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Bagging Wild Sounds, part 2
from The WildeBeat July 24, 2008
This outings program is part two of a report on a trip to record nature sounds. You've got to be totally quiet; stand like a statue. And then, if you're in the right place at the right time, you'll capture your sound. (Part one is here.) Our assistant producer Kate Taylor reports on her visit to the annual field recording workshop of the Nature Sounds Society. She tells her story with the help of: Alton Byrd, a nature sounds hobbyist from Berkeley, California. Martyn Stewart, a professional nature sounds recordist for the BBC. Chris Bell, a museum curator from Sydney, Australia. Hundreds of birds, amphibians, and a few domesticated mammals. Gina Farr, a multimedia producer from Marin Country, California. You can get tips from Dan Dugan on recording nature sounds by listening to our edition number 90, Listening to Parks. WildeBeat Members can download an extended interview with Martyn Stewart and additional extended wild sound recordings from WildeBeat Insider web pages. Show number 148 [MP3 format; length 10:33; 2,356,042 bytes] Combined show numbers 147 length 17:40; 16,966,708 bytes] Show number 148 script Show numbers 147 & 148 combined script Photo album JOIN NOW -- Help us help more folks to appreciate our wild public lands.
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Husum Falls Perfect Line (White Salmon) 7/20/08 2.9-3.0 ft
from YouTube :: Tag // tag July 23, 2008
7/20/2008 - 2.9 feet at the Husum gauge surging to 3 feet - Washington state east of Portland in the Columbia Gorge area. Andrew Coit of Eugene, Oregon, guides with Mike Arnold in the back and Curt and Nina in the front in Billy Nine's 14-foot SOTAR. The line is to keep the left tube on the edge of the bubble line and head straight for the river right rock and then turn down the tongue. There's one big hit at the top before the tongue. Then hold on! Video by Carrie Arnold of Parkville, Missouri. Author: midnightfarmers Keywords: Tags: rafting whitewater White Salmon kayaking raft kayak carnage Washington Oregon Columbia Gorge northwes Added: July 23, 2008
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Bagging Wild Sounds, part 1
from The WildeBeat July 17, 2008
This outings program is part one of a report on a trip to record nature sounds. You've got to be totally quiet; stand like a statue. And then, if you're in the right place at the right time, you'll capture your sound. Our assistant producer Kate Taylor reports on her visit to the annual field recording workshop of the Nature Sounds Society. She tells her story with the help of: Dan Dugan, technical advisor to the Nature Sounds Society. Gina Farr, a multimedia producer from Marin Country, California. Hundreds of birds, amphibians, and a few domesticated mammals. Chris Bell, a museum curator from Sydney, Australia. Martyn Stewart, a professional nature sounds recordist for the BBC. Next week, in part two, we'll hear more nature sounds, and find out why it's important to our guests to record and preserve them. You can get tips from Dan Dugan on recording nature sounds by listening to our edition number 90, Listening to Parks. Show number 147 [MP3 format; length 9:48; 2,356,947 bytes] Show number 147 script JOIN NOW -- Help us help more folks to appreciate our wild public lands.
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Starting With Fire
from The WildeBeat July 10, 2008
This skills program presents the basic skill of fire building. This is the second in a series of shows featuring primitive technologies experts from Primitive Ways. (The first show is number 141, First Skills.) Naturalist Dino Labiste explains and demonstrates the fundamental skill of fire building. Our ancestors depended on fire as a basic survival tool as far back as a million years ago, and yet today, among many people it's becoming a lost art. Ben Lawhon, the education director for the Leave No Trace Center for Outdoor Ethics talks about minimum impact skills for making and using fires. The fifth Leave No Trace principle is Minimize Campfire Impacts. The Primitive Ways website has many articles on primitive fire skills. Another source of information on primitive skills in the Society of Primitive Technologies. Show number 146 [MP3 format; length 9:55; 2,383,583 bytes] Show number 146, high-quality stereo version [MP3 format; length 10:28; 10,057,426 bytes] Show number 146 script JOIN NOW -- Help us help more folks to appreciate our wild public lands.
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Cupsuptic camping
from popular posts - blip.tv (beta) July 07, 2008
Ahh, summer vacation. There's nothing like Maine's western mountain region near Rangeley. The area has some of the state's most breath-taking scenery and beautiful lakes. Ben and Erin enjoyed a relaxing weekend on the 4th of July. Activities included kayaking, fishing, swimming, boating, bird-watching, relaxing, sitting around the campfire, slapping mosquitos, eating and drinking.
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Stealth Gear
from The WildeBeat July 03, 2008
This skills program explains the gear you can carry to tread lightly on your favorite wild places. This is the second in a series of presentations by the Leave No Trace traveling trainers. J.D. Tanner and Emily Ressler talk about the gear you can bring along to make it easier to Leave No Trace. They talk about shoes and shelter, bags and trowels, cameras and sketch pads, lights and blankets, cans and binoculars, and radios and headphones. All of this gear, and more, can help you leave the wild places you visit as good or better than you found them. Specifically, Emily mentions Restop, WAG bags, and poop tubes. J.D. mentions bear cans, which we discussed in detail in our previous edition, Bear Cans Revisited. We'll hear more from Emily Ressler and J.D. Tanner in a future edition. The series will continue several weeks from now when J.D and Emily explain more details about a specific Leave No Trace principle. Show number 145 [MP3 format; length 9:47; 2,352,439 bytes] Show number 145, high-quality stereo version [MP3 format; length 9:47; 9,406,657 bytes] Show number 145 script JOIN NOW -- Help us help more folks to appreciate our wild public lands.
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John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park
from Revver - popular Videos June 30, 2008
Author: yctv Added: Mon, 30 Jun 2008 05:24:29 -0800 Duration: 36http://www.yctv.tv/floridakeys - John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park is a very popular tourist attraction. This huge preserve includes The Coral Reef Theater, a giant reconstruction of a living patch reef in a floor-to-ceiling circular aquarium, and ...
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John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park
from Most Recent June 30, 2008
Author: yctv Added: Mon, 30 Jun 2008 05:24:29 -0800 Duration: 36http://www.yctv.tv/floridakeys - John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park is a very popular tourist attraction. This huge preserve includes The Coral Reef Theater, a giant reconstruction of a living patch reef in a floor-to-ceiling circular aquarium, and ...
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Devil's Face
from YouTube :: Tag // carolina June 28, 2008
my 4th time down the green slime narrows. lots of fun. Matt swam Chief, but not on video. Duane wet his pants. ha ha, not really Author: mintyleaf99 Keywords: green river narrows kayaking north carolina creeks kayak devil's face Added: June 28, 2008
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Bear Cans Revisited, part 2
from The WildeBeat June 26, 2008
This wild places program is part two of an exploration of the situation in the Sierra Nevada wilderness areas that lead to the development of the bear-resistant food canister. (Part one is here.) Who makes these things, and how do we know they work? Steve tells the story with the help of: Harold Werner, a wildlife biologist from Sequoia length 10:50; 2,603,437 bytes] Combined show numbers 143 length 21:13; 10,189,501 bytes] Show number 143 script Combined show numbers 143 & 144 script JOIN NOW -- Help us help more folks to appreciate our wild public lands.
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