A water channel controlled at its head by a gate
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We recorded this episode, the first in our new Enchantment season, live at Red Lion Books in Colchester as part of Sluice [Vernacular] - the latest interation of the artist led organisation's expo. Our guest for the episode is Hayley Lock, an artist whose interests lie in the occult and its intersection with female otherness. Her chosen cultural artifact is a mystical mirror, reputedly owned by Elizabeth I's court astronomer John Dee, which is currently housed in the British Museum. Hayley talks about working with and under hypnosis, the Essex witch trials, and finding witch marks in the windmill attached to her house on the Suffolk/Norfolk borders. Not quite coincidentally Witch Marks is also the name of Transition Gallery's exhibition at The Minories in Colchester which took part over Sluice weekend (14-16 June 2024) and featured Hayley's artworks alongside work by six other artists.
Trevor Murphy contains multitudes. Whether as the founder of the boutique record label Acadian Embassy, the leader of bands such as Sluice and Quiet Parade, an award-winning publicist, a radio host, or a respected behind-the-scenes player throughout Nova Scotia's culture sector, he acts as a consistent champion for the outsider. Leaning on almost 20 years of experience in the music industry, Murphy strives to promote artists (particularly those from the East Coast) with a dedicated DIY attitude and a staunch alternative spirit. Check him out @hfxisburning
Collateral Damage has a hell of a time taking down The Rancher (and her horse, Radish), then soon finds out the joke might be on them. Featured Music: "Agis comme du monde" by Sluice and "Derailer" by Wine Lips Dungeon Punks is recorded and produced by Kirk Hamilton. Super U is being played on Masks: A New Generation. ——— Support the show on Patreon: patreon.com/dungeonpunks Leave us a review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify! Follow us on Twitter: @DungeonPunksPod or Instagram/Threads @DungeonPunks Come hang out on our Discord channel Find the Songs From Bands We Like on our Spotify and YouTube Music playlists. ——— SEASON 3 CAST: Stu Popp as The GM aka Everyone's Podcast Dad™ Fil Cieplak as Jason Evans aka Thrasher Leigh Eldridge as Artemis Archer aka The Bandit Mel Shim as Barbara “Babe” Lacey aka Terra Firma Taylor Ramone as Jackie Hyde aka Cambion AND Kirk Hamilton as Kevin Dance aka Cadence
Sluice is a verb that means to cleanse or rinse with water. Dating back from the 17th century, our word of the day was first used as a noun to describe a gate used to hold back water. In time it became a verb to describe the act of watering something. Here's an example: I really need to sluice that porch. All that mildew and dirt need to be rinsed off before our party guests arrive and are too disgusted to enter our home.
Recorded April 21, 2023 at The Seahorse Tavern (Halifax, NS) Darcy Walsh is back on the road again, this time to Good Dear Good's single release party for "Coffee and Sunshine", to check out a stellar lineup of performances and catch up with the folks over at Lulo Music Group. Lulo Music Group recently announced Good Dear Good as the label's first signed group, and the band released their first single, "Coffee and Sunshine," on April 19th, 2023. A single release show was be held at The Seahorse Tavern on April 21st with Good Dear Good featuring Maura Whitman, Sluice, and June Body ...but who is Lulo Music Group? Join East Coast DNA as we learn about the people behind the label, what they've accomplished in such a short time and where they are looking for the future. Stay put to the end for a live performance of Coffee and Sunshine from Good Dear Good (recorded at The Seahorse Tavern, April 21, 2023) 00:00 Lulo Music Group at The Seahorse Tavern intro 00:21 Darcy Walsh introduction 00:40 Lulo Music Group Interview 01:25 Meet Juan 04:29 Meet Nik 06:06 Meet Megan 08:15 First signed band 09:35 Meet the rest of Lulo 12:30 Signing off 12:46 Good Dear Good performs Coffee and Sunshine 16:43 Encore Selection Screen "Encores": Sluice performs Électrique • Sluice performing Électrique live at... Maura Whitman performs Anxiety • Maura Whitman performing Anxiety live... June Body performs Take Out Time Back • June Body performing Take Our Time Ba... Listen to Good Dear Good "Coffee and Sunshine": https://ffm.to/coffeeandsunshine Find Lulo Music Group online: https://linktr.ee/lulomusicgroup Find East Coast DNA online: https://linktr.ee/eastcoastdna East Coast DNA bi-weekly podcast available on all streaming platforms. SUBSCRIBE to our YouTube channel for bonus episodes all year round. @eastcoastdna Special Thanks to the Seahorse Tavern and Lulo Music Group for hosting the event and participating in our show. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/east-coast-dna/message
Tune in to hear DJ Ocean Spray interview the front man of the local band, Sluice. Hear about the inspirations for Sluice's music and what is up next for the band.
Stewart and Drogan help Clyff search for his missing cousin Isabella. There are other out scouring the city for her though... Theme and additional music by Epidemic Sound. Logo art by Winston Fujino.
Last time we spoke about the battle for Tientsin. Tientsin had be relieved momentarily of its siege, but the Boxers and Qing forces quickly went back to work assaulting the foreign held part of the city. Forces from the great powers began arriving at Taku, heading for Tientsin to finally lift its siege once and for all. The battle against the Chinese held part of the city was to be the bloodiest battle of the Boxer Rebellion and it was the Japanese who ushered in victory. The southern and eastern gates of Tientsin were breached as the foreign troops sent the Qing and Boxer forces fleeing. Now with Tientsin firmly in their hands and with even more troops arriving by the day, the new 8 Nation alliance was preparing for a march upon Beijing. Would this new international force be able to get to Beijing quickly enough to save the besieged foreign community there? #66 The Boxer Rebellion part 6: The Fall of Beijing Welcome to the Fall and Rise of China Podcast, I am your dutiful host Craig Watson. But, before we start I want to also remind you this podcast is only made possible through the efforts of Kings and Generals over at Youtube. Perhaps you want to learn more about the history of Asia? Kings and Generals have an assortment of episodes on history of asia and much more so go give them a look over on Youtube. So please subscribe to Kings and Generals over at Youtube and to continue helping us produce this content please check out www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals. If you are still hungry for some more history related content, over on my channel, the Pacific War Channel where I cover the history of China and Japan from the 19th century until the end of the Pacific War. German Field Marshal Alfred von Waldersee was chosen to be the supreme allied commander, but he was in Germany with his soldiers set to depart on August 18th. Meanwhile Lt General Sir Alfred Gaselee was at Tientsin and he managed to get the Americans to back him temporarily to be the leader of the new 8 Nation alliance. I would like to note, General Yamaguchi Motomi was the highest ranking officer present at Tientsin during this time, but non-white racism disallowed the other commanders to allow him to take command. It was estimated by most of the great powers that some 50-70 thousand troops would be necessary to march upon Beijing, Gaselee had 22,000. 10,000 Japanese, 4000 Russian, 3000 British, 2000 Americans, 800 French, 200 Germans, 100 Austrians and 100 Italians. Telegraph lines were cut, the railway was damaged and many of the Great powers advised waiting for more troops before marching. But the British and Americans threatened to go it alone if they did not march at once. Back in Beijing the truce had gradually died down and now the foreigners lived in a confused paradox. At one moment the Zongli Yamen would send them gifts of food and assure them protection, the next they were plotting their death. The hostilities had resumed while the Zongli Yamen began publicly stating any soldier caught firing on the legations would be beheaded. It was unbelievably contradictory. Rumor also had it Li Hongzhang had been appointed the negotiator for peace talks and would soon send telegrams to the foreign governments. On August 12th, Prince Qing sent a message indicating the Zongli Yamen intended to have a meeting with the ministers the very next day. The foreign community hoped this meant a relief force was close to Beijing and that the Qing were panicking. They had all received information two days prior from General Gaselee stating “Strong force of Allies advancing. Twice defeated enemy. Keep up your spirits.” They also received a message from General Fukushima stating “Probable date of arrival at Peking August 13 or 14.” The legation defenders morale had thus boosted considerably, but they were still under a violent siege taking the lives of people every day. Bullets and shrapnel peppered them each day and the Qing forces seemed even more aggressive, planting their banners just 20 yards from the defenders outposts. In fact some of the banners bore the name of a General they had not heard of until that point, it was our old friend Yuxian. Yuxian had been appointed governor of Shanxi province and reigned a campaign of terror against Christians and foreigners there. On July 9th, it was rumored Yuxian had executed 44 foreigners including women and children from some missionary families whom he had personally invited to the provincial capital, Taiyuan under the guise he was going to protect them. It is disputed by historians who were the actual culprits who killed the foreigners, but the incident became known as the Taiyuan massacre. What is known, by the later half of 1900, Shanxi saw as many as 2000 Christians murdered. It seemed Empress Dowager Cixi brought Yuxian over to Beijing as a last-ditch effort to overrun the foreigners. The tenacity of the besiegers had increased exponentially, as told to us by Lenox Simpson “all thoughts of relief have been pushed into the middle distance—and even beyond—by the urgent business we have now on hand. . . . What stupendous quantities of ammunition have been loosed-off on us . . . what tons of lead and nickel! Some of our barricades have been so eaten away by this fire, that there is but little left, and we are forced to lie prone on the ground hour after hour.... The Chinese guns are also booming again, and shrapnel and segment are tearing down trees and outhouses, bursting through walls, splintering roofs, and wrecking our strongest defenses more and more.” The commanders of the Gaselee force figured they would be facing roughly 70,000 Qing soldiers and anything between 50-100 thousand boxers between them and Beijing. They had roughly 70 artillery pieces, and lacked any real cavalry, aside from a few Cossacks. There was some Japanese cavalry, but their horses turned out to not be able to face the heat, 60 out of 400 of them would not make it to Beijing. So they were going to be mostly an infantry force. The commander chose to take the exact same route to Beijing that the British and French took during the second opium war, rather fitting if you ask me. They departed on August the 4th and the first battle they would face was at Beicang. Their intelligence reported General Dong Fuxiang had deployed roughly 20,000 troops at Beicang, though in reality it was around 11,000. The British, Americans and Japanese advanced along the west side of the river, while the French and Russians marched on its east. As the army approached Beicang on August the 4th they camped outside near the Xigu fort arsenal, the very same arsenal Seymour and his expedition had come across. The commanders planned to have the British, Americans and Japanese turn the right flank of the Qing while the Russians and French turned their left flank on the opposite side of the Hai river. At 3am the Japanese launched their attack under the cover of allied artillery and they quickly seized a Qing battery on the extreme right of their defense lines. They then pushed forward on the flank as an artillery duel between the Qing and allies raged for half and hour. During the duel, a Japanese regiment performed a direct assault on a Qing position along the river. The Japanese requested some cavalry aid from the British, but it failed to reach them on time, leading the Japanese to take heavy casualties. None the less the Japanese stormed some Qing entrenchments forcing the defenders to retreat. On the east bank of the Hai river, the French and Russians were unable to hook around the Qing left flank due to flooded terrain, but the Japanese victory in the west broke the Qing's will to fight as a general retreat was sounded. The allies lost 60 men dead, all Japanese with 240 wounded. Around 50 Qing were killed in the battle that lasted until 9am, it was a relatively easy victory, though the Japanese paid heavily for it. American medics notably treated the Japanese wounded. The Qing forces retreated 12 miles back to Yangcun where they took up positions between the east bank of the Hai river and its railroad embankment. Yangcun was heavily fortified and the Qing forces led by Generals Ma Yukun and Song Qing hoped to halt the allied advance there. The British and Americans took the vanguard this time advancing on Yangcun by August 6th. The Japanese advanced along the west side of the Hai river, but would not find themselves taking part in the battle. The Qing numbered nearly 11,000 again, though its unknown how many actually took part in the battle. The allies faced something nearly as bad as bullets that day, tremendous heat. Indeed during the Gaselee expedition the weather often reached 42 degrees, or 108 freedom units for your americans. 20% of the men who marched on Yangcun fell out of rank, and a ton of sunstroke related deaths occurred. The allied forces advanced within 5000 yards of the Qing positions. The Russians were on the easternmost, followed by the British, then the Americans. The assault began at 11am, and soon it became an endurance competition between both sides. Men clutched their water canteens as they marched. The Americans bore the brunt of the Qing resistance as they hit the strongest held position behind the railroad embankment. Men were seen collapsing from sunstroke as Qing artillery and rifle fire poured upon them. The Americans were advancing in open terrain and had to run to avoid being hit. As the Americans charged over the railroad embankment they would find most of the positions abandoned. The battle ultimately became one enormous rearguard action. As the Americans advances so rapidly, the British and Russian artillery began to mistake them for retreating Qing forces and shells began to be lobbed over the US 14th infantry. 4 Americans were killed with 11 wounded as the Americans frantically signaled back to stop the shelling.Placing a handkerchief on the point of a sword an American commander galloped up the embankment waving it at the artillery fire. To make matters worse, upon seeing the shelling, the French joined in also firing upon them. By the late afternoon the battle for Yangcun was over, the Qing took very few casualties as they had abandoned their positions fairly early on. The Americans had 9 dead, 64 wounded, 15 of which would die later on. The British had 6 dead, 38 wounded and the Russians 7 dead, 20 wounded. Within Yangcun the allies found the trains Seymours expeditionary forces had abandoned, as told to us by Frederick Brown “Still standing on the embankment were the boilers and wheels of the engines used in that fruitless attempt to reach Peking. How the Boxers must have gloated in their hate when they rushed upon these inventions of the ‘foreign devils'! They had burned the woodwork . . . looted the brasses, nuts, and bolts, and had even torn up and buried the rails and sleepers. But the wheels and boilers remained there in defiance”. The route to Beijing was a nearly treeless plain, the landscape was littered with fields of 14 foot high corn. It was actually terrifying because one could not see over the corn fields for possible enemies lurking about. On one occasion Lt Roger Keyes of the HMS Fame was horrified to see “the banners of a large body of Tartar cavalry and the pennons of our Bengal Lancers showing above the standing maize, and within a mile of one another, apparently unaware of each other's proximity, but closing fairly rapidly.” Keyes galloped over to warn the Bengals, but it was like finding a needle in a haystack. The Japanese actually began carrying bamboo ladders so they could peak over the corn, must have been silly as hell to watch this march. The heat was a constant enemy, as the commanding officer of the US 14th infantry, Colonel Dagget recalled “a fierceness in that China sun's rays which none had experienced in the tropics or our Southern States during the Civil War.... Its prostrating effect was unaccountable, and caused our men to fall by hundreds. The dust of ages . . . rose at every footstep. The corn obstructed the breeze, and did not allow it either to blow away the dust or fan the burning faces of the fainting soldiers.” The men would abandon countless blankets, greatcoats, haversacks and such along the roads. Even the British Indian troops were suffering from the heat. Lt Steel remarked “The heat was awful, the whole road being littered with men fallen out, Americans, Japs, and ours. The country is so dense with crops we couldn't see anywhere, and the flies and bad water made life pretty sickening. Everywhere one came across dead bodies of Chinese and mules and horses in various degrees of foul composition. I nearly catted [vomited] dozens of times.” Despite the conditions, the 8 nation alliance marched 25 miles and won two easy victories. After a council of war on August 7th, the commanders had all agreed to continue the march and not wait for reinforcements. The Italians, Austrian and Germans had returned to Tientsin to reequip themselves as they had greatly miscalculated the gear needed for the expedition. Many French likewise would have to turn back. The field was thus set for the Russians, British, Japanese and Americans to push on. The Qing who saw them march would simply flee, seeing countless villages abandoned along the way. In some villages, a few Chinese civilians would be found, and as noted by Dagget “the villages were all deserted, except occasionally a Chinese man or woman would be found crouching in some hidden corner, expecting to be killed every moment. And, to the disgrace of humanity . . . some of these innocent, unresisting people were shot down like beasts but not by Americans.” British journalist Henry Savage-Landor traveling with the expedition would write “the majority of the “American boys” were “as a rule extremely humane, even at times extravagantly gracious, towards the enemy.” Henry would also claim his countrymen showed more humanity than the other nationalities. Many prisoners were taken, some Qing troops, some Boxers. The Chinese regiment was in charge of prisoners, but the other troops sometimes grabbed prisoners and abused them. Henry wrote of how a Boxer prisoner was dragged away by some French and Japanese troops and shot in the face “The poor devil, who showed amazing tenacity of life, afterwards had all his clothes torn off him, the soldiers being bent on finding the peculiar Boxer charm which all Boxers were supposed to possess. The man lived for another hour with hundreds of soldiers leaning over him to get a glimpse of his agony, and going into roars of laughter as he made ghastly contortions in his delirium.” On August 8th a message came from MacDonald to Generals Gaselee and Chafee. The message was accompanied by a map of Beijing, advising them to enter Beijing through the south gate of the Chinese city, then to advance up the main street, before turning towards the Tartar wall. MacDonald promised they would mark portions of the Tartar wall with American, British and Russian flags to help them. Unfortunately the notes were written in cipher, but the Gaselee force had left the key back in Tientsin. Captain Griffin of the 1st Bengal lancers was given the task of running back to Tientsin to get it deciphered. The army found themselves halfway to Beijing at the town of Hoshiwu. There they found written plans that the Qing forces sought to flood the countryside and drown them out. Lt COlonel Vaughan of the 7th Rajputs recalled “We found the cutting nearly completed, and the workmen's tools and baskets lying in it, so precipitately had they fled. However, although the thing didn't come off, the Chinese general informed his government that he had cut the banks of the Peiho, and inundated the country, drowning 25,000 of the foreigners, at which, he naively concluded, ‘they are much disheartened.' We read this account of our being drowned some months later in a Chinese paper, and were much amused,”. On August 12th, the allies came across the sealed gates of Tungchow. The Qing garrison fled upon their arrival too which Frederick Brown would write .“As we followed the retreating army, we came across pots, pans, umbrellas, and fans, the necessary paraphernalia of a Chinese army, scattered about in all directions. . . . It seemed, therefore, that there would be no serious stand till Peking should be reached,” The south gate of Tungchow was blown up, allies pouring in and began looting. Gaselee tried to control the men and reassure the local population who were terrified and hiding in their homes. Meanwhile Li Bingheng who had promised to repel the foreigners at the first sign of a battle on August 11th he wrote to Empress Dowager Cixi .“As we followed the retreating army, we came across pots, pans, umbrellas, and fans, the necessary paraphernalia of a Chinese army, scattered about in all directions. . . . It seemed, therefore, that there would be no serious stand till Peking should be reached,” After the fall of Tungchow, Li Bingheng killed himself. On the 12th the commanders held another war council. General Linevitch of the Russians argued they would be too exhausted to perform an assault upon Beijing immediately upon arrival. The other commanders agreed to a three phase operation. Each nations army would send a cavalry reconnaissance on the 13th, followed by the main bodies expected to arrive on the 14th and the general attack would commence on the 15th. The French commander General Frey had just returned to the force with an additional 400 French troops from Tientsin making them 5 national armies. The general attack called for a simultaneous advance with each national contingent aiming for a particularly gate in the eastern wall of Beijing. The Russians took the furthest north position on the right flank; then the Japanese, then the French, then the Americans and last the British on the southern most left flank. Their intelligence reported the Qing were concentrated on the south and southeast portions of the city, thus Gaselee chose to have the British take the most exposed position. The Russians were assigned the Dongzhi gate, Japanese Chaoyang gate, Americans Dongbien gate and the British the Guangqui gate, while the French were simply left out of the planning all together ahaahah. On the evening of the 13th, rumors suddenly emerged that the Russians were breaking the plan and making a wild dash for Beijing. As told to us by Keyes “A message has just come from the Russians that some Cossacks have pushed on to within a mile and a half of Peking, and the gates are open. I wonder if it is true; if so we are properly left behind.” What actually occurred is unclear, but Russian scouts were well ahead of everyone else on the night of the 13th and sent word that Dongbien, the gate the Americans were to attack, was lightly defended. General Lineivitch sent a vanguard under General Vassilievski with some artillery to secure the approach to Dongbien. Apparently it was Vassilievski who saw an opportunity so instead of waiting he charged with his men over the moat bridge taking the 30 or so Qing defenders by surprise in their outer guardhouse. The Qing tried to raise an alarm but it was too late as the Russian artillery blasted a hole right through the Dongbien and before dawn of the 14th were the first to enter the city. The Russians would soon find themselves in a crossfire however between the courtyard and inner/outer door killing 26 Russians and wounding 102. The survivors would be pinned down for many hours. MacDonald got his men together to raise the Stars and Strips, Union Jack and Imperial eagle of Russia atop the Tartar Walls to signal the advancing allies. Upon seeing this the Qing siege forces went into a frenzy last ditch assault upon the legations. It was to be known as “the three terrible nights”, as Captain Poole wrote “Legation full of danger, up all night, fiercest attack I can remember, let them do their worst.”. The Qing artillery began smashing the Fu palace as Qing riflemen fired upon anyone they could see. In the midst of the chaos a messenger from the Zongli Yamen showed up bearing a note stating “dating from today, neither Chinese nor foreigner would ever again hear the sound of a rifle.” Meanwhile Colonel Shiba was ordering men to bang pots and pans while the Italians shouted and whistled trying to convince the Qing soldiers they were a larger force than they were. MacDonald called up reserves three times trying to rush forces to critical points. Qing rifleman armed with Mannlicher carbines were storming through the Mongol Market with a large modern piece of artillery that was deployed upon a high point on the Imperial cities wall. It was a two inch quick firing Krupp gun which did more damage in 10 minutes than the Qing had done in 5 weeks. The foreigners unleashed their colt machine gun and Maxim gun upon it, but were met back with Mannlichers, Mausers, Jingals and older muskets. Bricks and stones exploded, hand to hand combat erupted. Then suddenly through the chaos, the sound of heavy artillery could be heard coming from the east. A sudden lull began on both sides, until the foreigners in the legations realized it was the relief force outside the city, they were engaging the Qing troops! The news spread from building to building, MacDonald watched as the legation guards all suddenly became alive again, everyone was joyous. They all wondered whose national army would come first. As news spread that the Russians had already stormed the Dongbien gate the race began. The Japanese march turned into a rapid sprint, followed by the Americans. General Gaselee refused to believe the Russians had abandoned the plan but when he himself heard the sounds of artillery hitting Beijings walls, he was livid. At 3:30am on August 14th the British main body was 6 miles outside Beijing. They marched upon Guangqui and General Gaselee had two artillery piece brought up. According to Lt Steel “The battery fired some dozen shots, and the Chinese scuttled, and we burst the door open and were inside.” Keyes took a Union Jack and scaled the wall just right of the gate placing it atop the wall. Keyes had hoped to hop down and open the gate for his comrades, but they busted it open before he could do so. Gaselee dispatched two detachments through the breach to seize the Temples of Heaven and Agriculture as the rest of the main body proceeded westwards to the Tartar Wall. Lt Colonel Vaughan described the scene “Not a Chinaman was to be seen, but the banging of doors was heard, and many of the rings hanging from the door knobs were shaking as we passed, showing that the doors had only just been shut. At last we entered a long and broad street, and while going up it saw hundreds of Chinamen running down the side streets away from us.” The British forces estimated they were lined up with the “Sluice” gate also called the watergate which led to the legations quarter. They turned north as Qing troops fired down upon them from houses, but as noted by Keyes “we saw no troops and there was no real opposition.” As they approached the Tartar wall they came under fire from the outer gate of Hatamen. The Qing were using smokeless powder, making it very difficult to see where shots were coming from. As the British got closer to the legations they saw the American, Russian and British flags atop the Tartar Wall indicating where the Sluice gate was. Lt Steel described the scene as the men went towards the Sluice gate “we all dashed across the canal, bullets fizzing and spitting all round, a small shell exploding in front of my nose, no harm done.” It's unclear who exactly was the first man to enter the British legation, but according Mrs Ker, a British diplomats wife “it was a Sikh, an unforgettable sight, naked to the waist, sweating like a pig, hair tumbling on his shoulders. He kept waving his rifle and shouting ‘Oorah!' . . . and in a bunch, with officers and men, that old darling, General Gaselee, about twenty-five yards behind.” The besieged foreigners were in a daze, shortly before 2pm MacDonald received news that foreign troops were beneath the Tartar Wall opposite of the Sluice gate. MacDonald rushed over just in time to greet General Gaselee. MacDonald led the force to the British Legation. Two hours after the British arrived, General Chaffee and the 14th US infantry arrived who were also quickly brought over to the British legation. The Americans led by the 14th infantry had reached the walls of Beijing only to find the Russians stuck in the Bongdien gate. The Russians had assumed they would strong right into the city, but instead they were being torn to pieces from the wall top riflemen. General Vasilievski was hit in the chest by a Mannlicher as he tried to rally his men on the lower parts of the wall. The main body of Russians only reached his vanguard force at 10am. The Americans proceeded to scale the wall south of Dongbien, taking some of the pressure off the Russians. A 20 year old bugler, Calvin Titus volunteered to scale the wall first. Unarmed he climbed the wall, earning himself the Congressional Medal of Honor and an appointment at West Point for the action. When he got to the top he signaled the rest to start climbing and by 11am the regimental flag was flying over the walls of Beijing. By 12 US forces were charging Qing soldiers atop the walls around Dongbien. The Americans advanced through the southeast of the Tartar city too which they were embroiled in street fighting. It took hours for them to work their way to the Tartar Wall. When they got through the Sluice gate, they then realized the British had won the race after all. The Japanese encountered stiff resistance at their assigned gate, the Chaoyang. The Qing hit the incoming Japanese with artillery, greatly stalling them. Despite the relief forces getting into the legations, the siege was still raging on. As Lt Steel remarked “everyone was talking and cheering and waving their hats whilst the bullets were flying thick overhead and banging on the roofs all high, no one caring a hang! The Chinese simply went mad when they realized we were in and let off every bally gun they had at random.” Colonel Shiba launched a final attack on the Qing barricades at the Fu, driving off the soldiers. The relief forces went to work clearing snipers out of the Mongol Market who were shocked upon seeing the soldiers, they had no idea Beijing had been breached. As Captain Poole blasted a hole through the Imperial Carriage Park wall and stormed through it with 60 marines he discovered two mines with the powder and fuse lying about. He would later remark “If the troops had come one day or one night later, God only knows what the result would have been!” Upon seeing the British troops enter the Sluice gate, the Qing began lowering banners atop the Tartar wall and withdrew. American and Russian forces surged forward as hundreds of Qing soldiers fled. The British, Russians, Japanese, Americans and French forces went to work securing gates of the city and were actively fighting their way to the imperial court. Lenxo Simpson was at the Hotel de Pekin where he found Russian soldiers getting drunk and openly discussing plans, he had this to say “the Russians had attempted to steal a march . . . on the night of the 13th, in order to force the Eastern gates, and reach the Imperial City and the Empress Dowager before anyone else. That had upset the whole plan of attack, and there had then simply been a mad rush, everyone going as hard as possible, and trusting to Providence to pull them through.” The Russians had managed to enter the legations an hour before the Americans, while the Japanese had the most frustrated time getting in. George Lynch accompanying the Japanese described their attempts to blow the Chaoyang gate “The Japanese engineers went forward one by one until twenty minutes passed and expanded into half an hour. With cheerful and unwavering gallantry these men went forward to blow up that gate, across the open space over the bridge, from which they could be fired on by hundreds of Chinese. The attempt was absolutely hopeless. It was not that there was any wavering amongst them after ten had been shot. . . . But it was a task that the bravest man could not accomplish. Working like marionettes, they fired their guns again and again, but they were of very light caliber—little war dogs, spat their rather impotent projectile against that great mass of centuries-old masonry, they might as well have been firing peashooters”. It took the Japanese until 9pm to blast their way through the wooden doors. They then stormed the city skewering Qing soldiers upon their bayonets until they reached the legation. The French were the last, they only arrived to Beijing a day late because their route went through a marsh. The battle to seize Beijing claimed 66 foreign lives and 150 wounded, simply astonishing when you think about it. The losses to the Qing are unknown, but expected to be quite high. While Beijing was being seized, the work of the 8 nation alliance was not done just yet. I would like to take this time to remind you all that this podcast is only made possible through the efforts of Kings and Generals over at Youtube. Please go subscribe to Kings and Generals over at Youtube and to continue helping us produce this content please check out www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals. If you are still hungry after that, give my personal channel a look over at The Pacific War Channel at Youtube, it would mean a lot to me. And so at last the 8 nation alliance had made it to the great walled city of Beijing. The British, Russian, Japanese, American and French stormed Beijing's outer walls to rescue the foreign legations, but what of Empress Dowager Cixi?
What's in a name? That which we call a sluice by any other name would smell just as sweet... Episode 5 - So, it seems we've got a show - who's coming to have a look then? We chat with Karl England, an artist, curator, organiser and co-founder of Sluice, a hybrid platform which has been an art fair, an expo, a biennial, a gallery, a magazine and an online platform working exclusively with artist and curator-led projects and non-profit galleries. Confused about networking, promotion and finding your audience? Listen to us bang on about it! Tune in every Friday for the next step in our guide, tips and tricks to bring your creative idea to life and to learn about the industry from some of the best!
It's a Father's Day zoom episode with special guest, double-father and quadruple-grandfather so he knows what he's talking about, Ric Averill! Will's a dad, too. The Notes: Father's Day with Ric Averill! The story of Will's birth! Will pisses on the misogynist doctor aka baby reciprocity! The people of Lawrence have spoken re: Will's unkemptness, et al! Ric's own experience with mail-in heckling! Lawyers love writing letters! As always, Mom has the receipts! Generational disputes! This beachfront property isn't panning out . . . or is it!? The thing about climate change is the heat, man! Wet apocalypse vs dry apocalypse! Riding the river to work! It's always wet in Amsterdam! Lawrence Canal System! Circling in canal boats, looking for canal parking! We've got to talk about accordions! The first thing I think of when I think of Ric Averill is: quiet! We will combine skateboarding and canals to provide gondoliers that can sing a perfect tenor and land a frontside 1080 rodeo in a fucking boat! Will brings it back to Father's Day to ask for Ric's fatherly advice for himself, the listeners, and all the ships at sea, and, also to try to pump himself up a little! Father's Days of the Future! Ric Averill's Sluice! Ric gives a heartfelt speech about the joys, lessons, and rewards of parenting! Nelson is the hero here! What our resident fathers did for Father's Day! See us live this Friday at RPG! See us for a live episode 400 and a farewell to RPG: Friday, June 23rd, at RPG! Drinks at 7:30, show at 8, afterparty to follow! Contact Us! Follow Us! Love Us! Email: doubledeucepod@gmail.com Twitter & Instagram: @doubledeucepod Facebook: www.facebook.com/DoubleDeucePod/ Patreon: patreon.com/DoubleDeucePod Also, please subscribe/rate/review/share us! We're on Apple, Android, Libsyn, Stitcher, Google, Spotify, Amazon, Radio.com, RadioPublic, pretty much anywhere they got podcasts, you can find the Deuce! Podcast logo art by Jason Keezer! Find his art online at Keezograms! Intro & Outro featuring Rob Schulte! Check out his many podcasts! Brought to you in part by sponsorship from Courtney Shipley, Official Superfans Stefan Rider and Amber Fraley, and listeners like you! Join a tier on our Patreon! Advertise with us! Check out the Lawrence Times's 785 Collective at https://lawrencekstimes.com/785collective/ for a list of local LFK podcasts including this one!
Because Indiecast is obligated to talk about the biggest indie news of the week — it's right there in the introduction — they were required to open this week's episode with an overview of the Boygenius discourse (:30). Which turned toxic over the weekend for all of the predictable reasons. However, is it possible to think that The Record is neither a masterpiece nor the worst thing ever but simply ... okay?One album Steve and Ian think is a lot better than okay is Rat Saw God, the latest from North Carolina band Wednesday. Steve and Ian both wrote about this album this week, and both came away impressed by Karly Hartzman's ability to evoke a real sense of place in her lyrics (8:23). Coupled with the band's heavy guitar sound, Wednesday brings to mind one of their biggest influences, Drive-By Truckers. Might the critical acclaim of Rat Saw God bring more people to the DBT fold? (20:22)Next they turn to the mailbag, and address an interesting listener question: What is the best album of the decade so far? (30:42) Which leads to other interesting questions: How did the pandemic mess with how we perceive early 2020s music? Has the album that will define this decade even been released yet? After that, they proceed to talk about the legacies of two very different acts: The Beastie Boys and Coheed & Cambria.Finally, in Recommendation Corner (55:13) Ian recommends the reissue of an emo classic by Braid, while Steve stumps for the patio and cookout friendly jams of Sluice.New episodes of Indiecast drop every Friday. Listen to Episode 133 here and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. You can submit questions for Steve and Ian at indiecastmailbag@gmail.com, and make sure to follow us on Instagram and Twitter for all the latest news. We also recently launched a visualizer for our favorite Indiecast moments. Check those out here.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
In honor of Brendan Fraser, Deanna and Meaghan sit down to discuss the art and science of preserving corpses for posterity a.k.a. making mummies! Expensive mummies, cheap mummies, fire mummies, honey mummies, fake mummies. If you can name it, we can mummify it! Follow Meaghan on Twitter: @MissMeaghanJ Follow Deanna on Twitter: @DeannaWritesInk Listen to Meaghan's other podcast: The Dragonlance Canticle Visit Meaghan's store on the DM's Guild: Click here!
"在下部班纳导航上的低水位上警告 爱尔兰水道向所有船只和较低班恩的用户提供建议,Carnroe堰和Cutt之间的水位由于Cutts Sluice Gates的技术问题而在北爱尔兰Coleraine南部的技术问题较低。 " "启动AD- #TheMummichogBlogoFmalta Amazon Top和Flash Deals(会员链接 - 如果您通过以下链接购买,您将支持我们的翻译)-https://amzn.to/3feogyg 仅在一次搜索中比较所有顶级旅行网站,以在酒店库存的最佳酒店交易中找到世界上最佳酒店价格比较网站。 (会员链接 - 如果您通过以下链接购买,您将支持我们的翻译)-https://www.hotelscombined.com/?a_aid=20558 “因此,无论您希望别人对您做什么,也对他们做,因为这是法律和先知。”“ #Jesus #Catholic。 “从受孕的时刻,必须绝对尊重和保护人类的生活。从他生存的第一刻起,必须将一个人承认为拥有一个人的权利 - 其中每种无辜者都是无辜的权利。”天主教教堂的教理2270。 堕胎杀死了两次。它杀死了婴儿的身体,并杀死了母亲的科学。堕胎是深刻的反妇女。它的受害者中有三个季节是女性:一半的婴儿和所有母亲。 流畅的马耳他无线电是马耳他的第一号数字广播电台,演奏您的轻松最爱 - Smooth提供了“无混乱”的混音,吸引了35-59个核心观众,提供柔和的成人现代经典。我们操作一个流行曲目的播放列表,并定期更新。 https://smooth.com.mt/listen/ 马耳他是一颗地中海宝石,等待被发现。马耳他拥有文化和历史,娱乐和放松,冒险和兴奋的独特结合,也是出国留学的理想之地。实际上,它拥有世界上最优秀的学习机构。 -https://www.visitmalta.com/ 关注电报:https://t.me/themummichogblogdotcom Tumblr:https://www.tumblr.com/themummichogblogofmalta blogspot:https://themummichogblogofmalta.blogspot.com/ 论坛:https://groups.google.com/g/themummichogblog Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/groups/chinesecommunitymalta 结束广告" " 爱尔兰内陆水道的跨境机构说,建议船只大师沿着下班恩航行的这一部分限制运动。 https://afloat.ie/inland/inland-waterways/Item/57297-Warning--over-low-water-lows-on-lows-on-lower-bann-navigation?mc_cid = 9901923dbe&mc_eid = 811b3cb2fe "
Halifax alt-rock band Sluice has a new album of covers that puts an Acadian spin on things... including Taylor Swift. Trevor Murphy tells us why his band decided to make a cover album of tunes - with an Acadian twist!
Part of a series of recordings being made for the project Fonema in Barreiro, Portugal. My two week residency is part of Territory, a programme commissioned by Sluice magazine and PADA Studios, which will exhibit as part of the Lisbon Art Weekend 10-13th November 2022. I sat drinking a beer in the afternoon outside of the Cervejaria Pireza listening to the clientele converse about things I had no chance of understanding. I love this kind of situation as I'm completely reliant on interpreting tone, intensity, gesture and body language as to what may or may not be being spoken about. All of these conversations were happening on the ground floor, inside the bar and in the street. After a while I noticed conversations of a different kind happening on the first floor. Residents in this area are keen on keeping caged birds (not something I am a fan of. I don't really agree with the concept of pets.) and at least three birds in cages outside three separate houses seemed to be chatting to each other above the people below.
Part of a series of recordings being made for the project Fonema in Barreiro, Portugal. My two week residency is part of Territory, a programme commissioned by Sluice magazine and PADA Studios, which will exhibit as part of the Lisbon Art Weekend 10-13th November 2022. I spent a while recording next to the River Tagus on a small spit known as Alburrica. The recording highlights the effect of the ferries, which pass very frequently, on the surrounding landscape, both sonically and ecologically, with the sound of their engines and the intensity of the water being displaced. Also this is the first time I have recorded a Small Egret, whose call you can hear once between two ferry horns at around 2:50. The recording also captures a lady collecting clams along the tide line, whose work was interrupted by the sudden noticing of the microphone. I apologised.
En spectacle ce lundi 29 août au Carleton dans le cadre du Halifax Urban Folk Festival. Dans le réveil du Grand-Havre sur Oui 98 FM, de 6h à 10h tous les jours de la semaine à Halifax, Guillaume Couture reçoit des invités qui font vibrer la francophonie en Atlantique.
Toyota South Africa's Prospecton plant, in Durban, KwaZulu-Natal, will take three to six months to get back to full production capacity, Toyota South Africa Motors (TSAM) president and CEO Andrew Kirby has said. The plant was shut temporarily following a severe flooding incident that affected predominantly a widespread area in Durban downstream of the Shongweni dam on April 12. Sluice gates were opened at the Shongweni dam after heavy rainfall resulted in the dam reaching capacity. The release of a vast volume of water meant that mud- and silt-laden water breached the banks of the Mlazi river near Toyota's plant in the Industrial area. The subsequent flood resulted in water entering the ground and basement levels of the Prospecton plant, reaching depths of between 1.5 m and 1.8 m. The resulting flood knocked out electricity, water supply and telecommunications services to the entire plant. During a site visit on August 16, TSAM said the plant was ramping up operations, with many production lines having opened back up. The plant is expected to produce about 135 100 vehicles this year, compared with the 203 700 units a year produced prior to the flooding. Following the flooding, TSAM embarked on an eight-stage process to ramp up operations, Phase 1 involved emergency control measures. The second phase saw the company prioritise making operations safe, secure and clean, while Phase 3 involved restoring electricity to the plant after it was cut to prevent electrocution directly after the flood. Phase 4 saw Toyota South Africa checking and assessing equipment, while Phase 5 involved repairs of damaged, but recoverable equipment, as well as ordering replacement equipment that could not be repaired. Delivery of new equipment and verification thereof were taken care of in Phases 6 and 7, while the final phase involves machinery and plant start-up. Mass production of Hino units was reached on May 24, Toyota Hi-Ace units on July 15 and the Corolla Cross on July 28. TSAM plans to go into mass production of Corolla Quest units on August 17. The Hino production line is running at full capacity. On August 12, TSAM shipped its first post-flood batch of export vehicles to Europe, showing its commitment to scaling up operations. TSAM is also implementing future climate resilience measures, such as raising sensitive electronic equipment off the factory floor. This is being done to ensure the company remains insurable and to ensure it can better weather any similar incident or other climate-change-related weather incidents in the future.
Enjoy these songs about the western states Gold Rush. (Rebroadcast) Song Title Artist Album Old West Saloon (instrumental) Carmichael & Woods Essential Sound Effects Vol.1 Sutter's Mill Dan Fogelberg High Country Snows Sutter's Mill New Riders of the Purple Sage Gypsy Cowboy Oh California Dick and Carol Holdstock San Francisco Shanties and Sea Songs Sacremento/Ho California Logan English The Days of '49, Songs of the Gold Rush Days of '49 Rachel Sedacca Lucky Like Me Coloma Be Brave Bold Robot Take a Deep Breath Saloon Time (instrumental) Thick Crust Dougboys Home on the Range When Miners Sang Rita Hosking Live in the 16 to 1 Mine Oh My Darling Clementine The Sweptaways single Sourdough/Miner's Song John Shreve From Texas to Montana The Days of '49 Sourdough Slim Travelin' Blues Water Down the Sluice (instrumental) Michael Kahn Panning for Gold Honky Tonk Saloon (instrumental) Wild West Gang Western Music
Wow...what a week! Here are its three most important news items of which you MUST be aware! 1. Uvalde shooting update (plus, the passage of Gun legislation) 2. The Supreme Court sluice gates open, three monumental decisions pour out 3. President Biden falls off his bicycle...as the economy falls off a cliff Subscribe to this growing channel! Show me some (much-needed) love by leaving a five-star rating. Visit my sister podcast, Pneuma Wellness for more content in the health, mindfulness, and wellness sphere
From crowdfunding your comics to the world of abstract art, alongside with play along games, laughs and more; this episode has it all. Not only that, but we're joined once more by the awesome Gareth Hopkins (Ghosts in Things, The Sluice). Theres a deep dive into comics patreons and the value of reader engagement, value for money, abstract art and of course tons of fantastic comic recommendations to check out! Great stuff to check out this week - Gareth Hopkins, Gareths Patreon, Ghosts in Things, Jetwash Trampoline, Tom Longs Post, Kev Couling, The Earth 2 Podcast, Comic Tropes, Tom Murphy, Collosive Press, High Precision Ghosts, Sez Dez, The Bad Bad Place, David Hine, Mark Stafford, Zombie Ship, Albert Camus, The Stranger Click here to buy comics from the creators of the Awesome Comics Podcast! Let us know what you think! Email: awesomecomicspod@gmail.com Join the discussion today at our facebook group Awesome Comics Talk Check out the folks who sponsor this lil show - the mighty folks at Comichaus! If you love our Intro/Outro music, then check out the brilliant Chad Fifer and more of his musical badassery at www.chadfifer.bandcamp.com
[#226] Sluice off the amniotic fluid and prepare your delivery tubes, Easter is upon us - but first! Taskmaster is back, Aperture Desk Job exists, we Excel at Excel, the return of the snooker, and surprise diarrhoea. TV of the Year 2006 follows, featuring Heroes, Young Dracula, The Real Hustle, Torchwood, Time Trumpet, and some others. Buy me a non-denominational drink: https://ko-fi.com/invisibletower YouTube: https://youtube.com/invisibletower Twitter: https://twitter.com/InvisibleTower Email: contact@invisibletower.net Music: "Anachronist" by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3363-anachronist License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license
In this episode, Greg and Leon are joined by special guests Nigel (https://www.acecomicals.com/guests/nigeltwumasi) and Tazziii (https://www.acecomicals.com/guests/tazziii) for the crackling epicentre of a universe shattering event! part of a crossover with the Mayamada Story X Story Podcast (https://mayamada.com/storyxstory/) We are here to discuss Jack Kirby's ETERNALS (https://www.marvel.com/comics/issue/81105/eternals_by_jack_kirby_the_complete_collection_remastered_cover_trade_paperback). In honor of the introduction of THE ETERNALS to the MCU (https://www.marvel.com/movies/eternals)we are going to be taking a look at The beginning of the Marvel Universe's Mythology, laid down by the king himself Jack Kirby. Riffing on the existence of gods, demons, monsters and heroes of ancient times. The genesis of man to modern day, told the marvel way. The yarn spun about beginnings of life on Earth and beyond in the Marvel Universe! It all begins here with Jack Kirby's bronze age books. Diving into the THE ETERNALS (1976) (https://www.marvel.com/comics/issue/81105/eternals_by_jack_kirby_the_complete_collection_remastered_cover_trade_paperback) We aim to provide you with an overview of the Marvel creation myth as well as discussing some truly great comics! Notes: Below is the comparison image mentioned during the cast that illustrates the similarity of The Eternals title title lettering to that of the 1971 Bantam paperback edition of "Chariots Of The Gods?" Send any questions or feedback to (mailto:acecomicals@gmail.com) acecomicals@gmail.com. And also please subscribe (http://www.acecomicals.com/subscribe) and leave us a review! If you like what we do please consider donating to us (https://ko-fi.com/acecomicals) at https://ko-fi.com/acecomicals. All contributions will be used to defray the cost of hosting the website. Ace Comicals, over and out!# Special Guests: Nigel Twumasi and Tazziii.
Information Morning Saint John from CBC Radio New Brunswick (Highlights)
Peter Rowan highlights some Acadian pop by Nova Scotia's Sluice.
Trevor Murphy était en entrevue avec Michel Savoie le matin pour présenter son nouvel album "Le Succès par le travail" dans un style Power pop francophone. Information sur Sluice : sluicehfx.bandcamp.com ou trevor@acadianembassy.com
Lots of questions about trusting factory presets over creating hunt programs from the start. I have some pretty strong opinions about this topic and I have seen a lot of new Detectorists make a few mistakes in setup over go with. Sorry for those of you that came back thinking this is another Podcast. The Mr. zero and one's Producer had his zero and one sensibility rattled that I changed the episode number to match the QT and not the layout. :-) He won.
If you had asked me in 2004 if there was a good cross over detector for gold and CRT, I'd said no. Today not so much so. There are a few viable X-over detectors out there but make sure you are choosing what you need. DO not go detecting wondering if you made the right choices especially when your in the field. That is not the time to be questioning your detector.THIS IS A NEW Podcast. Sorry for the confusion in the episode numbering, Mr. zero and one's Producer had his zero and one sensibility rattled that I changed the episode number to match the QT and not the layout. :-) He won.
Rebecca and Mari have Avery Patrick, the new owner of Showdown Montana, on the podcast. She tells us about the upcoming events at Montana's first ski hill, tips on winning the Mannequin Jump, and how she got out of ski school as a kid. WereNoDamExperts.com It's not too late to ski for yourself! March 13, 2021: Brock Stokke Bump Off & Tacky Attire March 27, 2021: Great Falls Ski Club Mannequin Jump April 3, 2021: Pond Skim & Closing Day
Rebecca and Mari talk about a true Montana State Park: Sluice Boxes State Park. Rebecca's been there once, and Mari's been there quite a bit. They talk about the easy trails, parts that are along the cliff, and that one time Fish and Wildlife thought Mari's daughter was being kidnapped. Whether you're an avid adventurer, or just here for the views, we recommend going to Sluice Boxes State Park. #VisitGreatFalls #GreatFallsMontana #WereNoDamExperts WereNoDamExperts.com
Trevor’s been making music on the East coast for years. He's been in bands, runs an independent label, works as a publicist and hosted a radio show championing local music for a decade. He's been making moves on his own recently - he's got a new solo project called “Sluice”!! In fact, he's got a new single coming out this Friday!! In fact, we’re going to play it for you right here on the show!!! Tune in to hear all about it; stay for our thoughts on the current state of independent music-making.
Hey Prospectors, It's been a while. Over the last few months, we have received a huge amount of great email questions about everything. KB and I decided to take a lot of these and turn as many of these as we can into short-format Podcasts to help you become a better Prospector and Miner. This quick tip talks about those elusive detector signals that May be either VDI or Audio and why is it is important not to trust just one or the other. If you would like to watch the Webcast it will be available after 1/12/2021 on the Gold Trails TV YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5_w1T9VRTnF88GDGGJQBgA Please like, subscribe, and ring that bell. There will be a lot of visual tips on the Webcast.
Music by Linda Louisa It is tragic when believers view the world through a frame of their own making, rather than in the light of God’s self-revelation in His Word and through the ages. When John the Baptist sought reassurance that Jesus really was the Promised One, Jesus pointed him not to doctrines and dogma set in stone but to the living witness of His awesome power. Forgive us, Lord, for all the ways in which we shrink You to fit our own small ideas. May our world view expand to embrace the reality of who You really are, and to proclaim the fulness of Your kingdom. Lord, we are moving towards the place where we worship before Your throne, free from all the particles that sully the flow of Your rainfall. Drench and quench each one of us in the unending stream of Your waterfall. Let the water of life flow out to all we are concerned for, Yes, let all who hear these words and music moisten dry parched lips and quench their thirst in You as they find and follow Your Spirit’s leading. Sluice away the cloying dust and dirt as You rain your living water on us, Lord; clear refreshing liquid that cascades and thunders through our lives. Give us the courage to leap with You outside our comfort zone, beyond the edge of human reason where faith and love hold sway.* Let us be living stones, emerging from the ocean depths, once crushed and broken by the crashing waves and tides, but now smoothed and sculpted, honed in Heaven’s light to become sparkling jewels within Your Kingdom.* (*adapted from a poem by Nancy Brook) Thank You that You have brought life and immortality to light through the gospel; (2 Tim. 1:10) and just as You raised Jesus from the dead, may You also raise my friends and neighbours with Him and present them alive in Your presence. May the veil that is over them be taken away. (2 Cor. 4:14) Harness all the learning You would imbue our minds with, express all the virtue You would weave in our soul. Radiate Your presence to a people devoid of You; for although their needs are often inconvenient, You want us to be more lenient: for people matter most of all to You. Lord, one drop of Your inspiration dispels the inner strife that is so rife. We pray for that living water to envision and empower all who proclaim Your name; and, whatever may befall, let us be carriers of Your Kingdom call Lord, let good sense prevail in the decisions that we face; bucketfuls of common sense when all around are feeling tense. We ask for God-given sense to prevail in matters still in great suspense. In human terms they may appear too close to call: but we plead with You to establish outcomes that bring glory to Your name. May those afraid to enter the water, turn at last to You and reach their heart’s true centre: the One who sees and hears their inner plea. Since ingrained ingratitude makes us unclean, may we never take our clean running water for granted, at this time where death and disease lie hidden in the mud when the great floods rush by. Thank You Lord for its constant provision when it is such a scant commodity in so many parts of the world. Lord, the water You gave to be a blessing has all too often become a means for repressing, in both spiritual and political realms. Overrule the pressures that are building; guide and challenge those who control the water flow. Raise up springs where none existed before; Re-open wells where You are not worshipped any more and be especially with those who walk enormous distances hoping not to be turned away as hindrances; Yes, overrule the pressures that are building; guide and challenge those who control the water flow.
This week we have our first guest! We touch on Corona virus updates, quarantine parades, EMT adventures, freshmen dormitories, killing bugs/rodents, corporate greed during quarantine, and the origin of sluice juice.
A great show covering to of the most important topics of the day; Coronavirus and the Democrat Party.
Field Recording made at Mundon Wash Sluice, 6th February 2020 as part of my project Resounding, following in the footsteps of JA Baker, author of The Peregrine. http://www.stuartbowditch.co.uk/resounding-344243
Field Recording made at Down Hall Sluice, Bradwell 21st November 2019 as part of my project Resounding, following in the footsteps of JA Baker, author of The Peregrine. http://www.stuartbowditch.co.uk/resounding-344243
Field Recording made at Highams Farm Sluice, Goldhanger 14th November 2019 as part of my project Resounding, following in the footsteps of JA Baker, author of The Peregrine. http://www.stuartbowditch.co.uk/resounding-344243
Learn about modern-day gold mining from Rick Ness and Tony Beets, two of the stars of Discovery’s #1 TV show, “Gold Rush.” In that vein, Curiosity Daily hosts Cody Gough and Ashley Hamer explain sluice boxes, resistivity surveys, and other gold mining techniques. They also discuss the following story from Curiosity.com about why you stop liking new music as you get older: https://curiosity.im/33G3ixC Please support this episode’s sponsor! Get your first month of KiwiCo FREE by visiting https://www.kiwico.com/curiosity More from Discovery’s #1 show, Gold Rush: Gold Rush official website — https://www.discovery.com/shows/gold-rush DiscoveryGO — https://go.discovery.com/watch/discovery @GoldRushTV on Instagram — https://www.instagram.com/GoldRushTV/ Gold Rush on Facebook — https://www.facebook.com/GoldRush/ Follow @Gold_Rush on Twitter — https://twitter.com/Gold_Rush Follow @GoldrushRick on Twitter — https://twitter.com/GoldrushRick Download the FREE 5-star Curiosity app for Android and iOS at https://curiosity.im/podcast-app. And Amazon smart speaker users: you can listen to our podcast as part of your Amazon Alexa Flash Briefing — just click “enable” here: https://curiosity.im/podcast-flash-briefing.
This week, Judge John Hodgman and Bailiff Jesse Thorn are in chambers to clear the docket! They talk about making the bed, using and washing towels, and more! Plus friends of the Court Biz Ellis and Theresa Thorn of One Bad Mother help with a dispute regarding childcare!
You are going to love this episode with Jennifer Lord! We dive into painting, being a librarian, learning and teaching tai chi chuan and ikebana, butoh and being a mom. And fashion! I attended a gallery exhibition and was immediately drawn to the vibrant paintings by Jennifer and then I got to meet her and she has such a wonderful and thoughtful presence. Was an absolute delight to chat with her and got so much from this chat. BioJennifer Lord is an artist and teacher. She received her Bachelor of Arts from Naropa University in Visual Arts and T’ai Chi Ch’uan. She studies and teaches T’ai Chi Ch’uan with Rocky Mountain T’ai Chi Ch’uan. She is a student of Sogetsu Ikebana with Kalapa Ikebana. Lord’s most recent events include, a solo exhibition at JuiceBox Gallery, a solo exhibition at Alto Gallery, a group show at MegaFauna, digital video collaboration with Noah Travis Phillips published online by RealityBeach.org and exhibited at Sluice in London. She has a forthcoming collaboration with the MÚSED fashion house. Lord exhibited ikebana in the 2018 annual Sogetsu Ikebana Spring Show in Denver, Colorado. Lord’s collaboration TEAM-UP! with Noah Travis Phillips will be published by +4 Press. She lives, works, and teaches in Boulder, Colorado. Her work is held in several private collections.ARTIST STATEMENTSpeculative Abstract Rainbow-scapes.Working in acrylic on canvas or hardwood panels, I make paintings that are simultaneous. The poetic titles of my paintings act as a door into the work and provoke multiple meanings.My work is a portal into another way of seeing the natural world, one of flux and interconnection, an encounter both destabilized and unified. My paintings are ecological and cosmological, depicting different scales and perspectives from various subject orientations. These paintings disrupt singular notions of subject/object. I present emergence, simultaneity, relationship, and multi-directional flows.While working, I remain on the edge between mapping an image or landscape and being receptive to that which arises through process. This edge is generative, spontaneous, and dynamic. I work with both the specificity of place and the abstractness of nature and phenomenon. I think about climate change, natural and environmental disasters, and the supernatural through process-responsive gestural painting.The accretion and variety of marks within my paintings coalesce to create an ecology. This ecology of marks describes various emotional, physical, and hidden material qualities of the landscape. My methodology is cosmological.My current series, under the working title, “Natural/Human Disasters” explores the interconnection of human and geologic Earth shaping forces. My bold and complex paintings explore the human caused destruction of nuclear bombs and mass-scale weaponry, mining, and oil spills alongside phenomena like lightning, volcanoes, floods, tsunamis, and earthquakes. These paintings are chaotic and harmonious imaginary landscapes of the Anthropocene.Simultaneously looking at the tension between environmental destruction and ecological wholeness, my work is always on the side of nature’s doubtless awesome vitality, grounded in the majesty of mountains and the magic of rainbows.Jennifer Lord links:https://juniperlord.comhttps://www.instagram.com/juniperlord/https://www.juiceboxdenver.com/Thyme in the Studio info:You can sign up for my haiku hello newsletter sent every fortnight. Just a haiku, and whatever else comes through to be shared like songs, recipes or photos. Sign up at my website www.aidazea.comhttps://www.patreon.com/thymeinthestudiohttps://www.instagram.com/thymeinthestudiopodcast/https://www.instagram.com/aida.zea.arts/https://www.aidazea.com If you enjoy the show and are in a secure place financially please consider supporting the show on Patreon/Thyme in the Studio. I know many people are feeling the pinch of the current corona pandemic financially. If that is you, but you would like to do something to support the show please follow, subscribe, rate, and review the show on apple podcasts. If you leave a review please feel free to include your website or instagram handle to bring more awareness to your work as well. I want to support and you!Music by Komiku
The TRASHcast crew discusses North Country sex crimes, a vandalized sluice gate, snow ban parking, and Oregon right wing militias! There’s plenty of slander to go around, it’s funny news, locally!
Gold Fever Radio with Special Guest Brandon Johnson President of GPAA/LDMA Gold Prospecting
Gold Fever Radio Dredge Camp Indiana
Cody Drake loves to hunt for Treasures, along with Gold and other artifacts. His desert servival skills are pretty awsome as well.
Gold Fever Radio Special Guest Jeff Davis With Geo Mining. Plus ?
Gold Fever Radio with Specail Guest Tom Kitchar with Waldo Mining Dist. Gold Prospecting
Phil and Adam discuss Nintendo Labo VR, being sick, and the evolutions of kid's poop.
Gold fever Radio with Guest Kevin Hoagland. Gpaa and Metal Detectors
Gold Fever Radio with guest Jim McIntyre. Cottonwood Trails Gold Camp
Aris and Wendell gather a group together to pull off the impossible: breaking into the hyper secure MindFarm facility to rescue family and friends. But there's a few problems, the least of which are murderous robots,
Gold Fever Radio with special guest Klint Washburn. Gold Claw Gold Pan. How to use. Where and how to find Gold.
Special Guest Dave Turin Gold Rush Lost Mines. Ming in Arizona for some Rich Gold. Follow the Adventure!
Gold fever Radio Guest Charlie LeSueur. Superstition mountains
Wayne Tuttle - Legends of the Superstition Mountains. Gold prospecting and Treasure Hunting.
Gold Fever Radio talks with Special Guest Blake Harmon from Miners depot talk about Gold Prospecting and Metal Detecting
Gold Fever Radio with Special Guest Mike Pung. Learn about Gold and how to find it. Plus his adventures.
Gold Fever Radio live at the Nome, Alaska Family Reunion. Cripple River Camp. We are talking about the adventures while there and the memories.
Guest Bill Southern talks about Metal Detectors.
Gold Fever Radio with Special Guest Augie Krutzsch. AKAU
Gold Fever Radio with guest KC Morgan from Gold Rush - White Water
Gold Fever Radio with Special Guest Jeff Williams. We talk about Gold Prospecting.
Gold Fever Radio Special Guest Deanna Bratton Pollan
Special Guest Metal Detector Partners Peter Schichtel & Joe Jorgensen
Gold fever Radio with Guest Klint Washburn inventor of Gold claw gold Pan
Gold fever Radfio talks with Guest Blake Harmon about Prospecting and Life
Gold Fever Radio with Guest Wayne "Nugget Brain" Peterson. Gold Prospecting, Metal Detecting and treasure Hunting
Gold fever Radio guest John Boudreau.
Gold fever Halloween Special. Gold and Ghost.Scary Stories
Gold prospecting, Treasure Hunting, and the Paranormal
Gold prospecting, Treasure Hunting, Metal Detecting, Ghost Towns.
Gold Prospecting, Treasure Hunting and Ghost Towns.
A heartful of gratitude to the wonderful Jack Druce for tanking with us this episode. Check out his twitter @Jackdruce and his website for other excellent Druce content Breathing Through Drowning, Patreocean, LKS, Helium Foods, Nobel Prize for Chicken, Early Game Sledging, Tar Anonymity TITTT Merch is now available on Red Bubble. Head over here and grab yourselves some swag. And you can support the pod by chipping in to our patreon here (thank you!) Two in the Think Tank is a part of the Planet Broadcasting family You can find us on twitter at @twointank Andy Matthews: @stupidoldandy Alasdair Tremblay-Birchall: @alasdairtb And you can find us on the Facebook right here Acute thanks to George Matthews for producing See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Gold Prospecting, Treasure Hunting and Ghost Towns
Gold Prospecting, Metal Detecting, Mining, and Treasure Hunting and Ghost Towns
Gold prospecting, Treasure Hunting and Ghost Towns
DPR brings you an exclusive preview of the long awaited 13th studio album of legendary experimental rockers Primus. ‘Sluice out the Turd’ is the album that barely got made, mainly due to the band’s crippling Pokémon Go addiction. Luckily for us, they didn’t understand micro transactions so they’ve had to down their devices and pick up their instruments to pay off Les Claypool’s Pikachu. We’re glad they did though as we now have sure fire hits like “About 80 bars of D”, “The one that sounds like an Ice Cream truck”, and “Mostly Static”. Personally this reporter can’t wait...I actually can’t...yeah...it’s terminal. Credits & Artwork: http://www.dicepaperrole.com/podcast/episode-21-familiar-face/
Dungeons & Dragons: Grave of Man Part 19 - The Sluice Gate Conundrum by Keith Ballard
https://youtu.be/1bS6vaqZUl4 https://youtu.be/1bS6vaqZUl4 Brandon and Rem are back bringing you the sluice of the internet and other disgusting words! Here are some more topics! Elite Dangerous Valkyria Revolution Gorilla food songs Tempered glass DC movies Cows of the future Heat resistant cows Brangus Comicon International: San Diego leaving San Diego FSotW: Markus "Notch" Persson all for a heterosexual day and if you're not down for that you should be shot, apparently! The Internet: A wretched hive of scum and villainy. Interested in writing geek-centric articles? Got a fever to let your inner writer out? Email us with an article to be published for thousands of readers to see! Also visit the bazaar! http://www.duelingogres.com/bazaar-dueling-ogres-store/ SMASH ALL THOSE LIKES AND SHARES AND SUBSCRIBES FOREVER! They help us stay alive one more day! Literally, there are larger ogres over us. They're ruthless and terrifying. We cry tears of blood! CALL or TEXT us so we can play/read your question on air @ !! (Intro uses the "" track by Kevin Macleod (). Licensed under . Outtro: , licensed under .)
A quick look at the Mobile Gem Mining Sluice from JNE Lapidary at the Arlington Gem and Mineral Show:Click HERE to download
Strapped onto a log, riding the sluice of learningCheck out the links to some interviews and B-roll I produced for a conference put on by the company I work for. It may not look like a lot, but I did it all on my own and it represents most of my life during January. It feels so good when it stops.I recorded this episode in pieces at different times. Once I met the deadline for my day job I was freed up to complete The Killer edit. At the end of the show I talk about the critique and the different ways other people in the class approached their edit of the story.I wanted to recommend student screenings to anyone interested in learning more about filmmaking. Your response to the weaknesses of the film provides good insight into what you already know about filmmaking. They're a good source of insight into potential errors and oversights when producing your own film. A cautionary resource, particularly for a student filmmaker like you and I.The entire experience of producing The Killers has given me a lot of thoughts about getting the coverage you need to tell a story. The fastest path to success is planning through preproduction. Pre-visualization tools like storyboards and shot lists are valuable tools as well. It doesn't matter how you do it, what matters is that you create the edit before you begin shooting.