POPULARITY
E' salito ancora, a 174, il numero delle persone che nel valdagnese hanno registrato sintomi gastrointestinali, a volte pesanti, dopo la camminata per le contrade di Piana, il 1° Maggio dopo aver bevuto acqua da alcune fontane non allacciate all'acquedotto. L'Ulss 8 Berica in una nota conferma che i risultati delle analisi evidenziano la circolazione di un virus.
Tutti presentano sintomi lievi-moderati, pertanto le loro condizioni non destano preoccupazione, e già dalla serata di ieri i nuovi casi segnalati sono andati riducendosi sempre di più". Dei 133 utenti assistiti, per 93 è già stata effettuata l'indagine epidemiologica da parte degli operatori del Servizio di Igiene e Sanità Pubblica dell'Ulss 8.
Základní umělecká škola v Trutnově obdržela nástroj v grantovém programu Piana do škol a ve veřejné sbírce získala od dárců půl milionu korun. Nadace, která grant vyhlásila, tuto částku zdvojnásobila a stotisícovým příspěvkem se na nákupu podílela také společnost, která pianino dodala.
La Venganza Será Terrible: todo el año festejando los 40 años Estudios AM 750 Alejandro Dolina, Patricio Barton, Gillespi Introducción • Entrada0:01:36 • El segmento reflexivo en La Venganza0:08:16 Segmento Inicial • Datos científicos sobre el cuerpo humano0:12:19 • Oyentes Segmento Dispositivo • El mago Merlín0:51:22 • "Besos brujos" ♫ (Canta Libertad Lamarque) Alfredo Malerba y Rodolfo Sciammarella. Segmento Humorístico • ¡Mamá, me voy a vivir con mi pareja! Sordo Gancé / Manuel Moreira • Presentación • "Ay de Mí" ♫ (Homero Manzi/Sebastián Piana) • "Queixa" ♫ (Caetano Veloso) • "Crazy" ♫ (Gnarls Barkley) • "How High the Moon" ♫ (Nancy Hamilton/Morgan Lewis) • "Al Ritmo Del Pan Dulce De Rolón" ♫ (Ritmo de Maracas y Bongo, Los Lamas)
V novém Poesiomatu v centru Prahy si lidé můžou poslechnout celkem dvacet zvukových nahrávek. Mezi nimi jsou například projevy prezidentů nebo poslední zaznamenaná slova studenta Jana Palacha a jeho načtené texty. Zařízení v dolní části Václavského náměstí včera odhalil spolek Piana na ulici, zástupci pražského magistrátu a první městské části.
A wave of viral speculation has swept across social media following claims by an Italian research team that new satellite-based radar technology has revealed vast hidden structures beneath Egypt's Giza Plateau. Enormous underground cylinders, spiral shafts, and five mysterious chambers allegedly lie beneath the Pyramid of Khafre—some even linking them to the legendary Emerald Tablets of Thoth the Atlantean. But does the data hold up under scrutiny? And where is the promised evidence? We break down the wild claims, the strange cast of characters, and the very real science behind the tech—while asking: is this a revolutionary discovery… or just another echo from the esoteric fringe? Then in our Plus+ extension, we dive into the depths with a look at invisible residents—unidentified submerged objects (USOs), strange water-based anomalies, and the theory that we may be sharing our oceans with a hidden aquatic intelligence. Links Yuga Shift: The End Of The Kali Yuga & The Impending Planetary Transformation Comunicato stampa..Piana di Giza SAR Scan of Khafre Pyramid Synthetic Aperture Radar Doppler Tomography Harmonic analysis of Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) data Space geodetic monitoring of engineered structures Andrew Côté Khafre SAR scan Mar 2025 Corrado Malanga HUGE Structures Discovered 2km BELOW Pyramid of Khafre?! 36,400 BC: The Historical time of the Zep Tepi Theory The Emerald Tablets of Thoth-The-Atlantean Gérard de Nerval Journey to the Orient Great Pyramid Plus+ Extension The extension of the show is EXCLUSIVE to Plus+ Members. To join, click HERE. A History of USOs: Unidentified Submerged Objects: Volume 1: From the Beginning to 1969 UFOs and Water: Physical Effects of UFOs On Water Through Accounts By Eyewitnesses Invisible Residents: The Reality of Underwater UFOs Are Underwater UFOs an Imminent Threat? The U.S. Government Sure Thinks So UFOs, Alien Abductions, and High Strangeness: Otherworldly Encounters from the Hudson Valley Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nel magico mondo di Oz, lontano dalla Città degli Smeraldi, verso l'estremo confine orientale, nella Piana del Tormento, nasce una bimba dalla pelle verde e i denti affilati, Elphaba Thropp, che passerà alla Storia come la Perfida Strega dell'Ovest. Elphaba nasce dalla penna di Gregory Maguire nel romanzo Wicked: Vita e Opere della Perfida Strega dell'Ovest, del 1995, il primo di una serie di libri ispirati al mondo magico creato da L. Frank Baum a partire dal 1900 con Il meraviglioso Mago di Oz. La Strega di Maguire viene completamente reimmaginata fino a rappresentare uno dei punti più alti delle narrazioni letterarie sulla figura della strega nella contemporaneità. La fama di Elphaba è legata soprattutto all'incredibile successo del musical di Broadway, portato in scena ininterrottamente da più di vent'anni in tutto il mondo, e di recente riproposto sul grande schermo in versione cinematografica, riconfermando il potere magnetico di Elphaba, ormai impressa nell'immaginario collettivo con la sua pelle verde e il cappello a punta, mentre sfida la gravità volando sulla sua scopa incantata, opponendosi al potere tirannico del Mago di Oz e alla sua violenza nei confronti degli Animali. Tuttavia, sebbene il musical e il film colgano l'intento di restituire a Elphaba la dignità di un individuo con una storia che merita di essere raccontata, il libro di Maguire è molto diverso, più oscuro, più complesso, e con un arco narrativo decisamente più tragico, nonché una politicizzazione della protagonista più imponente e radicale. A fondamento dell'Elphaba di Maguire c'è proprio la riflessione sul mostruoso e sull'umano, sulle relazioni interspecie, sulla tirannia, sul potere della parola e in definitiva sulla natura intrinseca del Male.
Gabriel Soria recibió en "Los Clásicos" a Nacho Piana (Nieto de Sebastián) y a su esposa, la pianista Shino Ohnaga. Emitido el 3-12-2023.
Venerdì 20 dicembre, con le nostre Lilly e Katia - alla guida del programma Donne al Volante - è stato ospite Sergio Orsini, presidente della Società Speleologica Italiana, per commentare i commenti negativi che sono seguiti alla vicenda di Ottavia Piana, speleologa rimasta intrappolata nella grotta di Bueno Fonteno e salvata da oltre centro tecnici. «L'intervento in quella grotta serviva per mappare nuove zone di quell'area per poter studiare la potenzialità delle risorse idriche», ha spiegato il Dott. Orsini. Ha inoltre sottolineato che gli speleologi sono volontari: «Le ricerche sono svolte a spese dello speleologo. Non vengono pagati, ma operazioni di questo tipo servono per svolgere indagini che vanno a vantaggio della comunità». Infine, una risposta a chi protesta contro i costi del salvataggio di Ottavia Orsini: «I costi non esistono. I soccorritori sono volontari assicurati personalmente, poi ci sono assicurazioni che coprono operazioni di questo tipo, ma si parla solo di costi relativi alla ricerca e al soccorso in grotta.
Dopo la conclusione della missione di salvataggio durata quasi 80 ore e che ha coinvolto 160 operatori del Soccorso Alpino e Speleo giunti da mezza Italia, preziose le testimonianze dei 22 volontari partiti dal Veneto. Tra loro anche Michela Zambelli, già presente nel 2023 nello stesso luogo per soccorrere Ottavia Piana.
Le prime pagine dei principali quotidiani nazionali commentate in rassegna stampa da Davide Giacalone. Ucciso il generale di Putin, Meloni contro l'opposizione, negozi chiusi nei festivi. #Ilpostinazienda. Oggi con OMR, Officine Meccaniche Rezzatesi, gruppo leader mondiale nella produzione di componenti e soluzioni integrate per il settore automobilistico. Ha 15 stabilimenti in 5 continenti, 3800 dipendenti e ne cerca subito almeno 15. Con noi il cavalier Marco Bonometti, Presidente e Amministratore Delegato di Officine Meccaniche Rezzatesi. Don Antonio Mazzi, fondatore della comunità Exodus, regala ogni giorno un pensiero, un suggerimento, una frase agli ascoltatori di RTL 102.5 Federico Catania, del soccorso alpino, è intervenuto per parlare dell'intervento complesso, durato 75 ore, con più di 159 operatori, venuti da tredici regioni differenti, impegnati per portare in salvo la speleologa Ottavia Piana. Siamo riusciti ad anticipare le tempistiche del salvataggio. Ieri l'Istat ha pubblicato un interessante report sulla popolazione italiana. Com'è composta? Come sta cambiando? Ne abbiamo parlato con Gerardo Gallo, direttore del Servizio Censimento della popolazione dell'Istat. L'attualità, commentata dalla direttrice del quotidiano Nazionale e dei quotidiani del gruppo Monrif, Agnese Pini. Secondo l'Oxford Dictionary il 2024 è riassumibile con le parole "Brain Rot", letteralmente marciume cerebrale. Una condizione che deriverebbe dallo scrolling compulsivo sui social di fronte a contenuti di bassa qualità. Ne abbiamo parlato con Massimiliano Panarari, sociologo. All'interno di Non Stop News, con Enrico Galletti, Massimo Lo Nigro e Giusi Legrenzi.
Operazione riuscita, è stata portata fuori dalla grotta alle 3:15 di questa notte la speleologa Ottavia Piana, bloccata dopo una caduta nell'Abisso Bueno Fonteno nella bergamasca, da sabato pomeriggio. A renderlo noto è stato il soccorso alpino con un comunicato.
Andrea Della Piana"Artico Club"BraSabato 14 dicembre avremo la seconda data della rassegna, ovvero il debutto nazionale del nuovo spettacolo di Nicholas Ciuferri, narratore e performer. Con Waltzing nowhere - Life of Elliott Smith vengono ripercorse le tappe del percorso artistico del cantautore statunitense, dagli inizi nella sua cameretta fino alla notte degli Oscar. I brani saranno eseguiti da Andrea Dellapiana, Nicolas Roncea e Amedeo Viglino: tre musicisti della zona di Langhe e Roero che si uniscono per la prima volta in questa formazione, appositamente per questa occasione. Ti suggerivo di parlare con Andrea proprio perché per questa particolare serata non sarà solo direttore artistico, ma anche uno degli artisti sul palco.L'anno di Artico termina domenica 29 dicembre con il concerto chitarra e voce di Marco Castello. Con il tour invernale sarà in diversi capoluoghi italiani, ma noi siamo molto orgogliosi di essere riusciti a portarlo in provincia. Questa data ha già registrato il tutto esaurito.Non mancano le collaborazioni con le realtà locali: qualche mese fa a Bra è nata Casa Pride la prima associazione a sostegno dei diritti LGBTQIA+ e noi già quest'estate li avevamo "tenuti a battesimo", come ci dicono loro, durante il festival, ospitando un loro banchetto al Parco della Zizzola. Durante ogni serata avranno un corner dedicato, dove chiunque potrà fare loro domande e raccogliere informazioni, ma anche solo fermarsi per due chiacchiere. Inoltre la selezione musicale che aprirà e chiuderà ognuna delle serate è a cura di Respiri, il piccolo festival elettroalpino di Melle.IL POSTO DELLE PAROLEascoltare fa pensarewww.ilpostodelleparole.itDiventa un supporter di questo podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/il-posto-delle-parole--1487855/support.
What can a 440-year-old company teach us about sustainable innovation in the modern world? In this episode, hosts David Millili and Steve Carran sit down with Andrea Piana, CEO of Piana Technology, to explore the fascinating journey of a 440-year-old company at the forefront of sustainable innovation. Discover how Piana's groundbreaking Renovo Mattress is reshaping the hospitality industry with its 100% recyclable design and advanced sleep technology.Andrea shares insights on the legacy of his family's Italian textile business, the cultural shift to the U.S., and his vision for a zero-waste future. From his journey as a two-time world kickboxing champion to leading sustainability efforts in bedding, Andrea provides a unique perspective on merging tradition with innovation.Key Topics:What inspired the development of the Renovo Mattress as an innovative and sustainable sleeping solution? How are circular economy principles applied in mattress manufacturing?Why are emerging technologies in sleep science and mattress design important for improving sleep quality? The environmental impact of traditional mattress production and disposal.Tune in for a deep dive into the role of circular design in combating ecological challenges and learn how the hospitality industry can lead the way in environmental responsibility—all while ensuring the ultimate guest experience.Sponsor spot:This episode is sponsored by Piana Technology: https://www.piana.tech/Join the conversation on today's episode on The Modern Hotelier LinkedIn pageThe Modern Hotelier is produced, edited, and published by Make More MediaLinks:LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrea-piana-9b617912/Piana Technology: https://www.piana.tech/For full show notes head to: https://themodernhotelier.com/episode/122Follow on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-...Connect with Steve and David:Steve: https://www.linkedin.com/in/%F0%9F%8E...David: https://www.linkedin.com/in/david-mil...
Um episódio mais que especial, gravado na Praça Municipal de Poços de Caldas, em comemoração aos 6 anos de Podcast, durante a Mostra Integrada de Artes - MIA, com o escritor Leonardo Piana! O papo foi lindo, com participação da plateia, e muita história bonita. Apoio: Livruz! - livraria Para envio de livros e postagens: Tadeu Rodrigues Caixa Postal nº 129 CEP: 37701-010 - Poços de Caldas - MG Acompanhe, curta, compartilhe! Siga-nos | Instagram: @podcastrabiscos | @tadeufrodrigues | email: podcastrabiscos@gmail.com | tadeufrodrigues@gmail.com
Ever wondered what happens when a 442-year-old Italian family business meets modern American innovation? Join us for an inspiring journey from textile roots to sustainable sleep tech! In this episode, Mark Kinsley, welcomes Andrea Piana, CEO of Piana Technology, a company that began in 1582 as a textile manufacturer and has evolved into a powerhouse of sustainable innovation in bedding and beyond. Episode Summary: In this episode, Mark and Andrea dive into Piana Technology's legacy, from humble beginnings in Italy's Alps to pioneering eco-friendly mattresses today. Andrea shares the family's journey, the power of passion and purpose, and how Piana Technology aims to lead in sustainability without sacrificing functionality or affordability. Andrea's reflections on the family's commitment to community, the environment, and future generations make this conversation both insightful and heartfelt. Key Takeaways: 1. Sustainability at Scale: Piana Technology is reshaping the mattress industry with circular design and environmentally friendly processes. 2. Purpose-Driven Innovation: Andrea emphasizes the importance of staying true to one's purpose, with Piana focusing on products that promote health and planetary well-being. 3. Legacy and Community: A business that feels like family is not only unstoppable but also built to serve future generations through resilience and responsibility.
PALERMO (ITALPRESS) - "La storia recente - nella fase di transizione che hacaratterizzato i Balcani - ha visto popoli dei Paesi vicini, in particolare quello albanese, cercare nell'Italia, la speranza di costruire futuro e prospettiva di vita in un'Europa unita e senza più divisioni. Tra i nostri due Paesi, oggi, si sviluppa un fortissimo interscambio, economico e culturale, avvicinando ancora di più i due popoli. Capisaldi di tale amicizia sono i valori di libertà, indipendenza e democraziatestimoniati dalla comune appartenenza all'Alleanza Atlantica e, in prospettiva, all'Unione Europea, cui l'Albania di oggi guarda con la legittima aspirazione di divenirne presto parte integrante. L'Italia è - e continuerà a essere - una convinta sostenitrice di questo approdo, da realizzare velocemente per l'intera regione deiBalcani occidentali". Lo ha detto il presidente della Repubblica in occasione dell'incontro sulla storia e la cultura arbereshe in Sicilia, a Piana degli Albanesi.xd6/sat/col
PALERMO (ITALPRESS) - "La storia recente - nella fase di transizione che hacaratterizzato i Balcani - ha visto popoli dei Paesi vicini, in particolare quello albanese, cercare nell'Italia, la speranza di costruire futuro e prospettiva di vita in un'Europa unita e senza più divisioni. Tra i nostri due Paesi, oggi, si sviluppa un fortissimo interscambio, economico e culturale, avvicinando ancora di più i due popoli. Capisaldi di tale amicizia sono i valori di libertà, indipendenza e democraziatestimoniati dalla comune appartenenza all'Alleanza Atlantica e, in prospettiva, all'Unione Europea, cui l'Albania di oggi guarda con la legittima aspirazione di divenirne presto parte integrante. L'Italia è - e continuerà a essere - una convinta sostenitrice di questo approdo, da realizzare velocemente per l'intera regione deiBalcani occidentali". Lo ha detto il presidente della Repubblica in occasione dell'incontro sulla storia e la cultura arbereshe in Sicilia, a Piana degli Albanesi.xd6/sat/col
PALERMO (ITALPRESS) - "La storia recente - nella fase di transizione che hacaratterizzato i Balcani - ha visto popoli dei Paesi vicini, in particolare quello albanese, cercare nell'Italia, la speranza di costruire futuro e prospettiva di vita in un'Europa unita e senza più divisioni. Tra i nostri due Paesi, oggi, si sviluppa un fortissimo interscambio, economico e culturale, avvicinando ancora di più i due popoli. Capisaldi di tale amicizia sono i valori di libertà, indipendenza e democraziatestimoniati dalla comune appartenenza all'Alleanza Atlantica e, in prospettiva, all'Unione Europea, cui l'Albania di oggi guarda con la legittima aspirazione di divenirne presto parte integrante. L'Italia è - e continuerà a essere - una convinta sostenitrice di questo approdo, da realizzare velocemente per l'intera regione deiBalcani occidentali". Lo ha detto il presidente della Repubblica in occasione dell'incontro sulla storia e la cultura arbereshe in Sicilia, a Piana degli Albanesi.xd6/sat/col
Il nuovo programma sportivo Radio Giraffe condotto da Silvia La Piana e Domenico Cremonte, inerente la squadra femminile di Basket del BCC Derthona
E' quanto emerso dal tavolo tecnico che si è riunito questa mattina in Municipio, al quale erano presenti Comune, Ulss 8 Berica e Viacqua. Si tratta di un virus che viaggia di persona in persona per via diretta e aerosol. Negativi i risultati del secondo giro di analisi sull'acqua dei serbatoi
Transmisión del TangoBA Festival y Mundial. Concierto "Orquesta Típica Candombe de Sebastián Piana", con la dirección de su nieto, Nacho Piana. Centro Cultural 25 de Mayo. Grabado el 21/8/2024
I primi casi a inizio settimana. Viacqua, che che gestisce il servizio idrico integrato ha provveduto ad effettuare alcuni campionamenti e a lavare e disinfestare le captazioni dei due serbatoi che servono la frazione. In attesa di capirne di più, l'Ulss ha diramato una serie di indicazione sanitarie ai cittadini.
Ron Piana, is a science writer who worked in the oncology industry. and co-authored the book The Great Prostate Hoax: How Big Medicine Hijacked the PSA Test and Caused a Public Health Disaster. On the podcast he talks oncology, the power structure of big pharma/FDA, obesity crisis, ozempic, and much more. PLEASE SUBSCRIBE LIKE AND SHARE THIS PODCAST!!! Video Version of Show Rumble- https://rumble.com/v5cvw3t-coffee-and-a-mike-ron-piana-triumvirate-of-pharma-oncology-and-the-fda.html Follow Ron Twitter- https://x.com/FreeRadicalRon8 Order Ron's book- https://www.amazon.com/stores/author/B005P0S5ES Follow Me Twitter/X- https://twitter.com/CoffeeandaMike Instagram- https://www.instagram.com/coffeeandamike/ Facebook- https://www.facebook.com/CoffeeandaMike/ Truth Social- https://truthsocial.com/@coffeeandamike Gettr- https://gettr.com/user/coffeeandamike Rumble- https://rumble.com/search/all?q=coffee%20and%20a%20mike Apple Podcasts- https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/coffee-and-a-mike/id1436799008 Gab- https://gab.com/CoffeeandaMike Website- www.coffeeandamike.com Email- info@coffeeandamike.com Support My Work Venmo- https://venmo.com/code?user_id=3570365208987017385&created=1658667789.4661531&printed=1 Locals- https://coffeeandamike.locals.com/ Cash App- https://cash.app/$coffeeandamike Mail Check or Money Order- Coffee and a Mike LLC P.O. Box 25383 Scottsdale, AZ 85255-9998 Sponsors Independence Ark Natural Farming- https://www.independenceark.com/
RIMINI (ITALPRESS) – “Il centrodestra a livello di Regione Liguria ha molte personalità di spicco, ha quei profili professionali, giuridici e politici che possono intercettare l'elettorato, ma soprattutto ha quei profili che possono consentire, una volta vinte le elezioni, di poter ben amministrare come è stato fatto in questi anni”. Così Alessandro Piana, presidente facente funzioni della Regione Liguria, nel corso di un punto stampa al Meeting di Rimini.xb1/sat
RIMINI (ITALPRESS) – “Il centrodestra a livello di Regione Liguria ha molte personalità di spicco, ha quei profili professionali, giuridici e politici che possono intercettare l'elettorato, ma soprattutto ha quei profili che possono consentire, una volta vinte le elezioni, di poter ben amministrare come è stato fatto in questi anni”. Così Alessandro Piana, presidente facente funzioni della Regione Liguria, nel corso di un punto stampa al Meeting di Rimini.xb1/sat
BikingMan Corsica
Músico, compositor, director de orquesta y pianista argentino nació el 26 de noviembre de 1903 en el barrio porteño de Almagro y falleció el 17 de julio de 1994. Fue autor, entre otros, de los famosos tangos "Milonga del 900", "Milonga sentimental", "Milonga triste", "Viejo ciego", "El pescante", (con letras de Homero Manzi), "Tinta Roja" (con letra de Cátulo Castillo), "Sobre el pucho" (con música de José González Castillo). Compuso también las bandas musicales de varias películas como Sombras Porteñas (1936), Carnaval de Antaño, He nacido en Buenos Aires, Nobleza gaucha, Las de barranco, El último payador y Derecho viejo. Su padre era peluquero y músico aficionado; tocaba varios instrumentos como el mandolín, la guitarra y el piano y fue quien lo alentó musicalmente desde pequeño, regalándole diversos instrumentos. Sebastián estudió también en el Instituto Musical Odeón, con el maestro Antonio D´Agostino, y junto a dos importantes músicos argentinos: el virtuoso Ernesto Drangosch (1882-1925) y el compositor Juan Francisco Giaccobbe (1907-1990). Debutó en un trío infantil cuando solo tenía 12 años y, de manera profesional, cuando tenía 17 años en un cine de barrio tocando valses y fragmentos de óperas. En 1922 se presentó por primera vez en radio y, en 1926, conoció a Homero Manzi con quién formó un equipo famoso por escribir numerosos temas en los años siguientes logrando encontrarle un rumbo diferente a la milonga. Piana fue también autor de temas que figuran entre los mejores tangos como "Silbando" (Letra: José González Castillo.1923), "De barro", "No aflojes" (Letra: Mario Battistella. Música en conjunto con Pedro Maffia. 1934), "El parque de artillería", "Son cosas del ayer", entre otros. Escribió alrededor de quinientos temas y fue presidente de la Academia Porteña del Lunfardo. Tenía 90 años cuando murió el 17 de julio de 1994, en la ciudad de Buenos Aires. Recordamos la extensa trayectoria de este distinguido artista y su obra de compositor de formidables clásicos, a través de registros sonoros conservado en el Archivo Histórico de Radio Nacional. FICHA TÉCNICA Edición: Fabián Panizzi Música y Testimonios Chacarera (Sebastián Piana) por Andrea Dongarra [del Álbum “Panorama de la música argentina. Compositores Nacidos Entre 1897 – 1903”] Molina, Horacio (Cantante) Homenaje a Sebastián Piana (Raíces Latinoamericanas) 1983 Piana, Sebastián (Compositor Pianista) Berrutti, Rafael (Conductor) Entrevista (Homenaje al 400 - LRA1) Gato (Sebastián Piana) por Andrea Dongarra [del Álbum “Panorama de la música argentina. Compositores Nacidos Entre 1897 – 1903”] 1983 Piana, Sebastián (Compositor Pianista) Berrutti, Rafael (Conductor) Entrevista (Homenaje al 400 - LRA1) Minueto en sol Op.14 (Ignacy Jan Paderewski) por Sebastián Piana (1985 en su Casa) 1983 Piana, Sebastián (Compositor Pianista) Berrutti, Rafael (Conductor) Entrevista (Homenaje al 400 - LRA1) Té para dos (Vincent Youmans - Irving Caesar) por Sebastián Piana (1985 en su Casa) 1985 Piana, Sebastián (Compositor) Arce, Virginia (Periodista) Entrevista El Motivo (Juan Carlos Cobián - Pascual Contursi) por Ricardo Domínguez y Walter Ríos [1995 del Álbum “Chamuyos de Fueye y Guitarra”] 1985 Piana, Sebastián (Compositor) Arce, Virginia (Periodista) Entrevista Sobre el pucho (S Piana - González Castillo) por Sebastián Piana [1969 del Álbum “Sebastián Piana por Sebastián Piana”] 1972 Piana, Sebastián (Compositor) Pinky (Conductora) Entrevista (CX 10 Radio Continente) Sobre el pucho (S Piana - José González Castillo) Hernán Cucuza Castiello [del Álbum “Sigue siendo lo que hay”] 1972 Piana, Sebastián (Compositor) Pinky (Conductora) Entrevista (CX 10 Radio Continente) Viejo ciego (S Piana - Homero Manzi) por Sebastián Piana [1969 del Álbum “Sebastián Piana por Sebastián Piana”] 1972 Piana, Sebastián (Compositor) Pinky (Conductora) Entrevista (CX 10 Radio Continente) Noches Provincianas (Sebastián Piana - Homero Manzi) por ...
Dans cet épisode, nous vous emmenons en Corse.Cette île méditerranéenne française est un véritable joyau naturel surnommé "Île de Beauté".Elle se distingue par ses paysages époustouflants, allant des plages de sable fin aux montagnes escarpées.Où aller en Corse ?Saint-FlorentCommencez votre [visite de la Corse: https://www.selectour.com/corse/sejour], par la première étape, direction la Haute-Corse à Saint-Florent.Saint-Florent est situé entre le Cap-Corse et le Désert des Agriates. donc c'est un point idéal pour découvrir cette région. Un petit port de plaisance très agréable où la baignade est au programme.Vous pourrez emprunter le Sentier des Douaniers, visiter la Citadelle Génoise, admirer la Cathédrale de Nebbio et sa petite place, grimper en haut de la Tour de la Mortella, faire le marché de Saint-Florent, vous prélasser sur la magnifique plage de Saleccia.CorteOn part à la découverte de villages typiques. Corte est située dans les montagnes de Haute-Corse à environ 500 mètres d'altitude et elle occupe une place vraiment symbolique dans la culture corse. Elle offre une vue panoramique d'exception sur les vallées de la Restonica ou du Tavignano depuis le Belvédère. La partie haute de la ville est historique avec la citadelle. Et dans la partie basse, on est plutôt sur la partie commerçante de la ville.Sinon concernant Corte, les amateurs de randonnée seront au paradis. Cette région est vraiment faite pour les amateurs de randonnée, avec la Vallée de la Restonica, la Bergerie Grottelle pour effectuer une marche vers les lacs de Melo et Capitello, la Vallée du Tavignano, la cascade des Anglais et l'Arche de Corte.PianaC'est à peu près à une heure et demie au-dessus d'Ajaccio. Ce village est classé parmi les plus beaux de France.Il y a beaucoup de randonnées pédestres balisées. Piana est vraiment connu pour ses calanques et ses roches rouges. Vous pourrez partir à la découverte de la réserve de Scandola. Encore une fois, la roche est forgée par les éruptions d'un ancien volcan. La mer est turquoise, c'est tout simplement magnifique.Vous pouvez même aller jusqu'au village de Girolata pour utiliser le Sentier du Facteur. Il y a aussi le Capo Rosso qui grimpe fort pour aller jusqu'à la Tour Génoise, la réserve naturelle de Scandola jusqu'à Cargèse, les plages Ficajola et Arone.SartèneOn peut voir jusqu'aux aiguilles de Bavella, explorerer le quartier médiéval, l'église Sainte-Marie, la mairie qui fut un ancien palais génois, profitez de la plage de Roccapina et de la baie de Campo Moro.Promenez-vous également sur les sentiers de randonnée, le site est classé Natura 2000. Les paysages sont vraiment superbes.BonifacioSitué à l'extrême sud de la Corse, les Bouches des Bonifacio séparent la Corse de la Sardaigne.Il y a la partie basse avec le port, qui est un lieu très agréable pour flâner.Et la partie basse avec la découverte de la citadelle. Ne serait-ce que pour monter de Basse-Ville à la Haute-Ville, le chemin est juste fantastique avec une falaise de calcaire blanche.Si vous êtes courageux, vous pouvez visiter l'escalier du roi d'Aragon. C'est un escalier creusé dans les falaises qui compte 187 marches. Ensuite, les excursions en bateau où vous pourrez aller jusqu'aux îles Lavezzi.Pourquoi voyager en Corse ?La Corse porte bien son nom. Elle s'appelle « l'Île de Beauté », comme vous pouvez le savoir. La Corse est si proche de nous, à environ 1h30 de vol depuis Paris. C'est une destination magnifique, vraiment riche.Si vous souhaitez en savoir plus sur la destination et, pourquoi pas, préparer votre prochain [séjour en Corse: https://www.selectour.com/corse/sejour], n'hésitez pas à faire appel à nos [experts: https://www.selectour.com/agent/recherche?postalCode=&city=&favoriteDestination=FR&page=1] !À bientôt dans le cockpit !
La Asociación de Jóvenes Empresarios de Ferrol, Eume y Ortegal (AJE Ferrolterra) organiza su último evento de Networking antes del parón veraniego. Este encuentro tendrá lugar el próximo martes 16 de julio a las 13:00 en el restaurante Mamá Piana, ubicado en Valdoviño. El evento contará con una charla previa de Agroflor, una cooperativa local que explicará a los asistentes su acción en Ferrolterra. Esta presentación ofrecerá una visión sobre el trabajo que realizan en la región. La actividad forma parte del convenio entre AJE Ferrolterra y el Concello de Narón, y representa una forma de cerrar la primera parte del año. Se espera que el evento sirva para despedirse hasta septiembre y retomar las actividades con nuevas energías. Este networking busca ser un espacio para que los asistentes intercambien ideas y establezcan nuevas conexiones y acogerá tanto a socios como no-socios, realizando una dinámica tipo speech para romper el hielo. Su organización marca el final de una etapa, y prepara el regreso en septiembre con nuevas iniciativas y proyectos. Desde AJE señalan “Invitamos a todos los jóvenes empresarios de la región a asistir y aprovechar esta última oportunidad de networking antes del parón estival. Nos vemos el próximo martes en Mamá Piana”. La actividad tiene un coste de 10€ para socios y 18€ para no-socios, precio que incluye la comida en Valdoviño. Para inscribirte contacta con ellos vía mail en info@ajeferrolterra.org o llamando al 634 16 45 08.
Nálgast má þáttinn í heild sinni án auglýsinga inn á; https://solvitryggva.is/ Sara Piana hefur í gegnum árin verið umtöluð á Íslandi, einkum og sér í lagi eftir að hún giftist vaxtarræktarkappanum Rich Piana og af þeim birtust reglulega fréttir. Sara hefur hingað til ekki farið í viðtöl í íslenskum fjölmiðlum, en fannst tími til kominn að segja sögu sína, einkum og sér í lagi þar sem hún er nú alfarið flutt til landsins og ætlar að hefja hér næsta kafla í sínu lífi. Í þættinum segir Sara frá því hvers vegna hún þurfti sem ung kona að flýja land eftir stöðuga ógn. Hvernig hún fór langt inn í Fitness-heiminn eftir að hún flutti til Bandaríkjanna og síðan frá skrautlegu líferni sínu með Rich Piana, sem oft var öðruvísi en það virkaði út á við. Sara lærir nú hjúkrunarfræði og hlakkar til næsta kafla í sínu lífi, eftir að hafa fengið margfaldan æviskammt af dramatík, eins og hún segir sjálf. Þátturinn er í boði; Ozon - https://www.ozonehf.is/ Narfeyrarstofa - https://narfeyrarstofa.is/ Nýja vínbúðin - https://nyjavinbudin.is/ Outdoor Tactical Sport - https://www.otsport.is/ Gullfoss - https://gullfoss.is/ Fiskikóngurinn - https://www.facebook.com/fiskikongurinn.is/?locale=is_IS Heitirpottar.is - https://heitirpottar.is/ Kjötkompaní - https://kjotkompani.is/
Andrea Della Piana"Artico Festival"www.articofestival.itBra, dal 26 al 29 giugno 2024Si avvicina l'ottava edizione di Artico Festival, che dal 26 al 29 giugno 2024 porterà al Parco della Zizzola di Bra milioni di scintille. I protagonisti delle prime due serate sono gli stand up comedian Giorgia Fumo e Sandro Cappai, mentre le serate di venerdì e sabato sono dedicate alla musica, con i live di Vasco Brondi, Ditonellapiaga, Lucio Corsi, Thru Collected e Napoli Segreta.È confermata anche quest'anno la presenza di un palco off, il Garden Stage, dedicato ai live unplugged sul prato che vedrà esibirsi Gaia Morelli e Elso. Per ognuno degli artisti in programma, la data ad Artico rappresenta l'unica in Piemonte quest'estate. è organizzato dall'Associazione Culturale Switch On, in collaborazione , con il contributo della Fondazione CRC nell'ambito del bando POP e di Banca CRS - Cassa di Risparmio di Savigliano e con il sostegno di Nova Coop, dell'Ente Turismo Langhe Monferrato Roero e Cambieri.it. L'artwork è a cura di Ortica Studio. La stand up.Mercoledì 26 giugno l'inaugurazione dell'ottava edizione è affidata a Giorgia Fumo, nota in tv per la sua presenza su Comedy Central, all'ultimo Festival di Sanremo e a Italia's Got Talent. Con il nuovo spettacolo Pressione bassa il pubblico verrà condotto alla scoperta della vita dei millenials, i nuovi adulti che si barcamenano con le briciole lasciate dai loro predecessori. Il giorno successivo il protagonista è Sandro Cappai, co-fondatore del progetto Stand-up Comedy Sardegna, membro della redazione di Lercio.it e co-conduttore del podcast Tazza di caffè. Ad Artico porterà il suo nuovo show, Sandro Cappai Live. In apertura delle due serate, gli stand up comedian Caterina Guarini e Alessandro Cerato, in collaborazione con Cuneo Comedy Night. I live.Venerdì 28 e sabato 29, spazio alla musica: nella prima serata, Vasco Brondi porta a Bra una tappa del tour Un segno di vita, in cui il cantautore suonerà i suoi pezzi più recenti insieme a diverse canzoni contenute nell'album Costellazioni, del quale ricorre quest'anno il decennale. Con Lucio Corsi e con il suo inconfondibile glam rock in apertura, questa data di Artico si preannuncia come una delle più poetiche di sempre. In chiusura, il dj set è a cura dei Roero Tropical. Si cambia decisamente ritmo nella serata successiva: l'iconica Ditonellapiaga, reduce dal successo del Primo Maggio a Roma, farà ballare il pubblico al ritmo delle sue hit più recenti, tratte per la maggior parte dal suo nuovo album Flash. All'inizio e alla fine della serata, Bra e Napoli saranno più vicine che mai, con i live dei Thru Collected e di Napoli Segreta. Nelle serate di venerdì e sabato torna il Garden Stage, il palco off di Artico dedicato ai live unplugged sul prato, dove si esibiranno Gaia Morelli, il cui album d'esordio La natura delle cose è uscito lo scorso aprile per Dischi Sotterranei e Panico Dischi, e Elso, finalista dell'ultima edizione del Rock Contest - a cui Artico prende parte da anni in quanto membro della giuria, e vincitore del Premio Enrico Greppi “Erriquez”, dedicato alla memoria del leader della Bandabardò. Le novità dell'ottava edizione. Tante le novità che porta con sé questa edizione, tutte volte a rendere Artico un luogo sempre più accogliente, accessibile, sostenibile.Prenota qui il tuo posto https://dice.fm/search?query=artico%20festival%20braIL POSTO DELLE PAROLEascoltare fa pensarewww.ilpostodelleparole.itDiventa un supporter di questo podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/il-posto-delle-parole--1487855/support.
Reciban un cordial saludo. Desde Cali (Colombia), les habla Sergio Luis López, compartiéndoles un nuevo episodio de "Así la escuché yo..." En 1968 se lanzó el álbum “Tangos por El Gran Combo”, en donde esta orquesta puertorriqueña en la voz de su cantante Andy Montañez, logró ubicar varias canciones en el gusto de sus seguidores como la titulada “Milonga sentimental”. La canción ya había sido éxito en 1933 en la voz del “Zorzal criollo”, el inigualable Carlos Gardel, quien la grabó con el título “Milonga sentimental”. Así la escuché yo… Esta canción es una composición de los argentinos Homero Manzi y Sebastián Piana, la cual fue estrenada en 1932 por su compatriota Mercedes Simone “La dama del Tango”, bajo el título “Milonga sentimental”. ¿Y tú, en cuál grabación la escuchaste primero? Autores: Letra: Homero Manzi & Música: Sebastián Piana (argentinos) Milonga sentimental - El Gran Combo (1968) "Tangos por El Gran Combo álbum (1968) Canta: Andy Montañez (nombre real Andrés Montañez Rodríguez, puertorriqueño) Género: Salsa Milonga sentimental - Carlos Gardel (1933) single “Milonga sentimental/La cumparsita” (1933) Guitarras de Barbieri, Pettorossi, Riverol y Vivas (argentinos) Carlos Gardel (argentino, cuyo lugar de nacimiento se lo disputan Francia y Uruguay. Murió en Medellín, Colombia en 1935) Género: Milonga Milonga sentimental - Mercedes Simone (1932) single “Milonga sentimental/ El gateao de Don Secundino” (1932) Mercedes Simone (“La dama del Tango”, nombre real Mercedes Celia Simone, argentina) Género: Milonga ___________________ “Así la escuché yo…” Temporada: 8 Episodio: 28 Sergio Productions Cali – Colombia Sergio Luis López Mora
In 1998, Alex and Thomas Huber climbed the first ascent of Freerider on El Capitan in just over 15 hours. Their climb ushered in a new era of big wall free climbing, and there's no question it was a hugely important moment in climbing history. But the way we credit it, most often simply to Alex Huber, ignores the rich history of the route. The Huber's pioneered about 1/30th of the climbing. The vast majority of the route was established over many years by a who's who of Yosemite and free climbing history. Robbins, Frost, Pratt, Long, Bachar, Hudon, Jones, Glowacz, Skinner, Piana, Schneider, and MORE. Put simply, Freerider is a linkup. A brilliant linkup, but a linkup nonetheless. And we just can't talk about it without going back. Way back. Back into time. Check out more here! Join the Secret Stoners Club for FREE. ---------------------------------- Thank you to our partner, Tension Climbing. Tension creates tools to help you elevate your climbing experience. Check out the goods here and use code STONE for 10% off anything but the full Tension Board set-ups, hardware, and gift cards. When you support Tension, you're supporting the team at Plug Tone creating this show. Written in Stone is co-created with Power Company Climbing. Use code STONE at checkout for 20% off. Details at www.powercompanyclimbing.com/stone
We've been planning to sit down with Olivia ever since she did her world record downwind challenge, but we've never been able to make it work - she's so busy! This week was the week, even having to bail the first time because Liam was caught by the dreaded Covid...... A great chat was had though - as we'd suspected! Olivia runs us through the current goings on in her life including a very fun sounding trip to Tenerife to shoot with the AXIS crew. We catch up on the Downwind challenge she did last year and also hear some rather amusing stories about her time competing on the GWA events.... Another friend of the podcast is made - we look forward to hopefully bumping into Olivia somewhere in the world! If you like what we do, check out buymeacoffee.com/gfpodcast - we're aiming to get ourselves away on some specific trips this year to make sure we have some great people to chat to, and we'd appreciate all the support we can get to bring our ideas to life!
V třetí sérii podcastu Czech Time si povídáme o nejznámějších českých značkách a jejich příbězích. Jestli hrajete na klavír, je dost dobře možné, že už jste slyšeli o značce Petrof - jednom z největších výrobců klavírů a pianin nejen v Evropě. Ať už ano, nebo ne, pojďte se zaposlouchat do historie tohoto českého pokladu. Chcete se s podcastem učit česky? Stáhněte si ZDARMA transkript ke všem epizodám na TÉTO stránce. Nebo se rovnou přihlaste do Konverzačního klubu Czech Time, kde najdete transkripty všech epizod, cvičení na gramatiku, slovíčka, výslovnost, psaní i mluvení. Do Konverzačního klubu Czech Time se můžete přihlásit TADY. Další inspiraci k učení češtiny najdete na BLOGU Czech Time TADY. Sledujte Czech Time taky na Facebooku, Instagramu, TikToku nebo You Tube.
Join us for a captivating episode of The Backstory on the Shroud of Turin podcast as we sit down with Alessandro Piana, a distinguished Shroud historian based in Monza, Italy. Alessandro's expertise in the history of the Shroud has led him to become an accomplished author, penning books and articles that unravel the tale of this ancient relic.Hailing from the heart of Italy, Alessandro is not only an author but also a sought-after lecturer, speaker at conferences and seminars, and a prominent figure in radio and TV broadcasting. His dedication to shedding light on the history of the Shroud has sparked intrigue and discussions worldwide. Read more at: https://unimi.academia.edu/AlessandroPianaDon't miss this opportunity to gain a deeper understanding of the Shroud's history and Alessandro Piana's invaluable contributions to the field. Subscribe, like, and share to stay connected with the latest in Shroud exploration and research.Subscribe to our podcast for more insightful interviews and engaging discussions on faith, history, and the intriguing mysteries of the Shroud of Turin.Want to learn more about author Guy R. Powell? Check out the socials below:Website: www.guypowell.comInstagram: @guy.r.powellFacebook: @AHistoryOfTheShroudOfTurinBook Link: https://www.amazon.com/Only-Witness-H...Connect today to unlock the mysteries of the Shroud of Turin.
¡Feliz inicio de semana, mis queridos soñadores! ✨ No sé ustedes pero creo que actualmente esta MUY de moda cuidarnos la piel
Hudobnej škole sa Zuzana Ceralová Petrofová ako dieťa vyhýbala. Vyštudovala farmáciu, no namiesto lekárne vedie rodinnú firmu, ktorá je najväčším výrobcom akustických klavírov a pianín v Európe. Do umeleckých škôl sa dnes vracia netradičným spôsobom. Vypočujte si podcast Impact Talks, v ktorom prinášame inšpiratívne príbehy filantropov a filantropiek a búrame tabu spojené so slovom filantropia. Meno Petrof pozná celý hudobný svet. Na klavíroch tejto celosvetovo uznávanej značky hrá nielen Paul McCartney či Billie Eilish, ale aj nadané deti z bežných rodín. Vďaka nápadu Zuzany Ceralovej Petrofovej dostalo zatiaľ 75 umeleckých škôl zadarmo nové hudobné nástroje v hodnote viac ako 11 miliónov českých korún. Pomáhanie pritom považuje Zuzana Ceralová Petrofová za prirodzenú vec. „Moja rodina vždy pomáhala ľuďom, pradedo postavil v Hradci Králové celú štvrť. Keď to máte v rodine a vidíte príklady, že to ide a že je to jednoducho normálne, tak to prenášate ďalej,“ vysvetľuje svoj pohľad na filantropiu. V podcaste sa dozviete: · ako rodina Petrof pomáhala v minulosti a čo robí dnes, · čo ich spája so zakladateľom obuvníckeho impéria Tomášom Baťom, · prečo si svoju znárodnenú fabriku po páde komunistického režimu museli kúpiť, · čo má covid, Čína a Taiwan spoločné s projektom Piana do škôl, · prečo sa pri ňom spojili s rodinnou nadáciou Komárkovcov, · ako Petrof Art Family podporuje umelcov a umelkyne. Kto je Zuzana Ceralová Petrofová? Predstaviteľka piatej generácie rodiny Petrof pracuje v spoločnosti Petrof takmer štvrťstoročie, už dvanásty rok ako prezidentka. Za svoje manažérske schopnosti získala mnoho ocenení, v ankete TOP Ženy Česka 2020 ju uviedli do Siene slávy. Pravidelne sa objavuje v rebríčku najvplyvnejších žien časopisu Forbes. Do Bratislavy prišla nedávno na pozvanie Nadácie Pontis ako hostka diskusného večera Impact Talks na tému Ženy a filantropia. Vyjadrila nádej, že darovanie klavírov pre umelecké školy by sa po vzore našich českých susedov mohlo rozbehnúť aj na Slovensku. Impact Talks V podcaste Impact Talks vám predstavujeme osobnosti z biznisu, kultúry a športu, ktoré búrajú zaužívané predstavy o filantropii. Srdciarov, ktorí pomáhajú intuitívne, aj tých, ktorí sa snažia o čo najväčší spoločenský dopad. Lebo filantropia je pestrá a zďaleka nie je iba o rozdávaní peňazí. Impact Talks vám prináša Nadácia Pontis, ktorá sa dlhodobo venuje rozvíjaniu filantropie, sociálnych inovácií a zodpovedného podnikania. Podcast vzniká v spolupráci s portálom Aktuality.sk a moderuje ho Milan Junior Zimnýkoval.
Podnikatelé a byznys vyzvaly vládu k restartu Česka. Země podle nich stojí. Brzdí ji chybějící velké investice, politická vize, ale i byrokracie a nedostatek pracovních sil. Kdo a jak dokáže zemi nastartovat?Hostem Ptám se já byla prezidentka a majitelka společnosti Petrof Zuzana Ceralová Petrofová, která je členkou Národní ekonomické rady vlády (NERV).Svoje vize, kam by se mělo Česko v dalších 30 letech ubírat, představili zástupci největších oborových svazů a firem před týdnem. A jako už dříve apelovali na vládu, aby odstranila překážky, které brání zemi uskutečňovat strategické investice. Na konferenci Česko na křižovatce promluvil i premiér Petrv Fiala (ODS), který slíbil, že na strategické projekty budou v příštích letech vynaloženy biliony korun.Jak přesně by se ale mělo Česko zase vrátit k růstu? Recept má vládě pomoci najít nová pracovní skupina, která vznikla v rámci NERVu. Její členkou je i Zuzana Ceralová Petrofová. Ta sama přiznává, že její firma už na případná opatření vlády čekat nemůže.„Lehko se sbalí firma, která nemá takovou historickou zátěž a tradici jako my. Příští rok budeme slavit 160 let a máme určité postupy, které nechceme úplně měnit a vlastně díky tomu jsou naše výrobky tak oblíbené ve světě. Ale prostě jsme došli do bodu zlomu. Takže se koukáme po světě, kde by bylo nejlepší umístit například ty nejnižší modelové řady,“ vysvětlila majitelka legendární české značky klavírů.S jakými problémy se v posledních letech potýkají tuzemské firmy? Kdy by mohlo dojít k očekávaným krokům k nastartování naší ekonomiky? A věří ještě podnikatelé, že to někam povede?---Ptám se já. Rozhovory s lidmi, kteří mají vliv, odpovědnost, informace.Sledujte na Seznam Zprávách, poslouchejte na Spotify, v Apple Podcasts a dalších podcastových aplikacích nebo na Podcasty.cz.Archiv všech dílů najdete tady, ostatní podcasty Seznam Zpráv tady. Své postřehy, připomínky nebo tipy nám pište prostřednictvím sociálních sítí pod hashtagem #ptamseja nebo na e-mail audio@sz.cz.
Unbroken Veterans with Sam La Piana In this episode we hear from Sam about finding his path, his time in service & deployment to Afghanistan, and ways to effectively transition from military to civilian roles. About Sam: Sam La Piana is one of the cohosts of the Unbroken Veterans Podcast. He has served nine years in the Army Reserve with one tour to Afghanistan. He chose to join the military because he was tired of thanking people for their service when he knew the best way to thank them was to serve as well. He always finds himself trying to find another way to help other people and believes this is an even better way to thank his fellow Veterans. On the civilian side, Sam is in industrial sales and enjoys spending time with his Wife and kids, being outdoors and shooting. About Lions Guide:Your leadership is what enables you to accomplish your goals in your career, in your business, and in your life! If you could use more certainty in your life, and you don't have the growth or traction towards your goals that you want then… yes we're talking about your leadership… If you are a business owner or executive, who needs your team to execute on your goals and objectives… yes, we're talking about your leadership… If you are run an organization, and you need your teams within to successful align and accomplish the mission… yes, we're talking about your leadership… Get empowered to be a world-class leader! If you could use some help in leveling up in any of these areas including leading yourself, or leading others better, then I invite you to visit us at LionsGuide.com to book a call to talk about which of our programs is best for you…
A pleasure to chat with Olivia Piana, a true water women and foiling pioneer. She foiled for over 14 hours covering over 280km. Smashing my record in the name of conservation of the Portuguese coastline. We also went into how she is preparing for the races in Hawaii for downwind month. If you enjoy this podcast check out other episodes of The Casey Catch Up or check out my website for more content at www.caseyaus.com
En esta emisión de Tierra Adentro, Guillermo Stronati recordó la fundación e historia de la localidad bonaerense de Tres Arroyos, creada por el Coronel Benito Machado al instalar su campamento entre la confluencia de tres cursos de agua que le darían su nombre. Una reseña de aquellos primeros años, su nombramiento como cabecera de partido, los enfrentamientos con el cacique Calfucura y el empuje económico adquirido a fines del siglo XIX con la llegada de inmigrantes daneses y holandeses, siendo esta ciudad la mayor colonia danesa de la argentina. En la columna Patio de Tango, un recorrido a la carrea del compositor, director de orquesta y pianista, Sebastián Piana, nacido en noviembre de 1903, quien alentado por su padre músico aficionado, fue iniciado desde temprana edad en múltiples instrumentos. Autor de numerosos clásicos del tango de las primeras épocas, Piana compuso alrededor de quinientas obras, fue presidente de la academia porteña del lunfardo y también se encargó de la banda sonora en numerosos clásicos del cine. Falleció en el año 1994 y hasta sus noventa años continuó componiendo y dando clases de música.
Today we REWIND to this classic episode with living-legend and climbing pioneer Paul Piana himself, 35 years after he and Todd Skinner completed their historic first free ascent of El Cap's Salathé Wall on June 15, 1988, helping to shape the dreams of many generations of climbers to come. Lynn Hill doing the Nose a few years later, Tommy Caldwell on the Dawn Wall, and the new generation of climbers like Connor Herson, Jordan Cannon, Brittany Goris and Amity Warme. And most important, what this latest generation has pulled from Paul and his contemporaries, is that it's important to do it all – bouldering, sport, big walls, both adventure and difficulty, and a reverence for history without letting the mythology hold you back. We've still got a handful of signed copies of Paul's 1997 book Big Walls: Breakthroughs on the Free-Climbing Frontier available HERE. With every purchase, you're donating to The Todd Skinner Legacy Fund, which aims to support the continuing mission of the late Todd Skinner by funding endeavors and programs in his spirit. Click HERE to hear Kris's poem The Cowboy King, mentioned in the episode, which features over 100 classic route names from the Lander area. This episode originally aired on October 7, 2020. The Power Company Podcast is brought to you by Power Company Climbing and is a proud member of the Plug Tone Audio Collective. You can help us keep episodes ad-free by becoming a Patron for as little as $3 a month! Find full episode transcripts and more at our website.
Aloha friends, it's Robert Stehlik. Welcome to another episode of the Blue Planet Show, which I record right here in my home office and talking to wing foil athletes, designers, thought leaders, anyone who has something interesting to say. And today's interview is with Olivia Piana. She's an amazing world class athlete, not just in wing foiling and surf foiling and downward foiling, but also in standup paddle surfing, standup paddle racing, wind foiling, kiting and more. She has several world titles in her name. She talks a little bit about the challenges of competing as a woman in these male dominated sports and her about her goals. And then this summer, the moca Oahu race is coming up. We talk about that she's entered to race in that one of the few women doing the downward foiling. I'm entered in that race as well, so I'm looking forward to doing more interviews. Talking to athletes that are entered in this race before and after. So hope you can join me for some of those interviews. As always, you can watch it right here on YouTube or listen to it on your favorite podcast app. Just search for the Blue Planet Show. So without further ado, here is Olivia Piana. Okay, Olivia, welcome to the Blue Planet Show. It's great to have you here. Thank you. Hello, Robert? Yeah, so it's you're in Portugal. I guess it's 7:00 PM for you, for me. It's eight o'clock in the morning and Hawaii. Yeah, thanks for joining me and from the other side of the world. It's pretty cool that we can talk like this on Zoom, yeah. I've never talked to you before, so it's good to meet you virtually. But can you talk a little bit about like, how. Start from the very beginning. Where were you born? How did you get into water sports and what, how did you get into what you do today? I was born in Marsai in south, south France. Then I grew up in ban a very small city in the beginning of the Alps. So I was an hour and a half away from the coast, from the Mediterranean Sea. And I, so I grew up on a very natural place with the mountains and I play many different sport. When I was kid, I had the luck to have my parents that really gave me the opportunity to discover many things. And my mom is a windsurf fan. And when I was kid she brought me on the windsurf and yeah, I just totally fallen in love to a windsurf thing when I was 12 in in the Mediterranean Sea. And I wanted to dedicate my life to it. It was my dream to be wind surf for pro and to compete around the world and to win titles. And I had my my like some champions that I really loved. And yeah, that's that's how I discovered the patient for the ocean, the wind and the wave and wind surfing is my first sport. Okay. And then, so like you started at 12 years old and then you got into windsurf racing right away or like competing with windsurfing or, yeah, I started with windsurfing P dub race, slalom race. And so I went with my mom. My mom helped me on the competition and she really loved it too. And I start to travel a bit more. I never compete a lot on the wave, even if I really loved the wind surfing on the wave. But I guess, racing is much more easy to compete than wave riding. And when I was from the Mediterranean Sea in France, it's not really wavy. So yeah I had more opportunity to race and to do slalom. And and yeah, it was the only thing I will be more lucky to be a man a man that, a woman in windsurfing because it was not that easy to have a sponsor and help to compete and to, but I did it anyway and I really loved it. So you like yeah. You're basically, you're saying that the sponsors were not as helpful when you, for women, like they didn't support women as much as men? Is that what you're saying? Yeah, I think it's it's a system that the industry is mainly men and then they think the women don't buy the product and then they design the product for the men. And then there is no woman into the sport. But it's more about the history of the sport and the mentality and the vibe on the beach and everything. It's not so welcoming for women and it's like it is, but some women try to make changes, but it's not so easy. Luckily with standard paddling and today with wing foiling, it's really different and there is more opportunity for women to, to compete. But it's changing slowly, but it's not that easy to to improve it. Yeah. Yeah, that's, so I was kid and I was on the beach like, Hey guys, can I really windsurf with you? But yeah, it was basically my most of the people get help for the, from the family or they work to pay everything because windsurfing is super Super expensive. But yeah, it's, it was not so easy, but I did my best and I'm super happy anyway. Okay. And then what came next? Cuz I know you got into all kinds of sports. Standup paddling and then foiling, wing foiling and I, what else? Yeah, and then I discover standard paddling in 2011. It was the day that it was not windy. And then I went with friends with this long and big boards on the waves. And yeah, it was the first time actually that I surf a wave without a sail. And and then thanks to my friend Fred Bonne that. So I live in tar that I met there in Spain. I this guy really pushed me to go into the racing and to compete and we were like a team to go to the event. And it, the funniest thing is I already wanted to compete in wave stopping and the first World Cup was in latter in 2012. And there was also the racing, the surfing and the racing were together. And the title there, there was the overall for was, I think it was the eight, no it was the standard war two before. And there was this overall title for surfing and race and racing. And then I did also the racing, but I was not so motivated to do it. And I won the race. I was like, oh, wow. Actually, it's pretty cool. And I discover how fun is it to race? And it's not only boring, to paddle, paddle, paddle for 15 kilometer. And it was pretty technical. The day after the distance race, we went on the wave to do the technical race. And it was a mix of racing and surfing. And I really love it. And I won again, like it was a bigger crash on the way with all the girls, like surfing and at the mark, like with the racing board. But yeah, it was so fun. And yeah, I got better opportunity in surfing than windsurfing. From the same brands. That's what it was. Very strange. Like the same brands on the windsurfing and stand up industry gave more money to women in surfing. So I was like, okay. And I had the opportunity to compete in standardizing more easy. Okay. So what, who was your sponsor at that time? Who was sponsor? Yeah, sorry to say it, but it was fanatic. Fanatic, okay. But maybe it's the situation, maybe it was more, it give more visibility if, it was just at this time more easy to have a good contract in s than wind surfing. So basically they were probably making more money with standup paddle board, so they wanted to promote that more than windsurfing. Is that basically fanatic, they sell a lot of windsurf boards, but maybe for a woman it was easily, it was more easy to give the good image to sail boards, to sell subs sub boards than wind surfboard. Okay. Yeah. So it was like it was it was like this. So yeah, I start like this. And so that was, so the first time you competed in standup paddling, you basically, you won the racing and then you also won the surfing. So you were the o or No, I didn't won the surfing. The surfing was on the very small waves and I got lost, I think. So I was thinking okay. It was Surfing in competition is not easy because it's very rare that you have the good condition and you can express yourself. And then racing make it much more easy. You just have the start and the finish. And also about the judgment. It's judgment in racing is pretty easy. Just you paddle and you cross the finish line and you have your position. And yeah, and I, and then I got some prize money with this competition and that permit me to go to the next competition and I start like this. Nice. I'm gonna, I'm gonna screen share a little bit from your Facebook page or Instagram or Facebook where they st. Like way in, in the past, but yeah, this was like, I guess you were writing fanatic boards and, but yeah, I guess even early on you were getting like stories in magazines and everything, right? Yeah. This was in the Sri Lanka. This was in Sri Lanka, my first barrel, let's say. Oh. And yeah it has an amazing streak. We were surfing on the wave on the morning and wind surfing on the afternoon. And to have a fanatic as a sponsor on this trip was really cool to do both sports. Okay. Yeah. So after you won your first Santa Paddle race, then what happened? You went to more contests and then traveled, like what? Yeah, basically I really traveled a lot thanks to sap. Standard, bring me everywhere in the world and make me meet a lots of amazing people. And I am super grateful for that. It's so easy and versatile. You can go everywhere. You can go like the picture that you see with many people on the board. I think it's in Leon, in France. On the river. On the river run. Yeah. And yeah, was really the beginning. The very beginning. This picture. Yeah. 2014. And then there was a races on, inflatable boards on in Europe. That's funny that, yeah. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. The inflatable board there are definitely not as performance as the rigid one, but it's so easy to travel with. Yeah. Is, are the European market, is it still like most people using inflatable boards in Europe on when there go standard path? Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah. There is a lot of inflatable boards for beginner or for people that don't paddles that much. They really love to go on the inflatable board and enjoy their time. Yeah. Makes sense. And actually, they are better and better. They are not good for surfing, for example, but for just paddling on in France for example, we have a lot of beautiful place for just paddle under crystal clear water. Super nice. Yeah, I mean it's just convenient cuz you can pack 'em up small, you can travel with it, take it on the airplane, all that kinda stuff, right? So definitely has some advantages. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. So then, okay. And then you got more, more and more into standup paddle racing or surfing and both Or what was Yeah. What were you up to? Yeah, I get more and more in racing. I broke my ankle in 2015 and this was very hard because I had to, no, I broke my feet windsurfing in, in Morocco in 2015 and and then it takes six months to recover. And yeah, this was a bit hard, but then I recover, I change sponsor as well to starboard in 2016. And then, yeah, I guess it was 2000 because me, sometime with the years I get I get lost, but thousand 16 I had a little down with the injury and then little by little up and then I was very performance in 2017, 18 and 19. At the PPG in California Pacific game and the I S A I won the, from 2013 to 2017. I got seven time this world champion. Of isa vice versa in technical rates and distance race. Okay. And I was like, what happened to me? I'm always, I'm a lot of time second then I take care. Like I really take care of every little detail and everything. And in 2018 in China I got were the champion of distance race for the first time. Congrats was so amazing. After seven time. Second I was like, finally. Yeah. With the French team. Tell us a little bit about that injury you had in 2016 in Morocco. You said did you get, your foot was stuck in the foot strapp or something? Or did you get Yeah, I was too. I was too late on the wave. I was like behind the lip, and then the lip catch me, and instead of my feet to go away like this, the board just turn on the other way. And then my, the I had the feet be between the mast and the board. It was like very bad. Then I just all my body just twist. And my, my, my foot was still on the strap. And then I just couldn't swim. My gear went away with the wave and somebody helped me with the windsurf to go back to the shore and they didn't discover immediately that it was broken. That's why it was very long to recover. And then when I discovered that it was actually broken was one month, so one month and a half after, because I still had the pain on the foot. And then I just had to rest and to, and I did outer rigor kinda, yeah. Outrigger paddle at, yeah. At that time. In France, we have some clubs from from and I learned a lot during this time how to paddle well with the ian on the typical canoe. And it was actually very good for the training to, to have this injury. Interesting. So basically, and then you came back stronger a after that. What are some things that you learned from the Ians and like for paddle stroke technique that helped you with standup paddle racing? Curious. The same with the Titian is they don't explain, they just show you. And they tell you, but it's like that, look at me, it's the technician. They're the, they have the feeling on the water, they, this is the emotion, this is the, what they feel more that what they think. And yeah, just spend a lot of time on the water with them watching them. And it, it was still not perfect, but for surfing was was good enough. And I, we train on the canoe with six girls and solo. And yeah, on the, we like the different way to train was super interesting that you can do also on the stop with the break and with no break with yeah, difference. Sometimes it was super hard and too much sometimes. But very good to open our mind to to this technique. Interesting. Okay. Okay. And then, so then you came back from your injury and you started then you started winning the races not coming in second or the overall world title like, or Yeah. Talk a little bit about that. I came back, the first race I won again was the race in Paris. In the TIC show. So it was the beginning of December in the winter, and it was the only race of the year that, for the first place there was one plane ticket for the 80, for the award. Oh, nice. Of this race. And I was so happy to win it. Then I went to TA next April, 2017, and I don't remember it was 16 or 17. But anyway, it was around this time. And then when you, when I went to Tahi, when you win the race there, you win a flight ticket again from Paris to Taai to Tahi. So I won the race. And I won another ticket and I was like, wow. So I will, and then I went to Te Eiti like this six, sixth time during three years. And I went twice the year, like on April and December to race there. Okay. Maybe you find some picture from TE here or, yeah. I don't know. Maybe it was already the time of Instagram. And then you were writing for star boards and I guess Yeah. You were on the starboard team. Yeah. At that time I was racing for Star, for starboard. Okay. And yeah, I had some boards there. And what was really cool that it's in, in Titi, we had some Darwin conditions, some canoe. This is in France with the girls. Your canoe team. Yeah. Became, which position were you paddling in? I was in the fourth. Okay. I was the motor, as they call it. Yeah. The power. Okay. This is the clinic I really love to, to teach as well. Yeah. At that time, do you have the date? 2016, at that time I was I was sailing actually boats for starboard. I was wor working on the boat show. I had this job because I was starting again to be a athlete after the injury. And then I got paid by representing the brand on the boat show on the 10th, on the stand. And then when it was the time, Of the race. I just escape from the tent and I went racing and that's how I was able to pay and to travel again. Okay. Yeah. This is in Paris. This is in Paris. And in this kind of boat show the people, they ask you a coffee when you are a woman. I was like, oh, do you wanna know about the boards? Or they, the guys about the boards and the girls are supposed to be puffy. And it was so funny cause there's some people they just don't know. They just like, and I was wearing this blue jackets that is the jacket of the girl that's just bring the coffee and pouring chestain, yeah. Yeah. It was after the winning, yeah. Thousand, yeah. Thousand 15. I won in 2015 and then I went back in 2016. So I went to TE for the first time in 2016. Yeah. Okay. Okay, cool. And all right, so then, so two trips to Tahiti, that where you won tickets, that's a long trip home from France to Tahiti. Yeah. That's 24 hour of flight. Okay. There is LA and then La Tahiti. Okay. And when was the first time you came to Hawaii? I went to Hawaii for the first time in 2013. Okay. After the Battle of the Paddle. It was the first time I went to the US and after the Bachelor of the Paddle, there was the Standard Paddle War in Oahu in Turtle Bay. Then I traveled first to Maui. Then no, actually I'm wrong. The first time I went to. To Maui was for the triathlon the ex ter world championship in 2000. Must be thousand 12 maybe. I'm lost with the years. Yeah. And I compete in triathlon Oh, in Maui. So you also Yeah, I was, because I was living on the mountain and then I couldn't go on the water and I did yeah, trilon for three years and I was selected for the ter world championship and I compete, and actually a friend of mine was was world champion of 2008 in 2008 in Maui. So this guy helped me a lot to go into the, sorry, my dog. To go into the Trilon scene and I, and actually went to Maui to compete in Trilon, but mostly to Windsurf in OK Kipa. And it was the excuse to go there. Okay. That's cool. So how far did you go in the triathlon scene in the three years you were doing it? Did you get win anything or? I got second and junior TER world championship, but it was not so much competitive. I was not so competitive in I'm most competitive in in standup or water sports. But it probably helped you with the endurance, and with the endurance for racing, right? Yeah. Very lot. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Yeah. And then standard paddler racing was just a mix of windsurfing and trilon. The endurance and the glide. Yeah. And the paddle technique from outrigger paddling, yeah. You learned? Yeah, absolutely. Okay. Okay. So then you're doing, you're competing in standup paddle racing, and then what happened next? You, yeah, what's happened next? I get, I got two other world title in China in 2019 at the World Championship World title. I got the, I got second on the distance race. I got first on the technical and then the big surprise, I won the sprint race, the 200 meter race. But it was my first time I compete on this format. And on the interview I say, okay guys, I think it's just the foing that helped me a lot to paddle hard to take off the board. Cause I never train on the sprinter format because I really prefer to go on the ocean and to play and to enjoy the, what the ocean has to give you, to just compete. Sprint was not so much my what I love to do. And then I got into stand surf oil first in 2017. I got my first board and then into standup foil in Portugal where I live. There is a really nice wave long and smooth wave for foiling. And a bit of current. So it's much better to go there with the step than with the surf. And yeah, I just got addict, addict into filing. But I was really thinking that at the beginning I still train in both race suppress and support because actually my job was to suppress, and the covid arrives 2020. And the actually helped at some point it helped me to stop suppressing because I, it was when you are, when you win races and when you are the leader of one sport, it's super hard to quit and to say, okay guys no, it's my time to. To do something else. And surprising was really my second family. I have so many friends that I met on the competition and I traveled everywhere in the world with, and it's, it was really not easy to stop this and to have another life. But yeah, at some point the covid help making the transition. And it seems like that was a pretty common thing that like the top people in Santa paddle racing discovered foiling, and especially for down winding it's so much more efficient to be on a foil. And it seemed like the whole kind of standup racing scene. Kinda fell apart a little bit because of that, I think. And because of Covid, like there weren't any races for a while and then, and it seems like now, it never got its momentum back too, right? Like it's seems like there's just not as, there's not as many races and not as many people competing anymore in stand paddling. Is that true or is that just my perception? I think so. Yeah. There is a, yeah, and it, I think it, it also depends where you live. If you live on a spot that you can practice downwind for sure you go into sub, sub fo. But there are some athletes there are still sub surprising maybe because they want to continue and they have the will to keep training very hard. And. And yeah, there is Casey. There is some athletes from France, in France that we have many eraser that get into sub foil. It's still it's still not so popular because sub subdominant, like we sub to do subin, to sub surf with the foil. But subin foil at the beginning is very hard, especially two years ago or three years ago. Yeah. Very challeng. So let's talk a little bit about that. What was it like to get, your first time you tried it or like, how, talk a little bit about how challenging it is, yeah. The first, my first unwin with the Sub Foy, I borrowed a board in France from a shop from a friend of mine. It was a Robert Tale bought. Huge one, like 2034 wide, maybe six, two long. And it was a cargo board, it was like this, a bubble. And when is I, it's not about the board, it's about the rider always, but to take off. And when you take off, you are about to fly and you paddle super hard. And then when you are about to take, to serve the swell, you actually don't know what to do. And you take really a while to go, like full commitment to take off the board and let's see what's next? And yeah I think it's real today with the new boards, the long boards, Yeah, it's this is one of my first boards. So this was like in 2019, yeah. 2019. Yeah. And yeah, at the beginning was very tough. Very tough. Yeah. To stop down in fo like in, so in France, the, my first dunin, I didn't take off. Maybe I just take off off for a kilometer for eight kilometer. I had a ten second of foiling. And yeah, just kept going. And I remember in Portugal, my first I tried to go for a 28 kilometer run with the Kayak east. With the kayak guys. And I, maybe I fly for half an hour in total, and I did it in three hour and a half. Wow. I was like, exhausted. I was like, what the fuck? And now this run, I do it in an hour and 30 minutes. Yeah. So more than two hour less. It's when there is really a big difference when you fly and when you don't fly, it's it's huge difference. It's lot. Yeah. And then if you paddling the whole way with a small board and a foil underneath, it's hard worker. It's very hard. Yeah. It's so hard. But, now with the big long again, it's it make it much more easy and. It's so cool because I think many people can get in into the sport and have more opportunity to enjoy it. And we are already at the start of something really cool. Yeah. Sport and also the foils that getting better and Yeah. And then, but you do need to have good conditions. It's not like you can go out in super light wind or Yeah. Like in any kind of conditions. That's one thing about standup paddling that I think is it's just more accessible to more people, right? Like pretty much anybody that can standup, paddle, with the right equipment and any, pretty much any kind of water you mean? Standard paddle classic. The, yeah the yeah. For sure. For sure. And for sub foil, for certain mean for, you really need the more knowledge about the ocean. And about the safety. And it's is really the next step, but it's the freedom that you feel. It's incredible. Yeah. Yeah. No it's an amazing sport. Okay. So then, and then you also, it looks like from your you also got into windsurf foiling a little bit, it looks like. Yeah. Yeah. So you didn't some race? Yeah. This was the racing with that, this was when one year 2020 summer. 2020 to summer 2021. And I was born in Marsai, and then I felt, okay, the Olympic Games will be in Marsai in 2024. I am a windsurf in love. And I really want to try at least to know what it is and to get into it. And I did one year of Olympic training with the French team. It, and then I actually discovered the Olympic world that I just know from far, because the, let's say that the outdoor sports standard pad surfing is now into the Olympics, but windsurfing was really there. There was like one big step between Olympic windsurfing and what windsurfing is for. We are in the industry, but with foiling, it's much more, let's say it's much more similar because. Falling first is really more fun than classic windsurfing that than classic Olympic windsurfing in my point of view. And yeah, it was super interesting and I really got a lot of knowledge about falling, doing Olympic windsurfing training. It was at the end I, I prefer to to focus in one sport and to choose one sport that is sub subdominant fo or windfall as well. I did one year of world Cup in windfall and it's very hard to do everything you really have to choose. But I didn't want to have a regrets and I. I could I think I could do it if I will meet or attract the people, the team that can bring you to the Olympic. But I guess I am, it's not my profile of athletes. I'm, I prefer the freedom, I prefer to go sub subin for and to do the moloca and in, instead of doing the Olympic games. And, but to know it, I really needed to experiment it and to feel it. And to be born on on the city that will host the sailing Olympic games was very elect, and then I really wanted to try it. But you never competed in, in what you did, it looks like you did do some competition right on with the windsurf? Yeah, I did a IQ foil the Olympic windsurf win foiling class. Okay. I did a few competition. I got some pretty nice reason because before I never compete in Olympic format in my life. And I also I got some help from the French team, but I was not the best at athlete, so I was not on the main training group. But I still had some help about how to race and how to go up upward because it's all about how to go, how to read the wind, and how to go up. Wind the wind. And this is a science, this is really a lot of knowledge, a lot of feeling. And a lot of years underwater to know how to do it. And yeah. I still got 20 20 on the iq I international IQ for games. Okay. And everyone told me, yeah, Olivia, you did pretty well because you never compete in racing Olympic before. Like this, yeah. To make the good decision. And you can lose so quickly, many space, like many place like this, you take the wrong decision child your last Yeah. And it's a lot of races. It's 20 races in or sometime more in a few days. Yeah. It's pretty exhausted. Okay. And then and then how did you get into the wing foiling? Like when, when did you start wing foiling and what was your progression in that? Wing foiling, I start in 2000. September, 2019. I was already sub foiling on the waves, and I was thinking it's just about to add the sail when it's wind. And I got the support of tycoon first a French brand. And then in 2020, the, there was the first competition the G the G W V A and I really wanted to go to Haifa. It was at the end of the year during Christmas and New Year. Yeah. December 20. Oh, this is 21. 20, yeah. 21. Oh, no. And then it was 20 maybe. Okay. Oh, yeah. Oh yeah. Sorry. It was, no, I start in September 20 Uhhuh, and then, yeah. This is the first picture with tycoon. Yeah. 2020, sorry. Yeah. I start in 2020 September, and then I compete in December, 2020 in tar. Oh, okay. It was my, my first competition and I knew a bit tour because I went there for windsurfing and for standard paddling before, and I got it was freestyle. It was just, It was freestyle and the race was for fun. And I got served on the face, on the freestyle. My first trip broke during my, the final eat. It was it was a little bit a mess, but experience of competition. That foil looks huge for you. I guess in those days, people were using, I had with I was doing freestyle with 1,600 centimeter square. Oh, wow. But is really big. Yeah. Yeah. Really? The mask didn't like it. Yeah. Wow. Okay. And and then yet 2021, I compete again. Did a few workup in Wingfield. Went to France Switzerland. Brazil and and Spain. That's it, I think. And it was really different from what I knew instead pad because I was from racing. That is really re that was, and I was thinking, wow, we are lucky in Standard Island. And I we really live the same situation that's on the windsurf competition with the wind foil about men and women. But it was at the beginning, it was a new beginning of a new sport managed by Kit surfing kit Surfer. So yeah, it was it was a bit special. It's not easy to talk about it because everything has a beginning. And of course you need to create something and to, and it's super cool for the G V A to organize events. It's a lot of work to do what they do, that they do what they know and they do it how they know how to do it. And with the habits we are, we just, we are just our habits. And then it's true that they reproduce the same thing that they did with the kite surfing competition. And it was really different from what we do in standard paling in term of equality, gender. About the more about the image, about the video and photo production that for women was really a few comparing to men. And then the image is what makes everything, if you don't see any image of women on the water, you think it's a spot for only for men. And then it's the same. It's the same thing. You don't have image of women and it was also a water tour organized by brands that pay, that give the PGE for the G W V A. And these brands have mostly men riders. That they pay and they pay the travel expense to go to the competition, to go to the world tour. And then you have this situation that most of the competitor are men and you are like, hello. It us, the women and some, a few women come from the industry that has maybe 10% of the fleet and a few women come from them, their self, like paying everything the themself. And also many are rider, men, pay, pay, everything themself. But yeah we really try to find a way to give more, like the same amount of visibility to both gender, to attract more. More participants of women into the sport and to make it fair to have the same prize money. Because of course when you have, let's say 80 men competing and five women competing, it's not the same competition. That's completely true. But it's the problem is deeper than that. It comes from actually. But yeah, it was interesting to, to find a solution about this and Is there also hectic sometime when there's a wing full contest and the wind's kind of light do they send out the women's heat because the, it's not windy enough for the men or something like that? Do is it stuff like that too? Or Can be Yeah, can be, but can be. But the most important is to make the effort to make images of the competitor. And this is the most hard, the most hardest thing to do. To really coach to manage your production team to say, okay guys, because the filmmaker and the photograph, they are used also to shoot more performance of men that are impressive than women. And then it's just, that's why I said just the habits. It's not, we don't want women in the sport. It's not this, it's just we do what we used to do that we do it for a long time, and then we just reproduce what we are used to do. And to give image to women, it's it's it's something that's it's not so natural, it's not so it's you have to shake with the people to say, Hey, we are here. Yes. Yeah. So what are you, what are some things that you have been trying to do to help the the status of women in those kind of sports? Like what do you do to try to get rattle the cage a little bit? I have to decrease pleasure to organize the She wins events with venue. This is events dedicated for women to, to learn how to wing foil and to improve the wind foiling technique. And we are doing the first sheet done wings. So we go also on the don winds with the wing for it, with the shoe wings. And it's, so we start last year mostly in France. We did one, one event in Portugal in the beginning of this year, in April. And it's a big success. It's really impressive. The we act we gonna do one event this Sunday in France. And we are 20, we are 25 women in total. And the registration we're full in less than 24 hour. So I'm super, super happy and it's all about finding a way like to like to organize events, like to grow the logistic of the event, to welcome more women on the event because we are really had to stop the registration of the girls. And and then the idea is to produce major content to, for the social media and to do this kind of to help doing this and to inspire to give, to, to produce a positive image for women windfall and to show that it's super cool to win for when you are a woman. Yeah. No, that's great. And Wing foiling is really not so much about strength, but it's more about finesse and technique, so it's not Yeah, absolutely. Very strong. It seems like we, we see there's a pretty good amount of women getting into wing foiling too now, which is, it's good. It's cool to see that. But it did, it does seem especially in the media, it's definitely male do male dominated sports still right now. Okay. Yeah, it's let's talk a little bit about this this summer. So you, I know you signed up for the moca Tohu race and you're doing it as on wing foiling, right? So on sub Oh, you're doing on sub foil. Oh, okay. I thought you were wing foil. Ok. On foiling and also the Maui to Molokai race, right? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I'm super excited. Yeah. So talk a little bit about that. What kind of equipment are you planning to use and and the Strat your strategy and your training and stuff like that for those races this summer the equipment I am going to use is the axis done in the board. I have 1, 6 11 by 19 inch. And it's a 90 liter, it's a custom board. That axis made for me, it's a bump. I really love this board. It really make a big difference. It's this one. Yeah. Okay. And yeah, I did my first takeoff on the flat water with this board and the Foil Art Pro 12 0 1. What, which is pretty big. I don't think I'm gonna use this for the moca only If it's very light wind. I gonna use a smaller size that I have for now that is not on the projection yet, but will be soon. So it's a little surprise about the front wing and, but I use a, I'm good on a versatile foil. I like to, I for now, I don't use a very small foil. I use a 1000 centimeter square. And because I am, I like to take off in an easily. And to be able to do mistake and don't lose the flight. And I play more, let's say I, I like to go fast. I have one medium average of 23 kilometer per hour, which is pretty nice. On this I did it on 30 kilometer or something like that. So it's pretty, pretty long. And yeah, instead of going with a very small foil and if you lose the flight, it's another story and another story. And and I train mostly in Portugal where I live, where I have sometime nice condition for now. I don't have much wind and much wave so I train differently. But when it's and. Windy is just a paradise to train. It's really tir tiring every day. So much opportunity to push the limit. Yeah. And then the mo chi race, it's basically sometimes the start, at the start it can be pretty light wind and not very good bumps. And then of course, also the finish is like upwind, like you're going into the wind in monologue bay in Hawaii, Kai. And so you, for tho for that, the beginning at the end, you want a big bigger foil that's easier to stay up on, foil on. But then in the middle of the race you have sometimes huge bumps and very fast speeds, right? So it's hard to have a setup that can handle both, so yeah, that's why this year for my first time I will go with with a 1000 some semester square. And then I can take off almost on the flat. And I actually, my wing is in my front. This foot is in France getting prepared by a guy that will prepare the fo and make, because after one year there are some things. Oh, scratches proper. Like he make it perfect. Yeah. And I can't push this forward until my maximum speed was 42 kilometer k a kilometer per hour. And in, how much is that in, in miles per hour? I'm just trying to think. 40. It's fast. Yeah, it's very fast. Yeah. And then after that I just fell because it was like one big bumps and then a second, big bumps. And then the third, I was like, wow, I count more 42 kilometer per hour. I don't know how much it in Yeah, it's like about, I think, is it 2.2? I don't know. I don't know. But yeah, that's pretty, that's really fast. I, and then my my, my strategy will be if it's too big, I just find the line that allow me to fly as fast as I can. And actually I just I go there because I, of course I will do it. I will give it all, and I will try to win and everything. But it's all also about to be part of the race and to be part of the history of the sport, and to share it with many new, and to be there, it's just amazing. I, I have the experience that less expectation you have, like when you have a, when you're on the good flow and on the lightness better you are. So I don't push, I don't put me so much pressure of results. Of course I go there to do my best, but it's more about the experience and to enjoy it at the top. So who do you think is your biggest competition and the women's dwin. Foiling? Who, who do you think is gonna the, like the favorite? I think it's always everybody. Yeah. Cause you don't know. It's a new sport and you don't know, and you can have black horses. And everyone is able to make surprises for, of course Annie is very strong and we know that she's from Hawaii and she know very well the race and the spots and and she will be back after the her shoulder problems. And and yeah, I guess our main competitor is ourself. Like always. It's you push yourself and you go for it. And this is one opportunity to go over the comfort zone and to push. To pressure our limits. Yeah. Yeah. Especially when you are in the middle of nowhere. We will be, I guess with the escort boat. Maybe we don't know who is where, because we have different line or I don't know if we can really be close to each other, and it's pretty long I in, in filing less because to be two hour and a half, three hour of flight. But before, in like when you race in the classics race, it's four hour something. So it's not the, you have time to it's enough time for things to happen. Yeah so you never know. See in the mo areas, the finish, like everything can change. Yeah. Cuz if you get a nice wave or something and you versus having to paddle for the last mile almost, or whatever, so that's can be that can make a big difference too, I think, to finish. But yeah, the China War, yeah, that's big challenge. Challenge I think. But yeah, I think this year there's actually, I think there's more people on foils than on standup paddle boards, maybe in the moca race. I have to Oh yeah. Check it. Yeah. But there's a pretty big it's pretty, the pretty big group of That's cool. Of foyers. Yeah. So it's really and it's really the first time the race has held since the beginning of Covid, since 2019, it'll be interesting to see. Yeah. Yeah. It should be a big race of the race. Because back then, yeah, like in 2019 it was, foiling was still pretty new and it's a lot of things have changed since then, really, I think it's really exciting to see and then wing foiling for the first time too. In the race. Yeah. And then so what are your plans after that? Are you gonna focus focus on down wind, standup foiling, or what are your plans? Are you still gonna do standup racing or wing foiling, or what are your plans? My plans after the moloca? After this summer? Yes. I have the project, it would be maybe before or after the moloca, depending on the wind conditions. I want to set record in Portugal of Subin foil. I, so it's really, nobody knows about this for now. You are the first one to be aware of that. Oh, cool. Except my sponsor, I will start from Panish in Portugal and I will go to where I am able to go with the North wind. Okay. It means that I have a distance of two, two hundred and seventy five kilometer to cigarettes until c guess this is the point the point of the southwest of Portia. And it's about if I flight in my average speed, which is a 23 kilometer per hour, what I do in in a 60 k. I can fly, I can do it in one day of summer, of European summer, which is a 15 hour of flight. It's it's about 12, 12 hour and a half of fo of, and we have 15 hour of flight in from, so basically it's from 6:00 AM to eight to 6:00 PM six 7:00 PM wow. And nuclear. So if you complete that, it's longer than James. James Casey's one day record. I think he did it a hundred miles or something like that. So 275 kilometers would be more than that. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. It's it's a great experience. It's it's the adventure and with foiling today, with the new boards and the new foils, every single very fast, the improvement of the gear of the gear make everything much more like really go break the boundaries, go over the what we do. Last year the one, one year after with the new year, it's nothing about, it's we are reliving one, one time of the sport that is incredible, yeah. Yeah. Things are changing very quickly and improving. And I do it for association, Portuguese association that protect the nature. That actually like at this moment, Portuguese is very suffering from lux tourism with many golf on the gyms, on the nature parks that are just it's not just one or two golf, it's maybe six or more golf in a very smaller area in almost on the beach, let's say, where there is not much water. And then the intensive agriculture and then other project that, I mean that Portugal is really leaving an expansion, like at this moment with the, after the covid. Many people want to go and live there, and then it's an opportunity for the politics to have a opportunity in the other businesses. And then the respect of the nature is a bit forgotten in this story. Then I was think I'm seeking to do this for, to support association that, that try to share the good message that try to find the balance between development and respect of the nature and what we can do to find the right way to, to evolve and to make business, let's say. Because it's all about money. And yeah. So we are gonna do a documentary about this. We're gonna show you guys how beautiful is Portugal, how beautiful is the culture that you are already, and what is happening right now in the coast and in land and and to get support. To reach money for the people that need to like to stop legally. Some people that don't respect the law. Yeah. Basically overdevelop the story. Yeah. So you're raising funds, you're raising funds for a nonprofit. That's cool. Awesome. Yeah. Cause I love Portugal so much. So how long have you been living in Portugal now? How many years have you been living there? Five years. Okay. So you, your mother tongue is French and then you speak Portuguese and English. What do you speak any other languages? Frank Frankish. I speak French and Portuguese. French. Yeah. No, but I speak enough for the people to understand what I want to say. Yeah. And then I speak a bit of Spanish too. French, Spanish and Portuguese. When you know a bit how to speak it's easy. And when you have friends, when you live in the country, if you make the effort, it's okay. You can. Yeah. For me, it don't make sense to live in a country and don't speak the language. So it was not easy, but at the end I speak a bit of Portuguese. Yeah. Yeah. Cool. Let's talk a little bit about wing foiling. So are you gonna keep competing as a wing foiler? And what, and I just wanted to ask you too about your wings, the value wings and so on. So you wanna talk a little bit about your Yeah I will keep competing in wing fighting. I, I love to do don windows and we have one race in France, the cardinal wing foil event in September that is don't win races in wing foiling. So I have this races on my calendar. And I hope for new don't win wing for race to. To, yeah, to appear and and to be able to compete in the format. Okay. Yeah. This is why you so nice. So you're you, I love it. Yeah. Talk a little bit about the wings. Like what wings do you use and what do you like about the, these wings and so on? So these wings on the screen is the wing v2. Now I use the V3 for, and like when it's flat and on the wave, I use the aura and I will soon I will use the Aura X. This is the aula? Yeah. This one, this beauty, I will use the Aura X the new best wing of value that is really rigid and. And very nice on the wave and also on the racing. Apparently I did I did one race beginning of April in north of France, and it was very fun. And yeah I still compete on on the fun event of foing and I, and man, I really prefer to compete in, in the Darwin for the Moloca. I do it on the sub, but I have the feeling that more and more races will be Darwin also not only racing or office type. For for downwind foiling or standup foiling or wing foiling, are you talking about now? Wing wing foiling. Special events made for wing foiling. Do, yeah. That's what I really like. Yeah. So what kind of equipment do you use for downwind wing foiling? I use the, so the wing depend on the wing on the wind. I use the aura by your wing. And then I, for the body, it also depend on the wind, but I mostly use the Axis 55 liter with the 90 centimeter ma iModules carbon mast. For the sage, I used the ultra short, which is 64 centimeter long. And for the front wing, I used to use the art, the a r t. And now I gotta use the a R T Pro in different size. And for the rear wing, I used the progressive the 300 Progressive. I still didn't try the skinny rear, but it looks super cool. Need to train more on that to make my choice. But you have to, I've been using the A R T wings access a r t. So what's the difference between a r t and a R T pro? Like how are they different? How do they handle differently and so on? For now, for the, for what I tried with the 12 0 1, it's really about like the 12 0 1. It's much bigger and much I I expect it's 11. Ratio. So it's really more, oh longer. So you take of more easy with this thing, but it's always the same goal. It's to, I have better lift and go faster, it's this balance and the uproar is the next level. It's, you have a better lift. So it means that you can take off more easily. And when you make mistake and you are about to lose the flight the force still keep you up. And then when you push and you go fast, the foil accept to go fast and to to be in control and to, it's and this is the main goal. For the, for for the foiling development. But the apple is really made for done winding. That's why the lift for downwind is super important because if you don't fly, you don't do any downwind. Is it, what about the thickness of the profile? Is it about the same as the a r t or do you know the 12 0 1 is a bit more thicker on the front, and it's it's like the a r t, the last like the last version it's more like flat, let's say. And the A R T pro is more like how to say that in English? I don't know. But it's I think it's a little bit thicker on the front. And then less on the the evacuation of the water is from the center, it like this. Yeah. And then just higher aspect I guess, too. Yeah. So are are they planning to come out with more sizes in the a r T Pro, do you know? Or like what's, have you been able to test? Yeah. I'm gonna receive a smaller size. I just received one text message this morning from telling me that she gonna sh ship new sizes. So I can't tell you yet, but yeah, we're gonna have a I can tell you the exact size. Sure. But we gonna have a smaller size. Yeah. And then which is really cool for me cause the 12 0 1 for me is really big for my weight. So in, in the MOK race, if it, if the conditions are good, you might use something a little bit smaller probably, but Absolutely. But that seems probably the a R T pro kind of same style foil. Oh yeah. Yeah. Cool. And then what about the boards? Talk a little bit about the the dwin fo wing standup foil boards. I guess a r t makes makes them is your, is yours a standard standard production model? Or is this one, one of your I have this shape, the done wind. Yeah. But in 11. It's made for my weight. The 100 liter will be a bit big for me. So they just built a smaller border adapted, and also it's, yeah, it's 19 wa I'm also on a 19 inch wipe. Yeah, I've heard the, it works really well, right? Even for just catching waves easily and things like that. Do you ever use it for other, for in the surf or only for down wind? For now, I didn't use it on the surf because unfortunately we, it's flat for a few days and I used the Eid, now I used the e, the six O on the wave, but it was also super small. It was like really ankle high. And super nice. Like the dun wind is really made for the dun wind and for surfing I use the hybrid, but I guess the dun wind can be also nice for for small waves. So yeah, I use the 90 liter, the six O. Is that what, and then for what do you use for wing foiling? Is that the same board you use for wing foiling or for wing foiling? I use the, both the 85 liter. But if, let's say if I will be a client, I will use the ebra also in wing foiling. Cause that's true that I think so many boards that I am I'm so lucky to be a pro athlete and to have a, as much girl as I need. But I used the froth carbon fo board a five liter. Okay. When it's light, when it's very light in Portugal. Otherwise I use the 55 liter when it's windy. This port is I order it for sapping. And then I discovered that it was pretty nice when it was windy, but not enough to have a small board. And when it's when there is some current and big waves, you don't want to get watch and you want to go away very fast. So this board is very nice to take off easily and go away. So let's, and they're quite so compared, they're quite wide compared to the hybrid or the Oh, especially the dominant. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Interesting. But then it's really maneuverable because it's a very short, yeah. Short and Stuy five. It's a five. Oh. So yeah. Pretty nice on the surf. Cool. Yeah. This is my sub foil for the waves. And don't mean for the Yeah I'm super happy with the new board, the new sub. That's really amazing to, to see sub boards in the foiling industry, like official shapes for the first time. Yeah. When you're a pad, it's yes. And it's, it seems to be a fast growing thing right now too. I was just at a factory where they were making foil boards and almost everything in production right now it was all dom wind foil boards. A lot of companies are coming out with them and. So we'll see. And but yeah, it is such a challenging sport and I think it's, it is very much of a niche sport, so we'll see how widely it gets adopted, cuz I think it's just for a lot of people it's just not something they can do every day, but we'll see. Yeah, I mean it's for sure it's a niche but the equipment make it much more accessible and it's also about many people did wing foiling and then what next? Yeah. Have many friends, they're like, yeah, we wing foil on the, when it's flat and when you did a 360 and jump and, when you really know how to wing foil, you're like, okay, then what I do now. Yeah. And there are many people able to sub win foil. Yeah. That do. Yeah, no, for sure. Do wing. Yeah. And it's a cool challenge. I've been, I I was down with standup foiling before I got into wing foiling, and then once the wings came out, and then I was like, oh, this is so much easier, and so then I got really into wing foiling, and then lately I've been trying to get back into downward foiling, but then I remembered how hard it is, yeah, it's definitely not that easy to get going and then stay up on foil and stuff like that, so it's a challenge. But yeah. So do you I was gonna ask are you regular foot or goofy foot, like not your natural stance. Regular. Regular. And then when you're wing foiling, do you switch your feet or do you stay in the same position? You switch? I switch, yeah. Staying to to windsurfing, I'm used to switch. So if if Wing Foing becomes an Olympic sport, do you think you would compete in, in Wing for Olympic racing? I don't think so. No. I don't know that I, I don't, yeah I really prefer, and it's also about my, the timing in my life that I live in Portugal, I bought my home. I'm, I am doing a lot of gardening. I am completely fun of of taking care of the nature, of the land, of the plants. And this take a lot of time. It's my weight. It's one kind of therapy and anyway, it's something that I really love to do. And when I, like when you are Olympic athlete, you just do it, you don't do anything else. And this, I did it when I was 22, 27 years old. And I did stop for, I did stand up race racing twice a day, three, three times a week gym. And I got World Champion three times. And I'm like, yeah, so cool. But I know what is it to be professional at athlete Olympic? It's crazy. And and I also discovered the sailing community and the, like how it is to compete in sailing. And I prefer to be a free rider. A don't mean foer, yeah, because it gives you more, more freedom and it's more expression than just it's not just like a and I also want to go into the big wave. I want to go to NRA with the, before this winter, I want to experiment. I want to do crazy challenge. And I, and since always I am more free people. And when you do the Olympic, it's not you don't decide so much. You train a lot. You have a team around you and then, it's another way of life. And I'm aware that I am living in Portugal. I'm good here. And yeah. But it's really amazing if we finally go to the Olympics. And it'll go for sure. Yeah. I think so too. I think that's, it is just a matter of time. Such a, such a cool thing. But and you go to the Olympic? No, I'm 55, so I'm over the hill, but I still enjoy it though, and I like to go faster than young guys, so if I can Yeah. It's so competitive. Yeah. But yeah, I'm actually like the course racing I'm not that interested in it really, because Yeah, it's it depends so much on the conditions and the equipment and so technical, so definitely more fun to just go out in the waves and have fun and all that kind of stuff. But let's talk a little bit about the state of mind. Like you're talking about, like a little bit about like how sometimes it's better to not be. Or just to let your mind wander a little bit or just have like more of that not be too, sometimes if you're trying too hard, it's like it doesn't work, right? Like you have to go with the flow and then let it happen. And then when that, but talk a little bit. How do you get into the right frame of mind to get to do your water sports? What comes natural to you? Do you have any tips on how to get into the right state of mind, to where everything flows and comes naturally? I have the flow that we call the flow in psychology. It's when you are really on the moment. This is the hardest thing to do. It's really simple, but it's really hard at the same time because when you are competing or when you are pushing yourself, you are really focused on the result. And when you are focused on the result, you are no more focused on what you are doing. Because, and then, and I, when I was com, like since I was competing in, in, in suppressing, I was, and also I think it's very important to, to train the mind to be here now. It's sometime you are thinking about so many stuff, what I will do tomorrow, what I will do next month, what I will do December in Hawaii, and what I did before. But if you are not here now, you won't be here after. When I will be in Hawaii, maybe I won't be there. I will be thinking about what I will do in a month when I go back to Europe, so if I really try to focus to be here. And then of course, it's very important to, to plan and to be organized and this kind of stuff. But the experience I had recently, I, my garing watch was not working anymore, and then I to, to my speed and my distance, I put I put it on my phone on Strava. Then I put my phone in my pocket, then I did my don window, put out my phone sometime calling the friend on, but my phone was mostly on my pocket. And then I arrived there. I cut the Strava off. I stop the time I go to the parking and I check and I reached p is pretty good and the condition was not that Yeah. Was okay. Then I got this beautiful Garin watch, and then I was the condition were super good and I was feeling, I had the good speed and I was sure that my average speed was much better, but I was always watching the speed wow, 40 kilometer hour. Nice. No. Then I, when I finished my average speed was not that better because maybe because I was not really focused on the ocean and on the, on what I, on, on what I was doing. I was just checking the number distracted. Yeah. And. And this is very interesting. And also the experience I had was doing apna. I did one one camp of Apna in south of France. And it was my first experience doing APNA. So I was very beginner. I went with this guy that was word champion Stefan mi apnea is breath breath holding, right? Holding your breath or diving deep or like what? Yeah. Yeah. He is word champion of static apnea. And he is 11 minute, 50 seconds. 11 minutes in the water without laughing crazy. And the guy super amber teaching us how to do. And I really discovered doing apna, which is super simple as well, you just have to relax and to be focused on yourself and to don't think about anything else. And I really realized how it costs you to just watch how many minutes you are under the water or to be like in little tiny stress how you can be like, whoa. And then after a few times I did three, two or three days of up now with this guy. Then I went and the water to did a 17 meter for the first time was pretty nice. Then stay a bit down there and you have your distress to, to think, okay, I have to go up now I have to be able to, to reach the surface, face and breathe and to. Completely relaxed and to be it's incredible. It's incredible how you ma how you, how much your mind has an impact on yourself and how much the stress can kill you. You when you are you, the stress costs a lot of energy. So of course the stress is important to, to be awake and to push us. But it's really a balance between when you are doing your race, nothing else exists and you are so lucky to be here. Yeah. You are so fucking lucky to like to be her wife, for example, with many cool people around you. And just leave this moment. Just enjoy it and do your best and you come do better than your best anywhere. Yeah. Yeah, I think for the, especially the, for standup paddling, the, I've done the Moloka race like 10 times and it's such a mental thing, if you're not in the right state of mind, it's, it can be a very difficult race to, to do it, yeah. Because hard to stay, always stay positive the whole way across. When you stand up paddling it for five hours or six hours, it's uhhuh. Yeah. It's definitely a challenge. So I'm curious how so in the, how long can you hold your breath? Like how long can you stay underwater? No, I was very beginner. I did two minutes. Okay. It was really, I was very starting and I, it was my only training, but I want to train more for the next winter. Have you tried the Wim Hof breathing? Swim breathing. I know. Yeah, I know what it is. I did a very few times, but it's super interesting. Yeah, I do that like regularly in the morning, like after I get up, I just do the breathing exercise and breath hold exercises. And it's, yeah it's good for the mind, or just also just I think when you do something that's difficult or challenging, like for when I do it first thing in the morning, then the rest of the day is easy after that. So you do a couple hard things in the morning and then after that everything's pretty easy. So Uhhuh absolutely, it's it's really short, but it's, it has a big effect. Yeah. A way off. Okay. So do you have I think we've had a pretty long interview, but do you have anything you wanna share with the foiling world? And any message, you already talked about Getting more women into the sport and stuff like that. But do you wanna, do you have any other messages you wanna put out there? It's it's very large thing, but yeah I guess that the ocean and the nature in general, it's it's so amazing and that as many people we can bring into it, it's like it's our therapy. It's it's our it's our way of life. But I would like to say that it's for me, it's my to say that in English, it's my, what I live for. And sometime I'm thinking about the people that don't have the opportunity to experiment it, to get in contact with the water and with the, with this element. And like to put it more and more popular and accessible. It's it's so cool and I am super happy to help the industry to promote and to show what is possible and to share it with as many people as possible. That when I will be on the moloca, I will think about my friend Sonny, that you know, that he is leaving a very hard time at the moment about the mind health. And we, it's really important to take care of us, thanks to the ocean, because the ocean can accept, can take so many thing. It's not only about the physical health. It's also about the mental health and and yeah, it's I feel so grateful for it to be in contact with this element and yeah, for sure. I can talk about it for another hour. The Me Too. Yeah. Yeah. It's it's really, it's a luck and it's not a luck because we went volun, like we went into it, so we make it happen. And sometimes the ocean is very hard with us as well. It's not always fun that it's so much, it's so much learning and so much so much happiness. Yeah. Yeah. And you're right about the ocean is, it's, it always humbles you if you're, if you If you feel like invincible sometimes, then at some point you get the Yeah, you stay very humble. Yeah. You stay back in your place, so yeah, it's a good teacher for sure. Yeah. All right. Great. Yeah, so I'm, I was just thinking like what is something that we can all do to, like to protect the environment to, to be better, shepherds of the world, of the earth, you're talking about, like your, f raising funds for nonprofit to protect the protect the ocean or protect the land from overdevelopment and so on. But like being in the surfing industry, like it's not exactly like. The products we use are environmentally friendly and traveling all over the world on jet planes is not really environmentally friendly. That's, but but by going in the ocean, we, it is like the way, yeah. The way I justify it is a way to feel closer to it and wanting to protect it. Like we are the ocean protectors cuz we love the ocean. But what are some things that you do? What are some things that other people can do to be better shepherds of the earth, yeah. What I think it's all about daily leads thing. That we do every day about saving the water and being careful with the plastic that we bought, and all of these things that most of us know. But I am, we can discover that there is a long way to, to share this message to many people that are not aware about this or don't imagine the impact that we can have us little citizen and then for sure to get into the action, to influence the bigger industry that sometimes take a terrible decision like the deep meaning on the ocean. All this projects that is About to ha to happen in your in Europe. That is pretty not nice for the ocean and for the nature. And yeah, like I, I also study it's nothing about but it's I also study Chinese medicine and in Chinese medicine they say that little, a little action sometime can have a big effect. It means when you see Kiy taking a plastic bottle on the beach, which is not something that's it's just normal, the people that will watch him will be like, wow, this is Kailin doing it. So sometime you can have just little action that can have a big influence into other people and. And I think it's it's important to take it in consideration and to, to just act as best as we can. And but for sure it's a very complex complex story for all of us human that we love the comfort, we love the, we love to travel to Hawaii. We stand up at our board and we, everyone in our level, we are responsible. But I guess it's very hard to be perfect. Some of us maybe are, but the most important is to do our best and to keep improving and to think about the solution. Like some like finding maybe new. Type of construction or like most of the branded in the industry to remove the plastic and the packing and the packaging of the board. This is a huge like this is really good. To do. To do it. Yeah. Then when I do Don Window, I really go, I don't go with the boat because I'm not used to it, but, this little thing that can, by the way, I'm looking for a boat escort in, in M two. Okay. But I would love to do the M two without the boat with the foil. I guess It's okay. It's just a two or three hour of foiling, but it's Yeah. The mo moca you can do without a boat, but the mo Molokai tohu ha they require escort boat. You can'
Sara Piana hefur í gegnum árin verið umtöluð á Íslandi, einkum og sér í lagi eftir að hún giftist vaxtarræktarkappanum Rich Piana og af þeim birtust reglulega fréttir. Sara hefur hingað til ekki farið í viðtöl í íslenskum fjölmiðlum, en fannst tími til kominn að segja sögu sína, einkum og sér í lagi þar sem hún er nú alfarið flutt til landsins og ætlar að hefja hér næsta kafla í sínu lífi. Í þættinum segir Sara frá því hvers vegna hún þurfti sem ung kona að flýja land eftir stöðuga ógn. Hvernig hún fór langt inn í Fitness-heiminn eftir að hún flutti til Bandaríkjanna og síðan frá skrautlegu líferni sínu með Rich Piana, sem oft var öðruvísi en það virkaði út á við. Sara lærir nú hjúkrunarfræði og hlakkar til næsta kafla í sínu lífi, eftir að hafa fengið margfaldan æviskammt af dramatík, eins og hún segir sjálf. Þátturinn er í boði; Narfeyrarstofa - https://narfeyrarstofa.is/ Nýja vínbúðin - https://nyjavinbudin.is/ Ofnasmiðja Reykjavíkur - https://ofnasmidja.is/
Argentinian industrial designer Cristián Mohaded and Francesco Pergamo, director of Loro Piana's interiors division, discuss their collaboration on a new furniture collection and an installation called “Apachetas”.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week's episode features Brian Piana. Brian is a professor teaching graphic design that started investing passively this past year and is currently in two deals. Brian has found a lot of value from joining a community of like-minded investors to help educate him. He plans to watch the economy for a while before deploying more capital but will be watching for the next great deal.