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Online education has grown exponentially over the last few years, and online education in the hairdressing space is no exception. This is one episode in a series of podcasts that will focus on the various forms of online education in the world of hairdressing. My guest on today's podcast is Dublin-based Paul Davey, a hairdresser, salon owner, and the founder of Hairdressing Live, one of the first online education platforms to make a real impact in the space. In today's podcast, we will discuss: - What exactly Hairdressing Live is - What makes it different from other online platforms - What Paul sees as the future of education… And lots more! For full show notes, links and resources mentioned visit: https://growmysalonbusiness.com/podcast/210/ Thanks so much for joining me this week. If you enjoyed this episode, please leave a review. Ratings and reviews are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated! They do matter in the rankings of the show and help other people find my podcast. I also love to hear what's been helpful and what you love about the podcast! Just click here to review, scroll to the bottom, tap “Ratings and Reviews” tap to rate with 5 stars and “Write a Review” and let me know what your favourite part of the podcast is. Thank you for your support! And finally, don't forget to subscribe to the show to get automatic updates. Got a question you want answered on the podcast? DM me your question over on Instagram or just come on over to connect at: https://www.instagram.com/growmysalonbusiness/
Carolyn Quinn has family links to Felixstowe, a place she's visited frequently over the years, enjoying walks along the Edwardian seafront, soaking up its old world charm. For Open Country she returns to take a closer look at this Suffolk town, including how it's been shaped by the enormous presence of Felixstowe Port, the largest container port in the UK. She begins her journey with David Gledhill at Felixstowe Museum who gives a quick overview of the richly historic area. From there she walks round the corner to Landguard Nature Reserve, overlooked by the port's enormous cranes. Ranger, Leonie Washington, shows her the reserve's internationally important habitat of vegetated shingle. It supports species like the incredibly rare Stinking Goosefoot and provides habitat for ground-nesting birds like the ringed plover. Next, Carolyn pops on a hard-hat and enters the Port itself, where Paul Davey shares some facts and figures about this bewilderingly huge place. Then it's onto the Wildlife Trust's Trimley Marshes reserve. It was created to replace habitat destroyed when the Port expanded around 30 years ago. Carolyn asks Andrew Excell whether this wetland habitat makes up for the lost mudflats. And finally, the seaside holiday scene: Billy Butlin opened an amusement park here in 1931 and later sub-let it to showman and entrepreneur, Charlie Manning, who renamed it Manning's Amusements. Charlie's grandsons, Charlie Jr and Jonny, still run it but have also established Beach Street, where traders operate out of - what else - repurposed shipping containers. Carolyn meets Jonny and his mother, Sarah, who shares memories of the early days. Note: The parody of the shipping forecast was written by Les Barker and included on the album ‘Guide Cats for the Blind' created by Clive Lever. Producer: Karen Gregor
This week JB and DC welcome Paul Davey onto the pod from Aus to discuss property prices and interest rates in various areas of Australia and New Zealand, and how do the lifestyles really compare to each other.If you have any questions or things you'd like to hear us talk about, get in touch with us at david@squirrel.co.nz or John@squirrel.co.nz. The opinions expressed in this podcast are not financial advice, or a recommendation of any financial product. Any commentary provided are personal views and are not necessarily representative of the opinions of Squirrel. As always, we recommend seeking professional investment or mortgage advice before taking any action. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Paul Davey, from Port of Felixstowe, discusses the dock worker strike. He tells Bloomberg's Lizzy Burden the pay offer is a pay increase of between 8.1% and 9.6% depending on the job and that the offer is fair.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Dock workers strike for the first time in 30 years. We hear from Paul Davey, representing the Port of Felixstowe, on the pay rise that has been offered and Bobby Morton, from Unite the union, which wants meaningful negotiations and a pay bump closer to the 12.3% RPI rate. Plus the cost of living crisis is set to worsen as consultancy Auxilione Director Tony Jordan explains UK household energy bills will rise by about 80% in October.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Clonmel Rotary Club..... On this episode I chat to Paul Davey, President of Clonmel Rotary Club, Paul explains what the club does, previous help they offered with various charities and how you can become a member. Also this week, we have an appointment at The Nadur Wellness Hub with Annmarie McGrath, Liam Condon gives us the rundown on next weekend's Clonmel Busking Festival, The World Masters Mountain Running Championships are coming to town, Elvis at The Talbot Hotel and lots more.
Healthy soil is full of living organisms that help to generate the nutrients crops need to grow. But many conventional farming practices inadvertently degrade soil health over time, which in turn can reduce crop yields. Regenerative Agriculture aims to capture carbon in soil and aboveground biomass, reversing current global trends of atmospheric accumulation. At the same time, it offers increased yields, resilience to climate instability, and higher health and vitality for farming and ranching communities. To explore regenerative agriculture and to find out the impact it could have on our environment, we once again, in partnership with Anglo American, join experts in the field to share their insight and experience. We speak to Ross Mitchell, Head of Agronomy and Technical Services, Anglo American Crop Nutrients and Paul Davey, seventh generation farmer and conservation agriculture contractor. Find out how we can regenerate our agriculture to improve sustainability in the future. About our panel Ross Mitchell, Head of Agronomy and Technical Services, Anglo American Crop Nutrients Ross runs a global agronomy team overseeing the development of POLY4 in support of the company's commercial contracts. With over 30-years experience, Ross has a wide spectrum of knowledge of agricultural practices ranging from the research of nutrient and pesticide dynamics in soil to seed production. Before joining Anglo American, Ross specialised for eight years in sugar production – initially for large and smallholder farmers in China followed by large new farms in North Africa and the Indian subcontinent. Paul Davey, Farmer Paul Davey is a seventh generation farmer and conservation agriculture contractor. His wife manages their wholesale distribution and retail business which specialises in food, drinks and homeware made in Lincolnshire, UK. They run a shop in Lincoln which has an online home delivery service. The farm specialises in seed production growing cereals, oilseeds, grass seeds and pulses, including vining peas for Birds Eye. A lambing flock of Lleyn ewes is run in conjunction with the arable enterprises and the farm pursues a strategy of healthy soils producing heathy plants and healthy food. Paul was a finalist in the Soil Farmer of the Year competition 2019.
Daniel Takes a Train special with Paul Baker in conversation with David Eastaugh Daniel Takes A Train was originally formed in London in the 1980’s. The band split up in 1988 but re-emerged 30 years later as a live and recording act. Named after a Hungarian art-house movie, Daniel Takes A Train was originally formed in London in the 1980’s by song-writing duo Paul Baker (vocals) and Dan Synge (guitar). Augmented by James Hannington (drums), Rupert Blomfield (bass) and Paul Davey (saxophone) the band were regulars on the West End club scene (Ronnie Scott’s, Le Beat Route, The Limelight, The Astoria, Empire Ballroom etc) and even gate-crashed the 1987 Brit Awards armed with demo tapes in order to get a record deal. The band split up in 1988 but re-emerged 30 years later as a live act featuring core original members, following their discovery, via an old promo video on YouTube, by Firestation Records, Germany. Over the years, they have crossed genres as diverse as synth pop, jazz/funk, jangle and indie rock but always with an eye on creating that perfect pop moment.
26th April 2020 Haggai 2 Guest speaker Paul Davey
19th April 2020 Haggai 1 Guest speaker Paul Davey
The coronavirus pandemic is having a huge impact on UK food and farming – with supermarket shelves bare, farms suffering labour shortages and the widespread cancellation of agricultural shows.But agriculture is a resilient industry - and farmers are fighting back, ramping up food supplies and launching a huge campaign for British people to work on farms.And not to be deterred by cancellations, plans are afoot to hold the Greatest Agricultural Show online – where it won't be affected by coronavirus restrictions.This episode features Lincolnshire farmer Paul Davey, Sarah Boparan of Hops Labour Solutions and estate manager David Hills.Hosted by Johann Tasker with Surrey farmer Hugh Broom and Farmers Weekly deputy business editor Andrew Meredith.Recorded on Sat/Sun 21/22 March 2020.
Paul Davey joins the show to talk about his first season at Avon Old Farms, his commitment to Boston College and learning about what it takes to be the best.
Helen McCookerybook in conversation. Helen McCookerybook (born Helen McCallum, now Dr Helen Reddington) is an English musician, best known for serving as the bass guitar player and lead singer with Brighton-based punk rock band The Chefs during the late 1970s and early 1980s. She later formed Helen and the Horns (with Dave Jago on trombone, Paul Davey on sax and Chris Smith on trumpet), before continuing her career as a solo artist, writer and lecturer. In 2010 she released Take One on the Barbaraville label. She plays live gigs as a solo act as well as occasional revivals of Helen and the Horns. Her pseudonym derives from a 1979 photo shoot in Brighton, with other bands on the Attrix label. When the local news photographer asked McCallum her name, she told him, on the spur of the moment, that it was "McCookerybook" and the name stuck. Her first book (as Helen Reddington) The Lost Women of Rock Music: Female Musicians of the Punk Erawas published in July 2007. The book featured interviews with The Slits, Gina Birch, The Mo-dettes, Enid Williams (Girlschool), Dolly Mixture, Gaye Black (The Adverts), Vi Subversa (Poison Girls), Rhoda Dakar, Lucy O'Brien, Attila the Stockbroker, Caroline Coon, Geoff Travis and the late John Peel. She holds a doctorate from the University of Westminster and has been a lecturer at the University of East London since 2006. British songwriter and performer Katy Carr cites Reddington's lectures on the musical works of The Raincoats and the Riot grrrl underground feministpunk rock movement as a source of initial inspiration for her own 2001 debut album Screwing Lies.
In this podcast, Paul Davey and Sam Perrin from Xtravirt’s Cloud Automation Practice discuss automation, sharing their insight and learnings from having worked on dozens of automation projects.This episode outlines:What is automation?The common reasons businesses are automating business processes.Some of tools being used in automation – from Puppet and Chef for configuration management to HashiCorp’s options for provisioning, security and the running of applications.The need for businesses to take a business logic first approach to automation projects.Some common mistakes to avoid.How Xtravirt have designed workshops and best practice methodologies to ensure automation projects stay on track and deliver the business outcomes they were intended to.To find out more about Xtravirt’s Cloud Automation Practice, please contact:Sam Perrin - Sam_Perrin See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
I'm a huge fan of how live streaming has enabled us to a fast and powerful way to connect with others in real time. In this episode today, we are going to hear from the founder of Hairdressing Live, Paul Davey, on how he's leveraged this use of technology to revolutionise the way we can now get our fix of hairdressing education by bringing you some of the most influential names in the business to educate you wherever you are based. Epic stuff! Hairdresser Paul Davey is the co-owner of Davey Davey and is greatly regarded for his creativity. Paul spent over 10 years with Toni & Guy, where he held positions on the International Artistic Team. Since launching Davey Davey with his brother in 2010 it has seen him travel for Editorial and Session work to London, New York, and throughout Europe. I've big respect for Paul, who's outlook and innovative approach has given us the first online LIVE hairdressing academy, and that is committed to making quality hairdressing education accessible to everyone. With a diverse range of live hairdressing to watch, their online courses will allow you to hone your hairdressing skills and become an expert. And be sure do stick around to the end – I've a stomper of a competition exclusive for the HTCI community courtesy of our friends at Hairdressing Live. Stay tuned! Thanks for Listening! To share your thoughts: Leave a note in the comment section below. Ask a question by emailing me HERE Share this show on Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram. To help out the show: Leave an honest review on iTunes. Your ratings and reviews really help and I read each one. Subscribe on iTunes. Special thanks to Paul Davey for joining me today. Until next time!
Paul Davey, CTO Global Telecoms Industry for Atos, and Lynn Comp, Senior Director, Industry & Sales Enabling for the Network Platforms Group at Intel, join us live from Mobile World Congress, 2017. Atos is a digital services leader headquartered in Paris, France, with more than 100,000 employees in 72 countries. In this interview, Davey and Comp discuss Intel's focus on 5G and back-end network infrastructure, reiterate the importance of virtualized networks in realizing the benefits of 5G, and highlight an Atos/Intel collaboration with OEM suppliers to deliver standard, low-cost, virtualized network solutions atop which operators can build new end user experiences. For more information on the Atos/Intel collaboration, please visit https://networkbuilders.intel.com/ecosystem/atos. For more information on Intel's work to power 5G transformation, please visit http://intel.com/5g.
The Wild Storm by Warren Ellis, Jon Davis-Hunt, and Ivan Plascencia, Moby Dick by Chabouté from Dark Horse, Super Sons #1 by Peter J. Tomasi, Jorge Jimenez, and Alejandro Sanchez, Chester 3000 Volume 2: Isabelle and George by Jess Fink, Prophet by Brandon Graham, Simon Roy, Farel Dalrymple, Giannis Milonogiannis, Emma Rios, Fil Barlow, Helen Maier, Boo Cook, Malachi Ward, Matt Sheean, Zachary Baldus, Aaron Conley, Jim Rugg, Bayard Baudoin, Dave Taylor, Ron Wimberly, James Stokoe, Lando, Grim Wilkins, Sandra Lanz, Onta, Ron Ackins, Tom Parkinson-Morgan, Gael Bertrand, Rob Liefeld, Addison Duke, Ludroe, Xurxo G. Penalta, Amy Claire, Richard Ballerman, Joseph Bergen II, Graham, Jason Wordie, Ron Ackins, Lin Visel, and Paul Davey from Image, Haunted Horror #26 and Joe Kubert by Craig Yoe and IDW, Justice League of America: Rebirth #1 by Steve Orlando, Ivan Reis, Joe Prado, Oclair Albert, and Marcelo Maiolo, Kickstarter's Femme Magnifique anthology edited by Shelly Bond and Brian Miller, Jason Shiga's Demon Volume 2, Star Trek: Boldly Go #5 by Mike Johnson and Tony Shasteen from IDW, plus a whole mess more!