POPULARITY
Categories
How do salmon journey from a freshwater river to the saltwater ocean? And after years at sea, how do they find their way home to the exact river where they hatched? Discover how God designed salmon just right for their incredible adventure.Here's our trail map:Where Do Salmon Live?How Do Salmon Live In Both Fresh and Salt Water?Why Do Salmon Swim Upstream?Where Is Our True Home?Download this lesson's free coloring sheet: https://thenaturaltheologyproject.com/why-do-salmon-swim-upstream/Related Lessons to listen to next:How Do Fish Breathe Underwater? The Curious Ways Creatures Breathe - Lesson 68: https://player.captivate.fm/episode/0fc09da4-deab-42ce-9e57-2a2d5e9a2d8c/How Does God Water All the Plants and Animals? Lesson 110: https://player.captivate.fm/episode/01e9495f-489d-46cf-9c58-e0be1b6084f3/Eryn's Books:Where Wonder Leads: An Adventure in God's Wild and Wonderful World: https://thenaturaltheologyproject.com/wonderMade to Marvel: 52 Family Devotions Exploring the Wild Wonders of God's Creation: https://thenaturaltheologyproject.com/marvelThe Nature of Rest: What the Bible and Creation Teach Us About Sabbath Living: https://www.amazon.com/Nature-Rest-Creation-Sabbath-Living/dp/0825448891Rooted in Wonder: Nurturing Your Family's Faith Through God's Creation: https://www.amazon.com/Rooted-Wonder-Nurturing-Familys-Creation/dp/0825447615936 Pennies: Discovering the Joy of Intentional Parenting: https://www.amazon.com/936-Pennies-Discovering-Intentional-Parenting/dp/0764219782Episode Links:Discover God's designs in crabs and other ocean creatures with Apologia's Swimming Creatures of the Fifth Day course: https://www.apologia.com/shop/zoology-2-course-set/Explore all of Apologia's award-winning curriculum and courses: https://www.apologia.com/Nat Theo Club Bonus Video: https://thenaturaltheologyproject.com/memberGet full lesson guides in the Nat Theo Club: https://thenaturaltheologyproject.com/clubFree Salmon Coloring Sheet: https://thenaturaltheologyproject.com/why-do-salmon-swim-upstream/Ask your nature question: https://thenaturaltheologyproject.com/askScriptures Referenced in This Episode:“So God created the large sea animals and every living thing that moves in the sea. The sea is filled with these living things, with each one producing more of its own kind. He also made every bird that flies, and each bird produced more of its own kind. God saw that this was good. God blessed them and said, ‘Have many young ones so that you may grow in number. Fill the water of the seas, and let the birds grow in number on the earth.'” Genesis 1:21-22 (NCV)“He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has also set eternity in the human heart; yet no one can fathom what God has done from beginning to end.” Ecclesiastes 3:11 (NIV)“Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth. The first heaven and the first earth had disappeared, and there was no sea anymore…. And I heard a loud voice from the throne, saying, ‘Now God's presence is with people, and he will live with them, and they will be his people. God himself will be with them and will be their God. He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and there will be no more death, sadness, crying, or pain, because all the old ways are gone.'The One who was sitting on the throne said, ‘Look! I am making everything new!...'” Revelation 21: 1,3-5a (NCV)“If you declare with your mouth, ‘Jesus is Lord,' and if you believe in your heart that God raised Jesus from the dead, you will be saved. We believe with our hearts, and so we are made right with God. And we declare with our mouths that we believe, and so we are saved.” Romans 10:9-10 (NCV)Terms Learned in This Episode:Anadromous: An animal that is born in fresh water, lives most of its life in the ocean, and then returns to fresh water to have babies.Osmoregulation: The process of an animal's body balancing water and salt so it stays healthy.Ionocytes: Special cells in a salmon's gills that help control salt balance.Smoltification: The set of changes that helps a young salmon get ready to leave fresh water and live in salt water.Redd: A nest that a female salmon makes in the gravel at the bottom of a stream or river.Homing Instinct: A natural ability in some animals to return to an important place, like its home or nesting area, even after traveling far away.This podcast episode contains paid advertisements.
The Family Home: where we all shall gather together. Est. fifth era, year of 145 by Saint Honore Crawley, the people's woman.
Darkest Mysteries Online - The Strange and Unusual Podcast 2023
Saltwater History and Blood DebtsBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/dark-mysteries-the-strange-and-unusual-podcast-2026--5684156/support.Darkest Mysteries Online
For such a small state, Connecticut is a powerhouse of outdoor recreation, fisheries, and conservation success stories that could serve as a model for the entire country. In this special episode, Tony is joined by Mason Trumbull, Deputy Commissioner of the Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection, and Jeff Shaw, Director of the Office of Outdoor Industry and Experiences. Together, they reveal how Connecticut's innovative approach is turning ecological health into vibrant economic growth, demonstrating that sustainable fisheries and accessible outdoor spaces are the ultimate win-win.
Fishhook injuries are common, surprisingly nuanced, and honestly a little intimidating until you've removed a few. In this first episode of our Minor Procedures series, we'll reel in the essentials of pediatric fishhook removal, helping you take the bait on four classic removal techniques, procedural planning, anesthesia strategies, and post-removal management. We'll discuss when to pull back, when to advance, when not to get hooked on a single technique, and how to avoid turning a simple procedure into the one that got away. Along the way we'll cover sedation, antibiotics, wound care, and practical pearls to help you land these cases with confidence. Learning Objectives Compare and select among the four major fishhook removal techniques based on hook characteristics, depth of penetration, and anatomic location. Apply evidence-based approaches to analgesia, anxiolysis, procedural sedation, and post-removal management for pediatric fishhook injuries. Identify situations requiring escalation of care, including ocular involvement, contaminated water exposure, tendon or joint involvement, and circumstances where routine management may not be sufficient. References Gammons MG, Jackson E. Fishhook removal. Am Fam Physician. 2001;63(11):2231-2236. Prats M, O'Connell M, Wellock A, Kman NE. Fishhook removal: case reports and a review of the literature. J Emerg Med. 2013;44(6):e375-e380. doi:10.1016/j.jemermed.2012.11.058 Doser C, Cooper WL, Ediger WM, et al. Fishhook injuries: a prospective evaluation. Am J Emerg Med. 1991;9(5):413-415. doi:10.1016/0735-6757(91)90204-w Transcript This episode used an AI-generated transcript created in Descript as an initial draft. The transcript was subsequently edited, expanded, and refined by the author with assistance from OpenAI's ChatGPT (GPT-5.5). Final editorial decisions and content responsibility remain with the author. Welcome to PEM Currents: The Pediatric Emergency Medicine Podcast. As always, I'm your host, Brad Sobolewski, and today we're gonna start a new series on minor procedures. These are the types of procedures that we perform all the time in the emergency department. They're not the subject of multicenter trials or big keynote lectures, but these are the things that patients and families remember, and trust me, they will remember them whether you do them well or not. First up, fishhook removal. So I'm hoping to reel in some listeners with this one, and so hopefully you'll take the bait, and by the end of this episode you'll understand exactly what angle I'm coming from. And hopefully I'm just not trying to make a bass of myself. So anyway, fishhook removal sounds really simple until you actually start doing it. There's not just one technique. There are four classic approaches, and I'll talk about them all, and which one you choose depends on the hook, whether there's a barb, how deep it is, where it's located, your personal experience with different techniques. Fishhook injuries in children are usually minor and most commonly involve the hands and head, though I've seen them stuck in other body parts as well. Most can be managed in the emergency department or urgent care setting with local anesthesia and basic equipment Of course, if there's concern for tendon involvement, joint penetration, neurovascular compromise, if it's anywhere near the eyeball, you should stop and rethink your plan. You know, so ortho, if it's embedded deeply in a joint, um, anything that involves the eye itself isn't necessarily an emergency department procedure, and I'm not talking about the eyebrow, I'm talking about the globe. Fortunately, that's very rare, but that's definitely an ophthalmology conversation. And so before you even think about removing, you need to understand the hook. Is this a single hook or is this a treble hook? A treble hook is a type of fishing hook that has three individual hooks and barbs arranged in a triangular formation, and they're all fused to a single shank and eye. The eye is where the line gets tied to the hook. Is it freshwater or saltwater? How long has it been there? Is it an old rusty one that was sitting in your garage? Was it underwater for a few hours and then it got hooked in the skin? And honestly, how cooperative is the kid gonna be? Because unlike actual fishing, this is one of the procedures where patience beats blunt force. So the simplest technique is retrograde removal. This is exactly what families think you're gonna do before you walk in the room. You know, just pull it out the way it went in. But that's not how hooks are designed. They have the barb. They're designed to stay in the fish. So most of the hooks that I've removed are barbed hooks, and so you can't just back them out. If you try to pull a hook out the way it came in, it's gonna catch and tug on the tissue, it's gonna lead to more pain, bleeding and tissue distortion and not really gonna get you anywhere. So just pulling it out doesn't work, and family probably would have already tried that at home. The technique I end up using most often is advance and cut. And it kind of sounds wrong the first time you explain it to a family because your solution to removing the hook is to continue to advance the hook, but mechanically, this makes the most sense. So you advance the point of the hook through the skin until the barb exits completely, then use either really good trauma shears or heavy wire cutters to cut the hook in between the shank and the barb. If it's in a location where you have, uh, enough room, I like to hold a hemostat real close to the skin, grabbing the hook. Then I cut near the barb, get the pointy part out of the way, remove the hemostats, and then back it through the skin. This is considered the most reliable technique, and in most reviews it's described as being nearly universally successful, even for larger hooks. In children, I think this needs to be the go-to technique because success matters. You just gotta get it done on the, the first attempt. Kids don't tolerate multiple failed attempts very well. Um, obvious downside is that you create a second puncture wound, but in practice, that puncture is usually controlled and much less traumatic than repeated unsuccessful pulling. Depending on where the skin's at, you may actually need to put a little bit of tension or pressure against the skin to get that hook to poke through. Ultimately, this advance and cut method is the one that you should spend the most time learning and teaching to your trainees. The string yank technique is the one that often is seen at summer camps and on YouTube videos. You loop string or heavy suture or even fishing line around the bend of the hook, apply downward pressure to the shank to disengage the barb, and then pull quickly in line with the shaft of the hook. When it works, it yanks it out almost instantly. That's why the YouTube videos are popular. One second there's a fishhook in the finger, and the next there isn't. The advantage is that this can sometimes just be performed without anesthesia and can even be done at home. The disadvantage is obvious if you work with children. This requires cooperation. Younger kids, anxious kids, a treble hook, something that's deeply embedded, like this isn't gonna work all that well, and it's, again, less reliable with bigger and deeply embedded hooks. The last technique is needle cover. This one gets less attention. It seems elegant, but in practice it's actually pretty hard to do, especially in smaller kid parts. You insert an 18-gauge needle alongside the entry tract until the bevel of that needle covers the barb, and then pull both out together The advantage is that you avoid creating a second puncture wound, and you can minimize tissue trauma. The disadvantage is it's really complex technically. Maintaining alignment of both the hook and needle can be tricky because they sort of like roll and move around. And if you want to do this one, it's probably easier for smaller and medium-sized hook rather than larger embedded or treble hooks. And as you might imagine in the literature, there's not really any randomized trials comparing these techniques. Most of what we know comes from prospective observational studies, case series, procedural experience, and expert review. Advance and cut seems to have the broadest success across scenarios. String yank does earn some points for field use and avoiding local numbing. Needle cover is hard to do, but if the parent is absolutely adamant that you don't create a second hole, then that's probably your best option. And as with any procedure, you should probably be facile in multiple techniques in case the first one doesn't work. You don't just want to stand there and flounder. Anyway, most fishhook removals in children can be done with local anesthesia alone. One percent Lido with or without epi is usually enough. Depending on the location, you may need to do a digital block or a field block instead of just injecting directly around the hook because local infiltration itself can distort the anatomy and actually make removal harder. So that's why I like blocking the digit or doing a little bit of a field block around it. If you have time, a topical anesthetic before local infiltration can be a nice gesture. LMX or EMLA can be really helpful, especially for really anxious kids or kids who are escalating before you even start setting up. They take about forty to sixty minutes. About forty-five minutes is probably ideal. So if you can get that put on in triage, that's actually a, a great technique. So if you know you're going to inject to numb to get the fishhook out, and you need a little bit of extra time to get child life or other personnel in the room, by all means, put a topical anesthetic there. It only absorbs into the outer two millimeters, but it'll help with the poke, not necessarily the burning that happens once the lidocaine is in the tissue. And now that we've talked about pain, I think it's also important to talk about anxiolysis. Most kids that have embedded fishhooks don't need full procedural sedation. If it's right next to the eye, like in the eyelid, then that might be beneficial, especially in a preschool-aged kid or younger. Plenty of them do need some anxiolysis. Um, intranasal or oral midazolam is probably, uh, the most popular option. It's got rapid onset in about twenty minutes, no IV, some amnesia. Recent pediatric data suggests that point four or point five milligrams per kilogram may perform better than lower doses, uh, for the intranasal. If you've got nitrous oxide, that's another nice option for cooperative kids. It provides anxiolysis and analgesia with rapid recovery and a very low rate of adverse respiratory events. Fishhook removal is actually one of those procedures where nitrous can feel disproportionately helpful because the procedure itself is often quick, and the hardest part is just reducing the fear and helping the kid hold still for about thirty to sixty seconds. I think ketamine still has a role. I alluded to when I might use that earlier. Occasionally, you walk into the room and then there's a deeply embedded treble hook, a really anxious child, a failed attempt prior to you being there. And ultimately, yes, IV procedural sedation with ketamine should be on the table, and it's as always an excellent option. And never, ever underestimate distraction. Hopefully, you work in a place where there are child life specialists because they are wonderful. They are magic. But you've got videos, you know, music, VR, parents. I mean, sometimes the difference between success and failure is a working iPad. And then finally, the question of antibiotics. So fishhook removal does not automatically equal a course of antibiotics. A prospective series of one hundred fishhook injuries found prophylactic antibiotics were unnecessary for uncomplicated soft tissue injuries that didn't involve the cartilage or tendon. So if you've got a contaminated wound, a delayed presentation, you know, it was already in an established infection, though I've never actually seen someone impale a fishhook into an area of cellulitis. There's tendon involvement, joint involvement, or, you know, gross water exposure. Well, then maybe consider antibiotics. Freshwater injuries do raise concern for organisms like Aeromonas. Saltwater injuries introduce concern for Vibrio species and occasionally Mycobacterium marinum enters the conversation or the tissue. Um, saltwater injuries are often treated with doxycycline plus a third-generation cephalosporin. You recognize the doxy decisions in younger children require some additional consideration. Freshwater injuries could push you towards broader Gram-negative coverage, but, but honestly, for most fishhook injuries, especially in healthy children, you're just dealing with skin flora. So once I get the hook out, I make sure there's no other retained foreign bodies, like little pieces of the hook or little pieces of the barb. I irrigate with saline or tap water, maybe a hundred mLs for a smaller hook, more for bigger hooks or grossly contaminated wounds. Make sure that there's full neurovascular function and normal range of motion. Antibiotic ointment, simple dressing, update their tetanus shot if it's not been within five years, and explain to the family that the good news is that this is really a forgiving injury most of the time. Once the hook is out, these generally heal really well. We don't need to suture them back up. We're not worried about long-term damage. Tell the parents to watch out for increasing redness, worsening pain, pus drainage, fever, or other systemic symptoms, trouble moving the area, especially if it was around a digit, you know, numbness or anything else that makes you concerned that infection has started instead of healing. Families will almost always ask jokingly when they can fish again. Honestly, usually pretty quickly. Just don't put the wound under water until it's healed, and don't stand directly behind whoever is casting. And now for some take-home points. Fishhook removal is a simple and straightforward procedure where technique really matters. You have to know what type of hook is embedded in the skin. Retrograde does work for superficial or barbless hooks, but most fishhooks that I've seen have barbs because they are designed to stay in the fish. Advance and cut is probably the most broadly successful technique. String yank works if you're a YouTuber. Needle cover is really, I think, only for those scenarios where the family does not want a second hole. It's really actually hard to do. Local anesthesia is enough for most kids, so injecting with lidocaine. If you have time, LMX or EMLA helps with the poke a little bit. Routine antibiotics are not usually necessary. And if there's ocular involvement or if it's in a joint, call an ophthalmologist or an orthopedist. Honestly, this is one of those procedures that's really satisfying once you get comfortable with it. I love doing it with our residents and trainees. Families come in expecting something dramatic, and by the time they leave, they're surprised by how straightforward it was. And I guarantee that this is a story that they will tell for years and years. And if you do a good job and make it a good experience and perhaps even a lighthearted one, they are going to remember that. And yeah, you'll be part of somebody's fishing story. So I hope you did enjoy this first episode on minor procedures. I'm gonna do additional ones like these along the way because, you know, I think that they don't get a lot of love when it comes to traditional education. If you've got any ideas for future procedures or topics, please send them my way. As the kids would say, like, rate, and review. If you leave a review on your favorite podcast site, that would really help other people discover the show. I podcast because I think it's a great way to teach, and I've been doing so since 2013. And yes, you can remove a fishhook. Don't let this straightforward procedure become the one that got away. For PEM Currents: The Pediatric Emergency Medicine Podcast, this has been Brad Sobolewski. See you next time.
Some heavy stuff coming coming your way! Andrew's incredible and lovely mother passed away in April, and he's very thankful that he recorded this episode with her as a guest cohost in February. They set up in her small Colorado town and talked to some wild strangers who walked by. Guests include a young mother raising her daughter in the remote mountains, an odd woman who seems to have completely lost her mind, and a heartbroken emotional guy who gets really mad at Andrew. Recorded on 2/10/26 on Grand Ave in Paonia, Colorado. Thank you for listening to this very special episode.Go to https://Quince.com/podoutside for free shipping and 365-day returns!Visit https://Betterhelp.com/outside today to get 10% off your first month!Sign up for a $1 per month trial period at https://shopify.com/outside !Check out Kiersten Gerard's new EP called "Saltwater", now streaming everywhere!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
#931B Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/931B In this episode of Hunting with a Fly, Rick Kustich sits down with Vince Tobia of Cattaraugus Creek Outfitters to talk about one of the most overlooked predators in saltwater fly fishing—the barracuda. While many anglers head to the flats focused solely on bonefish, Vince explains why barracuda deserve a spot on every fly angler's radar. From sight-fishing tactics and presentation angles to gear setup and landing fish safely, Vince shares the lessons he's learned from years of chasing these aggressive apex predators across the Bahamas and beyond. #931B Show Notes: https://wetflyswing.com/931B
Send us Fan MailOn this week's Tuesday edition of Talking Pools, Andrea delivers a rapid-fire collection of pool industry myths, misconceptions, pet peeves, and hard-earned observations from the field. What started as an episode about common pool myths quickly evolved into a full-blown list of industry hot takes, terminology frustrations, safety reminders, and the kinds of misconceptions that refuse to die. Before diving into the chaos, Andrea discusses the brutal summer heat, challenges in the field, a commercial pool battling bug issues caused by water level problems, and announces her new merchandise store featuring designs such as "Mind Your Own Pool Business" and "I'm Your Pool Guy's Pool Guy." She also shares plans for subscriber-exclusive content and future Patreon support. The episode includes industry news from a Kentucky waterpark that was forced to drain and refill a lazy river following an equipment-related hazardous materials incident. Andrea also highlights an extensive list of upcoming pool, spa, aquatics, water safety, and trade events scheduled throughout late 2026 and early 2027. The main discussion centers on a collection of misconceptions that continue to frustrate pool professionals: Why calling every chlorine product "shock" can create dangerous chemical handling situations. The difference between actual industry standards and practices simply passed down from technician to technician. What professionals really mean when they say they "keep" chemistry at a certain level. Why understanding active ingredients matters more than trusting marketing labels. The truth about "chlorine lock" and why chlorine isn't actually locked. When cyanuric acid levels become problematic and when they don't. Common misunderstandings surrounding Total Dissolved Solids (TDS). Why phosphates are not always the emergency many people make them out to be. The reality that algae outbreaks are not always the fault of the service professional. Misconceptions surrounding Virginia Graeme Baker (VGB) compliance and pool safety. Why safety should never be optional in the pool industry. Organisms that chlorine struggles to eliminate, including Cryptosporidium and Baylisascaris. Why urine in pools is not as harmless as some people believe. Limitations of salt system boost and super-chlorination modes. A candid discussion on natural swimming pools and the health concerns they raise. Along the way, Andrea delivers plenty of humor, blunt opinions, practical field experience, and a reminder that many pool problems are far more nuanced than social media comments often suggest. Whether you're a service technician, pool operator, builder, or simply someone who enjoys industry debates, this episode offers a refreshing look at some of the most misunderstood topics in modern pool care. Topics Covered Pool chemistry myths Shock vs chlorine terminology Cyanuric acid misconceptions Chlorine lock explained Phosphates and algae control TDS and water replacement VGB compliance and safety Saltwater pool operation Commercial pool regulations Natural pool debate Industry standards vs tradition Waterborne illness prevention Pool service field experiences SponsorsThe 2026 Talking Pools Podcast Pool Industry Mentor Award is proudly supported by:BlueRay XLLaMotte CompanyRevved Up ApparelAqua Comfort Water GroupThese companies continue to support mentorship, education, and professional development throughout the pool and aquatics industry. #TalkingPools #PoolService #PoolChemistry #SwimmingPools #PoolProfessional #PoolIndustry #WaterSafety #CPOTraining #PoolMaintenance #AquaticsProfessionals Support the showThank you so much for listening! You can find us on social media:FacebookInstagramTik TokEmail us: talkingpools@gmail.com
If you know Nick Taylor you probably won't be surprised that this podcast is over 4 hours long, and if you dont know Nick, well you're in for a treat. Nick Taylor is one of the best wakeskaters to ever do it, with countless video parts, contest wins, and photos, Nick has done just about all you can do in wakeskating. With Nick being a detail oriented story teller, he spares no tale when it comes to his long career in the industry. Landing the first 360 flip, wakeskating.com, Nike, Byerly, Silver Dragon, Integrity, Fins vs. Finless, turning down sponsors, making fun of wakeboarding, Suwanee, perfectionism, and learning to fly helicopters. Hear all that and MUCH more in episode 115 of the Grab Matters Podcast with Nick Taylor!Follow Nick: https://www.instagram.com/nicktaylor941/Thank you to this shows sponsors! Liquid Force: https://www.liquidforce.com/ Slingshot: https://slingshotsports.com/Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/GrabMattersPodcastChapters:00:00 - 3:00 Intro3:10 Favorite Grab9:00 Early days on AMI14:00 Fresh vs. Saltwater 22:00 The kickflip/3 shuv26:00 wakeskating.com39:00 360 flip44:45 Byerly47:20 Guest Question: TJ Giesey52:00 Integrity/Fins 1:10:00 Guest Question: Silas Thurman1:24:00 Contracts/saving money1:30:20 LF'n Hot Seat1:49:00 Integrity to Remote2:08:00 CWC2:16:00 Silver dragon2:26:30 Slings Hot Takes2:51:30 Making fun of wakeboarding 2:56:00 Suwannee 3:19:00 Winching and perfectionism3:30:00 Nike trip shenanigans 3:37:00 Transitioning out of riding3:48:00 Currently/Setup4:05:00 Sea DooLinks:ISTUDIOMO: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=14ELRGFCiZo&t=184sSilver Dragon: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WNg7GgyqrO0Shoot us a text!Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/GrabMattersPodcastWebsite: https://www.grabmatters.com/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@grabmatters/videosInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/grabmatters/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@grabmatterspodcastFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/grabmatters
WBZ NewsRadio’s James Roja reports.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
we are on the up and up! spring is here summer weather is here for today atleast and the fish are biting! hugh recants the catch of memorial day weekend, fishing league is back on, charcuterie talks.and the normal chats. be a friend tell a friend!
Jason & Trish continue their adventures at The Calgary Expo, venturing down artist's alley to talk to up and coming talents about their past, present, and future projects. Plus SONIA travels past Mars for some target practice. 00:02:49 Cam Hayden talks about The Friends We Made Along the Way and Death Metal Duck! 00:10:35 Nickolej Villager tells stories through song with Radio Days. 00:16:13 Chase Kantor learns how to draw during Inktober and creating his series Jack of Spades. 00:21:44 Richard Fairgray is a Dick (short for Richard). 00:29:18 More from Chase Kantor and murder on the International Space Station. 00:31:15 Becka Kinzie talks about Wormhole Club Tragedy. 00:35:37 Anthony Ruttgaizer creates the Heroes of Homeroom C, remembers his favourite Strip Club Quotes, and Stone Cold Steve Austin! 00:40:48 Adrien Koleric has a comic book soundtrack, plus catches us up on Tod the Bond, The Sitter, and Spoon! 00:48:04 Jonathan Ball talks about Stranger Fiction, his upcoming Image book The Eye Collector, and his horror movie Princess and the Dragon. 00:56:00 Emilia Strilchuk just wants you to Be Yourself! Oh, Not Like That... 01:00:17 Alex Finbow of Renegade Arts has an exciting 2026 line up including Knight Terror, Shame, Fox Burrow and more from Hell Inc. and Modern Asian Family. 01:08:20 Stephano Jun talks about his second volume of his hit, award winning series Modern Asian Family! 01:12:11 Kieth Grachow talk Reponaut, Saltwater, and creating comics with his mom. 01:21:30 Trevor Fernandes-Lenkiewicz keeps things independent with Minutes to Midnight, Rise, and Area 51: The Helix Project at Pocket Watch Press. Support independent podcasts like ours by telling your friends and family how to find us at places like Apple Podcasts, iTunes, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, PlayerFM, Tune In Radio, PodChaser, Amazon Music, Audible, Libsyn, iHeartRadio and all the best podcast providers. Spread the love! Like, share and subscribe! You can also help out the show with a positive review and a 5-star rating over on iTunes / Apple Podcasts. We want to hear from you and your opinions will help shape the future of the show. Your ratings and reviews also help others find the show. Their "earballs" will thank you. https://invasionoftheremake.wixsite.com/podcast Follow us on BlueSky: @invasionremake.bsky.social Follow us on X/Twitter: @InvasionRemake Like and share us on Facebook, Instagram & Tik-Tok: Invasion of the Remake Email us your questions, suggestions, corrections, challenges and comments: invasionoftheremake@gmail.com Buy a cool t-shirt, hoodies, hats, and other Invasion of the Remake swag at our merchandise store!
Darkest Mysteries Online - The Strange and Unusual Podcast 2023
Saltwater Ledgers and Blood DebtsBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/dark-mysteries-the-strange-and-unusual-podcast-2026--5684156/support.Darkest Mysteries Online
In this second part with global nomad angler Paul Charbonnea, we get into chasing predators in some of the most remote locations on earth. As Paul says, he lives and works to fish, and in this segment, he takes us with him into boats in South America and Africa as he chases some of the most exotic giants on the planet. Points of discussion include:Saltwater epiphany The Amazon Madagascar
O le fa'alapotopotoga le Saltwater Alliance na fa'avae e ni tama'ita'i Pasefika ma tagata muamua i Ausetalia e tuleia ai le malamalama i a'afiaga o tagata i fesuia'iga o le tau ma fesoasoani ai i le fa'alauiloaina o tū ma aganu'u.
Darkest Mysteries Online - The Strange and Unusual Podcast 2023
Saltwater Ledgers and Blood DebtsBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/darkest-mysteries-online-the-strange-and-unusual-podcast-2026--5684156/support.Darkest Mysteries Online
The Northern Territory is continuing to grieve the short life of a five-year-old girl today with crowds in Alice Springs to pay tribute by donning her favourite colour.
Send us Fan MailOn today's episode, Luis Delgado is joined by John on Kayak Fishing Weekly to talk about his journey to master the Florida Panhandle. We dive into his specific strategies for navigating the Gulf's tidal shifts, finding hidden grass flats, and why the kayak is the ultimate tool for conquering these saltwater giants.
The Tank Talk Podcast on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tank_talk_podcast?utm_source=ig_web_button_share_sheet&igsh=ZDNlZDc0MzIxNw== The Tank Talk Podcast on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@tanktalkpodcast?is_from_webapp=1&sender_device=pc The Tank Talk Facebook group is a place to share your aquariums, ask questions or just hang out with cool people: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1674032529542132/ Johns website with live plants, live snails fish food, chemicals and all the equipment you need for your aquarium. Plus fun KGTropicals merch: https://keepfishkeeping.com Jasons website where you can order Primetime Aquatics merch or reserve your fish to be picked up at local swaps in the Chicago area: https://www.primetimeaquatics.com aquariumhobby #fishkeeping #fishtank #aquarium #petfish
Your pool equipment is probably not “broken” the setup is. We dig into the kind of questions that hit my inbox all the time and give the field-tested fixes that actually save you hours: why a Phoenix 4X or Hayward Aquanaut suction side cleaner keeps going sideways, what that says about balance and hose length, and the one adjustment that usually stops the problem immediately.Then we get into variable speed pump quality-of-life upgrades. If your VS pump screams at full RPM every morning during priming, you can often lower the priming speed and shorten the priming duration without losing reliability. I walk through the logic behind choosing a quieter priming RPM, why five minutes at max speed is often overkill, and how this simple change can cut noise and wasted energy for both homeowners and pool service pros.We also talk saltwater chlorine generator choices beyond the usual big names. If you're replacing an older AquaRite salt system and keep hearing “never heard of that brand,” I share why Circuit Pool salt systems are worth a serious look, how retrofit options can make the swap easier, and why ORP and pH automation with acid feeding can push your pool closer to truly hands-off water care. We wrap with suction plumbing tips around main drains, anti-vortex drain hangups, Polaris Atlas and Polaris Max cleaner fit, and vacuum bag upgrades for Bottom Feeder, Shrimp, and Riptide setups.•Adding one or two hose sections to stop Phoenix 4X and Aquanaut cleaners from tipping sideways•Why the four-wheel handle design can make a cleaner feel top heavy•Changing variable speed pump priming speed and priming time to reduce noise and wasted energy•Circuit Pool salt system pros, warranty value, and AquaRite retrofit compatibility•Why diverting suction to the skimmer helps suction side cleaner performance•Which cleaners get stuck on anti-vortex main drains and why Polaris Atlas and Max tend to avoid it•Choosing longer-lasting vacuum bags, smarter micron sizes, and cartridge filtration alternatives•Bottom Feeder or Shrimp portability vs Riptide cartSend us Fan MailSupport the Pool Guy Podcast Show Sponsors! HASA https://bit.ly/HASAThe Bottom Feeder. Save $100 with Code: DVB100https://store.thebottomfeeder.com/Try Skimmer FREE for 30 days:https://getskimmer.com/poolguy Get UPA Liability Insurance $64 a month! https://forms.gle/F9YoTWNQ8WnvT4QBAPool Guy Coaching: https://bit.ly/40wFE6y
In this episode of Better, host Mark Brand sits down with Nova Scotian diver and content creator Sean “Saltwater Sean” McMullen for a deeply honest conversation about curiosity, healing, and finding purpose beneath the waves. Sean shares how boredom during COVID, a wetsuit from Marketplace, and a couple of vintage soda bottles led to a viral photo, national media attention, and the birth of the Saltwater Sean platform. Along the way, he opens up about sobriety, divorce, tinnitus and hearing loss, childhood bullying, and how diving, magnet fishing, and cleaning up local waterways became a way to reconnect with his inner child, his parents, his kids, and his community. This is a story about environmental action, mental health, and the power of simply doing your own “weird thing” so others feel brave enough to do theirs.
Nick Cheskey is the host of Saltwater Underground, now in its sixth season on ESPN2, Discovery Channel, Sportsman's Channel, and Waypoint TV. He's one of the most versatile anglers in the country — a guy who grew up fishing, surfing, and ice skating on frozen Jersey swamps, and who pioneered surf shark fishing on the Northeast coast before anyone else was even trying. In this conversation, Nick and I catch up after three years and cover a lot of ground — from saltwater rivers freezing over in central Jersey to thresher sharks hunting with their tails to prehistoric megalodon teeth in freshwater streams. This one goes everywhere, and I loved every minute of it. Some of the moments I found most meaningful in this conversation: - Nick describing the first night he ever tried surf shark fishing in 1998 — paddling bunker bait out on a surfboard in the dark, alone, and having a thresher tail come whipping out of the water right next to him - How thresher sharks actually hunt — corralling bait with that massive tail and using it like a weapon, which is unlike anything else in the ocean - The species showing up in Jersey waters that have no business being there — tarpon off Cape Cod, cobia inshore, pompano in the surf, and Spanish mackerel everywhere - Nick's obsession with fossil hunting in New Jersey freshwater streams and finding a Hell Pig tooth that nobody had ever pulled out of Jersey before — 15 to 30 million years old - A real conversation about the future of fishing media, social media's effect on spot burning and content quality, and why both of us think the pendulum is starting to swing back toward expertise 00:00 Introduction 01:30 Three Years Since the Last Episode — What Nick's Been Up To 04:00 Ice Fishing Saltwater Rivers in Central Jersey 08:30 Growing Up Ice Fishing and Hockey in Frozen Jersey Swamps 13:00 Saltwater Underground Season 6 — ESPN2, Discovery, Waypoint TV 17:00 Filming Five Episodes in the Florida Keys 21:30 Sheepshead, Redfish, and Species Recolonizing the Northeast 27:00 Tarpon in New Jersey — Cape Cod Catches and the State Record 31:00 Surf Shark Fishing: How Nick Pioneered It in 1998 38:00 Thresher Sharks — How They Hunt and Why That Tail Is Deadly 44:00 The Great White Situation Up and Down the Coast 50:00 Fossil Hunting in Jersey Freshwater Streams 58:00 Finding a Hell Pig Tooth — 15 to 30 Million Years Old 1:04:00 Blood Worms, Sand Worms, and $35 a Dozen 1:09:00 The Saltwater Sportsman Seminar Series with George Poveromo 1:13:00 Social Media, In-Person Events, and the Future of Fishing Media
* Why have saltwater intrusions in the Mississippi River been getting worse? * We see stories and headlines talk about private equity…but what actually IS private equity? How do those companies work? What role do they play in bankruptcies?
Why have saltwater intrusions in the Mississippi River been getting worse? We talk to Tulane researchers Ahmad Khalifa, Research Scientist in the Dept. of River-Coastal Science & Engineering at Tulane's School of Science & Engineering, and Ehab Meselhe, Department Chair of River-Coastal Science and Engineering at Tulane's School of Science and Engineering, about what their new study has found.
* The US is striking Kharg Island. What will the impact on oil and gas be? * Housing affordability, insurance are biggest constraints on owning a home * Saltwater intrusions have been getting worse. Here's why * How can we make our roads safer for cyclists and drivers? * Is President Trump's approach to the Iran war working?
“Salt pool, no chlorine” might be the most expensive misunderstanding in pool care. We walk through what a saltwater chlorine generator actually does, why it is literally making chlorine, and how that simple truth changes the way you test, dose, and explain water balance to customers. If you're a pool service professional or a hands-on pool owner, you'll leave with clearer language, better troubleshooting steps, and fewer surprises on Monday morning.We also get into the parts that sales sheets skip: salt splash-out that dries on decks and hardware, the corrosion that shows up when salt is over-added, and why bonding and grounding matter more once your pool becomes an ionic solution full of metals. Then we tackle the “flakes” problem and the myths that cling to it. We explain why flakes are usually calcium carbonate, how a hot cell after flow stops can trigger scale, and how a simple cool-down period plus a slightly negative LSI can reduce buildup. • saltwater systems generating chlorine through electrolysis, same sanitizer as liquid or dry chlorine• cell lifespan tied to total run hours, lowering output and run time when demand allows• manufacturer salt targets around 3,000 to 3,500 ppm and why over-salting creates new problems• salt splash-out leaving concentrated salt on decks and features, rinsing to prevent crust and damage• galvanic corrosion risks, black deposits near metals, bonding and grounding pool equipment• heater corrosion concerns and when a sacrificial zinc anode can help• dealing with a failed generator, draining and refilling to reduce salt and high TDS, removing the cell housing• verifying salt with an independent salt meter, not trusting onboard readings or a TDS meter alone• preventing flakes with a cool-down period before flow stops and managing LSI slightly negative• phosphate fears put in perspective, flakes usually calcium carbonate not calcium phosphate• fixed-output chlorine production, recovery time after bather load spikes, supplementing with liquid chlorine• “superchlorinate” misconceSend us Fan MailSupport the Pool Guy Podcast Show Sponsors! HASA https://bit.ly/HASAThe Bottom Feeder. Save $100 with Code: DVB100https://store.thebottomfeeder.com/Try Skimmer FREE for 30 days:https://getskimmer.com/poolguy Get UPA Liability Insurance $64 a month! https://forms.gle/F9YoTWNQ8WnvT4QBAPool Guy Coaching: https://bit.ly/40wFE6y
Listen in on our lively chat with Anna Galvez, Assistant Director of Education at the Organic Seed Alliance, and Katie Jagger, a Field Research Assistant who also co-manages Saltwater Seeds. Anna supports organic farmers in building practical data skills for organic seed production, helping strengthen knowledge and decision-making in the field. Katie shares about her research work at OSA and how it connects to running a small seed company, while also reflecting on her experience as a beginning farmer balancing learning, research, and seed stewardship. Together, they discuss the intersection of farmer education, research, and the next generation of organic seed growers.This episode of the Farm Walks podcast was funded by the United States Department of Agriculture Transition to Organic Partnership ProgramThe Farm Walks Podcast is collaboratively organized by Tilth Alliance and WSU Food Systems. Visit farmwalks.org to learn more.
Social impact entrepreneur Mark Brand and Producer Madison Irvine unpack their conversation with ocean cleanup creator Sean “Saltwater Sean” McMullen. From diving Nova Scotia’s rivers, lakes, and coastline for trash to becoming an unlikely online creator, Sean’s story opens up a bigger conversation about authenticity, community, local arts, and playing the long game with your craft. This Season 3 finale also celebrates Nova Scotian identity, neighborhood kindness in Halifax, and the importance of supporting local art, podcasts, and emerging storytellers.
In Episode 290 of Outside The Round, host Matt Burrill sits down with Florida native Madden Metcalf to talk about his rapid rise from working on crab boats and playing waterfront restaurants to becoming one of the most exciting new voices coming out of the South. Madden shares how growing up on the “Forgotten Coast” shaped his work ethic, sound, and storytelling, and how those real-life experiences now fuel songs like “I Don't Want to Cry Anymore” and “My Hometown.” The conversation dives into his journey to Nashville, getting discovered by Freddie Wexler, and the fast-moving momentum that led to a deal with MCA. Madden also breaks down the inspiration behind his debut EP Saltwater Southern, a project that blends country, rock, and coastal influences into a sound that's uniquely his. From grinding in seafood restaurants to chasing dreams on Broadway and beyond, this episode captures an artist stepping into his moment with authenticity, grit, and a whole lot of Florida pride! Follow on Social Media: Madden Metcalf: @maddenmetcalf Matt Burrill: @raisedrowdymatt Outside The Round: @outsidetheround Raised Rowdy: @raisedrowdy Chapters (00:00:00) - Outside The Round(00:00:22) - Meet Maddie Metcalf(00:01:42) - Florida songwriter talks about growing up on the coast(00:05:27) - Florida singer-songwriter on his journey to country music(00:09:35) - Florida Songwriter on Bringing Out His Hometown(00:14:15) - How to book a show in Florida(00:17:54) - What's Your Favorite Greek Food?(00:19:46) - Favorite first trip to Nashville was...(00:23:52) - Jason Aldean on His First Puerto Rico Tour(00:26:25) - Freddie Smith on Saltwater Southern(00:30:43) - Madden Metcalf on His New Album Saltwater Southern(00:31:34) - Freddie One on Working With Young Loretta(00:35:52) - Tennesse on Songwriters(00:39:16) - Turkey Season Opens Soon(00:41:59) - Jimmy Kimmel on Working On The Crab Boat(00:43:40) - Trey Collins on Touring the Southeast(00:47:28) - Corey Smith(00:52:06) - Dalton Smith on REVIEW
The newest episode of Finding Demo Surf Fishing has dropped with Webb Skelton, founder of Project Saltwater, for one of the most powerful conversations on the show.After serving in the Army and facing a difficult transition back to civilian life, Webb found himself in a downward spiral that ultimately led to a life-changing stroke. What followed was a second chance, and a new purpose. Through fishing, community, and time on the water, Webb began rebuilding his life. That journey led to the creation of Project Saltwater, a growing mission focused on helping veterans, first responders, and Gold Star families find healing through surf fishing and the outdoors. In this episode, Webb shares his story, the impact of the fishing community on his recovery, and his vision for creating something bigger than himself, an organization built to bring people together, fill the gaps left behind after service, and offer a different kind of therapy through saltwater. This one goes deeper than fishing.If you know someone who could benefit from what Webb is building or someone who can help support the mission, this is an episode worth sharing.Audio: https://share.transistor.fm/s/3fc3eaeaSocial to follow:FB: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61574453432828This Episode Is Sponsored By: Kids Can Fish Foundation: Kids Can Fish is a state and federally-recognized 501(c)(3) charitable foundation. Their mission is to teach kids fishing fundamentals and, most importantly, HAVE FUN!! Bait Check: Ninja Tackle: Ninja Dagger, 7' Travel Rod, Bummy Stick, Akios reels, rigs, bait, and firearm accessories (optics, Glock parts, attachments, and more) Bait Check: DS Custom Tackle: Tackle Supply for all anglers. Floats, rigs, jigs, bait, and moreTheme Song Dirty Rock by TwisteriumMentions:US ArmyMayo ClinicYouTubeAce On The LineNE Florida Inshore Penn FierceFishbitesOver The Bar RodKelly MeddersBryan RoweCoastline CreationsHero's On The WaterReel Healing OutdoorsBrokenReel23Surf Fishing Solutions#findingdemosurffishing #SurfFishing #FishingPodcast #AnglingPodcast #SaltwaterFishing #BeachFishing #Surfcasting #PodcastRecommendations #OutdoorPodcast #FishingCommunity #FishingTips #PodcastLife #projectsaltwater #USArmy #MayoClinic #AceOnTheLine #NEFloridaInshoreSlayers #PennFierce#Fishbites #OverTheBarRod #KellyMedders #BryanRowe #CoastlineCreations #HerosOnTheWater #ReelHealingOutdoors #BrokenReel23 #SurfFishingSolutions
AmericanReef - Saltwater and Coral Reef Aquarium Advanced Aquarists Edition
On this episode of AmericanReef we have a 2 year update on the Ammonia dosing experiment on the Paletta SPS Reef tank. Please send all questions to americanreef@me.com
Solomon's experiment in Ecclesiastes 2 explores whether meaning can be found in life lived “under the sun,” apart from God. He pursues every human avenue of fulfillment: pleasure, wine, massive projects, wealth, sexual relationships, reputation, and legacy. With immense resources he essentially tries to build a secular Eden where nothing is off limits. Yet each pursuit ends the same way. Pleasure fades, achievements lose their shine, possessions multiply without satisfaction, and death ultimately levels every person. The verdict of the experiment is stark: life without God becomes empty and exhausting, a constant chase for something that never delivers lasting meaning. The deeper issue is misplacing meaning in things that cannot carry its weight. When people look to pleasure, relationships, status, or circumstances to provide identity and purpose, disappointment and resentment follow. Solomon's insight exposes a pattern that still shapes modern culture, where endless consumption and stimulation attempt to numb deeper questions of purpose. The answer is not rejecting enjoyment but rediscovering a joyful God who gives life as a gift, cultivating gratitude, and learning to receive daily blessings from Him rather than striving endlessly for the next thing. True satisfaction comes not from chasing more, but from living in relationship with the God who gives meaning to everything.
Steve Scepaniak just got back from a trip to the ocean and talks saltwater fishing in the gulf, plus the ice bite on Mille Lacs and what he expects when the ice melts.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
George Poveromo — host of "George Poveromo's World of Saltwater Fishing" (26 seasons), Saltwater Sportsman columnist since 1983, and founder of the longest-running fishing seminar series in the country (39 years) — joins Tom for a conversation about building a career in the fishing industry from the ground up. George shares the story of how buying a Mako instead of an Aqua Sport changed the trajectory of his entire life, the three-piece suit that landed him the Saltwater Sportsman gig, Mark Sosin's career advice that still holds up 40 years later, getting speared in the rear end by a sailfish, the shark population crisis in South Florida, and why AI-powered fishing forecasts are already here. ⏱️ TIMESTAMPS 0:00 - Introduction 1:30 - George's First Industry Job: The Miami Billfish Tournament 3:30 - First Story Sold to Outdoor Life for $300 4:10 - Joining Saltwater Sportsman in 1983 5:00 - Mark Sosin as Mentor 6:50 - The Embarrassing Boat Show Seminars That Started It All 7:55 - Launching George Poveromo's World of Saltwater Fishing (Year 26) 8:30 - The One Mako Trip That Changed Everything 10:55 - Pivotal Career Moments 12:30 - The Three-Piece Suit Interview at Saltwater Sportsman 15:40 - Mark Sosin's Advice: Never Take a Staff Position 17:00 - Building the Seminar Series Business Model 19:30 - How Technology Changed Seminar Attendance 22:00 - Peak Seminar Years and Tying Alice Cooper 24:00 - Stage Fright vs. Food Court Seminars 28:30 - COVID Pivot: Televised Seminar Series Hitting 1M+ Viewers 31:00 - 2026 Plans: TV This Year, 40th Anniversary Tour Next Year 33:45 - Studio vs. On-the-Water Production 35:00 - Finding Cameramen Who Don't Get Seasick 36:30 - The Sailfish That Speared George in the Rear 42:30 - Tom's Mutton Snapper Bacteria Scare 48:30 - FADs, Technology, and Modern Offshore Fishing 51:15 - Electronics Evolution: From LORAN to Bathymetric Charts 52:30 - Generational Shifts in Fish Populations 56:50 - The Shark Population Crisis in South Florida 1:04:00 - Conservation, Access, and the SHARK Act 1:08:00 - AI in Fishing: Ross Fish and Ocean Forecasting with Simrad 1:11:00 - Can AI Replace Fishing TV Hosts? ---
Good Vibe Tribe: Salt Water Initiative full 288 Fri, 27 Feb 2026 13:42:45 +0000 jFQu6oQn91gKMDXDBvDk1y62dqDOHzZH latest,wbmx,society & culture Karson & Kennedy latest,wbmx,society & culture Good Vibe Tribe: Salt Water Initiative Karson & Kennedy are honest and open about the most intimate details of their personal lives. The show is fast paced and will have you laughing until it hurts one minute and then wiping tears away from your eyes the next. Some of K&K’s most popular features are Can’t Beat Kennedy, What Did Barrett Say, and The Dirty on the 30! 2024 © 2021 Audacy, Inc. Society & Culture False https://player.amperwavepodcasting.com?feed-link=https
AmericanReef - Saltwater and Coral Reef Aquarium Advanced Aquarists Edition
On this episode of AmericanReef, Mike Paletta will discuss some of the trials and tribulations that have occurred over the past year on the sunlit, soft coral tank. As always, send all questions to americanreef@me.com
Here at Salt Strong, we test, celebrate, and fish with STRONG knots. However, some of the most strategic anglers purposely have a "weaker" knot in this one area to catch more fish. Listen in and find out why.
Don't make these costly tackle mistakes (like we did)! Here are 3 big mistakes we continue to see time and time again. Tight lines and enjoy.
Here's a little Tuesday morning inspiration for our fisheries advocates. Now grab that shovel and start digging, we will need you all next week.
Ehhh kia ora e te homies! Here's what you missed on the show today: Six60 in the building this morning! Give us a suggestion for our team building What are you silently judging people for?’ Were you a nose blowing family? We talk to a bush from the super bowl…or do we Why are you single this valentines The school repeaters in to talk about their new show Shot for listening, From Eds AKA Eric AKA Edith AKA Eteni
This week the guys and gals of CFR got together to discuss several topics. With the recent ICAST in Orlando, a number of the crew made their way to Orlando and got up close and personal with all the new products that will be introduced in the near future. We are going to hear about some of the best products and all the fun that surrounds this annual event. We also are going to discuss a recent experience that some of the MIFC crew had a direct hand in helping to difuse and possibly saving a young mans life. We do not kid around about suicide and the reality is, that many people have things they are dealing with that they hide from friends and family. In this case a young man had taken a very strong edible drug that had a very diverse effect on him and his mind. We are happy that all were safe and we cannot thank the USCG and the Murrells Inlet Fire and Resue enough for all of their efforts to make sure this incident ended without any injuries. We hope you are enjoying hearing our chaos as much as we are enjoyinmg recording and we hope that you will come join us for a future episode on Tuesdays at 5:30 at MIFC. Tight Lines!!!!Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/trilogy-outdoors--5441492/support.
This weeks show we discussed many topics including the great opportunites that are available to fishermen along the Grand Strand right now. We also discussed some fo the upcoming events along the Grand Strand as well as fundraisers that are coming over the next month. Don't forget to get signed up for The Grand Strand Fishing Rodeo over on our website or at any of our weigh stations located along the area. Come join Kenny, The Bassmaster, and Capt E for this weeks show!Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/trilogy-outdoors--5441492/support.
The Mid-January Saltwater Breakdown! Join the team as they discuss the cold water fishing of Mid-January. Let's discuss! Do you have a question about fishing in your area? Email rick@floridasportsman.com and we'll answer your questions on the air. Outline of Episode 327 [1:37] Tropics Report [3:25] Northeast Report [11:43] East Central Report [21:10] South East Report [21:10] South Report [23:50] Keys Report [29:28] 10,000 Islands Report [37:58] Southwest Report [42:39] West Central Report [48:27] Big Bend Report [48:27] Northwest Report [1:01:58] Panhandle Report [1:05:27] Florida Wrap-Up A BIG thanks to each of our sponsors, without whom we would not be able to bring you these reports each week Yamaha Outboards • Shimano Fishing • Tournament Master Chum • D.O.A. Lures • Fishing Nosara / Nosara Paradise Rentals • Young Boats
What do some of the greatest outliers in business history have in common? For the past year, I've been sharing the stories of history's greatest outliers like James Dyson, Estée Lauder, Sol Price, Henry Singleton, Les Schwab, Rose Blumkin, Jim Clayton, and Andrew Mellon. These are names that deserve to be studied, but rarely are. This episode explores the mindsets, systems and patterns history's most notable outliers used to turn adversity into long-term advantage. ----- Approximate Timestamps: (00:00) - Introduction (01:51) - Part 1: A Taste for Saltwater (09:20) - Part 2: Do it now (17:40) Ad Break (19:37) - Part 3: Systems to Scale (30:51) - Part 4: Understand What Really Matters ----- Upgrade: Get a hand edited transcripts and ad free experiences along with my thoughts and reflections at the end of every conversation. Learn more @ fs.blog/membership ------ Newsletter: The Brain Food newsletter delivers actionable insights and thoughtful ideas every Sunday. It takes 5 minutes to read, and it's completely free. Learn more and sign up at fs.blog/newsletter ------ Follow Shane Parrish:X: https://x.com/shaneparrish Insta: https://www.instagram.com/farnamstreet/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/shane-parrish-050a2183/ ------ Thank you to the sponsors for this episode: .tech domains: Nothing says tech like being on .tech https://get.tech/ reMarkable: Get your paper tablet at https://www.reMarkable.com today ----- This episode is for informational purposes only. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
To hear a Common Loon in the wild during summer, you'll need to find a northern, freshwater lake where a pair is nesting. But to find that same Common Loon in winter, you'll likely need to look on a saltwater bay. This shift from fresh to salt water would kill most animals. But loons — along with many ducks and other water birds — have evolved to make that move. It's possible that breeding adults nest on fresh water in order to save their energy for raising chicks.More info and transcript at BirdNote.org.Want more BirdNote? Subscribe to our weekly newsletter. Sign up for BirdNote+ to get ad-free listening and other perks. BirdNote is a nonprofit. Your tax-deductible gift makes these shows possible. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.