drippingspringsollas.com Saz Products of www.sazproducts.com Shield n seal of www.shieldnseal.com Pomona Universal Pectin of www.pomonapectin.com Flame Engineering Inc. of www.flameengineering.com Eco Garden Systems of www.ecogardensystems.com Made of recycled materials in the U.S It is a raised garden bed offers sustainable organic gardening that is environmentally sound. Use coupon code Wiveg125 to save $125 & Free Shipping (a $250 vale) on the Eco Garden Original Garden unit only in stone color must be purchased through the Eco Garden Systems website www.ecogardensystems.com/store valid thru Dec 31 2018 Outpost Natural Foods Co-op of www.outpost.coop Manure tea of www.manuretea.com The Gardener's Hollow Leg of www.thegardenershollowleg.com Save 10% use veggies at checkout Handy Safety Knife of www.handysafetyknife.com Use promo code WVG to get 10% off and free shipping one time use only. Bio Safe of www.biosafe.net 10% on your next order use coupon code TWVG at check out Chapin Manufacturing Inc. of www.chapinmfg.com The Plant Booster of www.plantbooster.net Tall Earth of www.tallearth.com save 15% on orders placed on, TallEarth.com. use WISCONVEG at checkout Purple cow organics of https://www.purplecoworganics.com
The Gardening with Joey & Holly radio show Podcast/Garden talk radio show (heard across the country)
Replay of The Wisconsin Vegetable Gardener Radio Show from 10-20-18 on 860AM WNOV and W293cx 106.5 FM Milwaukee WI, listen here during show hours Saturdays 9-10 am CST https://tinyurl.com/zvh5kaz Thank you for listening and downloading the show Topics: Joey and Holly talk about Overwintering plants, how organic is the food labeled organic guest Tovah Martin of http://www.tovahmartin.com/ Overwinter plants Kale – carrots – beets – Brussels sprouts – kohlrabi - chard How organic is the food youre eating Organic food is food produced by methods that comply with the standards of organic farming. Standards vary worldwide, but organic farming in general features practices that strive to cycle resources, promote ecological balance, and conserve biodiversity – without use of conventional pesticides; fertilizers made with synthetic ingredients or sewage sludge; bioengineering; or ionizing radiation What pesticides do to us – - lower immune system - make us tired/fatigued - can increase risk of disease/cancer - cause metabolism problems Not “healthier” necessarily In 2017 reported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) revealed its failure to make sure that imported organic foods actually meet USDA organic standards. Part of this was a failure to check documents and do audits, but perhaps most horrifyingly, even when imported crops do actually meet organic standards, there’s a decent chance they’ll end up being fumigated upon arrival with pesticides not allowed under USDA organic regulations. In order for milk and meat to be sold as organic, the animals can eat only organic feed, and most feed corn and soy grown in the U.S. is genetically modified, which doesn’t qualify as organic. How to prevent non-organic – clean 15/dirty dozen, shop stores that don’t sell produce that’s been sprayed with pesticides, find a local farmer ____________________________ In her constant, undying pursuit of all things garden-related, Tovah gets her hands dirty both outside and indoors. She is a perennial, heirloom, vegetable and cottage gardener of fanatical proportions, and is accredited by NOFA as an Organic Land Care professional. Beyond the garden outdoors, Tovah’s areas of specialty also include decades of experience with tropicals (especially begonias) in windowsills, greenhouses, and otherwise. She is an author and a blogger. 1.You write about how you used to get rid of your moss, and now you embrace is, why is moss a great addition to any landscape? 2.For everyday gardener, what do we most commonly forget to do in the garden (like relax, look at things, take in the beauty)? 3.What is the importance of designated walk areas in the garden? 4.Many people can see this time of year as ugly and brown, or can see it as picturesque and colorful – what are some ways you embrace the beauty of fall? 5.Tell us more about your newest book – The Garden in Every Sense and Season? 6.Where can we find out more about you? https://thewisconsinvegetablegardener.com/radio/ check out highlights of past show podcast and video https://thewisconsinvegetablegardener.com/video-series/highlights-podcast/ Email your questions to TWVGshow@gmail.com tweet us as #twvg or @twvgshow The show runs March - Oct Saturday morning’s 9-10am cst Check out the following sponsors that Make the radio show possible: IV Organics: http://ivorganics.com/ MI Gardener: http://migardener.com/ Use coupon code SHARE10 to save 10% off your 1st order. Beans & Barley: http://www.beansandbarley.com/ Bobbex: http://www.bobbex.com/ Rootmaker: https://rootmaker.com/ Plant Success organics: https://plantsuccessorganics.com/ Woodmans Food Stores: https://www.woodmans-food.com/ Root assassin shovel: https://rootassassinshovel.com/ Bluemel's Garden & Landscape Center Family owned, independent garden and landscape center that has been servicing the metro-Milwaukee area since 1955. 4930 W. Loomis RD. 414-282-4220 http://bluemels.com/ Hoss Tools of www.hosstools.com Tree Diaper of www.treediaper.com Seedling Square of www.seedingsquare.com Rebel green of www.rebelgreen.com Use coupon code WIVEG15 to save 15% at www.rebelgreen.com/shop Dripping Springs OLLAS of www.drippingspringsollas.com Saz Products of www.sazproducts.com Shield n seal of www.shieldnseal.com Pomona Universal Pectin of www.pomonapectin.com Flame Engineering Inc. of www.flameengineering.com Eco Garden Systems of www.ecogardensystems.com Made of recycled materials in the U.S It is a raised garden bed offers sustainable organic gardening that is environmentally sound. Use coupon code Wiveg125 to save $125 & Free Shipping (a $250 vale) on the Eco Garden Original Garden unit only in stone color must be purchased through the Eco Garden Systems website www.ecogardensystems.com/store valid thru Dec 31 2018 Outpost Natural Foods Co-op of www.outpost.coop Manure tea of www.manuretea.com The Gardener's Hollow Leg of www.thegardenershollowleg.com Save 10% use veggies at checkout Handy Safety Knife of www.handysafetyknife.com Use promo code WVG to get 10% off and free shipping one time use only. Bio Safe of www.biosafe.net 10% on your next order use coupon code TWVG at check out Chapin Manufacturing Inc. of www.chapinmfg.com The Plant Booster of www.plantbooster.net Tall Earth of www.tallearth.com save 15% on orders placed on, TallEarth.com. use WISCONVEG at checkout Purple cow organics of https://www.purplecoworganics.com
David Wellington, aka D. Nolan Clark, aka David Chandler is the author of over twenty novels of action, suspense, and drama. He got his start in 2003 with the online serialization of Monster Island. Over a period of five months he published a chapter of the story every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, writing each section moments before it appeared online and responding in real time to user comments. The resulting manuscript became his first published novel in 2005. He went on to write two more books in the same universe: Monster Nation and Monster Planet. His other horror series include the Laura Caxton series of vampire novels: 13 Bullets, 99 Coffins, Vampire Zero, 23 Hours, and 32 Fangs; and a werewolf duology comprising Frostbite and Overwinter. Taking a break from horror he wrote three fantasy novels under the pseudonym David Chandler: Den of Thieves, A Thief in the Night, and Honor Among Thieves. Under his own name he wrote the Jim Chapel trilogy of spy thrillers: Chimera, The Hydra Protocol, and The Cyclops Initiative. He returned to horror in 2015 with Positive, his grand zombie opus. In 2016 he began to publish a science fiction trilogy, The Silence, under the name D. Nolan Clark. The first two books, Forsaken Skies and Forgotten Worlds, are available now wherever books are sold. A third and final volume to the trilogy, Forbidden Suns, will be released late 2017. He has also worked in comic books and video games and has published dozens of short stories in a wide range of anthologies.
In this episode: - Two Japanese cryptocurrency exchanges resign from Japan’s Virtual Currency Exchange Association - Facebook has eased ban on cryptocurrency-related advertisement - ZCash has successfully activated ‘Overwinter’ hard fork - Top 20 cryptocurrencies slide by 3.5% on average
sources of stories from today: https://www.one-tab.com/page/P5sRbthaR6iMJrMyPLRLnA ↓↓↓timestamps↓↓↓ 1:27 - Free Bitcoin winner 2:13 - $250 Million Tether Grant: Here we Go Again 4:35 - China's Latest Government-Backed Crypto Rankings Put EOS 1st, BTC 17th 8:18 - Japan: VPs of Crypto Self-Regulatory Body Quit After Receiving Exchange Compliance Orders 12:06 - ‘Overwinter' Upgrade Looms as Zcash Prepares for Its First Hard Fork 15:08 - BTCC to Sell 49% Equity Stake of its Bitcoin Mining Pool for $18.7 Million Connect with us online at the following places: KRBE Digital Assets Group Website: https://krbecrypto.com/ Shop: https://shopkrbecrypto.com/ Newsletter: https://krbecrypto.com/join/ Services: https://krbecrypto.com/services/ About Us: https://krbecrypto.com/about/ KRBE Steemit: https://steemit.com/@krbecrypto SOCIAL KRBE Twitter: https://twitter.com/krbecrypto KRBE Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/krbecrypto/ KRBE Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/krbecrypto/ King Twitter: https://twitter.com/KingBlessDotCom Bitcoin Zay Twitter: https://twitter.com/bitcoinzay Donations welcome, but not necessary! Bitcoin: 1NTnWaGowHEh9VRWMXWTiqWpQT9vjP5Ukd Litecoin: LSc2bEAMEbGSHKx54GUt4xi1eZQqtscv8i INTRO MUSIC: U.O.E.N.O (Instrumental)- Rocko OUTRO MUSIC: Trouble Man - Marvin Gaye Thanks for listening and remember to subscribe for daily content where we give away free Bitcoin! ***Not a whole Bitcoin, a few dollars USD worth*** ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ **This is not financial advice. The expressed opinions in the video are of the speakers. You can lose all your money in the cryptocurrency market, so be sure to do your own research before investing.**
Hello Listener! Thank you for listening. If you would like to support the podcast, and keep the lights on, you can support us whenever you use Amazon through the link below: It will not cost you anything extra, and I can not see who purchased what. Or you can become a Fluffle Supporter by donating through Patreon.com at the link below: Patreon/Hare of the Rabbit What's this Patreon? Patreon is an established online platform that allows fans to provide regular financial support to creators. Patreon was created by a musician who needed a easy way for fans to support his band. What do you need? Please support Hare of the Rabbit Podcast financially by becoming a Patron. Patrons agree to a regular contribution, starting at $1 per episode. Patreon.com takes a token amount as a small processing fee, but most of your money will go directly towards supporting the Hare of the Rabbit Podcast. You can change or stop your payments at any time. You can also support by donating through PayPal.com at the link below: Hare of the Rabbit PayPal Thank you for your support, Jeff Hittinger. Snow Shoe Hare - Snoring and Nasal Obstruction in Rabbits - The Shot Hare - Perplexing Difference between Hares and Rabbits Hares and rabbits are related, but there are some key differences. Hares tend to be larger than rabbits and have longer legs and bigger ears. When threatened, rabbits typically freeze and rely on camouflage, as compared to hares, who use their big feet to flee at the first sign of danger. Rabbits are born blind and helpless, while hares are born fully furred and ready to run. About the Snowshoe Hare Snowshoe hares are forest-dwellers that prefer the thick cover of brushy undergrowth. The smallest species of the Lepus genus, the snowshoe hare (Lepus americanus) is a rabbit-sized mammal that is incredibly adapted to its seasonally variable environment. The snowshoe hare is named for its hind feet, which are adapted for traveling across snowy ground and are therefore noticeably large relative to the hare’s body mass. Population Range The snowshoe hare has the most extensive range of all New World hares and is found in many northern and western U.S. states, as well as in all provinces of Canada except Nunavut. They are primarily a northern species that inhabits boreal forests and can also range as far north as the shores of the Arctic Ocean. Along North American mountain ranges, where elevation simulates the environment of more northerly latitudes, they can be found as far south as Virginia (the Appalachians) and New Mexico (the Rockies). Snowshoe hares occur from Newfoundland to Alaska; south in the Sierra Nevada to central California; in the Rocky Mountains to southern Utah and northern New Mexico; and in the Appalachian Mountains to North Carolina and Tennessee. Snowshoe hares are primarily found in boreal forests and upper montane forests; within these forests, they favor habitats with a dense shrub layer. In the Pacific Northwest, snowshoe hares occupy diverse habitats, including mature conifers (mostly Douglas-fir [Pseudotsuga menziesii] and variants), immature conifers, alder (Alnus spp.)/salmonberry (Rubus spectabilis), Sitka spruce (Picea sitchensis)/salal (Gaultheria shallon), and cedar (Thuja spp.) swamps. In western Oregon, snowshoe hares were present in brush patches of vine maple (Acer circinatum), willows (Salix spp.), rhododendrons (Rhododendron spp.), and other shrubs. In Utah, snowshoe hares used Gambel oak (Quercus gambelli) in the northern portion of the Gambel oak range. In the Southwest, the southernmost populations of snowshoe hares occur in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, New Mexico, in subalpine scrub: narrow bands of shrubby and prostrate conifers at and just below timberline that are usually composed of Engelmann spruce (Picea engelmannii), bristlecone pine (Pinus aristata), limber pine (P. flexilis), and/or common juniper (Juniperus communis). In Minnesota, snowshoe hares use jack pine (P. banksiana) uplands, edges, tamarack (Larix laricina) bogs, black spruce (Picea mariana) bogs, and sedge (Carex spp.), alder, and scrub fens. In New England, snowshoe hares favor second-growth aspen (Populus spp.)-birch (Betula spp.) near conifers, but other forest types occupied by snowshoe hares include aspens, paper birch (B. papyrifera), northern hardwoods, red maple (A. rubrum), balsam fir (Abies balsamea), red spruce (Picea rubens)-balsam fir, eastern hemlock (Tsuga canadensis), northern red oak (Quercus rubra), oak (Quercus spp.)-pine (Pinus spp.), eastern white pine (P. strobus)-northern red oak-red maple, and eastern white pine. Snowshoe hares also use shrub swamps dominated by buttonbush (Cephalanthus occidentalis), alders, and silky dogwood (Cornus ammomum). Locations of subspecies are as follows: Lepus americanus americanus (Erxleben) – Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, Montana, and North Dakota L. a. cascadensis (Nelson) – British Columbia and Washington L. a. columbiensis (Rhoads) – British Columbia, Alberta, and Washington L. a. dalli (Merriam) – Mackenzie District, British Columbia, Alaska, Yukon L. a. klamathensis (Merriam) – Oregon and California L. a. oregonus (Orr) – Oregon L. a. pallidus (Cowan) – British Columbia L. a. phaeonotus (J. A. Allen) – Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota L. a. pineus (Dalquest) – British Columbia, Idaho, and Washington L. a. seclusus (Baker and Hankins) – Wyoming L. a. struthopus (Bangs) – Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, Quebec, and Maine L. a. tahoensis (Orr) – California, western Nevada L. a. virginianus (Harlan) – Ontario, Quebec, Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, and Tennessee L. a. washingtonii (Baird) – British Columbia, Washington, and Oregon Description Snowshoe hares have an interesting adaptation that helps protect them against predators. Depending on the season, their fur can be a different color. During the winter, snowshoe hares are white, which helps them blend in with the snow. When the seasons change to spring and summer, snowshoe hares turn a reddish-brown. This color helps them camouflage with dirt and rocks. Not every part of the snowshoe hare changes color throughout the year. An important identification trick is to look at a snowshoe hare's ears. The tips of the ears are always black no matter the season. The hind legs of a snowshoe hare are noticeably larger, and have more fur and larger toes than those of other rabbits or hares. These adaptations provide additional surface area and support for walking on snow. The hind legs are what give the hare its common name. The fur of the snowshoe hare is extremely thick and has one of the highest insulation values of all mammals. Another adaptation which ensures that the snowshoe hare can survive in an environment that drastically changes seasonally is that its fur changes color between summer and winter. In winter, almost all individuals undergo molting that transforms the hare’s brown summer coat into one that is pure white apart from the black-tipped ears and the feet, which remain grey. It is thought that this enables the snowshoe hare to become camouflaged, and has evolved to coincide with snow cover. The snowshoe hare’s relatively short ears are also an adaptation to reduce heat loss in the winter. The female of this species tends to weigh approximately 10 to 25 percent more than the male. Physical Description Snowshoe hares range in length from 413 to 518 mm, of which 39 to 52 mm are tail. The hind foot, long and broad, measures 117 to 147 mm in length. The ears are 62 to 70 mm from notch to tip. Snowshoe hares usually weigh between 1.43 and 1.55 kg. Males are slightly smaller than females, as is typical for leporids. In the summer, the coat is a grizzled rusty or grayish brown, with a blackish middorsal line, buff flanks and a white belly. The face and legs are cinnamon brown. The ears are brownish with black tips and white or creamy borders. During the winter, the fur is almost entirely white, except for black eyelids and the blackened tips on the ears. The soles of the feet are densely furred, with stiff hairs (forming the snowshoe) on the hind feet. Coloring Hares are a bit larger than rabbits, and they typically have taller hind legs and longer ears. Snowshoe hares have especially large, furry feet that help them to move atop snow in the winter. They also have a snow-white winter coat that turns brown when the snow melts each spring. It takes about ten weeks for the coat to completely change color. The snowshoe hare (Lepus americanus), also called the varying hare, or snowshoe rabbit, is a species of hare found in North America. It has the name "snowshoe" because of the large size of its hind feet. The animal's feet prevent it from sinking into the snow when it hops and walks. Its feet also have fur on the soles to protect it from freezing temperatures. For camouflage, its fur turns white during the winter and rusty brown during the summer. Its flanks are white year-round. The snowshoe hare is also distinguishable by the black tufts of fur on the edge of its ears. Its ears are shorter than those of most other hares. Preferred habitat Major variables in habitat quality include average visual obstruction and browse biomass. Snowshoe hares prefer young forests with abundant under-stories. The presence of cover is the primary determinant of habitat quality, and is more significant than food availability or species composition. Species composition does, however, influence population density; dense softwood under-stories support greater snowshoe hare density than hardwoods because of cover quality. In Maine, female snowshoe hares were observed to be more common on sites with less cover but more nutritious forage; males tended to be found on sites with heavier cover. Winter browse availability depends on height of understory brush and winter snow depth; 6-to-8-foot-tall (1.8 to 2.4 m) saplings with narrow stem diameters are required for winter browse in heavy snow. In northern regions, snowshoe hares occupy conifer and mixed forests in all stages of succession, but early successional forests foster peak abundance. Deciduous forests are usually occupied only in early stages of succession. In New England, snowshoe hares preferred second-growth deciduous, coniferous, and mixed woods with dense brushy under stories; they appear to prefer shrubby old-field areas, early- to mid-successional burns, shrub-swamps, bogs, and upper montane krumholz vegetation. In Maine, snowshoe hares were more active in clear-cut areas than in partially cut or uncut areas. Sapling densities were highest on 12- to 15-year-old plots; these plots were used more than younger stands. In northern Utah, they occupied all the later stages of succession on quaking aspen and spruce-fir, but were not observed in meadows. In Alberta, snowshoe hares use upland shrub-sapling stages of regenerating aspens (either postfire or postharvest). In British Columbia overstocked juvenile lodge-pole pine (Pinus contorta) stands formed optimal snowshoe hare habitat. In western Washington, most un-burned, burned, or scarified clear-cuts will normally be fully occupied by snowshoe hares within four to five years, as vegetation becomes dense. In older stands (more than 25 years), stem density begins to decline and cover for snowshoe hares decreases. However, in north-central Washington, they may not colonize clear-cuts until six or seven years, and it may take 20 to 25 years for their density to reach maximum. Winter snowshoe hare pellet counts were highest in 20-year-old lodge-pole pine stands, lower in older lodge-pole stands, and lowest in spruce-dominated stands. In western Oregon, snowshoe hares were abundant only in early successional stages, including stable brushfields. In west-central Oregon, an old-growth Douglas-fir forest was clear-cut and monitored through 10 years of succession. A few snowshoe hares were noted in adjacent virgin forest plots; they represented widely scattered, sparse populations. One snowshoe hare was observed on the disturbed plot 2.5 years after it had been clear-cut and burned; at this stage, ground cover was similar to that of the uncut forest. By 9 years after disturbance, snowshoe hare density had increased markedly. In western Washington, snowshoe hares routinely used steep slopes where cover was adequate; most studies, however, suggest they tend to prefer gentle slopes. Moonlight increases snowshoe hare vulnerability to predation, particularly in winter. They tend to avoid open areas during bright phases of the moon and during bright periods of a single night. Their activity usually shifts from coniferous under-stories in winter to hardwood under-stories in summer. Vegetative structure plays an important role in the size of snowshoe hare home ranges. Snowshoe hares wander up to 5 miles (8 km) when food is scarce. In Montana home ranges are smaller in brushy woods than in open woods. In Colorado and Utah, the average home range of both sexes was 20 acres (8.1 ha). On the Island of Montreal in Quebec, the average daily range for both sexes was 4 acres (1.6 ha) in old-field mixed woods. In Montana, the home range averaged 25 acres (10 ha) for males and 19 acres (7.6 ha) for females. In Oregon the average snowshoe hare home range was 14.6 acres (5.9 ha).[32] Home Range During its active period, a hare may cover up to 0.02 square kilometers of its 0.03 to 0.07 square kilometer home range. Cover requirements Snowshoe hares require dense, brushy, usually coniferous cover; thermal and escape cover are especially important for young hares. Low brush provides hiding, escape, and thermal cover. Heavy cover 10 feet (3 m) above ground provides protection from avian predators, and heavy cover 3.3 feet (1 m) tall provides cover from terrestrial predators. Overwinter survival increases with increased cover. A wide variety of habitat types are used if cover is available. Base visibility in good snowshoe hare habitat ranges from 2% at 16.5 feet (5 m) distance to 0% at 66 feet (20 m). Travel cover is slightly more open, ranging from 14.7% visibility at 16.5 feet (5 m) to 2.6% at 66 feet (20 m). Areas with horizontal vegetation density of 40 to 100% at 50 feet (15 m) are adequate snowshoe hare habitat in Utah. Food habits Snowshoe hares eat a variety of plant materials. Forage type varies with season. Succulent green vegetation is consumed when available from spring to fall; after the first frost, buds, twigs, evergreen needles, and bark form the bulk of snowshoe hare diets until spring greenup. Snowshoe hares typically feed at night and follow well-worn forest paths to feed on various plants and trees. Winter Snowshoe hares prefer branches, twigs, and small stems up to 0.25 inch (6.3 mm) diameter; larger stems are sometimes used in winter. In Yukon, they normally eat fast-growing birches and willows, and avoid spruce. At high densities, however, the apical shoots of small spruce are eaten. The snowshoe hare winter diet is dominated by bog birch (Betula glandulosa), which is preferred but not always available. Greyleaf willow (Salix glauca) is eaten most often when bog birch is not available. Buffaloberry (Shepherdia canadensis) is the fourth most common diet item. White spruce (Picea glauca) is eaten, but not preferred. In Alaska, spruce, willows, and alders comprise 75% of snowshoe hare diets; spruce needles make up nearly 40% of the diet. In northwestern Oregon, winter foods include needles and tender bark of Sitka spruce, Douglas-fir, and western hemlock (Tsuga heterophylla); leaves and green twigs of salal; buds, twigs, and bark of willows; and green herbs. In north-central Washington, willows and birches are not plentiful; snowshoe hares browse the tips of lodgepole pine seedlings. In Utah, winter foods include Douglas-fir, willows, snowberry (Symphoricarpos spp.), maples, and serviceberry (Amelanchier spp.). In Minnesota, aspens, willows, hazelnut (Corylus spp.), ferns (Pteridophyta spp.), birches, alders, sumacs (Rhus spp.), and strawberries (Fragaria spp.) are winter foods. Winter foods in New York include eastern white pine, red pine (Pinus resinosa), white spruce, paper birch, and aspens. In Ontario, sugar maple (Acer saccharum), striped maple (A. pensylvanicum), red maple, other deciduous species, northern white-cedar (T. occidentalis), balsam fir, beaked hazelnut (C. cornuta), and buffaloberry were heavily barked. In New Brunswick, snowshoe hares consumed northern white-cedar, spruces, American beech (Fagus grandifolia), balsam fir, mountain maple (A. spicatum), and many other species of browse. In Newfoundland, paper birch is preferred. Spring, summer and autumn In Alaska, snowshoe hares consume new leaves of blueberries (Vaccinium spp.), new shoots of field horsetails (Equisetum arvense), and fireweed (Epilobium angustifolium) in spring. Grasses are not a major item due to low availability associated with sites that have adequate cover. In summer, leaves of willows, black spruce, birches, and bog Labrador tea (Ledum groenlandicum) are also consumed. Black spruce is the most heavily used and the most common species in the area. Pen trials suggest black spruce is not actually preferred. Roses (Rosa spp.) were preferred, but a minor dietary item, as they were not common in the study area. In northwest Oregon, summer foods include grasses, clovers (Trifolium spp.), other forbs, and some woody plants, including Sitka spruce, Douglas-fir, and young leaves and twigs of salal. In Minnesota, aspens, willows, grasses, birches, alders, sumacs, and strawberries are consumed when green. In Ontario, summer diets consist of clovers, grasses, and forbs. Behavior Snowshoe hares feed at night, following well worn forest paths to feed on trees and shrubs, grasses, and plants. These animals are nimble and fast, which is fortunate, because they are a popular target for many predators. Lynx, fox, coyote, and even some birds of prey hunt this wary hare. Hares like to take dust baths. These help to remove ectoparasites from the hares' fur. Snowshoe hares are also accomplished swimmers. They occasionally swim across small lakes and rivers, and they have been seen entering the water in order to avoid predators. With the hindfeet splayed and the front feet close together, a snowshoe hare can erupt into a full run from a sitting position, attaining bursts of speeds of up to 40-56 km/h (25-35 mph) in a matter of seconds. Social System - The species is solitary, promiscuous, and sedentary. Males compete aggressively for receptive females, biting and scratching each other. Rarely, such encounters prove fatal to one of the combatants. Both sexes occupy small, overlapping home ranges of 1.6-4.8 ha (4-12 acre) that vary in shape with the configuration of the habitat. This species, which is well known for its dramatic fluctuations in numbers in other parts of its range, maintains relatively stable populations is the Adirondacks, and within suitable habitat, some of the highest densities anywhere, 1.7 per ha (0.7 per acre) Communication - Snowshoe hares use visual, tactile, vocal, chemical, and mechanical signals to communicate. Individuals "thump" with their hindfeet, perhaps as an alarm signal. During courtship, partners may touch noses before a male rushes or chases the female. Chases then alternate between the two, both stopping abruptly and turing to leap over the back of the other. Both may urinate on the other while leaping. Snowshoe hares perform guttural hisses at the conclusion of mating, and grunt, snort, or growl in other contexts. When captured, injured or frightened, they may scream. Communication and Perception Snowshoe hares have acute hearing, which presumably helps them to identify approaching predators. They are not particularly vocal animals, but may make loud squealing sounds when captured. When engaging in aggressive activities, these animals may hiss and snort. Most communication between hares involves thumping the hind feet against the ground. In summer, it feeds on plants such as grass, ferns and leaves; in winter, it eats twigs, the bark from trees, and buds from flowers and plants and, similar to the Arctic hare, has been known to steal meat from baited traps. Hares are carnivorous under the availability of dead animals, and have been known to eat dead rodents such as mice due to low availability of protein in a herbivorous diet. It can sometimes be seen feeding in small groups. This animal is mainly active at night and does not hibernate. The snowshoe hare has been reported to make many characteristic hare vocalizations, which are mainly emitted as a result of fear or stress associated with capture or predation. A common snowshoe hare vocalization is a high-pitched squeal, and other noises include whines, grunts and clicking sounds. Snowshoe hares are crepuscular to nocturnal. They are shy and secretive and spend most of the day in shallow depressions, called forms, scraped out under clumps of ferns, brush thickets, and downed piles of timber. They occasionally use the large burrows of mountain beavers (Aplodontia rufa) as forms. The snowshoe hare is a social species and has been spotted in groups of up to 25 individuals in one forest clearing at night, unlike most other Lepus species which are solitary until the mating season. Diurnal activity level increases during the breeding season. Juveniles are usually more active and less cautious than adults. Snowshoe hares are active year-round. The breeding season for hares is stimulated by new vegetation and varies with latitude, location, and yearly events (such as weather conditions and phase of snowshoe hare population cycle). Breeding generally begins in late December to January and lasts until July or August. In northwestern Oregon, male peak breeding activity (as determined by testes weight) occurs in May and is at the minimum in November. In Ontario, the peak is in May and in Newfoundland, the peak is in June. Female estrus begins in March in Newfoundland, Alberta, and Maine, and in early April in Michigan and Colorado. First litters of the year are born from mid-April to May. The gestation period is 35 to 40 days; most studies report 37 days as the average length of gestation. Litters average three to five leverets depending on latitude, elevation, and phase of population cycle, ranging from one to seven. Deep snow-pack increases the amount of upper-branch browse available to snowshoe hares in winter, and therefore has a positive relationship with the nutritional status of breeding adults. Litters are usually smaller in the southern sections of their range since there is less snow. Newborns are fully furred, open-eyed, and mobile. T hey leave the natal form within a short time after birth, often within 24 hours. After leaving the birthplace, siblings stay near each other during the day, gathering once each evening to nurse. Weaning occurs at 25 to 28 days except for the last litter of the season, which may nurse for two months or longer. Female snowshoe hares can become pregnant anytime after the 35th day of gestation. The second litter can therefore be conceived before the first litter is born (snowshoe hares have twin uteri). Pregnancy rates ranged from 78 to 100% for females during the period of first litter production, 82 to 100% for second litters, and for the periods of third and fourth litters pregnancy rates vary with population cycle. In Newfoundland, the average number of litters per female per year ranged from 2.9 to 3.5, and in Alberta the range was from 2.7 to 3.3. In Alberta the average number of litters per year was almost 3 just after a population peak and 4 just after the population low. Females normally first breed as 1-year-olds. Juvenile breeding is rare and has only been observed in females from the first litter of the year and only in years immediately following a low point in the population cycle. Reproduction Like most hares (and rabbits), snowshoe hares are prolific breeders. Females have two or three litters each year, which include from one to eight young per litter. Young hares, called leverets, require little care from their mothers and can survive on their own in a month or less. Snowshoe hare populations fluctuate cyclically about once a decade—possibly because of disease. These waning and waxing numbers greatly impact the animals that count on hares for food, particularly the lynx. The snowshoe hare may have up to four litters in a year which average three to eight young. Males compete for females, and females may breed with several males. Young snowshoe hares, known as leverets, are born in nests which consist of shallow depressions dug into the ground. They are born with a full coat of fur and with their eyes open, and remain concealed within dense vegetation. The female snowshoe hare visits the leverets to nurse them. Hares greatly influence the world around them, including the vegetation, predators, and other herbivores and omnivores that live in the same habitats. Hares browse heavily on vegetation. Browsing affects the growth of plants and stimulates plants to produce secondary compounds that make them unpalatable for hares and other omnivores. Predation The relationship between snowshoe hares and their year-round predators including lynx, great-horned owls, and northern goshawks is well documented. These and other predators such as golden eagles depend on snowshoe hares as a food source early in the nesting season. Across the boreal forest, the population size and reproductive success of many predators cycles with the abundance of hare. In Yukon, 30-day survival of radio-tagged leverets was 46%, 15%, and 43% for the first, second, and third litters of the year, respectively. There were no differences in mortality in plots with food added. The main proximate cause of mortality was predation by small mammals, including red squirrels (Tamiasciurus hudsonicus) and Arctic ground squirrels (Spermophilus parryii). Littermates tended to live or die together more often than by chance. Individual survival was negatively related to litter size and positively related to body size at birth. Litter size is negatively correlated with body size at birth. Snowshoe hares are experts at escaping predators. Young hares often "freeze" in their tracks when they are alerted to the presence of a predator. Presumably, they are attempting to escape notice by being cryptic. Given the hare's background-matching coloration, this strategy is quite effective. Older hares are more likely to escape predators by fleeing. At top speed, a snowshoe hare can travel up to 27 mile per hour. An adult hare can cover up to 10 feet in a single bound. In addition to high speeds, hares employ skillful changes in direction and vertical leaps, which may cause a predator to misjudge the exact position of the animal from one moment to the next. Important predators of snowshoe hares include gray foxes, red foxes, coyotes, wolves, lynx, bobcats and mink. Predators The snowshoe hare is a major prey item for a number of predators. Major predators include Canada lynx (Lynx canadensis), bobcats (L. rufus), fishers (Martes pennanti), American martens (M. americana), long-tailed weasels (Mustela frenata), minks (M. vison), foxes (Vulpes and Urocyon spp.), coyote (Canis latrans), domestic dogs (C. familiaris), domestic cats (Felis catus), wolves (C. lupus), mountain lions (Felis concolor), great horned owls (Bubo virginianus), barred owls (Strix varia), spotted owls (S. occidentalis), other owls, red-tailed hawks (Buteo jamaicensis), northern goshawks (Accipiter gentilis), other hawks (Buteonidae), golden eagles (Aquila chryseatos), and crows and ravens. Other predators include black bears (Ursus americanus). In Glacier National Park snowshoe hares are a prey item of Rocky Mountain wolves (Canis lupus irremotus). A major predator of the snowshoe hare is the Canadian lynx. Historical records of animals caught by fur hunters over hundreds of years show the lynx and hare numbers rising and falling in a cycle, which has made the hare known to biology students worldwide as a case study of the relationship between numbers of predators and their prey. Northern populations of snowshoe hares undergo cycles that range from seven to 17 years between population peaks. The average time between peaks is approximately 10 years. The period of abundance usually lasts for two to five years, followed by a population decline to lower numbers or local scarcity. Areas of great abundance tend to be scattered. Populations do not peak simultaneously in all areas, although a great deal of synchronicity occurs in northern latitudes. From 1931 to 1948, the cycle was synchronized within one or two years over most of Canada and Alaska, despite differences in predators and food supplies. In central Alberta, low snowshoe hare density occurred in 1965, with 42 to 74 snowshoe hares per 100 acres (40 ha). The population peak occurred in November 1970 with 2,830 to 5,660 snowshoe hares per 100 acres (40 ha). In the southern parts of its range, snowshoe hare populations do not fluctuate radically. As well as being prey to a number of forest animals, the snowshoe hare is hunted mainly for food by humans, particularly in Canada. Habitat loss and fragmentation, and possibly climate change, also threaten populations of the snowshoe hare. Clear-cutting of forests, whereby most or all of the trees in an area are cut down, reduces the area of ideal habitat for the snowshoe hare, which tends not to venture into open areas. The hares reach maturity after one year. Many hares do not live this long. But some hares can live as long as five years in the wild. Snowshoe hare conservation Although the snowshoe hare currently has a stable population trend and is not currently considered to be threatened, there are some conservation strategies in place for this species. In order to increase populations of the snowshoe hare in some southern states, hunting has been banned either permanently or temporarily, although it is not certain how effective this has been. In some areas, snowshoe hares have been bred in captivity and introduced to the wild in order to artificially boost populations. However, this has not been overly successful as many of these hares die during transport, and those that are introduced to the habitat are extremely susceptible to predation. Predator control has been suggested as a means of reducing mortality in the snowshoe hare, but this method produces several challenges for conservationists. Further research into various aspects of the snowshoe hare’s ecology has been recommended, as well as long-term monitoring of the species’ population trends, and studies on the impact of specific forestry management. In addition, the snowshoe hare occurs in several U.S. National Wildlife Refuges (NWR), including Koyukuk NWR, Red Rock Lakes NWR and Kodiak NWR, which are likely to afford it some protection. Snowshoe hares have been widely studied. One of the more interesting things known about hares are the dramatic population cycles that they undergo. Population densities can vary from 1 to 10,000 hares per square mile. The amplitude of the population fluctuations varies across the geographic range. It is greatest in northwestern Canada, and least in the rocky Mountain region of the United States, perhaps because there is more biological diversity in more southerly regions. The lack of diversity in the Northwestern portion of the hare's range means that there are fewer links in the food chain, and therefore fewer species to buffer either dramatic population increases or decreases. Disease may play a part in population fluctuation. Pneumonococcus, ringworm, and salmonella have all been associated with population crashes. Snowshoe hares are also famous for their seasonal molts. In the summer, the coat of the hare is reddish brown or gray, but during the winter, the coat is snowy white. The molt usually takes about 72 days to reach completion, and it seems to be regulated by day-length. Interestingly, there seem to be two entirely different sets of hair follicles, which give rise to white and brown hairs, respectively. In the wild as much as 85% of snowshoe hares do not live longer than one year. Individuals may live up to 5 years in the wild. Economic Importance for Humans: Positive Snowshoe hares are utilized widely as a source of wild meat. In addition to this, they are an important prey species for many predators whose furs are highly valued. https://www.nationalgeographic.com/animals/mammals/s/snowshoe-hare/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snowshoe_hare https://www.nwf.org/Educational-Resources/Wildlife-Guide/Mammals/Snowshoe-Hare http://www.iucn.org/about/work/programmes/species/who_we_are/ssc_specialist_groups_and_red_list_authorities_directory/mammals/lagomorph_specialist_group/ https://www.arkive.org/snowshoe-hare/lepus-americanus/ http://animaldiversity.org/accounts/Lepus_americanus/ https://www.esf.edu/aec/adks/mammals/snowshoe_hare.htm https://www.denali.org/denalis-natural-history/snowshoe-hare/ https://www.nps.gov/articles/snowshoe-hare.htm Snoring and Nasal Obstruction in Rabbits Did you know rabbits snore? Even occurring while they are awake, it is generally a result of blockage in the animal's airway. Typically referred to as stertor and stridor, it can also occur if nasal tissues are weak or flaccid or from excessive fluid in the passages. Symptoms The symptoms, signs and types of stertor and stridor depend on the underlying cause and severity of the condition. For example, an extremely stressed rabbit or a rabbit with a lowered immune system may sound excessively hoarse while breathing. Other typical signs for rabbits suffering from stertor and stridor include: Sneezing Rapid or loud wheezing sounds during breathing Nasal discharge (sometimes due to sinusitis or rhinitis) Discharge from the eyes Lack of appetite Inability to chew or swallow Oral abscesses (especially in the teeth) Causes Rabbits tend to be nasal breathers and any physical deformity or unusual nasal structure can result in a lower-pitched (stertor) or higher-pitched (stridor) sound emanating from the airway or nose. There are, however, many other causes for stertor and stridor in rabbits. These include: Sinusitis and rhinitis Abscesses, elongated teeth or secondary bacterial infections Facial, nasal or other trauma affecting this region, including bites from other insects or animals Allergies and irritants including inhaling pollen, dust or other insects Tumors that lodge in the airway Dysfunction of the neuromuscular system, which may include hypothyroidism or diseases affecting the brainstem Swelling and edema in the upper respiratory system Inflammation of the soft palate or throat and voice box Anxiety or stress Diagnosis To diagnose the animal, a veterinarian will first determine where the sounds are originating from in the rabbit. They will then conduct various lab tests, including X-rays, which are used to explore the rabbit's nasal cavity and identify any facial abnormalities or signs of abscesses and bacterial infections, such as Pasteurella. Other procedures may include collecting cultures Treatment includes providing supplemental oxygen to the rabbit, when appropriate, and providing a quite, cool and calm environment in which to live. A rabbit must also have a clear and unobstructed airway, keeping its ear and nasal cavities clean and debris-free. To combat harmful bacterial infections from developing, the veterinarian may alter the rabbit's diet to include more leafy greens. Medications which are helpful to control bacterial sinusitis, rhinitis or other related infection include antibiotics. And while steroids may be used to reduce nasal swelling or inflammation, it can worsen bacterial infections and should only be used when absolutely necessary and under the direct care of a trained veterinarian. Living and Management Because stertor and stridor are often related to airway obstructions, there are many serious complications which may arise. Pulmonary edema, or fluid retention in the lungs or airway, is one such common example. It is, therefore, important to closely monitor the rabbit and bring it to the veterinarian's office for regular checkups and follow-up care during recovery. https://www.petmd.com/rabbit/conditions/nose/c_rb_stertor_stridor The Shot Hare Wales Beti Ifan was one of the witches of Bedd Gelert. Her fear had fallen upon nearly all the inhabitants, so that she was refused nothing by any one, for she had the reputation of being able to handle ghosts, and to curse people and their possessions. She therefore lived in comfort and ease, doing nothing except keeping her house moderately clean, and leaning on the lower half of her front door knitting and watching passers-by. But there was one man in the village, a cobbler and a skilled poacher, who feared neither Beti Ifan nor any other old hag of the kind. His great hobby was to tease and annoy the old woman by showing her a hare or a wild duck, and asking her if she would like to get it. When she replied she would, he used to hand it almost within her reach and then pull it back, and walk away. She could not do him much harm, as he had a birthmark above his breast; but she contrived a way by which she could have her revenge on him. She used to transform herself into a wild duck or hare, and continually appear before him on the meadows and among the trees whenever he went out poaching, but took good care to keep outside the reach of the gun. He, being a good shot, and finding himself missing so frequently, began to suspect something to be amiss. He knew of a doctor who was a "skilled man" living not far away, so he went to consult him. The doctor told him, "Next time you go out take with you a small branch of mountain ash, and a bit of vervain and place it under the stock of the gun." Then giving him a piece of paper with some writing on, he said, "When you see the hare, or any other creature of which you have some doubt, read this backward, and if it is old Beti you will see her in her own form, though she retain her assumed form; shoot at her legs, but mind you do not shoot her anywhere else." The next day, as he was working his way through a grove near Beti's house, he could see a large hare hopping in front of him. He drew out his paper and read as he was instructed; he then fired at her legs, and the hare ran towards Beti's cottage. He ran after it, and was just in time to see the hare jumping over the lower half of the house door. Going up to the cottage he could hear the old woman groaning; when he went in she was sitting by the fire with blood streaming from her legs. He was never again troubled with the hare-like appearances of old Beti'r Fedw. https://www.pitt.edu/~dash/type3055.html#haas © Copyrighted
Another big episode featuring local Philly music Wednesday October 11 as The Stoop welcomes the powerful voice of Overwinter! She will be here to promote her new EP entitled Condor, and we will talk about her music and inspirations. We are always excited to get local music on our show and this one will be no exception. Plus your awesome hosts Jeff "The Shark" Porrini and Jewel Teti bring you a Brand New Top 5 List, What's On Your Playlist and much more. Come get your groove on at The Stoop beginning at 8pm
For episode 106, Steve talks about how bees overwinter and the roles of honey, nectar and pollen in the overwintering process. In addition, Bryan discusses a new method of mosquito control that involves a pesticide-spiked nectar.
John Morgan’s new book Archives of the Air and Jeremy Pataky’s collection Overwinter are featured at this event. Poet Jeremy Pataky who reads from his collection, Overwinter (University of Alaska Press, 2015) According to Joanna Klink, “ Jeremy Pataky’s poems find their ground in Alaska—its woodpiles and stone piles, its fishbones and lichen, its uncrossable creeks. There is an almost ancient attention to what is living in a landscape, and to the scales of human loss.” Jeremy Pataky lives in Anchorage and McCarthy, AK. He is a founding board member of 49 Writers. (2:41-28:56) John Morgan’s new collection of poetry is called Archives of the Air (Salmon Poetry, 2015). He is the author of several books including River of Light: A Conversation with Kabir, and a collection of essays called Forms of Feeling: Poetry in our Lives . John’s poems, according to Annie Dilliard, “ are strong and full of carefully controlled feeling. They are tender and precise evocations of the moral and sensory life of man.” John Morgan has taught Creative Writing at UAF and currently lives in Fairbanks and Bellingham, WA. (28:56-47:52) Note: there is background static in the recording