Black vultures are eating cows alive. Now some farmers can legally shoot the protected birds. – USA TODAY

Black vultures are killing this farmer's cows and he needs a permit to fire back

Farmer Rollin Bach says black vultures, a protected bird species, are flying in and killing his cows. A law requires a permit to kill the birds.

Mykal McEldowney and Matt Stone, Indianapolis Star

SCOTTSBURG, Ind. Sometimes as many as a dozen black vultures circle aboveJohn Hardin'sfields in southern Indianas Scott County, poised for when they spot a cold, weak or vulnerable cow. Unlike their turkey vulture cousins, which are easy to spot with their red heads, black vultures dont always wait for their meals to be dead.

The black vultures, now that's a very, very aggressive bird, Hardin said. Theyre basically waiting for the cows and calves to die or trying to kill them.

Black vultures survive, like most vultures, by eating carrion, or the remains of dead animals. That can serve as an integral part of the ecosystem: eating diseased remains that could carry sickness and spread to other animals. But unlike Indianas turkey vultures, black vultures also go for living animals: calves, piglets, lambs and other small livestock are their preferred targets.

Seemingly every day whenHardin walks out his door, he sees them. They often are perched on the roof ridge of his neighbors barn or settled on a nearby fence post watching, waiting.

It may sound ominous, Hardin said, and in a way, it is.

The livestock farmer said hes lost at least two but possibly up to four animals in the last few years because of black vultures.

When youre in the animal husbandry business, one of the worst things you want is for an animal to die, especially the way vultures do it, Hardin said. Once they get a hold of them, they pick the calfs nose off, pick around his mouth, face and navel. So then the calf cant make it very long after that.

Hardin is among a growing list of farmers who are dealing with what many describe as a reign of terror brought on by black vultures.These birds, however, are protected under an international law that regulates the hunting of migratory birds. That fact has left livestock producers across the state with a limited set of tools for how to address these birds, and with varying levels of success.

But the Indiana Farm Bureau is trying to give them another option. In early August, the insurance organization launched a new program in which livestock producers can apply for a permit to legally kill and remove a set number of black vultures from their property.

This initiative is several years in the making, but the farm bureau hopes it will have a swift impact.

When the initial volley of calls came in from those producers, we tried to figure out how we could help them, said Greg Slipher, Indiana Farm Bureaus livestock specialist. This gives them more control of whats happening on their farm.

Slipher first heard of black vultures about five years ago when he got a call from his colleagues in Kentucky warning him: Theyre coming. Seemingly overnight, black vultures started popping up everywhere on southern Indianas landscape, he said.

I got a heads up that these birds were coming my way, he said, and by golly they were right.

Black vultures have continued to expand north in recent decades across the Ohio River from their original territory in southern states. In the 1990s, there were so few black vultures in Indiana that groups dedicated to protecting migratory birds didnt even have a clear estimate.Now, a recent study based on calculations from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service estimates upward of 17,000 black vultures in the state.

As their numbers have grown, so, too, has the damage the black-headed birds have caused and the calls for assistance theyve spurred.The Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service with USDA has received an average of8,639technical assistance calls from participants in 2020 nationwide.

That increase can mostly be attributed to producers who are looking for help on how to manage the vultures, Humberg said.

Black vultures terrorize: Difficult to legally kill birds that are eating livestock

Still, the damage black vultures have caused is a little less easy to nail down at least at the present. A multi-year study of black vultures being led by Purdue University is currently underway. One of its goals is to better understand how many farmers have been affected,how many animals have been lost and the resulting financial costs.

A survey of only about 20 livestock producers found they lost 25 animals to black vultures in the last three years, including both adult cows and calves. A single cow can be worth more than $1,000, and for small producers, the loss of just one cow can be a major disruption to their operation.

According to outdoorlife.com, the black vulture reduction pilot program started in Kentucky and Tennessee, and includesArkansas, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahomaand Texas. The program allows farmers with vulture problems to obtain a depredation permit.

The U.S. has migratory bird treaties with Canada and Mexico, as well as Japan and Russia. These laws were put in place to protect migratory birds, which often cross international borders, from over-hunting. Black vultures are protected under one of these treaties: The 1918 Migratory Bird Act.

Under that law, it is illegal to maim or kill black vultures without a permit, which costs $100 in Indiana. Farmers can apply for one of these permits through the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, but they have found the process onerous and the cost a deterrent.

It becomes a convenience issue and a dollars issue, Slipher said.

Indiana drew inspiration from Kentucky, which pioneered this program several years ago. Since then, similar initiatives have popped up in Tennessee, and most recently in Missouri all of which have worked well and had positive results, Slipher said. He hopes Indiana will see similar success.

Indiana Farm Bureau is now taking on that part of the process for farmers. The organization applied for a permit from FWS, which it received in June. With that approval, the farm bureau is paying the permit cost and can award sub-permits to its members, for free, to lethally remove black vultures.

Thats going to be to our advantage, Slipher added. We have that relationship in place already and farmers will be more comfortable reaching out to work with us on it.

Their goal is to make things as straightforward as possible.

There is no limit on the number of permits the organization can give out, but it is authorized to take only 500 vultures this year. Based on each individual producers needs, the farm bureau will set the number of vultures they can take, not to exceed five.

Producers are excited about the program. In the first week since it launched, the farm bureau already received 24 applications, and Slipher expects that number to grow as the fall calving season approaches. He plans to issue the first permit this week.

Hardin is one of the farmers who applied.

Its going to be hard to eradicate them, but I hope it helps, he said. Everybody I know is on board, and I think there is a sense of hope.

After receiving a permit, producers must report the vultures that they remove and also ensure that they dispose of them properly. That can include burying the birds, but Slipher hopes farmers will do something else. He is encouraging them to preserve at least one of the birds and hang them on the property in effigy, which has been found to be an effective method for warding off more vultures.

Humberg envisions this program becoming a mainstay, as long as it is successful.

The vultures are here to stay, and we are going to have to find ways that we can all live together, he said. If that means some birds have to be lethally removed, hopefully were minimizing the number of birds we have to treat that way and the number of cattle lost.

Contributing: Sudiksha Kochi, USA TODAY

Follow Sarah Bowman on Twitter: @IndyStarSarah.

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Black vultures are eating cows alive. Now some farmers can legally shoot the protected birds. - USA TODAY

The Interesting Casting Choice The Office Fans Have Noticed – Looper

OnSubreddit r/DunderMifflin, one user made the observation, "Why did casting make Pam, Erin, Nellie, Katy, and Meredith all redheads?" It is interesting that many of the show's main characters have red hair, particularly when less than 2% of the world's population is ginger, according to NBC News.

It's unlikely that "The Office" casting team deliberately sought out redheads, and that it's just a coincidence that so many talented actresses cast on the show sport the same unique hair color. Jenna Fischer has even weighed in on the discourse, as the true shade of Pam's hair has been a point of debate among fans. On her "Office Ladies" podcast, as transcribed by Cheat Sheet, Fischer said that her hair is "reddish-brown," remarking that she had dyed it for a film during "The Office's" third season, leaving it less red than it had been previously.

These kinds of keen observations are just one of the many perks of watching and rewatching "The Office," and we'll certainly be looking out for any other consistencies during our next binge of the hilarious show.

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The Interesting Casting Choice The Office Fans Have Noticed - Looper

Pack Your Schoolbag with Supplies from These Portland Stores – Portland Monthly

The school year is about to begin again, in person and for real, it seems. Given that this time last year meant a stay-at-home, online-only start for many Oregon kids, it feels like a moment to reengage in the annual tradition of stocking up on school supplies. And this year, there are extras on the list, with masks and hand sanitizer added to the crayons and folders staples.

If you are getting somebody ready for school,you can stock up and support some local Portland business in the process. Read on for our list of back-to-school essentials and the Portland businesses where you can find them.

This southwest Portland business makes bags to withstand all the kinds of weather Oregon can throw at us. Their PDX bag is waterproof, which protects students laptops, paper notebooks, and homework from getting wet and destroyed. The bags are also made to hold up against years of use or abuseperfect for middle schoolersand come in three sizes.

Face masks are now high on the school supply list, particularly following Gov. Kate Browns mask mandate, and local maker Dana Herbert has sizes to fit smaller faces, with an array of fun patterns to match your kidsparticulartastes.

Portland Leather offers a zipped leather pencil case for writing supplies and other small trinkets thats durable, sleek, and comes in various colors from nutmeg brown to cranberry red. (Heads up, Portland Leather also stocks a number of backpacks.)

With North Alberta and Division Street locations, Collage is a perfect stop for any craft and art supply needs in addition to school supplies such as notebooks, calendars, and pens. They also carry a range of daily planners, including the 2022 Agatha planner, for students to keep track of their homework and to-do list for the week, as well as a monthly calendar pages to stay on top of deadlines.

Kids are going to need to stay hydrated during school and water fountains are a COVID no-no, so Lake Oswego-based fifty/fiftys 40-ounce bottle is a great option for students. Its large, but that means fewer trips to the water fountain and more hydrated sports practices. It also comes with a three finger lid making it easy to carry it around.

Notebooks are a back-to-school essential and Little Otsus Mnemosyne 199 notebook is a great locally-sourced option. It boasts 140 pages with a date and title headerwhile youre at their Division Street store, browse the array of pens and pencils so your kid can fill it with color.

SCRAP Creative Reuse receives donations of various used school and office supplies, and sells them at extremely affordable prices. You can get all the folders you need by picking up a pack of 10, that sells for $1. Youll be able to load up on supplies here, not break the bank, and leave feeling good about redirecting waste from the landfill.

Backpack full? Now youve got to dress them up for the daily wear and tear of school. N Mississippi Streets Black Wagon offers apparel for up to 14 years old, with quality tops, bottoms, rompers, and more. A favorite from the store is the Nightingale sweatshirt that works for all genders and can keep your child warm once the cold months set in.

As school begins and fall sets in, kids may be in need of extra reading material. Green Bean Bookss Jennifer Green had some recommendations. For third to fourth graders? Ways to Make Sunshineby Renee Watsonset at Vernon Elementary Schoola new heartwarming series with local roots and a strong African American female protagonist being compared to BeverlyCleary's Ramona Quimby! The second book in this series also just came out,Ways to Grow Love.For older kids in the 6th-8th grade range, she recommends Black Boy Joy, acollection of 17 stories by Kwame Mbalia. This book offers a collection of short stories, comics and poems that celebrate the joy and wonders of Black boyhood and is written by 17 awesome Black male and nonbinary authors!

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Pack Your Schoolbag with Supplies from These Portland Stores - Portland Monthly

Red Bull Imagination 2.0: Freeride Jam Sessions with Tyler Bereman – Red Bull Australia

As the second year of Tyler Beremans RedBull Imagination series is almost upon us, we called Bereman this week to talk about his vision for the project set to take place in September. We asked him what we can expect for the big wins, the projects impact on freeride motocross, and the Imagination footprint beyond 2021.

Tyler Bereman

Garth Milan / RedBull Content Pool

From my perspective, Imagination 2020 actually went a lot better than anticipated. We were really lucky that the dirt was some of the best dirt weve been able to work with, says Bereman on the creative collaboration with Jason Baker of Dream Traxx that brought a dream-designed course to reality. He adds, [The course] was as close as we could possibly get to what we had drawn. For the 21 days of the build that we had, it was nothing short of miraculous what Baker and his crew were able to put together As RedBull Imagination 2021 approaches, Tylers motivation is at an all-time high to build on what they established in 2020. The foundation that we built in 21 days, its still there. And our goal is just to keep adding to the course. I think this year is going to be really cool to see what comes of it.

And adding to the course is exactly what Bereman and course builder Jason Baker have done. Moving into 2021, the Imagination course will be broken down into three different sections. Were going to have the bigger jump side with the quarter pipe, the tree jumps, and add more lines and opportunity for the big side. Then the Supercross section will be a skatepark style dirt park, Bereman explains. Visually that is our goalto make it look like a skatepark. Just a ton of options. You can have one lip that you can go three different directions. Then were going to have a jib style section with wall rides, the container, and integrate some things from the heartland region like semi-trucks, tractors, and hay bales into the course. We built this course off of features that we would hit all over the world while were free riding.

Cole Seely hits the wallride at RedBull Imagination in Richards, Missouri.

Jeff Jacobsen / RedBull Content Pool

While Bereman and his production crew are still fine tuning the format of the event, the focus for this years event is: jam session. Creating space to welcome formats seen more frequently in board sport events, specifically skateboard park contests, is Beremans aim. When remembering last years event, Bereman says, I think one thing that stood out to all of the riders and everyone there on the production was when there were sessions where we would all be riding together. The night session riding that happened before the competition was a standout memory for a few reasons. Looking back to 2020 reveals Beremans driving spirit behind wanting more jam sessions, One session in particular at night that all of us were just feeding off of each other. That to me is free riding. Thats where the best riding comes because the amp levels are through the roof and were all feeding off of each other.

The idea is that the more the riders feel like they are just on a freeride session with their friends, the more they will begin to feed off of each others amplitude. With more of this freedom baked into the event, the bar will only go higher for the contest as a whole. Also, with a timed run, riders will be able to go anywhere throughout the course with no start or finish allowing them to be as creative as they can imagine. The first part of all of the athletes being there will just be these sessions, and filming these sessions, and getting everyone really hyped on the course, he says. Whatever you see goes [in this event]. Beremans perspective on the competition format changes the game for point-based results. The most creative line gets rewarded the most because a lot of us arent even doing tricks, Bereman explains.

Tyler Bereman celebrates after winning at RedBull Imagination in 2020.

Garth Milan / RedBull Content Pool

Beremans perspective is that full creative expression in freeriding is much different than freestyle motocross. Since transitioning from his racing career, Bereman has committed himself to showing the world that freeriding has no limits. Freestyle has gotten to the point where they have three double backflip and front flip tricks in their runs and its kind of over peoples heads. A lot of the average Joes sitting on the couch dont understand whats going on. Its crazy that freestyle has gotten to that point.

A lot of the free riding side of things was forgotten about. At one point it was all either racing or filling out stadiums for stuff like X-Fighters or Freestyle Events and I think there was really not many events when it came to just free riding. Free riding doesnt necessarily mean tricks, it doesnt necessarily mean racing, its whatever youd like to make it. These riders arent necessarily chasing the biggest tricks, theyre just having creativity on their motorcycle.

While the rider list is still under the confirmation process, Bereman could confirm that there will be more riders added to the 2021 roster: Still to be determined on the final rider list, but were working hard on giving everyone a shot. I really wish I could invite everyone, but with time I think well be able to open this rider list up more and more. Last year we had seven riders. This year its looking like were going to have 10-12 athletes. Having more athletes is better because it just brings those different styles and flavors to the table. Everyone has a unique individual style to their own riding.

Colby Raha, Tyler Bereman, Cole Seely celebrate at RedBull Imagination.

Chris Tedesco / RedBull Content Pool

For Bereman, though, progressing the sport and speaking to the motorcycle community is his ultimate goal with RedBull Imagination. Since paving his own lane in the space, it has since been Tylers goal to progress as an ambassador for the sport. I think in the next ten years hopefully we can just continue to build on this and open it up for riders like myself who started racing and didnt quite get where they wanted to but still can market themselves (through free riding).

I want to show these kids coming up its not all about race results and wins, its about creating content and enjoying what youre doing.

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Red Bull Imagination 2.0: Freeride Jam Sessions with Tyler Bereman - Red Bull Australia

Changing Perspective: Women Working In Motorsports – Red Bull

Riders at Cody Webbs Enduro clinic put their heads together to work out how theyd navigate various obstacles on dirt bikesthink muddy creek beds, steep inclines and rocky terrain. At the same time, a small group of women photographers were learning how to capture the perfect shot of the fast-paced action from Al Arena, one of the best mentors in motorsports photography.t was no less tricky a task.

Following RedBull Tennessee Knockout over the weekend of August 13th, three hand-selected photographers took part in a photo clinic in the mountains of Jasper, Tennessee. Its no secret the motorsports industry is male dominated, and that means the photographers who capture the industry are often men, too. In an effort to level the playing field, RedBull teamed up with Arena to host a workshop dedicated to bringing more photograpHERs onto the scene. The three photographers and their mentor shot an Enduro clinic where riders were also practicing their skills, and it meant carrying heavy camera equipment up and down mountainsides, clinging to trees and working hard to get just the right shot.

Luckily, the three artists were up to the task, although each comes from different parts of the country and creative backgrounds. Wrenne Evans, 27, grew up in Nashville, Tennessee and cut her photo chops shooting bands of every genre in Music City. Shes been on the road for about two years now, traveling with bands to capture their tours and shows. Amy Lentz, 35, left a career in mental health behind after stumbling across her first IndyCar race four years ago and falling in love with the sport. Lentz had worked previously with Arena, backing her up and providing a second camera angle for races. Alyssa Del Valle, 32, played basketball as a child and wanted to capture the excitement of sports on camera. She found herself photographing football for the University of Miami and other clients. Del Valle says she got a lot of work by hustling hard and asking for every opportunity she could find.

Brian Pearce at RedBull Cody Webb Clinic.

Alyssa Del Valle / RedBull Content Pool

These talented and hard-workingphotographers were matched in expertise and care only by Arena, a motorsports photography legend with two decades of experience. Arena has shot for RedBull as well as Mazda, Ferrari NA and Wired and is one of a handful of women photographers working in the industry. Arena says her parents were photographers and as a child she found their work inspiring; She still remembers the fond memory of the hemp strap on her fathers camera. Still, her teaching and mentorship wasnt specific to a single gender.

[Its] not what females need to know, but what motorsports photographers need to know, Arena says. [We learned a] lot of the basics, getting good shots, lighting, showing movement.

Together, the four trooped out to the Enduro clinic and talked through their shots, including how to pana technique Arena says leaves the focus on the subject of the photo, because the background is blurred out through motion, and the rider is crisp and sharp, almost as if time were standing still. Afterwards, Arena had each photographer choose the photos they liked best and walked through feedback on each, after which they all shared with each other.

Cody Webb and participants prepare to ride.

Amy Lentz / RedBull Content Pool

Theres art to the way you shoot, Del Valle told Lentz of her work; throughout the clinic it seemed the photographers wanted to support the others as much as themselves.

Although they do think its already headed in that direction, Del Valle, Lentz and Evans all agreed the industry needs to change and become more inclusiveespecially for women. Evans says more companies are taking diversity and inclusion seriously, and that it can feel validating to be the only woman in a male-dominated press pit at a show, but that there are drawbacks to being a female photographer, too. Lentz agrees, and says that when she shows up for work shes often the only woman there, and that getting work may require more hoops to jump through. Del Valle says sports photography can feel like a boys club, and that older male photographers with experience often act like they dont want women intruding in their spaces or even standing in the same places they plan to get the perfect photo.

There [are] very few women and the men made it clearespecially those with seniorityyou werent welcome in their space, Del Valle says.

Arena, who says even she struggles with imposter syndrome from time to time, says that over time female photographers gain more respect in their craft. She says drivers across motorsports know her now, making her recognizable and easier to accept. For newcomers, it may not be so easy, but these are exactly the challenges clinics like these hope to address. It was clear Arenas expertise, mentorship and feedback had made an impact on the photographers; at the end of the trip, Arena offered to keep messaging the photographers and give them advice on any job they might work.

Getting a little muddy

Wrenne Evans / RedBull Content Pool

It was a successful weekend, but theres still progress to be made. The photographers said that after the clinic was over theyd still need increased access to jobs, opportunities and expensive camera gear to stay on top of a fast-changing industry. With such talented, hard-working photographers engaging in ongoing education, its up to a changing industry to make room for them.

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Preview: Toronto FC heads to South Beach to take on Inter Miami – Waking The Red

For the second stop of their four-game road trip, Toronto FC heads to the Sunshine State to take on Inter Miami, who sit four points clear of the Reds in the Eastern Conference.

With just two wins from their last nine games, TFC sit bottom of the East and currently have the worst points tally of all 27 MLS sides. A late playoff push is still in the minds of the players, but the results will have to come sooner rather than later.

August has arguably been Miamis best month so far this season as Phil Nevilles men have picked up seven points from their last four. A dramatic 93rd minute winner from Rodolfo Pizarro sealed a 3-2 win against the Philadelphia Union in the Herons last outing.

Saturdays kickoff is set for 8:00 pm EST at the DRV PNK Stadium, with the game available to watch live on TSN.

A disappointing 1-0 defeat to Atlanta United in midweek was the latest low in what has been a rollercoaster of a season for TFC. The Reds are now 12 points behind the top seven and with 14 regular season games left to play in 2021, Javier Perezs men essentially have 14 cup-finals before the postseason begins on November 19th.

Toronto has also played two games more than FC Cincinnati and Miami, who are the two teams above the Reds in the Eastern Conference standings. Moreover, TFC cannot afford to drop more points against their closest rivals ahead of the campaigns business end.

In addition to their poor league form, Toronto has also been rocked by a growing injury list. Ralph Priso and Jozy Altidore have joined Ayo Akinola on the sidelines as long-term absentees. Priso has been ruled out for the rest of the campaign, while Altidores expected recovery time following a foot surgery is six weeks.

Tsubasa Endoh will also not be available on Saturday, while Dom Dwyer is questionable. With regards to Chris Mavinga, who has been dealing with a family matter over the last week, Perez confirmed the DRC international will not be available for selection.

Miami will be without Ryan Shawcross, Ventura Alvarado, Ian Fray and Joevin Jones through injury.

Having only scored three goals in their last four games, TFC is averaging just over a goal a game so far this season. Jonathan Osorio leads Toronto on the scoring front in MLS (4) and in all competitions (5), with Akinola sitting behind him in second on three league goals.

As for Saturdays hosts, Gonzalo Higuan has scored almost 50% of Miamis MLS goals so far this year. The Argentine has bagged eight strikes and provided four assists in 17 league appearances.

This weekends matchup will be just the second meeting in history between the two sides and the first meeting at either teams home ground. Toronto faced Miami last season at the Pratt & Whitney Stadium in Connecticut, with a late penalty from Alejandro Pozuelo sealing a 2-1 win for the Reds.

There is still lots of ground to be made up if TFC are to move off the bottom of the table and into the top seven, and with an opportunity to close the gap on one of the sides closest to them, three points should be the only thing on the minds of the Reds.

Ultimately, both teams have a major point to prove on Saturday, so will TFC begin their resurgence in form? Or will Miami record their third win in five to further bolster their playoff hopes?

Inter Miami: Marsman; Pirez, Figal, Makoun; Morgan, Gregore, Matuidi, Gibbs; Vassilev, Higuan, Robinson

Toronto FC: Bono; Laryea, Gonzalez, Zavaleta, Lawrence; Bradley, Delgado; Osorio, Pozuelo, Soteldo; Achara

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Preview: Toronto FC heads to South Beach to take on Inter Miami - Waking The Red

Marin hike: Find fall color in the countys many wetlands – Marin Independent Journal

While some may head to the mountains for fall color, one place to find it locally is in salt marshes where pickleweed turns red in the fall.

Pickleweed is a name used for several species of plants in the genus Salicornia. We have three in Marin: Virginia glasswort (which despite its name is native to California), Pacific glasswort, aka pickleweed, and Bigelows glasswort, aka dwarf glasswort, which is very rare in Marin. Why glasswort? A species of Salicornia growing in Europe was burned to produce soda ash (calcium carbonate) starting in medieval times. Venetian glassmakers who immigrated to England in the 16th century considered it superior to the potash produced by wood ash and found it readily available in English salt marshes.

Photo by Wendy Dreskin

Why does pickleweed turn red in the fall? Pickleweed is a halophyte, meaning that it is adapted to grow in places that would be too salty for most plants. The roots can filter out some salt, but the rest is pumped to storage cells at the tips of the plant. Over the summer, these storage cells fill up. Then, the cell breaks down, dies and turns red, giving the wetlands their amazing fall color.

Whether you call it pickleweed, glasswort, saltwort, samphire, sea beans or sea asparagus, you can find this plant in salt marshes all over Marin, including China Camp State Park, Corte Madera Marsh, Tomales Bay State Park and around Richardson Bay.

We have two species of native cattails in Marin. Both grow in fresh or slightly brackish water. Cattails are named for the brown hotdog-like seed heads, which as it becomes fluffy resembles a cats tail. Earlier in the spring, a narrower hotdog of male flowers opened above it on the same stalk.

Native Americans, and todays foragers, gather the pollen produced by male flowers as a thickener for soups and stews, and as a high-protein substitute for flour. The male flowers and pollen are gone now, leaving the female seed heads. Those tight seed heads turn fluffy when it is time for the seeds to disperse. The Algonquin used the fluffy seeds to stuff mattresses; the Thompson of British Columbia and the Blackfoot tribe used them as diaper material; and Dakota, Lakota and Omaha mothers used them for pad cradles and to prevent chafing if a baby was wrapped in something less soft. Okanagan-Colville in Washington state and British Columbia used the fluff as a dressing for wounds and as insoles in moccasins. These are just a few of the amazing variety of uses for cattails.

Next time you pass cattails, take a moment to appreciate a plant that can provide people with food, shelter, medicine, clothing, baskets, shingles, waterproof mats, tinder and so much more, not to mention giving food to muskrats, crayfish, ducks and geese, and providing nest materials for red-winged blackbirds, marsh wrens and other birds. You can admire this incredibly versatile plant at China Camp State Park, Scottsdale Pond in Novato, Point Reyes National Seashore, Rush Creek and Bahia open space in Novato, and Rodeo Valley in the Golden Gate National Recreation Area.

Photo by Risa George

Many Marin residents notice the arrival of golden-crowned sparrow returning in September because of their distinctive descending three-note song, sometimes thought of as Oh, dear me because it sounds sad. Some notice that white-crowned sparrows have returned to their inland backyards, although they only saw them at the coast in the summer. Those summer birds were the Nuttalls subspecies of white-crowned sparrow, which occur only in California, while the ones returning to backyard in the fall are mostly Gambels white-crowned sparrows that bred in subarctic Canada and Alaska. (Marin also gets Puget Sound white-crowned sparrows.)

This fall, try to spot the fox sparrow, another sparrow that breeds in Alaska and returns to Marin in September. Fox sparrows get their name from the foxy-red color of most eastern and northern populations, but the fox sparrows seen in Marin are gray or sooty brown. (Red fox sparrows do show up very occasionally.) Look for a large sparrow with brownish splotches on the breast and a rufous tail.

Beginners may confuse it with the similarly sized hermit thrush, which also has a spotty breast and rufous tail, but the thrush has a white eye ring and a thin bill. Fox sparrows like to come to backyard feeders. They can also be seen foraging on the ground in leaf litter looking for seeds and insects.

Correction: Thanks to Dewey Livingston for pointing out that Olema Valley Trail crosses Pine Gulch Creek, not Olema Creek, as featured in my last column.

Wendy Dreskin has led the College of Marin nature/hiking class Meandering in Marin since 1998, and teaches other nature classes for adults and children. To contact her, go to wendydreskin.com

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Marin hike: Find fall color in the countys many wetlands - Marin Independent Journal

New Forbush Bird Club journal celebrates local sightings over past year – Worcester Telegram

By Mark Blazis| Correspondent

Worcester County has a long and rich tradition of citizen scientists contributing to the greater understanding and appreciation of our local wildlife. Since 1931, the venerable Forbush Bird Club has annually published the Chickadee, their journal, named after our state bird, chronicling the records of bird sightings here.

Its a valuable asset that they share each summer. When I got mine in the mail last week, I couldnt wait to see the results of thousands of hours of observation and careful recording of club members put together by the editorial committee led by editor-in-chief, Kevin Bourinot, Sheila Carroll, Rodney Jenkins, Mark Lynch, Paul Meleskiand Thomas Pirro.

The 90th volume covering 2020 demonstrated how valuable our great outdoors is to us as a vital escape and sanctuary during stressful periods like the deadly Coronavirus outbreak. A remarkable 246 species were found during the year.

Lynch notes that county rarities included Mississippi kite, whimbrel and western kingbird. Remarkably, sandhill cranes were observed in Hardwick/New Braintree between March 15 and July 6. Two young established the first breeding record ever in our county.

Unfortunately, the young apparently succumbed to predation," Lynch said.

While countless great blue herons have been erroneously reported as cranes over the years here, the fact is that cranes are now a real possibility to see in Worcester County.

Birds that are normally seen at sea also found their way to Worcester County. Sooty terns, blown inland by severe storms, very briefly made Wachusett Reservoir a magnet for over a hundred serious birders. The first sooties I ever saw were in the islands of the Dry Tortugas, west of the Florida Keys, where they breed.

The black and white beauties that normally find themselves fishing for bait-sized prey and squid around coastal Florida and the adjacent Gulf of Mexico found themselves helplessly blown north and deposited here.

Our county also had three winter reports of the regionally rare yellow-throated warbler. This species, normally found in Americas southeast quadrant, is not to be confused with our abundant, breeding yellow throats that distinctively bear black masks. One of the birds that stayed certainly enjoyed the pine cones smeared with peanut butter that the hosting homeowner provided.

Winter finches were few, but Lynch and Carroll, who bird Worcester County as intensively as anyone now, surprisingly found many small flocks of red crossbills in mid-to-late summer just west of Worcester.

The Forbush Bird Club, named after Massachusetts first state ornithologist, Edward Howe Forbush, is one of the oldest bird clubs in the country. Its first president, Elmer Ekblaw (1931-1935) had a Worcester County sanctuary off Rt. 122 in Paxton named after him. The club has its monthly meetings at Mass Audubons Broad Meadow Brook Sanctuary in Worcester, and leads free field trips with competent leaders most weeks of the year. To join, contact Treasurer Barton Kamp at 508-753-7463.

Whether youre a pro or a rank beginner, youll be heartily welcomed, and the annual membership fee of $15 will prove one of the best investments you can make to have the doors opened to Worcester Countys birds.

On the birdfeeder front, just before we were advised to take our feeders down because of the novel disease spreading north into our region and infecting songbirds, I had done some successful experimenting. To attract orioles and catbirds, I had been using grape jelly effectively. I found grape jam to be just as good. Blueberry worked well when I ran out of grape jelly, but the birds didnt seem go for strawberry jelly at all.

As for hummingbirds, three feeders suspended from poles worked as expected, but one on suction cups attached to our picture window wasnt being very attractive until I tied on streaming red ribbons and a red mesh bag that had held oranges. Since then, hummingbirds have noticed the little feeder and actually come to it now more frequently than they attend the other conventional feeders.

This past week, Russ Therrien launched out of Galilee and fished off the east side of Block Island, catching numerous fluke and sea bass. Rather than striking buck tail jigs as Russ would have expected, the fluke eagerly took mackerel chunks intended for the sea bass. Most of the latter were big knot heads. Disappointingly, Point Judith Light later gave up no tautog.

Fluke, or summer flounder, are anatomically remarkable. Theyre one of our delicious flatfish that includes winter flounder and halibut. They have eye-like body spots, can change color and pattern to match their bottom background, can burrow and hide, and are left-eyed.

Amazingly, as they mature, bones in their head twist, causing one eye to migrate from one side of their head to the other. Flukes both eyes are on the colored left side of their body. Their right side becomes their belly and is all white. Both our winter flounder and halibut are right-eyed.

Big old fluke females, which are larger than males, can weigh over 20 pounds. Our state record, caught by Joseph Czapiga off Nomans island on September 25, 1980, weighed 21 pounds, 8 ounces. In contrast, our much smaller winter flounder state record was just 8 pounds, 2 ounces, and taken off Georges Bank by Tom Hillebrand on July 12, 1996. There are no state records for our other flatfish.

Fluke are sneaky and aggressive hunters. While hidden with just their heads exposed, they ambush prey like sand lance, menhaden, various minnows, small scup, squid, and crabs. After their winter spawning in deep water, they move into shallower waters from spring through fall.

Not everyone likes the regulations we currently have for harvesting stripers. Widely respected George Gavutis, former supervisor at the Parker River National Wildlife Refuge, is one of them. Today, fishermen may keep one striper between 28 and 35 inches per day. Gavutis, who lives in southern Maine near the coast has preferably fished in the past for smaller schoolies.

We primarily stick to the estuaries, trolling with fly rods and an electric motor," Gavutis said. "When we hook a rare keeper, we get to experience a bit of a Nantucket sleigh ride in our small boat as the fish rips line well into the backing and serenades us with the singing reel. We used to fish all the southern Maine coastal rivers as far north as the Kennebec and a little beyond. That was when Maine was the only state here-a-bouts that allowed us to keep a 20-26 inch slot fish, which are much more abundant, healthier to eat (less bio-accumulation of contaminants), and tastier than those breeders over 28 inches.

A couple days ago, when we were at a local bait and tackle shop, we saw a young commercial fisherman tossing out 50 or more over-36-inchstripers that he had taken from the Merrimack River in a few hours earlier that morning," Gavutis said. "He was getting a mere $3 a pound for them. Those breeders would have laid millions of eggs next year. Why can't the States allow us recreational fishermen to keep even one minimally valuable fish between 20-26 inches instead of just larger, environmentally more valuable breeders?

We hear a lot about right whales and humpbacks getting entangled in local fishing gear, but just over the last few weeks, at least five endangered leatherback sea turtles were found entangled in submerged fishing gear. Some were dealt with effectively while others were improperly released still-attached and entangled likely leading to their slow and painful death.

Leatherback sea turtles originate from tropical beaches, drift and swim here for the greater abundance of food in our waters, and drift and swim back beginning now, just before waters chill. The biggest of them can weigh upwards of 900 pounds, which explains why some of them are improperly handled and ineffectively released. Optimally, those who discover one entangled should call the CCS Entanglement Hotline at 800-900-3622, the NOAA Entanglement Hotline at 866-755-6622, or the Center for Coastal Studies in Provincetown, at 800-900-3622 to ensure that release is performed right and quick.

Contact Mark Blazis atmarkblazissafaris@gmail.com.

Excerpt from:

New Forbush Bird Club journal celebrates local sightings over past year - Worcester Telegram

Makabayan bloc wants more heads to roll over red-tagging – Philstar.com

(Philstar.com) - January 28, 2021 - 5:34pm

MANILA, Philippines Unsatisfied with the firing of the militarys intelligence chief, lawmakers in the leftist Makabayan bloc in the House of Representatives want more heads to roll over red-tagging.

Rep. Arlene Brosas (Gabriela party-list) said Thursday that it is not enough for Maj. Gen. Alex Luna to be sacked as Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana, National Security Adviser Hermogenes Esperon and the militarys southern Luzon commander Lt. Gen. Antonio Parlade Jr. should also be fired.

"More heads must roll over this persistent and shameless red-tagging by the Duterte regime. Luna cannot be just a sacrificial lamb," she said.

Rep. Ferdinand Gaite (Bayan Muna party-list) backed this, adding that if Lorenzana is serious in exacting accountability over red-tagging, then he should dismantle the anti-communist task force created by President Rodrigo Duterte in 2017.

Their spokesperson Parlade has been repeatedly making such blunders. He's been wrongly accusing anyone including activists, church leaders, celebrities and other personalities, and several academic institutions," Gaite said. They should have long been sacked.

Rep. France Castro (ACT Teachers party-list), meanwhile, said red-tagging will persist despite Lunas firing unless the governments anti-communist task force is abolished and the highly-contested anti-terrorism law junked.

Lorenzana announced Thursday that he has fired Luna over a list of University of the Philippines students who were supposedly captured and killed by the military as communist rebels published on the Armed Forces of the Philippines Information Exchange Facebook page.

The list turned out to be false as those identified to have been captured or killed surfaced in a press conference to disprove the claims.

Lorenzana called the publication of the list an unforgivable lapse.

The Makabayan bloc has been repeatedly accused by government officials, including Duterte himself, as being fronts of communist rebels, despite not showing proof.

The six lawmakers in the bloc have routinely denied the accusations. Xave Gregorio

Originally posted here:

Makabayan bloc wants more heads to roll over red-tagging - Philstar.com

Stoke City bosss message to Tom Edwards as he heads to New York Red Bulls – Stoke-on-Trent Live

Michael ONeill will be keeping watch of Tom Edwards progress at New York Red Bulls in hope that he can come back ready to fulfil his potential at Stoke City.

Edwards has returned from a loan at Fleetwood Town ready to head over to the United States for the rest of 2021, trying to make sure a career which started so young is going in the right direction.

The right-back, who has just turned 22, made his Premier League debut at 18 and is under contract at Stoke until 2024 and there is hope that this move and the chances and tests it presents will be a big step in his development.

O'Neill said: I spoke to Tom yesterday and I think its a good opportunity for him. He had a loan spell at Fleetwood which went relatively well although there was a bit of upheaval with the manager leaving just before the Christmas period.

This presents a different opportunity for Tom. Hes spent most of his career at Stoke, coming through the club as a local boy. This gives him an opportunity to see a different side of football away from Stoke and Stoke City.

Hes still on a lengthy contract and this is an important opportunity for him and one he should grasp with both hands.

Young Potters defender Nathan Collins is attracting plenty of transfer interest ahead of Monday night's deadline.

Arsenal, Burnley, Crystal Palace and Manchester United have all been touted as possible destinations.

In our daily Stoke City bulletin, we'll be bringing you any updates on Collins' future as well as other news, transfer features and comment pieces.

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Edwards had been the first of a star-studded Stoke youth team to make his senior breakthrough but while Tyrese Campbell and Harry Souttar are now first team regulars, he has not found it plain sailing over the last couple of years.

ONeill said: Young players have dips for various reasons. Tom was in the side when I came to the club but lost his place in the team.

I think at this stage of his career its very important for him to play.

Sometimes when players get to 28 or 29, sometimes that isnt the only factor and they make decisions based around their lives as much as anything, but in Toms situation he can make a purely football decision.

If he takes his opportunity and does well, well continue to monitor him in the MLS and hopefully he can come back and try to reignite his career here at Stoke City.

Edwardss exit this month follows his old Academy teammate Thibaud Verlinden and there could be more to come.

But, with four new signings in, there are not likely to be any coming the other way before the 11pm deadline on Monday.

ONeill said: I dont think well be adding to the squad in that period. Our main focus is on players leaving the club and players on the periphery of the team looking at opportunities elsewhere.

Thats something were only in control of to some extent and hopefully players will get the opportunity to kickstart their careers elsewhere.

Continued here:

Stoke City bosss message to Tom Edwards as he heads to New York Red Bulls - Stoke-on-Trent Live

Totally Not Fake News: The Force Behind It All – Battle Red Blog

PANDEMONIUM - Amid the sprawling fields of rocky terrain, with few distinguishing landmarks or features, there sits a massive stone complex, equivalent to the great fortresses of old. The exact features are tough to make out due to the haze, smoke and the interplay of fiery light and excessive darkness. It is here that we at Totally Not Fake News came to speak to the apparent power behind all the pratfalls that keep bedeviling the Texans as of late.

Funny that you used that word, noted our host, Lucifer. I dont know if I would quite say that, but ok, I get the literary turn of phrase. Despite our protests that we hadnt even thought of our writing, Lucifer chuckled Dont worry, it will be ok. I wont sue for libel just because you went with the unintentional pun.

Once we got our future editing out of the way, we started in with our questions about what role, if any, this entity had related to the chaotic situation associated with the Houston Texans, how a team that only 12 months ago held a 24 point lead in a divisional round playoff game, primed to host the first NFL conference title game in Houstons history. As we observed to our host in the midst of our research, we kept coming across some interesting names, such as Mephistopheles, Beelzebub and a Mr. Diabloespecially when looking at some very unique correspondence about deals where noted sports figures entered into unique contracts. Can you explain this?

Sheesh, this again? Alright, alright, Ill play along. So, as you know, I am a negotiator. Im always out to make a bargain, offering whatever you wantand usually for a relatively small, insignificant bit of personal collateral. Im no different than your usual rug merchant/car salesman, and way, way less pushy. So, I guess you would like some information?

After we presented him our research/documents for review, he then threw his head back in a hearty laugh Oh yes, I do love me some Houston-folk! Especially some of their owners/fans. Always love doing business with them! How many keep coming to me asking for my help, and all for my usual, small-ish terms? At this point, it is way too numerous to count. Ok, so I think I see where you are going with thisbut I will allow this line of questioning to continue.

Despite getting a little unnerved, we forged on So, what role do you have with the current situation with the Texans?

(Lucifer) So direct. No subtly, no build-up to establish reparteeI guess the modern media has gotten out of hand. Ok, well, the direct answer isI dont have ANYTHING to do with the current state of the team. Their poor record, the fact that they couldnt stop a decent high school offense, that their front office is a cluster[kitten] of a $hitshow in a raging dumpster fire (I believe the right way to use such terms)no, I didnt MAKE that happen. That is all your teams leadership.

Yet, we kept pressing. Well, can you help us understand? You see, there is this one document here from [total name illegible], but it basically says Can you help us? We are so close to being a Super Bowl winning team, so close to sticking it to Dallas. We just need a franchise quarterback. Help us, and I will pay your bill.

Replied our host, Oh, that one? Well, that DID come from someone in the Texans organization. Yeah, that was back sometime around 2017 I thinkyep, definitely 2017, so we made the deal, and I obliged. Did the Texans not get that franchise quarterback?

(Totally Not Fake News) Well, yes, they did draft Watson and he has played pretty well for the team. However, it feels like nothing has gone right since then. We are pretty sure that the individual in question wanted to actually WIN a Super Bowl!

(Lucifer) Did they? You see, they only asked to get a franchise quarterback. They never asked for an ACTUAL championship. So, the team had a franchise quarterback. Now, as for everything else

(Totally Not Fake News) So, are you saying that you are behind all of the failures since 2017?

(Lucifer) Do I look like the GM, the Head Coach, the owner, for the Texans? No, I am notbut now that you mention it, I kinda recall a few things back some time ago, maybeoh, thats right, 2019. This one guy comes in, one of those preachy types, my personal favorites. Anyway, he tries to challenge me, saying that he can withstand me, casting me out or whatever. Well, I am generally a live and let live type of guy. Unless you ask, and I am always willing for others to ask, I tend to stay out. Well, this guy just kept calling me out. Day after day, minute after minute. Sometimes, it just gets too much. So, I place a call towelluh, I dont really like to talk about that. Very, very sore subject, my relations with myuhcounterpart. Im like Hey [name redacted at request of interviewee], you remember that bet thing we did some time back, to test that one dudes faith and allwell, anyway, do you want to give it another go? Got this one guy, a real bloviating douche who will NOT SHUT UP about me! Look, I know we have the whole free will thing, but cmon, this guy is just asking for it.

Lucifer continued Now, I didnt expect an answer fromHim, but yet, I actually got word back the next day. Interestingly enough, [Name redacted at request of interviewee] indicated that he was actually getting tired of that one team, and wanted to start shaking things up for them, so hes like Ok, hes yours. Have fun. Gotta lesson or three to teach some folks up north. So, game on!!!

As we processed this information, the Morning Star noted Well, it was really quite easy. I only had to just trigger a little bit of temptation, getting this guy to think Hey, Ive been around football players. I can do this. Heck, I can do the Coach/GM job. I can do this all. Once I set that in motion, it has been working like a charm. Of course, the real work was by this guy. Ya know, it is not quite as fun as I would hope. I suppose I should have let the Texans get further along in their adventures before sparking the preachy guy, but they were so small time in their asks. Besides, this holy guy was really so small potatoesnot really worthy of an epic fall.

Small time? we asked.

(Lucifer) Sure. You see, Houston has not shortage of folks ask for my help. Most however just dont know how to ask the right questions. I need to know exactly what you really want. Except that one guy for the recent Astros. He at least had the wherewithal to ask for an actual championship. Most just ask for something, like just get the Astros to their 1st World Series appearance or Just give the Rockets home-court advantage against the Warriors or even Just give the Oilers the chance to forget that botched game in Denver/Buffalo and after they make the deal, I give them that. I dont say what happens after that fact. I am an entity that fulfills his contract. Nothing more, nothing less.

Interesting we noted.

(Lucifer) Now, I have answered all of your questions? Me, Stalin, Hitler and Mao have a tee time at Trumps new Styx Doral Course in 30 minutes.

(Totally Not Fake News) Well, we actually have quite a few. For one, we kinda thought you would, ya know, have three heads or some-

(Lucifer) [KITTENING] STOP RIGHT THERE!!! That mother[kittener]! Ever since that Florentine jerk came down here, he has made my life Hell. Ya see, if you force me to reference him, I turn into a three-headed beast, forced to chow down on a few arch-traitors. You know how bad that tastes? Especially after you have to do that over the centuries? Even after I spat out those Roman guys and got Benedict Arnold and Jeff Davis, it is still vile. Plus, it takes forever to change back. I tend to like the Milton version. Not quite as painful on the body (or the pallet).

(Totally Not Fake News) Milton? You mean like The Devils Advocate?

(Lucifer) No, you idiot! Milton, the English poet. And while I admire Pacino, he is way too yell-y for me. Actually, I think I like the TV series a bit more. Always seem to make better deals when people think I look like that.

(Totally Not Fake News) Interesting. So, you must see a lot of folks from Houstons past. Say, would you happen to know if a certain ex-owner

(Lucifer) MaybeWhats is worth to you to find out if he is or is not here? I only as a simple price.

(Totally Not Fake News) On second thought, maybe not. Well pass for now.

(Lucifer) You sure? Well, suit yourself.

As we rapidly left our hosts residence, which somehow started to look more like a snakes den as we left, we continue to try to understand what transpired. Perhaps it is true that divine forces are at play behind the struggles of not just the Texans, but of the general situation for Houston sports. Normally, we at Totally Not Fake News subscribe to facts and logic and do not give credence to the spiritual world (especially since our prayer entreaties and live chicken sacrifices did not yield that billion-dollar jackpot last weekend). However, there is so much happening that mere logic is at a loss to explain. Perhaps it is the case. Still, we will continue to monitor the situation and determine just what is at the cause of the issues with the Texans and hopefully, what can be the cure.

View post:

Totally Not Fake News: The Force Behind It All - Battle Red Blog

Outback Bowl Q&A with Red Cup Rebellion – The Crimson Quarry

Were less than two days away from the Outback Bowl, and to help us get a better feel for what Ole Miss might look like on Saturday, we touched base with our friends at Red Cup Rebellion.

Thanks to Zach Berry for taking time to fill us in.

This staff accomplished everything they needed to do this season. They showed massive improvement on offense and that there are plenty of early playing time opportunities on defense. On top of that, they currently have a top-20 signing class after the early signing period. Its about as good as it can get in a pandemic-abbreviated season sans a few head-scratchers.

Well, the one constant is Matt Corral. Despite playing in his third offense under his third coordinator in his third season, he has been tremendous. Sure, hes had a few games that he would like to forget, but you have to remember the enormous amount of pressure hes under to essentially score every single possession due to the defenses limitations. It starts and ends with him, but be sure to have an eye on the backfield. Ealy is most likely not playing, but Snoop Conner is a bruiser with home run speed and true freshman Henry Parrish is the future.

Without knowing him personally and just reading body language, I dont think that affects Corral much, if at all. Hes a quarterback and the good ones have a short memory. Hes also highly competitive and plays with an edge. I look for him to want to come out and make a statement as he heads into his junior season with a ton of hype.

Its a mixed bag, but its mostly a lack of talent. There are maybe three dudes on that defense, give or take, that would start and/or see time on another SEC defense. There are some that have made the transition over from offense to help out in the secondary with the lack of quality depth over there and overall, theres a lack of team speed. I had the opportunity to be down field level for the Egg Bowl against Mississippi State and it appeared that the players were in position more times than not, but they were just a step or two slow.

Short answer: recruiting is how you fix it

Hes not exactly unheralded, but he hasnt done much this year so lets go with it. John Rhys Plumlee became a household name in 2019 with his elite speed and big-play ability, but hes been the backup to Corral all year. And now that Ealy, Moore, and Sanders are all out, the Rebels lack a true game-changer on offense. Look no further than Plumlee to potentially be a weapon on Saturday. I anticipate Kiffin and offensive coordinator Jeff Lebby to use him in a variety of ways.

I think the Hoosiers are going to play angry and have a chip on their shoulder after being snubbed by the College Football Playoff committee. Ole Miss is battling injuries, opt-outs, and their defense is a disaster. The offense should keep them in this one, but I expect Tuttle and the gang to put up big numbers in a track meet that is ultimately won by Tom Allens bunch.

Indiana 44, Ole Miss 38

Originally posted here:

Outback Bowl Q&A with Red Cup Rebellion - The Crimson Quarry

Daily Dose of the DUB: Bleackley heads to Allen, Winquist signs with Nailers, and more – DUBNetwork

Conner Bleackley (259GP, 80G, 103A with Red Deer 11-16) has signed with the Allen Americans of the ECHL. Bleackley joins his fifth ECHL team in five seasons, having played in Missouri, Tulsa, Idaho, and Maine.

Josh Winquist (301GP, 101G, 115A with Everett 09-14) has signed with the Wheeling Nailers of the ECHL. Winquist had been playing with HC Banska Bystrica of Slovakias top professional league. Winquist is joining his fifth ECHL team having had previous stints with Bakersfield, Orlando, Utah, and Toledo.

Adam Helewka (244GP, 119G, 119A with Spokane and Red Deer 12-16) has been returned to the Cleveland Monsters in preparation for the AHL season. The 25-year-old centre was playing for HKM Zvolen in Slovakia where he scored three goals and added six assists in 17 games.

Jesse Zgraggen (258GP, 12G, 58A with Chilliwack/Victoria, Calgary, and Regina 10-14) has been loaned to HC Davos from EV Zug. He has been made available to HC Davos until the end of January. Zgraggen had played 11 games for EV Zug, registering an assist. It is the 27-year-old defensemans third season with Zug and seventh playing in Switzerland following his WHL career.

Link:

Daily Dose of the DUB: Bleackley heads to Allen, Winquist signs with Nailers, and more - DUBNetwork

Cristi Lewis Obituary (1970 – 2020) – The Indianapolis Star – Legacy.com

Cristi Ann (Remster) Lewis

Clayton - Cristi Ann (Remster) Lewis, 50, of Clayton, went peacefully into the comforting embrace of God, on December 30, 2020 after a long and courageous battle with her health. Cristi was born on November 19, 1970 in Indianapolis to Robert Stephen Remster and Sherrie Ann (Cooper) Remster. On December 18, 1993 in the Mooresville First Christian Church, Cristi was united in marriage to Aaron Todd Lewis. This loving union produced her two beloved red heads, Macy and Makenzie Lewis.

Cristi attended Monrovia Schools graduating in 1989. She went on to attend college and cosmetology school where she became a talented nail technician. Cristi had many roles throughout her life such as working for Professional Garage Door, In Trend, and Abstract & Title Company. Above all these positions, Cristi was a devout wife, mother, MiMi, daughter, and friend.

There was not a meal Cristi couldn't master; to be able to enjoy one of her meals and hospitality was to love her. Her most notable dishes were her homemade chicken and dumplings, apple crisp, hash brown casserole, snickerdoodles, and pot roast. Cristi was extremely creative and could see just about any project through. From helping Macy and Makenzie with their indoor 4-H projects such as flowers or gift wrapping to creating her beautiful wreaths and Christmas trees, Cristi was exceptionally talented.

When not cooking or decorating, Cristi enjoyed vacationing in Florida, watching her favorite Hallmark movies, playing Euchre and Bunco, sitting on her front porch, talking on the phone to her brother, Trevor every day, and working in her yard maintaining her lovely landscaping. Cristi was an incredibly gorgeous woman who could light up any room she walked into. She was always well dressed and had her hair and nails done beautifully. Despite her various health issues she endured throughout her life, she persevered through each of them with grace and strength. She was incredibly faithful and attended Monrovia Christian Church, Plainfield Bible Church, and Hazelwood Christian Church throughout her life.

Cristi did not know a stranger. She could be on a vacation far from home and immediately befriend someone. She was the first to lend a smile to a stranger or give up her place in line at the grocery store. She had a generous heart of gold with a personality and spirit that were one-of-a-kind. Cristi knew just about anyone and everyone; her infectious laugh and witty antics will be greatly missed by all of those who knew and loved her.

Cristi is preceded in death by her paternal grandparents, Robert and Wanda (Stephen) Remster and her maternal grandparents, William "Bill" and Mary Ermine (Mavity) Cooper; her beloved cousins, Todd and Sandra (Corcoran) Smith; and her precious Maltese, Daffini Marie.

Survivors include her husband of 27 years, Aaron Todd Lewis; beloved daughters, Macy (Walter) Colvin and Makenzie Lewis; father, Steve (Sarah) Remster; mother, Sherrie Remster; cherished brother, Trevor (Angela) Remster; siblings, Bryan (Robyn) Hughes, Amy (Bryant) Hoffer, and Michael (Amber) Hughes; nieces and nephews, Haley, Ella, Dylan, Coleman, Griffin, and Hudson; her bonus son, Kody Sprague and bonus grandchild, Mylan Sprague; her precious poodle, Gidget Rose; and many extended family members and dear friends.

Cristi's family would like to extend a special thank you to all of the medical professionals who cared for her over the years, but especially her ICU nurses as of recent at Hendricks Regional Health: Christina Barth, Chante Mayfield, Sarah Ross, Lindsay Masters, Joey Harder, and Jaqueline Royer.

To do their part in preventing the spread of COVID, the Lewis family will hold a private family visitation for Cristi. On Thursday, January 7th, 2021 at 11:00 AM Cristi's funeral service will be live streamed by visiting http://www.CarlisleBranson.com. Following the funeral service, Cristi will be buried near her family at White Lick Cemetery in Mooresville. In lieu of flowers, Macy and Makenzie have made the decision to start a scholarship fund in their mother's memory that benefits a child who is active in 4-H in both indoor and livestock projects as Cristi was very passionate about helping the girls with their projects. Checks can be made to the Cristi Lewis 4-H Memorial Scholarship Fund, and can be mailed to Carlisle-Branson Funeral Service, 39 East High Street, Mooresville, IN 46158. Please visit http://www.CarlisleBranson.com to leave an online condolence or to share a favorite memory with Cristi's family.

Published in The Indianapolis Star from Jan. 1 to Jan. 3, 2021.

Excerpt from:

Cristi Lewis Obituary (1970 - 2020) - The Indianapolis Star - Legacy.com

If You Can’t Stand the Heat – The Atlantic

Illustrations by Nicole Rifkin

It was September 2019, and Id been slow-roasting in a small Southern Oregon town for a couple of weeks, waiting on a big one. A wildfire. An opportunity. A chance to prove myself useful and, preferably, profitable. This was the pre-coronavirus era, a simpler time.

From the South, I had driven out West in hopes of embedding with workers at a fire camp, the catchall phrase used to describe the base of operations during any major wildfire. Fire campsmany established in the middle of nowhereare where frontline containment is coordinated, resources are mobilized, personnel are sheltered and fed. These are usually federally led operations, with anywhere from 150 to 2,000 people on-site.

Devastating wildfires have become a regular feature of life in the American West. The cost of fighting them currently burns through 53 percent of the U.S. Forest Services budget, compared with 16 percent in 1992. Even the Department of Defense has declared climate-change-related wildfires a national-security threat. The summer and fall were traditionally prime fire timewith fire camps following the blazes like circuses on the harvest-festival circuit. But now scientists, journalists, and government officials have christened extended, seemingly year-long fire seasons the new normal.

Every fire camp is a mini city, albeit a temporary one. My plan had been to report on what the new normal of months-long fires looked like from the center of such a city. I wasnt particularly curious about the much-glorified firefighters, the distraught victims, or the anguish over the loss of inanimate structures. Nor did I want to engage in hand-wringing about climate change. I just wanted to know about the people laboring at fire camp.

This kind of job didnt really have a name way back in 2019. But during the pandemic, we (the media, the public) began referring to these behind-the-scenes operators as essential workers. Before anybody cared, however, youd just call them grunts.

I assumed previous occupational experience in the hospitality industry would give me a chance to get in on the action. While failing to be a respectably employed journalist, I often moonlight as a kitchen grunt. Ive worked in slop joints, shopping-center fusion, hippie shacks, and fine dining. Its a fallback career Im forever falling back on, and just one of the reasons the food-service industry, I think, provides the truest glimpses of where we are and where were headed as a culture. Follow whats happening in the food world, and you dont just have a finger on the pulse of society; you have an ear to its stomach.

I made inquiries about becoming a laborer at a national-disaster site, working full-time for a company that caters, quite literally, to mass emergenciesone of the 16 companies that run 29 federally contracted mobile food-service units (MFSUs) specializing in fire-camp cuisine. I called all the western-based MFSUs, offering my services. In return, they offered zero promises. The thing about most restaurants, though, is that theres high employee turnover. I figured I could show up unannounced with a modicum of experience and eventually a kitchen would give me a shot. Sure enough, a couple of MFSUs warmed to my proposal.

A manager of Stewarts Firefighter Food Catering said I could come hang out on the lot of its MFSU kitchen in Lakeview, Oregon, a warehouse on a flat expanse of gravel behind a car dealership. Camping would be free of charge (the company put me in a cozy trailer) and should a major fire break out, Id be right there from the beginning.

I showed up and waited, using my time to catch up on the doorstop-size federal contract, the Blue Book, that spelled out the rules and regulations for emergency mobile food service at great length and in exacting detail. The many specific requirements and compliances would be enforced, it said, by the food-unit leaderpart of Overhead, the governments on-site management team at fire camp.

In the mid-20th century, the Forest Service tackled wildfires as its forefather the Army had, as a military campaigntotal domination. In and out. Everything run in-house. Latrine duty and field rations. Engaged in an endless War on Fire over the past few decades, the government has turned to private contractors for most aspects of fire suppression. In 1973, five private companies formed the National Mobile Shower and Catering Association. A cobbled-together industry quickly professionalized and standardized. Around that time, a man named Tom Stewart was running a family grocery in Lakeview, where Overhead teams had been purchasing supplies. In 1977, they struck a deal no longer than a few contractual pages. His first call was that summer. Stewarts Firefighter Food Catering grew in size, as did the number of disaster businesses and the thickness of the Blue Book.

See: Australias bushfire catastrophe in photos

One of the few disaster-catering companies still under original ownership, Stewarts retains its retro logo and is now a family business in its third generation, with the fourth occasionally pitching in.

The days in Lakeview dragged by; the fire season itself had been unusually slow that year. Occasionally, a few of us would pile in a truck and drive out of town, park high above a ridge, and look for smoke signals in the beige distance. The boredom and ennui were palpable.

On September 5, clouds started forming. That night there was lightning. The next days sky, however, was peaceful and picturesque. I turned in early. One more day, I told myself, then back home to find a real job. Freelance journalism wasnt paying the bills, and I began resigning myself to the likelihood that Id return home in search of regular kitchen work. Maybe as a prep or line cookI lacked the skills to be a sous chef, certainly not a head honcho. A kitchen would have to be in real bad shape to put me in charge of everything. Such a situation would require a divine act or an extended period trapped in a state of disaster.

To use a phrase Ive never heard uttered: Thank God for California.

Our chief banged on my trailer door at 8 a.m. The South Fire had been officially reported near Californias Shasta-Trinity National Forest. Stewarts team in Klamath Falls, Oregon, had been tapped to run the fire-camp kitchen. They had a full crew, the chief said, but maybe they could use the few of us hanging around the Lakeview lot. We secured our gear and took off. At the Klamath warehouse, we got a quick pep talk from the site boss, Tom Stewarts grandson. There was poor access to the heart of the inferno because, next to Shasta-Trinity, the Red Bank Fire had already torn through more than 6,000 acres. Our fleet of vehicles convoyed five hours south-southwest across the state line. By the time we got to our designated location, the South Fire had spread across 1,200 acres. It was on.

Fire camps get established where the Forest Service deems necessary. For the South Fire, it had commandeered a mid-tier camping sitea recreational heaven, according to the propertys websitethat had a small general store and was just 45 minutes off Interstate 5. We were directed to a cul-de-sac half a mile from the general store, at the end of a cabin-filled lane. It seemed a little cramped for a federal-disaster kitchen, but the prospect of small amenities made it significantly less backwoodsy than some fire-camp locations Id heard about. There was no cell service, but there was spotty Wi-Fi.

Under a boiling 98-degree sun, I watched as the kitchena converted semitrailerwas slowly backed into a flat, open clearing. Behind me, the caravan idled. There was the beverage trailer, the dry-storage cargo truck, a small refrigerator truck and a semi-length walk-in freezer (called reefers), as well as four or five pickups, hauling everything from a 1,000-gallon water tank to a smoker capable of cooking 750 pounds of meat to a generator the size of a bison. Running the trucks air conditioners or stretching their legs were the other 22 crew members, wearing the same thick navy-blue cotton tee, with Stewarts branded on the left breast.

One employee, who had a chefs knife tattooed on his forearm, waved his ink toward the epicenter of our soon-to-be pop-up restaurant and said, Lets put up the circus. The scurrying began as soon as our kitchen was dropped off. Reefers and storage trucks glided into place. Out came hoses and tubes and cords the size of pythons. The metal bones of the two dining tents were laid out across the dirt like an elephant graveyard, then raised. The crashing and cranking and clamoring and cursing carried on well into the evening.

The winds picking up, my knife-tatted co-worker said, as we continued working after dark. Thats bad for the fire. Then he shrugged. Good for us. It might have sounded like a twisted sentiment if I hadnt spent years with a similar mentality as a journalist. Burly members of the crewwhich was about 90 percent menslowly, methodically reorganized boxes and supplies in the dry-storage truck. Job security, they kept calling it. A way of milling the hours.

Because the 2019 wildfire season had had such a slow start, everyone was desperate for the hours. The years payout was looking thin. In a normal year, you could make $20,000 in four or five months. No benefits, but food and lodging were provided. A lot of folks, I was told, live off that, supplemented by welfare, unemployment, or short-term jobs during the off-season.

By 2 a.m., most of the setup work had been done and people had really started drifting away. Except for the snorting generator, fire camp was quiet. The only person still up and working was a guy whod been permanently attached to various electronics since we met up with the Klamath crew. Earlier, during the circus, hed called me boy despite what seemed like an obvious and reverse age difference.

His name was Kaleb. He had long, flat hair past his shoulders. He was folding cardboard containers the size and shape of small trash bins. Food boxes, Id learn, meant for something called spike camp. I stood in front of him for a solid minute before he looked up. A break? Sure. And dont fret. My first time, I wandered around for a week not knowing what to do.

I hadnt had the time, or perhaps the good sense, to set up my tent beforehand and was too exhausted now. I crashed, sitting straight up in my truck. Id figure things out tomorrow.

Upon arrival, Id been assigned to freight, which was under Kalebs supervision. In restaurant parlance, the dining area is front-of-house and the kitchen is back-of-house. Here, freight was more like back-of-back-of-house, true grunt work: unloading deliveries from the Sysco semi that had dropped off all our supplies; churning out hundreds of sack lunches, assembly-line-style, in the semi reefer; deep cleaning and odd jobs.

Freight was primarily guys who had obviously cut their teeth on rougher life experiences and could still smile about it through weathered faces. The gallows humor extended to the companys nickname, as represented by the kind of employees it attracts: Stewarts Rehab.

Working freightbe it in the dusty heat or the arctic reeferbecame soul-suckingly monotonous after two days. So I made a play for real kitchen work.

Actually, yeah, Ruby said when I popped my head into the kitchen at about 4 a.m. on day three and asked if she needed any help. My cooks are asleep, apparently.

Ruby was the head cook, the kitchen manager, and I immediately pegged her as a type. She had jet-black hair, proudly identified as a gamer girl, and her Nightmare Before Christmas socks were not simply a film tribute but a way of life. Ruby and her second-in-command, Josie, a petite collegiate blonde not a day over 22, were scrambling. For Josie, it was literal. She was quietly pouring bags of yellow liquid egg into a tilt skillet and stirring the soup into a solid using a three-foot-long stainless-steel paddle. The ovens, I was told, were on the fritz, so Ruby had me drop bacon into the deep fryers.

It didnt take me long to understand that we were cooking stomach anchors, not taste-bud tinglers. Instead of foie gras and bordelaise, our crew made large batches of heavy sustenance: things such as well-done chicken, powdered potatoes, instant gravy. Canned veggies were heated and dressed in brown sugar and spices. The liquid for Josies scrambled eggs came in 20-pound bags, and deep-frying bacon was an hour-long process. This was high-volume catering. The situation, and the contract, demanded it.

The Missoula Technology and Development Center, a Forest Service outpost in Montana, has long established that male firefighters need up to 6,000 calories a day. Studies have broken that need down even further by energy group (protein, carbohydrates, fat). This is a primary reason for the strict food standards and exacting portion sizes specified in the Blue Book.

Changes in societys general food preferences have affected the contract requirements over the years. There are now more vegetarian options and an increased emphasis on natural ingredients and fresh products. More recent Forest Service nutritional studies recommend that firefighters eat continuously throughout the day, to better maintain a healthy physiology during extended periods of high-stress energy output. So we made sacks of grazing lunches, full of protein, fruits, and vegetables, each weighing a good three or four pounds.

When Tom Stewart got his first wildfire call, in 1977, he rushed to the scene in his delivery truck. Upon arriving, Stewart found that the back was loaded with crab puffs, shrimp puffs, cream puffs, meat traysa bevy of lovely appetizers. They had been put there by his wife, Ann, who was supposed to be catering a wedding that day. The firefighters ate the party delicacies instead. Stewart remembers making hearty stews from scratch, too, although he wouldnt be allowed to improvise like that these days and keep the contract. Itd be impossible to know whether each portion contained the correct amount of protein, carbohydrates, and vegetables. Josie put it most succinctly when I once asked her what we were making for dinner. Some kind of meat, some kind of potato, she said, barely looking up from her task.

Exacting calculations lay behind the menus at fire camp. Each plate of disaster catering costs about $28 to make. Chefs make similar per-plate calculations in normal restaurants. Here, though, actual cuisine was as abstract as the wildfire we were on. At least mass-frying bacon gave me time to survey the kitchen.

At the front end of the semi was the walk-in cooler, about 60 square feet, behind clear plastic. The door connected to a ramp that led into the reefer semi. Cramped inside the kitchen were two 40-gallon stainless-steel tilt skillets that each looked like a billionaire childs Jacuzzi; a six-gallon kettle, also stainless steel; two deep fryers; two griddles below a venting system and atop the six fritzing convection ovens; and, finally, an eight-foot-tall warming cabinet. The possibility that this semi would be my entire world for much of our time at fire camp was strangely comforting.

Id gone through three or four boxes of bacon when two other cooks came bounding in. Josh looked about my age, maybe a few years younger. He was a California Latino, had a solid base frame, and moved with the grace of a sports car in low gear. Already smiling at 5 a.m., he beelined to the stereo and cranked some club beats. Ryan, wirily handsome in a locally sourced and free-range kind of way, seemed to coast on a young white mans charm. He gravitated toward Josie, who kept on working with the efficient, quiet industriousness of a seasoned pro.

By 5:30, the kitchen was bustling. By 5:50, the whole camp had started to come alive. We were strictly open for breakfast from 6 to 9 a.m. For three hours, we served plates of precise portions. I was tasked with ladling oatmeal into bowls. It beat freight work.

Near the end of breakfast, Ruby cornered me. Ryan was okay, but I stayed focused. I pressed my advantage. By the end of day four, Id spent the past two breakfast and dinner services on the line, and Ryan was sent to freight, voted off, it seemed. The period felt a little like an extended episode of Hells Kitchen. I had won the challenge.

My tent was up. My job was set. The basic work rhythms made sense. I was finally in a groove, and fire camp at large seemed to be getting into one as well. The outhouses had finally arrived, as had the mobile shower company. There was talk, too, that a laundry business was en route. When a T-shirt merchant set up shop just past the border of our tent city, near Overhead and the general store, we knew the South Fire was the real deal.

At the start of day four, exactly zero percent of the fire had officially been contained. The excited refrain was: We could be here until October. Think of the hours!

The front of our kitchen faced west, toward the dining hall and, far, far beyond that, a long ridge. When the sun set, the crests glowed with every iridescent shade of red and orange. It looked as if the ridge was aflame. We never saw any actual fire, though.

Long gone are the days when fire camp was established as close to blazes as possible. Tom Stewart told me about driving into walls of smoke and praying he made it through. That was decades ago. Not that disasters dont happen sometimes. One old-timer told me about one of the most famous wildfire photos ever, taken in Montana in 2000. He said it was shot from the fire camp where his entire kitchen got burned over. Now, however, veterans told me, the safe distance required between fire camp and the inferno is growing and growing.

Fire camps various rules, regulations, and general safety precautions took some of the romance out of the whole adventure. The entire operation was run by Overheads incident-management team. Most of its members were older white men with trim white beards or ruddy faces, a Leatherman looped through a belt buried at varying depths of paunch. Some of the younger ones were built and clean-shaven, and gave the impression that they longed to reenlist. In general, Overhead looked like stiff bureaucrats on a mandated fishing expedition, government lifers. Unlike everyone else at fire camp, they never looked dirty. They liked to run camp as if it were a semiformal military operation.

Everything was regulated. Lights-out came at 10 p.m. on the dot, when a crew of young whippersnappers from the California Conservation Corps would go around killing the floodlights. The CCC is a service for 18-to-25-year-olds who do various chores and small projects around fire camp. The Cs dressed crisply in matching tan button-ups, work pants, and hiking boots, and always moved in packs of twos or fours (apparently this was a safety requirement). The girls looked like they had all been on the deans list and the boys looked like they were all trying to do their best James Dean.

All the fun things in lifesex, guns, booze, drugswere prohibited. Women on our crew told me that the firefighters were discouraged from flirting with the kitchen staff, although errant notes were slipped through the serving window or into a personal tent on more than one occasion. Temporary tent cohabitation was a no-no, although everyone assured me that people got plenty laid.

Apart from an STD, it was unclear how someone might actually get reprimanded for having sex. Those other vices, however, were policed by private security. It struck me as odd that there would be a Checkpoint Charlie at the front of camp, but a guard told me that thefts are a not uncommon problem. Among the few people I actively disliked was one security guard, a jacked gym rat on a no-nonsense keto diet. She was stiffly arrogant as she patrolled the camp and, unprovoked, would explain her perpetually sour demeanor by saying things like I cant help telling it like it is or Thats just how redheads are.

In place of booze and drugs, there were at least the wan pleasures of consumerism, which were more abundant than one might think. Anytime theres a major wildfire, swag vendors will crank out a batch of clothes and set up shop at the border of fire camp. The production is as quick and cheap as the design. Except for some fresh lettering that details the name of the fire and its location, the shirts are interchangeable. The one I bought for my significant other says South Fire above pictures of some piney mountains, a green fire truck, and a large elk.

Everyone, it seems, gets a fire shirt whenever theyre at a new disaster and wears their old souvenirs at the current one. Our vendor had more than just the standard rags. The gear included fireman-related thermoses (First in, last out). Other T-shirts were of higher quality and played with iconography. There was the stoic, black-and-white American flag often used by Blue Lives Matter, except this one had a red stripe in the middle. Another was made to look like the label on a bottle of Fireball, with Firecall replacing the brand name. Yet another had graphics that mimicked the Parental Advisory, Explicit Content sticker:

STRAIGHT

OUTTA

FIRE CAMP

It was far and away the most popular. Ryan, in a shopping frenzy, bought more stuff than anyone else did, nearly $200 worth. There was money to be made at fire camp.

Private fire-related businesses were everywhere. After a veteran of many a fire camp found out what I did during the off-season, he went on about how I should start a trade magazine for the wildfire-and-disaster industry. He said I could make big money by selling ad space to the various businesses. Honestly, it wasnt a bad idea.

Disaster capitalism is hardly a new concept, although the phrase itself is attributed to Naomi Klein, who used it in her 2007 book, The Shock Doctrine, as a way to describe how corporations profiteer off war and crises on a large scale. As climate change has created a new normal, its also expanded the definition and scope of disaster capitalism.

The Atlantics own Alexis Madrigal has noted that the past few years have seen the rise of private firefighting companies for the rich and disaster-related trinkets for the rest of us. Yet disaster capitalism takes on more mundane forms too, especially at fire camp.

In 2008, the Forest Service spent $757 million on more than 1,000 private contracts, roughly 52% of its $1.46 billion budget for wildfire suppression, according to a 2011 Fortune article. Those figures havent much changed. Debbie Miley, the executive director of the National Wildfire Suppression Association, which represents the private wildfire industry, told me that private contractors make up about 40 percent of all of the resources that are available. That number can fluctuate a little bit depending on the fire season In some regions [such as] Oregon and Washington ... we can make up to as much as 65 percent of the industry thats available.

Most of the private contractors, Miley said, are small companies with a few employees. I had never before considered how many private businesses operated at fire camp. At ours, there was Triple Flare, which advertises itself as fire-camp recycling. There was a traveling mom-and-pop laundry service that spent the fire season cleaning clothes in a converted horse trailer. There were the grease collector, the water guys, the porta-potty company, and, of course, the food-service vendors like Sysco that have reps throughout the West who specifically work with MFSUs.

Grayback, our on-site shower service, was the only business I dreaded going to. It wasnt because I was told that the private shower stalls were a popular place to masturbate and where, on at least one fire, someone had taken a shower shit. Though there was that. It was because I started getting I dont want to say harassed. That sounds like Im making a direct comparison to what women experience (not even close). Its wordy but lets just say that I received a relentless barrage of unreciprocated advances.

Whenever I needed to take a shower or use a sink, which was every day, I had to steel myself against the female Grayback employee. She kept complimenting my looks and literally said, You should smile more. I didnt know a polite way to get her to stop so I smiled silently and tersely. This only made things worse. She started addressing me as Mr. Smiley. When I flatly told her my name, she just said, Hmm, no, you dont look like a Jeff.

I couldnt tell her to fuck off, because then Id have to deal with that drama every day. I felt trapped. Employees couldnt be forced to stay on-site, but leaving camp was strongly discouraged, as was bringing ones personal vehicle to the site. The bosses wanted us to stay close, and be ready to work at all times. Getaway wheels were too tempting a pleasure. I was trapped.

The oppressive September heat, all the working hours, the regulations, the relentless barrage of unreciprocated advances, the prohibitions on self-medicatingit was all starting to feel a little claustrophobic.

Lying down in the tent after lights-out, I thought about how good it would feel to sink into a whiskey oblivion. Even to float on a cloud of THC, which Im not partial to, as it usually makes me a tad edgy. Through the tent, however, Id occasionally catch an inviting whiff. Probably just a California skunks pleasant fart, I thought. Surely nobody would be breaking the semiformal military rules specified by our benevolent federal overlords.

Did anybody get sent home last night? Josie asked, as calm as ever. It was 5 a.m, still too early to know whether we were getting kicked off the fire. Wed been prepping for dinner the previous afternoon when it became obvious that a problem was afoot. Crew members began coming in through the kitchens back door, then carefully and strenuously craning their neck out the front threshold, their body half-hidden, like secret agents spying on the enemy.

All our tents were grouped together about 30 yards from the kitchen. It was the Cooks Alley of fire camp. Because we were camping, on contract, within a federally designated emergency zone, wed ceded basic Fourth Amendment rights. For reasons that were completely hazy to me, the redheaded guard had brought in a gun-toting forest ranger and a very eager drug dog. News of the sting operation got passed around faster than a joint at a high school house party while the ranger took her time rummaging through our tents, the dog tearing holes in the fabric as it pawed and snorted for contraband.

Ruby told me that when a drug check happened at another fire she was on, half the catering crew took off to hide in the nearby woods. Just imagine the sight!

This time, nobody ran. The gossip, however, was that people could be sent home or fined. Overhead could even terminate our contract and bring in an entirely different MFSU.

The prohibition of intoxicants at fire camp, even in a disaster kitchen, makes a bare minimum of sense. But theres a reason few respectable restaurants do a urine test. The high pressure and low pay of essential kitchen work are often offset only by the steady employment and flexible rules. Ruby knew this.

Kitchens are filled with masochists and addicts, shed said with deadpan authority just before dinner service on day five.

She was only in her first year as a full-fledged kitchen manager, but at 29 Ruby had spent her entire adulthood in the biz, working primarily in high-volume institutional fare. Before Stewarts, Ruby had cooked at an airport restaurant, at a senior center, in hospice care, and with another disaster-catering company. During the off-season, she worked at an expo center.

Away from fire camp, Ruby and I would probably orbit in different circles. On the line, though, she seemed like my kind of person. I got into kitchen work in the mid-aughts, at the height of our food cultures star-focused obsession with the chef-auteur. The glorification of masochists and addicts was the sort of braggadocio Id experienced and admired in my late teens and early 20s.

The young crews I was on had our heroes: Thomas Keller, Ferran Adri, et al. But we really gravitated toward the badasses. Anthony Bourdain in particular, with his seminal 2000 memoir, Kitchen Confidential, made food service fashionable, turning crass, hard-partying hourly grease slingers like us into underground rock stars.

A lots changed since. Ten years after his memoirs publication, Bourdain wrote that he encountered young fans of Kitchen Confidential, for whom the book was a validation of their worst natures. It was a prescient observation. An atmosphere that fostered the idea of the chef and cook as a difficult visionary (almost exclusively a white man) glossed over or ignored the realities of the kitchenbehavior that was every flavor of abuse.

During the past few years, the culture, both at large and in kitchens, has begun addressing toxic issuesharassment, shoddy labor practices, poor mental health, and addictionin the past few years. And as the world burns unabated, celebrity chefs have turned their skills to culinary triage. Call it disaster gastronomy if you want to sound fancy. Jos Andrs founded World Central Kitchen in 2010, and when Hurricane Maria decimated Puerto Rico in 2017, WCK sent a chef relief team that served more than 3.7 million meals, garnering massive media attention. Afterward, he wrote a book about the experience, titled We Fed an Island. Since then, WCKs volunteer-chef relief teams have been cooking every single day, serving more than 45 million meals at hurricanes, floods, and, of course, wildfires, according to its website.

Even the mayor of Flavortown has gotten in on the action. The same year as Hurricane Maria, Guy Fieri served up barbecue for thousands of evacuees of the Tubbs Fire, which tore through Californias Sonoma County. Fieris wine-forward Food Network peer Tyler Florence made the Sonoma disaster the subject of Uncrushable, his documentary about the painful resilience of first responders and victims. Fieri was also at both the Carr Fire and the Camp Fire in 2018. So many great people stepping up to take care of one another, he tweeted above a photo of a fire truck, a wall of flames behind it. Hashtag: #ProudAmerican.

As the New York Times food critic Tejal Rao put it in an August column about the death rattle of the toxic chef-auteur era, its rise and current decline has informed the industrys culture at every level. Perhaps, too, the disaster gastronomy trend will move in a positive direction. As far as our middle-of-nowhere kitchen was concerned, however, things were still pretty rough. The whole experience was getting to me. Bad. I dont want to project, but it seemed to be getting to others too. Even our rock, Josie, started showing cracks. What a weird day, she said after the drug-raid dinner service.

Cruising altitude is what Ruby, during the chaos of a planned Tex-Mex night, had called the manic exhaustion that had already settled in all of us, just a week into camp. Its just what you learn to live with and embrace, she said. Maybe, I thought.

Day-seven breakfast went smoothly enough, despite lingering paranoia from the previous evening. No one got sent home, and we still had the contract. But when I came in later for day-seven dinner prep, the kitchen wasnt just manic; it was madness. The bad kind of chaos. Unorganized.

I think it had something to do with prepping for spike camp, where the fire crews at the battles front lines sleep in the rough and have their meals delivered daily. Thered been some kind of screwup with the chow load. Bug-eyed and trembling, Ruby pressed her hands against her head in a vise grip. This, Id learned, was a tic of hers. She also began mumbling to herself.

Id worked in restaurants that had collapsed. It was pretty clear to me that our cruising altitude wouldnt be high enough to clear approaching mountains. Kalebthe wire-bound freight captain Id met on day oneseemed like a likely candidate for a crash.

In theory, work was organized into split shifts, which are two eight-hour blocks of work broken up by one eight-hour block of rest. In reality, everyone seemed to be working 12 to 14 hours at a time, buffered by the occasional snooze. Folks kept talking about overtime, which I understood, and something called California OT, which apparently meant time and a half plus another half after working more than 12 hours a day.

Everyone, all the time, talked about the hours. One crew member told me, I want the hours and I want the sleep, but was evenly split over which they wanted more. There was an unspoken agreement among the crew to not work too fast, especially because management was trying to limit OT, California OT in particular.

Youre the only one whos excited about getting off, Ruby told me. Excited was the wrong word, but I certainly expressed no desire to work a second longer than necessary. For starters, I was in excruciating and inescapable physical pain. Standing on ones feet all day can do that.

Lying down in the quietude after fire camps official lights-out, I could hear the screams of my lower half. Trying to nap during the day was better, if only because the heat forced things into relative perspective. My tent was an oven, and it either melted me into a restless sleep or had me resigned to sitting in a shaded chair, very still, until the dinner shift. Keeping drug- and alcohol-free meant there was no temporary relief. Id had a rough two years alreadyfull Millennial burnout. I could tell I was particularly vulnerable to an actual breakdown and had enough sense and good fortune, as well as a safety net of financially stable loved ones, to recognize the impending problem. Others didnt seem as lucky.

Kaleb took a beating. He probably slept about three hours a day.

There was a moment, maybe on day four, when I watched him squat on a tiny wheelbarrow. He just sat there, hunched over, for five minutes before lurching back to work. The next day, he was slouched just outside the big reefer, deflated. Somebody would open the door and itd bop him on the back. He never reacted.

Kaleb made it four more days, until day nine.

You didnt hear it? Ryan asked, as he waited for a ride out of camp. He meant that literally. One of our crew managers had berated both Kaleb and Ryan so loudly, it could be heard halfway to Overhead. Ryan told me his and Kalebs side of the story. It seemed like one of those things where you had to be there. They got straight outta fire camp that evening, after we made them hearty to-go plates.

Why, exactly, Kaleb and Ryan left or who was at fault, I never figured out. When I started researching disaster-catering companies, one of them told me that it had been approached several times by reality-show people. The Forest Service stonewalled any and all efforts. In fact, the latest Blue Bookthe one issued for the 202024 contract periodincludes a line regulating any reality-TV productions or other commercial filming. Probably for the best. Fire camp is already a can of gasoline and doesnt need a digital match.

Camp had become isolating. Like any city, I suppose. I was told it was common for people to get Dear John letters from home. Josh was in one of the porta-potties and heard a guy in the adjoining toilet sobbing to someone, over the Wi-Fi cell service, that his girlfriend had just dumped him. My worst day at fire camp was after my significant other called me, very upset, after a bad personal experience. I couldnt do anything but worry and work.

I was scrubbing the grill on day 10 when Ruby came in, stomped to the middle of the semi-kitchen, and let out a blood-curdling scream.

Sorry, she said, I just needed to get that out.

The immediate reason for Rubys uncorked rage was that one underling had given herself a nasty knife cut. Somebody suggested that we deep-fry the finger, to cauterize the wound. This idea was collectively nixed, mostly because it would mean cleaning out the fryer afterward, a job nobody thought was worth the hours.

Rubys fretting was irksome to me. I had started making a list of petty grievances. Her awkward, passive-aggressive commentsmeant innocently, Im surewere off-putting as well. More than once, she said I was getting fewer hours than other people and should remember that when I do my story. At one point during day 10, she complimented my work ethic by saying: Most new people would have quit by now.

The crews only other newbie had dropped out around day three. So the thought had occurred to me.

Ruby fell completely to pieces right before the dinner rush. It was steak day. Everyones favorite. We had just sent out the spike-camp delivery.

Our first task of the dinner shift was always spike camp. If fire camp is the base from which general troops are sent to the front, then spike is the tactical outpost behind enemy lines. At spike, personnel fight the wildfire, eat, and sleep. Thats about it. They dont come in for a shower or to take advantage of the Wi-Fi.

We prepped 50 to 100 daily spike meals, which were cooked and quickly packaged in bin-size cardboard boxes. They had to be loaded on pallets by 4:45 p.m. exactly so that they could be airlifted or driven to spike for scheduled supper. Plates and utensils and condiments and cups and beverages both hot and cold were sent along as well. Its not that dissimilar from a standard food-delivery service such as Uber Eats, just large-scale and without the tips.

Along with the spike payload came the dead-mans plate. This wasnt for eating. It was a plastic-wrapped display of the full hot dinner, portioned out so that crew chiefs could see exactly how much food each firefighter was supposed to get. The phrases morbid etymology was obvious enough. It was a reality that hung over us all.

Read: 72 hours on the fire line, every week

Link:

If You Can't Stand the Heat - The Atlantic

Every Single Redheaded Comic Book Character That Has Been Race Swapped – Bounding Into Comics

Film studios have made it a habit of race swapping red headed comic book characters and we are going to list all of them out for you today.

So lets get into it.

The upcoming Black Adam film featuring The Rock recently announced that Maxine Hunkel aka Cyclone, who first appeared in Geoff Johns and Dale Eagleshams Justice Society of America #1, will be played by Quintessa Swindel.

Maxine Hunkel is the granddaughter of the original Red Tornado Ma Hunkel and would be recruited into the new Justice Society by Power Girl and and Mr. Terrific.

Shes extremely intelligent with an IQ of 145. Shes also a book worm having a GPA of 4.0 at Harvard.

When she was a child she was kidnapped by the villain T.O. Morrow and injected with Red Tornado nanobyte technology. While the technology did not affect Maxine right away it would manifest by the time she was in college and give her significant wind powers.

In fact, just one of her sneezes destroyed her grandmothers garage and she also was able to summon a tornado five hundred feet tall.

The CW race-swapped Hawkgirl on both Arrow and The Legends of Tomorrow. The character was played by actress Ciara Rene.

Hawkgirls alter ego Shiera Sanders was first introduced back in Flash Comics #1 by Gardner Fox and Dennis Neville. At the time of her introduction she originally had black hair.

A new Hawkgirl from the planet of Thanagar would be introduced in the Brave and the Bold #34. This new Hawkgirl was named Shayera Hol and was a Thanagarian police officer like her husband Katar Hol, the new Hawkman.

She would have red hair as seen below.

The CW race-swapped Iris West in their Flash series and the character routinely crosses over throughout their Arrowverse shows. In The CWs version, the character is portrayed by Candice Patton.

The character was also expected to get race-swapped in Zack Snyders Justice League, but in the theatrical version the character was cut. She is expected to show up again in the upcoming Snyder Cut of Justice League. In that version she will be portrayed by Kiersey Clemons.

While Iris West is typically portrayed as a brunette, in her debut appearance in Showcase #4, her hair has an auburn appearance.

This auburn hue would be showcased throughout much of the DC Animated Movie Universe films and can be seen in the screenshot below from Flashpoint: Paradox.

CBS race-swapped Supermans pal Jimmy Olsen when they cast actor Mehcad Brooks to play the role in Supergirl.

Interestingly, in Olsens first appearance in Superman #13, hes shown with blonde hair.

However, by the debut issue of Supermans Pal Jimmy Olsen, the character had his now iconic red hair.

Like Iris West, The CW also race swapped Wally West in the Flash and its Arrowverse universe. The character was portrayed by Keiynan Lonsdale.

When Wally West was first introduced all the way back in The Flash #110, he had his trademark red hair.

Starfire was race swapped in DC Universes and now HBO Maxs Titans series. The character is currently portrayed by actress Anna Diop.

Starfire first appeared in DC Comics Presents #26 and was created by Marv Wolfman and George Perez in 1980 as part of the New Titans.

In her first appearance she has orange skin and flaming red hair.

Batwoman was most recently race swapped in The CWs Batwoman series. Actress Javicia Leslie will take on the moniker Batwoman as she plays a brand new character named Ryan Wilder.

In her first appearance in 52 #11 she has her iconic red hair both as Batwoman and as Kate Kane.

It wouldnt be until Detective Comics #854 where they retconned her long red hair into a wig. Although even in that issue her hair is still red underneath the wig.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles character April ONeil would be race swapped in the 2018 animated series Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. She was voiced by Kat Graham.

The character originally appeared in the second issue of Kevin Eastman and Peter Lairds black and white Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles series.

When the comic was reprinted with colors it showed that April was a white woman with brown hair.

While April originally had brown hair, the character has also been depicted with red hair as seen in the original Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles animated series as well as comic book series like the TMNT Presents April ONeil series.

Electro would be race-swapped in The Amazing Spider-Man 2. The character would be played by Jamie Foxx. Foxx also claimed he would be playing Electro again in the upcoming Spider-Man 3.

In Electros first appearance in The Amazing Spider-Man #9 hes shown having dark red hair.

Commissioner James Gordon is getting the race-swap treatment in the upcoming Batman film from director Matt Reeves. The character will be played by Jeffrey Wright.

Gordon was introduced in the same issue as Batman in Detective Comics #27. In that issue hes older and his hair has greyed.

However, when Gordon was a young beat cop and even as his early days as Commissioner hes been shown to have red hair.

Heimdall was race swapped in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, where he was portrayed by actor Idris Elba.

In Heimdalls original appearance in Marvel Comics Journey Into Mystery, his facial hair and eyebrows were most definitely black as seen below.

However, by Thor #156 when he confronts The Recorder, his facial hair had most definitely been changed to a red hue.

Bow was race swapped in the recent Netflix animated series She-Ra and The Princesses of Power. The character was voiced by Marcus Scribner.

While Bow was originally introduced in the She-Ra animated series from Filmation, the character did appear in a She-Ra comic book series published in the UK.

Interestingly, while the character had red hair in the animated series, in the comic he has black hair.

Ariel from Disneys The Little Mermaid will be race swapped in the upcoming live action version of the film. The character will be played by Halle Bailey.

Now, you might be thinking why is Ariel on this list. Well, the character has appeared in a number of comics and even in the graphic novel Ariel and the Sea Wolf.

Dark Horse Comics even published a three issue adaptation of the original Disney film.

Josie from Josie and the Pussycats was race swapped in The CWs Riverdale series. She was played by actress Ashleigh Murray.

The character first appeared in Shes Josie #1 from Archie Comics. She was created by Frank Doyle and Dan DeCarlo.

She had her fiery red hair on the front cover of the issue.

Read the rest here:

Every Single Redheaded Comic Book Character That Has Been Race Swapped - Bounding Into Comics

These Are The Biggest Hair Colour Trends Taking Over In 2021 – Glamour UK

Fact, our hair colour preferences have shifted through whats been an unpredictable year. Already, top hair colourists have started to see this change play out in even their most conservative clients. Were ready to come out of our comfort zone, or at the very least switch things up in order to feel refreshed. This could be through a bold colour (which by the way, has boomed during 2020), or through teensy hair glow-ups, such as cleverly updated highlighting techniques. Either way, were ready to feel liberated, shiny as we roll into a new year of possibilities.

Before we get cracking with the emerging trends that the pros have predicted will take off big-style next year, its important to remember that each and every option should be tailored specifically to you. Colour should always be completely personalised based on skin tone and hair texture, explains top hair stylist and UK Editorial Ambassador for LOreal Professionnel, Adam Reed. Colour should be applied in a way that looks multidimensional to make facial features pop. You can also apply colour in clever ways that give the illusion of thickness if your hair is finer or play with light to help illuminate and define curls. So make sure you really maximise your consultation time with your colourist to get the most beautiful, bespoke colour experience.

Here are the hair colour trends to watch out for

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To complement the return of heavy seventies fringes and loose bohemian texture, seventies golden blonde will be big, reckons Bryony Cairns, colourist at Larry King. Sharon Tate is a huge influence. Bleach Londons creative director, Alex Brownsell seconds this strawberry blonde and golden honey tones will be popular, she says. As will butter blonde. Its very easy to maintain at home because bleached hair naturally has yellow undertones, so this look will soften into a honey effect, adds Alex. For more dimension, Bryony recommends opting for lots of fine babylights throughout the whole hair to give the illusion of an all-over HD colour.

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Brunettes often suffer from too much warmth running through their hair, explains Bryony. Adding slices of cooler tones mutes the warmth without taking away the depth of the colour, and this helps to even out the tone, she explains.

Adam Reed Londons Cool Down colour menu is specifically geared toward dialling up or down your colour, and neutralising brassiness (which is on the up since weve been spacing out salon appointments). You can still maintain the richness of brunette but with a cooler base, he says. Have a conversation with your colourist who will be able to advise the best palette to suit you.

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Sales of red hair colour were off the charts during 2020 as Kim Kardashian, Dua Lipa, Lizzo, Kylie Jenner and even Ricky Martin gave the shade a spin. Heading into next year, red will live on in all its glory with bold cherry red but also more natural blonde copper shades, predicts Josh. People are finding ways to express themselves through all different shades of red, he says, More so, since one application of the shade can take you through multiple different tones as it fades. Semi Permanent glosses are the way forward for a statement colour. A cherry red applied on a pale bleached hair can often fade over time to a pretty pink shade and give you many statement looks from one application, adds Josh, though consult with your hairdresser wholl be able to give you an indication of your hairs porosity, how intense the shade will be and how it will react and evolve on your hair.

Particularly popular, will be renaissance reds think beautiful, deep, rich reds which give you those stunning copper and bronze tones, says Adam. You can have this as deep or as subtle as you want the key is for it to look really healthy.

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Once again, were referencing the nineties. Many clients are referencing the decade, from the chunky caramel highlights that Jennifer Aniston has, to the shaggy champagne blonde haircut for Meg Ryan, explains expert hair colourist, Josh Wood. But one nineties trend thats set to go stratospheric is money-piece hair. Millennials may not yet have heard of it, but the nineties colour technique favoured by Geri Halliwell circa peak Spice Girls, is back only toned down to make it more subtle. In fact, Queen Bey is partially responsible for its triumphant return after rocking it on her Instagram.

This is all about lighting up the front section of hair and then toning it so there is a lovely blend, explains Adam. Moving away from the rogue blonde style which was a popular Instagrammable hair trend, softer money piece highlights framing the face is an easy way to get the brightness around your face through winter while keeping really low maintenance, agrees Bryony.

Crucially, its versatile. What is lovely, is you can use any tone such as a bold rock n roll modern colour, through to something only slightly lighter than what you would normally have, still creating that chunky piece through the front, says Adam. And its democratic, too. Its malleable to all colours, confirms Bryony, from red heads having strawberry blonde to brunettes having golden sun kissed tones.

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The peekaboo hair colour trend started taking off this year. This is a deeper panel through the back of the hair, explains Adam. Imagine a half head of colour where the bottom layers are washed with a contrasting colour. Hidden under the top layer of hair, they peek through as you move. Weve seen it with vivids but this is more about adding depth and density through the back section which offers a richer, deeper result. It doesnt have to be a stark contrast either which makes it super wearable, you can go as vibrant and or as subtle as you want.

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Alongside bold new choices, beautiful minimal maintenance will never go out of fashion. "In 2021 the balayage trend will stay with us, with its ability to offer low maintenance colour and subtle regrowth," confirms Josh. "Balayaged lowlights and highlights are more forgiving as they don't create a clean cut line," explains celeb colourist, Nicola Clarke who counts Kate Moss, Dua Lipa and Charlize Theron as clients.

As well as speckling highlights throughout the lengths of our hair, ombre will be making a return says Bryony. The techniquesees hair graduate from dark at the roots to light at the ends. "It's a really low maintenance colour that's great for brunettes who dont want to commit to sitting in the salon chair every 8 weeks keeping up the blonde," she says, since your roots fade into the rest of your hair, so regrowth won't be a problem.

"Its adaptable with colours too as you can mix it up using direct dyes like pink and corals to get flashes of colour for a few days at a time," says Bryony. "Toners and semi-permanent colours in peaches, pinks, mints and blues just seem to be growing," agrees Nicola, "and the products on the market, especially for home use are getting much better," she says. Therefore you can create a hybrid system of in-salon colour, adapted yourself at home if you feel like it.

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Searches for pink hair grew by 900% last year, so its unsurprising that it was Bleach Londons most requested shade. A lot of people experimented with colour for the first time during lockdown this year and started by trying softer, pastel shades to dip their toe in colour, explains Alex. For 2021, weve already noticed a trend towards the more vivid colours as people have become more confident to try something new. I think well see a lot of brighter, bolder looks. The update to pastel pink? Bubblegum. We launched our new Super Cool Colour Gobby Pink because it was so highly requested as a custom shade in our salons, reveals Alex.

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Dirty blonde has become our spirit animal hair during a year where we've all gone feral, but we're actually really enjoying it. Pair warmer blonde tones with a smudgy natural root. Dua Lipa's brush with blonde is a great example, "or think Kurt Cobain, Courtney Love, Annie Morton and Debbie Harry," says Nicola. "Charlize [Theron] has that grungy colour look at the moment, with the dark shade underneath," she says. But Kate [Moss] will forever be the original dirty blonde."

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How to make a problem into a trend: enter root clash. If you fancy dabbling with colour and you're experience root regrowth, it's the way to go, says Alex. "Think of this as a reverse dip-dye, with the colour starting at the roots and fading out into the mid lengths or contrasting with your grown out colour like Billie Eilishs green and black hair," she says. "If you need to touch up your roots, this is a really fun way to experiment with colour without committing to an all-over tone. I love a bold colour fading into blonde like Tangerine Dream and Aubergine Dream, or if you want to try Billies colour, Slime Light is perfect."

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These Are The Biggest Hair Colour Trends Taking Over In 2021 - Glamour UK

Giving season is here: It is ‘sharing time’ in Edenton – The Daily Advance

Over the three days of Dec. 3 through Dec. 5, 2020, Edenton Lions and friends helped the kettle krowd gather gifts.

Lions are sporting red vests showing the Salvation Army motto Doing the Most Good. The signature hand bells ring. Strangers relax when they hear the music! Friendships resurface or comfortably begin.

Known for their work with the hearing and visually impaired, Lions are now known for helping the other Army.

Members of various faith communities join in manning the buckets!

Sharing Time is even more important this year as the pandemic of COVID-19 remains among us. Nearly everyone shows up with mask on. Excellent! Nippy weather quickens some steps.

Eyes are alert and forward. Many are unglued from iPhones in their hands. Good. Since Thanksgiving many have relearned to enjoy others face to face!

We care....We wear is on one cheek of Lions face mask. We Serve on the other cheek notes 83 years of service 1937-2020.

Chilly temps today are harbingers of severe cold to come. Community needs food on the table, clothes on the back, heat in the house and a roof overhead to keep out the rain.

Familiar greetings ring out. Hows the family? Whatcha been doing lately?

Whats for lunch? Whos cooking? Whos paying? Grub with or without calories?

Shadboat Willis is among the first to be at his station. Notices new unwrinkled greenbacks. George, Thomas and Abe crowd into the red buckets. Nothing like new money without the smell of tobacco juice, snuff or fish!

Eye contacts multiply as folk approach business entrances.

Lions initiate light conversation. Yes, coins are welcome here... You seriously welcome pennies and dimes!? Yes, all day long. We appreciate all gifts and givers.

I notice a friend exiting Food Lion. Where is your good-looking lady today? Home, she gave you folks too much last year! There is mischief in his eye. I suspect he does more than his fair share of good trouble today.

Ole Tar Heel looks around and is surprised.

Recognizes nice lady approaching but who is the small one she is carrying? Is this the 4th Wise Man? No, its Grogu the baby Yoda from the Disney+ show The Mandalorian! Lady shushes me. Explains in a whisper that her hubbie is a secret admirer of the Star Wars celebrity. Gag Christmas gift. Stifle your wise-cracks! No autographs until after Christmas! Or tweets either! Lady hustles to her pick-up truck and discreetly place Grogu in a secret place! Darn.

Others arrive. People thin out then regroup. Approaching my post is a vivacious 4th-grader with a head of red hair! Followed by grandmother type. This should be interesting.

Young lass jumps for joy! Spies coins on the pavement. Bends to retrieve a new quarter and two super-new bright Lincoln pennies. While others slip their gifts into the kettle bucket I eye the youngster.

Instead of pocketing her treasure Emma heads my way. Points to the red kettle. Yes! Wants to know if we accept small coins. Yes, all gifts are welcome! Cute as a speckled puppy! Emma tells me of life in the 4th grade.

Have I ever been in the fourth grade? Before I can answer, we are talking rivers like the Amazon, the Nile, the Ganges and the Mississippi. Silently I wonder to myself, Is this the little red-haired girl that Charlie Brown has been seeking all his life?

Friday I am posted to Roses, having been assigned to Food Lion on Thursday and Saturday. After a time, I notice a young woman with two one-dollar bills in hand leaving the store. Her clothing is clean but simple. For whatever reason, I asked her why she donates.

She tells of growing up in Perquimans County. In January or February while age 14, the house she and her parents lived in burned to the ground. Completely gone. Brutally cold weather. No family or neighbors to take them in. Somehow the Salvation Army found a simple place the threesome could live in through spring. It was dry enough that she could do her homework for school. Family survived the winter.

She muses, I have never forgotten that kindness. I can never repay. But I remember. That is why I give two dollars. That is how I say, Thank You.

Folks, your gifts are a major benefit in the life of real people today. Readers who are still with me will be delighted to know that the public of December 2020 has been most generous. Significantly better than 2019 which was good too. Difficult challenges have not overwhelmed us.

Thank you for being true to the best any of us know.

Meanwhile, Lions continue to mask up. Hope you will too.

We care. We wear. We serve.

New members welcome, especially red heads!

John Mitchener is past president of the Edenton Lions Club, 2010-11.

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Giving season is here: It is 'sharing time' in Edenton - The Daily Advance

Ecchi horror game "Red Colony" heads to Switch on Jan. 7th, 2021 – GoNintendo

The Red Colony was supposed to save the human race, not end it. . . After a crazy scientist plays God and experiments with the colonists DNA, a deadly virus infects them and turns them into blood-thirsty zombies. Maria is trapped in the turmoil and desperately searches for her daughter in this Ecchi inspired Horror Game. However, the secrets she finds in her personal life and the colony means she will have to be the Hero and rid the colony of the wicked virus.

Red Colony Features:

- Anime character design.- Twisted story.- Blood, gore and horror!- 2DTCT (2D Tear-Clothes-Technology)...(!?)- Drama inspired by 'The Bachelor' and 'High School of the Dead'.- Graphic Novel story-telling with more interactive and immersive gameplay.- Solo Developed by me, Rune Storm.

Hi! I'm Maria, CEO of LAB. LAB is one of the most exciting places to work at in the Colony. At LAB we are paving the way for the future.

I've been CEO for five years and have been leading the way on some groundbreaking projects that will help all of us in the Colony.

Even though the Red Colony follows a strict Communist Code and each individual's work is as important as the next, I do believe that LAB is the heart of the Colony and the most important thing for our future. Recently we received a big check from the Mayor, which we have put towards upgrading our equipment, expanding the LAB facility and hiring new staff (some of which come from the Blue Colony... That will be interesting...)

Plus, our most exciting and revolutionary project at the LAB is. . . Sorry, I get so carried away with work! I can't tell you all of our secrets.

I forgot to mention that I'm married to James, the Mayor of the Red Colony (Convenient, I know) and we have a beautiful daughter together called Diana. She's just as smart and beautiful as her mother. Life in the Red Colony is perfect, there's nothing that could ever spoil our wonderful commune.

The Red Colony follows a strict communist code. The inhabitants all aim towards a common goal for the betterment of the Colony and humankind as a whole. Insulting another person's work can lead to huge fines, imprisonment or in the worst case; banishment from the Colony.

In the early days, it was clear that capitalism and competition would cause more harm than good for the Colony. Thus the Founders wrote "The Communist Code" whereas the neighbouring Colony chose capitalism as a founding principle. Over time, the colonies have become rivals, leading to an arms-race. Ironically, both colonies have similar goals but very different approaches. Thus, the arms-race is to see who will succeed first.

Travel between the colonies has become more difficult than ever, especially since you have to travel by air. To do this, inhabitants must be presented with a special permit to visit the neighbouring colony. Therefore, interaction between the inhabitants of the two colonies is near impossible.

2DTCT (2D Tear-Clothes-Technology)

To get to the flesh, Zombies like to tear through peoples' clothing. When Maria's clothing reaches 0%, she can no longer fight off the zombie horde and will get bitten. Be careful!

This game contain Mature Content such as Blood, Gore, Nudity and Swearing.

More here:

Ecchi horror game "Red Colony" heads to Switch on Jan. 7th, 2021 - GoNintendo

Christmas dinner can be festive – and thrifty – with this $60 feast for four – The Durango Herald

One of the realities of Christmas 2020 is that many people are on tighter budgets than usual. That doesnt have to be an impediment to a sumptuous, festive holiday meal instead, let it be like a little puzzle to solve.

I set myself the goal of figuring out a dinner for four that felt 100% holiday-worthy, but cost just three Andrew Jacksons. I hope youll agree there is nothing about this menu that feels downscale.

The centerpiece is a glazed ham, and the good news is that hams are available in many sizes. A boneless ham portion of about 3 pounds is ample for four people, with leftovers so you can think about ham and biscuit sandwiches, bean soups studded with chopped ham, grilled ham and cheese, maybe a quiche Lorraine later in the week.

If this all sounds really good, you might go for a 4-pound ham.

I cannot tell you how much my family likes my Cheddar Potato Gratin. There is nothing frugal about this lush dish. If you have a few more dollars to throw into the pot, treat yourself to some top-of-the-line cheddar. Leftovers will be fought over (and in my house, I will win, because I will know where they are hidden in the fridge).

And then the humble cabbage is transformed into a silky, jewel-toned side dish. This whole side is the sum total of about $3 worth of ingredients (a fact you can keep to yourself). When cabbage is first seared and then braised, it becomes meltingly tender, with a sweetness complemented by a level of flavor you can only get with caramelization and a knob of butter.

Tie it all together with a simple lettuce salad with a mix of any of your favorite lettuces. You can go robust (endive, radicchio, escarole), mild (butter, bibb, mesclun), or somewhere in the middle. Toss it with a tangy vinaigrette to round the plate out with a little acidity and texture.

Finally, end the meal with a dessert that feels classic, merry and even elegant. Pears, poached in apple cider, lemon and brown sugar are then drizzled with a rich chocolate sauce and sprinkled with chopped crystallized ginger.

If you have leftover cream from another dish, whip a cup or so with a touch of powdered sugar and vanilla and bloop it next to the plated pears for an even grander finale.

The $60 total presumes you have some things on hand (such as peppercorns, oil, vinegar and salt), but otherwise, you should be able to stick to this budget.

Drinks are not included, but, if youre on a budget, go into your favorite wine store or grocery, share your menu with them, give them a price limit and ask for recommendations. Think about prosecco or cava as your sparkling wine cheaper than champagne, but just as effervescent and cheery. Or try sparkling apple cider!

Happy and merry and cheers to all. Heres how we recommend tackling this meal: Poach the pears first or even a day before the meal. On the day you plan to serve, make the potato gratin first. Then, lower your oven temperature and make the ham and cabbage, which cook at the same temperature. While they cook, finish preparing the dessert and make the salad.

When you remove the ham from the oven, re-cover the potatoes and slip them back in the oven to reheat for about 10 minutes before serving.

Apricot-Bourbon Glazed Ham

Time: Active: 15 minutes | Total: 2 hours 15 minutes

Servings: 4 to 6

A store-bought cooked ham doesnt need additional cooking to be safe to eat, but baking it a second time allows you to add a lacquer-like glaze that provides sweet tanginess. Basting the ham a few times during the course of the cooking allows the outside to get shiny and caramelized.If youd prefer not to use bourbon, you can swap in apple cider or pineapple juice instead. For a few dollars, you can buy one of those little bottles of bourbon like they sell on airplanes; it really gives the glaze a memorable depth of flavor.

Make Ahead: The glaze can be made up to 3 days in advance.

Storage Notes: Leftover ham can be refrigerated for up to 3 days.

INGREDIENTS: cup apricot preserves or jam2 teaspoons minced or finely grated fresh ginger2 tablespoons bourbonOne (3-pound) uncured, cooked boneless hamMethod:

Position a rack in the middle of the oven and preheat to 325 degrees. Line a shallow baking pan with foil and spray with nonstick spray.

In a small bowl, combine the apricot preserves, ginger and bourbon and mix until well combined.

Using a sharp paring knife, score the ham by making crosshatch cuts all over the surface about inch deep and -inch apart, creating a square or diamond pattern. Place the ham cut side down in the baking pan and brush it with about a third of the glaze.

Bake, uncovered, for 45 minutes. Brush the ham with another third of the glaze. Bake for about 45 minutes longer, then brush with the remaining glaze. Bake for an additional 30 minutes, or until the ham is nicely browned and caramelized on the outside.

Remove the ham from the oven and let sit for 10 minutes before slicing.

Nutrition: (based on 4 servings) Calories: 478; Total Fat: 12 g; Saturated Fat: 3 g; Cholesterol: 151 mg; Sodium: 2940 mg; Carbohydrates: 32 g; Dietary Fiber: 0 g; Sugar: 32 g; Protein: 72 g.

Source: Recipes from food writer Katie Workman, founder of The Mom 100 site.

Braised Red Cabbage Wedges

Time: Active: 45 minutes | Total: 1 hour 45 minutes

Servings: 4

Cabbage rocks: Its cheap, plentiful, versatile and its there in the winter when the variety of fresh vegetables is at a nadir.In this recipe, cabbage is cut into wedges, seared and then oven-braised in cider and a bit of vinegar. It becomes soft and buttery and hard to stop eating. Dont worry if some of the wedges fall apart as you are cutting or cooking them; just scoop up all the pieces and toss them into the pot. When you serve it, try to arrange it so the prettiest wedges are on top.

Storage Notes: Leftover cabbage may be tightly covered and refrigerated for up to 4 days.

INGREDIENTS:3 tablespoons unsalted butter, divided1 large red onion (about 10 ounces), halved and thinly sliced1 medium head red cabbage (about 2 pounds)Kosher saltFreshly ground black pepper2 tablespoons cider vinegar (may substitute red wine vinegar or balsamic vinegar) cup apple cider or juiceMETHOD:In a large, heavy, ovenproof lidded pan over medium heat, melt 1 tablespoon of the butter. Add the onion and cook, stirring occasionally, until tender, about 8 minutes. Transfer the onions to a plate. Remove pan from heat.

Meanwhile, using a chefs knife, cut the cabbage in half through the stem. Place a cabbage half on the cutting board, flat side down and slice into roughly 1-inch wedges, leaving enough of the core so that the wedges hold together as much as possible. Trim away the thickest part of the core, as needed. Repeat with the remaining cabbage half.

Position the rack in the middle of the oven and preheat to 325 degrees.

In the same pan, melt another tablespoon of the butter over medium heat. Add half the cabbage wedges, and season with salt and pepper. Cook, without moving them, until lightly browned on the bottom, about 5 minutes, then carefully flip the wedges with a thin metal spatula, season again with salt and pepper, and brown on the other side, about 5 minutes. Toss any loose cabbage leaves in the pan so that they brown on all sides. Transfer the wedges and leaves to another plate. Repeat with the final tablespoon of butter and the remaining cabbage. Transfer the second batch of cabbage to the plate with the first batch.

In the same pan, add the vinegar and apple cider. Return half of the seared cabbage and loose leaves to the pan, sprinkle the cooked onions over, then add the rest of the seared cabbage, placing the prettiest wedges on top.

Cover the pan and place in the oven. Braise for 1 hour, or until the cabbage is tender (a sharp knife should slide in easily).

Serve directly from the pan or arrange on a platter and serve family-style.

Nutrition: Calories: 282; Total Fat: 9 g; Saturated Fat: 5 g; Cholesterol: 23 mg; Sodium: 103 mg; Carbohydrates: 50 g; Dietary Fiber: 7 g; Sugar: 40 g; Protein: 4 g.

Source: Recipe from food writer Katie Workman, founder of The Mom 100 website.

Cheddar Potato Gratin

Total time: 2 hours

Servings: 4

This budget-friendly recipe is scaled generously on purpose, because a plate of leftover gratin heated up in the microwave is truly a post-feast breakfast worth getting up early for.You can use any cheddar that fits your budget, from shredded bagged to a fine aged, hand-grated block. Youll really taste the cheese, so if you have a few extra bucks to throw into a dish, this would be a good place to do that.

Storage Notes: Leftover gratin can be refrigerated for up to 4 days.

INGREDIENTS:Butter or cooking spray, for greasing the dish1 cup low-sodium chicken broth1 cup heavy cream2 tablespoons Dijon mustard1 teaspoon kosher salt1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper1-1/2 teaspoons fresh thyme leaves (or 1/2 teaspoon dried thyme), plus more for optional garnish2 pounds 8 ounces russet potatoes, peeled and sliced about 1/8-inch thin8 ounces (2 cups) grated sharp cheddar cheeseMethod:Position the rack in the middle of the oven and preheat to 400 degrees. Lightly grease a 9-by-9-inch baking dish with butter or cooking spray.

In a medium bowl or a liquid measuring cup, combine the chicken broth, cream, mustard, salt, pepper and thyme.

Layer half the potatoes in the prepared baking dish. Then sprinkle on half the cheese and pour in half of the liquid mixture. Repeat with the remaining potatoes, cheese and liquid.

Cover the pan with foil and bake for 30 minutes. Remove the foil and continue to bake for an additional 45 minutes or so, until the potatoes are tender (a knife slides should in easily) and the top is browned and crispy. Let cool for 15 minutes before serving; and sprinkle with more thyme, if using.

NOTE: You can make this dish in a 9-by-13-inch pan. Youll get more crispy potatoes on top and a thinner layer of the creaminess, but it is just as good. Bake just as directed.

Nutrition: Calories: 676; Total Fat: 41 g; Saturated Fat: 26 g; Cholesterol: mg; Sodium: mg; Carbohydrates: g; Dietary Fiber: g; Sugar: g; Protein: g.

Source: Recipe from food writer Katie Workman, founder of The Mom 100 website.

Poached Pears With Chocolate Sauce and Crystallized Ginger

Time: Active: 30 minutes | Total: 2 hours 20 minute

Servings: 4

Be sure to use pears that are just turning ripe, not hard but not soft either for this budget-friendly, festive dessert. Bosc, Bartlett and DAnjou produce delicious results. For a twist, try replacing a cup of apple cider with an equal amount of riesling.

Make Ahead: The poached pears may be refrigerated for up to 1 day before serving. Serve chilled or at room temperature.

INGREDIENTSFor the pears:2 cups apple cider2 cups water cup light or dark brown sugarZest strips from 1 washed lemon, preferably organic3 sprigs fresh rosemary (optional)6 black peppercorns4 just-ripe pears, such as DAnjou, Barlett or BoscFor the chocolate sauce: cup heavy cream cup (5 ounces) finely chopped semisweet chocolate teaspoon kosher or sea salt, or more to taste cup chopped crystallized ginger (optional)Sweetened whipped cream, for serving (optional)Method:Make the pears: In a saucepan just large enough to hold the pears, combine the apple cider, water, brown sugar, lemon zest, rosemary, if using, and peppercorns.

Using a vegetable peeler, peel the pears, leaving them as smooth and neat as possible; try to leave the stem intact. Add the pears to the pot, and cover with a circle of wax or parchment paper to prevent discoloration as the pears cook. Use a lid or a heatproof plate that will fit just inside the diameter of the pot to hold the parchment down.

Turn the heat to medium-high and bring the liquid to a simmer. Reduce the heat to maintain a gentle simmer and cook until the pears are fairly tender but not super-soft, turning every 10 minutes or so, so that all parts of the pear have a chance to be submerged, for 25 to 30 minutes total. The pears are done when the tip of a sharp paring knife or a wooden skewer glides fairly easily into the outside of the pear and meets some resistance as it heads toward the middle. To test this, gently lift a pear out of the pot and insert the tester into the bottom this will keep them unblemished on the sides.

Remove the pan from the heat and let the pears cool with the parchment still on but the lid or plate removed in the poaching liquid until they reach room temperature. The pears will continue to cook in the hot poaching liquid. Either hold at room temperature for a few hours, or transfer the pears to a container and refrigerate for up to 1 day.

Make the chocolate sauce: When ready to serve, place the heavy cream in a small microwave-safe bowl and warm on HIGH until hot but not boiling, about 15 seconds. Place the chocolate chips and salt in another small bowl and pour the hot cream over. Let sit, without stirring, for about 2 minutes, then stir until smooth and the salt is dissolved.

Slice a sliver off the bottom of each pear so they stand up straight. Place each pear on a plate and drizzle each with chocolate sauce. Sprinkle the pears with the chopped crystallized ginger, add a dollop of whipped cream, if using, and serve.

Source: Recipe from food writer Katie Workman, founder of The Mom 100 website.

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Christmas dinner can be festive - and thrifty - with this $60 feast for four - The Durango Herald