Podcasts about Silver Queen

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Best podcasts about Silver Queen

Latest podcast episodes about Silver Queen

The Paranormal 60
Virginia City: Hauntings & Legends - The Paranormal 60

The Paranormal 60

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2025 68:13


Step into the ghostly past of Virginia City, Nevada, one of the most haunted towns in America. On this episode of The Paranormal 60, I'm joined by renowned author and historian Janice Oberding to uncover chilling stories from this legendary location. Discover the eerie tales of the Old Washoe Club, where spirits are said to linger, and the Silver Queen, known for its ghostly guests. Explore the haunted halls of the Old Jail, the tragic history of the Yellowjacket Mine, and the spectral whispers at the Bucket of Blood Saloon. Don't miss this journey into the supernatural. Listen now! Order Janice's book, Haunted Virginia City here: https://amzn.to/4c2RfxZ Join Dave, Shane & Janice in Virginia City this April 11-13th for investigations, presentations and more: https://soulcircleparanormal.com/soul-circle-events Virginia City: Hauntings & Legends - The Paranormal 60 Keep up with Dave's Paranormal 360 Radio Show on WCCO Radio here: https://apple.co/3PuVubW Order Dave's book here: https://bit.ly/TheaterOfTheMind SUPPORT THE ADVERTISERS THAT SUPPORT THIS SHOW Mint Mobile - To get your new wireless plan for just $15 bucks a month, and get the plan shipped to your door for FREE, go to www.MintMobile.com/P60 Haunted Magazine - https://bit.ly/hauntedmagazine Tarot Readings by Winnie - https://www.darknessradio.com/love-lotus-tarot SUBSCRIBE TO OUR VIDEO CHANNEL HERE - https://bit.ly/3ySmSf8 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- DAVE'S LINKS X: @TheDaveSchrader IG: @OfficialDaveSchrader IG: @officialparanormal60 WEBSITE: http://www.Paranormal60.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

1001 Stories From the Old West
THE SILVER QUEEN and IN AN EVIL TIME HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL

1001 Stories From the Old West

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2024 42:49


The Silver Queen- Annette Vargas inherits the Rimrock mine from Leadhead Kane and troubles erupt In An Evil Time- Paladin tracks down $50,000 and a legend

El Baño MX
Dia internacional del Rock en El Baño MX

El Baño MX

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2024 77:06


Cual seria tu concierto de rock con 3 bandas vivos o moridos ideal?Cual es su cancion favorita de Rock?Quieres saber cual seria el concierto armado por la Silver Queen o por Andre? De esto y más platicamos hoy y queremos saber tu qué opinas al respecto, recuerda darnos like y seguirnos en elbaniomx.com, activando la campanita de notificaciones y si quieres ver en vivo lo que estos locos hacen recuerda visitar el canal de youtube que es https://www.youtube.com/c/ElBañoMX

Midday
'What Ya Got Cookin'?' with Chef Gwyn Novak and John Shields

Midday

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2024 48:31


Midday's What Ya Got Cookin'? segment returns. What dishes or recipes have you been obsessed with this summer? We are joined by a pair of heralded local chefs who have recipes that take advantage of Maryland's summer seafood and vegetable offerings. Gwyn Novak is a professional chef and cooking instructor who owns and operates "No Thyme to Cook," a cooking school on Solomons Island in southern Maryland. John Shields is the owner of Gertrude's at the Baltimore Museum of Art and author of several cookbooks. Both chefs shared a few of their favorite recipes with us: Grilled Peach Crostini with Whipped Ricotta - Serves 8 Ingredients: · 1 C. whole milk ricotta· Kosher salt· Freshly cracked black pepper· 4 peaches, pitted and quartered· Extra virgin olive oil· 1 loaf sourdough, thickly sliced· ¼ C. toasted pecans, chopped· 1 Tbsp. fresh lemon thyme (or fresh thyme leaves with ½ tsp. lemon zest)· 2 Tbsp. hot honey· Edible flowers for garnish Directions:To whip the ricotta: Place the ricotta in a blender or food processor with a pinch of salt and pepper. Blend until smooth and light. Season to taste. Brush the peaches with olive oil. Grill until they begin to give off juice and have grill marks. Remove from the grill and set aside. You can now slice these in half. Lightly brush the sourdough with olive oil. Grill lightly until you see grill marks. Remove from the grill. To assemble: Spread whipped ricotta onto the sourdough slices.Top with sliced peaches, toasted pecans, lemon thyme.Drizzle with hot honey.   Corn, Crab and Red Pepper Salad Ingredients:3 tbsp extra-virgin olive oil1 tbsp sherry vinegar1 large garlic clove, peeled, and mashedJuice of 1 lime½ pound fresh or pasteurized backfin crabmeat, picked over for shells1 small red onion, peeled and finely minced1 medium red bell pepper, cored, seeded, cut in fine dice4 cups fresh Silver Queen (or other sweetcorn) corn kernels3 tbsp fresh cilantro leaves¼ tsp Old Bay or seafood seasoningSalt and freshly ground black pepper Directions:Combine oil, vinegar, garlic, lime juice, and whisk thoroughly. Place crab, red onion, red pepper, corn, and cilantro together in a bowl and toss gently, taking care not to break up the lumps of crab. Pour the lime dressing over top and gently toss again. Season with Old Bay, salt, and pepper to taste. Cover and chill for at least one hour before serving.   Chesapeake Chargrilled Oysters - Serves 8 Ingredients:· 36 oysters, freshly shucked (on the half shell)· 1 stick salted butter· 7 cloves fresh garlic, minced· 1 tsp. crushed red pepper· 1 Tbsp. thyme· 1 Tbsp. oregano· 2 oz white wine· 8 oz. Romano or Parmesan cheese, grated· 1 Tbsp. fresh lemon juice· Fresh parsley for garnish Directions:In a saucepan, melt the butter and bring to a simmer. Add the garlic, red pepper, thyme, oregano & wine. Simmer for 2 minutes. Roasting/Grilling Oysters Pre-heat oven or grill to 350°. Once at 350°, place freshly shucked oyster on the half shell on the center of the oven/grill. Once the water around the oyster begins to bubble and the oyster begins to rise, ladle 1 tablespoon of the butter garlic sauce on top of each oyster. Top with a dusting of cheese and allow the cheese to melt. Finish with a squirt of fresh lemon juice & a garnish of fresh parsley.   Single-Fried Oysters with Horseradish and Tartar Sauce Ingredients:1 pint shucked oysters1 cup fine yellow cornmeal1 cup all-purpose flour1 tbsp salt 1 tbsp Old Bay seasoning1 tsp black pepper Vegetable oil, for fryingSalt and freshly ground black pepper, to taste Directions:Drain the oysters, reserving the liquor, if desired (see Note). Combine the cornmeal and flour, salt, Old Bay, and pepper. Dust the oysters in the flour/cornmeal mixture, one at a time. Set aside the oysters for several minutes to dry. Pour oil into a frying pan to a depth of 1/2 inch. Heat the oil and sauté the oysters for about 5 minutes, or until golden brown. Do not overcrowd the skillet. Add more oil as needed. Remove the oysters with a slotted utensil to paper towels and drain well. Season with salt and pepper. Note: Oyster liquor may be added to dishes for heightened flavorEmail us at midday@wypr.org, tweet us: @MiddayWYPR, or call us at 410-662-8780.

City Cast Salt Lake
Climbing Gym Smackdown, Training Table's Tease, and a Silver Queen's Estate Sale

City Cast Salt Lake

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2024 34:40


The Front is beefing with USA Climbing, and the Salt Lake City Redevelopment Agency is being nosy about it. Executive producer Emily Means joins host Ali Vallarta to break down whether the drama outweighs the community benefits. Plus, the Training Table's big tease, a crazy estate sale, and our next 9 Line-esque project. Get a $5 ticket to 801 Day at Second Summit Cider (21+). Resources and references: RDA board approves development agreement with USA Climbing – without seeing its business plan [Building Salt Lake] The case of the missing Training Table [Deseret News] The Silver Queen's estate sale Consider becoming a founding member of City Cast Salt Lake today! It's the best way to support our work and help make sure we're around for years to come. Get all the details and sign up at membership.citycast.fm. Subscribe to our daily morning newsletter. You can also find us on Instagram @CityCastSLC. Looking to advertise on City Cast Salt Lake? Check out our options for podcast and newsletter ads. Learn more about the sponsors of this episode:  Base Camp Treats - Use promo code CITYCAST20 for 20% off your online purchase. The Shop Embodied Patience Crude - Get $25 off your facial by mentioning this ad. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

1001 RADIO DAYS
THE DEADLY SWAMP MATTER and THE SILVER QUEEN MATTER YOURS TRULY, JOHNNY DOLLAR

1001 RADIO DAYS

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2024 48:41


The Deadly Swamp Matter: Johnny returns to Missouri to catch the murderer of a young mother he met on a previous trip and winds up the prisoner of 4 killers The Silver Queen Matter: Johnny's hearthrob Meg moves to a new place and calls Johnny to stop a murderer

The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast
Podcast #150: Park City Vice President and Chief Operating Officer Deirdra Walsh

The Storm Skiing Journal and Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2023 63:31


This podcast hit paid subscribers' inboxes on Nov. 2. It dropped for free subscribers on Nov. 9. To receive future pods as soon as they're live, and to support independent ski journalism, please consider an upgrade to a paid subscription. You can also subscribe to the free tier below:WhoDeirdra Walsh, Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of Park City, UtahRecorded onOctober 18, 2023About Park CityClick here for a mountain stats overviewOwned by: Vail ResortsLocated in: Park City, UtahYear founded: 1963Pass affiliations:* Epic Pass: unlimited* Epic Local Pass: unlimited with holiday blackouts* Tahoe Local: five non-holiday days combined with Vail, Beaver Creek, Breckenridge, Crested Butte, Keystone* Epic Day Pass: access with All Resorts tierClosest neighboring ski areas: Deer Valley (:04), Utah Olympic Park (:09), Woodward Park City (:11), Snowbird (:50), Alta (:55), Solitude (1:00), Brighton (1:08) – or just ski between them all; travel times vary massively pending weather, traffic, and time of yearBase elevation: 6,800 feetSummit elevation: 9,998 feet at the top of Jupiter (can hike to 10,026 on Jupiter Peak)Vertical drop: 3,226 feetSkiable Acres: 7,300 acresAverage annual snowfall: 355 inchesTrail count: 330+ (50% advanced/expert, 42% intermediate, 8% beginner)Lift count: 41 (2 eight-passenger gondolas, 1 pulse gondola, 1 cabriolet, 6 high-speed six-packs, 10 high-speed quads, 5 fixed-grip quads, 7 triples, 4 doubles, 3 carpets, 2 ropetows – view Lift Blog's inventory of Park City's lift fleet)View historic Park City trailmaps on skimap.org.Why I interviewed herAn unfortunate requirement of this job is concocting differentiated verbiage to describe a snowy hill equipped with chairlifts. Most often, I revert to the three standbys: ski area, mountain, and resort/ski resort. I use them interchangeably, as one may use couch/sofa or dinner/supper (for several decades, I thought oven/stove to be a similar pairing; imagine my surprise to discover that these words described two separate parts of one familiar machine). But that is problematic, of course, because while every enterprise that I describe is some sort of ski area, only around half of them are anywhere near an actual mountain. And an even smaller percentage of those are resorts. Still, I swap the trio around like T-shirts in the world's smallest wardrobe, hoping my readers value the absence of repetition more than they resent the mental gymnastics required to consider 210-vertical-foot Snow Snake, Michigan a “ski resort.”But these equivalencies introduce a problem when I get to Park City. At 7,300 acres, Park City sprawls over 37 percent more terrain than Vail Mountain, Vail Resorts' second-largest U.S. ski area, and the fourth-biggest in the nation overall. To call this a “ski area” seems inadequate, like describing an aircraft carrier as a “boat.” Even “mountain” feels insubstantial, as Park City's forty-some-odd lifts shoots-and-ladder their way over at least a dozen separate summits. “Ski resort” comes closest to capturing the grandeur of the whole operation, but even that undersells the experience, given that the ski runs are directly knotted to the town below them – a town that is a ski town but is also so much more.In recent years, “megaresort” has settled into the ski lexicon, usually as a pejorative describing a thing to be avoided, a tourist magnet that has swapped its soul for a Disney-esque welcome mat. “Your estimated wait time to board the Ultimate Super Summit Interactive 4D 8K Turbo Gondola is [one hour and 45 minutes]”. The “megas,” freighted with the existential burden of Epic and Ikon flagships, carry just a bit too much cruise ship mass-escapism and Cheesecake Factory illusions of luxe to truly capture that remote wilderness fantasy that is at least half the point of skiing. Right?Not really. Not any more than Times Square captures the essence of New York City or the security lines outside the ballpark distill the experience of consuming live sports. Yes, this is part of it, like the gondola lines winding back to the interstate are part of peak-day Park City. Those, along with the Epic Pass or the (up to) $299 lift ticket, are the cost of admission. But get through the gates, and a sprawling kingdom awaits.I don't know how many people ski Park City on a busy day. Let's call it 20,000. The vast majority of them are going to spend the vast majority of their day lapping the groomers, which occupy a small fraction of Park City's endless varied terrain. With its cascading hillocks, its limitless pitch-perfect glades, its lifts shooting every which way like hammered-together contraptions in some snowy realm of silver-miners - their century-old buildings and conveyor belts rising still off the mountain – Park City delivers a singular ski experience. Call it a “mountain,” a “ski area,” a “ski resort,” or a “megaresort” – all are accurate but also inadequate. Park City, in the lexicon of American skiing, stands alone.What we talked aboutPark City's deep 2022-23 winter; closing on May 1; skiing Missouri; Lake Tahoe; how America's largest ski area runs as a logistical and cultural unit; living through the Powdr-to-Vail ownership transition; the awesome realization that Park City and Canyons were one; Vail's deliberate culture of women's empowerment; the history and purpose of those giant industrial structures dotting Park City ski area; how you can tour them; the novel relationship between the ski area and the town at its base; Park City's Olympic legacy; thoughts on future potential Winter Olympic Games in Utah and at Park City; why a six-pack and an eight-pack chairlift scheduled for installation at Park City last year never happened; where those lifts went instead; whether those upgrades could ever happen; the incoming Sunrise Gondola; the logic of the Over And Out lift; Red Pine Gondola improvements; why the Jupiter double is unlikely to be upgraded anytime soon; Town Lift; reflecting on year one of paid parking; and the massive new employee housing development at Canyons.      Why I thought that now was a good time for this interviewIf only The Storm had existed in 2014. Because wouldn't that have been fun? Hostile takeovers are rare in skiing. You normally can't give a ski area (sorry, a super-megaresort) away. Vail taking this one off Powdr's lunch tray is kind of amazing, kind of sad, kind of disturbing, and kind scary. Like, did that really happen? It did, so onward we go.Walsh, as it happened, worked at Park City at the time, though in a much different role, so we talked about what is was like to live through the transition. But two other events shape our modern perception of Park City: The Olympics and The Lifts.The Olympics, of course, came to Park City in 2002. On this podcast a few weeks back, Snowbird General Manager Dave Fields outlined the dramatic changes the Games wrought on Utah skiing. Suddenly, everyone on the planet realized that a half dozen ski resorts that averaged between 300 and 500 inches of snow per winter were lined up 45 minutes from a major international airport on good roads. And they were like, “Wait that's real?” And they all starting coming – annual Utah skier visits have more than doubled since the Olympics, from around 3 million in winter 2001-02 to more than 7 million in last year's amazing ski season. Which is cool. But the Olympics are (probably) coming back to Salt Lake, in 2030 or 2034, and Park City will likely be a part of them again. So we talk about that.The Lifts refers to this story that I covered last October:Last September, Vail Resorts announced what was likely the largest set of single-season lift upgrades in the history of the world: $315-plus million on 19 lifts (later increased to 21 lifts) across 14 ski areas. Two of those lifts would land in Park City: a D-line eight-pack would replace the Silverlode six, and a six-pack would replace the Eagle and Eaglet triples. Two more lifts in a town with 62 of them (Park City sits right next door to Deer Valley). Surely this would be another routine project for the world's largest ski area operator.It wasn't. In June, four local residents – Clive Bush, Angela Moschetta, Deborah Rentfrow, and Mark Stemler – successfully appealed the Park City Planning Commission's previous approval of the lift projects.“The upgrades were appealed on the basis that the proposed eight-place and six-place chairs were not consistent with the 1998 development agreement that governs the resort,” SAM wrote at the time. “The planning commission also cited the need for a more thorough review of the resort's comfortable carrying capacity calculations and parking mitigation plan, finding PCM's proposed paid parking plan at the Mountain Village insufficient.”So instead of rising on the mountain, the lifts spent the summer, in pieces, in the parking lot. Vail admitted defeat, at least temporarily. “We are considering our options and next steps based on today's disappointing decision—but one thing is clear—we will not be able to move forward with these two lift upgrades for the 22-23 winter season,” Park City Mountain Resort Vice President and Chief Operating Officer Deirdra Walsh said in response to the decision.One of the options Vail apparently considered was trucking the lifts to friendlier locales. Last Wednesday, as part of its year-end earnings release, Vail announced that the two lifts would be moved to Whistler and installed in time for the 2023-24 ski season. The eight-pack will replace the 1,129-vertical-foot Fitzsimmons high-speed quad on Whistler, giving the mountain 18 seats (!) out of the village (the lift runs alongside the 10-passenger Whistler Village Gondola). The six-pack will replace the Jersey Cream high-speed quad on Blackcomb, a midmountain lift with a 1,230-foot vertical rise. These will join the new Big Red six-pack and 10-passenger Creekside Gondola going in this summer on the Whistler side, giving the largest ski area on the continent four new lifts in two years. …Meanwhile, Park City skiers will have to continue riding Silverlode, a sixer dating to 1996, and Eagle, a 1993 Garaventa CTEC triple (the Eaglet lift, unfortunately, is already gone). The vintage of the remaining lifts don't sound particularly creaky, but both were built for a different, pre-Epic Pass Park City, and one that wasn't connected via the Quicksilver Gondola to the Canyons side of the resort. Vail targeted these choke points to improve the mountain's flow. But skiers are stuck with them indefinitely.On paper, Vail remains “committed to resolving our permit to upgrade the Eagle and Silverlode lifts in Park City.” I don't doubt that. But I wonder if the four individuals who chose to choke up this whole process understand the scale of what they just destroyed. Those two lifts, combined, probably cost somewhere around $50 million. Minimum. Maybe the resort will try again. Maybe it won't. Surely Vail can find a lot of places to spend its money with far less friction.All of which I thought was rather hilarious, for a number of reasons. First, stopping an enormous project on procedural grounds for nebulous reasons is the most U.S. American thing ever. Second, the more these sorts of over-the-top stall tactics are wielded for petty purposes (ski areas need to be able to upgrade chairlifts), the more likely we are to lose them, as politicians who never stop bragging about how “business-friendly” Utah is look to streamline these pesky checks and balances. Third, Vail unapologetically yanking those things out of the parking lot and hauling them up to BC was the company's brashest move since it punched Powdr in the face and took its resort away. It was harsh but necessary, a signal that the world keeps moving around the sun even when a small group of nitwits want it to stop on its axis.Questions I wish I'd askedOn Scott's Bowl accessI wanted to ask Walsh about the strange fact that Scott's Bowl and West Scott's Bowl – two high-alpine sections off Jupiter, suddenly closed in 2018 and stayed shut for four years. This story from the Park Record tells it well enough:Park City Mountain Resort on Tuesday said a high-altitude swath of terrain has reopened more than three years after a closure caused by the inability of the resort and the landowner to reach a lease agreement. …PCMR in December of 2018 indefinitely closed the terrain. The closure also included terrain located between Scott's Bowl and Constellation, a nearby ski run. The resort at the time of the closure said the landowner opted not to renew a lease. There had been an agreement in place for longer than 14 years, PCMR said at the time.A firm called Silver King Mining Company, with origins dating to Park City's silver-mining era, owns the land. The lease and renewals had been struck between the Gallivan family-controlled Silver King Mining Company and Powdr Corp., the former owner of PCMR. A representative of Silver King Mining Company in late 2018 indicated the firm traditionally accepted lift passes as compensation for the use of the land.The lease went to Vail Resorts when it acquired PCMR. The two sides negotiated a one-year extension but were unable at the time to reach a long-term agreement, the Silver King Mining Company side said in late 2018.Land ownership, particularly in the west, can be a wild patchwork. The majority of large western ski areas sit on National Forest Service land, but Park City (and neighboring Deer Valley), do not. While this grants them some developmental advantages over their neighbors in the Cottonwoods, who sit mostly or entirely on public land, it also means that sprawling Park City has more landlords than it would probably like.On Park City Epic Pass accessThis is the first Vail Resorts interview in a while where I haven't asked the question about Epic Pass access. I don't have a high-minded reason for that – I simply ran out of time.On the strange aversion to safety bars among Western U.S. skiersWhen you ski in Europe or, to a lesser-extent, the Northeastern U.S., skiers lower the chairlift safety bar reflexively, and typically before the carrier has exited the loading terminal. While I found this jarring when I first moved to New York from the Midwest – where safety bars remain rare – I quickly adapted, and now find it disconcerting to ride a chair without one.This whole dynamic is flipped in the West, where a sort of tough-guy bravado prevails, and skiers tend to ride with the safety bar aloft as a matter of stubborn pride. Many seem shocked, even offended, when I announce that I'm lowering it (and I always announce it, and bring it down slowly). Perhaps they are afraid their friends will see them riding with a lame tourist. It's all a bit tedious and stupid. I've had a few incidents where I've passed out for mysterious reasons. If that happens on a chairlift, I'd rather not die before I regain consciousness. So I like the bar. Vail Resorts, however, mandates that all employees lower the safety bar when in uniform. That doesn't mean they always do it. This past January, a Park City ski patroller died when a tree fell on the Short Cut liftline, flinging him into a snowbank, where he suffocated. Utah Occupational Safety and Health (UOSH) fined the resort a laughably inadequate sum of $2,500 for failing to clear potential hazards around the lift. UOSH's report did not indicate whether the patroller, 29-year-old Christian Helger, had lowered his safety bar, and experts who spoke to Fox 13 in Salt Lake City said that it may not have mattered. “With that type of hit from the weight of that type of a tree with that much snow on it, I don't know that the safety bar would have prevented this incident,” Travis Heggie, a Bowling Green State University professor, told the station.Fair enough. But a man is dead, and understanding the exact circumstances surrounding his death may help prevent another in the future. This is why airplane travel is so safe – regulators consider every factor of every tragedy to engineer similar failures out of future flights. We ought to be doing the same with chairlifts.Chairlifts are, on the whole, very safe to ride. But accidents, when they do happen, can be catastrophic. Miroslava “Mirka” Lewis, a former Stevens Pass employee, recently sued Vail Resorts after a fall from one of Stevens Pass' antique Riblet chairs in January of 2022 left her permanently disabled. From a local paper out of Everett, Washington:The lawsuit claims the ski lift Lewis was operating was designed in the 1960s by Riblet Tramway Company and lacked several safety precautions now considered standard in modern lifts. The lift suspended two chairs from a single pole in the center, with no safety bars or bails on the outside to confine passengers.Lewis suffered a traumatic brain injury, collapsed lung, four fractured vertebrae and other severe injuries, according to the complaint. She required multiple surgeries on her breasts and knees.The plaintiff also reportedly had to relearn how to speak, walk and write due to the severity of her injuries.It is unclear which lift Lewis was riding, but two centerpole Riblets remained at the resort last January: Kehr's and Seventh Heaven. Kehr's has since been removed. Vail Resorts, as a general policy, retrofits all of its chairlifts with safety bars, but these chairs' early-1960s recessed centerpole design is impossible to retrofit. So the lifts remain in their vintage state. It's a bit like buying a '57 Chevy – damn, does that thing look sweet, but if you drive it into a tree, you're kinda screwed without that seatbelt.Vail Resorts, by retrofitting its chairlifts and mandating employee use, has done more than probably any other entity to encourage safety bar use on chairlifts. But the industry, as a whole, could do more. In the east, safety bar use has been normalized by aggressive enforcement from lift crews and ski patrol and, in some cases (Vermont, Massachusetts, and New York), state laws mandating their use. Yet, across the West and the Midwest, hundreds of chairlifts still lack safety bars, let alone enforcement. That, in turn, discourages normalization of their use, and contributes to the blasé and dismissive attitude among western skiers, many of whom view the contraptions as extraneous.Technology can eventually resolve the issue for us – the new Burns high-speed quad at Deer Valley and the new Camelot six-pack at The Highlands in Michigan both drop the bar automatically, and raise it just before unload. But that's two chairlifts, at two very high-end resorts, out of 2,400 or so spinning in America. That technology is too expensive to apply at scale, and will be for the foreseeable future.So what to do? I think it starts with dismantling the tough-guy resistance. There are echoes here of the shift to widespread helmet use. Twenty years ago, almost no one, including me, wore helmets when skiing. I held out for a particularly long time – until 2016. But wearing them is the norm now, even among Western Bro Brahs. As the leader of a major Vail ski area who has watched the resort evolve first-hand, I think Walsh would have some valuable insights here into the roots of bar resistance and how Vail is tackling it, but we just didn't have the time to get into it.What I got wrongI noted that Nadia Guerriero, who appeared on this podcast last year as the VP/COO of Beaver Creek, had “transitioned to a regional leadership role.” That role is senior vice president and chief operating officer of Vail Resorts' Rockies Region.Park City personnel also provided a few clarifications following our conversation:* When discussing our 2023 closing date and “All the Way to May!” Deirdra said we had already extended our season by a week. In fact, our first extension was for two weeks: from April 9 to April 23. On April 12, we announced an additional eight days.* When discussing how we memorialize our Olympic legacy, Deirdra stated, “We have a mountain in the base area.” That should have been “monument.”* When discussing our lift upgrade permit, Deirdra said, “Our permit was upheld.” This should have been EITHER withheld, OR “The appeal was upheld.”Why you should ski Park CityPark City is a version of something that America needs a lot more of: a walkable community integrated with the ski area above it in a meaningful and seamless way. In Europe, this is the norm. In U.S. America, the exception. Only a few towns give you that experience: Telluride, Aspen, Red River. Park City is worth a visit for that experience alone – of sliding to the street, clicking out of your skis, and walking to the bar. It's novel and unexpected here in the land of King Car, but it feels very natural and right when you do it.The skiing, of course, is outstanding. There's less chest-thumping here than up in the Cottonwoods – less snow, too – but still plenty of steep stuff, plenty of glades, plenty of tucked-away spots where you look around and wonder where everyone went. Zip around off McConkey's or Jupiter or Tombstone or Ninety-Nine 90 or Super Condor and you'll find it. This is not Snowbird-off-the-Cirque stuff, but it's pretty good.But what Park City really is, at its core, is one of the world's great intermediate ski kingdoms. I'm talking here about King Con and Silverlode, the amazing jumble of blues skier's right off Tombstone, Saddleback and Dreamscape and Iron Mountain. You can ride express lifts pretty much everywhere as you skip around the low-angle glory. The mountain does not shoot skyward with the drama of Jackson or Palisades or Snowbird or Aspen. It rises and falls, rolls on forever, gifting you, off each summit, another peak to ride to.Before Vail bought it and stapled the resort together with the Canyons, no one talked about Park City in such epic – no pun intended – terms. It was just another of dozens of very good western ski areas. But that combination with its neighbor created something vast and otherworldly, six-and-a-half miles end-to-end, a scale that cannot be appreciated in any way other than to go ski it.Podcast NotesOn Vail's target opening and closing datesIn previous seasons, Vail Resorts would release target opening and closing dates for all of its ski areas. Perhaps traumatized by short seasons, particularly in the Midwest, the company released only target opening dates, and only for its largest ski areas, for 2023:The remainder of its ski areas, “expect to open consistent with target dates shared in years past,” according to a Vail Resorts press release.On Hidden Valley, MissouriWalsh's first ski experience was at Hidden Valley, a 320-footer just west of St. Louis. It's one of just two ski areas in Missouri (both of which Vail owns). Vail happened to acquire this little guy in the 2019 Peak Resorts acquisition. Here's a trailmap:Not to be confused, of course, with Vail's other Hidden Valley, which is stashed in Pennsylvania:Rather than renaming one or the other of these, I am actually in favor of just massively confusing everything by renaming every mountain in the portfolio “Vail Mountain” followed by its zip code. On the Vail-Powdr transitionI'll reset this 2019 story from the Park Record that I initially shared in the article accompanying my podcast conversation with Mount Snow GM Brian Suhadolc in August, who also worked at Park City during Vail's takeover from Powdr:In some circles, though, the whispers had already started that something was afoot, and perhaps not right, at PCMR. Powdr Corp. for some unknown reason was negotiating a sale of its flagship resort, the most prevalent of the rumblings held. The CEO of Powdr Corp., John Cumming, late in 2011 had publicly stated there was not a deal involving PCMR under negotiation, telling Park City leaders during a Marsac Building appearance in December of that year the resort was “not for sale.” Later that evening, he told The Park Record the rumors “always amuse me.”The reality was far more astonishing and something that would define the decade in Park City in a similar fashion as the Olympics did in the previous 10-year span and the population boom did in the 1990s.The corporate infrastructure in the spring of 2011 had inadvertently failed to renew two leases on the land underlying most of the PCMR terrain, propelling the PCMR side and the landowner, a firm under the umbrella of Talisker Corp., into what were initially private negotiations and then into a dramatic lawsuit that unfolded in state court as the Park City community, the tourism industry and the North American ski industry watched in disbelief. As the decade ends, the turmoil that beset PCMR stands, in many ways, as the instigator of a changing Park City that has left so many Parkites uneasy about the city's future as a true community.The PCMR side launched the litigation in March of 2012, saying the future of the resort was at stake in the case. PCMR might be forced to close if it did not prevail, the president and general manager of the resort at the time said at the outset of the case. Talisker Land Holdings, LLC countered that the leases had expired, suddenly leaving doubts that Powdr Corp. would retain control of PCMR. …Colorado-based Vail Resorts, one of Powdr Corp.'s industry rivals, would enter the case on the Talisker Land Holdings, LLC side in May of 2013 with the aim of wresting the disputed land from Powdr Corp. and coupling it with nearby Canyons Resort, which was branded a Vail Resorts property as part of a long-term lease and operations agreement reached at the same time of the Vail Resorts entry into the case. Vail Resorts was already an industry behemoth with its namesake property in the Rockies and other mountain resorts across North America. The addition of Canyons Resort would advance the Vail Resorts portfolio in one of North America's key skiing states.It was a deft maneuver orchestrated by the chairman and CEO of Vail Resorts, Rob Katz. The agreement was pegged at upward of $300 million in long-term debt. As part of the deal, Vail Resorts also seized control of the litigation on behalf of Talisker Land Holdings, LLC. …The lawsuit itself unfolded with stunning developments followed by shocking ones over the course of two-plus years. In one stupefying moment, the Talisker Land Holdings, LLC attorneys discovered a crucial letter from the PCMR side regarding the leases had been backdated. In another such moment, PCMR outlined plans to essentially dismantle the resort infrastructure, possibly on an around-the-clock schedule, if it was ordered off the disputed land.What was transpiring in the courtroom was inconceivable to the community. How could Powdr Corp., even inadvertently, not renew the leases on the ground that made up most of the skiing terrain at PCMR, many asked. Why couldn't Powdr Corp. and Talisker Land Holdings, LLC just reach a new agreement, others wondered. And many became weary as businessmen and their attorneys took to the courtroom with the future of PCMR, critical to a broad swath of the local economy, at stake. The mood eventually shifted to exasperation as it appeared there was a chance PCMR would not open for a ski season if Talisker Land Holdings, LLC moved forward with an eviction against Powdr Corp. from the disputed terrain.The lawsuit wore on with the Talisker Land Holdings, LLC-Vail Resorts side winning a series of key rulings from the 3rd District Court judge presiding over the case. Judge Ryan Harris in the summer of 2014 signed a de facto eviction notice against PCMR and ordered the sides into mediation. Powdr Corp., realizing there was little more that could be accomplished as it attempted to maintain control of PCMR, negotiated a $182.5 million sale of the resort to Vail Resorts that September.Incredible. Here, if you're curious, was Park City just before the merger:And Canyons:Now, imagine if someone, someday, merged this whole operation with the expanded version of Deer Valley, which sits right next door to Park City on Empire Peak:Here's a closer look at the border between the two, which is separated by ropes, rather than by any geographic barrier:Right around the time Vail took over Park City, all seven major local ski areas discussed a “One Wasatch” interconnect, which could be accomplished with a handful of lifts between Brighton and Park City and between Solitude and Alta (the Canyons/Park City connection below has since been built; Brighton and Solitude already share a ski link, as do Alta and Snowbird):This plan died under an avalanche of external factors, and is unlikely to be resurrected anytime soon. However, the mountains aren't getting any farther apart physically, and at some point we're going to accept that a few aerial lifts through the wilderness are a lot less damaging to our environment than thousands of cars cluttering up our roads.On the Park City-Canyons connector gondolaWe talked a bit about the Quicksilver Gondola, which, eight years after its construction, is taken for granted. But it's an amazing machine, a 7,767-foot-long connector that fused Park City to the much-larger Canyons, creating the largest interconnected ski resort in the United States. The fact that such a major, transformative lift opened in 2015, just a year after Vail acquired Park City, and the ski area is now having trouble simply upgrading two older lifts, speaks to how dramatically sentiment around the resort has changed within town.On Park City's mining historyAn amazing feature of skiing Park City is the gigantic warehouses, conveyor belts, and other industrial artifacts that dot the landscape. Visit Park City hosts free daily tours of these historic structures, which we discuss in the podcast. You can learn more here.On the Friends of Ski Mountain Mining HistoryWalsh mentions an organization called “Friends of Ski Mountain Mining History.” This group assumes the burden of restoring and maintaining all of these historic structures. From their website:More than 300 mines once operated in Park City, with the last silver mine closing in 1982. Twenty historic mine structures still exist today, many can been seen while skiing, hiking or mountain biking on our mountain trails. Due to the ravages of time and our harsh winters, many of the mine structures are dilapidated and in critical need of repair. We are committed to preserving our rich mining legacy for future residents and visitors before we lose these historic structures forever.Over the past seven years, our dedicated volunteers have completed stabilization of the King Con Counterweight, California Comstock Mill, Jupiter Ore Bin, Little Bell Ore Bin, two Silver King Water Tanks, the Silver Star Boiler Room and Coal Hopper, the Thaynes Conveyor and the King Con Ore Bin. Previous projects undertaken by our members include the Silver King Aerial Tramway Towers and two Silver King Water Tanks adjacent to the Silver Queen ski run. Our lecture with Clark Martinez, principal contractor on our projects and Jonathan Richards who is our structural engineer, will provide you insight as to how we saved these monuments to our mining era.Preserving our mining heritage is expensive. Our next challenge is to save the Silver King Headframe located at the base of the Bonanza lift and Thaynes Headframe near the Thaynes lift at Park City Mountain Resort. These massive buildings and adjacent structures will take 6 years to stabilize with an expected cost of $3 million. We are embarking on a capital campaign to raise the funds required to save these iconic structures. You can learn more about our campaign here.Here's a cool but slow-paced video about it:On the 2030/34 Winter OlympicsWe talk a bit about the potential for Salt Lake City – and, by extension, host mountains Park City, Deer Valley, and Snowbasin – to host a future Olympic Games. While both 2030 and 2034 are possibilities, the latter increasingly looks likely. Per an October Deseret News article:It looks like there's no competition for Salt Lake City's bid to host the 2034 Winter Games.International Olympic Committee members voted Sunday to formally award both the 2030 and 2034 Winter Games together next year after being told Salt Lake City's preference is for 2034 and the other three candidates still in the race are finalizing bids for 2030.“I think it's everything we could have hoped for,” said Fraser Bullock, president and CEO of the Salt Lake City-Utah Committee for the Games, describing the decision as “a tremendous step forward” now that Salt Lake City was identified as the only candidate for 2034.Salt Lake City is bidding to host the more than $2.2 billion event in either 2030 or 2034, but has made it clear waiting until the later date is better financially, because that will avoid competition for domestic sponsors with the 2028 Summer Games in Los Angeles.The next step for the bid that began more than a decade ago is a virtual presentation to the IOC's Future Host Commission for the Winter Games during the week starting Nov. 19 that will include Gov. Spencer Cox and Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall. IOC Executive Board members will decide when they meet from Nov. 30 through Dec. 1 which bids will advance to contract negotiations for 2030 and 2034, known as targeted dialogue under the new, less formal selection process. Their choices to host the 2030 and 2034 Winter Games will go to the full membership for a final ratification vote next year, likely in July just before the start of the 2024 Summer Games in Paris. The Summer Olympics have evolved into a toxic expense that no one really wants. The Winter Games, however, still seem desirable, and I've yet to encounter any significant resistance from the Utah ski community, who have (not entirely but in significant pockets) kind of made resistence to everything their default posture.The Storm explores the world of lift-served skiing year-round. Join us.The Storm publishes year-round, and guarantees 100 articles per year. This is article 96/100 in 2023, and number 482 since launching on Oct. 13, 2019. Want to send feedback? Reply to this email and I will answer (unless you sound insane, or, more likely, I just get busy). You can also email skiing@substack.com. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.stormskiing.com/subscribe

Making It Grow Minutes
A revolution for corn lovers

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2023 1:00


Back in the day, when Silver Queen sweet corn became widely available, it was transformational for corn on the cob lovers. Sweet corn differs from field corn it the actual amount of sugar versus starch it contains when mature.

Making It Grow Minutes
Field corn vs. sweet corn

Making It Grow Minutes

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2023 1:00


In those days, Silver Queen was the finest sweet corn available, and a relative grew several acres of that for friends to come and pick.

Binge-Watchers Podcast
Action Movie Moms, Silver Queen Anime, And First Time Movie Reactions To Legend Of Lemnear

Binge-Watchers Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2023 39:09


EXCLUSIVE Offer for Podcast Listeners! Head to https://bit.ly/FACTORMEALSBINGE50 and use code binge50 to get 50% off your first box! Sub Audio https://bit.ly/SUB2LISTEN Sub Video: https://bit.ly/BWVideoSub The podcast usually releases episodes on holidays, but Mother's Day fell on a weekend this year. To celebrate a belated Mother's Day, Johnny Spoiler and Jordan Savage discuss some badass movie moms, including Ellen Ripley from the Alien franchise, Geena Davis from The Long Kiss Goodnight, and Studio Ghibli characters. Johnny Spoiler and Jordan Savage also discuss how they have been playing around with AI to create images of themselves as anime characters in the style of Studio Ghibli; a funny discussion about GILFS erupts. In this episode, Johnny Spoiler and Jordan Savage discuss the movie Oldboy, which is a South Korean action drama film directed by Park Chan-wook. The film tells the story of a man who is kidnapped and held captive for 15 years. When he is finally released, he sets out to find his captors and get revenge. Oldboy is a dark and violent film, but it is also a visually stunning and thought-provoking film. The hosts of the podcast highly recommend Oldboy to anyone who enjoys action, drama, or revenge films. Johnny Spoiler says that Old Boy is one of his favorite movies of all time. Jordan Savage says that she has not seen Oldboy, but she is intrigued by the plot. The hosts discuss the film's themes of revenge, violence, and redemption. The hosts also discuss the film's director, Park Chan-wook, and his other films, such as Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance and Lady Vengeance. Johnny Spoiler and Jordan Savage discuss the anime OVA movie Legend of Lemnear. Johnny Spoiler and Jordan Savage praise the movie's action sequences, music, and character development. Johnny Spoiler and Jordan Savage also mention that the movie is a bit campy and over-the-top, but that it is still enjoyable. Johnny Spoiler and Jordan Savage recommend the movie to fans of fantasy anime and 80s action movies.

Heirloom Radio
Have Gun Will Travel -"Lady Kane, The Silver Queen" May 17, 1959

Heirloom Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2023 26:40


106 Episodes of "HGWT" were produced for radio. It was a unique program because it was first popular on television with Richard Boone as Paladin John Dehner agreed to play the Paladin on one condition, that he could be his own character and not a copy of Richard Boone's portrayal of Paladin. If you have ever seen the television series, I know you would immediately see and hear the differences between the two characters with the same name. This track will be living in the "Western" Playlist

Classic Streams: Old Time Retro Radio
Saturday Matinee: Have Gun Will Travel: Lady Kane The Silver Queen (05-17-1959)

Classic Streams: Old Time Retro Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2023 24:12


Have Gun – Will Travel is an American Western series that was produced and originally broadcast by CBS on both television and radio from 1957 through 1963. The television version of the series starring Richard Boone was rated number three or number four in the Nielsen ratings every year of its first four seasons, and it is one of the few shows in television history to spawn a successful radio version. That radio series starring John Dehner debuted November 23, 1958, more than a year after the premiere of its televised counterpart. Production. Have Gun – Will Travel was created by Sam Rolfe and Herb Meadow and produced by Frank Pierson, Don Ingalls, Robert Sparks, and Julian Claman. Of the 225 episodes of the television series, 24 were written by Gene Roddenberry. Other major contributors included Bruce Geller, Harry Julian Fink, Don Brinkley, and Irving Wallace. Andrew V. McLaglen directed 101 episodes, and 28 were directed by series star Richard Boone. Premise. This series follows the adventures of a man calling himself "Paladin" (played by Richard Boone on television and voiced by John Dehner on radio), taking his name from that of the foremost knights in Charlemagne's court. He is a gentleman investigator/gunfighter who travels around the Old West working as a mercenary for people who hire him to solve their problems. Although Paladin charges steep fees to clients who can afford to hire him, typically $1000 per job, he provides his services for free to poor people who need his help. Like many Westerns, the television show was set in a time vaguely indicated to be some years after the American Civil War. The radio show announced the year of the story that followed in the opening of each episode. The season 5 television episode, "A Drop of Blood", gives the specific date of July 3, 1879. In the fourteenth and seventeenth ("Lazarus", March 6 and 7, 1875) episodes of season 5, it is 1875. Title. The title is a variation on a cliche used in personal advertisements in newspapers like The Times, indicating that the advertiser is ready for anything. It has been used this way from the early twentieth century. A trope common in theatrical advertising at the time was "Have tux, will travel" (originally from comedian Bob Hope in 1954), and CBS has claimed this was the specific inspiration for the writer Herb Meadow. The television show popularized the phrase in the 1950s and 1960s, and many variations have been used as titles for other works, including the 1958 science fiction novel Have Space Suit—Will Travel by Robert A. Heinlein.

Proactive - Interviews for investors
Equity Metals Silver Queen project records increase in mineral resource estimate

Proactive - Interviews for investors

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2022 4:49


Equity Metals Vice President of Exploration Rob Macdonald joins Natalie Stoberman from the Proactive studio to discuss the details behind the Silver Queen gold-silver project's increase in its Mineral Resource Estimate. The Silver Queen Property consists of 45 mineral claims, 17 crown grants, and two surface crown grants totalling 18,852 ha with no underlying royalties. #proactiveinvestors #equitymetals #TSXV #EQTY #mining #gold #silver #silverqueenproject

Have Gun Will Travel
Have Gun Will Travel - Silver Queen

Have Gun Will Travel

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2022 24:08


Have Gun Will Travel - Silver Queen https://havegun.libsyn.com/havegun

travel western guns silver queen have gun will travel silver queen
Row by Row Garden Show
Row by Row Episode 201: The DOs and DONT’s of Growing Corn

Row by Row Garden Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2022 31:49


Tonight we talk sweet corn and field corn, what is the difference? When should you plant and harvest? How much should you plant for your family? Sheila gives us tips on the best way to preserve your corn harvest! Sweet Corn Vs. Field Corn Field Corn has been around the longest (for hundreds of years), originating in Mexico and South America. It is used for grits and corn meal; it is typically dried on the stalk to around a 23-25% moisture level. Animal feed is also made up of field corn. Sweet corn is typically harvested and eaten in the immature stage (milk stage) on the stalk, they have a relatively high moisture content. Sweet corn is bred for its sweet taste. Stowells Evergreen is the oldest heirloom sweet corn that we carry, it was developed in the mid-1800s. It is standard sweet corn (su) and with it being an heirloom, you can save the seeds. Our most popular is the Silver Queen, which was developed in the 1960s, Silver Queen is a standard (su) sweet corn variety that is a hybrid. This year we "trialed" new sweet corn that we plan to carry next year; the Seminole Sweet XR Corn (sh2) is a bi-color and was bred in Illinois. It is sweeter than the Silver Queen and was bred for the commercial market. How Much Corn We Plant Don't overplant your corn! Hoss recommends starting off by planting in a smaller plot to utilize your garden space. Greg planted 6 rows that were 52 feet each (roughly a 25' x 50' plot) of the Seminole XR sweet corn, which produced 60 quarts of creamed corn and 10 pints of canned corn. Greg planted the Seminole XR on March 1, 2022, and they harvested on May 30, 2022. Only 90 days to maturity! Tips On Preserving Corn There are many ways to preserve corn. Sheila says you should try creaming your corn and freezing it if you never tried that method. She has recently tried canning and she is a fan. We have a new video going up on Tuesday, 6/7 on our YouTube channel. Product of the Week Benary Giant Zinnia Mix Watch the Complete Show on YouTube Below: https://youtu.be/XVV9706V_K4

Ear Hustle
Gabrieleen Silver Queen

Ear Hustle

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2022 42:31 Very Popular


What happens to a prison town when its main prison closes? The residents of Susanville, in Northern California, are about to find out. Ear Hustle took a road trip to see how Susanvillers — both inside and outside the prison — are reacting to the news. As always, big thanks to Lt. Sam Robinson and Warden Ron Broomfield for their support of the show. Ear Hustle is a proud member of Radiotopia, from PRX. Find a full list of episode credits at earhustlesq.com.

The Relic Radio Show (old time radio)
Have Gun Will Travel and John Steele Adventurer

The Relic Radio Show (old time radio)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2022


This week on The Relic Radio Show, we begin with Lady Kane, The Silver Queen, the May 17, 1959, episode of Have Gun, Will Travel. (25:00) Our second story comes from John Steele, Adventurer. We hear Lighthouse Twelve, his episode from October 25, 1949. https://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/archive.org/download/rr22021/RelicRadio772.mp3 Download RelicRadio772 Support our fifteenth year of podcasting by [...]

Ghoul, Interrupted
Ep 6: Silver Queen, the Encore

Ghoul, Interrupted

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2021 35:23 Transcription Available


In this episode, we talk about what dissappointed us on out last ghost hunt, what ghost hunting really looks like, and we do a little of a get to know us before the end of the time listening! Join us to learn more about ghost hunting and more about your hosts, Annaleaz and Austin. 

Ghoul, Interrupted
Ep 5: Silver Queen, the Investigation

Ghoul, Interrupted

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2021 13:41 Transcription Available


In this episode, we talk about what happened on our hunt at the Silver Queen. Join us to learn of what we did and didn't find at this location!

Old Time Radio Westerns
Lady Kane the Silver Queen – Have Gun Will Travel (05-17-59)

Old Time Radio Westerns

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2021 25:54


Original Air Date: May 17, 1959 Host: Andrew Rhynes Show: Have Gun Will Travel Phone: (707) 98 OTRDW (6-8739) Stars: • John Dehner (Paladin) • Ben Wright (Heyboy) Special Guests: • Lynn Allen • Joseph Kearns • Harry Bartell • James Nusser Writers: • Albert Aley Producer: • Norman MacDonnell Exit music from: Roundup on […]

Have Gun Will Travel - OTRWesterns.com
Lady Kane the Silver Queen – Have Gun Will Travel (05-17-59)

Have Gun Will Travel - OTRWesterns.com

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2021 25:54


Original Air Date: May 17, 1959 Host: Andrew Rhynes Show: Have Gun Will Travel Phone: (707) 98 OTRDW (6-8739) Stars: • John Dehner (Paladin) • Ben Wright (Heyboy) Special Guests: • Lynn Allen • Joseph Kearns • Harry Bartell • James Nusser Writers: • Albert Aley Producer: • Norman MacDonnell Exit music from: Roundup on […]

Ghoul, Interrupted
Ep 4: Silver Queen, the Background

Ghoul, Interrupted

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2021 24:29 Transcription Available


Welcome to our second investigation! This is the first of three episode into the Silver Queen Hotel in Virginia City, NV. In this episode, we let you know the history, both factual and paranormal, regarding this location before diving into the findings of the investigation next week! Join us on our next adventure

Show Up & Love
EP15: You Are A Survivor

Show Up & Love

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2021 25:38


The guest today is Ivy Roman, who was born and raised in the Bronx. She is the first college graduate in her family and accomplished this while supporting her sister with raising her kids. Ivy is known in the wrestling world as Silver Queen. She is a warrior and a survivor encouraging others in their journey to find peace and get more out of this life. She believes we only live once and should live life to its fullest!In this episode, we talk about…Why mental health matters to Ivy.What inspired Ivy to be the first in her family to go to college and how she was able to do it.How Ivy got into wrestling and how it helps with her mental health.Why Ivy lost herself in her wrestling character for a while and how she found herself again.How Ivy inspires others to find peace.Why you should hope for the best, but prepare for the worst.Why holding on sometimes hurts more than letting go.Links to Resources:Ivy's Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/healingwithivy/ Ivy's Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/ivy.roman.96 Ivy's Clubhouse - @silverqueenivyIvy's Podcast - https://open.spotify.com/show/6dcVT9mSSvZlIiROFIzeNv To learn more about Lorrine or to order her Amazon Best Selling Book, Freeing Your Heart For Love visit her link below: https://beacons.page/lorrinepatterson Follow the podcast on Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/showupandlove/.Please like, subscribe, and leave a review if you enjoyed the episode!

RADIO Then
HAVE GUN WILL TRAVEL "Lady Kane eThe Silver Queen"

RADIO Then

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2021 24:08


May 17, 1959 episode 026 Lady Kane eThe Silver Queen aired on CBS Radio. In a suspicious turn of events a beautiful lady receives a half-ownership in a silver mine. The series broadcast 106 episodes between November 23, 1958, and November 27, 1960. It was one of the last radio dramas featuring continuing characters and the only significant American radio adaptation of a television series. John Dehner (a regular on the radio series version of Gunsmoke) played Paladin, and Ben Wright usually (but not always) played Hey Boy. Virginia Gregg played Miss Wong, Hey Boy's girlfriend, before the television series featured the character of Hey Girl. Unlike the small-screen version, in this medium there was usually a tag scene at the Carlton at both the beginning and the end of the episode. Initially, the episodes were adaptations of the television program as broadcast earlier the same week, but eventually original stories were produced.

Lattes and Legends
The World Of The Bizarre: The Silver Queen Hotel

Lattes and Legends

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2021 17:55


This historic Virginia City Hotel in Nevada has a long past of silver miners and sex workers. Some of the spirits that haunt it will make you have chills up your spine! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lattes-and-legends/support

Row by Row Garden Show
Row by Row Episode 155: Best Way to Preserve Sweet Corn!

Row by Row Garden Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2021 31:54


Our corn is finally coming in and ready for harvest. This year we grew the G-90 corn for the first time. The G-90 is an Su, or standard variety of sweet corn, such as Jubilee and Silver Queen. The drawback of the Su variety is the lower sugar content. They only have about 9% sugar which means a short shelf-life, only 1 to 2 days, so it is important to process them as soon as they are harvested. Preservation Once you've harvested your corn you need to either eat it or have a way to preserve it so that it doesn't go bad or spoil on you. There's nothing quite like watching your crops grow and flourish with high yield only to have it spoil because you couldn't save it after harvest. The best thing to do is to have a plan. Your plan needs to cover from planting all the way past harvest to include how you plan on using your crop. If you are growing corn to keep for your family then there needs to be a plan for preservation of your harvest. There are 3 ways to preserve your corn; canning, corn-on-the-cob, and freezing. When you can your corn you have to cut the kernels from the ear and either raw pack or heat pack them. If you heat-pack you will have to use a pressure cooker. The on the cob method tends to lose texture and flavor after a few months so it is the least desirable method of preservation. It also takes up the most room in your freezer so the ease is typically not worth it when you end up with a freezer full of corn that has no flavor. When using the freezing method you cut the kernels off, as with the canning method, or cream the corn. Freezing Your Corn The method that the folks here at Hoss prefer is the freezing method after creaming the corn. It's not the easiest way to preserve corn but it has the best results and will last much longer for you. Once you have harvested your corn you need to shuck and silk the ears, meaning you need to remove the protective leaves and then remove the silky fibers on the end of the ear.  Silking brushes are the best way to remove the fibers and we have one for $7.99 that will make that job extremely easy. Use a back and forth motion along with the corn while slowly rotating it to make sure you remove all the fibers. Don't use too much pressure as you can burst the kernels. Once you've silked your corn you'll want to wash the ears well and let the excess water dry off completely. You don't want extra water when you cream corn. Next, you want to use a knife and barely cut the tops off the kernels, cutting away from yourself and into your pan or bowl. Once you've removed the tops off of the kernels you will use the back of the knife to scrape the cream out of the kernels.  Once you've creamed your corn you will need to blanch it. Blanching is important because it will stop the natural enzyme actions and promote a better flavor. This process can be done before you cream if that works better for you. Simply boil your corn for 10 minutes, let it cool, then cream it. For this process, however, we blanch in the microwave after the creaming step. You'll want to use 50% power for 10 minutes, stir, then repeat. When the corn is ready the color will be more vibrant.  Take the blanched corn, let it cool off, and place it in a freezer container. If done correctly, your freshly processed corn will last up to 2 years. Make sure to label your storage container with the date so you can keep track of its time in the freezer. Product of the Week Corn Silking Brush Sweet Corn Varieties Watch the Complete Show on YouTube Below: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q3wXleUYs5w

Row by Row Garden Show
Row by Row Episode 137: The Best Way to Plant Corn in the Vegetable Garden

Row by Row Garden Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2021 59:26


Things to Consider When Growing Corn Before deciding whether to plant corn in the garden, there are a few important isolation requirements you need to follow in order to avoid cross-pollination of sweet corn. If you do not want cross-pollination of sweet corn you should either plant a synergistic variety or stagger your plantings 2 to 3 weeks in your garden. You should also consider whether you have time to process and harvest the corn once it's ready. If you don't have time to process and put away some of the standard varieties all in one day, you should probably consider growing some of the sweeter varieties that leave you a 10 to 15-day window to put up on the homestead. Another important factor to consider is whether this is your first time growing corn. If it is your first time growing corn, we recommend growing a standard variety such as G90, Jubilee, or Silver Queen. We recommend a standard variety due to the longer growing period which allows you more time to apply plenty of fertilizer and water. Growing Corn in the Vegetable Garden The key factor when growing corn is to plant corn in a square plot with at least three rows side-by-side. If you are growing in a raised bed you can still plant corn just try and squeeze in three rows if you can. The major reason why we plant corn in square plots is that corn is wind-pollinated therefore in order to get full ears of kernel those tassels need to side-by-side. The ideal pH for growing corn is between 5.8 - 6.5, however, if you get above 7 you may run into some trouble in the garden. For older corn varieties, you can get them germinating at 55 degrees. However, for the sweeter varieties, the soil temperature should be around 60 degrees. As far as, row spacing we recommend spacing them between 30 to 36 inches. While seed spacing is a little different based on whether you are planting sweet or field corn. We suggest planting sweet corn seeds around 6 to 8 inches apart on drip tape in the vegetable garden. While field corn seeds should be planted anywhere between 8 to 12 inches apart. Since corn is a heavy feeder, drip irrigation is more effective and way easier to supply the plants with the needed amount of water directly at the plant roots. Fertilizing Schedule for Corn When fertilizing corn, Nitrogen is the key component to accomplishing great success when growing corn in the vegetable garden. The standard corn recommendation is five pounds of Nitrogen per 1,000 square feet or 300-row feet. Once corn plants reach 6 to 8 inches tall, we suggest using our Fertilizer Injector to apply 2 lbs of 20-20-20 and 1 cup of Micro-Boost per 1,000 square feet. Then, once they reach 12 to 18" tall at our first hilling we apply 10 lbs of Chilean Nitrate. Next, we will side dress again with Chilean Nitrate once the corn reaches around "hiney high" which will also be our last cultivation. When the corn reaches around "titty high" we will inject 4 lbs of 20-20-20 and 1 cup of Micro-Boost per 1,000 square feet. The last time we fertilize is when plants start tasseling and we give them another 4 lbs of 20-20-20 and 1 cup of Micro-Boost to top them off in the garden. So in total if you have a 1,000 square plot of corn with no nutrients in your soil already you will need a bag of 20-20-20, one quart of Micro-Boost, and 2 bags of Chilean Nitrate. The most common pest problem when growing corn is earworms. The best pest control product to use when dealing with earworms is to use Spinosad and apply it on the silks. Show and Tell Segment On the show and tell segment this week, Greg and Travis talk a little bit about the weather conditions that have caused several issues for gardeners this year so far. The guys also show off a new product which is our Hoss Germination Mats that are offered in 3 different sizes. Travis goes over some new pumpkin and sunflower varieties that are now available on the website. The two new heirloom pumpkin varieties are both giant or larger type pum...

The Daily Gardener
February 23, 2021 The Father of the RBGE Archives, Agnes Arber, Marion Delf-Smith, English Cottage Gardening by Margaret Hensel, and the Very Best Flowers for Drying

The Daily Gardener

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2021 26:56


Today we celebrate a woman known as the Lady of Botany, yet today few people know her life story, and fewer still appreciate her difficult professional journey. We'll also learn about another female botanist who started one of the first degreed botany programs for women in England. We hear a story about a mink who set up residence in a winter garden from an avid gardener and writer. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a delightful book about Cottage Gardening. What could be more charming? And then we’ll wrap things up with the story of a dried flower expert who created everlastings for celebrities and he also shares some of his favorite flowers to preserve for long-term joy and delight.   Subscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart To listen to the show while you're at home, just ask Alexa or Google to “Play the latest episode of The Daily Gardener Podcast.” And she will. It's just that easy.   The Daily Gardener Friday Newsletter Sign up for the FREE Friday Newsletter featuring: A personal update from me Garden-related items for your calendar The Grow That Garden Library™ featured books for the week Gardener gift ideas Garden-inspired recipes Exclusive updates regarding the show Plus, each week, one lucky subscriber wins a book from the Grow That Garden Library™ bookshelf.   Gardener Greetings Send your garden pics, stories, birthday wishes, and so forth to Jennifer@theDailyGardener.org   Curated News Sir Isaac Bayley Balfour (1853-1922) – An Appreciation | RBGE.org |  Leonie Paterson   Facebook Group If you'd like to check out my curated news articles and original blog posts for yourself, you're in luck. I share all of it with the Listener Community in the Free Facebook Group - The Daily Gardener Community. So, there’s no need to take notes or search for links. The next time you're on Facebook, search for Daily Gardener Community, where you’d search for a friend... and request to join. I'd love to meet you in the group.   Important Events February 23, 1879 Today is the birthday of the British plant morphologist and anatomist, botanical historian, and philosopher of biology Agnes Arber. Since her father was the artist Henry Robertson, Agnes learned to draw as a child, and throughout her life, she illustrated all of her own botanical work. Agnes’ mom, also an Agnes, fostered her love of plants. Mentored and befriended by the botanist Ethel Sargent, Agnes mastered the microscope. Ethel was a profound role model in Agnes’ life. She not only taught Agnes her earliest lessons in botany, but she also modeled a unique approach to her work because Agnes watched Ethel successfully conduct her work in a small laboratory she had built in her home. Later, when Anges wrote her first book on her dear monocots (which are grass or grass-like flowering plants), she dedicated her work to the woman who was godmother to her only child Muriel Agnes Arber and the brightest beacon in her botanical career and: Ethel Sargent. In 1909, Agnes married a paleobotanist, Edward Alexander Newell Arber, of Trinity College at Cambridge. And it was thanks in part to Edward that Agnes moved to Cambridge from London and made a life there. Edward promised Agnes that “life in Cambridge offered unique opportunities for the observation of river and fenland plants.” Despite Edward’s appeal, for Agnes, Cambridge was tough. Cambridge was a much harder place for a female botanist than London - where Agnes would have had more opportunities, connections, and acceptance. Sadly, Agnes and Edward would be married for only nine years as Edward died in 1918. And so, before her 40th birthday, Agnes found herself both a widow and a single mother to six-year-old Muriel. After securing help with childcare and household duties, Agnes carried on with her botanical work -  she wrote constantly, she was poorly compensated for her work, and she never re-married. A few years after Agnes arrived in Cambridge, she started working at the Balfour Laboratory, which was owned by Newnham College and was a place for teaching women. Now, the creation of this laboratory was a direct result of allowing women admittance into Cambridge. And although women could attend Cambridge, they could not go to labs or classes, and so the Balfour Lab became their only option for conducting experiments. Over the 19 years that Agnes worked at Balfour, the female students gradually disappeared as classes and lab opportunities opened up for them in botany, chemistry, geography, etc. By 1925, Newnham College was ready to sell the lab to Cambridge; they needed the cash, and it seems only Agnes needed the lab. Yet when Agnes reached out to Cambridge, both the University and the head of botany, Albert Seward, rejected her - suggesting she might seek out a space to work at the botanic garden.  And so, an accomplished botanist and the widow of a Cambridge professor no less was left with nowhere to work. And so, seven years after her husband’s death, Agnes, like her mentor and friend Ethel Sargent, set up a home laboratory in the back of her house over the kitchen. Agnes worked from home for the rest of her life. A lover of researching whatever captured her curiosity, Agnes allowed her intellect to veer into areas seldom explored by her botanist peers, such as history, philosophy, poetry, and art. Yet, each of these disciplines molded and refined Agnes’s perspective on plant morphology, and they put her in a unique position to write her most impactful philosophical works in the twilight of her life. When it came time for Agnes to publish her final work, Cambridge snubbed her again when they declined to publish it. As per usual, Agnes persevered without the University’s help. Agnes became interested in botanical history after reading the old herbals. In 1912, Agnes released a book called Herbals: Their Origin and Evolution. Agnes's work reviewed the primary herbals written for a 200 year time period between 1470 and 1670. These beautiful books formed the basis for early botanical education, and, luckily for Agnes, many were housed at Cambridge. In her book, Agnes examined how the plant descriptions and illustrations evolved over time. An instant classic, Agnes forever changed the way herbals were reviewed and written. In her philosophical work, The Mind and the Eye, Agnes argued that there was a blurred line between the science and art of botany. Botanists cannot fully capture a flower through data alone, just as the painter cannot paint all that a flower contributes to nature. Any gardener who sees their garden with their head and their heart can relate to Agnes’ philosophy. When she was 67 years old, Agnes became the first female botanist to be elected as a Royal Society Fellow. Two years later, she became the first woman to receive the Linnean Society’s Gold Medal for her botanical work. Known by many in her circle as the “Lady of Botany,” Agnes wrote, “A record of research should not resemble a casual pile of quarried stone; it should seem "not built, but born,” as Vasari said in praise of a building.” Today, you can toast Agnes with a gin made in the UK. The gin is made in her honor and it's called Agnes Arber gin. And it's made with nine botanicals, including angelica, cassia, coriander, grapefruit, iris, juniper, lemon, licorice, and orange. And I think Agnes would be especially touched by the beautiful hand-drawn botanical illustrations on the label of every bottle. If ever there was a female botanist that deserved to be toasted, I believe Agnes Arber fits the bill.   February 23, 1980 Today is the anniversary of the death of the British botanist and botanical pioneer Marion Delf-Smith. A botanical trailblazer, Marion started the botany program at London's Westfield (a women’s college preparatory school) in 1906. To make the program a reality, Marion fundraised relentlessly, and then she bought everything the program needed to teach botany, mount specimens, store collections, and conduct fieldwork. Ultimately Westfield became one of the only places in the world where women could learn how to study botany. And in 1915, almost a decade after starting her degree program, Marion was finally able to award Bachelor’s degrees in botany to her students. Sixty-Seven years after starting her botany program, Marion was honored by her students on the occasion of her 90th birthday. Marion died seven years later, on this day in 1980. She was 97 years old. And there’s a lovely side note about Marion’s botanical career. At one point, Marion served as an editor for a botanical comedy magazine called "The Sportophyte." Marion’s poem,  "A Botanical Dream," was featured in a volume of The Sportophyte, and I thought I would share some quick definitions to help you appreciate her verse. Gymnosperms produce seed cones like conifers and the Ginko.  The Medullosae and Pteridosperms are extinct plants in the seed-fern group.  Calamites are extinct swamp plants related to horsetails - except that they could grow as tall as a ten-story building.  Cryptogams are plants that reproduce by spores (not flowers or seeds).   Sphenophyllum cones would refer to the spore-filled cone of an extinct group of plants that are a sister group to modern horsetails.  Finally, Palaeozoic is a reference to a long-ago era. The end of the Paleozoic period marked the most extraordinary extinction event on earth. A Botanical Dream Last night as I lay dreaming There came a dream so fair I stood mid ancient Gymnosperms Beside the Ginkgo rare. I saw the Medullosae With multipartite fronds, And watched the sunset rosy Through Calamites wands. Oh Cryptograms, Pteridosperms And Sphenophyllum cones, Why did ye ever fossilise To Palaeozoic stones?   Unearthed Words The most predaceous winter visitor we have had was a mink that took up residence under the woodpile one winter. The end of the pile was only 20 feet or so from the place where the drain pipe struck out of the pond, which tends to be open even when other areas of the pond are frozen. The Mink had found the perfect carryout restaurant right across from his winter Abode. We timed him: 20 seconds from leaving the woodpile to returning with a crayfish. We never saw him return empty-handed. — Jo Busha, Time and the Garden, February   Grow That Garden Library English Cottage Gardening by Margaret Hensel This book came out in 2000, and the subtitle is For American Gardeners, Revised Edition. In this book, Margaret shares everything she knows about English Cottage Gardening; and she’s as charming as her topic. Margaret breaks down ten cottage gardens owned by everyday gardeners in England and America. By deliberately not focusing on estate gardens, Margaret shows Daily Gardeners how anyone can cultivate the charm of a cottage garden. With inspiring photographs, Margaret focuses on plants that are easy to grow and give the look cottage gardeners love - enchanted shapes and natural forms, gentle colors, and endearing varieties. The last section of the book shares a glossary of 76 plant recommendations, including the Latin and common names, how to use them in the garden, as well as a list of places to find old rose varieties. This book is 256 pages of an English Cottage Garden masterclass taught by a garden designer who loves to teach the most novice gardener to create enchanting gardens and vistas right outside their windows. You can get a copy of English Cottage Gardening by Margaret Hensel and support the show using the Amazon Link in today's Show Notes for around $10    Today’s Botanic Spark Reviving the little botanic spark in your heart February 23, 1991 On this day, the Hartford Courant shared an article written by Anne Farrow called Garden of Everlasting Delights. This fantastic article features Gregg Fisk of Gregg Fisk Designs and his incredible dried arrangements and flower drying skills. Gregg’s creations are truly a cut above the rest, and his celebrity clients have included Barbara Streisand and Lady Bird Johnson. And a photo of one of his swags highlights outstanding features like small flower pots, hydrangea, globe amaranth, and love-in-a-mist. Now as for Gregg’s favorite plants to grow for drying, here’s what Gregg suggests: “Some of the basics are globe amaranth, the everlasting signifying immortality; American statice, a ruffle-edged annual that's durable and can be grown in a variety of colors; strawflowers; asters; zinnias; heather' in several different colors; and nigella, a flower with a delicate mauve seed head and a beautiful name: love-in-a-mist.  The current crop of books on growing flowers for drying also recommends hosta, the ubiquitous of shade-garden perennials; poppies, which have a globe-shaped seed case that dries easily, astilbe, ivy, baby's breath and the evocatively named money plant, which has a silvery, translucent seed case.  Another must-have for the home gardener is the rose. [Gregg] recommends planting a climbing rose, sometimes called the faerie rose… [which adds] a finished, old-fashioned appearance to dried arrangements.  From the herb family, [Gregg] chooses rosemary, which has a dark, blue-green needle and a wonderfully piney perfume; bay, for its fragrance; and both Silver King and Silver Queen artemisia. The artemisias, which really are silver-colored, look handsome and puffy in the garden and in dried arrangements.  The bright golden florets of yarrow, a perennial grown in the earliest New World gardens, is another of the herbs he always chooses, as are the low-growing lamb's ear, which has a velvety, gray-green leaf that is soft even when dried. Often shown in herb kits for children because it is so touchable, lamb's ears are particularly pretty in wreaths with a lot of pink flowers or placed in a bowl of homemade potpourri.  White lilacs can [hang-dry] easily and turn a pearlescent cream color.  Hydrangeas, too, can be hang-dried and then dyed in a variety of shades. Asters, a garden classic, dry beautifully in beach sand. Experimentation teaches you a lot, [and Gregg] has found an ally in… the microwave oven.  Though the procedure for drying flowers in the "mike" is more complicated than simple hang-drying methods, the results, particularly with… peonies, daffodils, marigolds, and roses, justify the effort required. The special advantage of microwave flower drying is that the delicate natural color of the bloom is preserved because the drying time is a fraction of traditional methods.”   Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener. And remember: "For a happy, healthy life, garden every day."

FM Talk 1065 Podcasts
Plain Gardening With Bill Finch 1-17-21 hour 2

FM Talk 1065 Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2021 43:47


Lawn and garden expert, author and columnist Bill Finch hosts this weekly gulf coast garden show Sundays 9 to 11 AM. corn varieties, tall types, a lot of room in small gardens, Silver Queen, Silver King, work well in this area, older varieties, less-sweet, winds blowing over some stalks, pests, rodents, squirrels, green moss,

Demolished Salt Lake
Episode 1: The Bransford Apartments

Demolished Salt Lake

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2021 20:54


The story of the Bransford Apartments and the Silver Queen, Susanna E. Bransford Emery Holmes Delitch Engalitcheff Sources: Utah Historical Quarterly 1996- Vol LXIV No. 1 Utah's Silver Queen and the “Era of the Great Splurge” South Temple Historic District Utah National Register Nomination Form Pages 24-27 Salt Lake Herald-Republican: 1901-07-28, 1902-03-05, 1902-07-28, 1904-07-01, 1905-01-29, 1907-05-24, 1918-02-10, 1918-10-16 Salt Lake Telegram: 1904-06-27, 1917-12-29, 1918-07-29, 1921-05-14, 1925-09-13, 1928-03-22, 1938-03-28, 1946-05-01 Salt Lake Tribune: 1908-12-02

El Baño MX
Inocenteadas en El Baño

El Baño MX

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2020 53:28


En este dia de los Inocentes en El Baño no enteramos como Andre uso esta fecha para anunciar que seria papá, un tierno, bonito y ocurrente detalle. Mientra el barbón nos confiesa que usa esta fecha para torturar a su equipo de trabajo, jugando con sus mentes y emociones. Por si tu quieres jugar tambien damos unas recomendaciones como las que tomara  la Silver Queen para aplicar en casa. Recuerda darnos like, seguirnos y activar notificaciones en QFM 104.3 y El Baniofm en todas las redes sociales.

El Baño MX
Verdades que duelen o mentiras que confortan? En El Baño

El Baño MX

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2020 56:54


La mayoraria de las personas preferimos una verdad que nos duela, hasta que nos la dicen y nos duele y ahi nos damos cuenta que una mentira que reconfortara podia ser una mejor opcionEn este episodio de El Baño nos enterams porque batearon a la Silver Queen y la Ghostearon hasta que ella confronto al desgraciado para aclarar las cosas, mientras Alex nos cuenta como le reclamaron por no impedir una boda. Halblando de mentiras, nosotros no te mentimos cuando te decimos que podrias llevarte $1,500 pesos, solo debes contestar 10 preguntas y listo, FASTFIT patrocinador oficial de la milanesa y media te invita a paricipar este viernes, solo debes sintonizarnos y esperar el momento para llamar y llevarte ese dinero! Recuerda darnos like, seguirnos y activar notificaciones en QFM 104.3 y El Baniofm en todas las redes sociale

Rebel At Large The Adventure Podcast
Mile Marker 08: Silver Queen Hotel, Virginia City Nevada

Rebel At Large The Adventure Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2020 36:11


Join Drifter & Gypsie as we stay a couple of nights in the haunted Silver Queen Hotel in Virginia City Nevada.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/RebelAtLarge)

Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar
Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar - 042460, episode 687 - The Silver Queen Matter

Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2020 23:38


A new episodeSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/yours-truly-johnny-dollar/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacyThis podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Podtrac - https://analytics.podtrac.com/privacy-policy-gdrpChartable - https://chartable.com/privacyPodcorn - https://podcorn.com/privacy Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar
Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar - 042460, episode 687 - The Silver Queen Matter

Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2020 23:39


A new episodeSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/yours-truly-johnny-dollar/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar
Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar - 042460, episode 687 - The Silver Queen Matter

Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2020 23:07


A new episodeSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/yours-truly-johnny-dollar/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

Fowl Players Radio
Season 5 Episode 24 Fran Bryant- Singer, Musician, Songwriter

Fowl Players Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2020 78:01


Coming FRIDAY JUNE 12 TO FOWL PLAYERS RADIO-Hey Kidz!We welcome veteran singer, musician, and songwriter Fran Bryant to the show! Fran tells us many stories about the bands he has performed with over the years, such as Speedway, Alton Street, Silver Queen, Apricot Brandy, Tailgunner, Sojourner, and shares some material from his 2015 solo album "Writing in the Sand"! We had a great time catching up! Lots of great stories, and a special warning to all singers about hitting high notes at the end of Queen songs! (That was one gig where he got lots of great "exposure"!)Listen for free here starting June 12- https://fowlplayersradio.buzzsprout.comor subscribe for free at iTunes, Apple Podcasts, Overcast, Pocketcast, Castro, Castbox, Google Podcasts or Stitcher or Spotify

Fowl Players Radio
Season 5 Episode 22 Greg Sinners-Musician, Songwriter

Fowl Players Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2020 127:33


Now Available!!! Click Below!!!Fowl Players Radio Welcomes Musician and Songwriter Greg Sinners! We talk about his bands- Silver Queen, Tailgunner, Axis Sally, and Shockwave, and he shares stories about the Baltimore area club scene from the 70's through the 90's. We also get to hear some of his recordings from Tailgunner and Shockwave, and talk about the song "Bad Attitude" which was featured on the 97 Underground album!Subscribe for Free on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, Overcast, Pocketcast, Castro, and Castbox, or listen here- http://fowlplayersradio.buzzsprout.com

No Pix After Dark Podcast
EP 071: Silver Queen Cafe

No Pix After Dark Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2020 36:53


Nicole and Jason, the owners of Silver Queen Cafe join the NoPixAfterDark Pod for the first time. We discuss how they met each other, there passion for music and why they decided to have a restaurant in the community they live in.  We have an exclusive announcement that they make on the show about what is happening next at the restaurant.  We talk about where they go eat when they have a day off and the top brunch and dinner items on the menu that customers love at Silver Queen Hope you are not hungry because you're in for a treat.  FB Silver Queen Cafe IG Silver Queen Cafe  Music by Max Bent 

Row by Row Garden Show
Row by Row Episode 95: Most Tasty Sweet Corn Variety for the Garden

Row by Row Garden Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2020 49:38


Types/Tasty Sweet Corn Varieties The three major types/tasty sweet corn are known as standard, sugary extender, and supersweet. The standard is a su gene that is mostly your old-time favorite varieties including Silver Queen, Stowell's Evergreen, and Jubilee. The standard type will germinate in cooler soils better than the supersweet and once they are harvested you have to do something with them quickly because they normally last about 3 days in the fridge. While the sugary extender or sugary enhance type is where you will find the majority of the most popular varieties such as Silver King, Bodacious, Incredible, Peaches & Cream, Ambrosia, and Argent Sweet Corn. Typically the sugary enhance gene can store a little better than the standard type and needs a little warmer soil temperatures to germinate. Lastly, the supersweet type is known for storing the longest once harvested and requires even warmer soil temperatures to germinate in the garden. Also, the supersweets require a little more maintenance than the standard or sugary enhanced type. Now an uncommon type is known as triplesweet corn which actually contains all three of the major genes such as the standard, sugary enhance, and supersweet. One thing about having the triplesweet contain all three of the major genes is that you don't have to isolate when planting. Therefore, if you want to grow two different varieties of sweet corn you should plant whichever variety of the standard, sugary enhanced, or supersweet then wait two weeks and plant you a triplesweet in the vegetable garden. Planting/Growing Tips The main factor about planting sweet corn is it should be planted in blocks, not rows. Corn is pollinated by the wind so if you experience corn cobs that are half-filled at the end of the growing season it is most likely due to pollination issues. Therefore, planting in squares that are larger and blockier the better your pollination will be throughout the growing season. Another important factor about pollination is ensuring that your fertilizer is delivered right to your corn to help with the coincide of the tassel and silk development. When it comes to spacing, corn has a standard row spacing of 36 inches. Travis has tried growing corn with two-foot spacing but was not successful because there is too much foliage and your pollen can't fall to the silks. For seed spacing along the row, it can vary a little bit depending on what irrigation you have, however, the most ideal is 6 to 8 inches apart. When dealing with fungus and disease on corn we suggest using Liquid Copper Fungicide, Complete Disease Control, or Spinosad. Show and Tell Segment On the show and tell segment, Greg and Travis discuss a little bit about the pandemic that is happening right now. Travis has some Pak Choi that he has harvested from the garden. This variety of cabbage is a fast producing crop that creates steady production and excellent flavor profiles. Next, he has a variety of Gold Nugget Carrots that were grown in the garden for the first time this year and they are similar to the Bugs Bunny type carrots. The guys also compare their onion varieties that were harvested from the garden area. Viewer Questions Segment On the question and answer segment this week, the guys answer questions about when to plant tomatoes and planting watermelons. Travis mentions that he just has a feeling when it's time to plant tomatoes in the garden. He kinda knows when the frost is done and the temperatures start warming up it's time to plant. Greg says he still has to get drip tape in the ground, but it is time once the true leaves start coming up in the greenhouse. Product of the Week Sweet Corn Varieties https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=buuPR6ds_CM

Row by Row Garden Show
Row by Row Episode 95: Most Tasty Sweet Corn Variety for the Garden

Row by Row Garden Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2020 49:38


Types/Tasty Sweet Corn Varieties The three major types/tasty sweet corn are known as standard, sugary extender, and supersweet. The standard is a su gene that is mostly your old-time favorite varieties including Silver Queen, Stowell's Evergreen, and Jubilee. The standard type will germinate in cooler soils better than the supersweet and once they are harvested you have to do something with them quickly because they normally last about 3 days in the fridge. While the sugary extender or sugary enhance type is where you will find the majority of the most popular varieties such as Silver King, Bodacious, Incredible, Peaches & Cream, Ambrosia, and Argent Sweet Corn. Typically the sugary enhance gene can store a little better than the standard type and needs a little warmer soil temperatures to germinate. Lastly, the supersweet type is known for storing the longest once harvested and requires even warmer soil temperatures to germinate in the garden. Also, the supersweets require a little more maintenance than the standard or sugary enhanced type. Now an uncommon type is known as triplesweet corn which actually contains all three of the major genes such as the standard, sugary enhance, and supersweet. One thing about having the triplesweet contain all three of the major genes is that you don't have to isolate when planting. Therefore, if you want to grow two different varieties of sweet corn you should plant whichever variety of the standard, sugary enhanced, or supersweet then wait two weeks and plant you a triplesweet in the vegetable garden. Planting/Growing Tips The main factor about planting sweet corn is it should be planted in blocks, not rows. Corn is pollinated by the wind so if you experience corn cobs that are half-filled at the end of the growing season it is most likely due to pollination issues. Therefore, planting in squares that are larger and blockier the better your pollination will be throughout the growing season. Another important factor about pollination is ensuring that your fertilizer is delivered right to your corn to help with the coincide of the tassel and silk development. When it comes to spacing, corn has a standard row spacing of 36 inches. Travis has tried growing corn with two-foot spacing but was not successful because there is too much foliage and your pollen can't fall to the silks. For seed spacing along the row, it can vary a little bit depending on what irrigation you have, however, the most ideal is 6 to 8 inches apart. When dealing with fungus and disease on corn we suggest using Liquid Copper Fungicide, Complete Disease Control, or Spinosad. Show and Tell Segment On the show and tell segment, Greg and Travis discuss a little bit about the pandemic that is happening right now. Travis has some Pak Choi that he has harvested from the garden. This variety of cabbage is a fast producing crop that creates steady production and excellent flavor profiles. Next, he has a variety of Gold Nugget Carrots that were grown in the garden for the first time this year and they are similar to the Bugs Bunny type carrots. The guys also compare their onion varieties that were harvested from the garden area. Viewer Questions Segment On the question and answer segment this week, the guys answer questions about when to plant tomatoes and planting watermelons. Travis mentions that he just has a feeling when it's time to plant tomatoes in the garden. He kinda knows when the frost is done and the temperatures start warming up it's time to plant. Greg says he still has to get drip tape in the ground, but it is time once the true leaves start coming up in the greenhouse. Product of the Week Sweet Corn Varieties https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=buuPR6ds_CM

Old Time Radio Westerns
Lady Kane The Silver Queen – Have Gun Will Travel (05-17-59)

Old Time Radio Westerns

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2020 26:00


Lady Kane The Silver Queen Original Air Date: May 17, 1959 Host: Andrew Rhynes Show: Have Gun Will Travel Phone: (707) 98 OTRDW (6-8739) Stars: John Dehner (Paladin) Ben Wright (Heyboy) Special Guests: Lynn Allen Joseph Kearns Harry Bartell James Nusser Writer: Albert Aley Producer: Norman Macdonnell

Have Gun Will Travel - OTRWesterns.com
Lady Kane The Silver Queen – Have Gun Will Travel (05-17-59)

Have Gun Will Travel - OTRWesterns.com

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2020 26:00


Lady Kane The Silver Queen Original Air Date: May 17, 1959 Host: Andrew Rhynes Show: Have Gun Will Travel Phone: (707) 98 OTRDW (6-8739) Stars: John Dehner (Paladin) Ben Wright (Heyboy) Special Guests: Lynn Allen Joseph Kearns Harry Bartell James Nusser Writer: Albert Aley Producer: Norman Macdonnell

El Baño MX
Anything can happen Wednesday

El Baño MX

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2020 83:37


Que pasa cuando tienes en cabina casa llena, con Miros, La Conciencia, Silver Queen, Andre, Alex y ademas llegan para dar un tono musical Betto la Rocola Cardenas y el Negro, que nos llenaron la cabina de buena música mientras jugamos unas muy divertidas y al parecer difíciles dinamilocas musicales. Iniciamos con una nueva dinamiloca llamada Melodiando donde las bellas cantantes La Conciencia, Silver Queen, Miros y el gritante Andre  con Betto en la guitarra, pero vemos que no es tan fácil de descifrar o de cumplir, hasta que llega El Negro y nos demuestra como es que se debe jugar. Por si fuera poco, tenemos dos duetos especiales cantando Ha Ash en la voz de La Conciencia y Silver Queen, también escuchamos Wickerd Game en la voz de Miros y Andre Plata. Todo esto con mucha música, risas y juegos.  

Row by Row Garden Show
Row by Row Episode 90: Everything You Should Know About Drip Irrigation!

Row by Row Garden Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2020 48:51


Let's Talk Drip Irrigation On this week's episode, the guys answer some of the most popular frequently asked questions about drip irrigation in the vegetable garden. Although some people are intimidated by drip systems, however, it is rather simple and really a gamechanger in the garden area. The first question they answer is whether or not you can use drip tape irrigation with a gravity-fed system. Travis mentions that you can use drip tape with a gravity-fed system, but it is unfeasible overall. The second most popular question about drip irrigation is should it be buried or laid on top of the soil. Greg says you can really do either, but drip tape was designed to be buried under the soil to prevent it from being harmed by other elements. There are two ways to bury drip irrigation using our wheel hoe either with the plow set attachment or the drip tape layer attachment. Once the drip tape is in the ground, people often wonder how to know where the emitters are located after it's buried in the area. The best way that Travis determines where the emitters are once it is buried is by turning the irrigation on and around 10 to 15 minutes depending on how dry the soil is, little water spots will develop where the emitters are located. They also mention that you can plant crops in between the emitters along the drip tape irrigation. The next question that is asked often is can you save drip tape and reuse it again in the garden. The guys mention that it can be reused depending on how conservative or frugal you want to be. Travis typically pulls tape up out of the area and then cultivates the area and lays it right back down, he never pulls it completely up and tries to store it. He normally uses the same drip tape four to five times and then replaces it with new tape. Another question the guy's answer is you can certainly leave the drip tape in the garden over winter because it decompresses when it is not in use so you will never have to worry about it freezing during the winter season. The major difference between 8 mil and 15 mil tape is the 15 mil tape is almost twice as thick as the 8 mil tape. The 8 mil tape is designed for annual vegetables, while the 15 mil tape is better for perennials in the garden. When watering individual rows, you can use the drip tape row start valves which basically allows you to turn off or on individual rows that need irrigation. Another popular question is how long do you let drip irrigation run in the vegetable garden. Which is rather a hard question to answer because it depends on factors such as the climate, weather temperatures, soil type, the crop you are growing, and so much more. Greg mentions that you will get the feel for how wet it is the soil real quick and once plants start growing larger it may take longer to water, however, it all just depends on certain factors. You can also use drip irrigation in a raised bed situation it just may need more what we call tee and elbows for the mainline. When direct seeding in the garden, Greg recommends planting crops directly on top of the drip tape while planting transplants on either side of the emitters. The last question the guy's answer about drip irrigation is how to avoid hitting it with the wheel hoe. Overall, by burying it and putting it out of the way we can avoid messing it up in the vegetable garden. Show and Tell Segment On the show and tell segment, the guys discuss the different types of carrots growing in the vegetable garden. They also discuss potato planting since it has been super wet in the garden. The guys also discuss some okra varieties that have excellent flavor profiles such as Red Burgundy, Star of David, Silver Queen, Cowhorn, Perkins Long Pod, and Clemson Spineless. Viewer Questions Segment On the question and answer segment this week, the guys answer questions about growing crops against tradition, controlling tomato spotted wilt virus, warm-weather cover crop, and growing collard greens.

Row by Row Garden Show
Row by Row Episode 90: Everything You Should Know About Drip Irrigation!

Row by Row Garden Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2020 48:51


Let's Talk Drip Irrigation On this week's episode, the guys answer some of the most popular frequently asked questions about drip irrigation in the vegetable garden. Although some people are intimidated by drip systems, however, it is rather simple and really a gamechanger in the garden area. The first question they answer is whether or not you can use drip tape irrigation with a gravity-fed system. Travis mentions that you can use drip tape with a gravity-fed system, but it is unfeasible overall. The second most popular question about drip irrigation is should it be buried or laid on top of the soil. Greg says you can really do either, but drip tape was designed to be buried under the soil to prevent it from being harmed by other elements. There are two ways to bury drip irrigation using our wheel hoe either with the plow set attachment or the drip tape layer attachment. Once the drip tape is in the ground, people often wonder how to know where the emitters are located after it's buried in the area. The best way that Travis determines where the emitters are once it is buried is by turning the irrigation on and around 10 to 15 minutes depending on how dry the soil is, little water spots will develop where the emitters are located. They also mention that you can plant crops in between the emitters along the drip tape irrigation. The next question that is asked often is can you save drip tape and reuse it again in the garden. The guys mention that it can be reused depending on how conservative or frugal you want to be. Travis typically pulls tape up out of the area and then cultivates the area and lays it right back down, he never pulls it completely up and tries to store it. He normally uses the same drip tape four to five times and then replaces it with new tape. Another question the guy's answer is you can certainly leave the drip tape in the garden over winter because it decompresses when it is not in use so you will never have to worry about it freezing during the winter season. The major difference between 8 mil and 15 mil tape is the 15 mil tape is almost twice as thick as the 8 mil tape. The 8 mil tape is designed for annual vegetables, while the 15 mil tape is better for perennials in the garden. When watering individual rows, you can use the drip tape row start valves which basically allows you to turn off or on individual rows that need irrigation. Another popular question is how long do you let drip irrigation run in the vegetable garden. Which is rather a hard question to answer because it depends on factors such as the climate, weather temperatures, soil type, the crop you are growing, and so much more. Greg mentions that you will get the feel for how wet it is the soil real quick and once plants start growing larger it may take longer to water, however, it all just depends on certain factors. You can also use drip irrigation in a raised bed situation it just may need more what we call tee and elbows for the mainline. When direct seeding in the garden, Greg recommends planting crops directly on top of the drip tape while planting transplants on either side of the emitters. The last question the guy's answer about drip irrigation is how to avoid hitting it with the wheel hoe. Overall, by burying it and putting it out of the way we can avoid messing it up in the vegetable garden. Show and Tell Segment On the show and tell segment, the guys discuss the different types of carrots growing in the vegetable garden. They also discuss potato planting since it has been super wet in the garden. The guys also discuss some okra varieties that have excellent flavor profiles such as Red Burgundy, Star of David, Silver Queen, Cowhorn, Perkins Long Pod, and Clemson Spineless. Viewer Questions Segment On the question and answer segment this week, the guys answer questions about growing crops against tradition, controlling tomato spotted wilt virus, warm-weather cover crop, and growing collard greens.

El Baño MX
Lunes de Sorpresas

El Baño MX

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2020 84:44


Era un dia normal en El Baño, el barbon tenia planeada una sorpresa con la llegada de La Conciencia, sin saber que otra sorpresa estaba por llegar, hasta que la cara de Alecita gritaba WOW al ver el regreso de la Silver Queen y sorprendiendo a todos en cabina, creando un poco de caos en cabina y sin saber que otra sorpresa estaba en camino, al final del programa llega corriendo la Conciencia y entonces un programa normal de Lunes se convierte en el extraño regreso de las Mujeres MaravillaIntentamos mantener orden en un programa que no se pude haber planeado con la reunion de Fernanda castillo la Silver Queen y Noelia mejor conocida como La Conciencia, ademas recomendaciones de cine y tele, musica y locuras dificiles de explicar. Esto y mas en este episodio de El Baño 

Have Gun, Will Travel | Old Time Radio
Ep026 | "Silver Queen"

Have Gun, Will Travel | Old Time Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2019 25:57


If you like this episode, check out https://otrpodcasts.com for even more classic radio shows! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Row by Row Garden Show
Row by Row Episode 73: The Best Onion Varieties to Grow in Your State

Row by Row Garden Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2019 37:14


Onion Varieties & Types The three types of onions are intermediate day, short day, and long day. They are separated based on the regions of the country they can be planted and it has to do with the amount of day length at which they start the bulbing process. The two phases of onions are the vegetative stage and the bulbing stage. During the vegetative stage, your goal is to maximize the leaves you are getting on the onion plant. Each of the leaves on the plant represents a ring on the onion. For root development, we supply the onions with a 20-20-20 fertilizer to ensure the plants get the phosphorus and potassium they need. Once the roots are established we will give the onion plants ammonium sulfate to ensure they get plenty of nitrogen. Then, during the bulbing stage, each of the rings is filling up with water and producing a nice big onion. When they reach the bulbing stage we do not need to apply any more fertilizer to the plants, just plenty of water using drip tape. Short Day Onions When preparing to grow short-day onions, the best time to plant is in November if you are in zone 7 and 8. We recommend planting in November because the onion plants will have a nice stand of vegetation before the cold weather comes and then be able to survive it. While in the long run, you will produce healthier and bigger onions in the vegetable garden. The short-day onions will start the bulbing process once day length reaches between 10 to 12 hour days. If onions are planted in November, then the bulbing process will typically start in February and last a month or two which means harvesting will happen in mid to late April or early May depending on the weather conditions. The three varieties for short day onions that we have available are Savannah Sweet, Sweet Harvest, and Texas Legend. Intermediate Day Onions With the intermediate day onions, the best time to plant is around late January or early February and the bulbing stage will happen around mid-April or early May when day length reaches 12 to 14 hours. The only intermediate day onion variety we offer is known as Candy which is a very popular variety to grow in the vegetable garden. Long Day Onions If you live in the northern region the long-day onions are the type of onions that you would need to grow in the vegetable garden. These onions start the bulbing stage once the day length reaches 14 to 16 hours. Therefore, planting short day onions happen around early April so the bulbing stage is around either May or June. The only long day onion variety we have available is Walla Walla which is a widely grown onion that produces really well in northern climates. Show and Tell Segment On the show and tell segment, Greg and Travis are waiting on the fall crops to germinate and weather temperatures to be just right in the vegetable garden. However, Travis has a good crop of Stonewall cucumbers coming out of the garden as of right now. Greg has got a few crops planted such as cabbage, kohlrabi, broccoli, and Tiger collards. The guys also discuss a couple of new varieties of vegetables. Three new varieties of radish such as Purple Plum, Helios Golden, and Cherry Belle. Then, the new okra varieties available are Cowhorn, Star of David, and Silver Queen. As well as, carrot varieties that include the Chantenay Royal and Black Nebula. Viewer Questions Segment On the question and answer segment this week, the guys answer questions about how many carrot seeds to plant on a 40-foot double row and growing carrots in a raised bed. Travis mentions that he probably uses 3 to 4 packets when planting a 40-foot double row of carrots. Greg says growing carrots in a raised bed is a great idea, keep an eye out for a potential video soon. Products of the Week Single Tine Cultivator https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aOJfHbfz2tM

Row by Row Garden Show
Row by Row Episode 73: The Best Onion Varieties to Grow in Your State

Row by Row Garden Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2019 37:14


Onion Varieties & Types The three types of onions are intermediate day, short day, and long day. They are separated based on the regions of the country they can be planted and it has to do with the amount of day length at which they start the bulbing process. The two phases of onions are the vegetative stage and the bulbing stage. During the vegetative stage, your goal is to maximize the leaves you are getting on the onion plant. Each of the leaves on the plant represents a ring on the onion. For root development, we supply the onions with a 20-20-20 fertilizer to ensure the plants get the phosphorus and potassium they need. Once the roots are established we will give the onion plants ammonium sulfate to ensure they get plenty of nitrogen. Then, during the bulbing stage, each of the rings is filling up with water and producing a nice big onion. When they reach the bulbing stage we do not need to apply any more fertilizer to the plants, just plenty of water using drip tape. Short Day Onions When preparing to grow short-day onions, the best time to plant is in November if you are in zone 7 and 8. We recommend planting in November because the onion plants will have a nice stand of vegetation before the cold weather comes and then be able to survive it. While in the long run, you will produce healthier and bigger onions in the vegetable garden. The short-day onions will start the bulbing process once day length reaches between 10 to 12 hour days. If onions are planted in November, then the bulbing process will typically start in February and last a month or two which means harvesting will happen in mid to late April or early May depending on the weather conditions. The three varieties for short day onions that we have available are Savannah Sweet, Sweet Harvest, and Texas Legend. Intermediate Day Onions With the intermediate day onions, the best time to plant is around late January or early February and the bulbing stage will happen around mid-April or early May when day length reaches 12 to 14 hours. The only intermediate day onion variety we offer is known as Candy which is a very popular variety to grow in the vegetable garden. Long Day Onions If you live in the northern region the long-day onions are the type of onions that you would need to grow in the vegetable garden. These onions start the bulbing stage once the day length reaches 14 to 16 hours. Therefore, planting short day onions happen around early April so the bulbing stage is around either May or June. The only long day onion variety we have available is Walla Walla which is a widely grown onion that produces really well in northern climates. Show and Tell Segment On the show and tell segment, Greg and Travis are waiting on the fall crops to germinate and weather temperatures to be just right in the vegetable garden. However, Travis has a good crop of Stonewall cucumbers coming out of the garden as of right now. Greg has got a few crops planted such as cabbage, kohlrabi, broccoli, and Tiger collards. The guys also discuss a couple of new varieties of vegetables. Three new varieties of radish such as Purple Plum, Helios Golden, and Cherry Belle. Then, the new okra varieties available are Cowhorn, Star of David, and Silver Queen. As well as, carrot varieties that include the Chantenay Royal and Black Nebula. Viewer Questions Segment On the question and answer segment this week, the guys answer questions about how many carrot seeds to plant on a 40-foot double row and growing carrots in a raised bed. Travis mentions that he probably uses 3 to 4 packets when planting a 40-foot double row of carrots. Greg says growing carrots in a raised bed is a great idea, keep an eye out for a potential video soon. Products of the Week Single Tine Cultivator https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aOJfHbfz2tM

Hillbilly Horror Stories
166: Silver Queen Hotel

Hillbilly Horror Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2019 45:39


Sources: Mysterious Destination Magazine Haunted Travels USA Yahoo.com Ghostnghouls.com Trip Advisor Silverqueenhotel.net HauntedPlaces.org The Haunted Side YouTube Bridge Paranormal YouTube

Bellezza e bizzarria - il cinema insolito secondo Goffredo Fofi
La tragedia del "Silver Queen" (1939) di John Farrow

Bellezza e bizzarria - il cinema insolito secondo Goffredo Fofi

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2019


Goffredo Fofi racconta "La tragedia del Silver Queen" (1939) di John Farrow (padre di Mia Farrow), sceneggiato da Dalton Trumbo, Jerry Cady e Nathaniel West.

Row by Row Garden Show
Row by Row Episode 42: The Best Corn Varieties to Grow in a Vegetable Garden

Row by Row Garden Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2019 26:36


Corn in the Vegetable Garden As part of the Poaceae family, Corn has been a staple crop from generation to generation. Pollinated by wind, corn is a heavy feeder and needs lots of space, water, and fertilizer to grow good during the warm season. When growing corn it prefers to grow in well-drained soil that has a pH of 6.0 to 6.8. Depending on the heat temperature and varieties of corn it can take anywhere from 60 to 100 days to harvest in the garden. Sweet Corn Categories and Varieties On this week’s episode, the guys talk about different corn varieties for sweet and field corn. They begin by discussing the different types of sweet corn which are indicated by the genes present. There are three main sweet corn categories based on the genes they have which are su (standard), se (sugary extender) and sh2 (supersweet). There are also varieties with combinations of these genes, which is the case with the Honey Select variety. The su, or standard, varieties include those older cultivars such as Silver Queen, Silver King and Stowell's Evergreen. These varieties have more starch and less sugar as compared to the se and sh2 varieties. The se, or sugary extender, varieties include cultivars such as Ambrosia, Peaches and Cream and Incredible. The sh2, or supersweet, varieties have the highest sugar content and store the longest, but are the most finicky when it comes to germination and planting depth. Greg recommends that beginner gardeners go with one of the su varieties, but that he has grown many of the se varieties in the last few years with great success. They also talk about their field corn varieties which include Jimmy Red, Blue Hopi, Truckers Favorite and Hickory King -- all of which are great for grinding into corn meal and grits. Greg is feeling generous today and gives away some South American Popcorn seed to the first 10 viewers that send us an email. Show and Tell Segment On the show and tell segment this week, the guys sample a couple of beets from Travis' garden. Travis mentions that a customer recently asked him about the taste difference between red and golden beets. To help answer the question, he brought a Merlin beet and a Touchstone Gold beet from his vegetable garden. After sampling, the guys both agreed that the Merlin beet has a sweeter flavor and higher sugar content, but that they are both delicious and fun to grow. Greg has lots growing in the garden right now. He has kohlrabi, tiger collards, English peas, onions, and shallots all growing really good in the vegetable garden this season. Greg and Travis also hope to get some of there potatoes in the garden this weekend since potato planting season is right around the corner. Viewer Questions Segment On the question and answer segment, the guys answer questions about pickling okra and planting asparagus or strawberries in their garden. Greg brought a book called "The Pickled Pantry" and agrees to send it to the viewer who asked the question. He mentions that the book contains several great pickled okra recipes that he's tried that have had great success. He has liked one of the sweet and one of the spicy recipes in the book. Travis explains that they have several beds of asparagus growing behind the warehouse for a long time. They guys also have a couple of asparagus growing videos on their YouTube Channel. Greg has been doing some research on strawberries so maybe we will add those to our seed lineup in the near future. Tool of the Week Premium Corn Seed Mockmill Stone Grain Mill https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AklFnTNpOSo

Row by Row Garden Show
Row by Row Episode 42: The Best Corn Varieties to Grow in a Vegetable Garden

Row by Row Garden Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2019 26:36


Corn in the Vegetable Garden As part of the Poaceae family, Corn has been a staple crop from generation to generation. Pollinated by wind, corn is a heavy feeder and needs lots of space, water, and fertilizer to grow good during the warm season. When growing corn it prefers to grow in well-drained soil that has a pH of 6.0 to 6.8. Depending on the heat temperature and varieties of corn it can take anywhere from 60 to 100 days to harvest in the garden. Sweet Corn Categories and Varieties On this week’s episode, the guys talk about different corn varieties for sweet and field corn. They begin by discussing the different types of sweet corn which are indicated by the genes present. There are three main sweet corn categories based on the genes they have which are su (standard), se (sugary extender) and sh2 (supersweet). There are also varieties with combinations of these genes, which is the case with the Honey Select variety. The su, or standard, varieties include those older cultivars such as Silver Queen, Silver King and Stowell's Evergreen. These varieties have more starch and less sugar as compared to the se and sh2 varieties. The se, or sugary extender, varieties include cultivars such as Ambrosia, Peaches and Cream and Incredible. The sh2, or supersweet, varieties have the highest sugar content and store the longest, but are the most finicky when it comes to germination and planting depth. Greg recommends that beginner gardeners go with one of the su varieties, but that he has grown many of the se varieties in the last few years with great success. They also talk about their field corn varieties which include Jimmy Red, Blue Hopi, Truckers Favorite and Hickory King -- all of which are great for grinding into corn meal and grits. Greg is feeling generous today and gives away some South American Popcorn seed to the first 10 viewers that send us an email. Show and Tell Segment On the show and tell segment this week, the guys sample a couple of beets from Travis' garden. Travis mentions that a customer recently asked him about the taste difference between red and golden beets. To help answer the question, he brought a Merlin beet and a Touchstone Gold beet from his vegetable garden. After sampling, the guys both agreed that the Merlin beet has a sweeter flavor and higher sugar content, but that they are both delicious and fun to grow. Greg has lots growing in the garden right now. He has kohlrabi, tiger collards, English peas, onions, and shallots all growing really good in the vegetable garden this season. Greg and Travis also hope to get some of there potatoes in the garden this weekend since potato planting season is right around the corner. Viewer Questions Segment On the question and answer segment, the guys answer questions about pickling okra and planting asparagus or strawberries in their garden. Greg brought a book called "The Pickled Pantry" and agrees to send it to the viewer who asked the question. He mentions that the book contains several great pickled okra recipes that he's tried that have had great success. He has liked one of the sweet and one of the spicy recipes in the book. Travis explains that they have several beds of asparagus growing behind the warehouse for a long time. They guys also have a couple of asparagus growing videos on their YouTube Channel. Greg has been doing some research on strawberries so maybe we will add those to our seed lineup in the near future. Tool of the Week Premium Corn Seed Mockmill Stone Grain Mill https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AklFnTNpOSo

Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar | Old Time Radio
Ep685 | "The Silver Queen Matter" (AFRTS)

Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar | Old Time Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2019 24:56


If you like this episode, check out https://otrpodcasts.com for even more classic radio shows! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Hubbard Wrestling Weekly
Episode XXV: WWE Royal Rumble 2019 Preview Show Feat./ Silver Queen Ivy Roman & Jayel Cotto

Hubbard Wrestling Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2019 78:25


http://hubbardwrestlingweekly.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/HubbardWWPodcast25-Jan-26-2019-Ivy-Roman-and-Jayel-Cotto.mp3 The official kickoff to WWE WrestleMania season is here and with that comes excitement and anticipation of what is to come. Well, right here on the January 26th, 2019 edition of the #HubbardWrestlingWeekly Podcast we have more than excitement and more than anticipation... WE HAVE STAR POWER. Superstar professional wrestlers and champions Silver Queen Ivy Roman and Jayel Cotto join the show as guest analysts as we preview Sasha Banks vs. Ronda Rousey, Brock Lesnar vs. Finn Balor, Becky Lynch vs. Asuka, 'The New' Daniel Bryan vs. AJ Styles and much more surrounding the excitement of WWE's 3rd longest tenured historical event, the Royal Rumble. In addition, Jayel & Ivy give updates on championships, their affiliation with wrestling stable The GO4T, and much more. This episode was amazing... Click play and enjoy. You're welcome! #HWWeekly is in the building and its lit! Special Guest: Ivy Roman (@SilverQueenIvy), Jayel Cotto (@JayelCotto) HWWeekly Website/Podcast Founder: Sean Hubbard Web Developer/HWWeekly Lead Consultant: Alex@haascrea.com **All content of Hubbard Wrestling Weekly Podcast has been produced by and is the exclusive property of HubbbardWrestlingWeekly©**

Alligator Preserves Podcast
Episode 36: SPECIAL SERIES, Silver Queen Alison Sandoval

Alligator Preserves Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2018 30:01


Alison Sandoval is a Silver Queen after completing the Leadville Race Series two-day race: a 50-mile mountain bike race on a Saturday followed by a 50-mile foot race the very next day, starting at over 10,000' elevation and climbing through mountainous terrain from there! And she is the one who inspired her husband (who is the current record holder for the Leadman race) to start competing!

Hubbard Wrestling Weekly
Episode XI: WWE Extreme Rules 2018 Review Feat./Ivy Roman

Hubbard Wrestling Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2018 103:54


http://hubbardwrestlingweekly.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/HWWPodcast11-Aug-2-2018-Silver-Ivy-2nd.mp3 This truly fun and informative episode of the Hubbard Wrestling Weekly Podcast is a special review show as women's professional wrestling sensation & member of @The_GO4T stable Ivy Roman and HWW host Sean H. discuss/review WWE's July pay-per-view Extreme Rules. Listen to this great show as IVY and Sean go back and forth about NOT ONLY THE MATCHES... but also the storylines that led to the matches that earned this pay-per-view at 4 out of 5 rating on the #HWWeekly scale. Click play, enjoy, and make sure you listen with extra focus on our review of the Raw Women's & Universal championship matches as the Silver Queen sounds off about RONDA ROUSEY and the state of the Universal Championship. Also, she makes a prediction on who she believes will face Ronda Rousey in the rumored WrestleMania 35 main event. This is a must listen. Special Guest: Ivy Roman (@SilverQueenIvy , @The_GO4T) HWWeekly Website/Podcast Founder: Sean Hubbard Web Developer/HWWeekly Lead Consultant: Alex@haascrea.com **All content of Hubbard Wrestling Weekly Podcast has been produced by and is the exclusive property of HubbbardWrestlingWeekly©**

Row by Row Garden Show
Row by Row Episode 6: Growing Sweet Potatoes – Varieties, Tips and More!

Row by Row Garden Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2018 30:37


Tips for Growing Sweet Potatoes in the Vegetable Garden On this week's episode, Greg and Travis talk about growing sweet potatoes in a vegetable garden. They are a crop that grows well in very warm temperatures and should not be planted until the temperatures have warmed significantly in the early summer. Greg and Travis prefer to plant them after early spring crops are finished, so they'll put them in a spot where Irish potatoes, broccoli, lettuce, etc., have been previously harvested. Along with okra, peppers, and eggplant, sweet potatoes are one of the few crops that do well throughout the summer in south Georgia. You can plant sweet potatoes directly behind regular potatoes because they are not related and don't have to worry about cross-pollination. Unlike Irish potatoes, sweet potatoes are grown from slips. These slips are grown commercially in big greenhouses or hoop houses. The slips, or "draws" as some old-timers call them, are plucked from the tubers, bundled and delivered to the customer. Their preferred source for slips is Steele Plant Company in Gleason, TN. There are many different varieties of sweet potatoes that will differ in the color of the skin and the inside color. Over the years, Greg and Travis have tried the Covington, Centennial and Beauregard varieties. They prefer the Covington variety as it has been the most productive in side-by-side testing. Greg explains that commercial growers will mow off the leaves before harvesting so that the potato skin becomes thicker and makes them store better. He is going to try that this year in his garden to see how well it works. Show and Tell Segment On the show and tell segment this week, the guys talk about the Ambrosia sweet corn that they've been harvesting from the garden. Greg mentions that he picked a wheelbarrow load that morning and it was currently being creamed and put in freezer bags. Although the Silver Queen variety had been their favorite for years, they are really big fans of the Ambrosia variety. They talk about the wide range of sweet corn varieties and how certain genes can determine the sweetness and storage ability of each variety. The Ambrosia variety is a bi-color corn that is in the "se", or sugary extender, category. The tool of the week is the very popular Over the Should Harvesting Bucket, which works great for harvesting sweet corn, tomatoes, or okra. Viewer Questions Segment On the question and answer segment, the guys answer questions about beginner gardening tools, the frequency of using drip irrigation and hilling plants in the garden. They recommend the Single Wheel Hoe as a great starter tool for a beginner gardener due to the versatility with many attachments. Along with a couple of good hand tools like the single tine cultivator or diamond hoe. For a first year garden, they recommend 40' x 40' as a great starter size. Then you can gradually work your way up to a larger garden in the future if you wish to do so. They mention that they typically run their drip irrigation at least once every other day, assuming no rainfall. They discuss the importance of frequency with watering and making sure the garden plants don't become stressed due to lack of water. Finally, they go through a list of the garden plants that perform best when hilled. Greg explains that corn, tomatoes, sweet potatoes, and regular potatoes all like to be hilled in the garden. However, some vegetables like okra, cucumbers, squash, and lettuce you should avoid hilling in the garden. Tool of the Week Over-the-Shoulder Harvesting Bucket https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LoOgOj4eQD0&t=18s

Hubbard Wrestling Weekly
Episode III: Silver Queen Ivy Roman

Hubbard Wrestling Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2018 32:38


http://hubbardwrestlingweekly.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/HWWepisode3-Podcast-June-14-2018-SilverIvy.mp3   In what was an epic interview as part of the 3rd dynamic episode of the Hubbard Wrestling Weekly Podcast, up and coming professional wrestling star Ivy Roman would speak about her younger days growing up & the relationship she has with her sister, her love for the pro wrestling industry, responded to some tweets from some of her fans, expressed her appreciation for the Now You Create organization among other organizations, and would deliver a very strong message to a man by the name of Vince Steele who made some controversial comments regarding her 'Greatest of All Time' stable brother Riot Raze.  You do not want to miss what she had to say as she totally speaks her mind and definitely puts everyone on notice that Ivy Roman and the Go4t are the team to deal with in world of professional wrestling.  Press play right now and hear what the Silver Queen has to say! Special Guest: Ivy Roman of The GO4T (Twitter: @SilverQueenIvy) HWWeekly Website/Podcast Founder: Sean Hubbard Web Developer/HWWeekly Lead Consultant: Alex@haascrea.com **All content of Hubbard Wrestling Weekly Podcast has been produced by and is the exclusive property of HubbbardWrestlingWeekly©**

Western Wednesday
Have Gun Will Travel - Silver Queen

Western Wednesday

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2017 24:30


Have Gun Will Travel - Silver Queen 5-17-59 http://oldtimeradiodvd.com

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Western Wednesday
Have Gun Will Travel - Silver Queen

Western Wednesday

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2017 24:30


Have Gun Will Travel - Silver Queen 5-17-59 http://oldtimeradiodvd.com

travel western guns silver queen have gun will travel silver queen
Western Wednesday  Classic Westerns
Have Gun Will Travel - Silver Queen

Western Wednesday Classic Westerns

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2017 24:30


Have Gun Will Travel - Silver Queen 5-17-59 http://oldtimeradiodvd.com

travel western silver queen have gun will travel silver queen
Have Gun Will Travel
Have Gun Will Travel - Silver Queen

Have Gun Will Travel

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2017 24:30


Have Gun Will Travel - Silver Queen 5-17-59 http://oldtimeradiodvd.com

travel silver queen have gun will travel silver queen
You Betch
Episode 4 - The Saint And The Silver Housewife - 9:17:17, 9.15 PM

You Betch

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2017 91:28


This week we break it down with the tale of Saint Olga, who was responsible for the annihilation of an entire empire, and the rags-to-riches-to-rags story of Baby Doe Tabor, the Silver Queen of the Wild West.

Yours Truly Johnny Dollar – The Great Detectives of Old Time Radio
EP2155: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Silver Queen Matter

Yours Truly Johnny Dollar – The Great Detectives of Old Time Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2017 27:18


The fiery Meg calls Johnny to her new place and needs Johnny to stop a man she suspects is a murderer before he makes Meg his next victim. Original Air Date: April 24, 1960 When making your travel... [[ This is a content summary only. Visit my website for full links, other content, and more! ]]

History Goes Bump Podcast
Ep. 177 - Haunted Virginia City

History Goes Bump Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2017 86:04


The Virginia City National Landmark is one of the nation’s largest historic districts and includes over five hundred buildings dating to the time of the great bonanzas, from 1859 to 1880. John Mackay was an industrialist who formed a partnership with three other Irishmen and operated silver mines on the Comstock Lode. They hit it big in 1873 when they discovered the “Big Bonanza.” That find built Virginia City and kept it on the map for the next two centuries. On this episode we are joined by three listeners: Tara Williams-Case, paranormal investigator with P.R.O.O.F. Paranormal Anna Frias and case manager for Pacific Coast Watch Pam Ennis. We discuss the history and hauntings of the Suicide Table, Silver Queen, Bucket of Blood Saloon, St. Mary's Art and Retreat Center and the Mackay Mansion. The Moment in Oddity features the Tootsie Roll Tale and This Month in History features the launching of the Submarine NAUTILUS. Our location was suggested by Tara Williams-Case, Jeni Justine, Pamela Ennis and Anna Frias. Checkout the website: http://historygoesbump.com Show notes can be found here: http://historygoesbump.blogspot.com/2017/01/hgb-ep-177-haunted-virginia-city.html Become an Executive Producer: http://patreon.com/historygoesbump Music: Vanishing from http://purple-planet.com (Moment in Oddity) In Your Arms by Kevin MacLeod http://incompetech.com (Outro) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/  

Wagons West
Have Gun Will Travel - Silver Queen

Wagons West

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2013 25:09


Podcast – Hiddengrid: The Sixth World Chronicles
Episode 035 – Maria Mercurial – Session 1 – Part 1 – Sing Baby Sing

Podcast – Hiddengrid: The Sixth World Chronicles

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2013


Hear that music? That’s some pretty sweet tunes from the Silver Queen herself. Now, what do you suppose she wants to do with a bunch of low-life riff-raff like this gang? Download Episode 035 – Maria Mercurial – Session 1 – Sing Baby Sing null Want to see more of the Hiddengrid? Join our Facebook community and meet with […]

Haunted Hunters
Haunted Hotels

Haunted Hunters

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2010 45:00


Tonight we will be talking about haunted hotels across the United States. We will share with you our experiences in famous hotels such as the Silver Queen in Virginia City, Nevada to not so famous remote motels. We encourage you to call in and share your scary vacationing tales about your haunted hotel experience.