35 Burst results for "83%"

AP News Radio
Texas blows out Xavier 83-71 for spot in NCAA Elite Eight
"The second seat of Texas longhorns will play Miami and the Midwest regional final after an 83 to 71 win over Xavier. Texas guard tyrese hunter led the longhorns in scoring with 19 points in the same venue where they won a conference tournament. A lot of these guys and we played in the big 12 play in this arena. You know, so, you know, I say, you know, just having our fans coming out and having that support, any team we play is going to be a big game for us. In the earlier game, the Miami hurricanes upset Houston, a number one seed, 89 to 75, the hurricanes are in the elite 8 for the second straight year. Greg iklin, Kansas City

The Officer Tatum Show
Failed Bank Chooses 'Wokeness' Over Stability
"Had to forgot man the article that I was reading through $83 billion from corporate organizations. Now that didn't go to the street hustlers all of it, it was these major corporations that were just that were just straight up woke and a lot of that was just fun fit to Democrat campaigns. I mean, it was a Money Heist is what it was, but all of these people want to virtue signal. You have to keep in mind that there are leaders, right? They're the people that will be the leaders, the little corrupt elites at the top at the top of the totem pole. The Gavin Newsom is the Joe Biden of the world. There's always going to be the useful idiots like an SB bank who double down on what was it? Was it? They doubled down on it says here had to have forgotten man. This from Justin news, as SVB investment failures mounted, the bank doubled down on its ideological commitments by pledging $5 billion in new green tech outlays despite signs of rising interest rates, negatively impacting that sector, some incidents, institutional and investors also began to raise concerns about the overall balance sheet. These foods were straight up woke and they were cricket as all get out as well, but this is all about creating a new morality, taking you away from government are God and bringing you to government. And here's what they want. They create these device of issues, CRT, DEI. Excuse me, the trans movement, and what these people, the useful idiots that they need, these people get all wrapped up in these issues. And so what these people start believing is, okay, they've got my back on this issue, so if they tell us that we should nationalize the banks, they're probably right there too.

AP News Radio
Sasser hurt anew as top seed Houston beats Northern Kentucky
"Number one seeds Houston and Alabama one in the opening round of the NCAA tournament in Birmingham, the tide overwhelmed Texas a and M Corpus Christi 96 75, while Houston struggled the toppled northern Kentucky 63 52. Houston coach, Calvin Sampson. They were tougher than we were tonight. And that's not easy for me to say. Other winners were Maryland, which edged West Virginia 67 65, and auburn, which beat Iowa 83, 75. Winners advanced to the second round on Saturday. I'm Gary mckillop's.

Mark Levin
NY Post: Refugee Returns to Ukraine to Chronicle 'the Real Side' of War
"Had already seen the worst of war she hid in an underground bunker last February with her 83 year old random grandmother Rita and her pit bull Nigel as Russian jets tore through Ukrainian skies during the war's opening salvo Schlitz she fled to Moldova by the way have you seen that news Yeah I mentioned this or no Or all ideologues now are can we at least inform ourselves Moldova's tiny little country on the border with Ukraine And there's a secret document that's just been released Not released but found Michael Weiss reporting On Friday National Security Council made a surprise announcement at The White House They determined the Kremlin was plotting to topple another European democracy Moldova They're seeking to stage and use protests in Moldova as a basis to so many manufactured insurrection against the government there What do you think about that Is that okay too Sure It's none of our business It's all the way over there in Europe You know we're Marxism started in fascism started in World War I started in World War II started Way way way over there where we sent the yanks over there our parents our ancestors Oh yeah to fight and die and get wounded and come home because the prior generation Not the one just behind us the generation prior to the generation that went to war Well they believed in passivity too

Mark Levin
Retired Army Col. Paris Davis Receives Medal of Honor
"I want to tell you about a man who just got the Medal of Honor I was talking about Vietnam earlier The gateway pundit real life Rambo Medal of Honor winner fought off countless enemies using his pinky finger during a 20 hour fight The time June 2019 65 the place been Jin province in the meat grinder known as South Vietnam the stakes life or death Writes Jack Davis Western journalism For what took place that day retired army colonel Paris Davis 83 today he was awarded the Medal of Honor on Friday during a White House ceremony Just to be able to be considered for the mental honors one thing Davis said according to CNN to receive it is all the things I've never dreamed The army's website summarizes what took place as Davis a special forces captain of the time led his patrol Over the course of two days Davis selflessly led a charge to neutralize enemy emplacements Called for precision artillery fire engaged in hand to hand combat with the enemy In prevented the capture three American soldiers Robert Brown John reinberg and Billy wall While saving their lives with a medical extraction Davis sustained multiple gunshot and grenade fragment wounds during the 19 hour battle And he refused to leave the battlefield and toes men were safely removed

AP News Radio
Vietnam War veteran who broke barriers awarded Medal of Honor
"Recommended for the nation's highest military award, a Vietnam veteran has finally been honored. Retired colonel Paris Davis was one of the first black green beret combat commanders. One President Biden calls a true hero for risking his life amid heavy fire to save his soldiers during a 1965 firefight. His commander in turn recommended Davis for it the Medal of Honor. The president notes the paperwork was lost half a century ago. Not just once. But twice. This morning here at The White House, the president draped the medal on the now 83 year old Davis. You are everything this metal means. Outside minutes later, Davis did not dwell on the delay, but rather on the honor itself. This medal reflects what teamwork service and dedication can achieve. In

AP News Radio
Shead, Sasser lead No. 1 Houston past Wichita State 83-66
"Jamal shed scored 25 points his top ranked Houston won its tenth straight game to improve to 28 and two with an 83 66 win over Wichita state. Shed shot ten of 17 from the field and he knocked down four three pointers. They weren't really helping off me as much, so you know a lot of my guys were just telling me go in there and score, you know, I work on it every day, so it was just being confident in me, giving me confidence in myself. So that really helped. Marcus sasco 22 points and added four assists for Houston, while Jared walker chipped in 13 points 9 rebounds and three steals. Adam spole in Houston

AP News Radio
No. 2 Alabama wins, led by Miller after week of questions
"Second ranked Alabama is 15 and one in the SEC following an 86 83 win over Arkansas. Alabama coach Nate oats. We didn't have a great start. It was two games in a row. I don't think we played our best basketball. The beginning of the game, obviously we struggled chewing in score for the first few minutes. Freshman Brandon Miller scored 24 points on the heels of his season high 41 point performance in the crimson tides over time when it's South Carolina. Miller scoring spree comes after courtroom testimony, revealed his presence at the scene of a fatal shooting last month. He scored 8 points in a 15 O run to put the tide ahead by ten in the second half. I'm Dave ferry.

AP News Radio
Rice's 24 points help No. 6 Texas top Oklahoma in OT
"Sergio rice carried number 6 Texas to an 85 83 overtime win versus Oklahoma. Rice scored 20 of his game high 24 points in the second half and OT, helping the longhorns move to ten and four in the big 12. His fourth three pointer of the game gave Texas an 84 77 lead with two 26 remaining. Marcus Carr had 17 points in the longhorns 5th straight win over the sooners, while Timmy Allen added 15 points 9 rebounds and four assists. Grant sherfield led Oklahoma with 18 points, including a three pointer that sent the game to overtime. I'm Dave ferry.

The Dinesh D'Souza Podcast
Jay Leno Breaks Several Bones in 2nd Accident
"We wanted to talk about something that is, well, I don't know if we can really call it funny because it involves a very funny guy, Jay Leno, but this guy, it turns out he keeps getting seriously injured. We heard a few months ago. Yeah, for a few months ago back in November, he suffered second degree burns because he was doing something in his garage and it ignited. Well, hold on. Let me read. This is from an interview with Jay, I know, talking about this. He goes, I was underneath the car. I didn't had a clogged fuel line. And I asked my buddy to blow a little through the fuel light and boom, it hit me in the face with a quart of gas. There was a spark nearby and ignited it in my face caught on fire. I mean, it's hard to chuckle because it was. It was horrific. And we like Jay Leno, we're not like reveling in the verdict of Jay Leno. I mean, it's so sad. But he was very much, you know, like, hey guys, it's fine. It's fine. It's good. I'm good. And then. Well, what happened is this actually is amusing. Apparently Jay Leno had a second accident, but he didn't want to tell anybody about it because there had been a whole bunch of news reports on the burning. And so he thought, what the heck is so the second accident? Well, let's talk about the second accident. This is a motorcycle accident. He has multiple broken bones. And I think he broke his rib cage. Here we go, you got a scar across his neck, two broken ribs, two broken kneecaps, and a snapped collarbone. And then, of course, being Jay Leno. He goes, it's a little painful, but it's not the end of the world. Well, he goes, a 72 year old man driving an 83 year old motorcycle. What could go wrong? So, I mean, the thing about Jay Leno, first of all, this guy loves anything that moves. Any type of vehicle. And the faster the better. You know the Ellen's 204 stars. I did. And 168 motorcycles. He talks about that when he was on The Tonight Show. He talked about all his car collection and all that. So I knew he loved all that.

The BOB & TOM Show Free Podcast
Neil Diamond Gets a Birthday Serenade... From Himself!
"Have a tribute to Neil Diamond? Sure, happy birthday, Neil. Son for me. Hell I'm 82 now. But make it to 83. My toupee is glued now. I'll make it stick darling. Please don't sing. The bump on bomb doing sweet girl life. I'll get up from the chair. And kick you from behind, lose my freaking mind. Oh, song sung to me. Throw a little party. James Taylor, Paul Simon and arty. Happy birthday to me.

CryptoGlobe
SOL Total Number of Developers on Solana Grew 83, per Electric Capital Report
"11 a.m. Sunday, January 22nd, 2023. SOL total number of developers on Solana grew 83 per electric capital report. A recent research report on blockchain crypto developers says that in 2022, among blockchain ecosystems with 1000 total number of developers, Solana had the highest rate of growth 83 of ecosystem developer count. Here is how coinbase described Solana in a, blog post, published on June 29th, 2022 Solana, is a decentralized computing platform that uses SOL to pay.

AP News Radio
The latest in sports
"AP sports I'm David Schuster to NFL playoff games contested Saturday in Kansas City, Patrick Mahomes played through an ankle injury throwing a pair of touchdown passes as the chiefs down Jacksonville 27 20, Kansas City coach Andy Reid crediting his defense. I thought from the DBs to the defensive line to the linebackers, I just, again, my head goes off to the guys for that. Meanwhile, in Philadelphia, the eagles overwhelmed the Giants 38 to 7 with our Michael luongo in attendance. The eagle jumped to a 14 nothing for his quarterly on touchdown passes by a jail and hurts won the Dallas Goddard. The other devonta Smith first picked up a 5 yard touchdown run with 43 seconds to go in the first half, Boston Scott had a three yard touchdown one, maybe for the second quarter for the birds who were advanced to the NSA championship game for the first time since 2017. Coming up later Sunday, it will be Cincinnati at buffalo and Dallas at San Francisco. Lots of NBA action Saturday, Boston made it 9 straight wins, one O 6 one O four over Toronto, grant Williams scoring 25 points off the bench. As a role player in this league, you have to be prepared for any of those opportunities and you have to step up when the opportunity arises. And I feel like I try my best to do that and tonight shops went down and just continue to be aggressive. Evan mobley was aggressive scoring a career high 38 points as Cleveland defeated Milwaukee one 14 one O two, mobley's coach JB bickerstaff certainly impressed. You know, it's not just a particular quarter, but it's when winning matters the most. And I think he's got that gene when winning Mars is the most to rise to another level. And Minnesota coach Chris Finch had a bird's eye view, watching Anthony Edwards score 44 points as the T wolves defeated Houston one 13 one O four. Yeah, I mean, he was locked in all day. We had talked yesterday about how important this game was for us. And how he needed to set the tone. He certainly did that. He was special today. College hoops, TCU crushed number two Kansas, 83 60. I'm David Shuster, AP sports.

AP News Radio
No. 14 TCU hands No. 2 Kansas worst home loss in 2 years
"The 14th ranked TCU horned frogs upset the second ranked Kansas Jayhawks 83 to 60. TCU jumped to an early 22 point lead with a 23 to two first half run, would Kansas pulled with in ten points to end the half, the horned frogs and head coach Jamie Dixon were unfazed. We tried to just focus on where we were at, not the last minute or so. And I think that was a good and then we came out, obviously. And executed right away. It's TCU's first ever win at Allen fieldhouse, snapping a 16 game home court win streak for the jayhawks. Lawrence Kansas.

AP News Radio
Johnson scores 24 as No. 13 K-State beats No. 2 Kansas 83-82
"Kansas forward, Jalen Wilson, the leading scorer in the big 12 conference, telling 38 points, but the 13th ring to Kansas day wildcats managed to hold on for an 83 82 win in overtime over the second ranked jayhawks. Chianti Johnson got the winning basket with 25 seconds left in the OT. Jalen Wilson got to the line, a great player got to line a lot. And I feel like that took us back a little bit just trying not to file, but still play aggressive and down the stretch. I feel like we played aggressively and we ended up getting this game when it stopped. Johnson was the wildcats coast scoring leader with guard desi sills each with 24 points. Greg eckland, Manhattan, Kansas

AP News Radio
2022 saw 83% drop in law enforcement officers killed by COVID
"Advocates for law enforcement officers find a disturbing trend continues as the number killed by gunfire remains high. 226 officers died in the line of duty in 2022 that's down 61% from an all time high of 586 the year before. The differences do mostly to a drop in COVID-19 related deaths, although the virus remained the number one killer of police last year. 64 of the officers were killed by gunfire, matching 2021, and well beyond the average of 53 over the previous decade. That's according to a report from the national law enforcement officers memorial fund. Executive director Bill Alexander says they're concerned about the disturbing trend specific to firearms fatalities. The country has seen an overall rise in violent crime and gun violence in recent years, additionally, 40 officers died in vehicle crashes last year. That's a 30% increase. The most dangerous state for police deaths in the line of duty was Texas, followed by New York, California,

AP News Radio
Sasser, Shead lead No. 1 Houston past South Florida 83-77
"Marcus sasser scored a career high 31 points as top ranked Houston improved to 17 and one by beating South Florida 83 to 77. Sasser knocked down 6 three pointers and he added 11 free throws. Just being a senior on the team being a leader. I kind of didn't see it all, you know? I seen the momentum that they had. When you got good teammates, that's really just trust you with the ball and feel like you can change the game. You don't do nothing but really you confidence. Jamal shed scored 20 points and added 6 rebounds for the cougars. South Florida was led by Tyler Harris, who scored 31 points on 9 of 13 shooting. Adam spelling Houston

AP News Radio
The latest in sports
"AP sports. I'm John leathery. In Denver, the west leading nuggets cruise to a four straight win. Correspond to Bruce Morton has more. The nuggets overwhelmed and undermanned opponents squishing Phoenix one 26 to 97. Missing 7 players four of them starters, the suns were on the tail end of a back to back at altitude. They have lost 7 of 8. Western Conference leading Denver has won 12 consecutive home games. In the nation's capital, Kyle Kuzma had a game winning three that negated a 38 point performance from the bull Zach lavine as the wizard's edge Chicago 197. John morant, with 38 points, the grizzlies taught me the spurs one 35 one 29. The Celtics usual duel were up to their old tricks as Boston took care of New Orleans. Celtics guard jaylen Brown scored a season high 41 as Boston defeated the New Orleans pelicans one 25 one 14. His teammate Jason tain amounted 31 points in ten rebounds, but Brown led the Celtics to their fourth straight victory. Pelicans guard CJ McCollum at 38 points in defeat, but started by hitting his first 6 threes. Crank it out ski, Boston. The other Wednesday winners in the association, the pistons, kings, nicks, and the bucks. College hoops, Marcus sasser had a career high 31 points, as top ranked Houston improved to 17 and one, they beat South Florida 83 77. Sasser says he felt the need to step up his game against a tough opponent. Just being a senior on the team being a leader. I kind of didn't see it all, you know? I seen the momentum that they had. When you got good teammates, that really just trust you with the ball. I feel like you can change the game. You don't do nothing but really get you confident. Well, Mark Jackson didn't practice Wednesday, leaving his start against Cincinnati this weekend in doubt, he's been sidelined since week 13 with the knee injury. Four games in the NHL travelers connect me with a hat trick to lead the flyers to a 5 three win over Washington, Edmonton beat Anaheim 6 two, while the kings and the Maple Leafs, were the other winners. I'm John leathery. AP sports.

Tape Notes
"83%" Discussed on Tape Notes
"So that is California from screen violence. I'm conscious that Lauren has another appointment, so our two questions that we ask everybody. One is a technical question about a favorite piece of kit, and the other is an advice question about whether you have any advice that you would want to pass on or have had advice past to you that you would like to pass on. And it seems to me that maybe the tech question might have more to do with healthy with that. And but you, Laura and might have some amazing advice to parcel. I mean, I'm very bad at taking my own advice, so I'm not sure if I ever do this, but yeah, I don't know, I guess the main advice I would ever give somebody is just trusting your gut on certain things and putting in the time and putting in the errors so that you know you know enough about your part of the craft that you can feel as confident as you can discussing that. And for me with the lyrics, I'm like, it is all the time that goes in behind the scenes that leads to the final set of things. It's the reading. It's the writing. It's the pondering it. It's the going on a long walk. I'm trying to think about what could be better than that verb or that line. And I guess trusting that that's just the process. And I read something that Nick Cave said once where he was like, when he thinks about writers block, he doesn't want to think about the words not coming. He has come to think about it as the worst just haven't arrived yet. And I think that that I will tell him somebody much wiser and smarter than me and that's kind of how I like to try and think about it. No, at least. Yeah, yeah. That's great. Insight, I think. Thank you so much for all the time. You've put in today as well, really appreciate it and it's been absolutely fascinating. So I will leave the tech questions with the same. If you need to disappear, then you can disappear. And so Martin and Ian, tech guys. Thank you guys. Do you have a favorite piece of kit? We like to refer to each other as Nigel when we're in tech mode. I was thinking about this today. The answer to this question probably changes all the time, but I was thinking about this today and that the universal audio came out with a piece of kit called ox box, which is like, it's not like it's not like an amp modeler, but it's like a speaker and microphone modeler so you get a tube amp and then you plug the speaker output from the tube amp into the aux box. And it just saves you all the hassle of making up speakers and getting the room sound and ray and bothering about neighbors that are and you can have it completely silent. And the cabin emulation is absolutely amazing. You can choose from so many different types of speakers and different types of makes and the positioning of them and the EQ and it's got some nice universal audio outboard stuff in there like a plate reverb and 1176 compressor and a bunch of other stuff. But yeah, just as a tool, I don't even know if it's being particularly well. Like if it's sold that well or if they're ever gonna make a version two of it, but it just to me is like a really like a job that needed to be done and they did it exactly. Right. And it's been so useful, particularly for me in the course of making screen violence because I was recording from a Roman my house, so when my partner was asleep, you know, because of the times we would work crazy times and I wouldn't want to be making up I really liked the fire would probably have a partner anymore. Good point. What about you, Nigel? I mean, Martin. This is like the hardest question in the world. And I'm so ADD that probably changes once a week. But I'm gonna go like, there's an island instead of just like wow I'm enjoying and see the journal one O 6. Not the sex difference, which I love and it's right there, but particularly the general one O 6 because it was the first synthesizer that I ever really bonded with. Like the first hardware synthesizer the ever learned type to work properly. And if you listen back to the first church's album, you hear those big general pads, those sounds, the big journal bases. Those sounds in particular were responsible for unlocking a whole new area of my brain and creativity. And a whole new way of writing music in a whole new way of hearing music that were so inspirational that never had the one O 6 and the 16 right next to each other in the studio would be and I'll never be without either of them because they are like the cornerstone of what I represent as a right arm as I sent the player as a producer. And it's funny over the years because I've gone on a place to show the others. I won't say the names, but like the biggest thing you can think of, this person has like a complex of studios and all of them have a journal. They don't have any hardware synthesizers. Every room in the place there's a journal and I was like, oh, wow. Other people must have connected with us in the same way. And there's something so tactile and immediate and just huge about the way that things are and so if you're trying to buy a synth and you'll want to get an making music on the synthesizer, start with the channel, then get them all..

790 KABC
"83%" Discussed on 790 KABC
"83 year Olds rape conviction was overturned by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. His lawyer argued that the previous rape accusers should not have been allowed to testify. The attorney also insisted there was a previous non prosecution agreement with another. Prosecutor. Officials confirm more bodies have been recovered at the site of the South Florida condo collapse. We've now recovered for additional victims. The number of deceased is at 16. That's Miami Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine. Carver President Joe Biden says the threat of wildfires in the Western US is as severe as it's ever been. We know this is, uh This is becoming a regular cycle and we know it's getting worse. Speaking with Cabinet officials and governors, Biden said extreme heat and drought is getting worse While the government is playing catch up, he said, there must be a whole of government response to prepare and make sure no corners are cut when managing wildfires Biden and says fires are not a partisan issue. Former President Donald Trump says Democrats are acting as roadblocks in stopping illegal immigration. We built almost 500 miles of wall despite 2.5 years of lawsuits, litigation started by Congress, Nancy Pelosi in the Congo. They sued us for everything. And we won the suits and we started. New York Prosecutors are expected to file criminal charges against the Trump Organization tomorrow afternoon. Two representatives from the Trump Organization been told to expect charges to be filed around two P.m. Eastern. Earlier this week, the Manhattan district attorney's office eluded that any charges will be connected to tax related conduct. Law enforcement officials are not confirming the timing, and it's not clear if charges will be filed against individuals, namely former Trump Organization CFO. Alan Weiss, Alberg Weisberg allegedly avoided paying taxes in exchange for benefits such as an apartment I'm Michael Kastner, former secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, his dad. His family says. The man who served in that role under two presidents died at the age of 88 in New Mexico. Rumsfeld was a GOP congressmen before serving in the Ford administration. His most notable and controversial position was as George W. Bush's secretary of defense during the Iraq war on Wall Street. The major market.

Special Conditions - A Pokémon TCG Podcast
"83%" Discussed on Special Conditions - A Pokémon TCG Podcast
"All right just wanted to kiss an additional shadow with nat acre. Thank you guys so much. Your support means the world to us. Definitely we wouldn't be here today without you. And i can't wait to open my pack battle-kit onstream tomorrow super hyped on that. Hopefully i can do well in madame. I'm trying and i'm going to do another one. The following tuesday the eighteenth. I believe it is. I don't know maybe it's the eighteenth. Hopefully eighteenth eleven. am eastern has. Missed it if you're listening to this right now but you can always go back and watch and see what happens. Yeah absolutely. i think i'm going to open up. Either shining fades or hidden face. I dunno afterwards. So who knows who knows but you do. They sent us over some battle. Styles is it. I'm going to go first. Okay because you open so many champions path. I was very jealous. I mean only one that mattered though. Yeah yeah all right. Code cart is dp. Four x lt q. Why nine l. for bc again. Let us know what she got. Just let us know. I'm always curious steal energy. Earn a vitality booth alum brooks ish. Remarried foment galeria in slow. Poke minke horsey reverse hollow is really coli in a hollow chair. I don't actually have this card at all. Oneida open to. I've opened three booster boxes. And i have yet to see sharon or chair them. Sorry i'm yeah it's simple hollow but i didn't have it so excited is it. Which version is it. Oh it's the sunny day one okay cool. Yeah it's got an ability called spring bloom as often as you like doing return. You may attach a grass energy card from your hand to one of your pokemon that doesn't have a robot so pokemon v or pokemon gajah.

Special Conditions - A Pokémon TCG Podcast
"83%" Discussed on Special Conditions - A Pokémon TCG Podcast
"Or she fou- v. max. It sounds like you want to talk about milk tank. Oh i always want to talk about melting a. Hey we're gonna get into the art of the week. Which is mill tank. Milk cow pokemon It couldn't have been the chocolate milk. Cow pokemon no. It couldn't have been the almond milk. Pok cow pokemon definitely come on the milk. Yeah so there. Were twelve choices This wasn't really hard to decide. In my opinion okay There was a lot of them that were kind of like. But we're going to start with lots of choose from like i don't even yeah. There was twelve. Okay okay so a decent amount One was you know. I've never seen it before. But it also wasn't that great of art so i apologize that the other Nine couldn't make it but is what it is. at first one is from wonders. It's got milk tank. Just kinda basking in the sun Laying on its back when you'd never see an actual cow do know. I wish they would lay down on their back. Yeah not clearly just enjoying itself right living. It's best life it really is. It really makes you feel like warm and fuzzy because it feels like you're basking in the sun with it It's very simple image. It's just it's kind of like making a snow angel in In the business makes you happy man. Yeah exactly. Can i ask you a question about the car though. Yeah nex was named says level. Thirty two What does the level thirty to me. I don't remember seeing those kind of levels on cards before. Yeah so that that's just it's it's it's strength in the card with the heart gold. Silver series They started putting the levels there. Okay and then. They dropped it after that. Yep yep they do you know why did they realize it was. And it's definitely something that i should look into. I thought you were gonna. I thought you were going to ask me about the great out attack there. Oh the healing milk. Yeah it wa- it so it it has like a shadow means so you don't need to pay for that attack okay. Gotcha 'cause flipped to coins for each heads removed three damage counters from one of your pokemon. Now they don't have anything on it right it. Just it's just there. I believe it's a shadow still or it's it's actually like a a circle dot that's there but it's great out it's not it doesn't look like it's like an empty looks like a moon. Yeah it's weird all right next up. We've got from the calo starter. It is built tank again living. It's best life Laying sideways in like a the only way to describe it as like a sexy pose. Pay me like Yes yes yes. French ladies titanic seen. yes yeah. it's a beautiful bill. Plu sky in the background. It's sitting in a field again and this guy is closed. But it's got a three leaf clover on its forehead. Yeah earned its nose not for.

Special Conditions - A Pokémon TCG Podcast
"83%" Discussed on Special Conditions - A Pokémon TCG Podcast
"Swag lake t shirts hoodies coffee mugs. And more back to you at him all right. Thanks for that josh. Appreciate it as always carter the week this week or she food v. max to rapid strike eighty eight out of one sixty three from bell styles literature. Such a visitor. This is such an awesome looking card. I love both the v. Maxes just their style like the the the stream of wind behind them. It looks awesome. They got their fighting stances. They look amazing they evolve from rapids regular regular you know or she v or regular her she rapid or single strike but they have all to one but yeah. This thing is an evolution. It's got three hundred and thirty points. It's a fighting type as usual For one fighting gale thrust thirty damage if this pokomo moved from your bench to the act spot the stern the subject as an an additional hundred twenty twenty more damage. That's one hundred fifty damage for one energy and you can play switches. You can play scoop up nets for whatever pokemon. You have an active. There's so many ways to get this thing into the active. It's almost like enough to get you sick. Don't don't get sick. Keep that number in mind. That's that's one hundred and fifty for one energy. Okay got it for two fighting's colas it does gee max. Rapid flow discard all energy attached to this pokemon. This attack one hundred twenty damage to two of your opponent's pokemon. Okay what so. What is one hundred and twenty plus one hundred fifty hundred twenty plus one hundred fifty. That's two hundred and seventy adam. How much points do most tag team have. Two hundred seventy adam we right there. And then if it's not if it's a pokemon that has an additional ten more points like palca you play something like exude in your claims scoop up net so you play down that you get the damage where it needs to be and then you're taking three prize.

Special Conditions - A Pokémon TCG Podcast
"83%" Discussed on Special Conditions - A Pokémon TCG Podcast
"Hundred and sixty dollars almost like almost too. You can pay almost two hundred dollars for these like it doesn't reflexive adam. Yes especially asks. Definitely cheaper on there but Sure sure sure. I mean the promos looked so nice though they really do and It puts the normal hollow to shame. Yeah at act like it's so fierce that attacking like wow That's actually a scarier. Pokemon i imagine it to be yes. Looks like a the remember the first resident evil game those dogs trump through the windows. Oh my gosh. She has what it looks like on that card. That data that is that is with horns of course but before we get into the players cup four update from a self speaking of battle styles. I have a battle styles. pack. I wanna open heard. You had some other pacts that you wanted to open the some steam siege. Oh my goodness well. I'm to open this rope. And then we'll get into your steve. I'm so excited it's siege. Twenty twenty at him. Okay so Code cart is h. y. seven c q. l. to q. G. l. y. T t. good luck good luck. Everybody all right grass energy you earn vitality buffalo galeria mr mime ball toy mine. Fu patrie sue teh pig my reverse is cockle in a rare bolton. Okay steve's each time. Adam path your favorite favors my hype you were when these came out and you loved him. You absolutely love i did i did. I was so excited. For lou. cario built a deck and the net card wasn't very good. Yes Kadar dwi l. r. p. x. x. Q y are six w nine. Good luck to all you. Wonderful beautiful people out there. We have white energy pokemon center lady. Vicini cavu trobisch potion gillian balloon. Nicot metropolis reverse hollow mala mar and a hollow professors research. It's almost like i saw that coming. Yeah no it's easy to predict flip a coin and one of them is probably going to be professors. I can't wait till you pull a sentence gorge ago while maybe an i never hit the champ lotto like everybody else did. I don't know why. But that that card i did not pull very much of k. g. c. six in seven x q r h. Two our q so good luck out there. We have blue energy had turned milo. Great ball had tina swab lou scraggy cavanna glaring zigzag soon reverse hollow professors research and much chance Just like that call him. Go three three with garbage packs. Listen i open three on instagram today. From impact and they were all just normal. It's so bad. Well that was from shining feats still i was like i'm gonna keep opening until i get a shiny. Nope nope nope. Cgp to be p. y. b. k. Good luck everybody. We have purple energy field stadium. Lee parred bead role e. coli sizzler feed purloin scraggy. Poke of all reverse allah pokemon center lady. Anda galeria obsta..

Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"83%" Discussed on Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"Me on Twitter at think angel as well with some more personable musings that might talk about video games or music that I like. I also make music on my SoundCloud, which is also think angel. So if you want to check out the music they produce, which is not something you would bump at the club, but kind of experimental ambient music that's kind of what I like to produce. You can check that out as well. That is awesome. I'm going to do that, man. You have to only place them your stuff. You watch my videos, some of them have that music. Oh, nice, nice. Yeah, I want to check out the YouTube. I encourage everybody else to listen to to check out YouTube because it sounds like you have a shit ton of information on there. Well, I really appreciate it, and I really enjoyed this conversation. I'm glad we were able to make it happen. Yeah, me too. I'm really glad we could too. I do appreciate it. And this is actually special for us too. She didn't say much, but it's not very often that she gets to attend the actual interview. She does the intros with me, but not the interview. So this is good that we got her on here too as well. All right, brother, we sure appreciate it, man. I really appreciate it too. I'm higher peaks, and you've just listened to the dirt show. If you liked this episode, please like, share, comment, and go to Oregon rooted dot com where you can subscribe to us on your favorite platform, like iTunes, Pandora, or Spotify, also check us out on our YouTube for videos and IG, Facebook, and Twitter for all our updates. Thank you for listening.

Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"83%" Discussed on Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"An exam, which is the excess shed. And when they do that, that stuff will get stuck all over your buds. 8th is especially because it will produce that honeydew and then the exu VM will get stuck in adhered to the that's one way you can find them, which is kind of nice, but you're right, definitely. This is just disgusting. All of it. And then ants like to harvest that sweet stuff that they exceed. Oh, just gross. Squish. If people don't know, that's one thing. If you see ants on your plants that I would start looking for aphids two and wondering why those ants are on your plants and get that under control because a lot of times those ants will harvest those bad boys. You don't want them in your pants or on your plants. No, no pants, no plants. With that said though, and I had to ask this with the aphids. These things are out of control. What do you think is the best method or methods to deal with these guys? I mean, you have any advice at all for him. Yeah, I do. The main thing that you can do, the best prophylactic that you have is to scale your crop is to constantly be aware of what in on and around your crop because getting them early is the major thing that in my opinion going to lead to the best success. If you don't crop scale at all, then you're really just unaware of anything that's going on. And there's no way for you to react rapidly, which is the second thing you should do. So the first thing is to be aware in the second thing is to rapidly react and hopefully you already have an IPM strategy that geared towards affecting them. Hopefully, you already have supplies, some sort of chemical agent or a biological agent that's on tap that you can deploy quickly. If you have to wait for or if the order it and then receive it, maybe it'll take a week or two or whatever. Especially right now when supplies are, you know, spy lands are kind of hurt for various reasons. That can be very difficult. Or maybe you live in a place where it's very hard for you to get your own mail. You know what I mean? So those are the two big things to be aware of it when it immediately happens and then attack it immediately. And then the third question is, well, then what do you do to attack it immediately? Well, I like to use for biocontrols anyways. I like to use lacewing larvae a lot. There are a very wasp that go after aphids and candidacy with in particular. I have, again, like I mentioned, I have a petch primer on the candidacy. And I do go over some of the bio control agents that work against it. I like blueberry bastiano a lot too, which is an end to a pathogenic fungus. And it feeds on tons of different stock by the insects, and aphids are one of them. And so that can be very useful if you can get direct application onto them. There are some stuff against and horticultural oils that work well against them as well. I'm a big fan of using like various products that have like botanical oils, my kind of a thing your soybean oils your peppermint oil is not everything. But like we said earlier, I'd be careful because you don't necessarily know what goes into those compounds, especially if they're like fish for 25 50. 25 beef has that don't need to be regulated. On the one hand, it's great because you can use them in a lot of context and another way it's not so great because they're unregulated and you don't know what's in them. And so that's kind of the dichotomy that you have to make a confession about. Also, you know, there are other controls that are not biochemical. You can use heavily pruned the plant to think you mentioned that earlier and that's also very helpful because they're less surface area for the plant and for the pests that exist on. And also easier to get coverage that way. And you can also heavily prune the plant or drop a whole plant. Like if you have just one plant with candida safe it or something, I mean, it might be the financially and logistically more intelligent move to just destroy that plant. Sure. Put that plant, put that in a bag, feel that bag, get rid of it. But, you know, your crops getting will inform you about that mostly. Yeah. Yeah, absolutely. And that can be a tough decision I imagine, depending on depending on how the scale of the operation or whatever. Because I know even for myself, I say 12 plants going and I lose one, that's a heartbreak. I was just thinking of cooking mirrors too. Yeah, well, yeah, and that's the other thing too that was kind of in the top of my mind is, right? Yeah, there's a farm that we have up north towards Portland that relies totally on biocontrols. And they use everything from ladybugs to they're really hot on this kooka Maris. Is that how you say that? Ku camares? Cut camaras. However you want, man. All right. Okay, well if you want to ask, but since you asked, Isaac humorous. I hear a lot of people take kuka merit, and I think that's even more musical. So that's fine. It makes me want to sing the song actually as soon as I heard it. What is that? I say kuka meri sits in an old pine tree. What is that original song? Chicka berry or whatever the bird? Okay. I don't remember. It was a song from school that I used to sing. Apparently, I wish I could have heard that. Cucumber. Cuckoo? Yeah, I don't know. Barry? Maybe. I don't remember it. I don't remember. I always say cook mirror sits in an old pine tree. Well, I'll tell you. So one of the things I had told you is thrips around here are freaking, they're like, they're like the staple. They're like the milk and bread of the insect world in our area. And kuka meris, we used last year because this farm I was talking about. They rely on that totally. And it's been successful. They had to first year was real tough because the farm itself was basically out of business nursery, not out of business, just the nursery didn't use that whole land anymore. Is she basically she had she had given it to him to use for their cropping? So it already had its own bug problems because of the fact that they had flowers and plants and stuff like that as a nursery landscaping and so they already had their bug problems. So they spent the first couple of years hating it because they did have to get it under control with some chemical agents initially like with the greenhouses, but then the next year they completely relied on these biocontrols and what do you say Q? There we go. They use that and had very good success and actually they gave me some sachets. Is that how you say that? Sashes, sachets? Sachets. Sassy, okay. Gave me some of those and I hung them for my plants, and they worked wonderful. They got rid of the thrips fairly quickly, no thrips after that, and it lasted pretty much all season. And what I wanted to ask you about directly is they had said that you can actually successfully inoculate greenhouses and stuff with those cocoons. And then actually have them potentially survive year or two and actually stick around and not have to treat. And apparently that's what's happened. They've been able to do that and been successful. And the song is kookaburra sits in an old gum tree. Okay. It's from, it's from Illinois. It's from elementary school. So is that true? Can you inoculate with things like that, possibly in smaller areas like greenhouses and tents even than maybe have the population survived for a while? Absolutely. It's a statistics game mostly. What you're trying what

Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"83%" Discussed on Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"The fact that monarch butterflies used to be really plentiful around here and noticed that a lot of the milkweed is all infected by that. Well, I think there's less and less butterflies and there's just more and more aphids in those things. And people also plant tropical milkweed and various other milkweeds that aren't tuned into the native kind of seasons here. And so that can cause sort of problems where when populations of monarchs are out of sync or something, well, rather, I guess the more fundamental problem is that you can cause issues where milkweed that doesn't have like the same seasonal synchronization as the monarchs and other pets means that they can be haven for the past outside of the normal time. This is a problem because then what happens is that these tropical or exotic milkweed that can be a host for the native well, if you want to call them past the herbivores, I should say, the monarch butterflies and the milkweed apes and I kind of a thing. Well, then they can feed on these other weeds and then when it is the monarch time period, well, then the apes can just travel into the other milkweed that the monarchs more commonly feed on. And they've already got this sort of primer of a population that will compete with the monarchs and so you have this competition problem, ecologically. Yeah. Okay. I wonder if mine was a tropical milkweed. Yeah, we need bugs on them. No, we planted some milkweed that I don't know what kind it is. It's way different than your regular milkweed. It's much larger. It's pretty interesting. But not a milkweed expert, so I wouldn't be able to tell you. If I had a key and I could see the planet probably could. But yeah, I mean, I don't want to make anyone feel bad, but that is like one of the many myriad considerations like people have to make. And another thing that I don't like to I don't think it's healthy or helpful for people who want to help the ecology to kind of talk down or tell them that, oh, you planted this wrong plant. You're going to destroy you and disrupt the environment, kill everything and it's not helpful for anyone. But at the same time, that's kind of the sort of irony of the situation is that everything here is so multifaceted, IPM is super multifaceted. And that's one of the many considerations you have to make is this plant going to be a problem. Do I care more about growing the plant because it looks a certain way? Then I do about how it will affect the natural ecology. There's a citrus pest called the Asian citrus. It's ravaging the citriculture in Florida, something like 70 or 80% of the culture is destroyed in the last like four or 5 years because of it. And it's also in California. And it transmits this pathogen called a phytoplasma. And it's called Liberia bacteria within that genus. And when people grow citrus in their residential areas, they can also vector the pest and also the pathogen. So kind of the dilemma that crops up is that, well, should residential people be allowed to grow these plants when they can basically, when there's no government over regulation or anything like that. And it's kind of a right issue, right? I think that people should be able to grow what they want. But at the same time, it's kind of like, well, if you allow these people to grow these plants, eventually you're just going to have to tear out all the orchards because up until recently, I should say, it deserves no treatment for the pathogen. You got the pathogen, it would gnarly trees in a growing season, and then all of your Orchard will be dead. And the ripe fruit will become unripe. Leaves would fall branches to become withered, is really bad. And so like, yeah, so it's kind of like, what do you do in those situations with the right thing to do? It's kind of up in the air. You're pointing out a lot of things because I haven't thought about that. We are surrounded by a lot of orchards, like a lot, a lot of orchards, grapes, peaches, pears, what else do we got around us? How much it vineyards? We've got vineyards, cannabis. We got all that, and I hadn't really thought about that. I know I see other stuff in town, like I see prune, plum trees, and I see, you know, I see other fruits in town, but I hadn't thought about that it could affect the trees or the crops that are out there. And vice versa. And vice versa. Yeah. Sure cannabis is brought in a lot of stuff. Like the aphids that yeah. Perhaps, yeah. And circling back to what you were saying, Craig, about how having certain plants around can have the sort of issue, rice, root aphid, loves stone fruit. So some of the plants that you mentioned, like some of the Orchard plants, they would definitely host alternate between grasses and stone fruit, but they also happen to feed on cannabis as well, which isn't really fit in those two categories. So sometimes even if you have all this information about what they tend to go for, sometimes they just go after something else. And nobody could have predicted that. Sure, sure. And it seems like they could probably cross over to new things too, right? Like the potatoes to their steak. They just needed more courses for their meal. They're tired of one meal. Yeah. One kind of. Actually, aphids actually are very successful specifically because of that. It's because they can adapt all these generalists and to be able to adapt to various plant species and you get some species wherein they have like two main host groups that are really disparate. They're not really related very much. And kind of an evolutionary quandary. How did that happen? How did you adapt to this kind of plant? And these groups and these groups and they're totally very different. And I guess one of the theories is because of just mass extinction, but they were able to eke out an existence and kind of one colony gets a little bit established, maybe the plant isn't totally for whatever various reasons it's not like they're not able to reproduce very well or there's like toxins they're not accustomed to dealing with or there's symbionts aren't able to deal with them. But then over time, they get a little bit better and a little bit better. The same thing for spider mites to spots better. They're on over 1200 different plants. But those populations are able to adapt over many, many, many generations. And then you have subpopulations that do feed on the plants very well. And so that happens too. Well, and with spider mites and aphids, it seems like those many, many, many, many, many, many generations happen in about ten minutes. Right, yeah. You know what I mean? They can produce at a rate that's unheard of and so those many generations doesn't take too long. I do have a question. Okay, so we had an example with a farm that we went and toured where one of their hundreds and hundreds of cannabis plants was completely infested in aphids. None of the surrounding plants was. Do you remember that? Was that out in yes. Yes, out in Weimar. We won't use names. No. But it was really crazy because we saw the plant was like all the bottom branches were covered in aphids and there was plants that were damn near touching it and there was no aphids on it whatsoever, but it was the same strain. Just it was not touching the other plants. Yeah, that was odd. That does happen. It does happen. Sometimes it's because the aphids are just not incensed to go somewhere else. It could be the season that you're in. I have confidence that over enough time period the aphids do their move to another plant or move to the surrounding plants because. The way that aphids test that if a plant is viable or not, there's a lot of cues, they do use their eyesight somewhat. But they also use chemical cues, they might avoid areas where they might pick up scents that they associate with predators or parasites or microbes even. The PA fid, student recite from T cell is very famous for maybe not very famous, but there's some research that shows that they were able to avoid picking up a pseudomonas bacteria if I remember right because the pseudomonas produced a compound that fluoresces. Very, very at a very eastern spectrum of light. I can't remember exactly what it was. We don't see it. But everything with UV, regardless, the insect was able to detect this sort of like, I think it was like UV reflection that we, humans can't visually see. And so they would avoid those plants because those bacteria could infect them and cause them problems. So and then they also take test bites. They drop their style into the plant. And they go fishing around. Yeah. Which is actually problematic because aphids account for like 50% of plant virus vectors. And so yeah, and so they only need to take a little sip, a little sippy sip. And then the virus gets transmitted. So even if you're not that's the thing, even if it's not a host plant, it might still be able to vector this virus, whatever that virus might be. Okay. Okay. So dirty. My question is then, is that if a plant gets infected with aphids, we're not even going to say a heavy infection, just a light, they just got on the planet. And they transfer a virus. Depending on when that plants in a cycle and what kind of virus, you might not even know that virus is there. By harvest, right? Harvest a plant that has a virus not even know it. That's definitely a possibility, especially if it's at the very end. A lot of the viruses, I mean, so most plant viruses are not asymptomatic. Some plant viruses are, and cannabis even has a cannabis cryptic virus, which I have a pet primer video about on my YouTube channel. And it's asymptomatic. And we don't really know a lot about it, for a lot of obvious reasons. But most viruses are not like this. There's a couple of cannabis viruses in particular that since we're on the topic, I just want people to be aware of. I always talk about them. Because the cannabis birome is very understudied right now and it's happening a lot in Colorado and Israel and I'm sure it's happening in places that are undocumented or unreported rather. And the first one is the beat curly top virus. So that was discovered actually it was discovered a few years ago, but it was confirmed like in 2019. And it was in Colorado and beat curly to have viruses vectored by a leaf hopper called the beat leaf hopper. And it's actually common virus in the consequence thing United States, but also in Africa. It's also in the Middle East. There's a few different strains of BC TV. And

Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"83%" Discussed on Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"Into the

Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"83%" Discussed on Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"Bad way to go. People often ask me, Matt, feel pain. Since you brought it up. And to be honest, it's kind of a philosophical question. That's easy for a lot of people to say, right? I'm not trying to like, you know, you're right. I do have some empathy for these organisms. So in fascinating with have you ever heard of the comic that I do morning breakfast cereal with the web comic? I have not. You might like it. So this guy, his name is daiquiri Weiner. This is last name. And his wife is an entomologist. And so some of his comics deal with insects or something really like ecology or nature. And I'm bringing it up because I actually have a printout of one of his comics. Where it's a professor and a woman, and he's like, do you like beetle? Great. That's what you'll spend the next 50 years killing. And then the caption that the biologists are weird. And it's true though. You like something a lot like insect, for example. What do we need you to do? Kill a bunch of them because they eat our crop. So that'd be good if you like the subject matter doesn't mean you're going to end up like facilitating that subject matter, if that makes sense. Yeah. Yeah, absolutely. I know. It's good to hear that. There's someone feels bad about it. Because like I said, cannabis farmers a lot of them just don't care. They just want them gone. But it's true. And I guess if you have a spiritual leaning towards Buddhism and stuff, that might be an issue as well. I think that the way that I look at it is that there are organisms in nature that they didn't affect things like competed with them, then they would also die in parish. So it's kind of an unfortunate reality of living on earth. That's how things have adapted. I have a video on my YouTube channel dental, where I go over the cannabis IPM ecology of the plant and the various herbivores that feed on it, particularly insects and pathogens and that kind of a thing. And I make the point that you have to look at that sort of origin ecology. You have to understand, well, how do these various symbioses occur the mutualism and also the parasitism and when you understand how that occurs at the microbial level of the insect level in the root in the stems and the leaves, are the sphere that rises through all of that, then you have a much more complete picture of what's going on. And I think the thing that I care the most about when it comes to using biocontrols or one of the things I care a lot about that's not related to cultivation success is just to apply them in a responsible way in the same way that you would want to responsibly apply chemical agents or things like that that they don't get out into the environment and cause havoc. Sure. Now, as a specialist, what is your best overall method of IPM? I mean, in general. Natural sprays and then follow up with. Some sort of predator bugs or what kind of basic program would you think or do you know is the best, the best option for the healthiest for cannabis, people are going to be using it as medicine. So. For me, so IPM the eye in IPM is most important. It's the integrated test management. And every situation is different, but it's really good to have its main tools in the toolbox as possible. And I like to break down IPM into like 5 more or less sort of like equilateral unit. So you have your physical controls, you have your chemical controls, your biological controls. And depending on what we're talking about, I kind of change how I use which words I use to sort of encompass these groups. But there's also environmental controls and genetic controls. So to me, it starts at the very beginning. What, what's your location? What's your environment going to be? A lot of people inherent inherent environment. So you don't necessarily get to choose all of the facets of your indoor facility or your outdoor grow, wherever that might be. So you don't always get a lot of control over that. But if you can control that, then that's really helpful. And then also what you choose to grow, what are the what's the pedigree? Does it have resistance towards certain things? Does it have tolerance towards certain things? Is it susceptible to other sorts of things? We don't really have that data with cannabis. A lot of people say, oh, this is resistant. Why? Well, because I had powdery milk do over here, and I didn't have powdery mildew over here. Their course resistant. And that's just not really strenuous enough of an observation to really prove. I don't think I would take that as evidence. That sort of a thing. And then after that, it becomes sort of a question of bios chemical agent. And also cultural controls. I don't think I said cultural controls. Those are like your processes, how you do things, your standard operating procedures, I know a Gerber grower that I've worked with for a long time. They were dealing with a problem where Gerber daisies, you probably seen them in bouquets. Yeah, we grow them. They're my favorite. Oh, you do. Yeah. Excellent. Yeah, so then this will be very when you'll know exactly what I'm saying. So the gerbera daisy grows out of The Crown, right? And when these people cut flowers companies, so when they harvest, they were harvesting very quickly. were leaving the heel of the stem of the flower kind of in The Crown. And then what would happen is that they were getting really, really good both synthetic rape, the plants were very verdant and lush and they were growing really well. And the stem, the heel of the stem, the trunk it would get infected by yeast. And there was a consultant that came over and told these folks that this was the case. And what I realized was that if we change how we harvested and we don't leave that infecting heal, then what would happen was that the yeast would infect the plant, of course. But the other thing that we would get is that these beetles would come in out of nowhere. And identified them as pineapple beetles and strawberry beetles, which are which I don't remember the latinate name up my head. But these two beetles are part of a group called need to do a day to do a D depending on how you are taught to pronounce these Latin phrases. And they're called pleasant SAP feeding beetles. And so they were attracted to the yeast that was fermenting the sugars on the plant. So you got a whole big problem. They saw the beetles, they thought the beetles were causing the infection, but in reality it was happening with the reverse. They used would affect the wound, and then the beetles would come feed on the yeast, feed on the decaying organic matter, and then they would move to other plants, and then they would actually cause the infestation to grow. And they would actually bite

Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"83%" Discussed on Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"There are four main orders of insects that are the most you could call them the most successful because they're very specious and there's the largest orders of insects that we have. So one of those orders is to lepidoptera and those are the moths and butterflies. And one of the adaptations that allowed them to be so successful is that they're smaller, at least a lot of them are. And the caterpillars start small and grow fast and they eat constantly. That is actually one of the adaptive traits that is considered to be one of the reasons why they're so good at what they do. Yeah, they eat constantly and they grow quickly. And they metamorphose, right? Yeah. They're part of a larger group of insects called the holometabola, or at least those one term for it. And that's just a fancy word for the insects that go from larva to pupa to adult. They have that complete metamorphosis going on. And so a lot of caterpillars have adapted to either creating a shelter when they feed or hiding or they drop off of a plant and then they move to another plant to avoid predation. It just kind of as a matter of course. So there's a lot of different behavioral adaptations that make caterpillars really difficult. And one of the ones cannabis growers are most familiar with is that they might bore into the stem or bore into the flower material where it's very nice and cozy and warm and full of trichomes and other planets. You know, it's a funny part. Well, one thing I gotta say is I got nice taste in property because they go for the biggest bugs. They seem to find the biggest best buds and like, you know, hey, this is a nice three story mansion. I'm just gonna take up home here. They could treat it a little better. They could clean up after themselves. If they did, they wouldn't be as much of a problem. Yeah. Yeah, that dude, that's very true. Honestly. Right where they live. I don't know. You would think or at least I would think even from like an ecological perspective that that's usually not great for an animal to eat where defecate. Usually that's a great way to get fecal oral route pathogen, but apparently it's not the case here. And that's sort of unfortunate, really. Aberrant usually. Yeah, and what frustrates me is I do scope for them a lot. I know they're small in a lot of times I do find them when they're small, but it's like looking at them every day, every day. They just, they must be hiding out. Do they come out at night or when do they come out and they're most active? So technically, all butterflies are actually derivatives of moms. If you want to be technical about it, but most so mods usually are active at night. They usually lay a ton of eggs like hundreds of eggs is very common for a lot of these best species. And even non pet species. So they come out the moth comes. It's either using the moon to navigate or there's a light source that attracts it or there's a pheromone that attracted or something attracted to the area. Or possibly just happened to eat clothes out of its pupa from this area. And it's moving around and finds a suitable plant. And they go on that plant. And then those 300 or so eggs, some percentage of them might be dead already, or there might be some sort of problem with them, and they might die. But the rest of them do survive and then they are smaller caterpillars that can feed and feed on these plants kind of more innocuously. And then as they grow older, they might displace them those behaviors I was talking about like sewing the leaves together with silk or binding them together I should say. To make it a little shelter. So when you apply something like bacillus thuringiensis or blueberry bastiano like a Botanic garden or something like that, they don't make contact with the target. And so they are way less effective. And they might not even make the caterpillar rather might not even make contact with the tissue that has the microbial pathogen in or around it or on or around it. So that's a problem for any grower because that's the whole way it works. Yeah. Now, just so I'm clear on the BT doesn't bacillus, the BT doesn't it. It doesn't have to have contact with the caterpillar. Or can the caterpillar eat material later and still the caterpillar can eat the material later and it can still be problematic. The main thing about the bacillus that is lethal to the organism is that it produces these things called cry proteins. Cry proteins are what are actually lethal to the organism. Okay. They're the toxic thing. And so you might get a product that is just cry protein, you might get a product that is the living bacillus lung cancer. And there's different kinds of bacillus genesis for different paths, both the cursed, the population, or isolate. There's other ones too. But that's one of the big ones that people use for lepidoptera. So malls and butterflies and that kind of a thing. And there are also other microbes like enterobacter that produces chitinase and that catenated breaks down the chiton that makes up their paratrooper matrix or their exoskeleton and a bunch of other things. And basically causes sepsis in the intestinal gut of the caterpillar and obviously that's not good. So there's a bunch of different ways that microbes can be useful in that way. We've very bastiani worked a lot better in my opinion if it's ingested, but if you get enough spores on contact, you can also sort of infect the organism by penetrating the cuticular layer and the exoskeleton and then just invade the body and it's a bad way to go, but it works out really well for us. So basically eats it away. That's a skeleton. Yeah, that's basically it. Okay. Okay. So now I detect a little empathy in your voice. Yeah, it's years of practice. Oh no. I just meant in a lot of times people, I mean, even people listening to this podcast, it's going to be, you know, they're going to be like just screw the bugs and kill them. But on the flip side, I just hear the empathy in your voice. You're like, well, it's a bad way to go. And I just never thought of it that way. It is probably a pretty

Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"83%" Discussed on Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"Think that sort of arthropods in general, you're sort of exoskeleton or such organisms like when you look at them. They're very alien from us, with the exoskeleton. You know, I'm very cognizant of the time period that I grew up. I grew up in the 90s and early 2000s. For decades and decades before my own birth, there's research about these organisms that span hundreds of years and sort of media depictions of aliens with ecto skeletons and if you've seen a blinking on the Starship Troopers, you know, very, very classic video game metroid growing up. I loved and still do love the metroid series of video games about bounty hunters Thomas and Ron going around killing the Beijing space pirates and little metroids that kind of look like they even used the terminology like larvae and adults and all this sort of a thing. And they kind of like transform a metamorphosed over time. So I think there were a lot of media depictions of sort of fictional creatures that kind of were similar that also attracted my interest as a child, but also I think that they're kind of interesting from that perspective in general. There's no alien to our own physiology. And they're also one of the most predominant animals on earth. So it's not hard to come across them and look into them, whereas a mammal or something is usually one, a lot more work. And two, a lot bigger or something like this. Yeah, and like the old Godzilla, the old black and white godzillas weren't half those monsters insects. No? Yeah, like mothra and that sort of thing. And where did Godzilla come from? Godzilla is a Japanese product. Japanese culture I found is a very big it was a very big sort of causeway into that sort of like I got to live in those fictional world where the arthropods are even more impressive. And I feel like a lot of Japanese culture is very accepting and encouraging of those sorts of observations. I couldn't tell you exactly why, but I guess it's worked out that way. Sure, sure. I think there's been a lot of things that have used in sexist monsters. I personally can't stand spiders, you know. I can do anything but spiders. But yeah. So when it comes to pests in cannabis, I hate to get right into it, but I'm really interested. I imagine you have a lot of people questioning that, don't you? Questioning what? Just bugs, insects, problems with cannabis, how to treat it. Absolutely. Absolutely. And I had noticed in a post today from, I think it was either today or yesterday that you had put, maybe it's a couple days ago that you would put that you felt that was almost probably necessary to get rid of certain plants in certain areas or certain gardens or however because of what they do draw in. Absolutely. Yeah, so from a from a biosecurity perspective, it makes less than two, and every context is different. I like to use the phrase cultivation context. Every cultivation context is different. But a lot of cases. If you have plants on your property, or also outside of your property, but you can't really do much about that usually. But inside of your property, at least you can control. And there's a lot of plans that if you're not maintaining them in some way, because it's okay to have other plants that aren't part of your crop. They can be banker plants. They can be planned to have some sort of other use. Maybe they have a business use, maybe they're for beautification or whatever the reason is. But if you're not maintaining them, if you're not affecting them, then they can really can be a haven for pest. And I think the post that you're referring to is the one where I thought some stolen a Negro in LA growing out of the asphalt, like it does. I've seen this very often. And it's just eking out this sort of unfortunate existence where it's pummeled by they had mealybug and a whole slew of spider mites as used by my colony webbing all over the leave. Elf and whitefly. So there were three major mites, but three major and very common pest organisms that were feeding on this plant. And it was very dilapidated, but it was still existing. And it was still able to produce fruit. And then seeds would come from there. But yeah, that's the thing. You really got to maintain your plants in your environment. Because all of the treatments you do in your crop won't matter if literally four or 5 meters from your door, which is not secured and sealed quite well. Those mice could just easily walk right in or root aphids or some other sort of past organisms. Gross. It's really gross looking. I'm looking at it right now. Yeah, we were looking at your post in that thing is just hammered. I mean, if for the listeners, if you go to his IG, you can actually see the post. And good to know it's called nightshade. All right. Yeah, yeah, Black Knight shave. It actually needed to Europe, which I usually think of as solanaceae being native to South America. Your tomatoes, your peppers, capsicum peppers. I guess there are other tobacco elsewhere, but yeah, this one's actually native to Eurasia. So fun fact. Yeah. Now, and it was hit with a slew of things and still seem to produce seed. It's still relief white fly. And some I don't even know what that word is. So at least in our region, we run into a lot of basically, it seems like strips seems to be pretty common. And this is referring to cannabis, but thrips, and then it seems like the thrips have backpacks and they're full of spider mites. Every time. It does feel that way, doesn't it? Every time I see a thrip, I'm like, did you bring your buddy the spider mite with you? Or, I don't know, but. And then caterpillars. Spider mites. And then you know, so over the years, I've pretty much gotten used to those, the thrips, the spider mites, p.m. stuff like that, which is not an insect issue, but all those issues that seem to cause problems. And out of all of it, it seems like the caterpillar wants to give me the most at all. I mean, spider mites are bad, but if you never let them get a hold, you know, it seems like it's okay, but caterpillars even if I use BT or anything like that, it seems like one or two or three always gets through and just destroys stuff. Yeah, a caterpillar is

Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"83%" Discussed on Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"We couldn't just stop there. This is too good. I know. The contractor and its personnel shall hold all information obtained under the DEA contract and the strictest confidence, the work they get too high. The work description says all information obtained shall be used only for performing this contract and shall not be divulged nor move may known in any manner except as necessary to perform this contract. Yeah, January 1st of next year expired 2026. Unless terminated soon. Getting high. I like how their armed guards will be present. What are you going to do? I mean busted and still that moldy weed or steal the duct tape? It sounds like some pretty bad stuff. It sounds like what they have us do when we have two waste out product. They want us to mix it with kitty litter, dirt. Right. They want to basically make it so it's not worth smoking. It makes it sound like that when they press it into the bricks, they press it with all sorts of stuff that will also burn. Such as duct tape, all that shit that I listed, all that stuff they mix with it, so also it doesn't seem appeasing to the people who are burning it. Sure, sure. Nope. I don't know. Sounds like they should have freaking straight up. They're like, bitch put it in there. Don't smoke it. Hazmat suits and respirators, if you ask me. Okay, so that gives you an idea how much fun they get to have out there. That'd be fun. I want to go. Where's our ticket? Man, well, I think actually if anybody listens to Rogan, I think he's been talking about starting up some sort of ranch like that where he's even going to have actual wasn't he talking with rod white said he could make it a cult. And have people actually live out there, you know? I think he's serious. I'd go move that, I don't think I'd move to Texas, but I'd move there. Certainly would be a place I would imagine just like Dave Chappelle here. He probably got the fucking he'd been talking to Dave chapelle. I know he's fans of him, so I'm sure they talk. You need a ranch too, man. Never, ever fucking have the money for the past. But gotta be comedians. It sounds like you have to be a comedian, but it sounds like they got the right idea. How about a weekend thing or you have mushroom tea and mushroom food? High enough and be a comedian. Mushroom food and cannabis food. All right, so also John Legend, we know he actually endorsed measure one ten for Oregon in one of his tweets, which is cool now, just so everybody knows there's two different initiatives on the ballot, which were boat and tonight. We have to have it in the not tonight. We're gonna do it in the morning. I'm like, no. In the morning, we're voting, sending it out 'cause we got two important ones. One O 9 is to legalize use of psychedelic mushrooms in a clinical setting, all right? That's the first step boat and then one ten is to decriminalize certain drug possessions, minor drug offenses, and switch over to treatment services. Without raising taxes. Yes. So all it's doing is saying we're not going to squat your life away. Can't miss one O 8. What's one way? Taxes on tobacco. Okay. We'll see. I'm all for that taxes. Oh, how odd that is. But I'm not a smoker. I'm not a smoker, so. And I know that secondhand of that could kill my kid a whole lot faster than secondhand cannabis. Yeah, sometimes I wonder if I'm not alive from all those years of alcohol abuse just from cannabis. And I don't know. Anyway. And psychedelics. So, but John Legend on Friday had endorsed this. So thank you, John. We appreciate it. And happy Halloween, by the way, everybody. And oh, thank you. Thank you. Happy Halloween. Fucked him up last weekend, you guys. I had him watch 31 while he was high on acid and two hits of acid. Yeah, which is something we're gonna have to talk about if you're a future episode. You know, on two hits of acid I had a profound experience. I was so. But yes, I do know because it's almost Halloween. It does, yes. And so in Halloween spirit, we've been watching movies all, you know, every year we watch scary movies all the way through October, and I'll tell you. More like I torture him. Well, I'll tell you by the end of October I do start to have nightmares sometimes. Also too, I did realize that 95% of my psychedelic trips are pretty good, sometimes I'll feel a little derail, but not a problem getting back. I'll tell you what though. That 31, that's what it was called. Rob zombie? Shout out. Rob Zombie, dude. You're kicking my own. Let's just say that I butted him right off that fucking cat rail. After about what seemed like eternity watching that movie, I freaking it was bringing our 45 minutes, but it did feel like really, really long. All I know is when I'm sober, I'm not nearly as in tune with things is when I'm on psychedelics. And then you wanted me to change it. But it worked. I couldn't get off that playlist. You wanted me to change it and I'm just like, nope, new handed you the remote because it was just, it was all scary movie playlist, because I was stuck on that, yeah. Well, Anna was high. So how the fuck am I supposed to change? And I'm like, nope, I'm gonna go in the same circle of the same movies, take it. Yeah, well, the vibe just is too, it's I'm too sensitive to vibes, and it was like this chainsaw was just getting to me. So I got derailed for a minute. Well, there was people that were laying on chainsaw. Yeah, it's just I can't handle it the same way. What's this work? It was heavy on my heart. And then we started up Schitt's Creek. Well, but then before, yeah, right before that I had my little profound experience, it was pretty cool. I enjoyed it, so. Yeah, it's been nice. Anyways, while we hit this later. Yeah, so happy Halloween, we're coming at the end of October. I hope everybody had a good harvest. I hope you trim in the shit out of your stuff. And also to our patrons. Thank you. For everything. You know, I actually was able to test, take just a little bit of the money and test squad cast out this month. So it is a step above just doing zoom or something simple like that. We need to over the Internet interviews, which we're doing a lot of now because of COVID, not really a lot of people really want to come into a closed space. Still, even. Especially someone else's home, usually it's not.

Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"83%" Discussed on Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"My fault, I nailed the grass. Nailed the grass. Neil deGrasse. Neil deGrasse. So. Maybe it was your front lawn sprinkled with some lemon. Oh, barely, barely. Not even lemon zest. Lemon slice. Now, here's the thing. We did let one go by chance because it really resisted the pressure and that was the sweet skunk and I'm glad we did it to let it go because in the last like four or 5 days it's really changed. It went from smell like a regular skunk. Now it just smells like not roadkill. It smells like fresh deaths going to me. Like when I was cutting it, it smelled like you just freshly hit it. It's got that kind of sweet or skunk smell. But definitely some rubber tire in there. Oh, real fresh. Like even the tires. There you go. Like you just got out from getting the brownie set of treads for your car. And you hit a smack right in the image. So I'm excited for that because you can't forget that story about those gunks. Oh yeah. Anyway. Have we probably did. I almost hit a family skunks. Yeah, we missed them all. It's because I lifted my feet and took my hands off the wheel. And closed my eyes and said, I'm really excited for that particular profile because it's kind of been lost. Because so many other things have come up skittles and the GMOs and the garlic cookies, same thing. The tropicana is starting with the tanginess stuff like that. All that kind of overshadowed that old school skunk. I know it's coming back. People are already searching for it. Donny burgers. Sure pot roast. The gassy pot roast, organic. So really excited for that one. Well done guys, thank you. We will be seeing you next year. I've always talked not down, but very not like supportive of cloning or clone, not cloning. Wrong, but clones in general, like bringing clones in. Yeah, mostly because we've had bad experience. Well, and most people do. Yes. But I'll tell you what, these guys are legit. Everything was ultra clean. There was not one bug on them. No. They were just great. In terms of we did get them there a little sensitive, like I had to harden them off in the middle of July. When it was fucking the hottest in the backyard, I swear to God, it was magnified. It's hard to harden off a plant from being indoors at a 100°. Yeah. So we did it. And our sun was straight up on it. Yeah, so next year we're going to get them on time, get them proper. All right, I think that's it. We did have organ Arcus I want to shout to him organ Arcus. I want to shout out to JB because he did have we did cross his, got some seeds that we just I'm pulling actually should have cut today. I won't do it tomorrow. I'm going to just hang that bad boy upside down and just collect shades. But we crossed the Epstein kit. Ripstein. Man, you keep changing it up on me. Well, because everybody's going to get offended by the Epstein, so we might as well call it the ripstein. Now it is the blissful wizard leaning Pheno bit Sarah thinks we should call it the Epstein cut because of anybody seen the documentary. The documentary they explain with the Epstein penis looks like. And it was a joke. Not on the show. He was very offended. No, meaning it was a big joke meaning that it went to like, oh my God, people started making fun of him. Oh, Epstein? Because of that. And he just looked like an egg. Scoffed. So the buds looked like the Epstein penis, I guess. So it's the Epstein cut. They were short and fat leaves, which not into color leaves. Like we've all seen in the caliphs. No, these were some fucking funky ass leaves. Yes. Anyways. The best part is we crossed a male and a female that had the same traits. I want to bring that out. You know, now it's calming down as it's Karen. It's starting to really smell like that pot roast smell. So I don't know if I don't think I'd change the terms much. I just think I haven't had those, I haven't grown those before, so it smelled really weird to me when it was fresh. Yeah. I'll know what to look for now, but I just, whatever. Shout out to you, JB. This shit's fire. Hopefully. We'll see. I haven't smoked it yet. We will find out. Okay, let's move on. That was a lot. All right, so let's go to the news. This is a big one that we just we have to bring us up first. I don't know if anybody's seen says DEA seeks contractor capable of burning four tons of marijuana per day. 5. The drug enforcement administration recently reached out for help burning at least. That's quote at least a thousand pounds of marijuana per hour for 8 hours straight. No comment? I gave you a window. I gave you a window. So does every smoke in it for sure. No, it's either all moldy, it's like the hemp growers. Throw it under a tart. Throw it under a tarp. Says every year DEA sees his millions of marijuana plants in literal tons of raw cannabis, which eventually end up being destroyed. The successful contractor in Arizona would be responsible for burning marijuana and other controlled substances seized as evidence in drug cases to a point where there are no detectable levels as measured by standard analytical methods of byproduct from the destruction process. Question do you think they burn the weed that was seized? From where our studio used to be? I don't know. That's a good question. That's a good question. Eventually it's going to end up somewhere. I don't know. I hope they burnt it by now. Because I know they didn't give it back to them. And that's old we now. You would think that well, it says and it would be responsible for burning other controlled substances. You would think they already got this problem figured out. Or maybe they just ended up with the contract ended with someone else, now they're looking for someone new. It doesn't say. It says the DA shall inspect the incinerator to ensure no drug residue remains. Just coated with fucking RSO. If you're burning that much weed wouldn't it, not leave resin? It would leave resin, not RSO. I was joking. But well, okay, incinerators, so I'm sure it's very, very hot, but maybe not, but it just seems like you'd have to, I don't know, burning all that oil up. Oh, it seems like the clouds smoke would be. I'm sure that there are shit tons of cloud smoke. Okay. Hold on. The drugs are usually tightly compressed bricks or bales. So they're making the brown frown again. No, this is the stuff that probably seems. Hold on in Mexico. It continues and are packaged in all sorts of materials, cardboard, wrapping paper, plastic wrap, aluminum foil packaging, duct tape, and derivatives, plastic evidence bags, grease, oil, and others contractors will be expected to burn that stuff too. Yeah, this one's like no poison. They are making freaking the brown frown again to burn it. They're just like, okay, just push this up into a bail. Throw it on in there. Oh, here we go. To avoid potential contact ties, there must be proper ventilation, and no smoke buildup will be allowed. Other mandates include closed circuit cameras that capture the entire process, which DEA reserves the right to access as well as background checks and regular drug tests of all personnel. It's shoving your head to big ass furniture. Armed DEA agents and contractors will be present during scheduled burns. The work is also very hush hush. So whoever gets the job shouldn't expect to regale Friends with stories of the latest large scale federal weed burning sets.

Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"83%" Discussed on Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"All right, welcome to the dirt show I'm higher peaks. And this is lady sativa. All right, we are mid swing harvest 2020. Here it is. Cropped over. Well, yeah, we knew that. But we got all the plans torn down. Finally, one at a time. Officially today. And yeah, the very last one today. You were harvesting here while I was harvesting at work? It's all around us. It is. Fucking everywhere. Yeah, and actually that will give a shout out to those plants in a second. But yeah, we got them all torn down and now we're doing this this is the hardest part of the process for me. Sure. Yeah, the trimming and the allowing it to get too trim. So allowing it to. Dry or cure. Dry and cure. Yeah, I was having a brain fart. Yeah, it takes time, and every time you try it, you're like, ah, well it tastes a little better. Then you keep waiting, but wait another day or two. Okay, a little better. I've seen people argue about how long do you cure and a lot of people nowadays are like two weeks, because it used to be a month all the time, right? Standard, now everybody's like two weeks. And I think that, you know, the commercial guys, a lot of those guys are doing freeze dried. And it works great. There's a different consistency, but like some of the big guys do use it. And they do it 2024 hour care. So basically there's no cure when you freeze dry it. Yeah. But it's good enough for high end shelf. They still getting top dollar for it. You'd be surprised the companies that do it. But that would be cool. I'd like to try it at home, but those are like $4000. Freezers. We don't even have a regular fucking crazy. So let's go ahead and get one of those regular razors first and then we'll talk about it. No, I just wanted to mention that though, I don't know that's fucking expensive. If people realize that these high some high end cannabis places use freeze dry. Anyway, so no cure to that 24 hours. And it's perfect. I wonder if they'd trim it all. How did they do that? I'd never asked about how they did on the trim. They probably trim it down as low, but why would they not be able to still trim it after they? No, no, no, it wasn't. Okay, dumb question. I'm like, they probably buck it off freeze dry and then. Yes, and I do think that's also the popular method when they're making. I don't know, they might even hang it up. After that, no, I think it goes to bins. No, meaning I think that they cut it down, hang it up, freeze dry it, then buck it and trim it maybe. Oh, I don't know. I just know it gets to the freeze dryer at some point. But from a to B I think that also makes it quicker for making water hash too. So, but we're doing it the old fashioned way. And it seems like to me when I taste our cannabis, it's like usually closer to a month that it starts to taste best. It's like more like three weeks, you know, because we're already down. We got our first two strains. There's like two weeks, two and a half weeks now. Still not where I want it to be. So I'm a big fan for the three to four weeks. You kidding me were on only the third strained trimming. Well, not counting the small. Yeah. The small ones, so technically the 5th strain, if we get down to it. And it's weird when I'm getting paid money for trimming, I don't mind, I'll do it every day, like you don't mind it. But to do my own that I'm. To do my own is harder for some reason. I don't know why it's because I'm not getting paid, I guess, but at the same time I am getting paid because you save it on the back end, not buying that stuff, and you get all that. But we should make our presentable stuff. And then we should make our stuff that will just smoke at home where we'll just like, oh, here, look, here's our stuff that we trimmed hand trimmed. To our friends, and then be like, shove something else in the bowl. Never really smoked the really, really, really, really nice one, the teacher and real nice. Yeah, yeah. Well, and so let's get to that. The force strength. I just wanted to shout out to Bigfoot clones again. So obviously from Oregon and hi guys, much love. Yeah, and we haven't had been four or 5 years now, and we still hadn't had to try anything from them, and we did, man, they came out great now. I will say this out of the four, there was chili Verde. Which tastes just like a damn chili. It's sweet. Spicy sweet. Yeah. Don't run into those tubes very often. Almost like mango chili is the best way to explain it. Yeah, yeah, kind of like a Mexican chili covered mangoes. Yeah, no, I get it. But odd to me because it's so spicy. Like usually spicy to me is peppery. This isn't really so peppery in that sense. It's just like a pepper. It's like a sweet black pepper. It's weird. It's worth having a stable. So I think we'd grow that. But the big thing was the mimosa, damn, that's great. It took them till tonight to figure out why it's called the mimosa. Well, it's a cross of what Clementine and purple punch. Purple punch. So orange juice. And champagne. Yeah, well, and it smells like that to me. 'cause usually you drink champagne more in the air. But I'm like, taste it before I even knew the crust I'm like, it's a little bit of tropicana, or so we'll say Clementine. Now. 14 tangi ish. Any of the oranges. But it just finally hit me tonight. 'cause I'm like, why would they call it mimosa? So while we were watching Schitt's Creek, we're getting more of that, though, for sure. Chili verdam down, but the mimosa, memo, some emo, so that shit was fire, is fire, but we only got like a little jar, little now he's jar of it. Damn it. Less than. And then we got not so excited about the lemongrass. My only opinion here is I think that we probably didn't go long enough on that one. Yes, but also anything that I have smelled that has been lemongrass hasn't been too potent on the nose. Yeah. We haven't got to try it smoke wise yet. But it smells all right, but we also didn't let it go, like I said, like you said. As long as the other ones, such as you just pulled down the sweet skunk tonight. I'll tell you right now. This is our IPM episode. I'm not going to tell you who's on. Well, you already know if you read the damn episode title. Yeah. But here's the deal. I think that in suspense, don't read it. I don't know, I'm being crazy. So IPM episode. Something that we haven't done a lot of, so I found someone who rocks. He is an IPM specialist. And so we talk all kinds of things. As far as how early to our grow, I told everybody we've been doing great, week, week, week, week, I missed two weeks, all of a sudden, Nathan was like, hey, how's it going? What do we do? I did explain this. I think it was also the fires didn't help with that? No, but as all the timing like a backed off for a couple of weeks and then boom fires, which was probably why I backed off. I didn't want to go out there and be out in this movie. I think it was a compilation of both you not spraying and then the fires pushing them this way. There was an easy haven for them to come home to. Or come to. That's what I think it was a combination of both. So in that two week span, the freaking aphids. If it's really attacked, those little ones. And so the pressure was hard, so had to pull them quick. I think that two of them were fine. The mimosa was fine. The chili Verde was marginal, like it got the terps out, but it could have been a little bulkier. Yeah. But we really for sure needed to let the lemongrass go to really find out about that because it really turned out like, let me not lemon grassy. Grass,

Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"83%" Discussed on Oregon Rooted: The Dirt Show
"Hey, this is higher peaks. This podcast is supported by our listeners on Patreon. There you can become a patron with options of bonus content, including behind the scenes posts, messages, picks, shorts, rot unedited content, and even full episodes. You can influence feature shows, have voting power, get exclusive rewards and have patron only giveaways, see full details on our page at Patreon dot com slash organ rooted. Enjoy the show. People often ask me, Matt, debug, feel pain. And to be honest, it's kind of a philosophical question. The way that I look at it is that there are organisms in nature that they didn't affect things like competed with them, then they would also die in parish. So it's kind of an unfortunate reality of living on earth. Welcome to Oregon rooted. I'm higher peaks. This is lady sativa. You're listening to the dirt show where we bring you organs, cannabis culture.