alright guys now later in the video few
watch this video I say that the xm-lar is
not going I'm not good with the world
after this like right after this I get
into a shipment game and I get like 90
kills with this weapon so if you guys
want to see that leave a like i'll be
probably uploading that describe maybe I
don't know it's a big video for me so
yeah Yo whats going on guys its Your boy Yogge
here and today i'm bringing you guys
some gameplay with the new xm-lar weapon
so if you guys do not know their lead a
added weapons the project and honestly i
think it is out of us apart as you can
see i have a right here actually got it
by my Salvage and as you see only have a
couple killed i literally just like got
to slipping the recording and it went
bad so you know we're gonna have to redo
it but yeah let's see how we do with
this up it in multiplayer
alright guys so here we are in a
domination match either you see would
use the xml AR and guys fought back
about the camera on my weapon
this is one of the cameras that you need
to unlock the whole kit will not take it
but obviously you need to unlock their
things to get the weapon like calling
cards camos Combat Uniform a lot of
stuff you need to unlock and this is one
of the cameras gonna actually looks not
that bad
I like how it's like you two colors just
match I don't know how but they just
match in there and like a polygon make
for my have that's a workout but they
look like little booking of shapes and
it just works out if I'm weird but it
looks really really satisfying to me out
of this College looks delicious if
that's weird
all the food is so so you're a killer
looking delicious but I don't know it
just looks really really day so that's
about three point anyways guys the main
point is gameplay is for me top to match
you see how good this is good is because
obviously people are going crazy that
weapons are the game and I was like you
know what let's see how crazy they
really are so far 13 so I don't know
maybe I'm just garbage will have no clue
i know one of my friends we've got a
hundred kills was gonna I think he did
you guys go check out his video o.o yea
this gun has a not that much recoil are
Bobby for me I justin is not overpowered
me look he got me he got me right there
i was doing a stupid move but hey you
got me
hey guys so also let me tell you guys
probably in my opinion the fastest way
to unlock this gun look at him
what are you doing sir we also i was
saying the fastest the same do look at
him look at that spot for bomb sorry but
it's not your fault and that's what i
was saying guys so the fastest way to
unlock this weapon is honestly could
just save up on your Salvage like I've
about not able to salvage since the
beginning of the game and I saved up
about like I don't know 2,000 maybe and
i still didn't think I had enough right
so this is not starting to figure the
whole story
open the rest apply drop and I realized
I got the epic combat uniform for the
you know the series of stuff that you
need to get to unlock the weapon you see
somebody else has gone for like a lot to
add this gun
why anyways back to the soil and see if
i can multitask
yeah so anyway back to the story so open
a restaurant and I gotta epic combat
uniform and i was at all crap and it
said it's part of the xml AR uh-oh he
stopped me I'm done I'm done I'm done
I'm doing good
get out of here you slick thought I
locked epic combat uniform and then I
was like oh crap you know i have about
2,000 I'm not sure I have enough but
your whatever i'm just gonna unlock
everything you see if i can get it
the legislators cost about our notes 710
the you know as it goes down to the
comments they get cheaper too but you
know 7500 100-125 salvage and I actually
thought that was a lot but I needed
three thousand at least mind you I'm
nowhere close to 3,000 I'm like 2065 or
something like that I'm nowhere close
and then I just walk everything and
surprisingly i had enough i dont even no
idea i just i just randomly decided to
buy everything and I got it
not the most interesting story in the
world but you know just to show you that
anybody can get this weapon you just
need to have a lot of salvaged and yeah
guys as you can see from the game
players gun is not that bad i don't know
i like it's kind of like a mix between
the ACR and the SC two thousand ten or
twenty ten on a level I you I don't care
about the quality ghost gun and this
Chapel would stop killing me then you
know maybe i could do better and also
look at my team look at them I'm on the
bottom I know both like us don't get it
on top of the scoreboard look at it also
for those of you that are freaking out
about new weapons this is nothing like
wow that was the worst night I've seen
in my life you guys saw that shit but
anyway so this is nothing like the m16
or nothing like that at long range this
weapon is booty like I've tried going
long range and overgrown with this
weapon in its agency doesn't like out if
you guys think you're gonna go on
overgrown with the xml AR and think
you're going to do good
just stop please like it's so hard
oh my gosh what is done is good i'm not
going to like it
for medium and short range gunfights
like that it's a beast so I mean
obviously I'm not doing like crazy good
i was going for a gameplay but I mean
look at my half my team left and now
they're all back in some both shouting
now let me just say that the project in
general this game are good either i
don't like the fact that they're in the
game this game is already over power
with m16 stopping power Juggernog made
you know martyred a lot of stuff that is
stupid and Opie and this is not nothing
that will make the game better they did
do something to make the game better and
that is just server take greater
whatever I don't know what it did but
all occupations that this connection
feel smooth like really really smooth
sorry dude watch please tell me the
whole family is going to come through
here soon
no I'm so they all jobs new PR UAV Jared
damage that dude under there that do is
honor the car I need to go get a matter
they're done and let's see what we can
do while he stunned how he's out there
anymore
why look what you ran to any of you my
god bro look look at him
yes I finally kill them finally I guess
I guess that'll be it i'm sorry for the
really really bad gameplay I mean look
at how let me show you guys the
scoreboard and secular look at that 2521
I'm sorry that I going to do be but I
didn't want shotgun
it's not really that crazy like i said
but all my yeah i'll be after the group
get really like people infiltrating our
schedules
For more infomation >> COD4 REMASTERED HOW TO GET NEW WEAPONS - COD4 MODERN WARFARE REMASTERED XM-LAR GAMEPLAY - Duration: 7:04.-------------------------------------------
YELLOWSTONE IN DEPTH: THE BISON - Duration: 7:18.
Yellowstone's full of Wildlife
in addition to being able to see geysers
and some of the amazing geology here
people do truly come for the Wildlife
it's hard to see a bear you're pretty
fortunate to see a wolf but you're
fairly guaranteed to see a bison it
would be a rare visit to Yellowstone to
come and spend a day in the park and not
see a bison you can not only see what a
bison looks like you can watch it move
on the landscape you can listen to it
below you can see how it interacts with
other bison at Yellowstone we've
preserved the most important wild bison
population in the whole United States
partly because so few locations have
bison without fences there are huge huge
planes here in Yellowstone and Lamar
Valley is one of them that's you know
five or six miles long and a mile wide
there can be days where there's two or
three thousand animals in the valley
bottom and in a matter of 4-5 hours that
can all disappear they walk wherever
they want their no fences there's not
even a fence around the exterior of the
park to keep them in there always on the
move
just eating and walking eating and
walking the males are always with the
large hurts and there's usually an older
female that might be kind of the leader
of the herd
they are amazing in their ability to
survive and adapt to such a harsh
climate here we get a lot of snow in
Yellowstone but they have a large hump
on their back and there's bone and
muscle in that hump allows them to stick
their head they're huge head down into
the snow completely and just snow plow
the snow out of the way to get to the
grass
they begin to break up into smaller
groups will be distributed around the
hot spring basins and they use those
areas with limited amount of snow for
access to food
during the springtime as a time of
renewal and we have visitors just walk
to the park to watch the Bison during
the camping season
nearly all the females get pregnant
summer so there's a extremely high
percentage of females having calves
during april and may I was fortunate
enough to see a bison give birth to a
calf on mother's day one year it was
amazing to watch not just the birth but
to watch the CAF after the birth within
about forty minutes it was standing and
walking
compare that to a human child it takes
about a year to learn to walk
it's pretty amazing but they need to be
able to get up and run with the herd and
move around into the summer when things
are green and lush its kind of the prime
time for bison they're moving around and
eating a lot of visitors get to see vast
herds of them thousands of them were
fortunate to be able to support such a
large healthy herd I think that bison
are very emblematic of the wilderness
there was nothing but wilderness when
the Native American tribes were spread
out across north america and bison were
a dominant feature of that landscape the
animal was so important to many many
Plains tribes this particular animal
provided so much of what they needed the
meat obviously the fur in the hide
we used for clothing and blankets and TP
coverings everything was useful it was
kind of like a storehouse or department
store right in the one animal from a
time period when there were 30 million
animals on the landscape the United
States was pioneering into the western
frontier so the military strategy was to
take away the food which was the Bison
and conquer the Indian nations
they harvested bison by the hundreds of
thousands than an industry grew up
around that the bone was ground up to
make fertilizer for the farmers
occupying the Great Plains
and so to see their numbers dwindle solo
it was a direct reflection and an
intentional act to try to eradicate both
the Bison and the people so many were
killed and we believe only about 23 or
24 animals were left in Yellowstone 24
is not very many when you consider the
vast herds that were before that
as humans i think we played a role in
that certainly in there almost
extinction but also in kind of turning
that around it really is a conservation
success story that we were able to keep
them from going extinct and I think
we're lucky to be able to watch them on
the landscape today you know if we lost
wild bison on landscape we would have
lost a very stoic and emblematic symbol
of the great western states
because we were able to save them from
extinction
they're a symbol of how far we've come
as humans our own ability to share the
landscape with another species and to
see that not everything has to serve our
own purposes
there are as many places anymore where
you can have bears or wolves herds of
bison
-------------------------------------------
MY HAWAII VOLCANOES NATIONAL PARK - Duration: 3:24.
aloha and welcome to Hawaii Volcanoes
National Park an international biosphere
reserve viruses join us on the journey
through my green pot the park
encompasses over 330,000 acres and two
active volcanoes there are active till
30 mins lava to spring forest
oh yeah and an erupting volcano all this
combines to make Hawaii Volcanoes
National Park one of the top visitor
attractions in the hall of the white
bringing two million visitors a year to
this very spot these visitors from all
over the world and like us they will be
using electricity transportation eating
and drinking and generating weights
above we come in park and help which is
Alex look at me I just work here
plastic bottles requirement for crude
oil to make and then you never recycled
filling out those or into government
leadership go
what can I fill up the park station is
outside to the reins and this thing this
your bottle can be reusable easy to
clean and also recycled 20 at this point
I could just buy my own
Ranger door to our laundry hop in
carpooling is very green
well I do need to pick up my clean
beautiful but you know short trip to
truck that this is a waste of you
this can generate about a promise here
to just 10 minutes
I know why not try those be electric
vehicle in rechargeable electric vehicle
wow this is great but when the batteries
run out where do you plug it in when we
get into the Sun the photovoltaic panels
on this route 27 328 kilowatts of energy
every day that's about thirty six
thousand dollars worth every year and
enough for the energy needs of this
building plus extra
don't streetlights is a lot of
electricity runs right that's why we
refresh our street fully cut off down
mixed use a lot less electricity and the
longer way from the light-emitting
diodes direct like exactly what are you
doing
look like I'm doing output uniforms into
the dryer
did you know the driver blew the biggest
waste of electricity in the household
listen can use up to 3.3 kilowatts of
electricity
what's the alternative I thought it
would be something like this
I knew you would that's just some of the
ways that we're helping to make Hawaii
Volcanoes National Park a green park or
green planet
how about you
-------------------------------------------
#LMW Yours - Duration: 2:06.
Let's make Worcester yours.
My name is Brandon King I am a civil
engineer and international and global
studies double major here at the WPI. I
guess here on campus i'm in a lot of
different things. I am a resident
advisor, I am actually a building
manager in the campus center. I also go over
to ACE once a week or twice a week to tutor
African refugees which is also something I
enjoy to do. First thing I would tell an
incoming freshman will be go out and
explore the city. So this past November
the Black Student Union which is an
organization that I am a part of, held
their first unity and diversity fashion
show. We have students from Holy Cross,
Assumption, QCC, WPI many of the
different universities around came in
and it was a huge success that's
going to turn into an annual event. I
found out about Action! Worcester I was
actually in an urban and
environmental planning course during my
first term this junior year and a
person from Action! Worcester Josh came and
kinda told us about what they were doing
and myself and another ambassador Sara
Brown were very intrigued by the idea of
kind of connecting all the universities
and the businesses more because we feel
that it is kind of a disconnected city
right now. We're trying to work on
projects where the ambassador's are goint to
be on the campuses and advertising say
the funkraiser coming up or other events
that were working on and with that as
more people know about Action! Worcester
know about the event they're putting on
the Ambassador Program can grow and not only
in the Ambassador Program grow but the
entire cities universities will start to
merge together.
Explore your town.
Go out driving around and see the new
businesses and restaurants and all that
thats out there.
-------------------------------------------
YELLOWSTONE IN DEPTH: BEARS - Duration: 9:43.
they were watching yellowstone in depth
this is a love story and as often
happens in a love story
it starts with a chance encounter
in Yellowstone it seems everyone loves
the Bears our love affair begins anew
with each sighting but it's a story that
has played out since the first park
visitors came to Yellowstone and it's a
love that has only grown stronger over
time
I think my favorite encounter with a
bear yeah let's see that would have had
to a bad one time I'm done Raven pass
when we were over by Norris i was
working the visitor center desk and I
happened to look out the window and all
of a sudden people came running around
the corner there soon there's a bear in
the backyard there's a bear in the
backyard
suddenly the three of them all right
next to the right there was only a few
feet from the car the grizzly bear was
laying down for a while but then it
started heading up our way and then you
know my dad and I were priests you know
faces against the window like oh my gosh
she's freaked because of their was right
outside of her door and looked at the
people to any it didn't care
they're right above us and it was just
such a beautiful sight was amazing to
see them it was just so amazing yes
cool
yellowstone national park is home to
about 500 black bears and anywhere from
100 to 200 grizzly bears the bears
admirers however number in the millions
the first visitors and inhabitants in
Yellowstone viewed bears as a potential
threat an aggressive animal to be
respected and a creature of great
intelligence that intelligence enabled
bears to quickly adapt to the presence
of an increasing number of people it
wasn't long before they learn to use us
to their best advantage by the late
eighteen hundreds Bears had figured out
that where there were people there was
food for the next 80 years a hallmark of
every Yellowstone visit was looking for
bears begging along the roadside are
watching them feed on food scraps at the
hotel garbage dumps we loved them they
loved our lunch visitors to yellowstone
national park in the early years would
come to the dumpster watch bears feed on
the garbage at night
it would also see bears lining the
roadsides panhandling for human food
handouts along park roads and many
visitors would stop and think bears and
try to lure bears and interesting
photographic positions with food get
bears inside their cars behind their
cameras in different positions to get
pictures there was also bears coming
into the roadside campgrounds every
night
joining people for dinner getting up at
the picnic tables eating people food
some bears would come up to the back
doors the hotels every night about the
same time when they knew that kitchen
scraps to be thrown out the back door
and so people treated the bears as pets
and even some of the park employees
actually had bear cubs is wet so it was
really pretty crazy
having been raised on Yogi Bear and
winnie the pooh park visitors often
thought of Yellowstone's bears as
cartoon bears or teddy bears and the
Bears themselves often seem to play up
that image for a while even the National
Park Service got into the business of
bear feeding bears visited dumps behind
park hotels and people visited the dumps
to watch the bears they're watching at
the dumps became so popular that the
Park Service eventually built
grandstands and hosted nightly Ranger
programs for up to three thousand
spectators the constant supply of human
food both at the dumps and on the
roadsides made many bears realize that
people were two threat they lost their
fear of humans a process called
habituation they also became condition
to human foods it was a dangerous
combination
about 50 people every summer we're
getting scratched bitten or mauled it
was simply out of hand by nineteen
seventy park managers decided it was
time for a little tough love the
National Park Service in a sweeping and
controversial move closed all of the
dumps inside Yellowstone National Park
within a few years Rangers crackdown on
roadside feeding of bears after almost a
century of eating human food and passing
on there better ways to their cubs Bears
had to again turn to wild foods some
began raiding campgrounds for human food
the worst offenders both black bears and
Grizzlies were killed it became a public
relations nightmare for the national
park service but the agency stuck by its
mandate to protect and restore natural
conditions in the park
fortunately Yellowstone's bears proved
remarkably adaptable and eventually
return to a natural
diet there still are some instances of
habituated bears in Yellowstone bear 264
for instance a female grizzly who often
was seen between mammoth and Norris she
became so tolerant of people that she
was possibly the most photographed bear
in America
she was struck and killed by a car in
2003 other younger bears sometimes enter
campgrounds most likely out of simple
curiosity in recent years we've had a
few bears that have learned to crush
tense and some of them I think have
gotten a food reward because they'll
crush a tent and then dig through it is
if you're looking for something we had
one other bear that appeared to do it
just for fun or play he walked up belly
flop on a tent and then just walk away
we never did catch that bear approve
which bear was and it's no longer
happening we think he outgrew it today
Yellowstone's bears may be seen less
often than their roadside counterparts
of old but they still exist in healthy
numbers when they do venture to a
roadside it's because that road passes
through their natural habitat
not because they're expecting a handout
and human injuries due to bears are down
from 50 each summer to about one per
year for some Yellowstone will always be
a disappointment without the roadside
beggar bears the romance has lost some
of its pizzazz
for others the love affair with
Yellowstone's bears has taken on a new
depth and significance by appreciating
them from a distance we can better see
them for the wild bears that they are in
Yellowstone our love affair with the
Bears goes on but that love as often
happens has evolved over time as we
learn more
so how will we write this new chapter of
our love story what would we say now
they're Yellowstone's bears you are the
Bears of our imaginations my dreams and
honest you're the inspiration for the
teddy bears we grew up with in the
cartoon bears that make us laugh but you
are not those bears you're a wild you're
unpredictable you exist on your own
terms and for that we respect you anyway
-------------------------------------------
Learn Forest Animals for Kids | What Is It? Game for Kids | Maple Leaf Learning - Duration: 3:40.
What is it? What is it? I don't know.
What is it? What is it? Hey, let's go.
What is it? What is it? Please, show me.
Are you ready? One, two, three.
It's a fox!
Cool!
What is it? What is it? I don't know.
What is it? What is it? Hey, let's go.
What is it? What is it? Please show me.
Are you ready? One, two, three.
It's an owl. Wow!
What is it? What is it? I don't know.
What is it? What is it? Hey, let's go.
What is it? What is it? Please show me.
Are you ready? One, two, three.
It's a frog. Good job!
-------------------------------------------
WHY WE MONITOR EXPLAINED - Duration: 5:29.
the value of long-term monitoring is so
that we can know what's happening to the
plants and animals and their habitats in
the time that we can do something about
it
there are hundreds of national parks
across the united states and these parts
are not the same
so with the inventory and monitoring
networks have done is divided the
country into similar type ecosystems
ecoregions and each network is charged
with monitoring the part within a
particular set of ecosystem the
monitoring that we do it has to be
something that can be objectively
quantified and then repeat it several
years later and then repeated the same
way even walk out and say well it kinda
looks different to me but that doesn't
count you have had something that you
can measure the inventory and monitoring
networks have been identified vital
signs that are used to take the pulse of
the parks why is water quality
monitoring important to us here at
CinemaCon preserve the estuary is
exposed to a number of different
influences we're in an urban area we
have commercial port operations going
through the park there's commercial
fishing as well as recreational fishing
boating kayaking waterskiing jet-skiing
I think the unique thing about the
preserve is that there's so much of it
is still undeveloped that there's
pristine open view sheds so water
quality is critically important to
protect the thought marsh ecosystem the
Park Service values this kind of
information
it shows that the Park Service
understands the true meaning of
preservation each year we can't let my
penstemon a rare blue flowering plant
that not many people know about
we're down in our hands and knees really
crawling around looking for those
seedlings which are very hard to find
and the the large showy flowering adult
plants there is one very unique wash
that actually specializes in pollinating
these flowers is known as a pollen wasp
unlike common wasps which typically hunt
other insects these wasps behave more
like be the visitation of the flowers by
this wasp is essential really for the
long-term persistence of the plants
because it is such a well adapted
pollinator one never knows what all the
connections are what it would cost if
those species were lost if its habitat
type where lost things might not still
be here if it weren't for the protection
of the National Park Service the
findings of the inventory monitoring
program are reported directly to park
management as a manager of the park
you can't manage your resources without
having scientific data so the scientific
data associated with the monitoring
program gives us the ability to
understand the natural environment this
river system not just the river itself
and the aquatic creatures the fish and
the freshwater mussels that live in it
but everything adjacent to it
even the forest that come down to the
edge of the river all of it is connected
if no one is watching if they show up
and they find wait a minute
the rivers are rivers a wreck everything
that was alive in it is gone now
what happened then it's too late is too
late to do anything but if someone is
out here monitoring and watching then
the Park Service has a chance to take
action
flowing through these cave systems are
rivers and streams in which we can find
a unique creature the Kentucky cave
shrimp which is a federally listed
endangered species but it's not easy to
find it all the cave rivers are big and
dark and the cave shrimp are small and
transparent the idea behind long-term
monitoring is that resource managers in
any one part can make better management
decisions with good scientific data
the beauty is project is that it's
designed to detect change over a very
long period of time it might not be
something that's detectable in one year
two years three years even 10 years to
zoom out and to see this thing in a
bigger picture it is something I'm proud
to be part of the vision of the park
service includes this kind of
understanding and the value for the
science
-------------------------------------------
Shadowhunters 2x08 "Love Is a Devil" Promo - Duration: 0:48.
We've been friends for a long time.
And the last thing I ever want to do is screw that up.
Traditions change.
Feelings evolve.
He told you.
I'm never going to let anyone hurt him.
If I had known you were a demon, I would've done this years ago.
(whoosh, gasp)
Seeing you here makes me sick.
You're a murderer.
Nothing more.
-------------------------------------------
BLACK BEARS AT YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK - Duration: 9:30.
human beings relate to there's a lot
more profoundly than they do the most
other species and the reason is because
we have so many similarities there
roughly our size they're very
intelligent they eat the same foods that
we do and they compete with us and
that's an unusual situation I think when
you're looking face to face with a bear
you can recognize that cognition going
on behind the eyes that bear is
calculating things trying to decide who
you are and what you're going to do
whether he's going to go back to eating
or turn around and run or charge you
people either terrified of bears are
think they're cute and cuddly in there
somewhere in the middle
they spend the majority of their lives
looking for food that's their major goal
in life is to get as much food as they
can on a daily basis you know sort of in
preparation for this long period of time
when they're not going to have any and
the drive is just so deeply rooted such
an instinct for them bears are very well
equipped to find food I mean they are
perfectly adapted to this they've got
wonderful sense of smell they've got a
pretty good sense of sight and they've
got a good sense of curiosity so they
will not only remember where they found
food sources before but they'll
investigate where they believe there
might be food there just incredibly
powerful animal their cause are perfect
for ripping into things really have
great dexterity prehensile lip allows
them to grab individual and off a log
and fish little acorns out of their cups
what it means is it they can have a very
complex diet because they have the
mental capabilities of testing all kinds
of different foods for their quality as
well as recording geographically where
different foods are at different times
of the year so they can develop a really
complex seasonal map of where to go to
find foods
so where we get into the conflict with
people is you have 4 million people a
year up to 500 bears or so in the park
every single person that comes in brings
some tasty camp food and they're cooking
it non-stop and the campground and
there's people dropped a lot of food
scraps and there's a lot of trash and
refuse and waste that comes from all
these visitors
when you're somebody became a national
apart slowly but surely the interaction
between human embarrass picked up
because at the time there was no way to
store human food there was no way to
store trash garbage bags hadn't even
been invented yet they're just dumps
everywhere there's quickly learned that
they come around humans and they would
get food in the period from the nineteen
twenties to World War 2 the bear parks
developed feeding areas that were places
where they could dump trash and put
stands up and people could sit and watch
bears and so as an attraction it was
very popular as a way to reduce human
very conflict and actually backfired
because what they ended up doing was
creating more and more conflicts between
humans and bears creating more of what
they were calling nuisance bears because
they had become conditioned to using
human food and habituated to the
presence of humans 1972 the last dump
was closed so now these giant food
sources are just removed they're gone
they're not available for bears and you
have food condition habituated bears and
there's a lot of them now and the result
was the same everywhere if the Bears
aren't going to get the food at the end
of the food chain
they were going to simply move up the
line and go into the campgrounds and
take the food directly from the source
and that's what happened
so when i arrived in yosemite valley in
74
it was chaos it was simply chaos and it
looked like a mad house
they could flip trash cans open they
peel back the windows on cars and enter
into cars and they did what they needed
to do to get food because that's what
they had learned they had learned that
humans were a source of food human
vehicles were sort of human buildings
and so they were just doing what they
had learned how to do
the only solution to the problem short
of killing all the Bears is to make that
food unavailable and ultimately that led
to my suggestion that the park
experiment with heavy plate steel
lockers big enough to stick a cooler in
and put those in campsites turned out to
be very complex and very expensive but
in 1977 the Park Service tried it at
White Wolf campground in Yosemite every
single site had a locker and a rather
scary patrol Ranger went through the
campground right at dinnertime and told
everybody to put away their food in the
lockers or else every single site in
yosemite national park has food storage
locker that people can use so they can
get their food out of their vehicles out
of their tents and stored in a place
where bears cannot obtain it
so we spent a ton of our time going on
educating the public going around and
making sure everybody who's visiting the
park is aware that hey if you leave your
food out there is a good chance of their
might get it and it's gonna change that
bears life forever
once they learn that they can get food
from humans they've learned it they're
not going to forget it so that
information is available to them and so
what was a wild bear foraging out in
wildlands now becomes a bear that we're
going to have these conflicts with the
bears that are successful in obtaining
human food then change their entire
regime they learned that aggression
which is by the way mostly fake
aggression is a really good tool to
scare people away from their food if
they won't leave you no Bluff charges
are really impressive thing
and then we have now created a monster
that we really have no choice but to
destroy I think living with black bears
in national parks is going to require
constant vigilance and management there
are chores in this world and one of them
is the chores of managing food so that
we can live with their this park is here
to protect those animals
this is their place this is where they
belong everyone is a chance to be part
of the solution
everyone has a chance to contribute to
making this a better place a Wilder
place and more stunning place that will
last into the future
everyone has that chance
if we do a consistent job of managing
human food and making it largely
unavailable bikers we can live with them
they're exciting there handsome
they're fascinating to watch and I think
we can live with them very well in
national parks
-------------------------------------------
DISCONNECT - A Short Film on Love and Social Media | Jay Jani - Duration: 20:31.
Oh my God! Thank you, I don't know what I would do without this.
Yeah, no problem!
So are you new to the building?
Yeah, I just moved here recently
Oh nice! What's your name?
I am Gia...Sid Nice to meet you!
*Knocking on door*
Special delivery for Gia!
Wow you look amazing!
Thanks! You clean up pretty well yourself Sid. Thanks...Come on in!
So I still have a few things till I am ready so if you just want to hang out here and watch some TV thats fine.
Alright, sounds good!
So how was the drive? Not bad, a little snowy but other than that wasn't bad.
**Inaudible muffled TV**
*Texting sounds*
Okay ready? Yeah, lets go!
I...I love you
Come on smile!
No..Yeah! No I am playing
Come here
I AM SICK OF THIS SOCIAL MEDIA BULL****! I JUST WANT TO DOCUMENT OUR RELATIONSHIP!
WHO GIVES A F***
*Inaudible Fighting*
Why don't you go run to your room real quick how about that?
Literally always social media! All this bull****!
Social media whore!..
*Gia crying* Open up! Open up!
Gia...
Really?..Yeah just one. Alright alright alright..
**Texting over inaudible muffled TV**
I love you
*Knocking on door*
Are you Gia?...
Special delivery for Gia! Wow, you look amazing!
Thanks! You clean up pretty well yourself Sid. Thanks...Come on in!
So I still have a few things till I am ready so if you just want to hang out here and watch some TV thats fine.
Alright, sounds good!
So how was the drive? Not bad, a little snowy but other than that wasn't bad.
"If you are engaging in a consentual relationship you should keep it between two people."
"Perhaps not..the whole world!"
"You don't need to post about it online in order to prove it! ...Get off the phone!...Get off the.."
You don't need to post it to prove it
Lets go
True Love. The ageless hook that both lures and latches
A precious and gentle gift is true love. Cherished by those fortunate to have its' caress.
True love is THE greatest of mans self creation. Only rightly then is its greatest destroyer another of mans building
Comments have become loves validator and likes its' signifier
Conversations become texting. Arguments become phonecalls. And the abyss of feelings become status updates.
And yet that who loves you, without filter, sits just across from you.
No lense is required to see their face. No swipe required to appreciate their being.
Why be lost what appears to be? Why must love be posted to prove it?
-------------------------------------------
Numbers, Intentions, And New Beginnings - Duration: 3:31.
Numbers, Intentions, And New Beginnings
by via heartlightdg,
After posting the numerology forecast the other day, I realized it had been a long while
since I took notice of any single digit or combo of numbers or thought about the meanings
behind them.
I used to love noticing when 11:11 showed up in any form, it was my sign that I was
being guided and watched over by my spiritual team and it always gave me comfort.
I read tarot for years and was really into the numbers in that way as well but I seem
to have moved onto other studies recently.
Yesterday while on a road trip, my gas light came on.
Surprised, I decided I better pull over and fill up the tank.
When I turned off the car at the gas station, I glanced at the numbers on the trip odometer
and the miles read 111.1.
At first I thought, weird, the car shouldn�t need gas after only 111 miles!
(My gas gauge has been on the fritz so I use the trip odometer to keep track in case you
were wondering lol.)
Then the numbers registered.
And I smiled.
1111.
Cool!
All those 1�s � new beginnings.
How appropriate.
It was January 1 and 2017 is a 1 year in numerology.
Refueling my car and fascinated by the 1�s showing up, I also refueled my intentions,
and that is to always my keep my own Light on, especially since we were going to visit
family.
This year is for new beginnings for everyone and that is one of my intentions, to remember
to always be an energetic leader and to hold my own energy instead of matching others.
Looking at the number 11, a master number about intuition and illumination, I can also
see that that goes along with my intentions.
It says to keep the channel open for my intuition and to make sure my soul/higher self/awareness
is able to guide me at all times, not my ego/personality self.
I have been meditating recently on my evolutionary path and my intentions for the coming year,
this number 1 year of 2017.
And the fact is, we were on the way to see my in-laws when the gas light came on.
So, pay attention it said, stay conscious, remember to be who you are and who you intend
to be.
Finding other ways to relate to family is been something I have been focused on for
the last 9 months.
The previous three years have been rough after I rattled everybody�s visions and expectations
of me.
So I have been practicing acknowledging our common ground, letting their judgments flow
around me instead of absorbing them, not giving them the power to hurt or disturb me, and
staying in my own energy and wisdom.
And it has paid off in the last few months.
The 1�s showed up to remind me.
-------------------------------------------
DISCOVER GHOST TOWNS AT YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK - Duration: 7:14.
hmm
when you hike up to Dana village the
first thing you encounter is this stone
cabin
it's a very curious feature there's not
much else up here and you might wonder
why is there a stone cabin here in this
place it seems kind of random and the
more you wander around the upper part of
this Ridge you see evidence of these
cabins all over the place and you wonder
what were people doing here
the next thing you'll notice about this
area is that the rocks here are very
different
unlike the rest of the assembly which is
granite these are older metamorphic
rocks and the contact between those two
rocks is a great place to find things
like gold and silver
I
so if you are a minor walking around
here in the eighteen seventies or
eighteen eighties you were looking for
places to mine
these rocks are exactly the kind of
things you'd be looking for
these mines were right about 11,000 feet
above sea level up there even in the
summertime and get windy and cold and
these wires actually spent the winter up
there so imagine gale-force winds so
much snow avalanche danger they were
really working under difficult cold
conditions and of course they were
working very hard they're moving rocks
by hand digging by hand through rocks
it was probably an incredible amount of
hard work and suffering but they were
motivated because if it paid off
they were going to be rich because
there's this promise and speculation
that this was going to be the largest
silver ledge of the whole spirit about a
range and a lot of speculators and
Assessors were thinking it was worth
millions of dollars and that's back in
the eighteen eighties and it didn't take
very long
digging by hand into these very hard
rocks to discover that they needed some
more equipment in order to dig the kind
of tunnels that they knew they needed to
dig
they got more and more people interested
in it they decided to build a little
town below the mountain peak and start
tunneling through the mountain
and so there was a decision to bring in
hydraulic pumps and equipment to help
these miners get through the mountain
faster and they decided to bring 16,000
pounds of machinery and equipment from
San Francisco
and amazingly they did all of this by
hand by human power in the wintertime
dragging the equipment on sleds from
Lundy canyon to bentonville which is a
few miles and several thousand feet
elevation game lot of rope and tackle
just like pull it up the mountain range
took them two months and at the end of
that the head Foreman said now I know
why men grow old and when they finally
got the equipment to beneficial in may
of 1882 they knew they needed a better
way to get equipment there so beginning
in 1882 in 1883 they built a road to
Bennett ville from big oak flat across
the Sierra Nevada and that road today is
essentially the tioga road there are
various reasons why the mining
ultimately stopped but more than
anything that had to do with investor
interest with years going by lot of
investment no results eventually they
move their investments to other more
profitable minds so the golden crown
mine is right near moto pass which is
about ten thousand six hundred feet
above sea level
and right there there are still some of
the whitebark pine trees and that's what
the miners used to build their houses
that does feel like a ghost town me I
don't know if it's the wood and the wood
just has this decayed look it's very
aged would still looks really in good
condition for being around for over a
hundred and twenty hundred thirty years
when you're visiting these mined areas
it's very important to remember that
these are historic sites the cabins are
fragile
we need to preserve those
the national park service is here to
protect both the natural and cultural
resources and the mining history in
Yosemite is a significant story in human
history of yosemite national park
for me as a geologist this area is
fascinating just because of the rocks
but i think really more of the value of
this place is in the history not just
the written history but the history that
you can still see today in the form of
these cabins the mine shafts themselves
some of the remnant material that's left
over
that's really where the real value of
these ghost town slides
ok
-------------------------------------------
YELLOWSTONE IN DEPTH: FISH - Duration: 5:29.
they were watching Yellowstone in-depth
Yellowstone's waters are alive with a
variety of native and non-native fish
and fishing can be a great way to enjoy
the park fishing regulations and catch
limits vary depending on the fish
species so anglers should know how to
quickly tell Yellowstone's different
fish apart
here's how you can figure out what might
be on the end of your line Yellowstone
is home to five kinds of trout the
cutthroat trout is the only native trout
in the region and is the only fish with
a red / beneath its jaw hence the name
cutthroat like all other native fish
cutthroat router catch-and-release only
if it has a red / it's a cutthroat trout
and should be returned to the water
right away
rainbow trout may look similar but they
don't have a red / rainbow trout also
have numerous spots on the head whereas
cutthroat trout have very few rainbows
also often have white on the edge of the
fins while cutthroat trout never do
there are some rainbow cutthroat hybrids
in the park when in doubt you should
treat the fish like a native species and
return it to the water
brown trout are another non native trout
in Yellowstone they can be identified by
the pale helos that encircle black spots
on the body of the fish brook trout
another non native trout can most easily
be identified by the worm-like markings
on their body they are an overall darker
color than other trout and have light
spots including some red spots they also
have a light and dark edge on their fins
the largest crowd in Yellowstone is the
non-native lake trout lake trout have a
more deeply forked tailed and other
trout and are darker in color with white
spots like the rainbow trout they have
numerous spots on their head and often
have a white edge on their fins lake
trout Craver aegis Leon native cutthroat
trout for this reason the National Park
Service is trying to reduce lake trout
numbers in yellowstone lake if you catch
a lake trout there you must kill it and
may not return it to the lake alive
trout aren't the only fish in
Yellowstone's waters too rare and
beautiful fish the fluval arctic
grayling and the mountain whitefish also
call this place home
grayling are most easily identified by
their large sail-like dorsal fin
they also have dark spots on the front
half of the body
mountain whitefish can be identified by
their lack of spots they're very round
body shape and their small mouths with
no teeth mountain whitefish like the
fluval arctic grayling and cutthroat
trout are native fish and our
catch-and-release only to learn more
about where in the park your most likely
to encounter certain fish species pick
up a copy of Yellowstone's fishing
regulations at any of the parks visitor
centers or downloaded from the park's
website this guide also contains
information about the required park
fishing permit and catch limits for fish
in addition it has instructions on how
to handle fish that you release back
into the water so they have a better
chance of survival
the National Park Service sets fishing
regulations in order to protect
Yellowstone's fish and to ensure that
future generations will be able to enjoy
fishing in the park
you can help by learning fishing
regulations and by carefully handling
Paul fish that you release back into the
water together we can make sure
Yellowstone's waters continue to thrive
today and into the future
ok
-------------------------------------------
YELLOWSTONE IN DEPTH: THE RESTLESS GIANT - Duration: 6:19.
they were watching
yellowstone in depth
think of Yellowstone and most people
think of geysers and while over 3
million people come to yellowstone
national park each year to see the parks
geysers hot springs steam vents and mud
pots many don't know that the heat
fueling these wonders is coming from a
volcano possibly the largest on earth a
volcano that lies directly beneath their
feet the Yellowstone supervolcano hot
enough to fuel 10,000 hot water features
that have been spewing hissing and
searching for hundreds and thousands of
years a volcano whose restless shifting
triggers thousands of small earthquakes
in the park each year a volcano that has
had eruptions thousands of times more
powerful than Mount st. Helens
a volcano that could in an instant
change our world forever
the Yellowstone volcano is one of our
planets restless Giants for scientists
the question is not one of whether it
will erupt again but when in 2003
Rangers at the norris geyser basin
noticed a rapid rise in ground
temperatures in the same area previously
dormant geysers suddenly sprang to life
and others boiled dry i was walking the
trails in the morning of july eleventh
talking with visitors when I was in the
area of the Corporal geyser and we
noticed that the area had been heating
up because the trees were meeting at
maple syrup snow which meant the heat
was cooking the SAP in the trees
themselves
it looked like they might be something
in the trail itself so i took some
temperature readings in just a few
centimeters below the surface the
temperature of the earth was 200 degrees
Fahrenheit at that altitude 200 degrees
is the boiling point of water the park
decided to temporarily close the trail
to keep people from getting burned the
Rangers reported what they saw to Hank
Hessler Yellowstone's park geologist
with the help of the Yellowstone Volcano
Observatory he set up a grid of ground
monitoring equipment to study the
changes there are three indicators we
look at for an imminent volcanic
eruption in Yellowstone the first is
increased earthquakes in one particular
area
the second is increased ground
information the ground rising on the
order of feet perhaps yards in one
particular area and then also changes in
thermal activity geyser basins becoming
hotter and producing more gas at
Yellowstone all of those things are
happening all of the time we know though
that this sort of thing at Yellowstone
has been going on for thousands of years
but it doesn't always mean or infected
it almost never means that we get an
eruption here so we get all of this
geological activity that in some places
might mean an eruption was coming
and at Yellowstone it just means that's
the way the place works but Yellowstone
still delivers some surprises several
years ago us geological survey
researchers mapping the floor of
Yellowstone Lake made a series of
stunning finds large underwater hot
springs submerged earthquake faults
underwater spires and a submerged don't
100 feet tall and almost half a mile
long these discoveries along with the
increased activity at norris generated a
great deal of interest in the media and
raised concerns among some park visitors
as to the safety of visiting Yellowstone
Park but with such a large volcano
underlying Yellowstone scientists have
learned to expect the unusual
at norris the flurry of activity
continued for several weeks then as
suddenly as it began the disturbance
disappeared for now
Yellowstone's volcano slumbers in
relative peace Yellowstone is truly a
magical place and that magic is rooted
in the Yellowstone volcano we have a
very good volcano monitoring system in
Yellowstone and we'll know if the
volcano and when the volcano starts to
become excited so until that time
Yellowstone is a great place to come and
visit and experience the beauty of the
volcano directly one day
Yellowstone's restless giant will
reawaken it will change Yellowstone as
we know it but in the meantime and for
the duration of our lives and
generations to come
this giant will be a creative force not
a destructive one
the Yellowstone volcano breathes life
into the geysers the hot springs the mud
pots it fuels the geologic wonders that
have amazed countless generations and
will thrill countless more and it is
alive right now right beneath our feet
-------------------------------------------
GRAND CANYON IN DEPTH: THE LEGACY - Duration: 7:17.
my first trip to the Grand Canyon was in
2005 and I was actually moving to the
Grand Canyon I'd never been here before
I've never been west and growing up in
Georgia I wasn't really sure what to
expect but when I got here actually to
this exact spot the vastness of the
canyon was overwhelming to me the
wide-open space that the ability to see
for miles and miles a condor flying over
giant bird I've never seen anything
quite like it in my life started hailing
I didn't know anything about the climate
or the environment i just knew i was
moving to the desert i was searching for
something i wanted to hype and
experience the outdoors and I was hoping
to find that here I didn't quite realize
in a moment but that was the first day
of the rest of my life
one of the most special things for me
personally living and working at Grand
Canyon for the National Park Service is
contributing to the life-changing
experiences of over five million people
a year and being part of such a small
communities doing that I cherish that
responsibility as well as the rest of my
National Park Service family for me on a
day-to-day basis you know it's it's it's
sometimes easy to forget that we've been
around for over a hundred years a
hundred years for the park service but
you know over a hundred years for a lot
of other parks but in the end the thing
that really keeps our mission going is
knowing that were well established
organization that people value and
there's a reason that that we're all
here there's so many benefits to to be
in a ranger it doesn't get boring
everyday there is something new
its handling the little fires that pop
up in everyday operation whether it's
from ems calls to search and rescue
wildland fires that's what we handle and
we do that to ensure that park in the
visitors are safe you can come back and
enjoy this point
we're not the reason the park is here
but we're here to ensure that it stays
here and that it remains a part
my name is Mary Hilton and I've lived
here in the park since 8th grade so
about 15 16 years I've been in and out
of the pathways and student programs
work in different jobs with the Park
Service I currently work as a custodial
member on the South room where I clean
the restrooms and the visitor center and
take out the trash and new litter pickup
I take great pride in my job
it makes everyone to respect the park a
little bit more and see how much we love
our Park it's very rewarding for me to
have a connection with each one of the
visitors here that are at my window
it's very important to know that they I
may be the only one that they see during
their trip here into the park and I need
to make sure that they have a good
experience here so that they are able to
have a good experience throughout the
partner
my name is Bruce kilbride and I'm link
Robbie were married and we're volunteers
in here in the park with volunteered for
grand canyon national park for four
summers this is our for summer
sometimes here at the nursery your kind
of hidden away but it is good to
volunteer kind of out in the more public
areas of the parks because in little
kids can see my gosh you know somebody's
doing something you know without getting
paid their volunteering you know maybe
maybe they should think about
volunteering so it's a good to set an
example
well I think it's important to engage I
you because if if we don't have a base
of youth of incoming people for the Park
Service help preserve and protect these
resources we're not going to have
Stewart's for the future are our parks
will not have strong employees will have
the science resource management
backgrounds of public speaking skills to
help preserve these places and
preserving PT generations which is our
mission
I'm extremely proud to be here at grand
canyon during our Centennial to be
standing here representing the Park
Service it's really amazing to connect
people to these stories that we have
here we have a hundred years of
celebrating this National Park Service
protecting these resources and to allow
people to connect to them allows them to
care about them and want to continue to
protect them for our next hundred years
being a part of the National Park
Service legacy and a centennial year
means so much to me because of the
positive impact in the influence that
not just grand canyon but the Park
Service has had on me personally I feel
a duty kind of an obligation to pay it
forward to share my story to share my
experience because I feel like that's
the way to get folks connected to get
them into the park to actually come here
feel it to go below the rim to go on the
trails to be here at nighttime and its
experience the night sky you can see the
milky way it's an incredible feeling and
I want to do my part to to pay for
-------------------------------------------
2002 Ducati 998S Troy Bayliss #283 - Duration: 1:35.
What we have here is a 2002 998 Bayliss.
Number 283 of 400 built.
Whats unique about this particular motorcycle is that it's a european version which has
the deep sump engine.
I purchased this directly from the factory after retiring from racing in 2002.
While I was in the factory I went about the parts bin at Ducati Corse and started to add
a bunch more hot rod parts for this motorcycle.
It has the 10 spoke Marchesini magnesium wheels.
It has the longer Corsa magnesium swingarm along with the flat link, and different shock.
Whats really cool about this is if you look at the rear brake setup, it's a Corsa rear
brake with a billet caliper.
As far as the engine goes, it's pretty unique as well.
Lightened and rebalanced the crank shaft with Pankl titanium rods, Hi-comp Pistal pistons,
full port job and cam timing is done very nicely.
This thing has over 150 horsepower at the rear wheel so quite a nice little street bike
to ride around.
-------------------------------------------
DANGEROUS RIVERS AT YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK - Duration: 2:44.
71 fall harder they fall
I don't know what's on the waterfall
concerned with what he in the water it
is often went over he gets the scholars
go over got it thank you thank you
rising and now we've packed some pretty
intense training before he knows you as
a hard height you're really hot
without we just break off the trail
going to the street and just took all
those little trails
took her shoes off and started to wait
out you know I was only ankle-deep kayak
we've done things and we've been
events rough water was really slick
it's loud yell whoa you don't come out
any farther
the water was calm where we were
felonies slipped under the rain down the
bank to try to catch him i couldn't
could even really get a ReachOut kept
going and then he went under
disappear is on the way
-------------------------------------------
CONSERVING THE WILD BISON: AN AMERICAN ICON AT YELLOWSTONE - Duration: 4:26.
Yellowstone's played a key role in bison
conservation because there was a time
period where there were no wild bison
and the last rim that animals were found
in the backcountry of yellow stuff
today the population really is different
its large it's recovered so well that
what we're trying to do is preserve
historic behaviors that shaped bison
species things like migration to various
low-elevation winter ranges immigration
between breeding groups we've been so
successful that we have to deal with
animals that want to go beyond the area
that we have a responsibility to manage
on the surface it looks like it would be
a simple solution to let the animals go
and do nothing
bison leaving the National Park isn't
particularly a problem to the national
park service but bison leaving the
National Park and going to other
locations is more of a problem to all
three states that's around Yellowstone
because some animals within the Bison
population are infected with a bacterial
disease called brucellosis laws prevent
movement of brucellosis infected animals
so until we solve the problem of how
specifically you move animals in this
regulatory constraint will work kind of
limited to shipping animals the
slaughter or developing hunting programs
for bison when they leave the National
Park
what we've learned since we began
managing wild bison together with the
state of Montana is that the population
can fluctuate from 2500 4500 and not
create any additional transmission risk
to the livestock industry it minimizes
the safety risk to travelers along
highways and it reduces the conflict
between private landowners that live in
the area that bison select when they
moved to locations outside the National
Park when yellowstone was drawn on the
landscape there was lots of space for
you know migratory wildlife to move
freely back and forth and occupy these
low elevation areas conservation of wild
bison in the future will be all about
you know how well we negotiate space for
them and how well we actually manage
wild bison when they leave the National
Park there's no doubt that bison need to
be managed because they compete directly
with humans for habitat so i would
invite everybody to learn more of the
details of what's been accomplished and
the constraints that go along with
allowing Bisons just roam freely
unchecked across modern society
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