23 Burst results for "Captain Scott"

"captain scott" Discussed on WCPT 820

WCPT 820

02:36 min | Last week

"captain scott" Discussed on WCPT 820

"To free the hostages if you're going to secure the release of hostages we certainly hope we're going to be able to do you that got to make sure they can get from where they are to safety and do that as safely possible as which means you're gonna have to have at least a temporary localized stop in the fighting. Similar predictions of a hostage agreement in recent weeks have proven premature. A shooter opened fire last night at a Walmart in Ohio and police say he wounded multiple people before killing himself. say Officials the man walked into the Walmart in Beaver Creek which is in the Dayton Metropolitan area around 830 Monday night and began firing a gun injuring four people. The victims were to taken take him to area hospitals. Police say the shooter died from an apparent self -inflicted gunshot wound. Beaver Creek police captain Scott Molnar. This has been an incredibly tragic incident our thoughts and one Authorities in Colorado are hunting for a man they believe shot and killed three people and critically wounded a Fourth, in a property dispute, residents of the wooded rural area were told to shelter in place for five hours Monday as authorities search for the man. The order was later lifted Monday night. Sales of previously occupied US homes slumped in October to their slowest pace in more than 13 years this is AP news. A New Hampshire man who worked as a groundskeeper before he died in June has left a big surprise for his community. Jeffrey Holt maintained the grounds of the mobile home park where he lived in Hinsdale, New Hampshire and he also did odd jobs. He got around on a bicycle instead of a car and his mobile home was mostly empty of furniture. But Holt was a millionaire and when he died at age 82 he left his entire fortune nearly four million dollars to his town. Edwin Smokey Smith was Holt's friend best and knew his secret. The only parting thing I said to him was remember the town of Hinsdale and apparently it resonated quite well with him more so than I even expected. Smith says friend his was never a big spender. He was brought up to be very frugal. The money is in a trust and can be used for education, health, recreation or culture. I'm Donna Water. This is 8 20 AM WCPT, Willow Springs and streaming worldwide at WCPT820 .com. We are Chicago's progressive talk

"captain scott" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

Bloomberg Radio New York

03:14 min | Last week

"captain scott" Discussed on Bloomberg Radio New York

"Right Ira good stuff As always Ira Jersey he's the chief U .S. interest rate strategist for Bloomberg Intelligence joining us from our Princeton office so we appreciate getting some thoughts there. S &P 500 off a half of one percent and so we've got some marks a little bit of red on the screen doesn't seem to be too crazy but we'll keep an eye on it. Right now let's down to head Washington D .C. World and National News with Amy Mars. All right thank you Paul Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will convene Israel's cabinet after signaling that a deal with Hamas to free hostages in Gaza in return for temporary a pause in fighting may be getting closer. We get more on this now Bloomberg's Jody Schneider reports from Washington. Details of it but it does seem from the signs that we're getting there you know it's that close and President Biden said yesterday that they're closing in on a deal to free some of 240 those hostages. Bloomberg's Jody Schneider in the nation's capital President Biden leaning on lawmakers to change the nation's gun laws. Texas Congressman Craig Cazar says that something needs to be done to prevent another like massacre the one that happened next to his district in Uvalde Texas. We need to turn thoughts and prayers into real actions and solutions. The Biden re -election campaign warns a second Trump presidency will quote cost more American lives after the former president told members of the NRA at their convention that is if elected he he will support a tax credit to reimburse any teacher for the cost of a concealed carry firearm and training. Police in Ohio say a shooter opened fire at a Walmart wounding four people before apparently killing himself. That attack took place last night at a Walmart in Beaver Creek in the Dayton metropolitan area. Beaver Creek Police Captain Scott Molnar says the four victims are currently being treated for their injuries. We injured four victims, the conditions of the victims right now is unknown as they were all transported to area hospitals for treatment. Now police did not immediately release the name of the gunman, a possible motive for the attack or any other details about that shooting. Meanwhile in Colorado yesterday another mass shooting. Police three say people were killed, a fourth in critical condition. Police say that gunman remains on the run. They believe he was in a civil dispute with one of the victims over property lines and easements. Global news 24 hours a day and whenever you want it with Bloomberg News Now. I'm Amy Morris and this is Bloomberg. When it comes to me financial advisors are you looking to add or switch custodians? Are you going independent? Interactive Brokers provides lowest cost trading and turnkey custody solutions for all size firms. Trade globally from a single integrated master account with no ticket charges, no custody fees, no minimums and no tech platform or reporting fees. Plus IBKR has no advisory team or prop trading group to compete with you for your clients. Switch to the custody solutions that work for you at ibkr .com ria. When you get your news from Bloomberg you don't just get the story you get the story behind the story. How your EV's may not be as green as it seems. Why a decrease in global birth rates could send countries scrambling to increase immigration. You get context and context

"captain scott" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

36:32 min | 10 months ago

"captain scott" Discussed on Bear Grease

"Had been suckling pigs. In the dogs weren't slow and making a ring around him at a respectful distance. I tell you, even Bowie knife himself stood off. Then the way his eyes flashed, while the fire of them would have singed a cat's hair. In fact, that bar was in a wrath all over. Only one pup came near him, and he was brushed out so to tally with the bears left Paul that he entirely disappeared. And that made the old dogs even more cautious still. In the meantime, I came up and taken deliberate aim as a man should do at his side just at the back of the foreleg if my gun did not snap call me a coward and I won't take it personal. Yes, stranger, it snapped and I could not find a cap about my person. His eyes flashed with such fire, it would have scorched a cap. And we now see that this is no ordinary bear. He swatted a dog, and it vanished. And this veteran hunters Muslim pop to cap, meaning it didn't fire. But now he's beginning to plan for his final hunt. And if he doesn't kill it, he's leaving Arkansas, or maybe he'll be dead. It's unclear. Then I told my neighbors on that Monday morning, name in the day that I would start that bar and bring him home with me. Or they might divide by settlement among them, the owner having disappeared. Well, stranger on that morning, previous to the great day of my hunting expedition, I went into the Woods near my house, taking my gun and bowing off along just from habit, and they're sitting down also from habit. What should I see? Getting over my fence, but the bar. Yes, the Obama was within a hundred yards of me. And the way he walked over that fence. Stranger, he loomed up like a black mist and he seemed so large. He walked right towards me. I raised myself, took deliberate aim and fired. Instantly, the var wield and gave Yale and walked through the fence like a fallen tree wood through a cobweb. I started after, but was tripped up by my inexpressible, which either from habit or the excitement of the moment we're about my heels. And before I had really gathered myself up, I heard the environment grown in a thicket nearby like a thousand sinners. And by the time I reached him, he was a corpse. Stranger, it took 5 men and myself to put that carcass on a mule's back. An old long hair's waddled under his load, and if he was foundered in every leg of his body, and with a common whopper of a bar, he would have trotted off and enjoyed himself. Wouldn't astonish you to know how big he was. I made a bed spread of his skin. In the way it used to cover my bar mattress and leave several feet on each side to tuck up, would have delighted you. It was in fact a creation bar, and if it had lived in Samson's time, and if it had met him, in a fair fight, it would have licked him in the twinkling of a dice box. But stranger, I never liked the way a hundred him and missed him. There's something curious about it. I never could understand. And I never was satisfied at his given in so easily at last. Perhaps he had heard of my preparations to hunt him the next day, so he just come in like captain Scott's coon to save his win to grunt with and die in. But that ain't likely. My private opinion is that the bar was an unhung bar and died when his time had come. The bear was grown in like a thousand sinners. I'm impressed that Thorpe knew that a black bear is one of the few animals that we hunt on the planet that has a death moan, a double long shot bear, one that dies quickly, will often give a loud sometimes spooky elongated groan that can be heard a great distance. I'm talking like a couple hundred yards. It usually lasts longer than you think it should, and it's a sure sign of the bear's death. For a bear hunter, it's a bewildering moment of internal conflict as the excitement of certain success, wars with a sobriety delivered by the beast grandstanding auditory expression of death. Both feelings are usually of equal measure. Dog it also suggests that the bear heard his plans for his hunt and basically turned himself in. The sounds like a sensational thought, but in the book make prayers to the Raven by Richard Kate Nelson. We learned that the co Yukon people of Alaska believed the black bear was near the apex of spiritual power in the natural world. They believed that when a person plans a bear hunt, they should be careful not to speak directly about their hunt plans because the bear will hear them and avoid being killed. A hunter must speak in code using vague terms if he wishes to invite others or discuss hunting plans. And dog it suggests that this creation bear may have heard him. The death of a hunted bear is regarded with such ceremony with the ko yakan that its second only to a human funeral. They regarded bear mate as a delicacy, but killing one was a, quote, quest for prestige, and a high expression of manhood. This is similar to what bear hunting became in the south. And I hope you caught it, but doggett says that the bear was a creation bar, which is the same descriptor he used to describe Arkansas, the creation state. This is a spiritual place and beast. No one I've talked to really knows exactly what he meant. It's mysterious, but the climax of the story is that dog it says the bar was an unable bar that died when his time had come. Almost as if his death had been scripted in the hunter had nothing to do with it. The story is now handed back to our New Orleans traveler and he describes the peculiar response of the big bar. When the story was ended, our hero set some minutes with his auditors in grave silence. I saw there was a mystery to him connected with the bear, whose death he had just related and had evidently made a strong impression on his mind. It was also evident that there was some superstitious awe connected with the affair, a feeling common with all children of the wood when they meet with anything out of their everyday experience. He was the first one, however, to break the silence, and jumping up, he asked all present to liquor before going to bed. A thing which he did with a number of his companions evidently to his heart's content. Long before day, I was put ashore at my place of destination and I can only follow with the reader and imagination. Our Arkansas friend and his adventures at the forks of the cypress on the Mississippi. There was some superstitious awe connected with the bear. Doggett was moved by his own story, and he left a major impression on the fictional people, but the story left an impression on the real people of America and the writers who had script some parts of our American identity. We didn't read the full story, probably only about half of it, but now you know the premise. I've known for a good part of my life that Arkansas was once known as the bear state. I discovered this while in college studying the thesis writing of university of Arkansas students and faculty, but deep in the literature, this golden acre and lay there for the taken. No one ever told me this. I never heard about it growing up. Doctor Brooks blevins is the undisputed historian of the Ozarks. I wanted to ask him about why we were called the bear state. Arkansas the bear state, you know, the truth is no one really knows exactly when or how the state got that nickname. There's no, you know, it wasn't an official nickname. But we know that before the Civil War, the state had earned the nickname the bear state unofficially. Did he show up in literature? Yeah, and I would say there are probably two reasons for that. One is that Arkansas did become known as a state full of bears. I mean, it was a state where bear hunting was very good and you think about in the days before the Civil War, you're talking about a really sparsely populated state that has a combination of highlands and swamps, but probably more than that was because of the literary component. You have, and I think timing is really important in this. Arkansas becomes a state and at that very moment you've got really the genre of southwestern humor was really starting to take off and it becomes in some ways the most popular genre of literature before the Civil War. Arkansas became a state in 1836 and it's hard to say if it was expressly created for the bear, or if the bear was expressly created for Arkansas. And literature is a powerful tool for identity. Doctor blevins believes the big bear of Arkansas in 1841, along with other bear hunting stories, branded the young state, sucking the backwoods bear hunting image into the identity vacuum created by new statehood. America desperately wondered who we were. So we don't know who said it first, but it's clear it's connected to Jim doggett in this new genre of writing called Southwest humor. But what is southwest humor? As the name would suggest it's a humorous kind of writing that is based in the southwest and in those days the southwest wasn't New Mexico and Arizona. It was Arkansas and Mississippi and Alabama and Louisiana and basically the westernmost part of the United States at that time. Right. So yeah, that becomes the southwest and all these stories are, for the most part, published back east in sporting magazines, sporting periodicals, the spirit of the times in New York was the most prominent publisher of the southwestern humor stories and a lot of these stories had to do with hunting. A lot of them have to do with bear hunting, they also had to do with horse racing and politics and all kinds of stuff that you see out in these kind of frontier rural communities. But so many of them had to do with bear hunting and you've got the most famous bear hunting story that comes out. That's the big bear of Arkansas. This story becomes so popular and so famous that some later literary historians in the 20th century would even refer to southwestern humor as the big bear of genre of literature. I mean, that's how much the big bear of Arkansas is in stores. A whole bunch of other riders after him. Yeah, all the way down to faulkner and people in the 20th century. Mark Twain. Right. And these people were fascinated with these southwestern humor stories frontier characters in the dialect and all that kind of stuff. Here's university of Arkansas professor and folklore specialist doctor bob Cochran. What a cool guy. Tell me why this short story, the big bear of Arkansas was so influential though that when this one came out, it was a climax piece that was a line in the sand almost of and they called them the big bear humerus after that. And then that later would influence other American riders. Like why was this one so good? I think it was, it became so famous because it was recognized right away as better. It was more it was more complex. It had the language it had the jokes. It was deeper. How was it complex? Well, just it's a bear hunt story, but it's more than a bear hunt story. It's about crossing into the experience, which is the unknown. It's a burning bush story. You know, it's something that shocks you out of the way you perceive the very world. You don't think the world has this in it, and it does. You know, it's one of those kind of you're walking along on a bush catches on fire will it changes your life. Well, he's walking along and he sees this. They spare walk through a fence. You know, there's a sense on that line. Remember when Saitama sized that he went through a fence like a tree falling through a cop. And it almost dematerializes the bear, right? And there's a place where the bear hits one of the dogs and the dog disappears, right? It doesn't say it's yelping off to the side or killed or he says he uses that word. He said the dog, it's not there. He atomizes the dog. So in other words, I think it's a complex story because it takes you into the unknown. It takes you into the unknown. I have more questions for doctor Cochran. Let me ask you this. Is there a modern example of what this would have been like inside of our media today? Would it have been like my 75 year old dad looking at TikTok or? Well, the first thing I think is that many readers would have spurned it. And many readers would have regarded it as sub literary, you know, as sort of just like a shame to our culture. You got it. You got it. The way my grandmother felt about country music from West Virginia. Really? Yeah. Oh yeah. She didn't like country music. She thought there was a world of difference between a mountaineer and a hillbilly. And she was proud of being a mountaineer, and she would not abide the word hill. Really? Yeah. You know, we were when we were little kids. We were said, don't say hillbilly around grandma. Really, in West Virginia. West Virginia. And so mountaineers. You'd stand up and salute. And so your grandma wouldn't have liked this because it was kind of hillbilly. That made me funny. It was a demeaning stereotype. And that would have been true about a lot of people in respectable Little Rock wouldn't have liked it either. Because the same thing, you know, we still have that today. The state being judged by what some people in the state would think of as its lowliest members. But to the people that this appealed to, this was wildly popular. Wildly popular. Wildly popular, literature was usually quite formal and authors riding and dialect with something new. People loved it. I've got more questions. Tell me about where this was published. The spirit of the times. Right. It had some competitors because it was so successful, but it was the most successful. It had a wide readership and its readership was much wider than the people that it was discussing. It was a red just by hunters or people, but it was a sporting journal. Absolutely. If it was interested in one thing more than hunting. And I think it might have been. It's not like I've sat down and read all the back issues of this thing. What would be the first? Horse racing. Horse racing. Yes, sir. In the horse race and was a big thing back then too. It would have been like today's NASCAR. Yeah. And interestingly, in the first bit of this story, the big bear of Arkansas, he makes a horse jockey joke. He said his bear dog Bowie knife knows a bear the way a horse jockey knows a woman. Yeah. Which I can only assume it means that the horse jockeys were the cool guys that the women favored. Yeah. Because they were stars in a way. It's about as risque as you can get. This genre of writing was pretty risque for the day. You could get away with stuff that you couldn't get away with and my grandmother would have gasped when she read that. Yeah, she might not even picked her. Yeah, this was like rebel stuff. Yeah. And trashy. In some ways. But the people who read it were not trashy financially, they were pretty well off. It cost money to subscribe to these things. Would it have been like a print magazine? It would have been like a kind of tablet. Yeah. And it was extraordinarily popular. Thorpe used colorful descriptors and metaphors. In some sections I didn't read, he said he didn't plan to go to New Orleans in a crow's life, using its lifespan to describe a measure of time. He said running a bear in warm weather would turn him into a skin full of bars grease. And once dog at proclaimed mosquitos is nature, and I never find fault with her. If they are large, Arkansas is large. Her varmints are large, her trees are large. Her rivers are large, and a small mosquito would be of no more use in Arkansas than preaching in a cane break. That kind of sounds like something Brent Reeves would say. I'm still trying to understand just how popular this story was in America. Here's the old Hickory nut himself, Steven rinella, who happens to be one of those highfalutin New York Times bestselling authors. He's gonna talk about what he noted about the big bear of Arkansas. It was very poetic but not in an obnoxious annoying way. That they were at that time people were using poetic description. So effectively, but him describing in one passage when a bear comes over the fence. It rises over the fence like a black mist. And when it goes back through the fence, it goes through a fence like a falling tree cutting through cobweb. Poetic. Born of the earth is born of the land and not born of some writing workshop. You know, you think about these guys, they did not have YouTube. They didn't have Netflix and Hulu. This was their craft, the writing, writing was the primary means of communication. And even a primary means of entertainment for people. This story written as it was would essentially be like saying, dude, you should check out that Netflix documentary. It is awesome. Do you think riders have gotten better worse at the command of the English language? And really, when you talk about the command of the English language, what you're really saying is are people able to really describe what's happening on Planet Earth and inside the body of a human. I don't want to talk about the population writ large. I don't want to just refer to just general adult Americans, but I'll say of our leaders. Of our prominent figures, the use of the English language has suffered since this time since then. I mean, just go simply go read transcripts of Lincoln's who would have been at his prime alive and well at the time of this writing. Go look at his command and use of the English language compared to a transcript of any modern president speaking today. I think that, you know, more people of higher percentage of people are literate now than then, but the level of mastery of the English language as exemplified by key individuals has suffered. And I think that that ability to speak in such a colorful flamboyant energy laden way has gone away. However you feel about him. I followed him and known in my whole life and spoke to him. But you go look at the fire inside the language of a figure like Ted nugent. How fiery and colorful and exciting he's able to speak, right? It sort of brings the mind like the character speaking in this thing. He'll say a sentence. I don't understand how you just strung that sentence together. Yeah. Without working on it earlier, like an amazing ability to string sentences together. To hit two sides of the spectrum, nugent will say sentences that blow me away. Obama could string a sentence together that when you read a transcript of the sentence, I think to myself, how could someone have formed that as a spoken sentence? Having not written it out first. I'm not often blown away by people's sentences they put that they put together. But reading this, and again, we're confusing. This was created by a writer. This wasn't a transcript of a thing. So it was created by a writer who's did their research and spent their time in reading it. I sort of lament that that flamboyance with language isn't normal. And I wonder how was it normal, you know? Were these characters out there who would speak so. Just such a wild colorful passionate way. I bet you weren't expecting uncle Ted and Barack Obama to come up in this conversation. Neither was I pavement can take you to some great fishing holes and hunting spots, but to find the real gems. You need to leave the road behind. And the hunt is over. With Chevy Silverado factory lifted trucks, ZR2, trail boss and custom trail boss, you can command attention on and off the road. The Silverado ZR2 takes you off the pavement and into the back country with the next level off road capability. It comes with multimatic dynamics, suspension, spool valve, dampers for more suspension travel. Its front and rear electronic locking differentials, Gary nukem approved, ensure that max power goes to all the wheels, limiting wheel slip. Aggressive off road cut front bumper also Gary nukem approved, and large underbody skid plates make off roading a breeze. Plus, it has a 13.4 inch diagonal touchscreen and an available multi flex tailgate. Leave the pavement behind boys and go above and beyond or just about anywhere because adventure is everywhere. Learn more at Chevy dot com. Black buffalo different leaf, same ritual. So everything you love about dip without the tobacco. Tell us more. Here's our very own chili. Here at meat eater, he's gonna lay it out. Listen, man, let me tell you something about black buffalo. That stuff right there really just makes me feel like I'm chewing. For the first time all over again. I'm still on that black buffalo mint pouches. You know, that stuff still gets to me, so I'm gonna keep using it and the second it stops. So I'm gonna, I'm gonna chew hop onto the next flavor. That's right, authenticity matters. That meat eater, authenticity, I believe, has played a big part in our success, cause we like to make the kind of content do the kind of things and talk about the things that were genuinely interested in. It's not like you go in like pretend to be interested in something you're not. I hate that kind of stuff. Black buffalo knows this. That's why they make sure their product is an authentic, credible alternative. To dip, buy online at black buffalo dot com with promo code meat eater for 20% off your first order or check their store locator. And find thousands of locations, including town pump, where we all shop here in Montana and race track, one of the largest retailers in the southeast, warning this product contains nicotine, nicotine is an addictive chemical black buffalo strictly intended for 21 plus current consumers repairable products under each sail prohibited. Hey y'all, I'm Tyler Jones. And I'm Casey Smith, and we host the element podcast. We're a couple native Texans that love to push the limits in all our outdoor pursuits. We're also a couple of longtime friends started stomping around our local creek bottles, but if found ourselves blessed with the opportunity to hunt all over the country. From Elk, to whitetails, hogs, and even fish, we share a hunting stories, tactics, and we'll tell you how to pair the right chips with the rot salsa, how to paint a little el pastor and put it on a tortilla and I tell you what we'll even talk about some of our failures along the way that help us learn how to do what we love. We've also just recently joined the meat eater crew, so look forward to even more intense moments and crazy adventures with those fellers. Maybe we can even teach them those jokers a little something about hunt. If you can't get enough of the outdoors and want to learn more about how to get close to the game, you pursue. Listen to the element podcast on the iHeartRadio app. On Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts. Here's doctor Cochran continuing to describe how influential this big bear of Arkansas story was. There was one volume in his life that was published that had nothing but his stuff in it. And it was called hive of the bee hunter, 1854 and has 24 pieces in that. The big bear is one of them. And the second most frequently include historian anthology is nothing next to the story. It's a trivial piece. It's called a piano and Arkansas. And it's a hook story. I mean, it's just got one point. You got a village braggart, who's very proud of the fact that he's made two trips to the capitol, Little Rock. And he thinks he knows everything. In other words, he's the expert on the big world, right? Yeah. And he's heard that a newly arrived family in town has a piano, and there's great curiosity in the town called something like hardscrabble. You know how they name his technique? A fake town. Fake town, yeah. Nobody knows what a piano is. And this guy says, well, he's seen more pianist than what they see woodchucks. I mean, and what happens is, of course, that he is exposed as a braggart and a liar because he mistakes a newly arrived washing machine for piano. He thinks, okay, so that story is nothing. It's just a one, that's it. I just told you that it's a story. One shot joke. Whereas this story, we could spend an hour and a two just trying to figure out what the final thing the story is about. So I think it became the most popular story on really solid grounds. I think it's as good a story as there is. It's the most complex one I know. These southwest humor stories created lovable and interesting characters, but they were also setting up my beloved homeland for a rough 150 years of what scholars say was the most picked on state in America in the 20th century by far. We've mentioned that the big bear school of literature likely had notable effect on Mark Twain, who would begin publishing in the late 1860s, becoming America's most famous writer. Here's Steve vanilla. A thing that I noticed too that was the, it was evocative of Mark Twain. Yeah. What made Twain Twain was his ability to capture vernacular. His ability to live a life of research and take almost his characters were born of deep experience that he had personally, meaning there was no huckleberry Finn. There was no Tom Sawyer, but Mark Twain, and that was his pen name. Samuel Clemens, spent his life on the Mississippi, was raised on the Mississippi, had proximity to slaves, grew up in a slave holding place, fished catfish. He was a riverboat pilot. He did hang out with people. He knew these individuals, huck Finn and Tom Sawyer were perhaps more real than actual real people. And what gave him so much his character so much humanity is they were, they were low class people, but he loved them. He loved them deeply, low class people. That was his soul, right? Was bringing these people to life and defying stereotypes. So here you have, you know, you're hearing this tale spun by this Arkansas bear hunter, but you look like how the narrative is captured as clearly the writer had spent time around people. And you're like, this Arkansas bear hunter, who's sort of being in jazz portrayed as this rough and tumble individual, but in fact, he's exceedingly articulate. He's a very clear communicator. He's full of compassion and empathy and he's like a spiritual figure. Who approaches life with a great lost, you know? And so it's loving. It's loving in a way that a lot of stuff you see when you're watching something now and you're watching some stupid Disney movie in a hunter comes up, it's hateful. He's a southern accent. He's bloodthirsty. He's ignorant. I mean, these are all things you see all the time, right? But at this time, you could have this person like, what steps in the door, here's this uneducated, uncouth redneck bear hunter, but let's hear him talk. What emerges is all those things I said earlier, like a very passionate, deeply articulate. Deeply feeling individual. Who ascribes all these emotional things to a bear hunt and takes a story in an unexpected direction and loves this barrier like his brother and misses the bear. And so it's this whole package of what comes in is like, you know, you're expecting to have this guy be lampooned, but this guy is handled with great care. Yeah. You like you read it and you like dudes from Arkansas. Yeah. You wish you could talk to that guy. The dichotomy of the ignorant backwoodsman being a complex individual with his humanity on display is fascinating, but not new, even then. Here's doctor Cochran. It seems like this narrative of the simpletons of the south or the hill country or Appalachia or the Ozarks being portrayed in this complex way of being really simple, but also educated and in the know and kind of this striking contrast. This seems like a common narrative. The simpleton is actually the smart guy. Was that pretty common back in those days? Well, it's an old trope. It's an ancient trope. Jack and the beans. Jack is a simpleton. But Jack is smart enough to do what the guy's daughter tells him to do. And he wins. So I'll sometimes they're making fun of the guy like in that piano in Arkansas story that the town sophisticate is exposed as a fraud. But here, it's, again, it's part of the wonder of the story. It's much more complicated. If you move to the last paragraph or so that when he finishes the story, he's told a deep story about himself. He's told a story. He's a great hunter, but remember he says the bear was hunting me. Yeah. The bear came and sat across my fence and killed a hog whenever he wanted to. In other words, he tells a story about his own defeat. So here you have a ring tailed roar, while their scores of ringtail roar stories, but they're in a few ring tailed roar stories where the roar says here's the story where I got beat. Here's the story where I was in over my head that I don't even today really understood. What happened there? I mean, this story almost is unique for that look that kind of depth in this genre. And if you look at the last paragraph, I mean, you read that opening paragraph that he won people over right away and his total self confidence. In the end that self confidence is gone. Yeah, when the story was ended, our hero set some minutes with his auditors and grave silence. Yeah. I saw that there was a mystery to him connected with the bear whose death he had just related that had evidently made a strong impression on his mind. The big bar of Arkansas turns out to be one of the most interesting, deepest people on the boat, leaving the passengers in all of his life, his philosophy and right smart enamored. Maybe even envious. This is a popular theme. Doctor blevins wrote about the times having a romantic impulse to exalt an envy, the supposed and unattainable simple life of the hillman. Decide is no less strong today than it was then. Here's another layer of depth to the story from Steve and I. Today there's this narrative inside the hunting space that we all kind of have attached ourselves to is this deep respect for our quarry, which we sometimes think was absent during the market hunting era of this country. And we kind of feel like it's new. Like now when we kill a deer, you know, we think about, we really take that's a good one and this is significant and this is meaningful. This is not a small thing. And pay respect to this animal. But really that is so old. But what surprised me? And what I loved so much, but when Jim doggett, the Arkansas bear hunter, when he saw his dogs walk in the bear, the bear was walking and the dogs were all around it. He said he couldn't tell if the bear even knew the dogs were there, and he said, I loved him like a brother. I mean, if somebody said that today, that would seem like cutting edge. Be like, wow. Man, 1841. Thomas bang Thorpe's fictional character Jim doggett, Arkansas bear hunter, loved him like a brother. And I think that that inside of that emerged a functionalization of that love, which turned into the North American model of wildlife conservation. Really, what we're doing managing wildlife in this country goes back to Jim Dogg at loving that bear like a brother. And now his lamenting its passing. Yeah, and then when the bear dies, he said, the bear hunter became extremely melancholy and sad, and he said he missed the bear. And you wouldn't have thought that would have come out of the 1840s. The doubt had been a sentiment. I think that's one of the greatest lines in American literature, especially as it pertains to the lasting ethic of the American sportsman that has functionalized that love of a beast into saving wild places and wildlife. Lardy laud in my brothers, we have walked into a bird nest on the ground as we live in one of the greatest heydays of American wildlife wild places and access to hunting. I believe that's why these stories of our heritage are identity as Americans are so powerful. In the midst of a rapidly progressing society, seemingly trying to forget the backwoodsmen. We can not forget who we are. Society needs to continue to create space for hunters to manage the lion's share of wild places and wildlife. We've got a long track record of success. And if we do, there will be space and wildlife for all the stakeholders to partake in whatever means they like. This is America and we're hunters that love the great beasts and our caretakers of the wild places where they live. Can you say amen to that? I wanted to ask Steve why hunters seem to be so enamored with the ones that got away or the unkillable animal. Here's what he said. It's a good question. You can go super deep psychology and have it be that you're a establishing that in the end, the animal can prevail and that what you're doing is exceptionally difficult and you might see that someone that had come from a line of resource destruction, market hunters, and we were like, you're literally wiping species off the areas map that you would have a mythology of the ones that can't be got as a way to alleviate some of the guilt or blame. Or it could be just that it creates that it's like an act of reverence

Arkansas America Jim doggett Richard Kate Nelson Mark Twain Gary nukem university of Arkansas Brooks blevins Mississippi West Virginia Bowie Thorpe bob Cochran captain Scott Cochran Obama New Orleans Brent Reeves Steven rinella Ozarks
"captain scott" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

08:09 min | 10 months ago

"captain scott" Discussed on Bear Grease

"With a licensed therapist and switch therapist anytime for no additional charge. If you want to live a more empowered life, therapy can help you get there. Visit better help dot com slash Greece. Today to get 10% off your first month that's better help. HELP dot com slash Greece. Thank you. Aw, he went until he came to a tree, the limbs of which formed a crotch about 6 feet from the ground. In the crotch he got and seated himself and the dogs were yelling all around it, and there he set I and them as quiet as a pond in low water. A greenhorn friend of mine and company reached shooting distance before me and blazed away, hitting the critter in the center of the forehead. The bar shook his head as the ball struck it, and then walked down from that tree as gently as a lady would from a carriage. It was a beautiful sight to see him do that. He was in such a rage that he seemed to be as little afraid of the dogs as if they had been suckling pigs. In the dogs weren't slow and making a ring around him at a respectful distance. I tell you, even Bowie knife himself stood off. Then the way his eyes flashed, while the fire of them would have singed a cat's hair. In fact, that bar was in a wrath all over. Only one pup came near him, and he was brushed out so to tally with the bears left Paul that he entirely disappeared. And that made the old dogs even more cautious still. In the meantime, I came up and taken deliberate aim as a man should do at his side just at the back of the foreleg if my gun did not snap call me a coward and I won't take it personal. Yes, stranger, it snapped and I could not find a cap about my person. His eyes flashed with such fire, it would have scorched a cap. And we now see that this is no ordinary bear. He swatted a dog, and it vanished. And this veteran hunters Muslim pop to cap, meaning it didn't fire. But now he's beginning to plan for his final hunt. And if he doesn't kill it, he's leaving Arkansas, or maybe he'll be dead. It's unclear. Then I told my neighbors on that Monday morning, name in the day that I would start that bar and bring him home with me. Or they might divide by settlement among them, the owner having disappeared. Well, stranger on that morning, previous to the great day of my hunting expedition, I went into the Woods near my house, taking my gun and bowing off along just from habit, and they're sitting down also from habit. What should I see? Getting over my fence, but the bar. Yes, the Obama was within a hundred yards of me. And the way he walked over that fence. Stranger, he loomed up like a black mist and he seemed so large. He walked right towards me. I raised myself, took deliberate aim and fired. Instantly, the var wield and gave Yale and walked through the fence like a fallen tree wood through a cobweb. I started after, but was tripped up by my inexpressible, which either from habit or the excitement of the moment we're about my heels. And before I had really gathered myself up, I heard the environment grown in a thicket nearby like a thousand sinners. And by the time I reached him, he was a corpse. Stranger, it took 5 men and myself to put that carcass on a mule's back. An old long hair's waddled under his load, and if he was foundered in every leg of his body, and with a common whopper of a bar, he would have trotted off and enjoyed himself. Wouldn't astonish you to know how big he was. I made a bed spread of his skin. In the way it used to cover my bar mattress and leave several feet on each side to tuck up, would have delighted you. It was in fact a creation bar, and if it had lived in Samson's time, and if it had met him, in a fair fight, it would have licked him in the twinkling of a dice box. But stranger, I never liked the way a hundred him and missed him. There's something curious about it. I never could understand. And I never was satisfied at his given in so easily at last. Perhaps he had heard of my preparations to hunt him the next day, so he just come in like captain Scott's coon to save his win to grunt with and die in. But that ain't likely. My private opinion is that the bar was an unhung bar and died when his time had come. The bear was grown in like a thousand sinners. I'm impressed that Thorpe knew that a black bear is one of the few animals that we hunt on the planet that has a death moan, a double long shot bear, one that dies quickly, will often give a loud sometimes spooky elongated groan that can be heard a great distance. I'm talking like a couple hundred yards. It usually lasts longer than you think it should, and it's a sure sign of the bear's death. For a bear hunter, it's a bewildering moment of internal conflict as the excitement of certain success, wars with a sobriety delivered by the beast grandstanding auditory expression of death. Both feelings are usually of equal measure. Dog it also suggests that the bear heard his plans for his hunt and basically turned himself in. The sounds like a sensational thought, but in the book make prayers to the Raven by Richard Kate Nelson. We learned that the co Yukon people of Alaska believed the black bear was near the apex of spiritual power in the natural world. They believed that when a person plans a bear hunt, they should be careful not to speak directly about their hunt plans because the bear will hear them and avoid being killed. A hunter must speak in code using vague terms if he wishes to invite others or discuss hunting plans. And dog it suggests that this creation bear may have heard him. The death of a hunted bear is regarded with such ceremony with the ko yakan that its second only to a human funeral. They regarded bear mate as a delicacy, but killing one was a, quote, quest for prestige, and a high expression of manhood. This is similar to what bear hunting became in the south. And I hope you caught it, but doggett says that the bear was a creation bar, which is the same descriptor he used to describe Arkansas, the creation state. This is a spiritual place and beast. No one I've talked to really knows exactly what he meant. It's mysterious, but the climax of the story is that dog it says the bar was an unable bar that died when his time had come. Almost as if his death had been scripted in the hunter had nothing to do with it. The story is now handed back to our New Orleans traveler and he describes the peculiar response of the big bar. When the story was ended, our hero set some minutes with his auditors in grave silence. I saw there was a mystery to him connected with the bear, whose death he had just related and had evidently made a strong impression on his mind. It was also evident that there was some superstitious awe connected with the affair, a feeling common with all children of the wood when they meet with anything out of their everyday experience. He was the first one, however, to break the silence, and jumping up, he asked all present to liquor before going to bed. A thing which he did with a number of his companions evidently to his heart's content. Long before day, I was put ashore at my place of destination and I can only follow with the reader and imagination. Our Arkansas friend and his adventures at the forks of the cypress on the Mississippi.

Greece Bowie Arkansas bears Richard Kate Nelson captain Scott Samson Paul Thorpe Obama doggett Alaska New Orleans Mississippi
"captain scott" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

07:31 min | 10 months ago

"captain scott" Discussed on Bear Grease

"And there he set I and them as quiet as a pond in low water. A greenhorn friend of mine and company reached shooting distance before me and blazed away, hitting the critter in the center of the forehead. The bar shook his head as the ball struck it, and then walked down from that tree as gently as a lady would from a carriage. It was a beautiful sight to see him do that. He was in such a rage that he seemed to be as little afraid of the dogs as if they had been suckling pigs. In the dogs weren't slow and making a ring around him at a respectful distance. I tell you, even Bowie knife himself stood off. Then the way his eyes flashed, while the fire of them would have singed a cat's hair. In fact, that bar was in a wrath all over. Only one pup came near him, and he was brushed out so to tally with the bears left Paul that he entirely disappeared. And that made the old dogs even more cautious still. In the meantime, I came up and taken deliberate aim as a man should do at his side just at the back of the foreleg if my gun did not snap call me a coward and I won't take it personal. Yes, stranger, it snapped and I could not find a cap about my person. His eyes flashed with such fire, it would have scorched a cap. And we now see that this is no ordinary bear. He swatted a dog, and it vanished. And this veteran hunters Muslim pop to cap, meaning it didn't fire. But now he's beginning to plan for his final hunt. And if he doesn't kill it, he's leaving Arkansas, or maybe he'll be dead. It's unclear. Then I told my neighbors on that Monday morning, name in the day that I would start that bar and bring him home with me. Or they might divide by settlement among them, the owner having disappeared. Well, stranger on that morning, previous to the great day of my hunting expedition, I went into the Woods near my house, taking my gun and bowing off along just from habit, and they're sitting down also from habit. What should I see? Getting over my fence, but the bar. Yes, the Obama was within a hundred yards of me. And the way he walked over that fence. Stranger, he loomed up like a black mist and he seemed so large. He walked right towards me. I raised myself, took deliberate aim and fired. Instantly, the var wield and gave Yale and walked through the fence like a fallen tree wood through a cobweb. I started after, but was tripped up by my inexpressible, which either from habit or the excitement of the moment we're about my heels. And before I had really gathered myself up, I heard the environment grown in a thicket nearby like a thousand sinners. And by the time I reached him, he was a corpse. Stranger, it took 5 men and myself to put that carcass on a mule's back. An old long hair's waddled under his load, and if he was foundered in every leg of his body, and with a common whopper of a bar, he would have trotted off and enjoyed himself. Wouldn't astonish you to know how big he was. I made a bed spread of his skin. In the way it used to cover my bar mattress and leave several feet on each side to tuck up, would have delighted you. It was in fact a creation bar, and if it had lived in Samson's time, and if it had met him, in a fair fight, it would have licked him in the twinkling of a dice box. But stranger, I never liked the way a hundred him and missed him. There's something curious about it. I never could understand. And I never was satisfied at his given in so easily at last. Perhaps he had heard of my preparations to hunt him the next day, so he just come in like captain Scott's coon to save his win to grunt with and die in. But that ain't likely. My private opinion is that the bar was an unhung bar and died when his time had come. The bear was grown in like a thousand sinners. I'm impressed that Thorpe knew that a black bear is one of the few animals that we hunt on the planet that has a death moan, a double long shot bear, one that dies quickly, will often give a loud sometimes spooky elongated groan that can be heard a great distance. I'm talking like a couple hundred yards. It usually lasts longer than you think it should, and it's a sure sign of the bear's death. For a bear hunter, it's a bewildering moment of internal conflict as the excitement of certain success, wars with a sobriety delivered by the beast grandstanding auditory expression of death. Both feelings are usually of equal measure. Dog it also suggests that the bear heard his plans for his hunt and basically turned himself in. The sounds like a sensational thought, but in the book make prayers to the Raven by Richard Kate Nelson. We learned that the co Yukon people of Alaska believed the black bear was near the apex of spiritual power in the natural world. They believed that when a person plans a bear hunt, they should be careful not to speak directly about their hunt plans because the bear will hear them and avoid being killed. A hunter must speak in code using vague terms if he wishes to invite others or discuss hunting plans. And dog it suggests that this creation bear may have heard him. The death of a hunted bear is regarded with such ceremony with the ko yakan that its second only to a human funeral. They regarded bear mate as a delicacy, but killing one was a, quote, quest for prestige, and a high expression of manhood. This is similar to what bear hunting became in the south. And I hope you caught it, but doggett says that the bear was a creation bar, which is the same descriptor he used to describe Arkansas, the creation state. This is a spiritual place and beast. No one I've talked to really knows exactly what he meant. It's mysterious, but the climax of the story is that dog it says the bar was an unable bar that died when his time had come. Almost as if his death had been scripted in the hunter had nothing to do with it. The story is now handed back to our New Orleans traveler and he describes the peculiar response of the big bar. When the story was ended, our hero set some minutes with his auditors in grave silence. I saw there was a mystery to him connected with the bear, whose death he had just related and had evidently made a strong impression on his mind. It was also evident that there was some superstitious awe connected with the affair, a feeling common with all children of the wood when they meet with anything out of their everyday experience. He was the first one, however, to break the silence, and jumping up, he asked all present to liquor before going to bed. A thing which he did with a number of his companions evidently to his heart's content. Long before day, I was put ashore at my place of destination and I can only follow with the reader and imagination. Our Arkansas friend and his adventures at the forks of the cypress on the Mississippi.

Bowie Arkansas bears Richard Kate Nelson captain Scott Samson Paul Thorpe Obama doggett Alaska New Orleans Mississippi
"captain scott" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

08:38 min | 10 months ago

"captain scott" Discussed on Bear Grease

"When you're at your best, you can do great things, but sometimes life gets you bogged down, you may feel overwhelmed, or like you're not showing up in the way you want to. Working with a therapist can help you get closer to the best version of yourself because when you feel empowered, you're more prepared to take on everything that life throws at you. And if you're thinking of giving therapy a try, better help is a great option. It's convenient, flexible, affordable, and entirely online. Just fill out a brief questionnaire to get matched with a licensed therapist and switch therapist anytime for no additional charge. If you want to live a more empowered life, therapy can help you get there. Visit better help dot com slash Greece. Today to get 10% off your first month that's better help. HELP dot com slash Greece. Thank you. Aw, he went until he came to a tree, the limbs of which formed a crotch about 6 feet from the ground. In the crotch he got and seated himself and the dogs were yelling all around it, and there he set I and them as quiet as a pond in low water. A greenhorn friend of mine and company reached shooting distance before me and blazed away, hitting the critter in the center of the forehead. The bar shook his head as the ball struck it, and then walked down from that tree as gently as a lady would from a carriage. It was a beautiful sight to see him do that. He was in such a rage that he seemed to be as little afraid of the dogs as if they had been suckling pigs. In the dogs weren't slow and making a ring around him at a respectful distance. I tell you, even Bowie knife himself stood off. Then the way his eyes flashed, while the fire of them would have singed a cat's hair. In fact, that bar was in a wrath all over. Only one pup came near him, and he was brushed out so to tally with the bears left Paul that he entirely disappeared. And that made the old dogs even more cautious still. In the meantime, I came up and taken deliberate aim as a man should do at his side just at the back of the foreleg if my gun did not snap call me a coward and I won't take it personal. Yes, stranger, it snapped and I could not find a cap about my person. His eyes flashed with such fire, it would have scorched a cap. And we now see that this is no ordinary bear. He swatted a dog, and it vanished. And this veteran hunters Muslim pop to cap, meaning it didn't fire. But now he's beginning to plan for his final hunt. And if he doesn't kill it, he's leaving Arkansas, or maybe he'll be dead. It's unclear. Then I told my neighbors on that Monday morning, name in the day that I would start that bar and bring him home with me. Or they might divide by settlement among them, the owner having disappeared. Well, stranger on that morning, previous to the great day of my hunting expedition, I went into the Woods near my house, taking my gun and bowing off along just from habit, and they're sitting down also from habit. What should I see? Getting over my fence, but the bar. Yes, the Obama was within a hundred yards of me. And the way he walked over that fence. Stranger, he loomed up like a black mist and he seemed so large. He walked right towards me. I raised myself, took deliberate aim and fired. Instantly, the var wield and gave Yale and walked through the fence like a fallen tree wood through a cobweb. I started after, but was tripped up by my inexpressible, which either from habit or the excitement of the moment we're about my heels. And before I had really gathered myself up, I heard the environment grown in a thicket nearby like a thousand sinners. And by the time I reached him, he was a corpse. Stranger, it took 5 men and myself to put that carcass on a mule's back. An old long hair's waddled under his load, and if he was foundered in every leg of his body, and with a common whopper of a bar, he would have trotted off and enjoyed himself. Wouldn't astonish you to know how big he was. I made a bed spread of his skin. In the way it used to cover my bar mattress and leave several feet on each side to tuck up, would have delighted you. It was in fact a creation bar, and if it had lived in Samson's time, and if it had met him, in a fair fight, it would have licked him in the twinkling of a dice box. But stranger, I never liked the way a hundred him and missed him. There's something curious about it. I never could understand. And I never was satisfied at his given in so easily at last. Perhaps he had heard of my preparations to hunt him the next day, so he just come in like captain Scott's coon to save his win to grunt with and die in. But that ain't likely. My private opinion is that the bar was an unhung bar and died when his time had come. The bear was grown in like a thousand sinners. I'm impressed that Thorpe knew that a black bear is one of the few animals that we hunt on the planet that has a death moan, a double long shot bear, one that dies quickly, will often give a loud sometimes spooky elongated groan that can be heard a great distance. I'm talking like a couple hundred yards. It usually lasts longer than you think it should, and it's a sure sign of the bear's death. For a bear hunter, it's a bewildering moment of internal conflict as the excitement of certain success, wars with a sobriety delivered by the beast grandstanding auditory expression of death. Both feelings are usually of equal measure. Dog it also suggests that the bear heard his plans for his hunt and basically turned himself in. The sounds like a sensational thought, but in the book make prayers to the Raven by Richard Kate Nelson. We learned that the co Yukon people of Alaska believed the black bear was near the apex of spiritual power in the natural world. They believed that when a person plans a bear hunt, they should be careful not to speak directly about their hunt plans because the bear will hear them and avoid being killed. A hunter must speak in code using vague terms if he wishes to invite others or discuss hunting plans. And dog it suggests that this creation bear may have heard him. The death of a hunted bear is regarded with such ceremony with the ko yakan that its second only to a human funeral. They regarded bear mate as a delicacy, but killing one was a, quote, quest for prestige, and a high expression of manhood. This is similar to what bear hunting became in the south. And I hope you caught it, but doggett says that the bear was a creation bar, which is the same descriptor he used to describe Arkansas, the creation state. This is a spiritual place and beast. No one I've talked to really knows exactly what he meant. It's mysterious, but the climax of the story is that dog it says the bar was an unable bar that died when his time had come. Almost as if his death had been scripted in the hunter had nothing to do with it. The story is now handed back to our New Orleans traveler and he describes the peculiar response of the big bar. When the story was ended, our hero set some minutes with his auditors in grave silence. I saw there was a mystery to him connected with the bear, whose death he had just related and had evidently made a strong impression on his mind. It was also evident that there was some superstitious awe connected with the affair, a feeling common with all children of the wood when they meet with anything out of their everyday experience. He was the first one, however, to break the silence, and jumping up, he asked all present to liquor before going to bed. A thing which he did with a number of his companions evidently to his heart's content. Long before day, I was put ashore at my place of destination and I can only follow with the reader and imagination. Our Arkansas friend and his adventures at the forks of the cypress on the Mississippi.

Greece Bowie Arkansas bears Richard Kate Nelson captain Scott Samson Paul Thorpe Obama doggett Alaska New Orleans Mississippi
"captain scott" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

08:36 min | 10 months ago

"captain scott" Discussed on Bear Grease

"You're not. I hate that kind of stuff. Black buffalo knows this. That's why they make sure their product is an authentic, credible alternative. To dip, buy online at black buffalo dot com with promo code meat eater for 20% off your first order or check their store locator. And find thousands of locations, including town pump, where we all shop here in Montana and race track, one of the largest retailers in the southeast, warning this product contains nicotine, nicotine is an addictive chemical black buffalo strictly intended for 21 plus current consumers comparable products under each sale prohibited. Bear grease is sponsored by better help. I feel best when I'm feeling productive and the relationships in my life are strong with my wife, kids, and family. When you're at your best, you can do great things, but sometimes life gets you bogged down, you may feel overwhelmed, or like you're not showing up in the way you want to. Working with a therapist can help you get closer to the best version of yourself because when you feel empowered, you're more prepared to take on everything that life throws at you. And if you're thinking of giving therapy a try, better help is a great option. It's convenient, flexible, affordable, and entirely online. Just fill out a brief questionnaire to get matched with a licensed therapist and switch therapist anytime for no additional charge. If you want to live a more empowered life, therapy can help you get there. Visit better help dot com slash Greece. Today to get 10% off your first month that's better help. HELP dot com slash Greece. Thank you. Aw, he went until he came to a tree, the limbs of which formed a crotch about 6 feet from the ground. In the crotch he got and seated himself and the dogs were yelling all around it, and there he set I and them as quiet as a pond in low water. A greenhorn friend of mine and company reached shooting distance before me and blazed away, hitting the critter in the center of the forehead. The bar shook his head as the ball struck it, and then walked down from that tree as gently as a lady would from a carriage. It was a beautiful sight to see him do that. He was in such a rage that he seemed to be as little afraid of the dogs as if they had been suckling pigs. In the dogs weren't slow and making a ring around him at a respectful distance. I tell you, even Bowie knife himself stood off. Then the way his eyes flashed, while the fire of them would have singed a cat's hair. In fact, that bar was in a wrath all over. Only one pup came near him, and he was brushed out so to tally with the bears left Paul that he entirely disappeared. And that made the old dogs even more cautious still. In the meantime, I came up and taken deliberate aim as a man should do at his side just at the back of the foreleg if my gun did not snap call me a coward and I won't take it personal. Yes, stranger, it snapped and I could not find a cap about my person. His eyes flashed with such fire, it would have scorched a cap. And we now see that this is no ordinary bear. He swatted a dog, and it vanished. And this veteran hunters Muslim pop to cap, meaning it didn't fire. But now he's beginning to plan for his final hunt. And if he doesn't kill it, he's leaving Arkansas, or maybe he'll be dead. It's unclear. Then I told my neighbors on that Monday morning, name in the day that I would start that bar and bring him home with me. Or they might divide by settlement among them, the owner having disappeared. Well, stranger on that morning, previous to the great day of my hunting expedition, I went into the Woods near my house, taking my gun and bowing off along just from habit, and they're sitting down also from habit. What should I see? Getting over my fence, but the bar. Yes, the Obama was within a hundred yards of me. And the way he walked over that fence. Stranger, he loomed up like a black mist and he seemed so large. He walked right towards me. I raised myself, took deliberate aim and fired. Instantly, the var wield and gave Yale and walked through the fence like a fallen tree wood through a cobweb. I started after, but was tripped up by my inexpressible, which either from habit or the excitement of the moment we're about my heels. And before I had really gathered myself up, I heard the environment grown in a thicket nearby like a thousand sinners. And by the time I reached him, he was a corpse. Stranger, it took 5 men and myself to put that carcass on a mule's back. An old long hair's waddled under his load, and if he was foundered in every leg of his body, and with a common whopper of a bar, he would have trotted off and enjoyed himself. Wouldn't astonish you to know how big he was. I made a bed spread of his skin. In the way it used to cover my bar mattress and leave several feet on each side to tuck up, would have delighted you. It was in fact a creation bar, and if it had lived in Samson's time, and if it had met him, in a fair fight, it would have licked him in the twinkling of a dice box. But stranger, I never liked the way a hundred him and missed him. There's something curious about it. I never could understand. And I never was satisfied at his given in so easily at last. Perhaps he had heard of my preparations to hunt him the next day, so he just come in like captain Scott's coon to save his win to grunt with and die in. But that ain't likely. My private opinion is that the bar was an unhung bar and died when his time had come. The bear was grown in like a thousand sinners. I'm impressed that Thorpe knew that a black bear is one of the few animals that we hunt on the planet that has a death moan, a double long shot bear, one that dies quickly, will often give a loud sometimes spooky elongated groan that can be heard a great distance. I'm talking like a couple hundred yards. It usually lasts longer than you think it should, and it's a sure sign of the bear's death. For a bear hunter, it's a bewildering moment of internal conflict as the excitement of certain success, wars with a sobriety delivered by the beast grandstanding auditory expression of death. Both feelings are usually of equal measure. Dog it also suggests that the bear heard his plans for his hunt and basically turned himself in. The sounds like a sensational thought, but in the book make prayers to the Raven by Richard Kate Nelson. We learned that the co Yukon people of Alaska believed the black bear was near the apex of spiritual power in the natural world. They believed that when a person plans a bear hunt, they should be careful not to speak directly about their hunt plans because the bear will hear them and avoid being killed. A hunter must speak in code using vague terms if he wishes to invite others or discuss hunting plans. And dog it suggests that this creation bear may have heard him. The death of a hunted bear is regarded with such ceremony with the ko yakan that its second only to a human funeral. They regarded bear mate as a delicacy, but killing one was a, quote, quest for prestige, and a high expression of manhood. This is similar to what bear hunting became in the south. And I hope you caught it, but doggett says that the bear was a creation bar, which is the same descriptor he used to describe Arkansas, the creation state. This is a spiritual place and beast. No one I've talked to really knows exactly what he meant. It's mysterious, but the climax of the story is that dog it says the bar was an unable bar that died when his time had come. Almost as if his death had been scripted in the hunter had nothing to do with it. The story is now handed back to our New Orleans traveler and he describes the peculiar response of the big bar.

Greece buffalo Montana Bowie Arkansas bears captain Scott Paul Samson Richard Kate Nelson Obama Thorpe Alaska doggett New Orleans
"captain scott" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

07:53 min | 10 months ago

"captain scott" Discussed on Bear Grease

"Same ritual. So everything you love about dip without the tobacco. Tell us more. Here's our very own chili. Here at meat eater, he's gonna lay it out. Listen, man, let me tell you something about black buffalo. That stuff right there really just makes me feel like I'm chewing. For the first time all over again. I'm still on that black buffalo mint pouches. You know, that stuff still gets to me, so I'm gonna keep using it, and the second it stops, I'm gonna chew hop onto the next flavor. That's right, authenticity matters. That meat eater, authenticity, I believe, has played a big part in our success, cause we like to make the kind of content do the kind of things and talk about the things that were genuinely interested in. It's not like you go in like pretend to be an interested in something you're not. I hate that kind of stuff. Black buffalo knows this. That's why they make sure their product is an authentic, credible alternative. To dip, buy online at black buffalo dot com with promo code meat eater for 20% off your first order or check their store locator. And find thousands of locations, including town pump, where we all shop here in Montana and race track, one of the largest retailers in the southeast, warning this product contains nicotine, nicotine is an addictive chemical black buffalo strictly intended for 21 plus current consumers comparable products under each sale prohibited. Bear grease is sponsored by better help. I feel best when I'm feeling productive and the relationships in my life are strong with my wife, kids, and family. When you're at your best, you can do great things, but sometimes life gets you bogged down, you may feel overwhelmed, or like you're not showing up in the way you want to. Working with a therapist can help you get closer to the best version of yourself because when you feel empowered, you're more prepared to take on everything that life throws at you. And if you're thinking of giving therapy a try, better help is a great option. It's convenient, flexible, affordable, and entirely online. Just fill out a brief questionnaire to get matched with a licensed therapist and switch therapist anytime for no additional charge. If you want to live a more empowered life, therapy can help you get there. Visit better help dot com slash Greece. Today to get 10% off your first month that's better help. HELP dot com slash Greece. Thank you. Aw, he went until he came to a tree, the limbs of which formed a crotch about 6 feet from the ground. In the crotch he got and seated himself and the dogs were yelling all around it, and there he set I and them as quiet as a pond in low water. A greenhorn friend of mine and company reached shooting distance before me and blazed away, hitting the critter in the center of the forehead. The bar shook his head as the ball struck it, and then walked down from that tree as gently as a lady would from a carriage. It was a beautiful sight to see him do that. He was in such a rage that he seemed to be as little afraid of the dogs as if they had been suckling pigs. In the dogs weren't slow and making a ring around him at a respectful distance. I tell you, even Bowie knife himself stood off. Then the way his eyes flashed, while the fire of them would have singed a cat's hair. In fact, that bar was in a wrath all over. Only one pup came near him, and he was brushed out so to tally with the bears left Paul that he entirely disappeared. And that made the old dogs even more cautious still. In the meantime, I came up and taken deliberate aim as a man should do at his side just at the back of the foreleg if my gun did not snap call me a coward and I won't take it personal. Yes, stranger, it snapped and I could not find a cap about my person. His eyes flashed with such fire, it would have scorched a cap. And we now see that this is no ordinary bear. He swatted a dog, and it vanished. And this veteran hunters Muslim pop to cap, meaning it didn't fire. But now he's beginning to plan for his final hunt. And if he doesn't kill it, he's leaving Arkansas, or maybe he'll be dead. It's unclear. Then I told my neighbors on that Monday morning, name in the day that I would start that bar and bring him home with me. Or they might divide by settlement among them, the owner having disappeared. Well, stranger on that morning, previous to the great day of my hunting expedition, I went into the Woods near my house, taking my gun and bowing off along just from habit, and they're sitting down also from habit. What should I see? Getting over my fence, but the bar. Yes, the Obama was within a hundred yards of me. And the way he walked over that fence. Stranger, he loomed up like a black mist and he seemed so large. He walked right towards me. I raised myself, took deliberate aim and fired. Instantly, the var wield and gave Yale and walked through the fence like a fallen tree wood through a cobweb. I started after, but was tripped up by my inexpressible, which either from habit or the excitement of the moment we're about my heels. And before I had really gathered myself up, I heard the environment grown in a thicket nearby like a thousand sinners. And by the time I reached him, he was a corpse. Stranger, it took 5 men and myself to put that carcass on a mule's back. An old long hair's waddled under his load, and if he was foundered in every leg of his body, and with a common whopper of a bar, he would have trotted off and enjoyed himself. Wouldn't astonish you to know how big he was. I made a bed spread of his skin. In the way it used to cover my bar mattress and leave several feet on each side to tuck up, would have delighted you. It was in fact a creation bar, and if it had lived in Samson's time, and if it had met him, in a fair fight, it would have licked him in the twinkling of a dice box. But stranger, I never liked the way a hundred him and missed him. There's something curious about it. I never could understand. And I never was satisfied at his given in so easily at last. Perhaps he had heard of my preparations to hunt him the next day, so he just come in like captain Scott's coon to save his win to grunt with and die in. But that ain't likely. My private opinion is that the bar was an unhung bar and died when his time had come. The bear was grown in like a thousand sinners. I'm impressed that Thorpe knew that a black bear is one of the few animals that we hunt on the planet that has a death moan, a double long shot bear, one that dies quickly, will often give a loud sometimes spooky elongated groan that can be heard a great distance. I'm talking like a couple hundred yards. It usually lasts longer than you think it should, and it's a sure sign of the bear's death. For a bear hunter, it's a bewildering moment of internal conflict as the excitement of certain success, wars with a sobriety delivered by the beast grandstanding auditory expression of death. Both feelings are usually of equal measure. Dog it also suggests that the bear heard his plans for his hunt and basically turned himself in. The sounds like a sensational thought, but in the book make prayers to the Raven by Richard Kate Nelson. We learned that the co Yukon people

buffalo Greece Montana Bowie bears Arkansas Paul Obama Samson captain Scott Thorpe Richard Kate Nelson
"captain scott" Discussed on Bear Grease

Bear Grease

07:52 min | 10 months ago

"captain scott" Discussed on Bear Grease

"Suspension travel. Its front and rear electronic locking differentials, Gary nukem approved, ensure that max power goes to all the wheels, limiting wheel slip. Aggressive off road cut front bumper also Gary nukem approved, and large underbody skid plates make off roading a breeze. Plus, it has a 13.4 inch diagonal touchscreen and an available multi flex tailgate. Leave the pavement behind boys and go above and beyond or just about anywhere because adventure is everywhere. Learn more at Chevy dot com. Black buffalo different leaf, same ritual. So everything you love about dip without the tobacco. Tell us more. Here's our very own chili. Here at meat eater, he's gonna lay it out. Listen, man, let me tell you something about black buffalo. That stuff right there really just makes me feel like I'm chewing. For the first time all over again. I'm still on that black buffalo mint pouches. You know, that stuff still gets to me, so I'm gonna keep using it, and the second it stops, I'm gonna chew hop onto the next flavor. That's right, authenticity matters. That meat eater, authenticity, I believe, has played a big part in our success, cause we like to make the kind of content do the kind of things and talk about the things that were genuinely interested in. It's not like you go in like pretend to be an interested in something you're not. I hate that kind of stuff. Black buffalo knows this. That's why they make sure their product is an authentic, credible alternative. To dip, buy online at black buffalo dot com with promo code meat eater for 20% off your first order or check their store locator. And find thousands of locations, including town pump, where we all shop here in Montana and race track, one of the largest retailers in the southeast, warning this product contains nicotine, nicotine is an addictive chemical black buffalo strictly intended for 21 plus current consumers comparable products under each sale prohibited. Bear grease is sponsored by better help. I feel best when I'm feeling productive and the relationships in my life are strong with my wife, kids, and family. When you're at your best, you can do great things, but sometimes life gets you bogged down, you may feel overwhelmed, or like you're not showing up in the way you want to. Working with a therapist can help you get closer to the best version of yourself because when you feel empowered, you're more prepared to take on everything that life throws at you. And if you're thinking of giving therapy a try, better help is a great option. It's convenient, flexible, affordable, and entirely online. Just fill out a brief questionnaire to get matched with a licensed therapist and switch therapist anytime for no additional charge. If you want to live a more empowered life, therapy can help you get there. Visit better help dot com slash Greece. Today to get 10% off your first month that's better help. HELP dot com slash Greece. Thank you. Aw, he went until he came to a tree, the limbs of which formed a crotch about 6 feet from the ground. In the crotch he got and seated himself and the dogs were yelling all around it, and there he set I and them as quiet as a pond in low water. A greenhorn friend of mine and company reached shooting distance before me and blazed away, hitting the critter in the center of the forehead. The bar shook his head as the ball struck it, and then walked down from that tree as gently as a lady would from a carriage. It was a beautiful sight to see him do that. He was in such a rage that he seemed to be as little afraid of the dogs as if they had been suckling pigs. In the dogs weren't slow and making a ring around him at a respectful distance. I tell you, even Bowie knife himself stood off. Then the way his eyes flashed, while the fire of them would have singed a cat's hair. In fact, that bar was in a wrath all over. Only one pup came near him, and he was brushed out so to tally with the bears left Paul that he entirely disappeared. And that made the old dogs even more cautious still. In the meantime, I came up and taken deliberate aim as a man should do at his side just at the back of the foreleg if my gun did not snap call me a coward and I won't take it personal. Yes, stranger, it snapped and I could not find a cap about my person. His eyes flashed with such fire, it would have scorched a cap. And we now see that this is no ordinary bear. He swatted a dog, and it vanished. And this veteran hunters Muslim pop to cap, meaning it didn't fire. But now he's beginning to plan for his final hunt. And if he doesn't kill it, he's leaving Arkansas, or maybe he'll be dead. It's unclear. Then I told my neighbors on that Monday morning, name in the day that I would start that bar and bring him home with me. Or they might divide by settlement among them, the owner having disappeared. Well, stranger on that morning, previous to the great day of my hunting expedition, I went into the Woods near my house, taking my gun and bowing off along just from habit, and they're sitting down also from habit. What should I see? Getting over my fence, but the bar. Yes, the Obama was within a hundred yards of me. And the way he walked over that fence. Stranger, he loomed up like a black mist and he seemed so large. He walked right towards me. I raised myself, took deliberate aim and fired. Instantly, the var wield and gave Yale and walked through the fence like a fallen tree wood through a cobweb. I started after, but was tripped up by my inexpressible, which either from habit or the excitement of the moment we're about my heels. And before I had really gathered myself up, I heard the environment grown in a thicket nearby like a thousand sinners. And by the time I reached him, he was a corpse. Stranger, it took 5 men and myself to put that carcass on a mule's back. An old long hair's waddled under his load, and if he was foundered in every leg of his body, and with a common whopper of a bar, he would have trotted off and enjoyed himself. Wouldn't astonish you to know how big he was. I made a bed spread of his skin. In the way it used to cover my bar mattress and leave several feet on each side to tuck up, would have delighted you. It was in fact a creation bar, and if it had lived in Samson's time, and if it had met him, in a fair fight, it would have licked him in the twinkling of a dice box. But stranger, I never liked the way a hundred him and missed him. There's something curious about it. I never could understand. And I never was satisfied at his given in so easily at last. Perhaps he had heard of my preparations to hunt him the next day, so he just come in like captain Scott's coon to save his win to grunt with and die in. But that ain't likely. My private opinion is that the bar was an unhung bar and died when his time had come. The bear was grown in like a thousand sinners. I'm impressed that Thorpe knew that a black bear is one of the few animals that we hunt on the planet that has a death moan, a double long shot bear, one that dies quickly, will often give a loud sometimes spooky elongated

Gary nukem buffalo Greece Montana Bowie bears Arkansas Paul Obama Samson captain Scott Thorpe
"captain scott" Discussed on 850 WFTL

850 WFTL

05:43 min | 2 years ago

"captain scott" Discussed on 850 WFTL

"Him? Ice cream would be in the one Would dance around. Keep outs told me Be careful what you do, don't go around breaking young girls' hearts. Told me I'd be graphical. He loved me ever want to do the live becoming jeans? My Jesus that my son, she says. But my son before the season for tonight, I was on the side can stand when he's in the manor lands that would dance Bill. Around something my strong get Vice just ring band back to always say twice. Don't try, she told my baby. There's three that didn't your photo baby cries eyes wouldn't like mine. Don't dance. All of Lord people always told me Be careful what you do. Don't go around Brigham Young girls. I don't know what you did right by me. I got the smell of freedom. You're moment changelings. She just to get careless? Not my son. I don't find out change. Jesus again. Get So, she said, but the chance Yes, my son, Bannon change that by she just sit down. Yeah. She said. You know what You mean by change, Mom. Cheney. You must stand all the touch child. Your hand makes my fault. Three. That it's only up three for me. Girl possessed such it's busy, huh? Yeah. Jake girl. Must try to ignore added means more than that. What's left? Start to do this. What's love but a secondhand e boy Ocean? What's left? You got to do with it? Who needs a heart when a heart can be Brompton may see you acting confused when you're close to me if I can to love days Read it someplace I've got cause to be. It has a name for the There's a phrase back to him. Whatever reason to do it for me. Watch love. Captain Scott. Do what Sacked in handy bullshit. I've got to do got to do with it. Who needs a heart.

"captain scott" Discussed on KCRW

KCRW

06:27 min | 2 years ago

"captain scott" Discussed on KCRW

"The current Russian and American leaders. All the history made us hungry for the long view. And so we've called Madeleine Albright, secretary of state from 1997 to 2000 and one Who has some history of her own negotiating with the Kremlin Secretary Albright. Welcome to all things considered delighted to be with you. Thank you Set the stage for us a little bit, and I'm thinking of the choice of Geneva. I mentioned that 1955 summit. Reagan was here with Gorbachev. That was 1985. Is there a lesson from those summits of your that the the current president's Russian and American would do well to bear in mind? Well, I think that they are a way of two leaders of countries to sit together, get to know each other and then try to figure out How whatever they have decided can be carried out. So it's just one of the steps in a diplomatic process. You're saying just that moment of getting two leaders. In a room. That progress can be made that can't be made by all the groundwork in the world laid by AIDS in advance or following up afterwards. Well, I think it's one of the steps I do think one has to keep in mind, be it the Soviet Union or Russia. There is a similar desire by the Russians. To have a meeting where their importance is viewed where they are on the world stage. And the United States believes in having discussions and so I do think they're useful tool, but only one of the tools that is needed. To really make diplomacy work. Let's talk about Putin. You met him for the first time in 2000 at the Kremlin. Is that right? Well, I actually met him earlier when he was prime minister. 1999, and he was trying very hard to ingratiate himself with President Clinton. And what was your first impression? Well, my first impression was that he was kind of Trying to figure out who he was. But my impression in the second two meetings were that he very much liked the background of being in the Kremlin. With all its history that he was smart that he was prepared, um, and that he had a view about how things were going to go. One really kind of crazy thing was that at the summer Summit. They always well summits. They like to have some kind of entertainment. And so what happened that night? President Putin was trying to be modern and please President Clinton, so they decided to have A jazz concert. President Clinton absolutely could never said Still, when there was music, and Putin didn't move at a nerve. You couldn't see him move at all. He was totally rigid through all of this, so he doesn't have the kind of personality of having that way. I'm trying to imagine Vladimir Putin feeling moved by the beat of jazz and And breaking out some some moves. I mean, you're talking about Bill Clinton, who is, of course, the American president. You were speaking on behalf of when you were negotiating with Putin as the American secretary of state. It's you know, that was Putin's first American president, Joe Biden is his fifth. Yeah. Do you think any American president has successfully managed him? Well, he is not easy to manage. I think he is somebody that is very competent in his capabilities generally. And he believes that he is the sole reason in many ways that Russia now is on the world stage and that he wants to make sure that rush care is always taken into consideration. But Russia is alone. And I think In contrast, when the American president has gone in, uh, we have partners and it's never been clearer than it will be this time because President Biden has just come from some remarkable meetings, the G seven NATO and the EU and we have allies. And Putin is alone. And I, um I mentioned that we have returned into you for the long view. I know you have studied this relationship US Russia for a long time. I'm curious. I keep hearing this described as a particularly low moment and the relationship was there ever a high moment, however, a Hotpoint with Putin? Yeah. I don't think so. Frankly, I think that, um there might have been some hope when he came on, but I think that it was very clear that he had his agenda and I don't really remember a high moment with Putin. Madeleine Albright. She was secretary of state. In Bill Clinton's administration. Secretary Albright This was a pleasure. Thanks for taking the time. Thank you. The West is broiling. Excessive heat warnings are in effect again today from Phoenix, where today's forecast was 120 degrees to eastern Montana, where some farming towns braced for highs close to 110. NPR's Kirk Siegler reports There is little relief in sight for the drought stricken region. How hot is it? It's like opening an oven when you're baking a pie Captain Scott Douglas is a paramedic with the Phoenix Fire Department. The city has opened 66 cooling refuges and hydration stations at parks, libraries and pools. It's hot, and people say it's a dry heat, and I'm like, Well, you know what? When it gets 217 118 degrees It doesn't matter if it's dry, moist, cool. Whatever it's hot. Phoenix broke records last year for hitting 100 degrees or higher for more than 144 days. Last year was also a record wildfire year in much of the West, and every day there's a headline screaming this summer could be worse. Arizona lawmakers are holding a special session this week to consider $100 Million Emergency bill for fire Fighting and prevention in Nevada were invasive grasses and drought have fueled record range fires lately. Firefighters have.

Vladimir Putin Madeleine Albright Bill Clinton Putin 1997 Kirk Siegler Joe Biden 1985 120 degrees $100 Million 1999 Nevada Phoenix Phoenix Fire Department 217 Last year 2000 President last year EU
"captain scott" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

WNYC 93.9 FM

06:27 min | 2 years ago

"captain scott" Discussed on WNYC 93.9 FM

"Hosts the current Russian and American leaders. All the history made us hungry for the long view. And so we've called Madeleine Albright, secretary of State from 1997 to 2000 and one who has some history of her own negotiating with the Kremlin Secretary Albright. Welcome to all things considered delighted to be with you. Thank you Set the stage for us a little bit, and I'm thinking of the choice of Geneva. I mentioned that 1955 summit. Reagan was here with Gorbachev. That was 1985. Is there a lesson from those summits of your that the the current president's Russian and American would do well to bear in mind? Well, I think that they are a way of two leaders of countries to sit together, get to know each other. And then try to figure out how whatever they have decided can be carried out. So it's just one of the steps in a diplomatic process. You're saying just that moment of getting two leaders In a room. That progress can be made that can't be made by all the groundwork in the world laid by AIDS in advance or following up afterwards. Well, I think it's one of the steps I do think one has to keep in mind, be it the Soviet Union or Russia. There is a similar desire by the Russians, uh, to have a meeting where their importance is viewed. Where they are on the world stage, and the United States believes in having discussions and so I do think they're useful tool, but only one of the tools that is needed. To really make diplomacy work. Well, let's talk about Putin. You met him for the first time in 2000 at the Kremlin. Is that right? Well, I actually met him earlier when he was prime minister. 1999, and he was trying very hard to ingratiate himself with President Clinton. And what was your first impression? Well, my first impression was that he was kind of Trying to figure out who he was. But my impression in the second two meetings were that he very much liked the background of being in the Kremlin. With all its history that he was smart that he was prepared, um, and that he had a view about how things were going to go. One really kind of crazy thing was that at the summer Summit. They always well summits. They like to have some kind of entertainment. And so what happened that night? President Putin was trying to be modern and please President Clinton, so they decided to have A jazz concert. President Clinton absolutely could never said Still when there was music, and Putin didn't move. Uh, a nerve. You couldn't see him move at all. He was totally rigid through all of this. So, um, he doesn't have the kind of personality of having any kind of that way. I'm trying to imagine Vladimir Putin feeling moved by the beat of jazz and And breaking out some some moves. I mean, you're talking about Bill Clinton, who is of course, the American president. You were speaking on behalf of when you were negotiating with Putin as the American secretary of state. It's you know, that was Putin's first American president, Joe Biden is his fifth. Do you think any American president has successfully managed him? Well, he is not easy to manage. I think he is somebody that is very competent in his capabilities generally. And he believes, uh, that he is the sole reason in many ways that Russia now is on the world stage and that he wants to make sure that Russia is always taken into consideration. But Russia is alone. And I think In contrast, when the American president has gone in, we have partners and it's never been clearer than it will be this time because President Biden has just come from some remarkable meetings, the G seven NATO and the EU and we have allies. And Putin is alone. And I, um I mentioned that we have returned into you for the long view. I know you have studied this relationship US Russia for a long time. I'm curious. I keep hearing this described as a particularly low moment and the relationship was there ever a high moment, however, a Hotpoint with Putin? Yeah. I don't think so. Frankly, I think that, um there might have been some hope when he came on, but I think that it was very clear that he had his agenda. Uh and I don't really remember a high moment with Putin. Madeleine Albright. She was secretary of state. In Bill Clinton's administration. Secretary Albright This was a pleasure. Thanks for taking the time. Thank you. Mm. The West is broiling. Excessive heat warnings are in effect again today from Phoenix, where today's forecast was 120 degrees to eastern Montana, where some farming towns braced for highs close to 110. NPR's Kirk Siegler reports, There is little relief in sight for the drought stricken region. How hot is it? It's like opening an oven when you're baking a pie Captain Scott Douglas is a paramedic with the Phoenix Fire Department. The city has opened 66 cooling refuges and hydration stations at parks, libraries and pools. It's hot, and people say it's a dry heat, and I'm like, Well, you know what? When it gets to 117 118 degrees It doesn't matter if it's dry, moist, cool. Whatever it's hot. Phoenix broke records last year for hitting 100 degrees or higher for more than 144 days. Last year was also a record wildfire year in much of the West, and every day there's a headline screaming this summer could be worse. Arizona lawmakers are holding a special session this week to consider $100 Million Emergency bill for fire Fighting and prevention in Nevada were invasive grasses and drought have fueled record range fires lately. Firefighters have.

Madeleine Albright Bill Clinton Vladimir Putin Putin 1997 Joe Biden 1985 Nevada 120 degrees Kirk Siegler 1999 117 last year Last year Phoenix Phoenix Fire Department 100 degrees $100 Million 2000 Reagan
Extreme Heat in the West to Send Temps to Triple Digits

Environment: NPR

02:05 min | 2 years ago

Extreme Heat in the West to Send Temps to Triple Digits

"The west is broiling. Excessive heat warnings are in effect again today from phoenix where today's forecast was one hundred. Twenty degrees to eastern montana where some farming towns braced for highs close to one hundred ten. Npr's kirk siegler reports. There is little relief in sight. For the drought stricken region. How hot is it. It's like opening an oven when you're baking pie. Captain scott. douglas is a paramedic with the phoenix. Fire department the city is open sixty six cooling refuges and hydration stations at parks libraries and pools. It's hot and people say it's a dry heat. And i'm like well you know what when it gets two hundred seventeen hundred and eighteen degrees. It doesn't matter if it's dry. Moist phoenix broke records last year. For hitting a hundred degrees or higher for more than one hundred and forty four days last year was also a record wildfire year and much of the west and every day. There's a headline screaming. This summer could be worse arizona. Lawmakers are holding a special session this week to consider a hundred million dollar emergency bill for firefighting and prevention in nevada were invasive grasses and drought have fueled record range fires lately. Firefighters have been dealing with one hundred degree temperatures for the past two weeks. Paul peterson is the fire management officer for the federal bureau of land management. They're typically we wouldn't have a heat and winds until mid july. So i'm hoping that's not an indication of what we're going to see in the future. He's hoping that the monsoon rains arrive this summer. They were no-show last year. Meteorologists are blaming this blistering event on a heat. Dome stubborn high pressure ridge. That's blocking cooler systems. Nikolai rymer is with the national weather. Service in billings. Montana where the forecast. Hi today june fifteenth is one hundred six. We are very close to the hottest temperatures that we've ever recorded here rhymer says scientists can't pinpoint any one heat wave like this on climate change but he says the record drought and extremely low humidity. Right now is making the heat. Even worse

Phoenix Kirk Siegler Captain Scott NPR Paul Peterson Montana Federal Bureau Of Land Managem Fire Department Douglas Arizona Nevada Nikolai Rymer Rhymer Billings
"captain scott" Discussed on Newsradio 970 WFLA

Newsradio 970 WFLA

06:50 min | 2 years ago

"captain scott" Discussed on Newsradio 970 WFLA

"But the last few days, though, there has been a good flow on the beach. They're moving. I mean, it's hard to work on. But there has been a lot of fish. Yeah, on the beach, but they're not sticking in those passes like Yeah, I just put the brakes on, but they're just kind of zooming by now. Bocas had good season. You know a lot of fish Boca this year by hurt, But in talking with Jaimie Goodwin, Jamie said the last We can have two weeks has been tough. They've been grinding. Yeah, I mean, Jamie said he caught seven fish. You know, we Mean, Jamie's like a seven fish a day. It makes me feel better. Yes, it did. Me too. I was like, Okay, well, they're just me. I mean, and Jamie's running doubles. You know, I'm running one trip a day. God bless Captain Jaimie Goodwin. He's running. You know, six a.m. to noon and then picking up at one and fish until 78 o'clock at night, and he did seven in a week. That's tough. That's not. Yeah, that's not very, I mean, that's some grinding artificial make you humble, that's for sure. I guess you know, in talking with Captain Scott more this week, um We saw Justin out on egg Mont. Which always makes me feel better If I'm in the same place that Justin Moore is, Yeah, he's on it. He's got to be somewhere top shelf. No question about that Excellent fishermen dialed in very good and chatting with Scott, which is always a blessing, having Scott Moron. He thinks that a lot of those fish are up the bay. Eating off of that red tide. I mean, they're scavengers that makes a little bit of sense. Yeah, but there's not that many fish up to bay. You know, you know, I mean, like last year, for instance, we had up around. Um MacDill, an area we called G cut. There was a jillion fish up there. I mean, they stayed there for two. At least two weeks, maybe three weeks. There's a massive amount of fish. We didn't have that this year. You know, there's been nothing Guys and guides that were fishing that we didn't see any massive amounts of fish up in that base site. I don't know. I just We still have the the amount of fish that we've had in the past. You would. You would think that that with that red tie being in that You know, Piney Point Piney Creek area for the most part. That's where all the models are telling us that it's concentrated. That's where the dead fish were on the social media video. I saw Go figure thanks D e P for Helping us with that, Um, beautiful problem. Yeah. Um But you would think That if that was the case that the port would be the place where you'd see him, all right? I mean, if that's while you're dead fish are and the scavengers that tarpon are would be there and I'm just falling on Captain Scott Morris theories because he knows he's as good as search, too. Um, you would think that whole port edge right? There would be. I mean, that would be it would be you're G cut from last year with there's just hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of fish. You know, this fish pushed out there last year, though, that of course it was during the full moons when they And I pushed out there. But you know it's every year is different sort of get every year. There's no two years alike. And you would think and again and I tell people this all the time. You know, I just Been doing this 21 years next month. You've been doing away longer than I've been doing it. And you have his good and network as there is because of where you are. I mean, everybody all day every day. People here fishing. Oh, it's fish every day. Right? So, your intel and your knowledge that comes in and out of there is incredible. You know, Um And you and I are this frustrated. That's tarpon. They are the most frustrating dog on fish on the planet. God, they drive me nuts. Er I mean, I've been chasing those things. Well, I caught my first fish in 1961. So you know how long I've been chasing him, right? But But they're still saying they're still tarp in. Yeah, you know, I mean, I mean, there's certain things you do learn about. I mean, If you chase them long enough. You do learn some things for sure, but but still at all. You got to get bad taste to just this week, right here just kicked me in the head. I mean, I absolutely love chasing that fish. We got a big girl this week about 100 and 70 pounder. You know, for a guy who had never caught one before he's been fishing all over the world and just never caught a big carpet. It was a great feeling. It was a great fish. We did everything right? Had a shark on it. Ran the shark off everything just, you know, I get a face to face crab. And you're you know, you get that fish up next to the boat. And you're looking into that big, beautiful gold. I I mean, it's a really, really cool experience. But damn, they are frustrating. Yeah, you don't You don't stand alone Go from hero to zero. And like, you know, 11 evening, you can be red hot, and by the next day at noon, you feel like I have no idea what you're doing again. It's unbelievable. Okay. Pretty much had the feeling yesterday, too. I was yesterday. Last night. It was on the hill tied last night, Captain Lisa Fitzgerald and low Boris and we're on the boat. They they had me bring my wife Beth along and I'm telling you by eight o'clock last night. I'm like, if I don't see my tarpon rods for a year, I'd be thrilled. And I got a tarpon trip on Wednesday. So I'm still fishing on Monday. Thank God, I need a break. But back at it Wednesday like I don't know you've got to be like a relief pitcher, man. Just kind of a short memory and they don't forget it. No force Just shake it off. Yeah, just shake it off. Speaking of relief pitchers, I saw my buddy Austin Meadows this week at O'Neill's with his boat Chilling. Yeah, it was pretty cool. So Good to see him out there floating around. He had some friends in from Georgia. He likes fish. No doubt about that is a fishy, dude. Fishy. Dude, I shot that TV show out there stream song with him and had some people walk up. And so I was standing there and immediately They mentioned him falling off my boat Street song episode. Yeah, she was really funny. So I told him to. I didn't hesitate. I said, you know, uh, Boston, you're having a pretty good year, buddy. And I can't help but think that's directly related to your appearance on real animals. So next year, you that Almost be against me and you know, they say it's not good to fall off a boat sober, You know that? Well, we were silver. We were definitely sober. But the night before. Not so much that day. We were definitely sober. Uh, but super good to, uh, Super Good to see him. How was your kingfish season? We have so much wind again. It was tough, you know, did better later in the season actually were fishing down south. You know, if Longboat But actually actually did very well there but didn't do worth a hoot anywhere else. That's why I kept hearing that. You know the bites. Incredible South long about everybody was like, Oh, even a couple of the guys a lot of guys that run out of my marina that are diehard kingfish guys. They were like, Yeah, we're we're crushing. We're crushing with him. It was It was good there, but it was still bumpy, though, and it was windy. There was a couple of days there was like, you know. I don't really want any more of this..

Jaimie Goodwin Georgia Monday Wednesday Justin Moore Jamie Last night Scott Moron seven fish 1961 yesterday three weeks hundreds two Beth last night two weeks Justin seven 21 years
"captain scott" Discussed on KLIF 570 AM

KLIF 570 AM

03:34 min | 2 years ago

"captain scott" Discussed on KLIF 570 AM

"New mayor of Fort Worth, replacing Betsy Price. Parker, the youngest person to be elected mayor of a major city, says she's going to bring the city together and demonstrate that a world class city is capable being of a capable of being a premier destination. We're also going to focus on bringing additional corporate success stories here to our community to help drive our economy and move forward forward. Price endorsed Parker and congratulated her saying, quote. Matty undoubtedly has the heart for service and the head for policy that we need leading Fort Worth during this time of rapid growth and change and set your alarms now at 8 30 this morning, Maddie Parker will join us on the show Live so 8 30 we will hear from the mayor elect of Fort Worth. Speaking of mayors getting elected businessman Jim Ross declared victory Saturday night in the Arlington Merrill runoff election to replace three term Mayor Arlington Mayor Jeff Williams, who was barred from running. Again due to term limits, Ross says his focuses on bringing more jobs to the city. I'm an entrepreneur. First of all, and I'm never satisfied with the status quo. Anyplace I've gone, whether it's the police Department, whether it's being self employed, whether it's working in other law firms, every place I've gone, I've sought to make that place better. In the May 1st election. Ross received 47% of the vote over Michael Glaspie, but it went to a runoff because he needed 50% plus one to win. On Saturday, Ross declared his victory with 54% of the vote. A Democratic state legislator defended his colleagues dramatic exit from the House chambers last week in protest of the so called election security bill, representative Gene Wu told W F A is inside Texas politics and if nothing else the public needed to know about 22 pages. The GOP added to the bill before the session ended, was just so much worse than anything even contemplated by either body, and they should not be allowed to sneak that through. In the middle of the night. The issue is expected to be added to a special session this part this fall and the Tyler Morning Telegraph is reporting that in East Texas mayor has resigned just one day after being arrested for online solicitation of a minor. Texas state. Police say Montgomery and three other suspects were arrested when they arrived at the location after allegedly soliciting sex online, with investigators posing as minors. Montgomery is out of jail after posting $300,000 bond city officials say an interim mayor will be appointed within the next month. K Life news Time Now 79. Let's take a check on how your money is doing. Here is the latest business update from network radio Spencer MacGowan Morning, Spencer. Good morning, Captain Scott or the Dow's Up 49 points to start the week. 34,800. The NASDAQ slightly down in premarket trading. West Texas Intermediate crude 69 46 a barrel candidate. Top 70 is a key question for the oil executives this week. The 10 year U. S. Treasury 1.58% and what that tells us, while the bond markets not worried about inflation yet I'm Spencer Miguel and President Miguel and group network radio dot com. Coming up in our cliff notes at 7 17 more on those local elections, Allen West stepping down what's he going to do? Next in his career, and this is fascinating. The what? The Democratic senator said about the voting bill, and he said he's not on board with the Democrats. The reasoning why is amazing? And I think this is going to be a big turning point in the negotiations of where this bill goes. So we'll tell you about that. We've got lots of audio lots of stuff to get into. Stay with us. Cliff notes at 7 17 right now at K L I.

Michael Glaspie Maddie Parker Jim Ross Betsy Price 50% 54% Gene Wu Saturday Ross $300,000 47% Price Saturday night 1.58% GOP Parker Spencer Montgomery last week Texas
"captain scott" Discussed on KIRO Radio 97.3 FM

KIRO Radio 97.3 FM

01:36 min | 3 years ago

"captain scott" Discussed on KIRO Radio 97.3 FM

"Radio AB. More than 40% of our state's vaccines have been given out so far. But now the state says it is not enough car radios. Nicole Jennings has detailed states. New goal is to get 45,000 vaccines given out each day right now worried about a third of that we are making incredible progress that we want to be as high as possible. And so whatever we have done is not enough, and we need to continue to Things, State Health secretary doctor Umar Shaw says. To meet that goal. We need many more vaccine shipped from the federal government to the tune of 300,000 Week. So far, our state has gotten about 820,000 doses from the feds in total. Dr Shaw says he hopes things will move faster with the new administration in D. C the first time in almost two years and 7 37 Max flew over candidate today took off from Calgary. ENDIT in Vancouver B. C. This morning Canada ended its grounding of the max yesterday, Captain Scott Wilson was at the controls. He says he has no concerns about the safety of the aircraft. Some of the traveling public will have more concerns than others. But time will definitely show the safety of the Max and we do believe based on the additional scrutiny has put put into it. This is the safest aircraft in the skies that I Wilson says It'll take time and confidence for the public to regain trust in the airplane Reporting from Capitol Hill, CBS is Kris Van Cleave tells us the second impeachment trial for Donald Trump. May not happen for a while. Senator Graham came out with a statement this evening, saying that the former president supports McConnell's proposed timeline about starting impeachment at least in a couple of weeks, as opposed to rushing into it as soon as next week. And Alice checked already a real time traffic.

Umar Shaw Captain Scott Wilson Nicole Jennings Senator Graham Kris Van Cleave Donald Trump secretary Calgary Alice McConnell Canada CBS Vancouver president
"captain scott" Discussed on Newsradio 970 WFLA

Newsradio 970 WFLA

06:57 min | 3 years ago

"captain scott" Discussed on Newsradio 970 WFLA

"Talk about small craft exercise caution. Northwest winds 15 to 20 knots this morning being in waters a moderate shop like I've been saying all morning. I think tomorrow morning's probably gonna be a little better morning. Still gonna be cold, But the winds will come down a little bit. You got negative low tides Gonna Really forced those fish into some of those pockets into the creek mouse where you can gang up on him a little bit. Should be really, really good tides get better and better as we get close to the new moon, which is on Wednesday, So I've been talking about it all morning. Super excited to have Captain Scott Moore joining us here this morning. We're going to talk all about This article that Scott sent me. It's called It's all home Waters. The crash of Florida's TARP in Capital the author is Mantei, Burke and Scott. I was really I was really interested as I dove into the article little bit. It's only about a 12 minute. Reed So it's not a real long article. It's up on the real animals Facebook page, but it was really interesting to me because I don't think people understand. How development East of 75. Still really ends up affecting what happens on Florida's West Coast. Scott, are you there? Oh, my God. Yeah, there you are. Good morning. Good morning, Mike. Especially if it's on the water systems. Okay, One thing different were really special here in Tampa Bay. Everything goodness in the seventies they put in the septic septic tank. Deceptive tanks out and put in central sewer, which helps a lot think of all the river systems and all the canals and basins that still have septic tanks on it. That or 30 years. Old and some of those are not working. They're not inspected. You know, that's that's one thing they can do. And you know, you take Homosassa area. They're having the hook up now. Because they're protecting the springs in that particular area, so all those places You know, with all this new development, they're having a hook up, which is a great great thing. And you know, we've talked for years about our fishery and the fish in the movement. Hey, it's just don't swim around the water unless they're spotting or something, And normally there's a click to that. You may you know they end up in the passes because the groceries of there and then the tarp and go ashore in spine. I mean, there's there's a lot to it people, people. Over the years pushing here we've we've known if the tarp and go down the beach, they're going to keep going. If there's no groceries between here and Boca Grande, you know where they're going to go. You're not gonna They're gonna go where the groceries are. And up there in Homosassa. It's such a special special place. But even there that fresh water even with the springs If you have anything that offset, especially Brooke Blue crabs. Blue crabs are very sensitive. You know, you know, I was thinking about this over the last two days since I got a chance to sit down and read the article. You know, I remember. And obviously you've been doing this longer than I have, but I remember You know, 20 years ago. 15 years ago. I remember the Hill Times in Boca Grande. And days leading up to the hill tides. Um I just remember the crab flushes being amazing. And even here on Tampa Bay. We're getting some crab flush, but I don't see the crab flushes being You know what they once were. And it was interesting in the article. The way they put those crabs and you know, up there in Homosassa, which was, you know, a lot of people don't even really know what a great tarpon fishery almost asa was at one time. Um, they don't know how special that place was. And then you know, trying to, you know, understand how important those crabs are to that whole, You know, Time of the year that whole tarp in migration. Yeah, and in the spring excuse me in the spring. Most of the time people you take late seven way March, April and may. There's a big flush of blue crabs. Small, though. Smaller crabs, which you can catch on the flat. Okay. And then, of course you have your mackerel, crab and what we call um the brown crab. There's two you know, Like, if you go on a health tied to go the skyway or you go to egg monkey. Ah, lot of times you'll have What we call the purple You'll see that real that purple crab, which is a magical crab, and then you'll have the brown crab. That brown crab. You noticed they'll have eggs on him like late July and August. Big flush of the brown clap crabs in August, Okay, it seems to be the peak. But we do have your round and those and those mackerel crabs are all over in the gulf. Okay, you'll see him out there. You'll be all shore fishing and they'll be swimming around the water out there. That's interesting to me. It really seems that you know, like I said that I remember those crab flushes being just epic down in Boca Grande, and that I remember later in my Boca Grande days that you know, it seems And I know a lot of it has to do with rain that fresh water flushes a lot of those crabs out water quality screaming down there. Little Gasparilla is on septic tanks. Okay. 50, year old leaking septic tanks. Look at all upon a Gorda on the canals, all those canal systems. Coral Gables. Okay. And then you got the Quash of like, Oh, it didn't just like Okeechobee. They like loose all that fresh water, And then it goes into those canals and loaded with nitrogen and nutrients. And guess what they're bringing in there. The blue green algae. It's like atomic bomb going off. I mean, it doesn't take a rocket scientist, you know, to figure some of it out. Those crabs are cycling. But you know that we're going to go with the groceries are we know that the right way? it? Scott? I mean, in your opinion, how do we, you know? How do we? Is It just reason awareness to the to the public, is it? Is it giving our politicians on.

Captain Scott Moore Boca Grande Homosassa Florida Facebook Tampa Bay Reed Coral Gables scientist Mike brown West Coast Mantei Okeechobee Burke
"captain scott" Discussed on Newsradio 970 WFLA

Newsradio 970 WFLA

06:25 min | 3 years ago

"captain scott" Discussed on Newsradio 970 WFLA

"Welcome back. Yeah. Were there at the break. I Dog decided to finally get up. Wanted to go out back and I opened the back door here. Real animals, headquarters and boom. She's a little brisk out their breast little breathe. Yeah, Yeah, we're much better off to be inside by threat. Captain Scott Moore is going to join us right after the seven o'clock hour. We're gonna talk about article written by Mantei Burke. It's called It's all home Water. The crash of Florida's tarp in capitals gonna be Very interesting. Conversational cats got more. You don't want to miss that. I want to say good morning. Everybody joining us on the Facebook live feed. We've got a short segment here before the bottom of the hour. I want to check in with our good friend down in big pine Key, Captain Mike. I know I think if if everything was correct on social media there, I think I saw that you have been vaccinated. For, uh, covert 19 as you are also, uh, amongst other things. I mean, obviously you're a great captain down to the keys. But you're also a nurse who has put himself in harm's way here for many, many, many months. How do you feel enough to get the vaccine buddy? I felt great, Happy New Year to you and the whole real animals Family. Um, the arm was sore for about Three or four days, actually, and I'm not Complainer when it comes to pain, but it definitely was. It's a very sick shot, Uhm Thanks to CBS and their company on the care. They came in. The pharmacist gave the shots. They mixed up the two parts that comes in a two part shot. It's a powder in a liquid they mix it up in. It's it's rather thick. I attributed to the old time penicillin shots that a lot of us Older folks know that God is kids when we got strep throat or something, and it left Charlie Horse. I had a bit of a body aching a bit of a headache the next day, and it went away with a little bit of TLC, and that's it. I'm fine. I'm doing great if anybody's thinking about getting and I'm not gonna push you either way, But there's my report on the covert vaccine and 21 days after that will be on the 26. I will receive the second shot. So, um I'm on my way protected from this nasty bug brother Manuel, we need are we need our frontline nurses, doctors. All those people who have so bravely been on the front line fight. This thing's countless hours. We need you guys to get vaccinated and get protected. And then the rest of us can get in line. If if that's what you're choosing to do, and hopefully we can put this thing behind us. You've been fishing it all, buddy. Been fishing? Yes. Um, I was up in arms up in Brayton's and goodbye and my stepfather yesterday it was a somber holiday. Um Lost my step Dad, but he was always very encouraging about anything that his kids or his step kids did. He was very encouraging. To me to go out and make some money doing some fishing, because, uh, we did a little bit together and he said, You know, you're pretty darn good at this offshore thing. And I said, Yeah, I know. Hey, he was very encouraging. So everybody out there who fishes has got a parent behind them. He took them fishing to push them fishing. Uh, sometimes it's a step parent. Sometimes it's a good friend. I was blessed with several so Deficient. Been fantastic. Uh, we're getting plenty of plenty. Everything. Snapper, grouper. Um, unfortunately, the grouper is shut down. There's certain regulations in the Atlantic depending upon if you have federal licenses and not and I've actually rent right now, I'm I'm in line for my own federal license, but I ran off. Federal license. I started doing that. From another guy who doesn't use his anymore, and we're catching plenty of fish. The sailfish in the wall who have been spectacular. Um, that's that time of year. Blacks in tuna. No mahi quite yet. Gotta gotta warm back up, and it's warmer here than it is up there, but The money will go up in the right time and the April beginning to May. So what's the one want to thank all the all the people have been coming down? What's your water tap? Our water temp on the Gulf side is about anywhere ranging from 68 70. And on the Atlantic side, it drops a little more were 65 to 69. Um, obviously, the closer and you are you get a little bit warmer. Um, we're looking for the thermo climbs when we're fishing down below. Um, we're looking for actually where you look for cooler water in the summer. We're actually looking for thermal climbs deeper. Have a little pockets of warmer water kind of mixed in that Gulf stream brings that warmer water and even this time of year Yeah. I hear you to wrap things up at the end of the brave here. Tell her but how they get ahold of you Get down to the keys. This is a magical time for the keys. It's time to get down there. Catch him up. I think I told you. It is a A 134348086 captain Michael 47 gmail dot com Sightline the keys. They're always open and just a little tip toe. Everybody. I'm Looking at a home in marathon actually was a deep water access. So might be moving just a little bit north of here, And instead of walking down to the marina, you could park in my driveway and walk in my backyard and We'll go fishing. I say thoughts and prayers to you and your family, My friend. Have a great week. Hopefully, we'll hear from you again tomorrow. My brother. All right, I'll give you give me a buzz by charters walking up right now. You guys have a great day. You too, Michael. Good stuff right there, Captain. Big Mike from Big Pine Key cap. Big Mike for Big Yankee Cap Mike for big pine key. Checking him there. The keys are awesome. This.

Captain Mike Captain Scott Moore Michael Mantei Burke Florida Facebook Brayton Atlantic penicillin Gulf CBS Manuel Charlie Horse
California wildfires finally contained, but forecasters say break may be brief

Correspondents Report

05:30 min | 4 years ago

California wildfires finally contained, but forecasters say break may be brief

"Fires also been burning on vast scale across California most of those fires fires are contained but American forecasters say the reprieve could be brief with more. Potentially deadly fires expected in the coming weeks in California as in Australia. Firefighters say the pattern of bushfire behavior is changing his Daniel in southern California in California's wine country. North of San Francisco. It's all too familiar firefighting aircraft bombing blazes with water. A filled with smoke and homes and businesses turned to rubble so this was the tasting room bar all along here and it was long one big. The areas now being devastated by fire at three years in a row this time. Mass evacuations prevented loss of live. But when winemaker Ken Wilson returned. He's winery was gone. Only the bond left. I thought we were pretty much safe from. I mean look at the vines between here in the mountain. You know I would would have had a lot of vines to burn through if it's a groundfire but since it's a wind fire that's different facing good. Yeah next day I said let's open up the bar you know that's just keep going. Let's move forward. Let's not like me mope around so so I stopped moping around tried hard not mope around robe there are remarkable similarities in the firestorms that are now routinely extending fire seasons in both him his views as an Australian reporter the same resonates as as boone in Australia in spring. US authorities say Californian fires L. frequently burning willing to autumn and and even Winter Fire Brigade Captain Scott Rules the life and property losses definitely increased tremendously and the size of the fires that were fighting. Dim Bayer Bayer for sure. There are several similarities that go beyond the changing seasons political debate over climate change remains hated having being pulled the US out of the Paris climate agreement and rolled back a raft of environmental regulations. Donald Trump has claimed that California's Democrat government has filed to effectively manage forests due to lobbying by conservationists threatening to withdraw emergency assistance after fires as Zien Australia at times aging electricity infrastructure. Maintenance has also being blamed for several large blazes including the deadly Campfire last via this time the power company Paging de took the unprecedented step of cutting power to millions to try to prevent Powell line sparking blazes his body. It's being blamed for several of the season's FIS anyway. I don't know the data's there for me personally On climate change. But I I do know that there's more people than there's ever been in this state And they're encroaching in the wildland and moving out and expanding out into the into the forest and also With that we need to improve our infrastructure to support that and Through many years I'm not GONNA say that. The infrastructure bid neglected but it just hasn't been maintained up to Up to a point that can support the amount of population. That's using the power lines down. Starting these fires that needs to be addressed Australian winemaker mic Schroeder has been in California since the early nineties counties observing the changing seasons and the more frequent emergencies. Here it's been little nightmarish And feroce little deja Vu. We were evacuated. Quieted two years ago. with what was called the pocket thought this has been the kinkaid foucault. We live a little bit north of here Outside of Small Town called Gaza Ellen. We were woken up by a neighbor at eleven o'clock last week Wednesday and walked outside and a we saw was massive blow and plume of smoke in the hill behind us through Through stuff car is quick as quickly as we could I'm trying to think through. What are you doing those those emergencies? Until two years ago I've never ever had to evacuate From a home so two years ago it kind of really sunk in and then you stop to think about and hear about the The the the crazy bushfires that that we have across Australia run your Sydney number of years ago and the the devastation that causes and And the same something here. Two years ago Just South of here Santa Rosa Suburbia Five and a half thousand homes enjoy just burnt and I think twenty five people lost. He lives in a just literally a fire storm creating creating its own tornado like environment and And you hear about that in some of the The FIS That have been been an industry as well. As overlapping across the southern and

California Australia Ken Wilson United States Bayer Bayer San Francisco Santa Rosa Daniel Donald Trump Reporter Sydney Mic Schroeder Zien Australia Powell Democrat Government Boone Small Town Paris Two Years
Trump considering revoking security clearances for Comey, Brennan

Tony and Dwight

01:31 min | 5 years ago

Trump considering revoking security clearances for Comey, Brennan

"Cents on August I m s de says the rate hike helps cover daily operating costs the utility is currently repairing a pipe that carries forty percent of the city's daily wastewater underneath west main street and several lanes of east Broadway bar closed, because of this weekend's. Cave-in of a one hundred fifty two year old sewer line Paul miles NewsRadio eight forty w. h., a. s., President Trump may yank the security clearances of some top ex intelligence chiefs the president is exploring the mechanisms to remove security Clearance. Because they've politicized and in some cases monetize their public service and security clearances Republican Senator rand. Paul suggested the president revoked the security clearance a former CIA director John Brennan who criticized the Helsinki summit Sanders said not. Only, was the president, considering pulling Brennan's clearance he was. Also looking into whether to remove the clearances a, former FBI director James Comey former, CIA director, Michael Hayden former national. Security adviser Susan Rice and former FBI deputy director Andrew McCabe the US coastguard. Raise the sunken duck boat. From southern misery lake US coastguards captain Scott. Stormer said divers took photos of the bottom of the duck boat for their investigation, the boat sank Thursday evening when a storm brought near hurricane-force winds to Missouri's table rock lake killing seventeen of the thirty one passengers on board new research. Released this afternoon suggests some surprising implications some foods may have on our heart health cardiologists and lead study author Andrew.

President Trump Director John Brennan CIA Andrew Mccabe FBI Paul Miles Deputy Director Senator Rand Us Coastguard James Comey Newsradio United States Stormer Susan Rice Donald Trump Michael Hayden Captain Scott Missouri Sanders
Manafort trial delayed as judge approves immunity for 5 witnesses

All Things Considered

04:34 min | 5 years ago

Manafort trial delayed as judge approves immunity for 5 witnesses

"Live from NPR news in Washington I'm Janine, Herbst a federal judge granting a bid to delay the criminal trial of President Trump's former campaign. Manager Paul manafort's trial was set to begin this week NPR's Windsor Johnston reports his, attorneys are getting, until the end of the month two review documents in the case the defense team had requested a delay after receiving more. Than one hundred thousand documents related to the case over the. Past month. Many of them came from electronic devices seized from manafort's former business partner Rick gates who has already pleaded guilty to charges and the special counsels Russia investigation the judge also granted the request for. Five witnesses to testify with immunity Manafort faces sixteen. Counts including Bank fraud tax evasion and conspiracy most of the charges, stem from activities that predate the five months Manafort worked on the Trump, campaign none of them relate directly to allegations? Of coordination with Russia Windsor Johnston NPR, news Washington President Trump is considering revoking security clearances for six former Obama. Administration intelligence and law. Enforcement officials including former CIA director John Brennan and former FBI director James. Comey home Trump fired White House press secretary Sarah Sanders, says in some. Cases these people, quote monetize their clearances both Brennan and Komi are frequent Trump critics US Olympic swimming star Ryan locked he is in trouble again, the US anti doping agency suspended him for fourteen months for a rules, violation ATI winner of twelve Olympic medals was previously banned for an incident at the 2016 Rio. De Janeiro Olympics NPR's Tom Goldman has more the US anti-doping agency you Sada is, not suspending Ryan, locked de for taking a banned substance his punishment is for violating a rule about IV infusions in the violation appears to. Be self inflicted in may locked e posted an Instagram photo, showing him Hooked up to an IV with the. Caption athletic recovery with some hashtag vitamins the picture, prompted a, you Sada investigation which determined he used the IV with a legal substance, but without a required therapeutic, use exemption locked he, has acknowledged quote there are rules. And you have to obey, them the, Thirty-three-year-old can't. Compete until next, July he still, plans to train for the twenty, twenty Olympics tangled -ment NPR news an investigation into the sinking, of, a, duck. Boat that left seventeen. People, dead look at whether operators violated the coastguards rules on entering the water during, a storm the Viviers vehicle capsized on a lake in Branson Missouri last week as the area was under a. Severe thunderstorm warning with your hurricane strength winds. US coast guard captain Scott Stormer says the boat was raised from the. Water today one of the focuses of the investigation certainly is to determine the vessels condition throughout the casualty the NTSB is also investigating this is, NPR news And I'm Jamie Floyd for WNYC New York, lawmakers are expressing skepticism that the Trump administration. Will meet Thursday's court, order deadline to reunite migrant children taken from their. Parents at the border New York congresswoman. Nydia Velazquez says the administration's failure will not go on noticed Mr President history will judge you but most importantly voters will judge you maybe a November the. Administration failed to meet an earlier deadline to return all children under five to their. Parents by July tenth fewer than half of those, families were reunited by that date hundreds of forcibly separated children were brought to New York, and the daily news has laid off half of its newsroom staff that happened earlier today. The newspaper a fixture in New York City for the last century was sold last year for. Just one dollar to the owner of the ship Kogyo trip. Photographer Todd as l. was among, those who lost his job and governor Andrew Cuomo says he was taken by surprise by. The lay, offs and that he reached out to the paper's owner to offer help if there's a way for the state to be helpful financially We will, be because we want to keep that institution sprung it's a New York institution we want to keep those jobs. In New York the newspaper says it will focus more on breaking news and it's digital audience will have complete. Coverage coming up after news headlines New York City officials say nine buildings affected..

NPR President Trump New York Paul Manafort United States Ryan New York City Washington Windsor Johnston John Brennan Nydia Velazquez Andrew Cuomo Director CIA Rick Gates Russia Branson Missouri White House
Manhunt underway for suspect accused in fatal stabbing on train platform

Dr. Drew

01:35 min | 5 years ago

Manhunt underway for suspect accused in fatal stabbing on train platform

"This is Kate geo San Francisco a Cumulus station now on. Amazon Alexa open the k. g. o. eight, tenths scale good afternoon I'm Nikki medoro a, pearly with. A violent past has been identified as the suspect in the vicious stabbing attack of two sisters of, the MacArthur Bart station last night the attack. Left eighteen year old. NIA Wilson dead and twenty one year old tasha Wilson wounded barred police chief Carlos Rojo says they have. Video evidence that Twenty-seven-year-old John Lee cowl stabbed them without provocation everything that we've uncovered up to this point we see no altercation we don't. Have any information that there was any type. Of dispute and looks like it's the unprovoked unwarranted vicious attack Russia's video shows CAL's shedding his clothing as he fled the scene. Officers believe they found the murder. Weapon at a construction site a federal judge is postponed until next week the trial of former Trump campaign Chairman, Paul Manafort the. Judge pushed the, trial back to give manafort's lawyers more time to. Review thousands. Of pages of data and documents turned over by prosecutors in the last several weeks the National Transportation. Safety board will take custody of the duck boat that capsized in. Missouri now that it's been raised from table, rock lake coast guard captain Scott's Domo Stormer, says they. Waited until today to remove the boat from the lake because they had to get the necessary equipment, the investigation will look into whether the boat. Violated coast guard rules. By venturing into the water during a thunderstorm Stormer says it's up to the captain to decide whether or. Not life vests were needed.

Domo Stormer Paul Manafort Kate Geo San Francisco Macarthur Bart Station Nia Wilson Tasha Wilson Nikki Medoro Carlos Rojo Alexa Captain Scott Amazon Chairman John Lee Murder Russia Rock Lake Missouri
Pediatricians raise concern about health effects of some food coloring

Terry Meiners and Company

02:50 min | 5 years ago

Pediatricians raise concern about health effects of some food coloring

"Eleven hundred lines knocked down, by Friday's, wind and rain and replacing one hundred or so polls that, were broken and spokeswoman Natasha Collins says we're not out of the woods yet nurse to shake Out in the days after where a tree limb that was you know may have, come down shifts and then brings down a wire so does impacts continue as three. O'clock this afternoon, there were around seven hundred fifty, customers still without power. Crews in Missouri have raised the. Duck boat where seventeen people died from the bottom of table rock lake near Branson. Reporter Jim Krasula watched. The boat was brought to the surface the doomed duck. Bolt was raised from eighty feet of water not far from where it entered the lake that was hit by a sudden intense storm the bulk white canvas top was peeled back it's orange life jacket wedged into, the boats caged atop the lifesaving. Requirements and the regulations require that personal flotation devices beyond board for all passengers US coast, guard captain Scott, Stormer says it's up to the boat captain to decide whether passengers. Should. Put the, life jackets on Jim Chris sale table rock lake Missouri circumstances surrounding the death of the gunman involved in toronto's mass shooting sunday or under investigation police spokeswoman monarchy you don said reports i came in around ten pm officers later locating the gunman and gunfire was exchanged we are still waiting to confirm the person's identity and once we confirm that then we can take the next step and see if we can really said two people were killed and a dozen hurt in yesterday's attack which was not yet been ruled out as an act of terrorism victims of last year's mass shooting in las vegas are speaking out they're angry that they're being sued by the owner of the mandalay bay hotel where the gunman set up his shooters perch m._g._m. is suing the victims of the shooting in an attempt to get suits against it dropped m._g._m. claims an obscure law never used before protects it from being sued because it hit hired a security company approved by the federal government before the shooting joy ships daughter was killed in the massacre That they're trying to sue us now are the are suing us it's it's. Outrageous along with survivors. Of the shooting say they're shocked they're now, being sued by GM Alex stone ABC. News when it comes to your kids beware of. Chemicals in food and its packaging that's the alert from a new study in the journal of pediatrics finding that some preservatives food coloring and compounds can pose health risks, for young people here's ABC's chief medical correspondent Dr Jennifer Ashton things like bis phenol stalemates nitrites and nitrates which then can interact with. Other compounds and caused them health problems and food coloring and what kind of health risks they posted this vulnerable age group Ashton says to minimize exposure to processed foods use glass and minimize exposure to processed foods, rather and use. Glass and stainless steel containers not, plastic your next news update is at four I'm Suzanne Duval NewsRadio eight forty w. h. a. s..

Dr Jennifer Ashton Missouri ABC Natasha Collins Journal Of Pediatrics Branson Suzanne Duval Jim Krasula Captain Scott United States Bolt Mandalay Bay Hotel Jim Chris Reporter Las Vegas GM Toronto Stormer DON M._G._M.