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In this Teaching Moments episode, Sangha member Arati and Satyam discuss their experiences of finding refuge in the heart, our meditation practice, and the sangha.Arati: Talking about my practice is not something I'm very familiar with…I feel like I am still trying to learn, understand, and feel for what it means to have a spiritual practice. The talks that the sangha members gave at the intensive really resonated and inspired me to try and open up as I could relate to a lot of what they talked about and how they used their practice during rough times.The last couple of years have been very turbulent for me and I can't say I'm totally on the other side so a lot of my experience is still current. A 10 year marriage ended and with it took a lot of people I considered family, I lost my house and most of my belongings, I left a job that I worked really hard to get to where I was and with all that change…so much else was shaken up and lost. It felt like my entire world and what I relied on for stability, security, safety, and comfort was all pulled out from underneath me in a blink of an eye. It felt so quick that I didn't know who I was anymore. When people would ask me how I felt..it felt like I was jello, in the in-between…it was so scary and uncomfortable. Early on when these changes started happening, I went to Shoshoni for a weekend training with Satyam and Abhaya and when I returned to the east coast, I signed up for an online yoga teacher training with them. During that training, everything was falling apart and it was so hard for me to show up for those classes let alone meditate on my own each day. But ever since I connected to this practice, it's been there for me when I didn't know what else to do.I had always dreamed of going to India and what better of a time than when you've lost everything? And because I have this practice and have been warned over and over throughout the years…I knew I wasn't going to find anything out there to solve my problems or the key to my happiness but staying or going was equally tough. So I left my job and went on a big adventure with my new partner. I was traveling the world and in a newish relationship and although I'm so grateful for both of these experiences, after having my life dismantled, it definitely wasn't a vacation.I won't go too much into my traveling and it did strengthen my gratitude for these teachings and for Babaji but I also went through a lot more discomfort on so many different levels. Because of the state I was in internally, the chaos, uncertainty, and unfamiliarity all around me was so challenging physically, emotionally, and mentally. I kept making a (small) effort to do my practice but I have been exhausted by life and my mind felt like it was torturing me when I would sit to meditate. Still feeling pretty lost, I reluctantly reached out to Abhaya and asked about spending some time at Konalani.On the Big Island there is a place called the city of refuge where, in ancient Hawaiian times, if you committed a crime and you made it to this point, you would be absolved of your punishment, which was typically death. That sounds pretty extreme and I wasn't running from a crime but even though I knew it wasn't going to be easy, getting myself to the ashram felt like making it to my own place of refuge.I was right, it hasn't been easy. Being at the ashram is not an escape from any of your problems and most days, they are highlighted for me. But I've been able to get some clarity and reconnect to my practice in a big way. I have a reason to wake up each morning and am committed to doing my practice each day no matter what. I've got a place to sleep, food to eat, work to do each day and the support of the sangha. When I have to face my stuff - feeling lost, confused, disoriented, sad, overwhelmed - I can be in the flow of the ashram and I can remember that I am here to do this work.My idea of a refuge has really deepened during my time here. I asked Babaji how I should work while I am here and he said to stay centered and when I feel myself getting drawn out to come back. He's also pulled me aside during seva and told me to stop worrying and that I need to relax. I've always liked Babaji's surfing references because I surf a little bit and I found this quote where he said: “It is a lot like surfing: there is a wave of energy causing the transformation in your life. Your job is to keep centered and to keep your balance. That means you don't go to extremes mentally and emotionally. You don't get overly excited or overly conservative. Try to stay centered and balanced.”It's been hard for me to find this state of being centered and balanced because my mind really wants to analyze all the loss and feel all the emotions over and over. It hit me during a movie yoga night when there was a really intense scene happening and I could feel myself getting pulled into the drama, feeling the anxiety and anticipating what was coming. Babaji told us all to take a breath and in that moment, I released the grip on the scene and felt a sense of relief and peace inside. It was so easy to realize that the movie was separate from me and the emotions I was feeling weren't me. It made me wonder what if surrendering my own stuff was that easy? I truly want to experience my inner self as a place of refuge that's always with me and can't be taken away. So, I've really been trying to connect to this place inside and cultivate my inner refuge while I am meditating, while I am doing seva, and everywhere in between by recognizing that I am feeling heavy, tight, anxious or having negative thoughts and drawing my attention inside, relaxing, and allowing there to be calm. In Spiritual Practice, Babaji says: “What we are looking for when we meditate is peace of mind. Peace is the most incredibly valuable thing in the whole universe. Our minds are always active. They try to define us through our experiences.Though that may be useful to a degree, it is not the truth. The truth of who we are and what we are lies beyond the chatter and the noise of our minds. When we move beyond the chatter we will find clarity and a real sense of being present. We will begin to have a deeper understanding of our existence.” I am so grateful to have an actual place of refuge to go to and for the support I've received over the years and especially recently. It's helped me prioritize my practice and start to feel my feet on the ground again. Mostly, it has helped me feel a glimpse of my inner self that is beyond the chatter, beyond anything external, so that I can feel safe, secure, and at peace no matter what.Satyam:A line that really stuck with me from Arati's presentation was “I truly want to experience my Inner Self as a place of refuge that's always with me and can't be taken away”… I do too, and I'm sure you do as well. As she taught, We have a place of refuge in our hearts, a place we can go to at any time to dissolve the obscurations of daily life. But like the place of refuge here in Hawaii, It takes effort to get there, and effort to remain there, but no matter how much effort it takes what's most important is that it really is there. And as Arati taught, we can find refuge in our practice if we are willing to seek it out throughout our daily practices, tasks and activities. We have to find refuge in each repetition of the mantra, each weed we pull, each breath we take, each dish we wash, each posture we practice... In classic non-dual understanding, the place of refuge is only revealed to those willing to walk with refuge. As the Shiva Sutras put it, ‘the path is only revealed to the revealer'— the path to the place of refuge is only revealed to those who are seeking refuge in their path. This unique effort is of course nothing new, but a foundational topic in every practice. How do perform mantra in a way that leads us to its place of refuge? We can't yell the mantra, or do them faster, to accelerate the process— we start from where we're at, and work our way from the vibration in the mouth, to the throat to the heart. The same goes for the breath— you can't just jump into breath awareness, the mind pushes and pulls it immediately. You have to lengthen and smooth out the breath, and then slowly but surely release that effort and arrive at the experience of refuge in breath awareness. Swami Rudrananda always taught that the WIsh to Grow practice begins at a superficial level, none of us mean it at first, but we simply repeat each repetition with a little more sincerity, and eventually we arrive. The topic of refuge inspires a deeper appreciation for how we practice, not just what we practice, which has been at the forefront of Babaji's teaching over the past year and a half. When he says we need to learn to relax as we practice, in my opinion this doesn't mean we relax and then practice, as if they are two separate things, but that we learn how to use our practice to help us relax, that we use our practice not to blow up our karma, but release ourselves from it. Babaji recently used the analogy of dropping something out of your hand as a way of understanding surrender— when you use each mantra as a way to release, each breath as a way to release, then you become released. This is what the topic of refuge means to me, and how it has opened up my practice. So let's take time to walk through our practice with refuge and see if the path to the place of refuge in our hearts naturally unfolds for us step by step.
Was befindet sich im "Wilden Westen"? Bis 1804 wusste kaum jemand, was westlich des Mississippi lag. Die Lewis und Clark Expedition sollte dies ändern: Auf Ihrem Weg zur Ostküste begegneten sie zahlreichen indigenen Völkern, erkundeten erstmals heute berühmte Naturwunder und bahnten Wege, die den Grundstein für die Besiedlung des Westens legen sollten. Bis zum Jahr 1803 mussten sich die Vereinigten Staaten das Gebiet der heutigen USA noch mit zwei europäischen Großmächten teilen: Sowohl Spanien als auch Frankreich beanspruchten große Gebiete des Teilkontinents für sich. Mit dem Louisiana Purchase und dem Erwerb der französischen Kolonie verdoppelte sich die Landmasse der Vereinigten Staaten auf einen Schlag. Doch genaue Karten dieses Gebiets existierten nicht - bei aller Größe war die Landkarte der USA westlich der Gründerstaaten noch erstaunlich weiß. Welche Landmarken gab es, welche Tier- und Pflanzenarten existierten dort, welche indigenen Nationen lebten im amerikanischen Innenland? Am 14. Mai 1804 brach die Lewis & Clark Expedition von St. Louis aus auf, um diese Fragen zu beantworten, einen Landweg von der Ost- zur Pazifikküste zu finden - und den Wilden Westen erstmals wirklich für die Vereinigten Staaten zu erschließen. 00:00 - Einleitung 03:51 - Nachrichten aus dem Wilden Westen: Präsident Thomas Jefferson an den Kongress (Washington DC, Brief vom 18.1.1803) 06:23 - Die Landkarte Nordamerikas im Jahr 1803 08:46 - Der Louisiana-Purchase 15:27 - Weites, fernes, unbekanntes Land 18:00 - Gründe für und Ziele der Lewis & Clark Expedition 22:02 - Captain Merriweather Lewis und Lieutenant William Clark 26:52 - 14. Mai 1804 bis Winter 1804/1805: Den Missouri hinauf bis North Dakota 30:13 - Sacagawea, Kontakt mit den Shoshoni und westwärts durch die Rocky Mountains 36:12 - Oregon Trail, Yellowstone und weitere Entdeckungen 37:42 - Einschub: Der "Jackalope" 38:53 - Weitere Begegnungen mit indigenen Volsgruppen 41:12 - Die Bedeutung und moderne Betrachtung von Sacagawea für die Lweis & Clark Expedition 42:09 - September 1806: Rückkehr nach St. Louis 44:00 - Randnotiz: Geboren unter Entdeckern - Das weitere Leben von Jean-Baptiste Charbonneau 44:49 - Was hat die Geschichte inspiriert? 50:18 - Verabschiedung und Ausblick aufs nächste Mal
David Graf briefly mourns Robert Munoz's big move to island time. Robert's moved to Hawaii, so we wish him the best of luck! David's joined by WyoSports' Jeremiah Johnke to help preview Cheyenne Central, South and East heading into the 2022 high school football season (1:52). Then, David talks one-on-one with Pine Bluffs' Ryan Fornstrom (21:38) and Natrona County's Breckin McClintock (32:18).All 4A schools will open the 2022 season on Friday, Aug. 26:East vs. Campbell CountyCentral @ SheridanSouth @ Thunder BasinNatrona County @ LaramiePine Bluffs will open its season on Thursday, Sept. 1 @ Shoshoni.Follow David, Jeremiah, Ryan and Breckin on Twitter:@mrdavidgraf@jjohnke@Ryanfornstrom10@BreckinM10Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/wyosports-podcast/donations
UPDATE: As of 11:13 AM, "The roadway has been reopened for public travel. Law enforcement will remain in the area as this is still an active-investigation. Please continue to report any information pertaining to the whereabouts of Young to 9-1-1." (Fremont County, WY) - Cody Beers from WYDOT has issued the following statement concerning a highway closure between Shoshoni and Casper. "Human safety concerns," were listed by WYDOT as the reason behind the closure, but the Natrona County Sheriff's Department shared the following on their Facebook page earlier this morning, concerning an armed and dangerous individual on the loose named Luke Thomas Young. Young is reportedly the person of interest in an active double-homicide investigation on HWY 20-26. The most recent update posted at 9:30 AM, states: "The current road closure is along HWY 20-26 between Landmark Lane and Thirty Three Mile Road." https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=pfbid02hYPzbE91BkYU5PLkbw6siNtJENP4z2AoQXkErn6q5iMjvSbJ4XQCvFM6mr8m7QVUl&id=100064651455520 "If you have any information pertaining to this investigation, or the whereabouts of Luke Thomas Young, please contact the Natrona County Sheriff's Office Investigation Division at 307-235-9282. Anonymous tips can be submitted to Crime Stoppers of Central Wyoming through crime-stoppers.com and may be eligible for a cash reward." County 10 will post more updates once they become available.
(Fremont County, WY) - The latest County 10 Kickoff Show features Dubois High School Track and Field. Dubois has seen a early success from both a team and individual aspect. They joined the show before heading to the Meeteetse Invite today and will compete in Shoshoni tomorrow. Guest on the show include David Trembly - Dubois High School Track and Field CoachMia Jory - Dubois High School Track and Field AthleteNick Navas - Dubois High School Track and Field Athlete All shows air on KOVE 1330 A.M. and 107.7 F.M. also streaming on our website. You can listen to the full episode below.
(Fremont County, WY) - This edition of the County 10 Kickoff Show features the Shoshoni High School Track and Field team. The Wranglers and Lady Blue have only competed in one track meet this season and will compete at Greybull tomorrow April 2. Guest on the show include Jody Good- Head Coach of Shoshoni Track and FieldBraeden Cash - Shoshoni Track and Field AthleteCaleb Abbot - Shoshoni Track and Field Athlete All shows air on KOVE 1330 A.M. and 107.7 F.M. also streaming on our website. You can listen to the full episode below.
Shoshoni has an incredible Torii outside of its main temple, a huge threshold you walk through marking a transition from the mundane to the celestial. We walk through many thresholds in our daily life, and even though they might not have a temple on the other side, we can still use these transition points to make the room we enter more sacred within ourselves. When we walk through a doorway, we are usually caught up in the anticipation of the joy we expect to find on the other side of it, finding little bits of fleeting satisfaction in the many rooms of our life, but rarely enough to fulfill us. Meditation is the practice of opening the door to our heart without losing ourself in any particular object. This practice allows us to expand our heart's threshold in a very natural yet profound way, until the joy that we're used to chasing after seems to comes to us. This is because the greatest joy in life is that of an open heart. As Sri Shambhavananda teaches, “Happiness is something that shouldn't be dependent on external things. It should be an experience of your true nature…Having that realization you become free. Free to enjoy the world fully, free to be a part of many things, but never to lose yourself in any of them.” It is the search for inner joy that frees us from our outer suffering, which is why Shiva Sutra 3.25 also teaches that “Karma can only be overcome if it is enjoyed, it cannot be cast aside or abandoned,” meaning the real work of overcoming our karma isn't in accepting or rejecting the objects of our life, but in keeping our hearts open as we encounter those objects. So the next time you are passing through a threshold towards your object of joy, be it a refrigerator door or an office door— try slowing down your gait, exhale to surrender the object your approaching and inhale to drink a little bit of the present you are walking within. Because this door of the present, which opens in your heart, is the only threshold we must pass through to find our joy. And if you're lucky enough, you might look back and see someone you can hold that door of the present open for, allowing them the opportunity to open their heart as well.
(Laramie, WY) - After Shoshoni's 19-6 state championship win in Laramie, Coach Tony Truempler caught up with 105.1 JACK-FM broadcasters Wyatt Burichka and Jackson Morris to discuss the big win! Catch their full conversation and end of broadcast thoughts below.
(Shoshoni, WY) - Shoshoni Wranglers head football coach Tony Truempler chats with Jackson Morris about the upcoming state championship game! The Wranglers take on Rocky Mountain High School this Saturday at 1:00 p.m. from Laramie's War Memorial Stadium. Catch all the action on 105.1 JACK-FM and streaming right here!
(Shoshoni, WY) - After impressive wins against ranked opponents, Southeast (40-7) and Rocky Mountain (27-10) the Shoshoni Wranglers moved their way up the latest WyoPreps.com Coaches & Media rankings to the number one spot this week. Shoshoni prepares for an in-county match-up this weekend, hosting St. Stephens at 7:00 p.m. Friday night. Central Wyoming College student broadcaster and County 10 team member Jackson Morris caught up with Shoshoni Head Coach Tony Truempler again this week. Tony reflected on being picked number one, last week's road win, and looks ahead to Friday's contest with the Eagles. Check out the conversation in the player below and don't forget to catch more sports Friday on KOVE's County 10 Kickoff Show.
September 24, 2016 – Great Basin National Park, Nevada, USA “Did you know that something like 90% of Nevada is owned by the federal government?” Joe said to the passengers sitting around him in the car. Kaitlyn, who was in the backseat, replied with, “Who else would want it? Look at this place. … An Unforgettably Lucky Arrowhead Read More » The post An Unforgettably Lucky Arrowhead first appeared on 500 Ironic Stories.
(Shoshoni, WY) - Coming off of their week 1 40-7 win over Southeast, the Shoshoni Wranglers hit the road for the first time this season. SHS heads to Cowley to play 3rd ranked Rocky Mountain, for their second straight match-up against a ranked team. Kickoff is set for 6:00 p.m. Friday night. In this week's Wyopreps.com Coaches & Media Poll, Shoshoni ranks 2nd in 1A 9-man football. Check out some quick comments from Coach Tony Truempler in the player below, courtesy of Central Wyoming College student broadcaster Jackson Morris. For more local sports, catch the County 10 Kickoff Show Friday at 4:00 p.m. on KOVE 1330 AM and 107.7 FM!
(Shoshoni, WY) - Event promoter Jordan Whitener joined Jerrad and Charene to discuss the upcoming Shoshoni Hot Summer Nights event. Check out the full conversation in the player below and click here for more information on the event!
What happens when a long-time fan of the show says yes to being a guest? Coincidence is a funny thing, and the Mavens are no strangers to odd happenstance. This week's coincidence is a big one. Bailey Dann has been a listener almost since the beginning and on the Maven's radar for just about as long. She's part of the Indigenous language revitalization movement as a teacher of her native Shoshoni. When she isn't keeping her culture alive and educating the rest of us, she works estate sales none other than LINDA OF WILDHARE ESTATE SALES! She surrounds herself with all things 1950's, including her wardrobe, vintage recipes, and her 1953 home, which she is currently restoring. This episode is full of hard truths, funny truths, and the truth that we have to be who we are regardless of what those around us say. Cheers to us being us. Thank you to our team :Edit and Sound Design by: Grae @ Grae Matter Studios Intro by: Caylin Temple Copyediting by: Spell Check intro and Outro Music: Down the Rabbit Hole by myuu Source: https://soundcloud.com/myuu/down-the-rabbit-hole License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
(Shoshoni, WY) - The school spirit is alive and well at Shoshoni High School. Just how does a community with a population under 1,000 rack up over 28,000 votes? You're looking at some of the folks responsible for that in the photo above! County 10 and Jerrad & Charene from 105.1 JACK-FM mornings visited Shoshoni High School this week to present the school with their championship plaque (for a second year in a row) and some pretty sweet new championship t-shirts! Check out a quick conversation we had with some Shoshoni Student Council members and Principal Christina Mills in the player below. And, stay tuned for some details about how you can purchase a t-shirt to help benefit a Shoshoni school charity, coming soon to County 10! Now that the Mascot Challenge is over, you've got a chance to play along with our NCAA Tournament Challenge. Fill out your bracket here for a chance to win some great prizes!
(Shoshoni, WY) - The County 10 Podcast caught up with Shoshoni High School Principal Christina Mills recently for a short conversation. We briefly discuss new things happening with Shoshoni schools, how students and staff are dealing with COVID-19 challenges, and County 10's Mascot Challenge. Shoshoni's Wranglers were crowned champions in the first year of the challenge. The 2021 challenge presented by Gale's Carpet One and Altitude Interiors returns Tuesday, February 23rd! The County 10 Podcast is always made possible by Porter's Supply Company in Riverton. Click the player below to hear the conversation or subscribe to the County 10 Podcast on all major podcast platforms.
On a clear night, if you look up at the sky, you will see the Milky Way. Scientists tell us it's a galaxy made from billions of stars and gas, and it looks kind of…… milky. But the Shoshoni people of North America have their own 'How and Why' story about those stars which involves sparkly snow, and some rather grumpy bears. Here's storyteller Pamela Marre to tell us more.This work kindly shared by Pamela under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.If you'd like to support the show you can find us on our Ko-fi page - HERE See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Guest BioSondra Jones has spent her adult life researching, listening, writing and doing fieldwork regarding Native American in Utah, Colorado and New Mexico. With a secondary emphasis in anthropology, Jones's fieldwork projects include work within Utah's Uintah and Ouray Reservation. She has a PhD in U.S. History from the University of Utah (2013) and has taught American, Utah and Native American Studies at the U of U, BYU and Utah Valley University. Author of over a dozen articles on Native American history, as well as two other published works, Jones' book Being and Becoming Ute represents decades of careful research and writing. As Dr. Brian Cannon, former Director of the Charles Redd Center for Western Studies and now chairperson of the BYU History Department, stated: “…this sweeping narrative charts the history of the Ute people from prehistoric times into the twenty-first century, showcasing their pragmatic adaptive strategies and exploring their challenges. Jones helps readers to understand tensions and differences of opinion within Ute society between full-bloods and mixed-bloods, modernizers and traditionalists, and the difficulty of maintaining a Ute identity and cultural essence in the face of mainstreaming material and cultural forces.”SummaryJones describes how she came to her subject, how she and her husband transitioned from being English and mathematic majors, to pursing archeology and history. She shares a number of stories, early in her work with the Utes, including her Native American husband's involvement as a Ute Sun Dancer (performing in the most important spiritual ceremony of the Ute tradition). Jones also describes the Ute's ability at gradual adaption in technologies: hunting and gathering (from on foot to horseback), food ways, clothing; the Indian reservation system and its effects; the perils of seeking Native American “traditions;” the Spanish trails, caravan trading and the active slave trading, across Utah and the Southwest, prior to the mid-19th century; shortcomings in earlier historical approaches; stories of the Timpanogos Utes, their acquisition of the horse, and prior to this, their interest in creating an alliances with Spanish explorers, to aid in protecting against marauding Shoshoni from the north; various Ute leaders are named along with how they succeeded as leaders, and more. Do you have a question or comment, or a proposed guest for “Speak Your Piece?” Write us at “ask a historian” – askahistorian@utah.govURLs (book purchase links, associated exhibit, products, video links, etc.)To read about and purchase a copy of Being and Becoming Ute: The Story of an American Indian People (2019), go to the University of Utah Press (hard copy, soft and eBook) or gather up the ISBN number (9781607816577) and high tail-it to your local independent bookseller and order a copy there. **** URL Link to the above -- https://uofupress.lib.utah.edu/being-and-becoming-ute/
Guest BioSondra Jones has spent her adult life researching, listening, writing and doing fieldwork regarding Native American in Utah, Colorado and New Mexico. With a secondary emphasis in anthropology, Jones's fieldwork projects include work within Utah's Uintah and Ouray Reservation. She has a PhD in U.S. History from the University of Utah (2013) and has taught American, Utah and Native American Studies at the U of U, BYU and Utah Valley University. Author of over a dozen articles on Native American history, as well as two other published works, Jones' book Being and Becoming Ute represents decades of careful research and writing. As Dr. Brian Cannon, former Director of the Charles Redd Center for Western Studies and now chairperson of the BYU History Department, stated: “…this sweeping narrative charts the history of the Ute people from prehistoric times into the twenty-first century, showcasing their pragmatic adaptive strategies and exploring their challenges. Jones helps readers to understand tensions and differences of opinion within Ute society between full-bloods and mixed-bloods, modernizers and traditionalists, and the difficulty of maintaining a Ute identity and cultural essence in the face of mainstreaming material and cultural forces.”SummaryJones describes how she came to her subject, how she and her husband transitioned from being English and mathematic majors, to pursing archeology and history. She shares a number of stories, early in her work with the Utes, including her Native American husband's involvement as a Ute Sun Dancer (performing in the most important spiritual ceremony of the Ute tradition). Jones also describes the Ute's ability at gradual adaption in technologies: hunting and gathering (from on foot to horseback), food ways, clothing; the Indian reservation system and its effects; the perils of seeking Native American “traditions;” the Spanish trails, caravan trading and the active slave trading, across Utah and the Southwest, prior to the mid-19th century; shortcomings in earlier historical approaches; stories of the Timpanogos Utes, their acquisition of the horse, and prior to this, their interest in creating an alliances with Spanish explorers, to aid in protecting against marauding Shoshoni from the north; various Ute leaders are named along with how they succeeded as leaders, and more. Do you have a question or comment, or a proposed guest for “Speak Your Piece?” Write us at “ask a historian” – askahistorian@utah.govURLs (book purchase links, associated exhibit, products, video links, etc.)To read about and purchase a copy of Being and Becoming Ute: The Story of an American Indian People (2019), go to the University of Utah Press (hard copy, soft and eBook) or gather up the ISBN number (9781607816577) and high tail-it to your local independent bookseller and order a copy there. **** URL Link to the above -- https://uofupress.lib.utah.edu/being-and-becoming-ute/
Today on the County 10 rundown we discuss; Lander's 24 consecutive boys swimming championship Shoshoni wins regional wrestling Dubois plans to build rec center Central Wyoming College nurses headed to Haiti Lander Chamber of Commerce Awards luncheon Follow more local podcasts by liking 10Cast on Facebook! The County 10 Podcast is recorded in the Porter's 10Cast Studio. […]
[et_pb_section fb_built="1" _builder_version="3.22.7" custom_padding="||0px|||"][et_pb_row column_structure="2_3,1_3" _builder_version="3.25" width="90%" max_width="1599px"][et_pb_column type="2_3" _builder_version="3.25" custom_padding="|||" custom_padding__hover="|||"][et_pb_post_title categories="off" comments="off" admin_label="Post Title" _builder_version="4.0.5" title_font="||||||||" meta_font="|700|||||||" meta_text_color="#2b2b2b" title_font_size_tablet="" title_font_size_phone="" title_font_size_last_edited="on|phone" custom_css_post_title="font-family: roboto, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;" global_module="108498"][/et_pb_post_title][et_pb_text admin_label="Body Text 1" _builder_version="4.0.5" text_font="||||||||" text_text_color="#535353" hover_enabled="0"]Riverton-based Hi Mountain Seasonings is getting recognition from amateur home cooks and professional chefs alike across the country. Their products can be found across the country in big outdoor chain stores like Bass Pro Shop and Cabelas. Lucky for County 10'rs, you can also find their products at places like Shoshoni's Fast Lane, or at their small unassuming shop on College View Dr. in Riverton. The 10Cast Network's newest podcast, RADCast Outdoors, is dedicated to the hunting and fishing culture of Wyoming. Hosts David Merrill and Patrick Edwards recently sat down with Brian Tucker from Hi Mountain Seasonings to discuss a little more about the operation, some of their products, recipes, and of course the great outdoors. To catch the entire show, click the player below. You can also find RADCast Outdoors on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Google Play, or many other podcast apps! For more Fremont County based podcasts, follow 10Cast! http://media.blubrry.com/radcastoutdoors/content.blubrry.com/radcastoutdoors/RADCast_Episode_2-Brian_Tucker.mp3 For more about Hi Mountain Seasonings, click here. For 10% off of your next order, use promo code: HMS10 [/et_pb_text][et_pb_code admin_label="Display Ad" _builder_version="4.0.5" text_orientation="center"] Content continues below[adrotate group="12"][/et_pb_code][et_pb_text admin_label="Body Text 2" _builder_version="4.0.5" text_font="||||||||" text_text_color="#535353"][/et_pb_text][et_pb_divider admin_label="Post Content Ends Here." _builder_version="4.0.5"][/et_pb_divider][et_pb_divider show_divider="off" _builder_version="3.26"][/et_pb_divider][et_pb_signup mailchimp_list="county10|71e308fce0" layout="top_bottom" first_name_field="off" last_name_field="off" success_message="Thanks! You're in the club." title="Community. Connected." description="Get the latest County 10 updates in your email every day! " footer_content="No spam. Ever. " _builder_version="3.25.4" form_field_background_color="#ffffff" header_font="||||||||" header_text_align="center" header_text_color="#000000" header_font_size="25px" body_font="||||||||" body_text_align="center" result_message_font="||||||||" result_message_text_align="center" result_message_text_color="#000000" form_field_font="||||||||" use_background_color="off" custom_button="on" button_bg_color="#F05323" button_border_color="#F05323" button_font="||||||||" button_icon="%%109%%" button_on_hover="off" text_orientation="center" background_layout="light" width="100%" max_width="60%" module_alignment="center" custom_css_newsletter_title="color: #000 !important;" border_width_all_fields="1px" border_color_all_fields="rgba(51,51,51,0.09)" global_module="97122"][/et_pb_signup][et_pb_code _builder_version="3.25.4" text_orientation="center" disabled_on="on|on|off"]Advertisement[adrotate group="13"][/et_pb_code][et_pb_code _builder_version="3.25.4" text_orientation="center" disabled_on="off|off|on"]Advertisement[adrotate group="12"][adrotate group="12"][/et_pb_code][et_pb_divider show_divider="off" _builder_version="3.26"][/et_pb_divider][et_pb_text _builder_version="3.27.4" global_module="97145"]Have a news tip or an awesome photo to share?
[et_pb_section fb_built="1" _builder_version="3.22.7" custom_padding="||0px|||"][et_pb_row column_structure="2_3,1_3" _builder_version="3.25" width="90%" max_width="1599px"][et_pb_column type="2_3" _builder_version="3.25" custom_padding="|||" custom_padding__hover="|||"][et_pb_post_title categories="off" comments="off" admin_label="Post Title" _builder_version="4.0.5" title_font="||||||||" meta_font="|700|||||||" meta_text_color="#2b2b2b" title_font_size_tablet="" title_font_size_phone="" title_font_size_last_edited="on|phone" custom_css_post_title="font-family: roboto, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;" global_module="108498"][/et_pb_post_title][et_pb_text admin_label="Body Text 1" _builder_version="4.0.5" text_font="||||||||" text_text_color="#535353" hover_enabled="0"]Riverton-based Hi Mountain Seasonings is getting recognition from amateur home cooks and professional chefs alike across the country. Their products can be found across the country in big outdoor chain stores like Bass Pro Shop and Cabelas. Lucky for County 10'rs, you can also find their products at places like Shoshoni's Fast Lane, or at their small unassuming shop on College View Dr. in Riverton. The 10Cast Network's newest podcast, RADCast Outdoors, is dedicated to the hunting and fishing culture of Wyoming. Hosts David Merrill and Patrick Edwards recently sat down with Brian Tucker from Hi Mountain Seasonings to discuss a little more about the operation, some of their products, recipes, and of course the great outdoors. To catch the entire show, click the player below. You can also find RADCast Outdoors on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Google Play, or many other podcast apps! For more Fremont County based podcasts, follow 10Cast! http://media.blubrry.com/radcastoutdoors/content.blubrry.com/radcastoutdoors/RADCast_Episode_2-Brian_Tucker.mp3 For more about Hi Mountain Seasonings, click here. For 10% off of your next order, use promo code: HMS10 [/et_pb_text][et_pb_code admin_label="Display Ad" _builder_version="4.0.5" text_orientation="center"] Content continues below[adrotate group="12"][/et_pb_code][et_pb_text admin_label="Body Text 2" _builder_version="4.0.5" text_font="||||||||" text_text_color="#535353"][/et_pb_text][et_pb_divider admin_label="Post Content Ends Here." _builder_version="4.0.5"][/et_pb_divider][et_pb_divider show_divider="off" _builder_version="3.26"][/et_pb_divider][et_pb_signup mailchimp_list="county10|71e308fce0" layout="top_bottom" first_name_field="off" last_name_field="off" success_message="Thanks! You're in the club." title="Community. Connected." description="Get the latest County 10 updates in your email every day! " footer_content="No spam. Ever. " _builder_version="3.25.4" form_field_background_color="#ffffff" header_font="||||||||" header_text_align="center" header_text_color="#000000" header_font_size="25px" body_font="||||||||" body_text_align="center" result_message_font="||||||||" result_message_text_align="center" result_message_text_color="#000000" form_field_font="||||||||" use_background_color="off" custom_button="on" button_bg_color="#F05323" button_border_color="#F05323" button_font="||||||||" button_icon="%%109%%" button_on_hover="off" text_orientation="center" background_layout="light" width="100%" max_width="60%" module_alignment="center" custom_css_newsletter_title="color: #000 !important;" border_width_all_fields="1px" border_color_all_fields="rgba(51,51,51,0.09)" global_module="97122"][/et_pb_signup][et_pb_code _builder_version="3.25.4" text_orientation="center" disabled_on="on|on|off"]Advertisement[adrotate group="13"][/et_pb_code][et_pb_code _builder_version="3.25.4" text_orientation="center" disabled_on="off|off|on"]Advertisement[adrotate group="12"][adrotate group="12"][/et_pb_code][et_pb_divider show_divider="off" _builder_version="3.26"][/et_pb_divider][et_pb_text _builder_version="3.27.4" global_module="97145"]Have a news tip or an awesome photo to share?
[et_pb_section fb_built="1" _builder_version="3.22.7" custom_padding="||0px|||" custom_padding_wireframe="1px||0px|||"][et_pb_row column_structure="2_3,1_3" _builder_version="3.25" width="90%" max_width="1599px"][et_pb_column type="2_3" _builder_version="3.25" custom_padding="|||" custom_padding__hover="|||"][et_pb_post_title categories="off" comments="off" admin_label="Post Title" _builder_version="3.22.7" title_font="||||||||" title_font_size="45px" title_line_height="1.3em" meta_font="|700|||||||" meta_text_color="#2b2b2b" custom_css_post_title="font-family: roboto, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;"][/et_pb_post_title][et_pb_text admin_label="Text" _builder_version="3.25.4" text_font="Arial||||||||" text_text_color="#535353" text_font_size="20px" text_letter_spacing="1px" text_line_height="1.6em"]It's a busy weekend for Fremont County high school athletes as the fall sports season is slowly wrapping up. State cross country is held Saturday in Afton. It's the final regular season week of volleyball, girl's swimming, and football. Four Fremont County football teams will qualify for the playoffs according to Wyopreps.com. Riverton and Lander are still battling this weekend for playoff seeding. Shoshoni will be the #2 seed into the playoffs next week and get to host a game, and Wind River is locked in as a #4 seed and will hit the road for the first playoff game. Here's the week 8 high school football schedule... Friday, October 25 1:00 p.m. St. Stephens @ Farson-Eden 2:00 p.m. Dubois @ Little Snake River 4:00 p.m. Wind River @ Cokeville 7:00 p.m. Lander @ Worland 7:00 p.m. Riverton @ Douglas *Wyoming Indian forfeits scheduled game with Rocky Mountain. On the County 10 Kickoff Podcast this week, we preview high school football, CWC volleyball, and the state cross country meet by chatting with LVHS head coach Kevin Green. Listen in the player below, your favorite podcast app, or for more local podcasts find our 10Cast page. The County 10 Kickoff Podcast is made possible by Wyoming.com http://media.blubrry.com/county10kickoff/content.blubrry.com/county10kickoff/County_10_Kickoff_Show_Episode_8.mp3 [/et_pb_text][et_pb_code admin_label="Ad Code" _builder_version="3.25.4" text_orientation="center"] Content continues below[adrotate group="12"][/et_pb_code][et_pb_text admin_label="Text" _builder_version="3.25.4" text_font="Arial||||||||" text_text_color="#535353" text_font_size="20px" text_letter_spacing="1px" text_line_height="1.6em"][/et_pb_text][et_pb_divider _builder_version="3.26"][/et_pb_divider][et_pb_signup mailchimp_list="county10|71e308fce0" layout="top_bottom" first_name_field="off" last_name_field="off" success_message="Thanks! You're in the club." title="Community. Connected." description="Get the latest County 10 updates in your email every day! " footer_content="No spam. Ever. " _builder_version="3.25.4" form_field_background_color="#ffffff" header_font="||||||||" header_text_align="center" header_text_color="#000000" header_font_size="25px" body_font="||||||||" body_text_align="center" result_message_font="||||||||" result_message_text_color="#000000" form_field_font="||||||||" use_background_color="off" border_width_all_fields="1px" border_color_all_fields="rgba(51,51,51,0.09)" custom_button="on" button_bg_color="#F05323" button_border_color="#F05323" button_font="||||||||" button_icon="%%109%%" button_on_hover="off" text_orientation="center" background_layout="light" width="100%" max_width="60%" module_alignment="center" custom_css_newsletter_title="color: #000 !important;" global_module="97122"][/et_pb_signup][et_pb_divider show_divider="off" _builder_version="3.26"][/et_pb_divider][et_pb_code disabled_on="on|on|off" _builder_version="3.25.4" text_orientation="center" global_module="97154"]Advertisement[adrotate group="13"][/et_pb_code][et_pb_code disabled_on="off|off|on" _builder_version="3.25.4" text_orientation="center" global_module="97149"]Advertisement[adrotate group="12"][adrotate group="12"][/et_pb_co...
[et_pb_section fb_built="1" _builder_version="3.22.7" custom_padding="||0px|||" custom_padding_wireframe="1px||0px|||"][et_pb_row column_structure="2_3,1_3" _builder_version="3.25" width="90%" max_width="1599px"][et_pb_column type="2_3" _builder_version="3.25" custom_padding="|||" custom_padding__hover="|||"][et_pb_post_title categories="off" comments="off" admin_label="Post Title" _builder_version="3.22.7" title_font="||||||||" title_font_size="45px" title_line_height="1.3em" meta_font="|700|||||||" meta_text_color="#2b2b2b" custom_css_post_title="font-family: roboto, Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;"][/et_pb_post_title][et_pb_text admin_label="Text" _builder_version="3.25.4" text_font="Arial||||||||" text_text_color="#535353" text_font_size="20px" text_letter_spacing="1px" text_line_height="1.6em"]It's a busy weekend for Fremont County high school athletes as the fall sports season is slowly wrapping up. State cross country is held Saturday in Afton. It's the final regular season week of volleyball, girl's swimming, and football. Four Fremont County football teams will qualify for the playoffs according to Wyopreps.com. Riverton and Lander are still battling this weekend for playoff seeding. Shoshoni will be the #2 seed into the playoffs next week and get to host a game, and Wind River is locked in as a #4 seed and will hit the road for the first playoff game. Here's the week 8 high school football schedule... Friday, October 25 1:00 p.m. St. Stephens @ Farson-Eden 2:00 p.m. Dubois @ Little Snake River 4:00 p.m. Wind River @ Cokeville 7:00 p.m. Lander @ Worland 7:00 p.m. Riverton @ Douglas *Wyoming Indian forfeits scheduled game with Rocky Mountain. On the County 10 Kickoff Podcast this week, we preview high school football, CWC volleyball, and the state cross country meet by chatting with LVHS head coach Kevin Green. Listen in the player below, your favorite podcast app, or for more local podcasts find our 10Cast page. The County 10 Kickoff Podcast is made possible by Wyoming.com http://media.blubrry.com/county10kickoff/content.blubrry.com/county10kickoff/County_10_Kickoff_Show_Episode_8.mp3 [/et_pb_text][et_pb_code admin_label="Ad Code" _builder_version="3.25.4" text_orientation="center"] Content continues below[adrotate group="12"][/et_pb_code][et_pb_text admin_label="Text" _builder_version="3.25.4" text_font="Arial||||||||" text_text_color="#535353" text_font_size="20px" text_letter_spacing="1px" text_line_height="1.6em"][/et_pb_text][et_pb_divider _builder_version="3.26"][/et_pb_divider][et_pb_signup mailchimp_list="county10|71e308fce0" layout="top_bottom" first_name_field="off" last_name_field="off" success_message="Thanks! You're in the club." title="Community. Connected." description="Get the latest County 10 updates in your email every day! " footer_content="No spam. Ever. " _builder_version="3.25.4" form_field_background_color="#ffffff" header_font="||||||||" header_text_align="center" header_text_color="#000000" header_font_size="25px" body_font="||||||||" body_text_align="center" result_message_font="||||||||" result_message_text_color="#000000" form_field_font="||||||||" use_background_color="off" border_width_all_fields="1px" border_color_all_fields="rgba(51,51,51,0.09)" custom_button="on" button_bg_color="#F05323" button_border_color="#F05323" button_font="||||||||" button_icon="%%109%%" button_on_hover="off" text_orientation="center" background_layout="light" width="100%" max_width="60%" module_alignment="center" custom_css_newsletter_title="color: #000 !important;" global_module="97122"][/et_pb_signup][et_pb_divider show_divider="off" _builder_version="3.26"][/et_pb_divider][et_pb_code disabled_on="on|on|off" _builder_version="3.25.4" text_orientation="center" global_module="97154"]Advertisement[adrotate group="13"][/et_pb_code][et_pb_code disabled_on="off|off|on" _builder_version="3.25.4" text_orientation="center" global_module="97149"]Advertisement[adrotate group="12"][adrotate group="12"][/et_pb_co...
In today's episode I talk about how we need role models and representation that matters, and my trip to Shoshoni!
Over there in that creek bed I found a couple of Shoshoni arrowheads.
The group waits around the hospital as Anders heals from his broken leg. The walk is over for him and the group must now proceed with just three. John, Chase, and Liz make their way to Shoshoni a small town at the edge of a long desert stretch. Stocked up and ready to go, the group must make their way across a hundred miles of nothing.Music:"Isolated," "Midsummer Sky," "Comfortable Mystery," ""Easy Lemon" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Charles Henry King was an Entrepreneurs Entrepreneur Founder of Chadron, Nebraska, a prominent Banker, Wyoming's wealthiest businessman and President Gerald R. Fords biological grandfather. Why Listen Up to today’s show -> Recall we just did an entire show on Fannie O’Linn on our last show 062 Charles Henry King was a Prominent Banker that started a Bank C. H. King Company and First National Bank of Shoshoni, Wyoming. He was a serial entrepreneur at that time of his passing he was Wyoming’s wealthiest businessman. Charles Henry King was an entrepreneurs entrepreneur -> Get today’s show notes -> MitchellChadrow.com/show063 Sign up at the website for not only the latest podcasts articles and awesome guides but become part of the trusted friend's community at MitchellChadrow.com/signup CH King - today would be known as a serial entrepreneur At the age of 31 in 1884 he and his wife, Martha [Alicia (nee) Porter,] moved to Nebraska and settled a sparsely populated the region is known as Dawes County today we know it as the Panhandle of Nebraska. Their humble home was nicely settled along the White River in an area that we just talked about the brand new town of Chadron. Our startup round is sponsored by Chadron.net To learn more about the founding of the west and get the show notes go to our last show via MitchellChadrow.com/show062 and to learn more about the Chadrow 4 Chadron Project Head over to Chadron.net Now back to the show you will recall that Fannie O'Linn the subject from our last show certainly knew CH as his associates knew him as both helped found the town Chadron You see CH was a merchant pioneer who began trading with the Indians and became a bigtime merchant and wool trader he had one of the most successful entrepreneurial enterprises in Nebraska and Wyoming. He was founder and president of the Omaha Wool and Storage Company and founder of banks transportation companies and promoter of various enterprises. He had come far born in Pennsylvania on March 13, 1853, in Bradford County. When in Chadron NE he started a general store known as C.H. King's Mercantile. He was described in his day as being shrewd a true businessman, as a business person why study CH make him one of your own case studies well he was a visionary what today we might say a mover and shaker. He was a visionary -> he saw what others could not as he anticipated the arrival of the Chicago and North Western Railroad network into Chadron and the nearby Wyoming territory. He was constantly thinking of how he could expand his commercial enterprises. He executed on this opportunity by stringing together general stores, lumberyards' banks, wool trading companies, a freight hauling business, and much real estate strategically located where the railroad access insured the founding of future towns and cities in addition to Chadron. By July 25, 1886, Chadron was much in the infancy as an organized community -> it was at this time that President Gerald Ford's biological father Leslie Lynch was born to Charles Henry King and his wife Martha in the town of Chadron Our Fast Pitch sponsored by trustsmarter.com Trusts find trust co info on estate planning Book -> MitchellChadrow.com/books Robert Roy Foresman left a message that he was working on a full-length article and publication on Fannie O'Linn. He said it was nice to see the post about her and podcast he said that he has been researching her for over 10 years, and there is a lot of stories to still share. I’m going to link to robs other books and when his article and book on Fannie O’Linn published will him on in the meantime I provide a link to him here. He Works for the North Dakota State University northern plains ethics institute Even before Wyoming became a state in 1890 CH would become well known as one of the wealthiest men in Wyoming, At one time he amassed a fortune of $20 million in today’s dollars that is considerable but in 1890 it was huge. By 1900 C.H. King was known as a baron among wool traders and a merchant king in western Nebraska the panhandle As I stated earlier he was an entrepreneurs entrepreneur he was ambitious and eager to seize new opportunities, by 1905 he was moving his business HQs to Omaha. Omaha was known as the eastern terminal of the Union Pacific Railroad, and it also had numerous other roads so it became Omaha's western terminal. CH saw Omaha as a city with a great future. His reputation was both energetic but an honest businessman. As startups, business owners, and entrepreneurs we focus so much on wanting to raise or borrow money for our businesses. CH found it relatively easy to raise large sums of capital for new profitable ventures. For example, In 1908, he had a capital fund of $100,000, and the Omaha Wool and Storage Company was founded with C.H. King as president. His son, Leslie, Sr., also owned stock in the company and was named general manager. This was considered a big business for that time having a huge warehouse, 1200 feet long by 150 feet high, it was totally covered with a corrugated iron roof, and we know real estate is location location location CH was sure that the Union Pacific ran a side track up to the Omaha Wool and Storage Co. loading dock. By 1909 wool was being shipped into Omaha from western Nebraska, Wyoming, Colorado, Montana, Idaho, and South Dakota. Charles Henry was what we call today a serial entrepreneur he was driven to create more successful commercial companies/firms: C.H. King Company - > dealt in wholesale food merchandising. He was known in Omaha as a premier businessmen he entertained big time at Woolworth Mansion a real luxurious home with its ornately decorated ballroom The C.H. King Company and First National Bank Building, also known as Yellowstone Drug, is one of the oldest buildings in Shoshoni, Wyoming. The building was built for Charles Henry King in 1905–1906. King was a central Wyoming businessman who established a lumber business in the building. King is otherwise notable as the biological grandfather of U.S. president Gerald R. Ford. The First National Bank of Shoshoni was also located in the building Our wrap up round sponsored by startupssmarter.com You need help starting up a business from forms to set up your business to getting online with a website my listeners who go over to startupssmarter.com/Mitchell signup will get a free one-page website By signing up get guides articles and information President Ford's biological parents: Leslie Lynch King, Sr. and Dorothy Ayer Gardner marry in Harvard, Illinois. (near Chicago) on September 1912 Their son, president Ford born with the name biological father Leslie King Jr. was born eleven months later in 1913. However, The marriage of Dorothy and Leslie, Sr. lasted only about five months longer. On December 19, 1913, Dorothy obtained a divorce from her husband on the grounds of "extreme cruelty" and was given "sole custody" of their an only child, Leslie, Jr. While Ford's biological father was granted visitation rights Leslie, King Sr. was also ordered by the court to pay alimony attorney fees; and child support Leslie, Jr. or Ford attained his majority at age twenty-one game I will be doing an upcoming show on president Gerald Ford and I will explore several deeper personal questions not covered in this podcast How did all this impact CH in business -> Tremendously! I found myself asking - > Why would such a successful driven gregarious prominent businessman decide to just pick up and leave Omaha at a time when he was at the top of his business game Was it his personal life this tangled tale of President Gerald Fords biological parents divorce which by the way didn’t merely end with a judicial judgment of divorce alimony and child support payment decree. Charles Henry King was a maverick in business but his personal issues due to his son the president's biological father had a tremendous impact on his business these family issues caused CH to become sidetracked that story is so powerful - I will explore all of this on an upcoming show about President Gerald Ford.
After leaving Shoshoni, Robert makes his way along a long stretch of nothing. A hundred miles to be exact. Luckily, along this stretch he meets a pastor who offers up his home. When Robert reaches Casper he takes the pastor up on his offer. Jack and Robert also discuss religion. Don't forget to follow us on Twitter and Instagram: @7lambpodcasts