Podcasts about Sumbawa

Island in Indonesia

  • 50PODCASTS
  • 122EPISODES
  • 38mAVG DURATION
  • 1MONTHLY NEW EPISODE
  • Apr 4, 2025LATEST
Sumbawa

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about Sumbawa

Latest podcast episodes about Sumbawa

Daniel Ramos' Podcast
Episode 470: 05 de Abril del 2025 - Devoción para la mujer - ¨Amanecer con Jesús¨

Daniel Ramos' Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2025 3:50


====================================================SUSCRIBETEhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNpffyr-7_zP1x1lS89ByaQ?sub_confirmation=1==================================================== DEVOCIÓN MATUTINA PARA MUJERES 2025“AMANECER CON JESÚS”Narrado por: Sirley DelgadilloDesde: Bucaramanga, ColombiaUna cortesía de DR'Ministries y Canaan Seventh-Day Adventist Church===================|| www.drministries.org ||===================05 de AbrilCorazón de tambora«Deja la ira y desecha el enojo; no te excites en manera alguna a hacer lo malo» (Salmos 37:8).El corazón del Tambora era muy profundo, nadie conocía lo que albergaba en el fondo de su ser. Durante muchos años en silencio producía, lo que más tarde sería, una de las peores tragedias de la historia. Era la tarde del 5 de abril de 1815 cuando un estruendo alertó a la población de la isla de Sumbawa, Indonesia, y hasta 1,000 kilómetros más de distancia. Había comenzado su furia. Sus cenizas se esparcieron por la atmósfera y continuó haciendo erupción por cinco días más, hasta que el 10 de abril terminó por arrojar a 150 kilómetros de distancia rocas y cenizas, siendo el peor de los días. La lava ardiente, cuál río arrastró hacia el mar las poblaciones más cercanas, destruyendo cuanto hubo en su paso. Era su naturaleza explotar y matar. Sus alcances mortales continuaron por mucho tiempo. Debido a la erupción, los tsunamis que provocó y las hambrunas de los años siguientes, se estima que más de 70 mil personas murieron por el corazón ardiente del Tambora.En algunos corazones, hierve cuál lava dispuesta a explotar el enojo. Basta una palabra que les parezca ofensiva, una mirada o un acto desaprobado para abrir los labios y hacer erupción como volcán. Los daños ocasionados por las personas enojadas son de un alcance inimaginable. Se terminan relaciones, se acaban amistades, se pierden empleos y en el caso más extremo se pierden vidas debido a un mal manejo de la ira. Cuando el daño está hecho, no hay vuelta atrás.¿Qué tan rápido te enojas? ¿Cómo manejas ese momento? El consejo bíblico afirma que empeoramos las cosas cuando nos enojamos, y ya sea que hayamos sido espectadoras o protagonistas, sabemos que ese texto es verdad. La ira no trae nada bueno.¿Qué guardas en tu corazón? En un momento crítico y de prueba, sencillamente sacamos lo que tenemos dentro. La buena noticia es que mientras más tiempo pasemos a solas con Jesús, mientras más anhelemos parecernos a él, mientras alberguemos en nuestro corazón actitudes positivas, el enojo y la ira se alejarán de nuestras vidas. El resultado es que, cuando estemos sometidas a una situación que amerite el enojo, en vez de explotar como el corazón de Tambora, actuaremos como el corazón de Jesús. 

Unreached of the Day
Pray for the Sumbawa in Indonesia

Unreached of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2025 1:18


Episode Description Sign up to receive this Unreached of the Day podcast sent to you:  https://unreachedoftheday.org/resources/podcast/ People Group Summary: https://joshuaproject.net/people_groups/15119/ID     #PrayforZERO is a podcast Sponsor.         https://prayforzero.com/ Take your place in history! We could be the generation to translate God's Word into every language. YOUR prayers can make this happen.  Take your first step and sign the Prayer Wall to receive the weekly Pray For Zero Journal:  https://prayforzero.com/prayer-wall/#join Pray for the largest Frontier People Groups (FPG): Visit JoshuaProject.net/frontier#podcast provides links to podcast recordings of the prayer guide for the 31 largest FPGs.  Go31.org/FREE provides the printed prayer guide for the largest 31 FPGs along with resources to support those wanting to enlist others in prayer for FPGs

Business Daily
Seaweed: the super weed?

Business Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2024 17:29


It's a familiar feature of our oceans and beaches and yet its environmental impact has largely been overlooked. Now supporters say seaweed can help us address climate change by reducing our reliance on fertilisers, and by reducing the methane emissions produced by cows. On top of that, proponents say a new material produced from the sugars in seaweed could provide a biodegradable alternative to the millions of tonnes of single-use plastic we throw away each year. No wonder the World Bank is predicting a global seaweed boom worth $12bn this decade.We hear from scientists and entrepreneurs from Australia to Zanzibar who say we are only just beginning to understand the exciting possibilities posed by this ubiquitous underwater species. The Irish folk tune Dúlamán, about the island's traditional seaweed gatherers, is used with the permission of musician Seoirse Ó Dochartaigh. Produced and presented by Vivienne Nunis. (Picture: Seaweed farm. Sumbawa. Indonesia. Credit: Getty Images)

Owsiana Podcast
273: Sumbawa, wymarzona działka i mój krytyk wewnętrzny

Owsiana Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2024 52:29


W tym odcinku opowiadam o moim pobycie na wyspie Sumbawa, o wielkich marzeniach, poszukiwaniu działki z widokiem na ocean oraz o moim krytyku wewnętrznym.Zapisz się na listę zainteresowanych książką:https://landing.mailerlite.com/webforms/landing/t0x7b7

Catastrophes • Histoires Vraies
L'Éruption du Tambora

Catastrophes • Histoires Vraies

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2024 8:01


NOUVEAU - Abonnez-vous à Minuit+ pour profiter de Catastrophes - Histoires Vraies et de milliers d'autres histoires sans publicité, d'épisodes en avant-première et en intégralité. Vous aurez accès sans publicité à des dizaines de programmes passionnants comme Crimes - Histoires Vraies, Espions - Histoires Vraies ou encore Paranormal - Histoires Vraies.

The Pacific War - week by week
- 127 - Pacific War - Invasion of Western New Guinea, April 23-30, 1944

The Pacific War - week by week

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2024 52:50


Last time we spoke about the beginning of Operation Ichi-Go, the war in the Burma front and the war in New Guinea. Hundreds of thousands of IJA troops stormed countless areas in China. Chiang Kai-Shek was caught somewhat with his pants down, his best men were in Burma, there was little his defenders could do against such raw power. Xuchang fell and soon the Japanese were marching upon Luoyang. Over in Burma the British, Indian, American and Chinese alliance was continuing to both attack and defend. In the north Stilwell led the offensive, while Slim led the defensive in the south. The Chindits fought like lions to defend White City, but ultimately would give up strongholds to seek out new ones. Over in New Guinea the Japanese continued their frantic retreat under heavy pressure from the Australians. As bad as the situation was, the Japanese were in for another nasty surprise in Green Hell. This episode is the invasion of Western New Guinea Welcome to the Pacific War Podcast Week by Week, 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 world war two? Kings and Generals have an assortment of episodes on world war two 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 you can find a few videos all the way from the Opium Wars of the 1800's until the end of the Pacific War in 1945.  Last week we saw the effective conclusion of the Eastern New Guinea Campaign. It was a colossal campaign beginning with the Australian defense along the Kokoda Track, then the blood battle of Buna-Gona, the drive upon Lae-Salamaua, the march north upon the Huon Peninsula and Finisterres, and after taking Madang it was finally over. Yet while the book was closing upon Eastern New Guinea, the book on Western New Guinea was just about to be opened.  The pace of the offensive against the Japanese in New Guinea accelerated greatly in the first half of 1944. This was primarily because General MacArthur feared unless he made quick progress he would lose the reins over where the allies would drive upon the Japanese home islands. MacArthur of course sought to advance upon the Philippines, while the Joint Chiefs favored the Navy's central thrust more so. Despite MacArthur's continuous war against his colleagues and superiors and his continuous complaining he lacked support, he had been provided the means to carry out numerous amphibious assaults that could lead to his ultimate goal. MacArthur's operations against New Britain, Saidor, Los Negros and Manus clearly indicated allied superiority over the Japanese in terms of men, ships and airpower. By April of 1944, MacArthur had nearly 750,000 men under his command. His major components were 6 US infantry divisions, one cavalry division, 3 separate regiment combat teams and 3 special brigades. The Australians were gradually being relegated into a secondary role, but could still provide 5 additional divisions and enough separate brigades to form another 2 divisions. General Kenney's air force had grown so large, they could now mount 200 aircraft raids against a variety of targets with little fear of Japanese retaliation. What MacArthur needed was more and more forward airfields so he could hurl fighters and bombers deeper into the Japanese inner perimeter. In a lot of respects, the Japanese position in New Guinea was all but hopeless. Although they still had more than 350,000 troops in the Southwest Pacific area, many were isolated with little chance of receiving reinforcements or supplies. There was also an enormous amount of confusion amongst the various commands, made difficult by enormous distance and the lack of effective naval power. Overall command of Japanese forces as far as Wewak was technically under Lt General Fusataro Tshima, whose HQ was at Manokwari on the Vogelkop Peninsula. It was Tshima who ordered General Adachi to withdraw his 18th Army over to the Hollandia area. Fortunately for MacArthur, Adachi procrastinated heavily, believing a landing would be made at Hansa Bay. All of the heavy bombing by the 5th air force against the coast near Wewak supported his beliefs. Not too long ago we spoke about Operations Reckless and Persecution, the invasion of Hollandia and Aitape. Admiral Barbey had already departed the staging points and rendezvous northwest of Manus Island by April 20th. The large convoys sailed west from the Admiralty Islands until dusk, whence they turned southwest towards Hollandia. Admiral Mitscher's Task Force 58 was providing escort while also launching strikes against Wakde, Sarmi and Sentani airfields on April 21st. Over the next three days the carrier aircraft neutralized the remaining airpower in the Wakde-Sarmi area. Early on the 22nd, the two task forces separated, with the Persecution Task Force heading southeast towards Aitape and the rest, designated Reckless Task Force, proceeded to a point 20 miles offshore between Humboldt and Tanahmerah Bay. Now the allied troops were ready to hit the beaches, but awaiting them was a large concentration of Japanese…however it was mostly a concentration of Japanese personnel rather than combat troops. While initial attention was focussed on the Geelvink Bay area, the 2nd Area Army command was also concerned over the weak condition of the defenses of Hollandia, which lay just east of the 140th meridian in the 8th Area Army zone of responsibility. An order to dispatch an element of the 36th Division to that sector was issued but was quickly revoked on the ground that it would weaken the defenses of Geelvink Bay without appreciably strengthening Hollandia. A large section of the New Guinea coast between Wewak and Sarmi thus remained practically undefended. General Anami promptly dispatched a staff mission to 8th Area Army headquarters at Rabaul to press for reinforcement of the Hollandia area, and a similar recommendation was communicated to Imperial General Headquarters during December. Two battalions of the 6th South Seas Detachment, temporarily stationed on Palau, were dispatched by the High Command. This force arrived in Hollandia on March 4, but numbered only 240 men, since approximately 1000 men, including the detachment commander, had been lost en route to submarine attacks. No other action was taken, however, since both 8th Area Army and 18th Army, after the loss of Finschhafen, were more immediately concerned with checking further enemy penetration of the Dampier Strait region. Thus roughly 10,000 IJA and 1000 IJN personnel were at Hollandia, most support units led by Major-General Kitazono Toyozo and aviation units from General Inada's 6th air division. When Tsihima ordered Adachi over to the Hollandia area and he procrastinated, this prompted the leader of the 2nd Area Army, General Korechika Anami over at Davao to become concerned. Anami sent his chief of staff over to Wewak to convince Adachi to pull out, but when Adachi finally began withdrawing, he only had two regiment on the trail by the time of the American landings against Hollandia and Aitape. Major General Toyozo Kitazono only arrived in the area 10 days before the invasion and for an unexplained reason never officially took command. This is why Tshima's appointed air officers, Inada ended up being thrown the command. Inada only really had 500 effective combat troops, mostly from the 6th South Seas Detachment. These units belonged to General Anami Korechika's 2nd Area Army, which had been transferred recently from Manchuria to oversee the defense of the eastern Dutch East Indies and western New Guinea, and for the projected and later canceled invasion of northern Australia. Random note, I recently made a Youtube short mocking that canceled australian invasion on my youtube channel, it was a wild idea. Thus Anami's command was now formally around the 2nd, 18th and 19th armies. Lt General Kitano Kenzo's 19th Army had been garrisoning Timor, the Lesser Sunda Islands, Sumbawa, the Banda Sea Islands and some key points in Northwestern New Guinea with their HQ located at Ambon. Lt General Tshima Fusutaro's 2nd Army as I had mentioned was assigned overall defense of Western New Guinea, with Lt General Tagami Hachiro's 36th Division landing at Sarmi and Biak in early March and Lt General Ikeda Shunkichi's 35th Division preparing to come to Manokwari. The 14th Division originally part of the 2nd Army was diverted to defender Palau. Furthermore, to further support  the 2nd Area Army was Vice-Admiral Endo Yoshikazu's 9th Fleet, three southern expeditionary fleets, and the 7th Air Division of Lt General Sudo Einosuke. At Hollandia, the headquarters of Admiral Endo and Generals Kitazono and Inada had arrived at the same time by mid April. Though General Adachi had placed Kitazono in formal command of all units there, the transport commander had no time, as to develop a comprehensive defense plan for Hollandia, thus as I previously mentioned, command really fell onto Inada and Endo. The Japanese would be woefully unprepared for what was to come.  Over at Aitape, meanwhile, there were only a handful of replacements from the 20th Division, along with some naval and support personnel, so the situation looked even wrose for the 1000-man garrison. Preceding the amphibious assaults, Admiral Crutchley's surface fleet was going shell the Tanahmerah Bay area while Admiral Mitscher's carrier planes bombed the waters off the Tanahmerah beaches to explode possible mines, also finishing off the Hollandia airstrips and the remaining aircraft there.  Crutchley's warships picked up their landmarks through the mist as best they could, and at 6sm the roar of 8-inch guns from the heavy cruisers HMAS Australia and HMAS Shropshire shattered the silence of the steaming tropical morning. To this din was added the sharper crack of 5-inch and 4.7-inch weapons from American and Australian destroyers. The fire continued until 6:45, by which time 600 rounds of 8-inch and 1,500 rounds of 5-inch and 4.7-inch ammunition had been expended. As for the aerial strikes, despite the unfavorable weather, Task Force 58 managed to maintain planes on air alert over the Hollandia area since dawn. No enemy aircraft flew up from the Hollandia fields, and the few apparently operational planes sighted on those strips were strafed. In general there were no indications that Japanese defenses or defenders existed in the Tanahmerah Bay area. Task Force 58's scheduled bombing and strafing missions for that region were therefore canceled. Meeting little opposition, LCVP's carrying the first wave of the 19th and 21st Regiment approached Red Beach 2. As the leading wave of LCVP's, approached RED Beach 2, which was obscured by smoke from the naval bombardment, a rocket barrage was laid on the landing area by one Seventh Fleet LCI and two landing craft,, of the 542nd Engineer Boat and Shore Regiment. Machine guns mounted aboard the leading LCVP's kept up a steady fire against the beach. There was no answer from the Japanese, and the only opposition to the landing was scattered small arms and light automatic weapons fire from points far on the flanks of the beach and from a small island in Tanahmerah Bay. This fire was so quickly silenced by supporting destroyers that the assault waves suffered no casualties before reaching shore. Thus tactical surprise was achieved in Tanahmerah Bay, as the Japanese had only a few lookouts in the sector. General Irving's 24th Division successfully landed and the 3rd Battalion, 19th Infantry, quickly secured the northern portion of the beachhead and immediately dispatched patrols east and north to probe suspected enemy positions. The 1st Battalion, following the 3rd ashore, went into an assembly area to act as local reserve and to make ready to aid in unloading supplies at the water's edge if that proved necessary. The 2nd Battalion, 21st Infantry, took the southern half of Red Beach 2 with similar ease. The 3rd Battalion of that regiment quickly followed the 2nd ashore and sent Company I south to look for the trail expected to connect with Red Beach 1 at Dépapré. Simultaneously, LVT's carrying Lt Colonel Thomas Cliffords 1st battalion, 21st Regiment crossed coral barrier reefs on their way to Red Beach 1. Cliffords men landed completely unopposed and would spend an hour trying to locate the road leading to Lake Sentani and her airfields. Clifford left A Company at the beach while the rest trekked it over the  Dépapré-Lake Sentani trail at 8:37am, still encountering no enemy opposition whatsoever.Moving through fire lanes down which no bullets flew and past pillboxes in early stages of construction, the battalion column reached the village of Mariboe at 1047 hours. Only a few scattered enemy rifle shots had been encountered during this march and the village was secured without opposition. Over three miles by trail inland from Dépapré, Mariboe was the 24th Division's first inland objective. It was evident from scattered Japanese equipment in and around Mariboe that the Japanese had recently evacuated the village not long before the 1st Battalion's arrival. Colonel Clifford  halted his men. Since radio communication with the division command post on Red Beach 2 had been lost, he sent messengers back over the tortuous trail to report progress to General Irving. At the same time patrols were sent toward Kantomé, nearly two miles southeast of Mariboe. They reported few signs of enemy activity along the trail beyond Mariboe. Colonel Clifford apparently did not wait to re-establish contact with higher headquarters but, acting on his patrols' reports, ordered the battalion to push on. Encountering little opposition along the main trail, the unit reached Kantomé about noon. When Irving arrived to Red Beach 2 at 9;30am, he found a major logistical problem had formed at his main beachhead. Behind the narrow beach, a wide, impassable swamp was discover, it covered most of the area that the men had planned to use for the bivouac and supply dump area. Thus supplies soon began to pile up on the beach. This was an especially serious circumstance, for the landing plans had called for moving almost all troops and supplies overland from Red Beach 2 to the road inland. Construction of a road between the two beaches was soon found impracticable and when, after a day and a half of hard work, engineers had succeeded in driving a few yards of road into the hills south toward Red Beach 1, the project was discontinued. The small completed stretch did serve some useful purpose. On D-Day two batteries of 105-mm. howitzers were dragged along the road as far as possible to a cramped position on a little ridge immediately south of Red Beach 2. From this site the howitzers could deliver some fire support for troops advancing inland from Red Beach 1, but the direction of this fire was limited by a number of hills nearby. The same stretch of road also provided dispersal space for a few of the many vehicles which had been unloaded at Red Beach 2 on D-Day. Additionally, a limited dispersal area, rendered inaccessible by a small stream and by an arm of the swamp, was discovered at the northern edge of the beach, and ultimately the 542nd Engineer Boat and Shore Regiment constructed a road into this space. Artillery, ashore within an hour after the initial landing, was emplaced there to deliver fire on inland targets. But the fill used to build this road stopped the flow of the little stream which had drained the swamp into Tanahmerah Bay. To prevent a rise in the swamp's water level, a drainage canal was cut directly through the center of the beach. This procedure speeded the outward flow of swamp water, lowered the water level a little, and created a small additional dry area behind the beach, but it did not provide sufficient dry land for dispersal of all the troops and supplies scheduled to land on Red Beach 2. Eventually Irvings men found some dry flat dispersal areas behind the beach, allowing the supply shuttles to continue their work uncongested. Colonel Cliffords battalion would make the main thrust for the division while the remainder of Colonel Charles Lyman's 21st Regiment moved over to Red Beach 1. Colonel Clifford possessed little or no knowledge of the situation to the rear other than the difficulties presented by terrain. Ahead, 10,000 Japanese were thought to be concentrated around the airfields. Jangkena was on flat, swampy ground and was not an easily defensible position. Should the 1st Battalion push on to Dazai, also on flat ground, Japanese troops might outflank the unit, cut its line of communications to Dépapré, and destroy it at leisure. If the Japanese bypassed the battalion they could cut off the advance of the rest of the 21st Infantry at any one of the many defiles over the first two or three miles of the trail inland from Dépapré. Colonel Clifford therefore decided to pull his men back to Kantomé for the night, leaving only outposts along the trail east of that village. Kantomé was located near the foot of the Takari Hills, which he thought would present a serious obstacle to any Japanese flanking maneuvers. It was a fortunate decision, as around midnight elements of the 22nd Airfield Battalion had advanced overland around his 1st battalions outposts, striking at their left flank. Meanwhile, General Heavey's landing craft carrying the leading waves of the 162nd and 186th Regiments, supported by rocket fire and by Rear-Admiral Russell Berkey's cruisers, likewise met no Japanese resistance as they landed General Fuller's troops on the White Beaches. Company A of Colonel Harold Haney's 162nd Regiment rapidly secured Cape Pie while Company I of Colonel Oliver Newman's 186th Regiment secured Cape Tjeweri. With Jautefa Bay in hand, Newman's 3rd Battalion was then landed on White Beach 4 in preparation for an advance towards Leimok Hill and Pim. The first objective, Leimok Hill, lay 1,800 yards northwest of Pim. Part of the battalion secured the hill by 1000, and other elements advanced southward toward Pim. That village and its usable jetty were secured, against light opposition, by 1645, while Suikerbrood Hill, on Jautefa Bay south of Pim, was cleared by 1800. The danger that enemy troops atop dominating heights near Pim might make White Beach 4 untenable was over. The 3rd Battalion then established a night perimeter at Pim, extending its defenses along a trail leading west from that village to the point at which the Pim-Hollandia track joined the main road inland to Lake Sentani, thus securing the roadhead from which movements to inland objectives had to begin. Over at White Beach 1, Haney's 3rd Battalion advanced quickly to take Pancake Hill at around 8am, only meeting sporadic rifle fire. After taking the hill, they began pushing up the shores of Humboldt Bay, encountering no resistance as they advanced upon Jarremoh Hill. It seemed clear to the Americans, the Japanese had been taken by complete surprise, not expecting an amphibious assault against Hollandia so quickly, so they had pulled back to the Sentani Lake Airfield sector. Now further south, Haney's 2nd Battalion were advancing to a track that connected Hollandia with Pim, trying to make contact with the 3rd Battalion over at Jarremoh Hill. Meanwhile Newman's 1st Batallion was advancing upon Leimok Hill. Though the men wanted to keep pushing towards Hollandia during the late afternoon, Fuller decided to dig in for the night while warships and artillery softened up the city. When General Anami over at his HQ in Manado heard of the invasion he immediately ordered the 23rd Air Flotilla of Rear-Admiral Ito Yoshiaki to toss whatever he could against the allied surface ships and force along the beaches. He also ordered the 18th army to break through Aitape to rush over and help the Hollandia garrison and for General Tshima to dispatch a regiment force as well to Hollandia. Thus General Tagami got his 224th regiment together for the advance to Hollandia, expecting to get there for early May, while General Nakai's 20th Division continued to close in on Aitape. Anami also wanted to send the main part of the 36th Division to perform a counterattack in Hollandia's direction as he thought it vitally important to delay the enemy as much as possible so a better defense of Western New Guinea could be organized. Yet General Terauchi Hisaichi of the Southern Army declined his request to do so on the basis a counteroffensive would simply denude the already weakened defenses of Western New Guinea. Meanwhile General Doe's Persecution Task Force was carrying out their landing against Aitape. The landings would be preceded by naval gunfire from Captain Albert Noble's Destroyer force, aerial bombardment from escort carriers of Rear Admiral Ralph Davisons Task Force 78 and from General Kenney's air force. Meeting zero resistance and under the cover of a rocket barrage, the LCPR's landed the men of Colonel Francis Mason's 163rd Regiment by 6:45. Despite the lack of resistance, an immense amount of smoke and poor visibility prevented the troops from landing at Beach Blue, and instead they came ashore at Wapil. Just like at Hollandia, they had achieved tactical surprise at Aitape as the Japanese fled in a panic under naval gunfire. Mason's got his 2nd Battalion to swing west and quickly seize the Waitanan Creek while the 1st battalion was being landed. Then the 2nd Battalion formed a defensive position at the Pro Mission while the 3rd Battalion sent patrols east to establish an outpost near the mouth of the Nigia River. Back over at the beaches, General Doe landed some Australian engineers who began repairing the Tadji Fighter airstrip. The No. 62 Works Wing, Royal Australian Air Force, had come ashore at Blue Beach during the morning and had been able to start work on Tadji Fighter Strip at 1:00pm. Repairs continued throughout the night under floodlights, the lack of Japanese opposition and the urgency of the task prompting General Doe to push the work. Although it had been hoped that the strip would be ready for use on D+1, terrain conditions were such that necessary repairs were not completed on schedule. Thus it was 9:00 on April 24th before the Australian engineers, who had worked without break for almost forty-eight hours, could announce that the airstrip was ready. At 4:30pm, 25 P-40s of No. 78 Wing, RAAF, landed on the field, and the balance of the wing arrived the next day. The ground on which the fighter strip was located was so poorly drained that it was not until April 28th, after steel matting had been placed on the field, that it could be used continuously. The works wing then moved to Tadji Bomber Strip to aid the 872nd and 875th Engineer Aviation Battalions. The latter two units passed to the operational control of Wing Commander William A. C. Dale of the RAAF, who, besides commanding the works wing, was Persecution Task Force Engineer. Extensive repairs were necessary at the bomber strip and that field was not ready for use by fighter and transport planes until May 27th and for bombers until early July. While the engineers worked, Colonel Merle Howe's 127th Regiment also landed, while Mason's man expanded the perimeter further west, securing the incomplete Tadji west airstrip and the mouth of the Raihu River by the end of the day. Simultaneously, Colonel Cliffords men continued their advance from Kantomé to Sabron, whereupon, Fuller finally decided to launch his assault on Hollandia, with Colonel Haney's 2nd and 3rd Battalions rapidly moving down the ridge to seize the abandoned town by 11:15am. To the south, Colonel Newman had his 1st Battalion pursue the fleeing enemy, and in the process rapidly secured Brinkman's Plantation and then repelled a very uncoordinated Japanese counterattackby the 6th South Seas Detachment and General Kitazono's 42nd independent motor car battalion. At 8:00am on the23rd the 1st Battalion left its night positions on Leimok Hill and started out over the main track, passing through the 3rd Battalion. The movement was supported by the 205th and 218th Field Artillery Battalions, set up near Cape Pie, and by aircraft from the carriers of Task Force 58. By 9am the 1st Battalion had reached Brinkman's Plantation, about 2,200 yards by trail southwest of Pim. So far, there had been no opposition. Now Companies A and C parted from the main body to patrol northwest up the Borgonjie River. Proceeding to a fork about 2,000 yards upstream, the two companies repulsed a series of unco-ordinated attacks which were launched against the right flank of the 186th Infantry during the afternoon by a Japanese force estimated at 150. The two companies remained at the stream-branching during the night of 23-24 of April, and on the latter day they moved overland southwest to rejoin the main force on the Pim-Lake Sentani trail. Meanwhile General Inada's aviation personnel already at the Sentani airfield alongside those currently retreating there were cut off from their ration and ammunition supplies which happened to be stored near the coast. Facing the hopeless situation of having to conduct a proper defense of the airfields with less than a week's worth of rations, little small arms and machine gun ammunition, no artillery at all and with two different enemy forces converging upon them, General Inada seized full command and led the weak garrison to retreat towards Genjem. Their rear guard was proved by General Kitazono's troops. During that same afternoon, two platoons of Cliffords Company B, leading the advance from Sabron, safely crossed a small stream but soon found themselves in the middle of a well-concealed Japanese ambush on the east bank. Rifle and heavy machine gun fire made the stream's steep banks untenable, and the forward platoons hurriedly withdrew to the west, leaving four dead men behind. In response to this, Irvings artillery and Admiral Mitscher's carrier aircraft began to bomb and strafe the area, but Cliffords B Company was nonetheless unable to break through. An artillery duel emerged during the night keeping the men of the 1st Battalion wide awake. They were also being supplies with great difficulty via hand-carry over the Dépapré-Lake Sentani trail. Fortunately the 24th Division's plans for the Hollandia operation had taken into consideration many of the potential logistic problems that might be encountered in the Tanahmerah Bay area. The division G-4 Section had made a detailed study which had shown that a full infantry regiment could be supplied by hand-carry from Red Beach 2 over the Dépapré-Lake Sentani trail inland as far as Jangkena. When no road connecting Red Beach 2 with Red Beach 1 had been found, the division moved the main supply point to Dépapré, from which the advance inland would be supported. With this change in plans, the G-4 Section undertook new computations and calculated that the hand-carry distance could be extended to Dazai. This conclusion was based on the assumption that adverse weather conditions would not make the Dépapré-Lake Sentani road nearly impassable. On 23 April heavy rains started to turn the road into a quagmire through which struggling men could scarcely carry their own equipment and food, to say nothing of extra supplies for the leading battalion. By evening on that day logistic support of the 21st Regiment had therefore become a major problem. There was no question but that the regiment would have to be supported by hand-carry, for it was estimated that at least two weeks' hard work by engineers would be required before the road from Dépapré as far as Mariboe could be made passable even for jeeps. But the 1st Battalion had already advanced east of Dazai, beyond which point, according to the G-4 estimates, support by hand-carry would be next to impossible. Because of the logistical issues, General Eichelberger decided to make the Humboldt Bay area the principal task force landing site, allowing the 41st division to drive further inland. On the 24th, Newman's 3rd Battalion passed through the 1st and seized the Koejaboe area, only stopping there until the 2nd battalion came over to reinforce the continued advance. During this action however, most of the Japanese continued their retreat towards Genjem unmolested. Over in the west, Irving ordered Clifford to consolidate his forward positions around Sabron and Dazai as he now realized the continued rapid advance inland was no long possible as a result of their hand-carry logistics scheme and the weather was taking quite a turn for the worse hampering air drops. Back over at Aitape, Mason's troops crossed the Raihu and by midday the 2nd Battalion secured the town. However General Doe was dissatisfied with the pace of the westward advance, and he therefore suggested to Alamo Force that the 163rd's commander, Mason be relieved. This step was approved by General Krueger, although the regimental commander remained in control of his unit until 9 May, only two days before the 163rd Infantry began loading for another operation. For the next few days, the 163rd patrolled further inland and would fall into a heavy engagement at Kamti on the 29th. At the Kapoam villages, about twelve miles up the Raihu, elements of the 3rd Battalion encountered the only signs of organized Japanese resistance found in the Aitape area to 4 May. At one of these villages, Kamti, some outpost troops of the 3rd Battalion were surrounded by an estimated 200 Japanese who made a number of harassing attacks on 28 and 29th. These skirmishes cost the battalion 3 men killed and 2 wounded, while it was estimated that the Japanese lost about 90 killed. On the 25th, Colonel Lymann's two forward battalion resumed their march, heading through some dense jungle being met by sporadic enemy small arm fire. They eventually dug in around the vicinity of Julianadorp. Meanwhile Colonel Newman had his 3rd battalion advancing west along the main road to Nefaar while some LVT's transported his 1st battalion over Lake Sentani to a point on the western shore of Nefaar. Neither force faced much opposition and together would perform some patrolling of the Cyclops Drome during the afternoon. Back over at Aitape, Colonel Howe's 127th Regiment finished their occupation of Tumleo, Seleo and the Ali Islands and now were beginning to send patrols east towards Afua. On the 26th, Colonel Newman had his 1st Battalion seize the Cyclops Drome while his 2nd Battalion took some LVTS to capture the Sentani Drome. Shortly after midday both Battalions rapidly secured the airdromes under light enemy resistance. Despite a serious supply situation, Lyman's 1st and 3rd Battalion resumed the advance, only encountering one enemy bunker at Ebeli Plantation. It had been impossible to drop supplies from the air on April 25 and even hand-carrying had been stopped late in the afternoon by heavy rains which had flooded many small streams. Parts of the Dépapré-Lake Sentani trail were now knee deep in water. The two forward battalions were low on ammunition, and they would have to go on half-rations if the supply situation were not quickly improved. But General Irving was again optimistic about the weather, believing that air supply would be successful on the 26th. Furthermore, he had received information which indicated that the Japanese were evacuating the airfield area. For these reasons he considered that a continuation of the advance would not be unduly hazardous. In ordering the advance, the division commander was knowingly pushing his men far beyond the limit at which they could be supplied by hand-carry. If the airdrop should again fail or if track conditions should not improve, one of the two forward battalions would probably have to be echeloned back along the trail to augment the carrying parties, and the advance would probably have to be halted. Should enemy opposition prove stubborn, the forward battalions might have to withdraw, perhaps as far as Dazai, to replenish their meager supplies of rations and ammunition. General Irving was taking a calculated risk which assumed the success of the airdrop and an absence of determined Japanese opposition. By the afternoon of the 26th, the Hollandia Drome was secured after a successful airdrop at Dazai. After this the objectives of Reckless had been achieved. Mop up operation would continue up until June 6th, as Fuller's 41st Division cleared out Cape Soedja and the Cyclops Mountain. They would end up flushing out Japanese on Hill 1000 and Irving's 24th Division sent out patrols west towards Marneda, Demta Bay and Gemjem. By 6 June the they had all killed 405 Japanese and had taken 64 prisoners in the Genjem-Demta region. Many more Japanese were found dead of starvation or disease along the trails in the same area. During the same time period, Eichelberger's task force would develop Hollandia into a major base from which future operations would be support. In the end casualties for Operation Reckless amounted to 124 deaths, 1057 wounded and 28 missing for the Americans. The Japanese suffered 3300 deaths, 661 captured. On April 30th, 7220 Japanese from Hollandia's garrison would assemble at Genjem where General Inada began a gradual withdrawal in 11 echelons towards Sarmi. By May 7th, all echelons departed Genjem for a very long march through some of the worst terrain in New Guinea. Two-thirds of the garrison reached the Tor River by June. It's estimated 93% of their strength would succumb to the deadly jungles, lack of provisions and rampant cases of malaria. Meanwhile to secure the Tadji airstrips against Japanese attacks from the direction of Wewak, Colonel Howe sent Company C by boat to Nyaparake on April 28th where they set up outposts further inland around Charov and Jalup. By May 4th, further patrolling by the 127th regiment had discovered no trace of organized enemy units, thus Operation Persecution was successfully completed. During the operation 525 Japanese were killed, 25 were captured while the Americans suffered 19 deaths and 40 wounded. That is all for the New Guinea front as we are now traveling over to New Britain. After the Battle of Talasea and the area was secured, Colonel Smith reached the conclusion that the enemy was withdrawing as rapidly as possible to Cape Hoskins. He decided to send patrols to Numundo Plantation. A reconnaissance patrol on March 10th found enemy positions at Bola and Santa Monica Plantation evacuated, but came upon entrenched enemy at Garilli. On 11th Captain Andrew Haldane's Company K left Bitokara with orders to proceed to Numundo on a three-day patrol, a time estimate that was to prove too optimistic. Company K reached Garilli to find it empty of the enemy, but just north of Patanga encountered Japanese small-arms, automatic-weapons and mortar fire. For four days the Marine patrol made slow progress, fighting an enemy who made a stand in the heavy vegetation approximately every 200 yards and then withdrew effectively before the advance guard flankers could close in. On the evening of the 16th the company entered Kilu where the Japanese made their final stand. While the two forces battled, a Marine landing craft appeared offshore and as it approached the beach the enemy diverted what apparently was a 75mm field gun from the ground action to the "naval force". In the boat was Lieutenant Colonel Deakin who had obtained permission from Colonel Smith to transport a section of 81mm mortars to Captain Haldane's assistance. Although the Japanese bracketed the craft, they failed to hit it and the weapons were landed without casualties. Shortly after the heavy mortars began lobbing shells toward the enemy, the Japanese broke contact and the Marines reached Numundo 48 hours later without finding the Terunuma Detachment again. The 1st Battalion also set up an ambush at Garu which was productive of enemy dead and prisoners for awhile. Company I replaced Company K at Numundo and in turn was replaced on 25 March by the 2nd Battalion. Inasmuch as the enemy continued to straggle eastward singly and in small groups with little or no communications, patrols were kept busy returning over and over again to the same villages and plantations in hopes of catching unwary Japanese. Such hopes frequently paid off. On the 30th the 2nd Battalion moved southeast from Numundo to San Remo Plantation, described by one Marine as "a very pleasant place." From that point patrols probed westward to the Kulu River and eastward into the Cape Hoskins area as far as Buluma. Overall the patrols saw 3 men killed with 8 wounded while accounting for 151 Japanese killed and 68 taken prisoner. Meanwhile, Matsuda, Komori and Terunuma;s Detachments all were performing withdrawals. Komori dispatched his force to the rendezvous point in successive echelons. He himself left Didmop with the rear guard, back on February 28th, reaching Augitni via Vakan on March 1st. The following morning he started his hospital patients along the evacuation route and sent a detail of 250 men to Bulawatni to help transport provisions. Yet the Marines at Iboki were becoming increasingly troublesome, though quite unaware that they faced anything more than starving stragglers. When Company A, 1st Marines entered Talawaga on the 5th, Colonel Sato felt the hot breath of pursuit on his neck and moved to the trail fork where he assumed command of the combined force. The next morning the Komori Group resumed its withdrawal in a northwesterly direction along the right prong of the trail fork, while Sato prepared to follow with his command on the 7th. At this point the ways of these two officers parted, and thenceforth each pursued his individual course toward the destiny that awaited him. On the 6th the Komori Group, with Major Tobuse's 1st Battalion, 141st Infantry in the lead, covered 16 km's on the trail running northeast from the fork toward the coast to reach what the Japanese called the "North Road." After the first day on the trail, Komori's progress becomes difficult to follow, owing to his use of place names occurring in no other reports or maps. It was slow and difficult at best, because of rain and mud, and the necessity for wide detours to find fords through deep streams and safe passages through or around extensive swamps. His immediate force numbered about 200, and on March 8th he recorded the Tobuse Battalion a half-day's march ahead. He sighted occasional enemy reconnaissance planes, and on the 12th U.S. landing craft fired upon his men as they attempted to cross the Kuhu River, obliging them to take to the jungle and swamps. The broad Via River stopped his force on the 14th. When improvised rafts refused to float, the major and 15 others swam across. The rest, through weakness or timidity, declined to follow this excellent example, and it took two days and a wide detour inland to get the whole group to the right bank. Then, on the 17th, provisions ran out. Thus the weakening men came by painful stages to Kometto (Eleanora Bay) and the welcome coconuts of Linga Linga Plantation on the 21st. But the wide Kapuluk River posed a formidable obstacle to further progress. They tried first to swim the Kapuluk near its mouth, but 18 men of the 2nd Company were swept away and 12 of them drowned, only the captain reaching the far bank safely. A patrol far upstream failed to find any fording point, so the troops spent the rest of the day building rafts. These managed to stay afloat, but broke apart so frequently that another two days were required for the passage. Then came the real heartbreaker on the 24th: they reached Kou only to find the provisioning post evacuated. On the 25th an officer patrol encountered a U.S. patrol, and once more the group had to detour. On the 26th Komori hired a native to guide him to Numundo Plantation, at the eastern base of the Willaumez Peninsula. But evidently the man had a change of heart, for the major recorded next day that, lacking a guide, "we advanced using a compass." They now entered a region of extensive swamps, intersected by another major obstacle: the two-pronged Kulu river. The column got across this stream on the 27th, but lost five more men in the swift current. The survivors emerged from the swamps on the 29th and followed the river southward. On the 31st Komori made his final diary entry, eloquent in its stark simplicity: "We are very tired and without food." Apparently at this point malaria laid the major low. Ordering his men to continue toward Cape Hoskins, he took refuge in a native village, accompanied only by his executive officer, his orderly and a corporal attached to his headquarters. For lack of further diary entries, obscurity shrouds the last week of his life. Most of the Japanese forces reached Malalia by the end of March, but Marine patrols were becoming increasingly troublesome. On the 11th, elements of the 1st Marines landed at Linga Linga, patrolling further inland. Company E landed at the Kulu River mouth at the base of Willaumez Peninsula. There the Marines encountered 4 enemy stragglers, killing three and taking one prisoner. Then they moved westward to Kandoka, where they were joined by two platoons of Company F, brought over by boat. There they established a roadblock, just in time to catch Sato's rear echelon. Second Lieutenant Richard B. Watkins was in command of the trail block. At 9am Watkins led his group inland from the village over some faint trails which he hoped the Japanese main body might be using. The Marines had proceeded about a mile and a half and were about to cross a stream in a sparsely wooded area when they sighted two Japanese standing with slung rifles, apparently resting. Watkins had about decided to dispose of these when they moved off in a northeasterly direction, followed almost immediately by a large body of their compatriots. Lying where the Japanese could easily have spotted them, the Marines counted the 73 enemy soldiers and noted the equipment cited above. Conspicuous among them was a tall, burly officer being carried on a litter. The Japanese were cutting fresh trail through the jungle, and fortunately were too intent on their work to discover the patrol. They made excruciatingly slow progress, however, and Watkins did not dare to move until the last man had disappeared. He then returned with all speed to Kandoka, sending a runner ahead with his report. At the village he met Major Brush who had come over from Yaluiai with one squad on what he had intended as merely a routine inspection. He promptly radioed his command post to send a rifle platoon and a 60mm mortar section to the scene and ordered Watkins to hold the trail block with one rifle squad, one machine-gun squad and two mortar squads while he himself set off with the rest of the troops available in an effort to overtake the Japanese from the rear. Before his own departure that morning, Watkins had sent a six-man patrol under Sergeant Frank Chliek to an inland village some two miles south of Kandoka, right where the Japanese appeared to be heading. The lieutenant promptly dispatched a native messenger there with a warning; then, when firing broke out in that direction, he surmised, correctly, that Chliek had become engaged and took the remaining rifle squad and hurried to his assistance. He arrived to find the sergeant and his men crouched on high ground by the east-west trail with dead Japanese all around them. The volume of fire was intense, the pattern not at all clear. As it turned out, Chliek had stumbled upon the column somewhere near its head and, taking advantage of his superior position, immediately opened fire. Major Brush's force, which had been closing rapidly, was on the opposite side of the valley at this time; hence, at sound of the first shots, had hastened to the scene and struck the Japanese column's other flank. In order to avoid becoming involved in a fire fight with that group, Watkins ordered Chliek's patrol back to Kandoka and followed with his own squad at a slower pace. Brush caught up with him shortly, whereat a counting of heads showed that, miraculously, the Marines had not sustained a single casualty. Here is the aftermath as Watkins recalls it: “On the following morning I took a 20 man patrol through the battle area. We counted 55 dead including 3 officers. It was quite easy to believe that perhaps 20 more died in scattered positions throughout the dense underbrush. The dead were all within a 100 yard stretch of trail. We encountered 2 more Japanese who had evidently just come upon the scene who were sitting side by side staring dazedly at the destruction and did not even turn their heads when we approached.” The burly officer previously observed on a litter proved to be Colonel Sato. Evidently Sergeant Chliek's patrol had struck the enemy column at precisely the point where he was being carried, for the colonel had only had time to leap to his feet and draw his sword to fight back before the Marines' fire riddled him. Seeing their leader fall, those Japanese farther forward took off in mad flight, while those behind were cut off by the converging of the two patrols. Thus perished one of the few Japanese to deserve much credit for the performance of the 65th Brigade on New Britain. Although the rear echelon attacked by the two patrols comprised less than half of Sato's total force, the group, as such, ceased to exist with the death of the leader who alone had held it together. Units split into components, these into smaller parties, straggling eastward over a variety of trails, often hacking their own way by compass azimuth.  Throughout April, the 17th Division continued their retreat towards Rabaul, managed to repel multiple marine patrol attacks around Cape Hoskins. General Sakai's survivors finally got to Rabaul between April 16th and May 15th, erecting the last bulwark of defense for the South Pacific. On April 6th, the journey of another Japanese commander came to an end. The body of the already deceased Major Komori was captured at the San Remo Plantation by the 2nd Battalion, 5th marines. They came upon the outpost, suddenly face to face with a group of four bedraggled Japanese. It was one of those abrupt encounters that allow little time for reflection or deliberation. The flurry of fire that followed killed three of the enemy and wounded the fourth, who promptly surrendered. Komori had apparently died of malaria along the way.  For the 5th Marines, too, was nearing its journey's end, so far as New Britain was concerned. With promotion of the regimental commander, Lieutenant Colonel Buse took over on an acting basis, and General Smith returned to Cape Gloucester to relieve General Shepherd as Assistant Division Commander. Units attached to the regiment followed, and representatives of the Army's 185th Infantry arrived to inspect positions preparatory to replacing the 5th, just as other 40th Infantry Division elements were doing in the Cape Gloucester area with a view toward relieving the entire 1st Marine Division. Last clash of the campaign occurred onthe 22nd of April, when a 2/5 patrol intercepted a party of Japanese, killing 20, including two officers, and suffering the regiment's last fatality on New Britain. Three days later the whole 185th RCT moved into Talasea and San Remo, and at 1530 command of the area formally passed to the Army. LCM's carrying the 1st and 3rd Battalions back to Borgen Bay cleared Talasea at 1630, followed by those carrying 2/5 from San Remo at 2000. The movement was reported complete at 1930 on the 26th, and men of the 5th learned that the 1st Marines had departed this island of evil memory the previous day and that they would follow as ships became available. Soon they would be relieved by Major-General Isaac Rapp Brush's 40th Division, which took responsibility for Cape Gloucester, Arawe and Talasea by the end of April.  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. Thus Operation Reckless and Persecution were both successful. Now MacArthur had a strong foothold in Western New Guinea seeing the Japanese continued their frantic retreat wherever allied forces seemed to pop up. Over in New Britain, the Japanese were losing formidable commanders as they too were on the retreat, things were simply disastrous for the empire of the rising sun. 

Les Grosses Têtes
AH OUAIS ? - Pourquoi une éruption volcanique est à l'origine de l'invention du vélo ?

Les Grosses Têtes

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2023 2:53


REDIFF - Le 5 avril 1815 sur l'île de Sumbawa en Indonésie, l'éruption de son volcan, le Tambora, va avoir des conséquences dramatiques pour la Terre entière. Et pour cause, on considère que c'est la deuxième éruption volcanique la plus violente de l'Histoire. Les conséquences de cette éruption sont allées bien plus loin, notamment l'énorme quantité de cendres volcaniques éjectées.

Ah ouais ?
Pourquoi une éruption volcanique est à l'origine de l'invention du vélo ?

Ah ouais ?

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2023 2:36


REDIFF - Le 5 avril 1815 sur l'île de Sumbawa en Indonésie, l'éruption de son volcan, le Tambora, va avoir des conséquences dramatiques pour la Terre entière. Et pour cause, on considère que c'est la deuxième éruption volcanique la plus violente de l'Histoire. Les conséquences de cette éruption sont allées bien plus loin, notamment l'énorme quantité de cendres volcaniques éjectées. Dans "Ah Ouais ?", Florian Gazan répond en une minute chrono à toutes les questions essentielles, existentielles, parfois complètement absurdes, qui vous traversent la tête. Un podcast RTL Originals.

MXVice.com
The MX Vice Show | Episode #132 with Lorenzo Resta

MXVice.com

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2023 69:11


MX Vice Show returns with Lorenzo Resta and Ed Stratmann, as they talk all things MXGP following the 10th round in Sumbawa.

Uncensored with Andini Effendi
Dari Barcelona ke Sumbawa Bawa Cinta ft. Carlos Ferrandiz - Uncensored with Andini Effendi ep.32

Uncensored with Andini Effendi

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2023 53:38


Sukses jadi pengacara di Spanyol namun rela mengorbankan segalanya demi warga Sumbawa. Pendiri Yayasan @harapanproject, Carlos Ferrandiz yakin bahwa mengabdi pada sesama adalah jalan hidup meskipun depresi dilewati.#carlosferrandiz #sumbawa #society #cauldrontalks #uncensored #andinieffendi #podcast #talkshow—Uncensored bersama Andini Effendi ingin memulai percakapan mengenai isu yang kerap dianggap tabu. The Elephant in the Room adalah topik yang diketahui semua orang, namun tidak banyak yang berani membicarakannya. Dengan berdiskusi secara terbuka, kami harap masyarakat bisa lebih terbuka pikiran dan hatinya. ୨♡୧ New episode drops every Thursday! ୨♡୧☆ Jangan lupa follow & Subscribe kami ☆https://www.instagram.com/cauldrontalks/https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCIs1JAa6LciLsjwkQ-caGaw☆ Dengarkan juga podcast kami ☆https://open.spotify.com/show/6pHdBM4Jr0JMwBvbVCMiQI?si=cc66a009ea964c3ahttps://podcasts.apple.com/id/podcast/uncensored-with-andini-effendi/id1627192280☆ Host Andini Effendi ☆https://www.instagram.com/andinieffendi/☆Harapan Project ☆https://proyectoharapan.org/id/rumah2/https://www.instagram.com/harapanproject/—Timestamps00:00 Intro03:40 Pertama kali ke Indonesia06:52 Hati yang tergerak12:17 Meninggalkan Barcelona untuk Sumbawa16:15 Stigma dan penolakan yang dialami21:37 Misi sosial yang sustainable28:55 Pengalaman berat dan pelajaran37:29 Kolaborasi yang dapat dilakukan46:40 What needs to be changed49:34 How he made an impact

Vital MX
MXGP Podcast Show | 2023 Sumbawa

Vital MX

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2023 94:38


The Vital MX 'MXGP Podcast Show' from the tenth round of the 2023 FIM Motocross World Championship, which covers all that occurred at the Grand Prix of Sumbawa-Indonesia. Hosts Lewis Phillips and Adam Wheeler reflect on Sumbawa, with support from Polisport and FXR.

History of Southeast Asia
Episode 127: Sumbawa, or I Don't Know Where I'm A Gonna Go When The Volcano Blows

History of Southeast Asia

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2023 37:20


I had a challenging time creating the podcast episode that I am releasing today. I was ill for much of April, and I had to take time out to work on my taxes, as most Americans have to do. Then my computer erased the script for this show, forcing me to take some more days off to re-write it. Finally, it looked like I was done with recording the episode on May 11, but when I listened to the finished work, it didn't sound right. Among other things, I mispronounced the name of the island we are visiting here, so I ended up re-recording most of the work. Anyway, it is finished at last, so listen and enjoy! Today's topic is the eastern Indonesian island of Sumbawa, which like Lombok, is home to a major volcano that changed the course of history when it erupted.Do you think you would like to become a podcaster on Blubrry? Click here for the details on joining. Enter my promo code, HSEASIA, to let them know I sent you, and you will get the first month's hosting for free!Support this podcast!And here is the Podcast Hall of Fame page, to honor those who have donated already!Visit the Patreon page to become a long-term supporter of the podcast!

Ah ouais ?
LES ? DE L'INFO - Pourquoi une éruption volcanique est à l'origine de l'invention du vélo ?

Ah ouais ?

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2023 2:34


C'est assez improbable et pourtant c'est vrai. Tout a commencé le 5 avril 1815 sur l'île de Sumbawa en Indonésie, quand le volcan Tambora rentre en éruption... Tous les jours à 6h50 sur RTL, Florian Gazan révèle une histoire insolite et surprenante, liée à l'actualité.

Stuff You Missed in History Class
SYMHC Classics: Year Without a Summer

Stuff You Missed in History Class

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2023 26:18


The 2015 episode covers a volcano eruption in Sumbawa, Indonesia in 1816, that combined with several other factors to create an unusual -- and catastrophic -- series of weather events. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Slovenská Misijná Sieť
modlitby za NZES - Sumbawa v Indonézii

Slovenská Misijná Sieť

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2022 4:07


1. Jána 2:2  On je obetou zmierenia za naše hriechy, no nielen za naše, ale aj za hriechy celého sveta. http://bit.ly/nzes-dnesViac o etnickej skupine Sumbawa nájdete na:https://joshuaproject.net/people_groups/15119/IDSMS kalendár na rok 2023: bit.ly/SMSkalendar2023

Talking Shit
Obrolan 10 - Citayem Fashion Week by Geger Nuri (Host Magang) Ft. Uncle Rian, Inyok dan Aunty Cece

Talking Shit

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2022 20:19


Ngobrol santai ngebahas ini itu sambil duduk menikmati kopi khas Sumbawa. Podcast Talking Shit is powered by Anchor.fm. Download di App Store dan Google Play.

Les Grosses Têtes
AH OUAIS ? - Pourquoi une éruption volcanique est à l'origine de l'invention du vélo

Les Grosses Têtes

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2022 2:53


Le 5 avril 1815 sur l'île de Sumbawa en Indonésie, l'éruption de son volcan, le Tambora, va avoir des conséquences dramatiques pour la Terre entière. Et pour cause, on considère que c'est la deuxième éruption volcanique la plus violente de l'Histoire. Cette saison, les Grosses Têtes vous proposent de découvrir ou redécouvrir le nouveau podcast de Florian Gazan. Dans "Ah Ouais ?", Florian Gazan répond en une minute chrono à toutes les questions essentielles, existentielles, parfois complètement absurdes, qui vous traversent la tête. Un podcast RTL Originals.   Découvrez la page Facebook Officielle des "Grosses Têtes" : https://www.facebook.com/lesgrossestetesrtl/ Retrouvez vos "Grosses Têtes" sur Instagram : https://bit.ly/2hSBiAo Découvrez le compte Twitter Officiel des "Grosses Têtes" : https://bit.ly/2PXSkkz Toutes les vidéos des "Grosses Têtes" sont sur YouTube : https://bit.ly/2DdUyGg

Ah ouais ?
219. Pourquoi une éruption volcanique est à l'origine de l'invention du vélo

Ah ouais ?

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2022 2:36


Le 5 avril 1815 sur l'île de Sumbawa en Indonésie, l'éruption de son volcan, le Tambora, va avoir des conséquences dramatiques pour la Terre entière. Et pour cause, on considère que c'est la deuxième éruption volcanique la plus violente de l'Histoire. Les conséquences de cette éruption sont allées bien plus loin, notamment l'énorme quantité de cendres volcaniques éjectées. Dans "Ah Ouais ?", Florian Gazan répond en une minute chrono à toutes les questions essentielles, existentielles, parfois complètement absurdes, qui vous traversent la tête. Un podcast RTL Originals.

Slovenská Misijná Sieť
8.12. - modlitby za NZES - Sumbawa v Indonézii

Slovenská Misijná Sieť

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2021 4:07


1. Jána 2:2  On je obetou zmierenia za naše hriechy, no nielen za naše, ale aj za hriechy celého sveta. Viac o etnickej skupine Sumbawa nájdete na:https://joshuaproject.net/people_groups/15119/ID

CH Podcast
BRYAN TIMOTHY ANAK BROKEN HOME⁉️ Ft. Bryan Timothy | CHPodcast Ep.31

CH Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2021 46:00


Episode sebelum-sebelum nya itu membahas salah satu anggota nine house, dari Kazama Husein dan Putra Bachtera. Kali ini kita mendatangkan yang sama-sama bergelut di bidang musically yang berubah menjadi tiktok, ya siapa lagi kalau bukan Bryan timothy. Pria kelahiran surabaya ini yang pada awal mula nya bertempat tinggal di pesona alamnya indonesia yaitu Sumbawa. Siapa lagi yang tidak tahu dan mengenal keindahan alam di pulau sumbawa ini. Dari tempat yg jauh dari kemeriahan kota, Bryan membuktikan dirinya bisa berdiri sendiri tanpa bantuan keluarganya. Di umur 21 ini Bryan mengungkapkan kerasnya ketika masih kecil dan tidak di apresiasi oleh ayahnya, dengan berbekal kemauan dan niat Bryan membuktikan bahwa keahlian bikin konten tidak diragukan lagi. Banyak endorse yang masuk dan open promote lah bryan bisa bertahan dan bisa membuktikan ke orang tuanya bahwa keahlian seorang anak itu berbeda-beda. Penghasilan yang ia dapat adalah penghasilan yang hampir sama dengan teman-temannya di musically, TikTok dan Instagram. Bukan cuma bikin konten, lelaki ini membuktikan kalau di bidang fashion/bergaya layaknya model pun ia lakoni. Dengarkan saja langsung di podcast ini dan tonton fullnya di channel youtube chpodcast. Banyak tamu lainnya yang ada di CHPodcast, tonton episode lainnya dan dengarkan yaa. Jangan lupa juga untuk cek YouTube CHPodcast, TikTok CHPodcast dan lainnya. Karena ada tamu Sania leonardo, Kazama Husain, Husain Basyaiban, Emil, Gilang, Una dan Putra Bachtera. Kita juga gamau kalah sama podcast Deddy Corbuzier, podkesmas dan podcast besar lainnya. Tonton podcast lainnya dengan tamu atau guest yang berbeda di CHPodcast dan banyak membahas teori gelap kartun, funfact science, fakta menarik lainnya tentang dunia. Dan banyak juga mendatangkan Guest-guest atau bintang tamu menarik lainnya. Jangan lupa untuk subscribe, comment and like!

Sport inside – der Podcast: kritisch, konstruktiv, inklusiv
Riders of Destiny – das Schicksal der Kinderjockeys von Sumbawa

Sport inside – der Podcast: kritisch, konstruktiv, inklusiv

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2021 49:51


Es ist eine Tradition, die aus westlicher Sicht extrem verstörend wirkt: Auf der indonesischen Insel Sumbawa reiten kleine Kinder schnelle Rennpferde, weil es für viele Familien der einzige Gelderwerb ist. Schwere Verletzungen und Todesfälle sind einkalkuliert. Der Dokumentarfilmer Michael Niermann erzählt über die "Riders of Destiny".

Surf Talk
Surfing Indo – Unterwegs in Sumbawa

Surf Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2021


Unser Dauergast Lennart erzählt uns heute endlich ausführlich von seinem Solo Trip nach Sumbawa. Yeeeew & Cheeerio

Surf Talk
Surfing Indo – Unterwegs in Sumbawa

Surf Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2021 56:28


Unser Dauergast Lennart erzählt uns heute endlich ausführlich von seinem Solo Trip nach Sumbawa. Yeeeew & Cheeerio --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/surftalkpodcast/message

Audio Kajian Sunnah
kajian umum masjid agung sumbawa besar - ustadz abdurrahman lombok

Audio Kajian Sunnah

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2021 35:00


The Momentom Collective Podcast
Honest Solutions to Heal Our Oceans | Shawn Heinrichs

The Momentom Collective Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2021 38:58


How does one turn into one of the world's leading ocean activists?What can we realistically do to conserve our oceans and why is art and self love so important in the collective healing of our planet?Shawn Heinrichs is an artist and Emmy-award winning cinematographer, photographer and marine conservationist. His stunning and often stark artwork is fueled by his passion to protect the oceans, and the profound recognition that people only protect what they love. Join this deep dive with Momentom Cofounder, John Early, from our Indonesia Artist Residency in Sumbawa to inspire your connection with all life on this planet.For more info on Shawn visit: http://www.shawnheinrichs.com/His movie Racing Extinction is streaming free on Youtube here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sUpccvUa0C4~Topic Timestamps:Shawn's journey into ocean activism - 1:45 How can people realistically help conserve our oceans – 6:45The value of art in activism – 12:45The importance of rewriting our narrative – 18:263.7% to sway a population – 23:42Soul gazing with life underwater - 30:20Shawn's favourite activism victory - 32:30(Recorded live at our Indonesia Artist Residency, Sumbawa Island – October 2019) ~ ***Our Indonesia Residency in September 2021 is now open for applications!For more info on Circus Island and our other International Artist Residencies visit https://www.momentomcollective.com For more on our Podcast host, John Early visit https://www.johnearly.ca or on Instagram @johntearly ~ For the full playlist of our Video Podcasts on Youtube visit: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLDfv9P0yDraLxTtiJx6-vo_2hohOE1uu_For the Momentom Collective Podcast on Spotify visit: https://open.spotify.com/show/6Q9g39tyehzZWT75DZHo29?si=72YlmJNxSKuCO59yuX2S6g&nd=1Past episodes include: *Poranguí - The Medicine of Now & The Role Humanity Plays * Bodhi Samuel - Understanding Sexual Alchemy* Hannah Mermaid ~ Ocean Activism & The Truth of Being a Mermaid#ShawnHeinrichs

BEACHY.FM
AUSWANDERER # 24 "Auswandern nach Sumbawa"

BEACHY.FM

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2021 43:09


Podcast Nr. 24 bringt uns nach Indonesien auf die Insel Sumbawa, wo Jean-Daniel und Kali uns teilhaben lassen an einem Projekt, das Menschen mit unterschiedlichen Backgrounds zu einer vielfältigen Community zusammenführt. Sie berichten außerdem über ihre Reise, die sie letztlich auf Sumbawu eine neue Heimat finden ließ. Viel Spaß allen Zuhörern und ein dickes "Dankeschön" an Jean-Daniel und Kali. GET IN TOUCH : https://www.instagram.com/kinivillage/ https://www.kinivillage.com/ https://www.facebook.com/groups/761100164787990/?_rdc=1&_rdr

Geni
Renungan Harian GENi - Selasa, 4 Mei 2021 "Jangan Gelisah Dan Gentar Tetapi Percayalah oleh Hubert dari PDPKK Sang Penebus Sumbawa

Geni

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2021 8:40


Shalom, Renungan Harian GENi - Selasa, 4 Mei 2021 "Jangan Gelisah Dan Gentar Tetapi Percayalah oleh Hubert dari PDPKK Sang Penebus Sumbawa. Selamat mendengarkan GBU.

Kajian Islam Ilmiah
Pengaruh Keshalihan Orang tua Terhadap Anak

Kajian Islam Ilmiah

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2021 93:16


Pengaruh Keshalihan Orangtua Terhadap Anak (2 Sesi) - Al-Ustadz Abu Usamah Abdurrahman Lombok hafidzhahullah (Pengasuh Ma'had Imam Asy Syafi'i Sumbawa, NTB)

Fertemanan Travel Podcast
Episode 014 - Sumbawa Barat

Fertemanan Travel Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2021 32:45


Mulai dari susu kuda liar sampai cumi ring biru, obrolan kita kali ini tentang Sumbawa Barat yang bisa ditempuh pakai motor dari Lombok

TellMeWhere2Go
Overview: Lombok

TellMeWhere2Go

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2020 5:38


Featuring: Steve Collins Lombok is an island in West Nusa Tenggara province, Indonesia. It forms part of the chain of the Lesser Sunda Islands, with the Lombok Strait separating it from Bali to the west and the Alas Strait between it and the island of Sumbawa to the east. READ MORE HERE

Barrels and Business
Brent Valle: Fundamentals for Building a Business From the Heart

Barrels and Business

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2020 118:37


Brent‌ ‌Valle‌ ‌is‌ ‌an‌ ‌award‌ ‌winning‌ ‌entrepreneur,‌ ‌speaker,‌ ‌mentor,‌ ‌adventurer‌ ‌and‌ ‌caring dad.‌ A snowboarder and a surfer!In‌ ‌this‌ ‌episode‌ ‌we‌ ‌talk‌ ‌in‌ ‌detail‌ ‌about‌ ‌all‌ ‌what‌ ‌Brent‌ ‌has‌ ‌learned‌ ‌from‌ ‌selling‌ ‌his‌ ‌award-winning‌ ‌$27‌ ‌million‌ ‌gross‌ ‌revenue‌ ‌tech‌ ‌company‌ ‌to‌ ‌following‌ ‌a‌ ‌new‌ ‌path‌ ‌putting‌ ‌passion‌ ‌before‌ ‌profits ‌building businesses from the heart.Brent has gone through a lot, good and bad, and has learned from those experiences. He shares all‌ ‌the‌ ‌challenges‌ ‌he‌ ‌has‌ ‌gone‌ ‌through‌ ‌life‌ ‌not‌ ‌only‌ ‌including‌ ‌difficult‌ ‌moments‌ ‌such‌ ‌as‌ ‌a‌ ‌failing‌ ‌relationship‌ ‌and‌ ‌depression,‌ ‌but‌ ‌also‌ ‌the‌ ‌most‌ ‌risky,‌ ‌amusing‌ ‌and‌ ‌adventurous‌ ‌moments‌ ‌that‌ ‌have‌ ‌led‌ ‌him‌ ‌to‌ ‌building‌ ‌businesses‌ ‌from‌ ‌the‌ ‌heart‌ ‌and‌ ‌a‌ ‌life‌ ‌of‌ ‌his‌ ‌dreams!‌ ‌ ‌We‌ ‌talk‌ ‌about‌ ‌the‌ ‌importance‌ ‌of‌ ‌having‌ ‌a‌ leveraging‌ team‌ ‌and‌ ‌why we, as business owners, should provide ‌them‌ ‌with‌ ‌a‌ ‌safe‌ ‌space‌ ‌for‌ ‌them‌ ‌to‌ ‌be‌ ‌vulnerable,‌ ‌f*ckup‌ ‌and‌ ‌know‌ ‌it‌ ‌is‌ ‌ok as well as the importance and benefits of ‌so many things such as vulnerability, cultivating‌ ‌your‌ ‌business‌ ‌culture, mentorship, coaching and managing energy. Furthermore we converse about the‌ ‌responsibility‌ ‌we‌ ‌have‌ ‌as‌ ‌business‌ ‌owners‌ ‌and leaders in‌ ‌this‌ ‌world and how‌ ‌we‌ ‌can‌ ‌contribute‌ ‌towards‌ ‌humanity.Getting ‌down‌ ‌to‌ ‌the‌ ‌nitty‌ ‌gritty‌, ‌Brent‌ ‌shares‌ ‌countless‌ ‌strategies‌ ‌and‌ ‌fundamentals‌ ‌to‌ ‌start‌ ‌a‌ ‌new‌ ‌conscious‌ ‌and‌ ‌successful‌ ‌leading‌ ‌business‌ ‌from‌ ‌scratch‌ ‌and‌ ‌tips‌ ‌on‌ ‌how‌ ‌to‌ ‌become‌ ‌a‌ ‌conscious‌ ‌leader‌ ‌aligned‌ ‌with‌ ‌your‌ ‌purpose.‌About Brent Valle:Brent‌ ‌is‌ ‌the‌ ‌former‌ ‌CEO‌ ‌and‌ ‌co-founder‌ ‌of‌ ‌NGage‌ ‌Technology‌ ‌Group‌ ‌and‌ is‌ currently ‌the‌ ‌‌founder‌ ‌of‌ ‌The‌ ‌Future‌ ‌Phase,‌ ‌a‌ ‌cause‌ ‌that‌ ‌facilitates‌ ‌growth,‌ ‌transformation‌ ‌and‌ ‌adventure by offering different avenues for personal growth, team growth and business growth. He is the owner‌ ‌of‌ ‌Bells‌ ‌Surf‌ ‌Wax,‌ ‌a‌ ‌company‌ ‌that‌ ‌sells‌ ‌high‌ ‌quality‌ ‌surf‌ ‌wax‌ ‌with‌ ‌a‌ ‌product‌ ‌range‌ ‌to‌ ‌suit‌ ‌all‌ ‌water‌ ‌temperatures‌ ‌across‌ ‌the‌ ‌globe,‌ co-founder‌ ‌of‌ ‌Shred‌ ‌For‌ ‌Life,‌ ‌a‌ ‌non-profit‌ ‌to‌ ‌empower‌ ‌youth‌ ‌to‌ ‌live‌ ‌life‌ ‌on‌ ‌their‌ ‌terms‌ ‌with‌ ‌programs,‌ ‌pathways‌ ‌and‌ ‌experiences‌ ‌across‌ ‌the‌ ‌globe. Last but not least,‌ Bren is the Managing‌ ‌Director‌ ‌of‌ ‌The‌ ‌Techtify,‌ ‌a‌ ‌tech‌ ‌company‌ dedicated ‌to‌ ‌transform‌ ‌businesses‌ ‌with‌ ‌the‌ ‌provision‌ ‌of‌ ‌tailored‌ ‌IT‌ ‌solutions‌ and an excellent service.Brent lives in Melbourne, Australia. He has a graduate certificate in Marketing and an advanced diploma in International Business from Holmesglen Institute, a diploma in executive, leadership and transformational coaching from The Coaching Institute, is a NLP Practitioner, and a Forth Innovation Method and Train the Trainer Workshop certified facilitator.Brent has always loved to create, and this passion leads him to live life as an entrepreneur. From an early age he loved washing cars so that he could buy footy cards and lollies. It later progressed to pamphlet rounds.He was bullied through school & being adopted not knowing his identity made things really tough but he persevered. He turned to drugs and alcohol as a teenager after his parents separation and just made it through high school.But he found a way working multiple jobs as a teenager so that he could support my mother who ultimately taught me what love really is.The PC Company was the 1st business owned responsible for sales and marketing and quickly grew in 2 short years to later sell to a multinational. (Acquired for $240k and sold for $1.1M). He was 30.At this time Brent found his biological mother and her truth changed his life forever.NGage Technology Group was the 2nd, built from scratch to another successful sale and exit reaching revenues of $27M in 5 years. (Co-Founded with $2k and selling 5 years & 9 months later for $2.5M)Brent walked away from an amazing company to put passion before profits which led him to make a short-film in British Columbia armed with a snowboard and a dream and The Future Phase was born.The Future Phase is a leadership and training company that includes adventure into it's programs to give corporate teams and entrepreneurs the tools they need to succeed.He never imagined that along the way that he would also take ownership of Bells Surf Wax™ and also start a foundation to help teenagers find their calling Shred For Life.Brent is an inspiration. And he attributes the feedback to being generous, vulnerable and open with my diverse life experiences.His kids are everything and he loves surfing and snowboarding and taking people on inspiring adventures.He's a passionate philanthropist who loves to mentor youth, environmentalist and aspiring author (currently writing first book but it is taking forever).Tune in and discover why and how you must face your own fuckups!Key Points, Key Takeaways & Quotes(00:00:00) - Welcome to Barrels and Business!(00:01:30) - Selling a successful tech business, becoming more aligned and building The Dream Factory.Create a business aligned with your passion and purpose. Start by focussing on your values and beliefs, talents and who you are as a person. “Getting yourself clear as an individual is a great place to start if you are about to embark on growing a business”(00:08:51) - How not to lose yourself in the process of building a business even if your ego is driving and your soul is searching for significance.Create your business consciously by following your heart. “I started consciously listening to my unconscious and my heart more, and that started leveraging my skills, abilities and beliefs”(00:12:46) - Books, podcasts and things that Brent has used along his journey to not lose himself.“Work with somebody that is doing what you are trying to do” (00:14:33) - How to select good mentors. “Have someone to guide you, someone to walk beside you, and someone to lead”(00:20:33) - Difference between a mentor and a coach by Jade(00:23:59) - Number 1 relationship tip: “Base your relationships on honesty and trust”(00:24:56) - Why do people stop being open and truthful, where does that stem from?Create a space for others from your compassion, empathy and understanding. “Rather than force an outcome, I am going to focus on supporting and serving personally”Learn to manage the energy you give your business so that you have enough left for social life and your partner. “If you put everything into business, at the end of the week you might not have anything left”(00:32:38) - Learning to trust the process.If you want your business to grow fast know when to apply skills and know when to pull back.“The high speed doesn't let creativity, consciousness and energy come out, it just brings out an outcome at the end of the day” (00:43:48) - Lessons from selling a tech business Engage, getting back in alignment and building another tech business.If you want to succeed in life and business, be accountable for your previous mistakes and show up everyday with authenticity and vulnerability “I created all the businesses to be able to help people enrich their lives and businesses”(00:48:40) - Destroying depression by taking extreme ownership“Take 100% responsibility for your thoughts and actions”(00:53:19) - Setting up a new business with a conscious approach.Set up a new business consciously by ensuring you have all your fundamentals in place. “Measure your productivity each day not based on outcome but on your input” Set up a new business consciously by ensuring you have all your fundamentals in place:> Having a product or service you want to take to market and having a strategic partnership.> Choosing a brand that stands out from the rest, one that is original and different to what already exists in the marketplace.> Crafting your business based on what you stand for, aligned with your values, and by adding value to every situation.> Delivering your crafted business to market with an email marketing strategy> Posting on a regular basis on new channels, making sure your advertising is seen> Doing direct sales; targeting people already in your network to have a shortlist of the businesses you want to work with.(00:57:10) - How to cultivate, curate and replicate company culture.Cultivate your business culture by creating a safe space for your team members to be vulnerable and creative. “Create a space where people can fuckup and it is ok”(01:04:16) - What Brent does to allow his team to have a safe space to fuck up and what he allows in relationships to create the trust to openely shareCreate a safe space for your team by being vulnerable and honest yourself“There has to be vulnerability and a space for vulnerability to show up” (01:23:20) - About building Bells Surf Wax, Shred for life & CooeeGCContributing to humanity by being the ripple effect, and empowering youth across the globe with life skills. “Having a product in the surfing industry was a good space to incubate something of meaning” (01:45:52) - Surf Retreat in Sumbawa“The problem with common sense is that it's not that common”Connect with Me and the Barrels and Business Community:Website: https://www.barrelsandbusiness.com/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/barrelsandbusiness/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/barrelsandbusiness/Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jadegreenau/YouTube: https://bit.ly/jadegreenytAcast: https://shows.acast.com/barrelsandbusiness/episodes/welcome-to-the-barrels-and-business-podcastConnect with Brent Valle:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/brentbreaksbread/Website: https://www.iambrentvalle.com/Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/brent.valle.1Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brentvalle/Mentioned resources:NGage Technology Group: http://www.ngagetechnologygroup.com.au/cgi-sys/defaultwebpage.cgi Christian Surfers International: https://www.christiansurfers.net/2014-conference-blog/2014/7/29/our-new-international-directorLittle Frothers:https://www.littlefrothers.com/ SmoothStar:https://www.smoothstar.com/ Bells Surf Wax:https://bellssurfwax.comTechtify: https://techtify.com.au/ The Future Phase: https://www.thefuturephase.com.au/ The Shred for Life: https://shredforlife.org/ CooeeGC Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/cooeegoldcoast/about/?ref=page_internal CooeeGC program: https://elanorashs.eq.edu.au/curriculum/excellence-programs/cooeegc-program Mathew Barber founder of CooeeGC: https://www.linkedin.com/in/matt-barber-832784117/ The Starfish Story: https://eventsforchange.wordpress.com/2011/06/05/the-starfish-story-one-step-towards-changing-the-world/ Friend's surf and yoga retreat in Sumbawa, Indonesia: http://www.bahabahavillas.com/retreat Brent's Sumbawa, Indonesia tour package: https://www.iambrentvalle.com/retreat Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Momentom Collective Podcast
Ocean Activism & The Truth of Being a Mermaid | Hannah Mermaid

The Momentom Collective Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2020 38:21


Hannah Fraser, known professionally as Hannah Mermaid, is a professional model, actress, performer and ocean ecology activist. In our 21st episode of the Momentom Podcast we hear Hannah candidly share her path to becoming a professional mermaid, the challenges of underwater photo shoots with sharks, and why we need to protect the sentience of the ocean and all its creatures. Join host and Momentom cofounder, John Early, as he literally jumps into life as a mermaid (merman!). Topic Time Marks:The path to being a professional mermaid and ocean activist – 1:00Growing up vegetarian & having a Rockstar dad – 5:49When did your passion turn into your profession? – 10:00Underwater modeling: pranayama & sentient ocean creatures - 12:20The challenges of photo shoots with sharks – 16:30What can people do at home to be an ocean conservationist? - 22:40Witnessing massive dolphin orgies - 25:50John becomes a mermaid - 29:09What does community mean to you? - 32:25[Recorded live at Momentom's Artist Residency in Sumbawa, Indonesia - October 15, 2019] ~ For more info on Hannah Mermaid visit https://www.hannahmermaid.com or on Instagram @hannahmermaid *For more on host, John Early visit https://www.johnearly.ca or on Instagram @johntearly ~ We've just launched applications for our tentative Artist Residency season for this winter/ spring! (*International travel pending) For more info and to help us cocreate the season ahead visit https://www.momentomcollective.com ~ For the full playlist of our Video Podcasts on Youtube visit: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLDfv9P0yDraLxTtiJx6-vo_2hohOE1uu_For the Momentom Collective Podcast on Spotify visit:https://open.spotify.com/show/6Q9g39tyehzZWT75DZHo29?si=72YlmJNxSKuCO59yuX2S6gPast episodes include: *Poranguí - The Medicine of Now & The Role Humanity Plays *Adam Roa - The Importance of Self Love & Vulnerability for our Creative Soul*Amelia Broughton – Creating Connection with Authentic Relating & Human Design ~

MATARAM Radio City
Yuni Shara - Poto Tano

MATARAM Radio City

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2020 5:22


AJONG SASAMBO sebuah program musik yang dapat anda dengarkan melalui siaran MATARAM RADIO CITY, setiap hari Pkl. 20.00 Wita hingga selesai. Inilah salah satu lagu Pop daerah Sumbawa berjudul Poto Tano yang dinyanyikan Penyanyi kondang Indonesia Yuni Shara. Lagu ini diciptakan musisi Sumbawa kawakan Ace Let Luar. Poto Tano merupakan salah satu hits single dari album Barapan Kebo yang dirilis sekitar tahun 1993. Selamat menikmati! judul Lagu : Poto Tano Penyanyi : Yuni Shara Pencipta : Ace Let Luar Album : Barapan Kebo Poto Tano lawang desa Palabu tana samawa No sendi ya tu kalupa Gili ode mara intan Kasear nonda baroba Tulang jangi tu balayar Belo tampar somo umak Senap angin batarepa Sajan ngasi ate notang Me potanang no ku totang Sia tu ka bilin desa Langan lo layar let rea Sendi sate tu sangaro Bentan gama we tanenang Salam doa ku ko bulan Leng palabu poto tano Ku nokong ke ai mata Ku tari kanatang sia Sabar gama we andi e.. Na gier iman leng ate Mares pakarap kulete.... Lamen yanan si bagian Mana pamalat let rea Sadi jangi gayong kita

Berita Dalam Suara (Bds)
VIRAL Detik-detik Seorang Ibu Marah Besar Saat Pernikahan Anaknya, Ternyata Ini Penyebabnya?

Berita Dalam Suara (Bds)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2020 2:44


Prosesi ijab kabul sepasang pengantin asal Lombok viral di media sosial. Pasalnya, saat akan melangsungkan ijab kabul, ibu mempelai wanita tiba-tiba datang dan mengamuk. Video ibu pengantin wanita yang mengamuk itupun viral di media sosial. Video itu diunggah oleh sejumlah akun, satu di antaranya adalah akun instagram @infokemanusiaansosial. Dalam video tersebut terlihat suasana ijab kabul di dalam masjid. Kedua pengantin yang mengenakan busana warna putih terlihat duduk di tengah-tengah. Sedangkan para saksi dan tamu undangan terlihat duduk di pinggir. Namun tiba-tiba saat pembacaan doa pembuka, seorang ibu yang mengenakan hijab datang menghentikan acara. "Stop, stop pak" ucap perempuan itu sambil menunjuk kedua pengantin. Ia kemudian marah-marah menggunakan bahasa setempat. Para tamu yang hadir pun segera menenangkan ibu tersebut. Namun ia terus marah-marah kepada kedua pengantin itu. Bahkan ibu tersebut sempat marah-marah pada warga yang hadir sembari menjerit. Sedangkan pengantin wanita tampak dipeluk oleh wanita lain berhijab hitam. Dari keterangan pengunggah, ibu tersebut marah karena tidak ada pemberitahuan dari pihak pengantin pria perihal dilangsungkannya acara akad nikah. "Tebelas Sik Inaqn Diduga Penyebab Ibu Dari Calon Pengantin Perempuan Mengamuk Gara" Tidak Ada Pemberitahuan Dari Pihak Calon Pengantin Pria Saat Dilangsungkannya Acara Akad Nikah Anaknya @Jalud Putra Gbl Ndekn Inik Tutuk Ceriten Mule LOMBOK Jak" Unggahan inipun langsung mendapat beragam komentar dari kalangan netizen. Aris "Anaknya saling cinta, dan ingin menyelesaikan nya dengan cara yg baik, makatn ribut inaq tie" Bang Enal "Nikah kok gk pda izin.. Emang gk pake acara sorong serah.." Saeho Eho "Makanya zmn skrg klu mau kahwin minta restu dulu klu mmng gk direstui ya udh cari yg lain mch banyak" Nithaayuni "Mana mungkin keluarga si cewek nggak dikasih tau... Terus siapa doang wali si cewek. Ngomong kok ngasal" Seorang netizen pun kemudian menuliskan kronologi kejadian yang sebenanrnya. Kchen Minchen " Walinya di Sumbawa, tapi keluarga dri pihak ibunya perempuan gaada dikasi tau. Seharusnya petugas itu kasih tau jamnya, tapi ini kasi tau harinya aja ke pihak perempuan udh siap lah mau liat anaknya nikah tapi gaada yang ngundang, atau gak lewat Speaker kek manggilnya lah ini udah langsung aja baca khotbah nikah gimana gak marah ibunya,jadi jangan barsumsi dulu mbakku" Pengunggah juga menuliskan jika pernikahan ini tetap berlangsung dan keduanya resmi menjadi suami istri. "Intinya ijab qabulnya tetap dilaksanakan dan mereka sekarang sudah sah sebagai PASANGAN SUAMI-ISTRI (PASUTRI)" Unggahan ini pun mendadak viral di media sosial, dan sudah dibagikan sebanyak 1,2 ribu kali. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/beritadalamsuara/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/beritadalamsuara/support

Maras Project
Podcast Maras #eps12 Suci Indah Winanti

Maras Project

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2020 44:03


Podcast Maras #episode12 Laong Maras bersama Suci Indah Winanti. Mahasiswi asal Sumbawa yang menjadi wisudawan terbaik di Wuxi Institute of Technology. Selama kuliah ia juga mendapat total 6 beasiswa sekaligus. ___________ Mau tau cerita dibalik kerennya nakwai Uci? Dan tips trik kuliah berprestasi dengan beasiswa di luar negeri??? ___________ Sanenge balong2 semoga dapat Terhibur dan menginspirasi sia. Selamat mendengarkan. Enjoooooy. Salam nyemin @semaras_sia

Impact Zone Surf Podcast
Patrick Beven : Fighting Spirit

Impact Zone Surf Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2020 124:24


Saison 2 - Episode n°21. Enregistré à Hossegor le 20 mai 2020. Animation : Romain Ferrand / Rémi Chaussemiche Réalisation technique : Fred de Bailliencourt Invité : Patrick Beven Le Brazilian Storm a commencé à souffler sur le monde du surf il y a plus 25 ans si on considère l’impact de l’arrivée de Yannick et Patrick Beven en France au début des 90's. Alors doté d’un solide bagage technique, "PB" a rapidement progressé aux côtés de ses nouveaux potes (dont un certain Miky Picon) et dépassé son grand frère pour devenir l’un des tous meilleurs surfeurs du Vieux-Continent. Il détient d’ailleurs le record européen du nombre de victoires sur le circuit WQS (8). Et son histoire ne s’arrête pas à la compétition. En 25 ans, Patrick a vécu la professionnalisation et l’explosion du surf européen ; il a connu la gloire et l’âge d’or du surf-business ; et il a fait partie des membres fondateurs de Moskova et de l’aventure Euroforce. Enfin, qui dit Patrick Beven dit aussi capoeira, puis ju-jitsu. Le mouvement, la force et le culte du physique forgé entre les vagues et le tatami. Un état d’esprit, une esthétique et un esprit de clan revendiqués comme art de vivre, et qui lui ont par exemple permis de tisser des liens profonds avec les barons du North Shore, mais pas seulement. Depuis quelque temps, c’est le double Champion du monde Gabriel Medina qui l’a intégré dans son équipe pour bénéficier de ses expériences à la fois de prépa physique et de compétiteur. Patrick Beven, une histoire et un style nés de sa double-culture franco-brésilienne. Et surtout une vie toute entière dédiée au surf. Bonne écoute. Déroulé de l’émission : 3’ : Les débuts au Brésil 5’40’ : L’arrivée en France 11’40’ : Les premiers sponsors, l’époque Rip Curl 18’40’ : Transfert chez Gotcha avec Didier Piter 20’ : Un backside efficace, lisible en filigrane à travers son palmarès 25’ : Les origines de l’Euroforce 45’ : Aux portes de la qualification pour le WT 50’ : Quik Pro France 2009, la perf de sa carrière 56’ : Le début d’une nouvelle ère 1’00 : L’expert de la Gravière, 1’02 : Morceau n°1 1’06 : L’influence du ju-jitsu 1’10 : Ce que le travail physique apporte au surf 1’18 : La Ginastica Natural 1’23 : La connexion hawaïenne 1’30’ : Morceau n°2 1’33 : Quelle connexion entre surf et MMA ? 1’37 : Le job auprès de Gabriel Medina 1’49 : Et d’Adriano de Souza 1’51 : Son travail auprès de la nouvelle génération 1’57 : Sponsoring : le récent passage chez RVCA 1’53 : L’aventure Moskova 1’58 : Le coup de pression 2’02 : Le conseil Grom Spirit Mentionné dans l’émission : - Quik pro France 2009 : www.youtube.com/watch?v=pa69TN8K1yY - Team Gotcha Europe : youtube.com/watch?v=Xjuziy4yvJU / youtube.com/watch?v=T61iqv1rE7U - Satinho costao pro 2006 : youtube.com/watch?v=SoZjXrBqnow - Séance coaching de pro avec PB : youtube.com/watch?v=a7gvUAnLRbQ - Noah Dupouy et Kyllian Guerin accompagné de Patrick à Sumbawa : www.surfsession.com/videos-surf/free-surf/indonesie-noa-dupouy-kyllian- guerin-entre-copains-110206291.html - Promo Tour en Bretagne pour Quiksilver : www.surfsession.com/videos- surf/surf-session-tv/le-team-quik-assaut-bretagne-1211187328.html - BJJ & Surf, l’école de son Frère Yannick : www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Xaho2dx-eo - Ginastica Natural with Kid Peligro : www.youtube.com/watch?v=TYXp715ONog - Web Serie Monster Energy / Puzzle Media (2020) : www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yh9hJARVJYo - Moskova vibes à Hawai : www.youtube.com/watch?v=34gLGXC9qvk - La photo du coup de pression : www.instagram.com/p/Bes7JHuh41A/ Musiques : 35007 - Crystalline. Extrait de Pentacoastal : youtube.com/watch?v=fIiCVZr6Jdc Moebius and Berbohm - Subito. Extrait de chapter11.tv Suivez Patrick sur instagram : @patbeven Retrouvez-nous sur SoundCloud, Spotify, iTunes, surfsession.com et Majelan et instagram.com/impactzone.podcast facebook.com/ImpactZoneSurfPodcast Contact : impactzone.podcast@gmail.com

Impact Zone Surf Podcast
Sylvain Cazenave, passion hors-cadre (2/2)

Impact Zone Surf Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2020 88:39


Saison 2 - Episode n°20 bis. Enregistré à la Galerie Sylvain Cazenave le 21 novembre 2019. Animation : Romain Ferrand / Rémi Chaussemiche Réalisation technique : Fred de Bailliencourt Invité : Sylvain Cazenave - Deuxième et dernière partie de l'émission - Sylvain Cazenave. Un nom incontournable du surf français et international. Un crédit photo bien connu des lecteurs de Surf Session (et pas seulement !). Et un sacré personnage. Ca fait 45 années que Sylvain immortalise les meilleurs surfeurs sur les plus belles vagues de la planète. 45 saisons, dont 40 hivers consécutifs passés sur le North Shore, qui lui confèrent aujourd’hui un statut de légende et une légitimité incontestable. Car, derrière ses boîtiers photo, Sylvain a été à la fois témoin et acteur de certains des plus grands moments de la discipline. Avec comme point d’orgue la rencontre avec Laird Hamilton, et les incroyables débuts du surf tracté à Jaws ou encore du foil dont il a immortalisé chaque étape pendant des années du haut de son petit hélico. - Déroulé de l’émission : 1' - Kai Lenny 4' - Le foil, dès 1997 avec Laird 6'45 : Trip sordide à Sumbawa vers 1994 16'25 : La fin de la collaboration avec Oxbow 20' : L’évolution récente du métier de photographe 33' : Les autres photographes 36' : Les relations entre les photographes [43 : morceau] 46' : Son regard sur le surf français 59'30 : Témoin de l'arrivée et l'explosion de la Momentum Generation 1'06 : Le coup de pression de Sylvain 1'15 : Belharra 1'20 : Retour au foil 1'25 : Le conseil Grom Spirit de Sylvain - Musique : The Barr Brothers - Half Crazy : www.youtube.com/watch?v=MrpDVFbBmLY Issu du film "View From A Blue Moon" (Brain Farm, 2015) : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uHZqzgv4DLs Suivez Sylvain sur instagram : @galeriesylvaincazenave Et retrouvez tous nos épisodes sur SoundCloud, Spotify, iTunes, surfsession.com et Majelan Retrouvez-nous aussi sur facebook.com/ImpactZoneSurfPodcast instagram.com/impactzone.podcast Contact : impactzone.podcast@gmail.com

Podcast Mata Merah
File #1 Dari Sumbawa Untuk Dunia

Podcast Mata Merah

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2020 8:04


Menceritakan kembali isi buku Din Syamsuddin : Dari Sumbawa Untuk Dunia

Miftahul Arzak
VII. 01. Chit Chat_Covid19_Situasi Terkini Kecamatan Lunyuk

Miftahul Arzak

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2020 32:35


Episode Chit chat kali ini @podbyma mewawancara Uwa Iwan Sofyan selaku Camat Lunyuk. Dikabarkan bahwa salah seorang warga Kecamatan Lunyuk, Sumbawa berinteraksi dengan seorang Positif 01 Covid19 di NTB. Bagaimana kronologi dan kesiapan pemerintah. Silahkan mendengarkan.

Talking Shit
Eps. 05 : Keajaiban yang berada di Sumbawa

Talking Shit

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2020 20:57


Haloo semuanya, kembali lagi bersama saya kali ini saya ditemani teman-teman yang saya jadikan bintang tamu. Disini kita berbincang-bincang mengenai keajaiban yang ada di Sumbawa. Selamat mendengarkan semuanya. jangan lupa share yaa Podcast Talking Shit is powered by Anchor.fm. Download di App Store dan Google Play.

Maras Project
JUDIKA - Malaikat Cover Maras Project Studio With Al-Vharoz

Maras Project

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2020 5:07


Ta coveran keeempat kami. silamo sia sanenge. semoga bisa menjadi lagu pengantar tidur sia. Dukung kami untuk terus berkarya membawa nama Sumbawa ke mata dunia. Untuk kontak kerjasama dan sponsor hubungi nyemin di WA : 081807769500

Maras Project
AL-VHAROZ - JAUH ( MENUNGGU ) Official Music Video

Maras Project

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2020 6:00


Lagu Jauh (Menunggu) adalah Ciptaan KakWell, salah satu tim (gitaris multitalent kebanggan Al-Vharoz / Maras Project Studio). Lagu ini sudah tercipta 1 tahun yang lalu, diciptakan sebagai lagu pengantar tidur atas permintaan dari kekasihnya yang jauh disana. Sudah 2 tahun jarak memisahkan mereka. Proses pembuatannya 1 bulan, tapi belum pernah diperdengarkan ke orang lain. Hanya dinyanyikan saat KakWell telponan dengan "ay nya" untuk melepas kerinduan. Bahkan ke sesama tim pun belum pernah dinyanyikan. Harapannya lagu ini bisa mewakili isi hati para pejuang LDR. Dengan balutan musik yang syahdu, suara vocalist yang renyah, dan tentunya video klip yang sangat keren dengan talent berbakat dari siswa SMAN 1 Sumbawa Besar. Saking kerennya, Sepertinya penonton akan bilang "ini pasti bukan karya anak Sumbawa." selamat menonton. Silakan share lagu ini untuk orang yang kamu sayangi nan jauh disana.

GET WET SOON · Dive into Surfing, Yoga and Creativity
Tino Rischawy: Inspirationen für einen exotischeren Lifestyle

GET WET SOON · Dive into Surfing, Yoga and Creativity

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2020 50:02


p.p1 {margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; font: 12.0px 'Helvetica Neue'; color: #454545} Tino bereist seit mehr als 10 Jahren tropische Gefilde mit dem Surfbrett und ist nun aufgrund eines schweren Unfalles, den er glücklicherweise überlebt hat, für einige OPs längere Zeit in Deutschland. Der Unfall hat ihn ein weiteres Mal aufgeweckt und ihn zu einer neuen Aufgabe inspiriert: als Coach und Berater möchte er nun sein Wissen der letzten Jahre teilen und so viele Menschen inspirieren und ihnen helfen, selber das Leben zu führen, dass sie tief im Inneren führen möchten. Themen der Folge (unter anderem): • sein Motorroller-Unfall auf Sumbawa und die Odyssee zurück • sein Antrieb vor 10 Jahren, alles hinter sich zu lassen • wie er in Panama mit seinem Boot in Drogenbanden-Machenschaften verwickelt wurde • wie frei Minimalismus macht • welche limitierenden Glaubenssätze die meisten Menschen in ihrem "sicheren" Gefängnis halten • Tinos erste Begegnung mit dem Surfen • Tinos Mutter erzählt, wie die Distanz gleichzeitig mehr Nähe zu ihrem Sohn schafft und wie sie mit dem nicht ungefährlichen Lifestyle des Sohnes umgeht • uvm. Shownotes: Tino freut sich generell immer über persönliche Nachrichten, Gespräche und Anregungen. Per Facebook Saisonarbeit-Österreich Belgeitet Tino auf Instagram _____ Reconnect with yourself during the GET WET SOON in France Surf and Yoga Retreat" Die besten Monate für über 108 Surfregionen weltweit: Die "SURFING WORLDWIDE MAP" If you liked this episode, it would be amazing to write a little review on itunes, which helps that this podcast gets better and better and also can be found more easier. Thanks so much in advance. Namaste, Thomas p.p1 {margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; font: 12.0px 'Helvetica Neue'; color: #454545} p.p2 {margin: 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px 0.0px; font: 12.0px 'Helvetica Neue'; color: #454545; min-height: 14.0px}

WanderLearn: Travel to Transform Your Mind & Life
Overlanding in 35 African countries in 3 years - Dan Grec

WanderLearn: Travel to Transform Your Mind & Life

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2020 95:07


On March 14, 2020, Dan Grec's Kickstarter will end. If you're listening to this before that date, buy Dan's book on Kickstarter. His book (and website) are called The Road Chose Me. If you're listening to this after March 14th, buy Dan Grec's book on Amazon. Why buy his book?  Because for 999 days Dan Grec drove through 35 of the 54 African countries. His book recounts his 3-year adventure.   In this 90-min podcast, we discuss: His road trip across Latin America. How he saved money for 4 years for this 3-year trip. Why he biked to work in Yukon's winter. Which were some of the toughest African border crossings. How he got (or didn't get) African visas on the fly. How much it cost to ship his truck across the Atlantic How many times he got malaria and how it was. What he thinks of South Africa's future. What makes Sudan special and unique. His speaking tour. What he's planning to do next. We discussed the Caprivi Strip. Here are the facts from Wikipedia: Caprivi was named after German Chancellor Leo von Caprivi (in office 1890–1894), who negotiated the acquisition of the land in an 1890 exchange with the United Kingdom. Caprivi arranged for the Caprivi strip to be annexed to German South West Africa in order to give Germany access to the Zambezi River and a route to Africa's east coast, where the colony of German East Africa (now part of Tanzania) was situated. The river later proved unnavigable and inaccessible to the Indian Ocean due to the Victoria Falls. The transfer of territory was a part of the Heligoland-Zanzibar Treaty of 1890, in which Germany gave up its interest in Zanzibar in return for the Caprivi Strip and the island of Heligoland in the North Sea. We also wondered where the expression "rest on your laurels" comes from. Simply put: the origins of the phrase lie in ancient Greece, where laurel wreaths were symbols of victory and status. You can watch the interview on YouTube, although the audio is out of sync. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IaL8jLnRf_4& More info You can post comments, ask questions, and sign up for my newsletter at http://wanderlearn.com. If you like this podcast, subscribe and share!  On social media, my username is always ftapon. Follow me on: http://facebook.com/ftapon http://twitter.com/ftapon http://youtube.com/user/ftapon http://pinterest.com/ftapon http://tumblr.com/ftapon Claim your monthly reward by becoming a patron at http://Patreon.com/FTapon Rewards start at just $2/month! If you prefer to do a one-time contribution, you can send it to my PayPal at FT@FrancisTapon.com If you prefer giving me Bitcoin, then please send BTC to my tip jar: 3EiSBC2bv2bYtYEXAKTkgqZohjF27DGjnV Health Access Sumbawa One of WanderLearn's top patrons, Kathy Kennedy Enger, asked me to draw attention to Health Access Sumbawa. I am happy to promote this remarkable nonprofit. In 2014, Jack Kennedy founded the organization to bring malaria control and healthcare to remote, impoverished communities. It started on the remote island of Sumbawa, Indonesia. Since then, it's expanded thanks to generous donations. Visit their website to learn more and to donate: https://healthaccesssumbawa.org    

WanderLearn: Travel to Transform Your Mind & Life
Defending American Ignorance

WanderLearn: Travel to Transform Your Mind & Life

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2020 15:55


Part 4 of 5 of the "What Americans Can Teach Europeans" series Americans are criticized for being ignorant of geography, languages, and the world in general. Let’s examine geography first. For example, someone from Slovakia often feels smart because he can name at least ten countries near him and explain what’s basically going on there. He says Americans are stupid because they can’t do this. Humans are regionally focused. Today, for the average human, that radius of interest and knowledge might be 500 km. For someone in Nebraska, that means being able to name 10 states around him. For someone in Belgium, that means 10 countries. The level of geographic knowledge is effectively the same. Europe and the United States are roughly the same size. Although it’s true that a Nebraskan won’t find Belgium on a map, it’s also true that a Belgian won’t find Kansas on a map. And neither will find Togo or Cambodia. People are generally ignorant of anything that is beyond their geographic radius of knowledge. src="/wanderlearn/episode/update/id/images/travels/europe/usa/USnews.png" alt="Imagine if they had asked people if they closely followed the news about Guinea Bissau" />The same goes for being aware of what’s going on. The Nebraskan will know what’s going on in Iowa, Missouri, Indiana, and maybe California. Meanwhile, the Belgian will have an idea of the general affairs in Luxembourg, Denmark, Germany, and maybe Greece. They’re all about the same distance from each other, the only difference is one crosses country lines while the other crosses state lines. And, of course, the American won’t know what’s going on in those European countries, just like the European won’t know what’s going on in those particular American states. Americans won’t know about the floods in Romania any more than a Romanian will know about the tornadoes in Oklahoma. However, the European persists and says that Americans don’t know anything about world events and yet everyone knows what’s going on in America. One Latvian told me she was upset that she knows so much about America and Americans don’t know anything about Latvia. It was tough to break the news to her that Latvia’s physical, economic, and political size is insignificant. And it’s really painful to tell the same thing to the French. But it’s true. Europeans know what’s going on America not because they’re more worldly and sophisticated, but because America has a lot of influence in their affairs. America knows little about individual European countries because not one European country has much impact on America (except for perhaps Britain or Russia). Most Europeans don’t know much more than Americans about what’s happening in Uruguay, New Zealand, and Namibia because those countries are both far and insignificant to them. And those countries don’t give a shit about all the tiny European countries either. In addition, educated Europeans who do know lots of stuff about the world often compare themselves with non-educated Americans. They walk through New York and tell people, “Hi, I’m from Bulgaria, do you know where that is?” They’re horrified that New Yorkers don’t know crap about Bulgaria and conclude that Americans are geographically ignorant idiots, unlike the brilliant Bulgarians. Meanwhile, a girl from Laos goes to Bulgaria and asks the people she meets, “Do you know where Laos is?” You can guess the response. Please compare an educated, well-traveled American with an educated, well-traveled European; or the American on the street with the European on the street. You’ll discover the difference isn’t that big. Most who complain about these issues come from countries much smaller than the US. The smaller the country, the more they’re forced to look outside because they quickly exhaust the business and travel opportunities in their own country. Go live in Belgium and see how fast you get bored. People who live in big countries can spend their whole lives there and not get bored. It’s not that we’re more stupid or have a bad education system (although both of these may be true), but it’s primarily because learning about a big country is complex enough. Should Americans learn more about the world and its languages? Absolutely. We should all be flogged for our ignorance. And we should also flog ignorant people from other big countries like the Chinese, Brazilians, Russians, and the French. Why the French? Their country is smaller than Texas, so what’s wrong with that? Well, it’s always a good idea to flog the French whenever you get the chance. In short, it’s true that Americans are ignorant about world affairs and it’s a shame given how much influence the US has globally. However, Europeans are also pretty ignorant about affairs outside of Europe (their geographical focus). They know about America and China because these two large economies influence everyone's life. Yes, Europeans know more about Africa and Asia than Americans, but Americans often know more about Central and South America than Europeans. Another common criticism about Americans is that we don’t travel internationally. Again, scale distorts everything. A Hungarian feels well traveled because he’s been to 10 countries. However, most of them are probably near Hungary. If someone from Iowa logs the same miles as the Hungarian, she won’t even leave America. At best, she’ll have visited Mexico, Canada, or the Caribbean, which is what many Americans do. In other words, the Iowan might feel well traveled if he’s been to 10 US states. Each state in America is about the size of a European country: Germany is the size of Montana, Poland is the size of New Mexico, Slovenia is the size of New Jersey, Belarus is the size of Kansas, and Greece is the size of Alabama. Americans are criticized for not speaking foreign languages. Geography explains quite a bit. The Netherlands is tiny and surrounded by countries that don’t speak Dutch. They don’t speak four languages because they want to. They do it because they have to. How much incentive you have to learn a foreign language depends on: (1) the size of your country (2) the pervasiveness of your language. For instance, Americans rarely speak foreign languages well because we’re a huge country and English speakers are everywhere. Russians and Chinese speak foreign tongues as well as Americans—yeah, that bad. Neither of these big countries with their pervasive languages has much incentive to learn anything else. Slovenians live in a tiny country and few outside their country speak Slovenian, so they must learn multiple languages. It’s not that Americans are stupid or Slovenians are smart. Everyone is just practical. Furthermore, most Europeans can speak only their native language. My favorite pastime is asking Europeans if they speak a foreign language. The results are dismal. The true polyglots come from countries where just a few million people speak their language (e.g., Andorra, Slovenia, and Nordic countries). Finally, ignorance often goes hand-in-hand with being provincial, and Europeans are far more provincial than Americans. Wherever you are in Europe, ask the people you meet where they’re from. The answer is almost always the same: “I’m from here.” They were born and raised in the town you meet them in, they still live there, and they have no plans to leave. Stanford University researchers have found a strong correspondence between the genetics and geographical origins of Europeans. In fact, 90% of Europeans live within 700 kilometers (435 miles) of where they were born, and 50% to within 310 kilometers (193 miles). Ask the same question in America, and you’ll rarely get such an answer—people are usually immigrants, even if it means moving from Chicago to Miami. In San Francisco, people are often shocked when I tell them that I was born and raised there. “Wow, I’ve never met someone who was born here! You’re a native!” They make it sound as if I were a Native American. Because Americans move around much more than Europeans, Americans are less provincial than Europeans. In fact, Europe is so ridiculously provincial that most of their countries are far from united. Spain and Switzerland each have four language regions in their small countries. That alone discourages them from moving around within their country, and the idea of moving a few hundred kilometers to live in a neighboring country is scary. Italians are so regionally focused that they hardly know what is happening on the other side of their local hill. One reason so many strong European dialects persist is that people refuse to venture far. Eastern Europeans are filled with so many prejudices about people who live just a few hundred kilometers away because they’ve spent so little time there. Instead, they find jobs locally, marry locally, and die locally. Conclusion I’m embarrassed that Americans are so poorly traveled and so bad at geography and languages. Although other big countries aren’t much better, they usually are better. And yes, Europeans do know more about geography and world affairs than most Americans. However, the difference is not as big as Europeans like to believe. Moreover, I wish American media devoted as much time to news from developing nations as the European media does. On the other hand, I often assume that other countries know much more about the world than Americans, and I’m often disappointed to learn that it’s not accurate. In conclusion, it’s true: Americans are ignorant about many things. However, Europeans are hardly much better and sometimes their provincialism makes them worse.   In case you missed it, read part 1 of the What Americans Can Teach Europeans article series. More info You can post comments, ask questions, and sign up for my newsletter at http://wanderlearn.com. If you like this podcast, subscribe and share!  On social media, my username is always ftapon. Follow me on: http://facebook.com/ftapon http://twitter.com/ftapon http://youtube.com/user/ftapon http://pinterest.com/ftapon http://tumblr.com/ftapon Claim your monthly reward by becoming a patron at http://Patreon.com/FTapon Rewards start at just $2/month! If you prefer to do a one-time contribution, you can send it to my PayPal at FT@FrancisTapon.com If you prefer giving me Bitcoin, then please send BTC to my tip jar: 3EiSBC2bv2bYtYEXAKTkgqZohjF27DGjnV Health Access Sumbawa One of WanderLearn's top patrons, Kathy Kennedy Enger, asked me to draw attention to Health Access Sumbawa. I am happy to promote this remarkable nonprofit. In 2014, Jack Kennedy founded the organization to bring malaria control and healthcare to remote, impoverished communities. It started on the remote island of Sumbawa, Indonesia. Since then, it's expanded thanks to generous donations. Visit their website to learn more and to donate: https://healthaccesssumbawa.org

What's on Today
What's On Today, 18 Februari 2020

What's on Today

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2020 4:56


Era in Podcast merupakan podcast berita Indonesia terkini yang akan menyajikan informasi menarik setiap harinya. Kamu hanya cukup klik tombol play untuk mendengarkan podcast. Berikut 5 berita pilihan hari ini: 1. Ashraf Sinclair, Suami BCL Meninggal Dunia karena Serangan Jantung 2. Bayar SPP Pakai GoPay, DPR Ingatkan Conflict of Interest 'Mas' Mendikbud 3. Salah Ketik RUU Penyebab Kegaduhan 4. 23 Pengungsi di Niger Tewas Terinjak-injak Saat Berebut Makan 5. Banjir Genangi Beberapa Wilayah di Sumbawa

Maras Project
MAGITA - Maras Project Studio / Al-Vharoz (Cover)

Maras Project

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2020 4:59


Ta coveran ketiga kami. silamo sia sanenge. semoga bisa menjadi lagu pengantar tidur sia. Dukung kami untuk terus berkarya membawa nama Sumbawa ke mata dunia. Untuk kontak kerjasama dan sponsor hubungi nyemin di WA : 081807769500 ------- jangan lupa follow kami di Instagram : ➡ @semaras_sia https://www.instagram.com/semaras_sia/ --------------- ➡@maras_project https://instagram.com/maras_project/ --------------- ➡Nina Agustina (Vokalis) https://instagram.com/ninaaagustina._/ ­ --------------- ➡ Ari Gera (Producer) https://www.instagram.com/araharugra/ --------------- ➡ Well (Gitaris) https://www.instagram.com/well_vharoz/ --------------- ➡Syamsul Cung (Gitaris 2 / Bassis) https://instagram.com/syamsulalvharoz/ ___ ____ _____ Tonton juga karya kami lainnya. Sumpeng Kemang : https://youtu.be/32Ieje6TM6g ­--------------- Kemang Kuning : https://youtu.be/t4umVzApBzE

The Oceanriders Podcast
Episode 14: Meet François Bareau, Accomplished Waterman, Serial Entrepreneur, and Owner of Scar Reef Lodge, Sumbawa

The Oceanriders Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2019 45:45


Imagine sitting on a comfy beanbag, on a white sandy beach, watching the sun go down behind a volcano, with pristine waters as far as the eye can see and one of the best waves on the planet pumping behind the reef. Imagine you're sipping an ice-cold Bintang beer too. Well that is exactly what François was doing when I managed to get hold of him over Skype. François is a good vibes guru. He's spent most of his life in the outdoors. He is permanently tanned, dressed in colorful t-shirts and he's either barefoot or in flip flops. His hair is bleached by the salt and the sun, as he has been pursuing this tropical lifestyle for over 30 years. Behind this relaxed look is an incredible entrepreneur. From sports instructor to textile guru, graphic designer and now hotel owner, François has always been a true pioneer. This guy knows what it is to be outside his comfort zone and how to overcome challenges, against all odds.  From the French Alps to Sumbawa, Indonesia, François' path is a really interesting one. I first met François when I was living in Bali. To be honest, it's quite hard not to like François and his wife Natalia. At the time, they had just purchased the real estate, and were starting to create their dream, their very own surf camp in one of Indonesia's secret bays. Fast forward 5 years, 2 volcano eruptions, countless earthquakes and a few hurricanes later, and François is still pursuing his dream with the help of his incredible wife Natalia, and kids Jaï and Vega. Together they have turned Scar Reef Lodge into a mini paradise on earth: a boutique hotel for surf lovers on one of the most pristine beaches of Indonesia. The cherry on the cake being obviously Scar Reef, the notorious world class wave and a couple of other perfect reef breaks within paddling distance. In our conversation François shares the flukey story about how he found Scar Reef in the first place, and the challenges he has had to face ever since he's invested in Indonesia. Sometimes the postcard picture comes at a price, and François shares his knowledge with us. That said, he has created a pretty cool lifestyle on his « desert island ». We discuss what it's like to surf Scar Reef and although the break is renowned for its gnarly days (it's one of the most frightening waves of the planet when it's on), it is incredibly gentle and safe on small days. This is why François is now focusing on attracting longboarders to his boutique hotel. I questioned François offline about the possible problem of getting longboards to Scar Reef Lodge. Problem solved, as the Lodge has a special taxi service for your longboards shipping them overland from Bali straight to the lodge in Sumbawa. François has also a quiver of longboards just in case yours doesn't fit on the plane. So if you're a single fin maniac, François will have you covered! I would like to give a massive thank you to François for putting up with my crappy internet service. We must have made 30 attempts to connect on Skype. Thank you François for your persistance and for believing in this podcast! I hope you enjoy the episode, I personally adore François' French accent! Enjoy the episode. In the meantime, take care, have fun and enjoy the waves! Ciao Imi Links Scar Reef Lodge: www.scarreeflodge.com Son of Kite (Kitesurfing school in Mauritius): https://sonofkite.com/ Chrishanson Surfboards: https://www.instagram.com/christensonsurfboards/ Thomas Surfboards: https://www.facebook.com/thomas-surfboards-290331200434/ The Oceanriders Podcast is a non profit operation and as such, I would like to thank YOU ever so much for being more and more every week. You guys rock! If you enjoy listening, please subscribe to the podcast on iTunes or Spotify, if not, you can rate or review the podcast on iTunes. It helps the podcast get more visible and encourages me to do better every episode. You can find pictures of François in my article on Medium.com. If you want to get in touch with me directly there are loads of ways: email (hello@theoceanriderspodcast.com), via my website http://www.theoceanriderspodcast.com, and all my social accounts on http://www.linktr.ee/theoceanriderspodcast.

El Neutrino - Cienciaes.com

¿Qué tienen en común el Tour de Francia, dos de los mitos más universales de la literatura y el cine de terror, y el villancico más famoso de todos los tiempos? Frankenstein, la bicicleta, Noche de paz, los vampiros… No se pueden imaginar cosas más disparejas. Y sin embargo, todas ellas tuvieron la misma causa. Una causa que hay que buscar en la península de Sanggar, en el norte de la isla de Sumbawa, una de las islas menores de la Sonda, situadas al este de Java. En abril de 1815, hace ahora doscientos años, allí había tenido lugar la erupción volcánica más catastrófica registrada en la historia, la del monte Tambora.