POPULARITY
Thank you for listening to The Watershed, a podcast of We Are Water MN. In this episode, we hear from Sharon Day, a writer, artist, activist, educator, and leader of water protection efforts including Nibi Walks. She is also an enrolled member of the Bois Forte Band of Chippewa. Sharon Day explores some of her water memories, as well as themes around caring for and being in relationship with water. We'll also probe questions about our responsibility to past and future generations. What will you do for the water? The We Are Water MN exhibit will be hosted in Chisago County from June 20 through August 12, 2024. The main exhibit will be at the North Branch Area Library, while additional indoor exhibits will be on view at the Chisago County History Center. Lindstrom Memorial Park will have an outdoor display. After Chisago County, the exhibit will move to Cass Lake (Leech Lake Tribal College), and Shakopee (Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community). You can learn more about We Are Water MN at www.mnhum.org/water. Learn more about Chisago County's hosting of the exhibit, plus related events, at https://www.chisagocountymn.gov/1349/We-Are-Water-MN-Exhibit---June-20-to-Aug. This episode of The Watershed was produced by Angela Hugunin, and by We Are Water MN, which is led by the Minnesota Humanities Center in partnership with the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency; the Minnesota Historical Society; the Board of Water and Soil Resources; the Minnesota Departments of Agriculture, Health, and Natural Resources; and University of Minnesota Extension. We are Water MN is funded in part with money from the Clean Water, Land, & Legacy Fund that was created with the vote of the people of Minnesota on November 4, 2008 and by the National Endowment for the Humanities. Special thanks to Emma Needham, who conducted this interview, which was initially featured in Hartley Nature Center's hosting. Thank you to Sharon Day, our interviewee for this episode. You can learn more about Nibi Walks at http://www.nibiwalk.org/. You can find We Are Water MN on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/wearewatermn/), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/wearewatermn/), and Twitter (https://twitter.com/wearewatermn). Follow along for the latest updates! Music credits: These Times, Drone Pine, McCarthy, So We Go, and Waterbourne by Blue Dot Sessions (www.sessions.blue).
Thank you for listening to The Watershed, a podcast of We Are Water MN. In this episode, we hear from Sharon Day, a writer, artist, activist, educator, and leader of water protection efforts including Nibi Walks. Sharon is also an enrolled member of the Bois Forte Band of Chippewa. In this episode, Sharon Day shares water memories and an exploration of themes around caring for and being in relationship with water, plus our responsibility to past and future generations. What will you do for the water? The We Are Water MN exhibit will be hosted by Hartley Nature Center in Duluth from February 29 through April 22, 2024. After Hartley, it will move to four other communities throughout the state of Minnesota: Holdingford (Stearns County Soil and Water Conservation District in partnership with Art in Motion on the Lake Wobegon Trail), Chisago County, Cass Lake (Leech Lake Tribal College), and Shakopee (Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community). You can learn more about We Are Water MN at www.mnhum.org/water. Learn more about Hartley Nature Center's hosting of the exhibit, plus related events, at https://hartleynature.org/hartley-nature-center-programs/we-are-water-mn/. We Are Water MN is led by the Minnesota Humanities Center in partnership with the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency; the Minnesota Historical Society; the Board of Water and Soil Resources; the Minnesota Departments of Agriculture, Health, and Natural Resources; and University of Minnesota Extension. We are Water MN is funded in part with money from the Clean Water, Land, & Legacy Fund that was created with the vote of the people of Minnesota on November 4, 2008 and by the National Endowment for the Humanities. Special thanks to Emma Needham, who conducted our interviews in Duluth. Thank you to Sharon Day, our interviewee for this episode. You can find We Are Water MN on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/wearewatermn/), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/wearewatermn/), and Twitter (https://twitter.com/wearewatermn). Follow along for the latest updates! Music credits: These Times, Drone Pine, McCarthy, So We Go, Waterbourne, and On Top of It by Blue Dot Sessions (www.sessions.blue).
Thank you for listening to The Watershed, a podcast of We Are Water MN. In this episode, we hear from Duluth resident, educator, and boating captain Dave Johnson. Dave shares water memories and an exploration of themes around education, recreation, and stewardship. How can caring for the water right outside our front door help address more sweeping issues? The We Are Water MN exhibit will be hosted by Hartley Nature Center in Duluth from February 29 through April 22, 2024. After Hartley, it will move to four other communities throughout the state of Minnesota: Holdingford (Stearns County Soil and Water Conservation District in partnership with Art in Motion on the Lake Wobegon Trail), Chisago County, Cass Lake (Leech Lake Tribal College), and Shakopee (Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community). You can learn more about We Are Water MN at www.mnhum.org/water. Learn more about Hartley Nature Center's hosting of the exhibit, plus related events, at https://hartleynature.org/hartley-nature-center-programs/we-are-water-mn/. We Are Water MN is led by the Minnesota Humanities Center in partnership with the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency; the Minnesota Historical Society; the Board of Water and Soil Resources; the Minnesota Departments of Agriculture, Health, and Natural Resources; and University of Minnesota Extension. We are Water MN is funded in part with money from the Clean Water, Land, & Legacy Fund that was created with the vote of the people of Minnesota on November 4, 2008 and by the National Endowment for the Humanities. Special thanks to Emma Needham, who conducted our interviews in Duluth. Thank you to Dave Johnson, our interviewee for this episode. You can find We Are Water MN on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/wearewatermn/), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/wearewatermn/), and Twitter (https://twitter.com/wearewatermn). Follow along for the latest updates! Music credits: These Times, Waterbourne, Simple Melody, and On Top of It by Blue Dot Sessions (www.sessions.blue).
Thanks for listening to The Watershed, a podcast of We Are Water MN. In this episode, we hear from St. Croix 360 editor and founder, Greg Seitz. The We Are Water MN exhibit recently wrapped up its 2023 tour. In 2024, it will visit five communities throughout the state of Minnesota: Duluth (Hartley Nature Center), Holdingford (Stearns County Soil and Water Conservation District in partnership with Art in Motion on the Lake Wobegon Trail), Chisago County, Cass Lake (Leech Lake Tribal College), and Shakopee (Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community). Learn more about We Are Water MN at www.mnhum.org/water. We Are Water MN is led by the Minnesota Humanities Center in partnership with the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency; the Minnesota Historical Society; the Board of Water and Soil Resources; the Minnesota Departments of Agriculture, Health, and Natural Resources; and University of Minnesota Extension. We are Water MN is funded in part with money from the Clean Water, Land, & Legacy Fund that was created with the vote of the people of Minnesota on November 4, 2008 and by the National Endowment for the Humanities. Special thanks to Leah Lemm, who conducted our interviews in Stillwater. Thank you to Greg Seitz, editor and founder of St. Croix 360 and our interviewee for this episode. Learn more about St. Croix 360 at https://www.stcroix360.com/. You can find We Are Water MN on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/wearewatermn/), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/wearewatermn/), and Twitter (https://twitter.com/wearewatermn). Follow along for the latest updates! Music credits: These Times, Waterbourne, Lamb Drop, Pull Beyond Pull, and On Top of It by Blue Dot Sessions (www.sessions.blue).
As Archer continued to recover from his cardiac arrest and pneumonia, Louise sought out information in the hospital like it was her own lifeline. She needed to feel grounded in something and couldn't bring herself to trust Archer's medical team yet — especially after a medical error days earlier. In Season 2: Episode 4: Just Stay Alert, Louise explores her persistent advocacy for more information from medical staff and how that came from a sense of being on edge. In this episode, you will hear excerpts of interview conversations with: Kristi Holden, RN, and Associate Director for the Massachusetts Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner program. She's also Louise's future in-law, and the two spoke about trauma-informed nursing. Dr. Raymond Talucci, Acting Chief of Trauma at AtlantiCare Hospital in Atlantic City, New Jersey, while Archer was a patient there. The two spoke about Louise's quest for more information and distrust in Archer's medical team. Join Louise for Season 2 of Blink of an Eye: Episode 4: Just Stay Alert: August 15. Day 11. Listen in afterwards to this week's companion Trauma Healing Learnings episode for new understandings on trauma and tools to navigate your own trauma healing: Trauma Healing Learning: where To find out more about Archer, Louise, and this podcast, visit our website at blinkofaneyepodcast.com, and follow us on Instagram and Facebook @blinkofaneyepodcast, and Twitter @blinkofaneyepod Make sure to subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. You can become a member of our Patreon community and see extra Blink of an Eye content and bonus episodes at our Patreon page. Victoria Vox created the theme music. Music and sound effects in this episode are by Blue Dot Sessions: Come As You Were, Taoudella, Noodle Opus, Hermes Gray, Waterbourne. To see some of Archer's artwork, check out www.slimeyard.com. #hopeforeverything #obtaineverything
As Archer continued to recover from his cardiac arrest and pneumonia, Louise sought out information in the hospital like it was her own lifeline. She needed to feel grounded in something and couldn't bring herself to trust Archer's medical team yet — especially after a medical error days earlier. In Season 2: Episode 4: Just Stay Alert, Louise explores her persistent advocacy for more information from medical staff and how that came from a sense of being on edge. In this episode, you will hear excerpts of interview conversations with: Kristi Holden, RN, and Associate Director for the Massachusetts Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner program. She's also Louise's future in-law, and the two spoke about trauma-informed nursing. Dr. Raymond Talucci, Acting Chief of Trauma at AtlantiCare Hospital in Atlantic City, New Jersey, while Archer was a patient there. The two spoke about Louise's quest for more information and distrust in Archer's medical team. Join Louise for Season 2 of Blink of an Eye: Episode 4: Just Stay Alert: August 15. Day 11. Listen in afterwards to this week's companion Trauma Healing Learnings episode for new understandings on trauma and tools to navigate your own trauma healing: Trauma Healing Learning: where To find out more about Archer, Louise, and this podcast, visit our website at blinkofaneyepodcast.com, and follow us on Instagram and Facebook @blinkofaneyepodcast, and Twitter @blinkofaneyepod Make sure to subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. You can become a member of our Patreon community and see extra Blink of an Eye content and bonus episodes at our Patreon page. Victoria Vox created the theme music. Music and sound effects in this episode are by Blue Dot Sessions: Come As You Were, Taoudella, Noodle Opus, Hermes Gray, Waterbourne. To see some of Archer's artwork, check out www.slimeyard.com. #hopeforeverything #obtaineverything
In honor of the Addison Gallery of American Art's 90th anniversary, we've teamed up to release a three-part podcast series! We'll be taking a thematic view of their diverse and world class collection, exploring abstraction, the figure, and the urban sublime. New episodes will be released on The Lonely Palette feed every two weeks beginning Tuesday, May 18th. For more information on the exhibition, visit: https://addison.andover.edu/Exhibitions/90/Pages/default.aspx. Music used: The Blue Dot Sessions, "Waterbourne"
Pop quiz: what were the last five articles you read from a news source? And how many of them had to do with science? Climate change, perhaps? The chase for a COVID vaccine? Migratory paths of the monarch butterfly? We depend, perhaps now more than ever, on the fierce curiosity of science journalists like Kim O'Connell. A celebration of all things science writing. Theme music by Sean Balick. “Waterbourne” by Algae Fields, via Blue Dot Sessions.
This episode is a part of the first annual Climate Podcast Showcase, for more information on this visit www.climactic.fm/climatepodcase, and for more information on this show please visit All The Best. What Democracy Looks Like by Ryan PembertonIn September, 4 million protesters gathered to demand action on climate change. A few weeks later, Extinction Rebellion staged a global act of civil disobedience. Who are the organisers of the movement? And what impact are the protests having? Producer: Ryan Pemberton Supervising producer: Zacha Rosen Music: ‘Our Digital Compass' by Blue Dot Sessions, ‘Copley Beat' by Blue Dot Sessions, ‘Waterbourne' by Blue Dot Sessions, ‘Saver' by Podington Bear Off-Off-Grid by Alice AllenSome things aren't easy to broadcast – to your nearest and dearest, or to the general public. Michael Mobbs shares how he became “The Off-Grid Guy”, and why he's giving up the home that helped him make his name. Note: Michael Mobbs mentions that 60-80% of food production depends on bees. Around 75% of crops benefit from pollination from bees, but don't neccessarily depend on it. Producer: Alice Allen Supervising producer: Ryan Pemberton All The Best credits:Executive Producer: Ryan Pemberton Victorian State Coordinator: Jordan Fennell Episode Mix and Compile: Ryan Pemberton Host: Maddy Macquine Community Coordinators: Chloe Gillespie and Danni Stewart SYN Community Coordinator: Lee Robinson Social Media Producer: Matilda Fay Image: Kym Chapple Support Climactic See /privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This episode is a part of the first annual Climate Podcast Showcase, for more information on this visit www.climactic.fm/climatepodcase, and for more information on this show please visit All The Best. What Democracy Looks Like by Ryan Pemberton In September, 4 million protesters gathered to demand action on climate change. A few weeks later, Extinction Rebellion staged a global act of civil disobedience. Who are the organisers of the movement? And what impact are the protests having? Producer: Ryan Pemberton Supervising producer: Zacha Rosen Music: ‘Our Digital Compass' by Blue Dot Sessions, ‘Copley Beat' by Blue Dot Sessions, ‘Waterbourne' by Blue Dot Sessions, ‘Saver' by Podington Bear Off-Off-Grid by Alice Allen Some things aren't easy to broadcast – to your nearest and dearest, or to the general public. Michael Mobbs shares how he became “The Off-Grid Guy”, and why he's giving up the home that helped him make his name. Note: Michael Mobbs mentions that 60-80% of food production depends on bees. Around 75% of crops benefit from pollination from bees, but don't neccessarily depend on it. Producer: Alice Allen Supervising producer: Ryan Pemberton All The Best credits: Executive Producer: Ryan Pemberton Victorian State Coordinator: Jordan Fennell Episode Mix and Compile: Ryan Pemberton Host: Maddy Macquine Community Coordinators: Chloe Gillespie and Danni Stewart SYN Community Coordinator: Lee Robinson Social Media Producer: Matilda Fay Image: Kym Chapple Support Climactic Support the show: https://www.climactic.fm/p/support-the-collective/
This episode is a part of the first annual Climate Podcast Showcase, for more information on this visit www.climactic.fm/climatepodcase, and for more information on this show please visit All The Best. What Democracy Looks Like by Ryan PembertonIn September, 4 million protesters gathered to demand action on climate change. A few weeks later, Extinction Rebellion staged a global act of civil disobedience. Who are the organisers of the movement? And what impact are the protests having?Producer: Ryan PembertonSupervising producer: Zacha RosenMusic: ‘Our Digital Compass' by Blue Dot Sessions, ‘Copley Beat' by Blue Dot Sessions, ‘Waterbourne' by Blue Dot Sessions, ‘Saver' by Podington BearOff-Off-Grid by Alice AllenSome things aren't easy to broadcast – to your nearest and dearest, or to the general public. Michael Mobbs shares how he became “The Off-Grid Guy”, and why he's giving up the home that helped him make his name.Note: Michael Mobbs mentions that 60-80% of food production depends on bees. Around 75% of crops benefit from pollination from bees, but don't neccessarily depend on it.Producer: Alice AllenSupervising producer: Ryan PembertonAll The Best credits:Executive Producer: Ryan PembertonVictorian State Coordinator: Jordan FennellEpisode Mix and Compile: Ryan PembertonHost: Maddy MacquineCommunity Coordinators: Chloe Gillespie and Danni StewartSYN Community Coordinator: Lee RobinsonSocial Media Producer: Matilda FayImage: Kym ChappleSupport Climactic See /privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Meditatio Conversations January 2018 Produced & hosted by Leonardo Corrêa (leonardo@wccm.org) On this edition: Noel Keating interview on the new book Meditation with Children - a Resource for Teachers and Parents More about the book here: http://www.veritasbooksonline.com/authors/k/n/noel-keating/meditation-with-children.html Soundtrack: The Stasis, Waterbourne and Denzel Sprak and are songs by Blue Dot Sessions, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0
Immigrating is a conversation that happens across borders, generations, and versions of oneself. Grace and Justin talk across political differences. Unknown workers who forged the Transcontinental Railroad receive a new voice. Solmaz writes poetry to orient herself in the world. And Frankie and Francisco reflect on growing up in a new place. This is part two of a two-part series. Host: Cathy Wong Producers: Carissa Cirelli, Noelle Chow, Jett Hayward, An-Li Herring, Julia Ingram, Louis Lafair, Rosie LaPuma, Yue Li, Jenny March, Kate Nelson, Jackson Roach, Helvia Taina, Melina Walling, Jake Warga, Eileen Williams, Cathy Wong Show Music: johnny_ripper (Links to this show's music and sound sources can be found at https://storytelling.stanford.edu) Story 4: Grace and Justin Grace and Justin send each other letters. Producers: Cathy Wong and Kate Nelson Featuring: Justin Hsuan and Grace Music: "When in the West," "Sage the Hunter," and "Drone Pine" by Blue Dot Sessions Story 5: Chinese Railroad Workers Producer: Yue Li Featuring: Hilton Obenzinger, Barre Fong, and Gordon Chang Music: "Everything Ends Here" by Johnny Ripper; "More Weather," "Waterbourne," and "The Summit" by Blue Dot Sessions Story 6: Solmaz Solmaz Sharif wants to have the conversation we’re avoiding. Producers: Jackson Roach and Jett Hayward Featuring: Solmaz Sharif Music: "c" and "m" by Gallery Six, "Krankenwagen im Stau" by rui, "Upward" and "It Moves Like A 500 Year Old Process" by junior85 Story 7: Frankie and Francisco After immigrating from Mexico, Francisco Preciado Sr. gets a job as a groundskeeper at Stanford University. When his son, Francisco Preciado Jr., applies to Stanford, they learn together what it means to carry on a family legacy in a new country. Producers: Louis Lafair and Melina Walling Featuring: Francisco Preciado Sr. and Francisco Preciado Jr. Music: "An opener" by Bitbasic, "motion (johnny_ripper remix)" by noah, "Selbstheilend" by rui, "Pomp and Circumstance" by Edward Elgar and Miguel Flores
Hussein Rashid of Barnard / Columbia discusses the importance of thinking critically about news, information, and stories relating to the Middle East. We also highlight five activities you can do to promote media literacy in your classrooms. Learn more at www.primarysource.org/podcasts Music credits: "Kim Arar" by Wind of Anatolia "Sueur" by Monplaisir "Waterbourne" by Blue Dot Sessions "Thread of Clouds" by Blue Dot Sessions "Tower of Mirrors" by Blue Dot Sessions "Spins and Never Falls" by Blue Dot Sessions "Filing Away" by Blue Dot Sessions "Thannoid" by Blue Dot Sessions "-Yesilim" by Turku
Bikepacking coast-to-coast across Scotland. Adventure cyclist Lee Craigie loves to ride her bike, but when the road ends and the trail begins, the ride becomes so much more than a simple journey through the landscape. Music Paris (Elite Athlete Remix) and Amsterdam by Lasers, Waterbourne and Algea Trio Blue Dot Sessions, Padded Walls (reEdit) and Alesis 2010 by Floating Spirits. Credits Thanks […]