The Book of Swag: Chad Kellys next chapter – Red Cup Rebellion

The next chapter in the book of Chad Swag Kelly is underway. After he cleared waivers, the Indianapolis Colts signed Kelly to the practice squad last week.

In a year with incredible turmoil among the quarterback position in the NFL, there was hope for the former Mr. Irrelevant to get his shot at a 53-man roster. With Week 4 kicking off this evening, it appears the teams with question marks behind center are content, and the practice squad in Indy is where Kelly will stay.

Never able to keep his off-field antics in check, he now joins a long list of electric college quarterbacks who cant quite take the next step in the pros.

Chad Kelly, who his 11-year NFL quarterback uncle Jim Kelly once described as having a freaking rocket for an arm, clearly had a gift from a young age. He competed in Punt, Pass, and Kick competitions as a youth, and was a four-time national champion.

In 2008, his family moved from New York to Pennsylvania, where Kelly was to begin his freshman year of high school. Due to unexplained disciplinary reasons, he was suspended from the football team for seven games during his first season, and was dismissed before his sophomore campaign.

Kelly moved back to Western New York and took his school to a Monsignor Martin Association AA title. He was named MVP of the title game, committed to Clemson, made the finals of the Elite 11 competition, and led his team to another title game the next year.

He redshirted with the Tigers in 2012, and threatened the job security of his quarterback counterparts.

And while spending the year on the sideline, Kelly released a rap song...about himself.

Thus, the legend of Swag was born, and it only continued to grow.

Entering the spring, he was the clear-cut favorite to replace Orange Bowl champion Tajh Boyd as the starter for Dabo Swinneys Tigers. In January of that year, Kelly referred to himself as like a Mike Vick, only white.

His immaturity got in the way of his career once again and Kelly was dismissed from the program in April, after a few emotional outbursts. First, he yelled at a former Miss South Carolina after an auto accident in a parking lot.

Just days later, Kelly sealed his fate at Clemson. After a poor on-field outing in the 2014 spring game, he blew up at his coaches for choosing to punt on 4th-and-3 around midfield. He was benched for the remainder of the game in response to his ridiculous sideline tantrum, and subsequently dismissed from the program.

Remember, this was in a intrasquad scrimmage.

At the same time, following a similar narrative, Johnny Manziel was beginning his professional career. Arguably the most polarizing player in SEC history, the 2013 Heisman winner was called undraftable and an arrogant little prick. As talented as Manziel was, his NFL career flamed out after two troublesome seasons with the Browns and after spending time with the CFL and AAF, he is currently unemployed.

Kelly should have heeded the warning from Manziels example.

He committed to Ole Miss in December of 2014, but only after getting his feet back under him and leading East Mississippi Community College (EMCC) to an undefeated Junior College National Championship title. Not 12 days later, he was arrested after late-night incident in Buffalo where he allegedly told bouncers, Im going to go to my car and get my AK-47 and spray this place. Head coach Hugh Freeze leaned into his faith (LOL) and gave the talented gunslinger a chance anyway.

For sake of the program, thank goodness he did.

In Kellys 2015 season with the Rebels, he led the team to its second win over Alabama in two years, broke many of Eli Mannings single season numbers, led the SEC with 2042 passing yards and 31 passing touchdowns, and won a Sugar Bowl MVP. He also ran for over 500 yards and 10 touchdowns.

Some might say he was the best quarterback that Ole Miss has ever seen.

At the very least, his physicality and raw talent he displayed is undeniable. He was electric.

But he couldnt keep his head straight.

During a bye week in his senior season at Ole Miss, Kelly went home to watch his brother Casey play at his high school alma mater. As the story goes, Casey took a late hit, and a brawl broke out. Chad, who was in the stands, hopped a fence and got involved with the scuffle.

Freeze again came to his side, and gave Kelly another chance.

Jump back 10 years prior to Kellys field storm, when Ryan Leaf, who is known as one of the biggest busts in NFL Draft history, was in the conversation for being the number one overall pick to be taken over Peyton Manning.

Leaf, who was described as self-confident to the point where some people view him as being arrogant and almost obnoxious, had an attitude that might resemble that of Kelly. The Swag nickname doesnt come without arrogance, and he knows full well that he can ball. Because he can.

Leaf, who finished second in overall passing in 1997, was a finalist for the Heisman Trophy after his junior year. While the current era of college football is radically different than when Leaf played, the principle of the game remains the same. With that in mind, Kelly put up better numbers, and likely should have been in the Heisman conversation, if not for his troubled history.

Where the two differ, is their national prominence and immediate recognition after college. Kelly, who tore his ACL late in his senior year, was drafted with the last pick in the 2017 NFL Draft. Leaf was taken second overall.

Where the two draw similarities, perhaps, is the inability to stay on the straight and narrow.

After a sub par rookie year, Leaf was often hurt and couldnt find a way to win. After his first (and only) playoff game, he was asked a simple question and blew up at the reporter.

A second season with the Chargers ended in disappointment, and they released Leaf. He played with a wrist injury on two different teams before his pro career came to a close after four years in the league.

Leaf, now working as an analyst for ESPN, tells a tragic story of a young man who couldnt handle the moment. After retirement, his personal life spiraled out of control and his addiction to painkillers led him to spend 32 months in prison after an arrest in 2012.

Though not to the extend of Leafs tragic past, Kelly, who is now in his third season, similarly cannot get out of his own way.

He sat out his rookie season with the Denver Broncos to rehab from his knee injury and required surgery on his throwing wrist. In his second year, Kelly dazzled in the preseason.

He did not make the final 2018 roster with the Broncos, but the team held his rights until October, when Kellys most recent blunder took place.

Kelly, who had just left Von Millers halloween party, broke into the house of a neighbor and sat on the couch aside the two homeowners, mumbling incoherently. He was forcibly chased out with an aluminum vacuum tube, arrested shortly thereafter, and released by the Broncos in the days following.

The male resident claimed the doors were securely locked, the police stated that there was no sign of forcible entrance, and the female resident kept fairly quiet during the investigation. A conspirator might say that Kelly had been there before, if you catch the drift.

[wink, wink]

Whether guilty or not (he is absolutely is, and plead, guilty), Kelly cant seem to shake his off-field troubles.

His case was closed in March, and the Indianapolis Colts signed the 25-year-old quarterback two months later. In Kellys four preseason starts, he turned heads around the league, and completed 74 percent of his passes for an average of 145.8 yards per game.

Despite his early successes in 2019, Kelly was forced to sit out and serve a league-mandated suspension in the first two weeks of the regular season. As a result, the Colts signed veteran Brian Hoyer to back up starting quarterback Jacoby Brissett, and waived Kelly when his suspension was complete.

Rumors came that teams like the Jets and the Steelers were interested, but Kelly cleared waivers and was signed to the practice squad on Sept. 19.

Unlike Graham Harrell, Kellen Moore, Tim Tebow, Colt McCoy, and Jason White, who never saw their captivating college quarterback play explode on the next level, Kelly just hasnt given himself a chance.

Now, in what may be Kellys last opportunity to make the league, he has to stay the course and climb his way out of yet another setback.

And while the next chapter in the Book of Swag has yet to be written, it is rather humorous to imagine Kelly shredding a starting secondary in practice. If nothing more, he will only get better with consistent repetitions against a first-team NFL defense, and perhaps the thats the Colts plan.

Whatever is to happen, it will surely be entertaining. Keep reading.

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The Book of Swag: Chad Kellys next chapter - Red Cup Rebellion

Beef demand heads into the slow months – Grainews

Alberta packers were buying fed cattle in the range of $140 to $143 during the first half of September. The market has come under pressure due to the year over year increase in market-ready feed supplies.

In addition to the higher beef production, beef demand is moving through a seasonal low. During September and October restaurant traffic slows down and retail beef consumption also eases. Feeding margins have been in negative territory over the past four months. As of early September, feedlot pen closeouts are in negative territory by $150 to $200 per head. It looks like we could see another couple or months of negative margins so this will weigh on the feeder market longer term.

Yearling prices have been red hot as of late with 850-pound steers trading at 52-week highs. According to Statistics Canada, the number of yearlings in Western Canada on cow-calf and backgrounding operations as of July 1 was down nearly 14 per cent from July 1 of 2018. Another factor contributing to the strong yearling market is the fact that feed barley prices have dropped nearly $80/mt from early July. Calf values have been relatively flat throughout August and the first half of September. Western Canadian calf numbers are about the same as last year. The fed and feeder markets have potential to be quite volatile over the next couple of months.

photo: File

We may see further downside in the fed market before prices turn higher. U.S. fed cattle supplies during September and October are expected to be extremely burdensome, which will spill over into the western Canadian market. U.S. beef production will be at seasonal highs during September and October while beef demand moves through a seasonal low. This environment could cause the fed market to drop $10 from current levels. The lowest fed cattle prices of the year in Alberta are expected during the first half of October which could be as low as $125.

During November, the weekly slaughter pace will start to decline while demand tends to improve. Packers and retailers start gearing up for the holiday season which starts with the U.S. Thanksgiving. The market tends to percolate slowly higher between December and March. Once we move into the new calendar year, beef supplies start to tighten. Im expecting the Alberta fed cattle market to average $155 in January and February and $162 in March.

Its important that cow-calf producers have an idea of the price expectations for fed cattle because this will determine the price structure for replacements. We have a unique market situation for the feeder market. The number of yearlings (heifers and steers) on western Canadian cow-calf operations and backgrounding operations as of July 1 was 789,800 head, down 13.9 per cent from 916,800 head on July 1 of 2018. In Western Canada, yearling numbers are below year-ago levels while in the U.S., yearling supplies are actually up one per cent from 2018.

The futures market is trading near contract lows but Canadian yearling prices are near annual highs. The Canadian yearling market has divorced from U.S. prices and this will make it very difficult for feedlot operators to be profitable over the winter and spring.

Three main factors that will weigh on calf prices this fall. Currently, Alberta feedlot margins are deep in negative territory by $150 to $200 per head. It doesnt look like the margin structure will turn around over the next couple of months. Secondly, the number of calves on finishing operations in Western Canada as of July 1 was up 7.6 per cent from July 1 of 2018. The drier conditions caused more calves to move into feedlots earlier. This will lower demand later on in fall. Finally, the fed cattle outlook for the summer of 2020 does not look favourable. We could see Alberta fed cattle prices dip to the $110 area, about $10 below the lows of 2019. The calf market needs to discourage production, which means the cow slaughter needs to increase.

Cow-calf operators should be aggressive with the yearling and calf marketings. Yearling prices only have one way to go with values at 52-week highs. Calf prices are expected to trend lower so that the U.S. cow-calf operator starts to liquidate the herd.

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Beef demand heads into the slow months - Grainews

Lewis Hamilton says Mercedes will be underdogs for Russian GP and rest of F1 season – The Telegraph

LewisHamiltonfears he will be the underdog in the remaining six races of the Formula One season. Hamiltonheads into this weekend's Russian Grand Prix with just two victories from his last seven appearances - and a disappointing fourth in Singapore last weekend - while a resurgent Ferrari bid for their fourth win in succession.

Mercedes are unbeaten at the Sochi Autodrome, winning all of the five races staged here.

ButHamiltonbelieves Ferrari drivers Sebastian Vettel, who ended his 13-month losing streak in Singapore, and Charles Leclerc hold the aces - not just ahead of Sunday's race, but for the remainder of the campaign.

"We will not be favourites at any of the next six races," saidHamilton. "It is not my job to worry, but we are conscious of the position we are in.

"We know how fast Ferrari have been on the straights, so for us there isn't a short-term fix, but there are other areas we can do better in.

"At the last three races, we haven't extracted 100 per cent from the weekend and that is what we need to get back to. I can squeeze more out of the car, more out of myself. I haven't done a perfect lap yet this season."

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Lewis Hamilton says Mercedes will be underdogs for Russian GP and rest of F1 season - The Telegraph

REAL SCOOP: Another UN gangster pleads guilty to conspiracy – Vancouver Sun

Kreshnik Ismailaj was arrested in Ontario in July 2018 and charged with one count of first-degree murder. But he only admitted to participating in the plot to kill Red Scorpion gangster Kevin LeClair after a deal was reached with prosecutors.

Associate Chief Justice Heather Holmes accepted a joint Crown and defence lawyer submission and sentenced Ismailaj to nine years and six months in jail, minus 21 months credit for time served in pretrial custody. His remaining term is seven years, nine months.

Dressed in red prison garb, Ismailaj declined to address the court.

But through his defence lawyer Kevin Westell, he expressed remorse for helping others in the UN gang find and gun down LeClair in a busy Langley mall parking lot on Feb. 6, 2009.

Westell said he didnt want to comment in detail about his client because of security risks.

But he said that Ismailaj is a 38-year old man with no criminal record who quite obviously fell into a pretty egregious and horrifying period of time in his life where he was a member of a gang, and a very dangerous gang at that.

He said Ismailaj has insight into the massive amount of pain he has contributed to.

Crown Gordon Matei read the agreed statement of facts that Ismailaj started hanging around with UN gangsters in 2004 or 2005 and became involved in the drug business. Eventually, Ismailaj became a member of the UN gang.

Between May 2008 and February 6, 2009, the UN hunted rivalRed Scorpions gangsters, including Jamie, Jarod and Jonathan Bacon.

Ismailaj assisted in scouting for the UN targets, driving around areas where members of the Bacon-RS gang were known to frequent, Matei said, as well as sharing photos and details of their residences and vehicles.

Ismailaj stayed involved in the conspiracy even after others in the gang mistakenly killed stereo installer Jonathan Barber on May 8, 2008 as he drove Jonathan Bacons vehicle in Burnaby. Barbers girlfriend was also wounded.

On Feb. 6, 2009, Ismailaj and another UN gangster were hunting for LeClair, a senior Red Scorpion. They spotted him and watched him go into a Browns Socialhouse in a busy shopping plaza.

Jamie Bacon (left) and Kevin LeClair (right) in undated photo.FILE / PNG

Ismailaj and the other man contacted UN hitmen Cory Vallee and Jesse Egon Adkins to plan the murder of LeClair after he exited the restaurant, Matei said.

Ismailaj was in a Nissan Murano, parked so he could see the Browns entrance and message Vallee and Adkins when LeClair left. The two shooters were armed and in position, and started firing at LeClair after he got into his truck.

They fled in a Dodge Caravan, followed by Ismailaj in the Murano. The killers dumped their van in a church parking lot and got into the Murano. Ismailaj later destroyed the communication devices they were using.

After Ismailajs 2018 arrest, he provided an in-custody statement stating his involvement in the conspiracy and the LeClair murder and expressed his remorse, Matei said.

The Crown also handed an envelope to Holmes and asked her to read the document inside before sealing it and marking itother relevant considerations.

Holmes said murders and violence that resultfrom gang warfare have far-reaching negative effects for the community we all live in.

Several other UN gangsters have already pleaded guilty to the same conspiracy to murder their rivals. And Vallee was convicted last year of the first-degree murder of LeClair. Adkins fled to Mexico where he is believed to have been murdered.

UN gang boss Conor DMonte is also charged with first-degree murder in LeClairs slaying and remains a fugitive.

Several RCMP officers who worked on the lengthy investigation sat in Courtroom 53 for Thursdays proceedings.

Supt. Dave Chauhan, who heads the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team, said afterwards that this guilty plea comes 10 years after the homicide of Mr. LeClair and speaks to the determination of IHIT investigators who worked with the Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit and the B.C. Prosecution Service on the case.

These partnerships are key to ensuring a successful conclusion to events that impact the safety of our citizens throughout the Lower Mainland, from our specialized units to our frontline officers, Chauhan said.

CFSEU Supt. Paul Dadwal said Ismailaj and the UN are responsible for an unprecedented level of gang violence in the history of British Columbia.

With this latest conviction and sentencing, it should, yet again, send the message to individuals involved in organized crime-related violence that police will relentlessly pursue justice, regardless of how long it takes.

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REAL SCOOP: Another UN gangster pleads guilty to conspiracy - Vancouver Sun

Bethenny Frankel Turned Heads with a Daring, Thigh-High Slit on the Emmys Red Carpet – Bravo

We bow down to fashion queen Bethenny Frankel, who served not one but three fabulous looks this past Emmys weekend. The Real Housewives of New York City alum (who announced her exit from the showjust a few weeks ago) joined Hollywood'selite inon, not in the West Coastand she came ready to slay.

To kick off the festivities, Bethennyattendedthe Hollywood Reporter andSAG-AFTRA Emmy nominee celebrationon Friday evening. The Skinny Girl mogulpaired a sleekblack Balmain skirt with a black mesh-panelMugler top. She accessorized the sophisticated yet sexy getup with gold cuffs and a dazzling gemstone-encrusted Dolce & Gabbana clutch.

"Still under the weather but had to PONY UP for #Emmys weekend!" the RHONY stunner shared on Instagram.

On Saturday, Bethenny made another fabulous appearanceatthe Creative Coalition's Annual Television Humanitarian Awards Gala 2019, where she was honored for her missionwork with BStrong. Bethenny looked positively angelic in a flowy, white Zimmerman dress with delicate lace bell sleeves and white pumps. She completed her ensemble with beachy waves and a pink pout.

Naturally, Bethenny saved her best look for last: The NYC fashionista graced the 2019 Emmy Awards red carpet in a black sleeveless dress with silver floral embellishments and a sexy, thigh-high slit by Alex Perry, which she paired with black pumps by Iris & Ink.However, if you thinkBethenny had the beautiful gown custom-made for the occasion or borrowed it as most Hollywood stars do, think again.

The always-real RHONY alum bluntly told People Now that the dress came straight from her closet. Im not a borrower, Im a buyer, she said. Itd be like sleeping with Ryan Gosling and having to give him back;I dont like to test drive things," she shared.

And that, folks, is a true Bethenny style moment.

The Lookbook is Bravos celebration of personal style. We keep you up to date on the inspiring looks from trend-setting stylistas, test and report on the most-coveted fashion and beauty products, and offer solutions to all your style-related conundrums. Like us on Facebook to stay connected to our daily updates.

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Bethenny Frankel Turned Heads with a Daring, Thigh-High Slit on the Emmys Red Carpet - Bravo

Summerside Western Capitals junior A hockey team heads back out on the road to New Brunswick – The Guardian

SUMMERSIDE, P.E.I.

The Summerside D. Alex MacDonald Ford Western Capitals will be back in familiar surroundings Thursday.

No, it will not be Eastlink Arena. It will be the team bus.The Caps, who are off to a 3-1-0 (won-lost-overtime losses) start will head to Miramichi, N.B., to take on the Timberwolves (0-3-0) in a 7 p.m. start. This will conclude a stretch of five straight games on the road for the Caps to open the 2019-20 Maritime Junior Hockey League regular season.Starting the year with five games on the road is different and we had to do that last year, too, but the guys are excited for Saturday, said Caps forward and captain Brodie MacArthur.Caps head coach Billy McGuigan noted the team cannot look past the Timberwolves with excitement building for Saturdays home opener against the Yarmouth Mariners (4-1-1) at 7 p.m.Yarmouth is coming off a championship season, said McGuigan. Props to (Mariners head coach and general manager) Laurie Barron, it was his first championship (as a head coach) after 15, 16 years in the league. In that aspect, if we were not going to win I was happy to see Laurie win.They are a good hockey team and they are coached well. Matt Barron is arguably one of the best two-way players in the Maritime (Junior) Hockey League.Hes been a staple in their organization for a few years and they have added some guys again. They are having a great start to their season and its going to be a tough game for us. We are going to have to be ready.

Lots of travelAfter having Monday off following three games in three days in New Brunswick last weekend, the Caps were back practising on Tuesday afternoon. Overall, McGuigan noted, the Caps travelled 1,700 kilometres over the three days.There are pros and cons to it, said McGuigan, referring to the hectic schedule. Its a good time to get the team together. Obviously, in years past these points are very important, so you want to get as many as you can.The Caps are back in Grand Falls, N.B., on Oct. 4 and play back-to-back games in Edmundston, N.B., on Nov. 16 and 17.The travel in our division is pretty long, said McGuigan. You go to the Quebec border, you go to the United States border, its important to get them over with when the weather is good.However, after playing six of their first seven games on the road, 13 of the next 18 Caps contests will be at home.Weve been really good at home over the last few years and are hoping to continue that this year, said MacArthur. Once you get a couple of wins at home you feel pretty good and comfortable. Thats what we are going to try and do.

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Click here for story on Caps-Grand Falls game Sunday:

Click here for story on Caps-Fredericton game Saturday:

Click here for story on Caps-Edmundston game Friday:

Recap of Western Capitals road trip last weekend:Friday, Sept. 20Left for Edmundston, N.B., around 8:30 a.m.Checked into hotel in Edmundston before Friday nights game against the Blizzard a 5-2 loss.Saturday, Sept. 21Travelled to Fredericton to take on the Red Wings. The Caps won the game 7-2.Stayed in the New Brunswick capital on Saturday night.Sunday, Sept. 22Back on the road to Grand Falls, N.B., for a 3-0 win over the Rapids in a matinee.Headed home after the game and arrived back in Summerside around midnight.Quote: Playing three in three with all that travel was a tough weekend, said Caps head coach Billy McGuigan. Edmundston sure was a game we would like to have back, but we bounced back as a team and showed a lot of character and came up with six out of eight points on the road (in the first four games, including a 4-0 win at Amherst on Sept. 14).We are really happy with the way things have started and we are optimistic about our hockey club.

Jason.simmonds@journalpioneer.comTwitter.com/JpsportsJasonhttps://www.facebook.com/jason.simmonds.180

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Summerside Western Capitals junior A hockey team heads back out on the road to New Brunswick - The Guardian

15 pilot whales die near St. Catherines Island; Georgia’s 2nd mass stranding this year – WJCL News

Above file video: Dozens of whales end up on St. Simon's Island beachFor the second time in recent months, dozens of pilot whales stranded themselves along Georgia waters.The Georgia Department of Natural Resources says about 26 short-finned pilot whales stranded themselves on or near St. Catherines Island on Wednesday, leaving 15 dead.St. Catherines, Georgia DNR and the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration responded. Staff from the Georgia Sea Turtle Center and the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission also helped.Officials aren't sure why the whales beached themselves. Necropsies are being done to assess the animals health and to search for possible clues to the stranding.It was just two months ago that at least 47 pilot whales were involved in a mass stranding on St. Simons Island. Three whales died. No cause for that mass stranding has been determined.St. Catherines is privately owned and not open to the public.St. Catherines staff found 11-13 whales stranded on the remote island Wednesday morning, according to island director of operations Mike Halderson. Five were alive. Using tarps, tow ropes and vehicles, staff carefully returned four of the whales to the water. The fifth died before it could be moved. Short-finned pilot whales can weigh more than 3 tons and reach 24 feet in length.Later Wednesday, DNR confirmed that five pilot whales had stranded in the marsh. Small groups also were seen swimming that day in a tidal creek and in Sapelo Sound.On Thursday, checks by helicopter and boat spotted no live whales or additional dead ones as of noon, leaving the live whales seen Wednesday unaccounted for. Monitoring is continuing. Necropsies involving NOAA, DNR, St. Catherines and Dr. Terry Norton of the Georgia Sea Turtle Center are being conducted to the extent possible given logistics at the remote sites and the decomposition of carcasses. Some results may not be available for months. DNR senior wildlife biologist Clay George emphasized, however, that the mass stranding on St. Catherines is clearly not related to the capsized freighter in St. Simons Sound. The straight-line distance from the ship to the mass stranding site is more than 30 miles.WHAT YOU CAN DOIf you see a sick, injured, stranded or dead marine mammal, immediately contact Georgia DNR at 1-800-2-SAVE-ME (800-272-8363) or the Southeast U.S. Marine Mammal Stranding Network at 877-WHALE HELP (877-942-5343).NOAA also offers the free Dolphin and Whale 911 app to report a stranded marine mammal. Download the app through the Apple or Google Play Store.Below video: Rescuers save Orcas stranded on Argentine beach

Above file video: Dozens of whales end up on St. Simon's Island beach

For the second time in recent months, dozens of pilot whales stranded themselves along Georgia waters.

The Georgia Department of Natural Resources says about 26 short-finned pilot whales stranded themselves on or near St. Catherines Island on Wednesday, leaving 15 dead.

St. Catherines, Georgia DNR and the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration responded. Staff from the Georgia Sea Turtle Center and the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission also helped.

Officials aren't sure why the whales beached themselves. Necropsies are being done to assess the animals health and to search for possible clues to the stranding.

It was just two months ago that at least 47 pilot whales were involved in a mass stranding on St. Simons Island. Three whales died. No cause for that mass stranding has been determined.

St. Catherines is privately owned and not open to the public.

St. Catherines staff found 11-13 whales stranded on the remote island Wednesday morning, according to island director of operations Mike Halderson. Five were alive. Using tarps, tow ropes and vehicles, staff carefully returned four of the whales to the water. The fifth died before it could be moved.

Short-finned pilot whales can weigh more than 3 tons and reach 24 feet in length.

Later Wednesday, DNR confirmed that five pilot whales had stranded in the marsh. Small groups also were seen swimming that day in a tidal creek and in Sapelo Sound.

On Thursday, checks by helicopter and boat spotted no live whales or additional dead ones as of noon, leaving the live whales seen Wednesday unaccounted for. Monitoring is continuing.

Necropsies involving NOAA, DNR, St. Catherines and Dr. Terry Norton of the Georgia Sea Turtle Center are being conducted to the extent possible given logistics at the remote sites and the decomposition of carcasses. Some results may not be available for months.

DNR senior wildlife biologist Clay George emphasized, however, that the mass stranding on St. Catherines is clearly not related to the capsized freighter in St. Simons Sound. The straight-line distance from the ship to the mass stranding site is more than 30 miles.

WHAT YOU CAN DO

If you see a sick, injured, stranded or dead marine mammal, immediately contact Georgia DNR at 1-800-2-SAVE-ME (800-272-8363) or the Southeast U.S. Marine Mammal Stranding Network at 877-WHALE HELP (877-942-5343).

NOAA also offers the free Dolphin and Whale 911 app to report a stranded marine mammal. Download the app through the Apple or Google Play Store.

Below video: Rescuers save Orcas stranded on Argentine beach

Originally posted here:

15 pilot whales die near St. Catherines Island; Georgia's 2nd mass stranding this year - WJCL News

After Major Upgrades to a Former Ducal Palace, the Croatian Island of Hvar Has its First 5-Star Hotel – Robb Report

While the Dalmatian islands off the coast of Croatia are best known as buzzing summer destinations, modern tourism to some of these hotspots originally started in the winter, when travelers fleeing the cold would retreat here for the milder weather near the Adriatic Sea. In the late 19th century, one such traveler was Empress Elisabeth of Austria, who fell so in love with the island of Hvarsaid to be the sunniest in the archipelagothat she paid to have a dilapidated Dukes palace on the harbor transformed into a hotel. Named in her honor, the Palace Elisabeth Hvar Heritage Hotel has since become a historic landmarkand has just emerged from a two-year renovation that turned it into the islands first true five-star hotel, and the first Leading Hotels of the World member on the islands.

A Penthouse Suite at Palace ElisabethPhoto: Courtesy of Palace Elisabeth

Overseen by Croatian architecture firm Agro Inenjering and Czech interior designer Oto Blaha, the project saw a re-imagining of pretty much everything within the buildings walls. (The exterior, which features elements of both the 13th- and 16th-century Venetian-style Dukes palace and the 1898 Austro-Hungarian-era hotel, enjoys protected status.) The number of accommodations has been reduced to 45 rooms and suites, many with sea views and all with complimentary mini-bars, Guerlain bath products and subtle design nods to the time of the namesake Empress. The latter can also be seen throughout the public spaces, in touches like a wall of white hand fans running up alongside the main staircase, hand-painted murals, period-themed shadowboxes and cheeky portraits peeking out from behind the reception desk.

The Spa Couples SuitePhoto: Courtesy of Palace Elisabeth

The hotel enjoys a perfect location on Hvar towns main harbor, steps from the speed catamaran connections to Split and Dubrovnik (a uniformed staffer will help ferry your luggage anyway) and close to the jumping-off points for yachting adventures, wine toursand cycling tours in the lush interior of the island. When you want the relax away from the fray, there are plenty of idyllic spots at the hotel, including an indoor pool with jetted loungers and an adjacent sun deck, a chic outdoor lounge and a three-room spa offering treatments using high-end lines from France. The breezy San Marco restaurant, which serves Mediterranean-inspired fare (and an abundant included breakfast) overlooking the sea, sits almost on top of the original pillars from the Dukes palaceanother reminder of the spots storied past.

Originally posted here:

After Major Upgrades to a Former Ducal Palace, the Croatian Island of Hvar Has its First 5-Star Hotel - Robb Report

Korcula voted no.5 best island in the world to visit – Croatia Week

Korcula (Photo: Milica Spasojevic)

26 September 2019 The Croatian island of Korcula has been voted among the worlds best 5 islands to visit in 2020 in a survey by global travel site Big 7.

Following on from sample survey results of 1.5 million social audience, previous media scores and contributions from their editorial team, Big 7 has revealed the best islands in the world in the list of the top 50.

Korula is the second most populous Adriatic island after Krk, separated from the Peljeac peninsula by a narrow strait. Towns and villages on the island include Korula, Vela Luka, Blato, Brna, Lumbarda, Raie, rnovo, Pupnat, Smokvica and ara.

This is what Big 7 had to say.

Korcula is one of the must-visit destinations on Croatias South Dalmatian coast. Its a little further out to get to than most of the other islands, so you can enjoy less crowds and a more laid-back feel. People call Korcula Town Little Dubrovnik because of its medieval squares, churches, palaces and houses, while the beaches and dense forest offer incredible scenery.

Korula

In no.1 place was Icelands Flatey island.

In a charming way, it feels very much like a movie set. And so it is. Many movies are set on the island, most notably The Honour of the House based on a short story by Nobel Prize winner Halldr Laxness. The tranquility at this island is unique time stands still.

Flatey island

In second place was Palawan in the Philippines, followed by Espiritu Santo, Vanuatu and Sommary, Norway.

TOP 10 ISLANDS IN THE WORLD 2020:

10th. Bora Bora, Tahiti

9th. Lummi Island, Washington, USA

8th. Barbados

7th. Pemba Island, Zanzibar

6th. The Aran Islands, Ireland

5th. Korcula, Croatia

4th. Sommary, Norway

3rd. Espiritu Santo, Vanuatu

2nd. Palawan, Philippines

1st. Flatey, Iceland

You can check out the full list here.

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Korcula voted no.5 best island in the world to visit - Croatia Week

Staten Island’s Best Dressed: A 50th anniversary at Hilton Garden and more – SILive.com

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- Our borough is filled with style stunners, both young and young at heart, and this column features just a sampling each week. For example, the Hilton Garden of Staten Island, Bloomfield, was the setting for the recent 50th wedding anniversary of Margaret and Joseph Martin.

The elegant celebration, hosted by their three chidren,Jennifer Belford, Karen Kennedy and Paul Martin, was attended by the couple's family and dearest friends.

Check out photos from their party and the last of our back-to-school photos, and other images of Staten Islanders out and about town. Send your 'Best Dressed' photos to gsantos@siadvance.com.

Courtesy Jennifer Belford

Joseph and Margaret Martin's golden anniversary party at the Hilton Garden of Staten Island (left to right): Paul Martin (son), Joseph Martin (the groom- lol), Margaret Martin (bride), Karen Kennedy (daughter), and Jennifer Belford (daughter).

Courtesy Hyland fmaily

Keira and Fiona Hyland are beautiful and headed to Kindergarten and Pre-K 3, respectively.

Courtesy Jennifer Belford

Joseph and Margaret Martin's golden anniversary party at the Hilton Garden of Staten Island: Vincent Kennedy (son-in-law) and the bride and groom's daughter, Karen Kennedy.

Courtesy Partners in Sound Productions

Partners in Sound Productions staff gather for a group photo at their Back to School Sweet 16 Expo.

Courtesy Dennis Surmanek

Liliana Surmanek is looking quite adorable for her first day of Pre-K 3.

Courtesy Jennifer Belford

Joseph and Margaret Martin's golden anniversary party at the Hilton Garden of Staten Island: (left to right) son-in-law, Scott Belford, Joseph Martin (groom), Paul Martin (son), and Vincent Kennedy (son-in-law).

Courtesy Rosanne Mottola

First day of kindergarten for Ryan Mottola.

Courtesy Blomquist family

Kayley, Brendan And Emma Blomquist are ready for the new school year!

Courtesy Jennifer Belford

Joseph and Margaret Martin (groom and bride) with sister-in-law Cathy Martin and Michael Martin at their golden anniversary party at the Hilton Garden of Staten Island.

Courtesy Brenda Laino

Alexis Laino is looking beautiful for her first day of first grade.

Courtesy Jennifer Belford

Joseph and Margaret Martin with Eileen and William Bonner, friends of 40 years, at the Martins' golden anniversary party at the Hilton Garden of Staten Island.

Courtesy Lotito family

Jack Lotito looking handsome for his junior year at Saint Peters Boys High School.

Courtesy Randi Martinucci

Perez children are all smiles for their first day of school. Left to right are Brooke, Jason and Jade.

Courtesy Jennifer Belford

Sarah Nicoll (niece), Ellen Nicoll (sister-in law), Margaret Martin (bride), Joseph Martin (groom), and William Nicoll (brother-in law) at Joseph and Margaret Martin's golden anniversary party at the Hilton Garden of Staten Island.

Courtesy Dolman family

Sophia and Vittoria Dolman are looking beautiful for their first day of junior year at Tottenville High School.

Courtesy Jennifer Belford

Joseph and Margaret Martin with their youngest granddaughter, MaryKate Kennedy.

Courtesy RoseAnn Rea

Andre Rea is ready for the seventh grade and Christian Rea is ready for fifth grade.

Courtesy Jennifer Belford

Joseph and Margaret Martin's golden anniversary party at the Hilton Garden of Staten Island (left to right): Michael Martin (nephew), Margaret Martin (niece), Joseph Martin (groom), Courtney Martin (niece) and Margaret Martin (bride).

Courtesy Karen Ambrosio

Belle and Gabby Ambrosio are all smiles for the first day of first and fifth grade, respectively.

Courtesy Jennifer Belford

Jennifer Belford, Karen Kennedy, Paul Martin (Joseph and Margaret Martin's Children) at their parents' golden anniversary party at the Hilton Garden of Staten Island.

Courtesy Kimberly Borges

First day at Our Lady of Good Counsel for Nicholas Borges and his cousin, Emma Creech, at left, and Rebecca Borges, who attends St Joseph by-the-Sea High School.

Courtesy Brenda Laino

Arielle Laino is so cute for her first day of second grade.

Courtesy Tracy McTiernan

Caitlin McTiernan looking beautiful for her first day of school at Blessed Sacrament.

Courtesy Jennifer Belford

Elizabeth Belford (grandaughter), Jennifer Belford (daughter), Scott Belford (son-in-law) at Joseph and Margaret Martin Joseph and Margaret Martin's golden anniversary party at the Hilton Garden of Staten Island.

Courtesy Laurel Bacenet

Lily & Reilly Madill are back-to back cuteness for their first day of school.

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Staten Island's Best Dressed: A 50th anniversary at Hilton Garden and more - SILive.com

The Windswept Scottish Islands Producing Beautiful Artisanal Goods – The New York Times

LAST MAY, THREE England-based craftspeople the basket makers Mary Butcher and Annemarie OSullivan and the furniture maker and designer Gareth Neal were sent by their London gallery, the New Craftsmen, for a weeklong residency in Orkney, a chain of about 70 small islands off the northern coast of Scotland. They explored Mainland, Orkneys largest island, as well as North Ronaldsay, a three-and-a-half mile spit of land (population approximately 50) rich in farmland, marram grass, seaweed-eating sheep and Neolithic ruins. They also met with the Orcadian furniture maker Kevin Gauld and the sculptor Frances Pelly, both of whose work is deeply bound up with the islands history and landscape.

The New Craftsmens co-founder and creative director, Catherine Lock who travels across Britain in search of potters, textile designers and other artisans to highlight at her Mayfair showroom has long been inspired by Orkneys culture, and commissioned the first piece she sold at the gallery, a collaboration between Gauld and Neal, on the archipelago seven years ago. Since then, the pairs beautifully austere straw Brodgar chair has been a consistent best seller, with more demand than Gauld can answer.

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Before craft was called craft, when it was just the stuff people made from what was around in order to get by, objects were indivisible from their provenance. And in a place as remote as the Orkney Islands, that connection is still strong but the link to the outside marketplace less so. Lock invited these three makers to see how they might channel the spirit of this place through objects. The goal of the project is the creation of new work both collaborations and individual pieces that express the spirit and traditions of Orkney, exposing it to a larger global audience while preserving and reinvigorating the distinctive skills found there.

One can understand a place by what its people make. Because trees are scarce here, Orcadians historically had to rely on driftwood and shipwrecks for timber; you can still find stone houses with roofs made of upturned old boats. The islands are flush with heather, peat, seaweed and sandstone, but locals have a special relationship with straw, which they have long used for everything from roofing and bedding to shelving, rainwear and furniture. Perhaps the most famous local product is the original Orkney chair: a winglike seat with a tall curved back, sometimes with a hood, made from coiled and woven straw and a frame of reclaimed timber. The shape provided warmth in winter and served as a wind block inside drafty houses. I love that the most humble of materials, like straw, can become immensely precious and useful in the hands of someone who knows what theyre doing, says Lock. But today, Gauld says, there are only a handful of businesses in the world dedicated to making these chairs. Nineteenth-century versions fetch between $2,500 and $5,000 on sites like 1stdibs.com.

THE NEW CRAFTSMEN, which opened in 2012, has sought to create a bigger market for both the aesthetic of handmade crafts as well as the traditional skills behind them. Often passed from generation to generation, many of these ancient trades have been fading as the world shifts from the artisanal to the mass produced. But simultaneously, thanks in part to the gallerys profile in Londons art and design scene, there is a growing group of young makers, often rural transplants, who have begun apprenticing with older masters and are bringing a modern design sensibility to centuries-old techniques.

Lock hopes the Orkney project might lead to regular straw-craft workshops on the islands and perhaps even the founding of a straw school in its largest town, Kirkwall, on Mainland, that would train a new generation of master craftspeople.

Work from the residency is on display in a show titled Portrait of Place: Orkney at the gallery through next month. For it, Gauld and Neal have made an oak-and-straw side table, dining chair and low lounge chair, all crafted with straw grown on Gaulds land. Butcher has been working on a series of bags and vessels inspired by domestic baskets using straw, beach grass, field rushes and seaweed, and OSullivan created a large-scale straw light and a table influenced by a traditional technique used to make straw mattresses in Orkney. These will be displayed alongside objects from Orkney artisans, including Pelly, who lives and works in a wind-battered cottage on Mainland. The elemental sculptures she creates, composed of repurposed objects and materials including stone, wood, clay and willow, will carry the calm of her landscapes heath and sea to Mayfair and, perhaps, signal a new beginning.

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The Windswept Scottish Islands Producing Beautiful Artisanal Goods - The New York Times

Cancer behind them, two Grand Island firefighters return to duty – Grand Island Independent

Running into a burning house is one kind of bravery. Battling cancer is another.

Grand Island firefighters Lonnie Mitteis and Bryan Stutzman, both 58, returned to work Wednesday after missing significant time due to cancer.

Mitteis, a firefighter-paramedic, had been gone nine months while he was tackling bladder cancer. Stutzman, who had prostate cancer, was gone eight weeks.

For Mitteis, who learned of his bladder cancer Jan. 8, what was the low point?

Oh, it was the chemo, by far, he said.

Not being able to do anything was tough. When youre used to going and going and going and literally, it takes everything youve got to get out of the chair to go to the restroom, it wears you out, Mitteis said, adding that he was sick. I didnt believe it was possible to be that sick.

Saying chemo is terrible isnt enough. Its horrible, he said. He started chemo in the middle of January. For the next three months, he had three days when he actually felt like a human being.

Along the way, Mitteis gained some humility because he saw cancer patients who were a lot sicker than he was.

On May 20, a surgeon in Omaha took my bladder and my prostate and he built me a new bladder out of 60 centimeters of my small intestine. Its called a neobladder.

Mitteis is extremely happy to be at back at work.

I really didnt think this would ever happen, Mitteis said. When I first found out I was sick, I thought my career at the Fire Department was over. I really did.

Stutzman, a battalion chief, had his prostate removed.

Its hard to get a phone call telling you that you have cancer, Stutzman says. You never think its going to happen to you, and when you get that call it sends you to some dark places. You think the worst, he said.

People who have their prostate removed sometimes find it messes with your head, he said.

Theres a possibility of a lot of side-effects with surgery like that. Luckily, I havent had them. But thats all you think about, he said.

In December 2017, Grand Island firefighter Jedd Bohlender, only 49, died of pancreatic cancer.

We just lost Jedd to cancer, Stutzman says. His co-workers just watched him waste away. So you see that and you hear the word cancer is in you, youre going to fear the worst, he said.

He had different treatment options. But he decided to go with surgery after talking to a cancer doctor. His niece, whos a registered nurse, works for the doctor.

The physician pointed out that cancer is now the leading cause of death among firefighters.

If you do radiation and you get another cancer in that region, you cant do radiation again, the doctor told Stutzman. And surgery becomes 10 times more difficult, because that radiation just kind of mucks everything up.

Stutzman received the great news that he is cancer-free.

Still, the surgery was tough. It was four to six weeks of I dont ever want to do that again, he said.

During the recovery, he wasnt allowed to do any lifting. So you just sit around.

Stutzman has been a Grand Island firefighter since May of 1985.

When he was fighting his battle, Mitteis received a huge amount of support from other firefighters.

He got cards from as far away as Germany and New Zealand. He also received many phone calls, texts and other messages from Canada and all over the U.S.. They came from people with whom hes worked and competed. Mitteis takes part in firefighting competitions, such as the 3M Scott Firefighter Combat Challenge at the State Fair.

Those messages played a big role in helping Mitteis get through it. They were all positive, and thats what was driving me almost to the point of if I hadnt returned, I would have felt guilty, he said. Yeah. I didnt want to let them down.

Mitteis, a St. Paul native, will celebrate 19 years as a Grand Island firefighter on Nov. 1.

A paramedic knows more than a little about medicine.

Mitteis disagreed with a doctor and a physicians assistant who thought his problem was his prostate. Later, one doctor told him his refusal to accept the initial diagnosis probably saved his life.

In late July, Mitteis began to feel like he might come back to work. He even competed, on a limited basis, at the firefighter challenge at this years State Fair.

Before starting back full-time this week, he was on light duty for two weeks.

Cancer is the leading cause of death among firefighters, Stutzman said. Bladder cancer is one of the most common killers.

The GIFD has about 70 employees. Since 1984, 13 to 15 firefighters have had some form of cancer, Stutzman said. Three of them have died Bohlender, George Arnett and George Pontious.

Twenty or 30 years ago, houses were mostly built of wood and other natural products, Stutzman said. Now many of the materials are plastic and treated fabrics. Firefighters deal with a lot of carcinogens, he said.

When he started, if you washed your clothes, you were made fun of, Stutzman said. The badge of honor went to who had the dirtiest helmet. In retrospect, that was not good.

Stutzman is in charge of setting out specifications for a new GIFD fire truck. In the modern world of firefighting, gear is kept in separate compartments after firefighters extinguish a fire.

Firefighters are using personal protective equipment that limits their exposure. Experts say that a persons body, when it heats up, absorbs toxins at four times the normal rate, Stutzman said.

Exhaust systems are being installed so that engine exhaust doesnt get into fire stations.

International firefighter unions are trying to help prevent cancer in firefighters.

But its also up to individual firefighters, Stutzman said. Were in that toxic atmosphere, he said. They just try to minimize the risk as best they can.

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Cancer behind them, two Grand Island firefighters return to duty - Grand Island Independent

Godzilla 2 Made Skull Island The MonsterVerse’s Monster Island – Screen Rant

Godzilla: King of the Monsters may have quietly introduced one of the most important locations in Godzilla lore to the MonsterVerse - albeit with a different name - since it would seem that Kong's home, Skull Island, is the MonsterVerse's take on Toho's Monster Island.

Skull Island first appeared in the original King Kong movie, all the way back in 1933. The island is inhabited by natives, and of course, King Kong himself. On Skull Island, Kong is worshiped like a god. Over the years, different versions of the island have been brought to the big screen, with the latest incarnation being introduced in Kong: Skull Island in 2017. In this movie, Skull Island is a habitat for multiple giant creatures, but Kong is the most powerful of them all. It eventually earns the attention of Monarch, who set up a base there to study the monsters that live on the island.

Related: Was Godzillas Burning Form Originally Going To Be Blue Fire?

The credits of Godzilla: King of the Monsters reveal various tidbits about the aftermath of Godzilla's showdown with King Ghidorah in Boston. The credits include numerous newspaper clippings that describe what happens after Ghidorah's defeat. One headline reads, "New Titans Are Drawn To Skull Island." First of all, this piece of information clearly sets up Godzilla vs. Kong, because it means that other Titans are on their way to Kong's home. Secondly, it draws comparisons to Monster Island, a place that has been a part of Godzilla history since the 1960s.

While Godzilla has often been shown to live deep in the ocean, this hasn't always been the case. In classic Toho movies, Godzilla was shown to reside in a tropical environment called Monster Island, which was also home to Rodan, Gorosaurus, Anguirus, Kumonga, and more. There, the monsters live in isolation, perfectly free of humans. Most of the kaiju on the island have learned to live in peace, but occasionally there's in-fighting between the monsters. Different variations of the island have appeared in multiple Godzilla films, including Godzilla vs. King Ghidorah in 1991.

If the credits of the King of the Monsters is any indication, the next variation is the MonsterVerse's Skull Island - though this is something that King Kong may not be happy about, and could lead to trouble. Skull Island being one of the main entry points for Hollow Earth could make it a hotspot for Titan activity. The new Titans who are coming to Skull Island may intend to make it their new place of residence. If so, by the time Godzilla vs. Kong rolls around, Skull Island could be the new home to adiverse group of Titans, and essentially the new Monster Island.

More: Kong Cant Beat Godzilla In The MonsterVerse Like He Did In The Original Movie

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Mara Jade Can't Be Star Wars Canon (Because Disney's Already Used Up Her Stories)

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Godzilla 2 Made Skull Island The MonsterVerse's Monster Island - Screen Rant

Recovery continues on Ocracoke Island but at slow pace – WRAL.com

By Bryan Mims, WRAL reporter

Ocracoke, N.C. The recovery process on Ocracoke Island is moving along but slowly after Hurricane Dorian.

Heavy equipment and hand-held rakes are helping clear up debris and damage after flooding swamped the area.

On one side of the dunes you can see and hear the tender crash of ocean waves. On the other side is the crash of ruins rising like the foulest of mountains.

Like the waves, the trucks rumble in, offloading what had been valuable possessions just weeks before. Now it's all stashedin abeachfront parking lot off lonely Hwy.12. Its final destination: Recycling centers and landfills off the island.

Its origin: The streets of Ocracoke Village, where Leslie Lanier is raking up after her own rubble mound, which was at lasthauled away.She owns the Books To Be Red bookstore and managed to salvage most of her books from Dorian's deluge.

"You know, it's our stuff," Lanier said. "It's my books, it's my paperwork, it's my children's artwork. But now that we've thrown it all away, it's good to see it gone."

People treasure the sound of the junk haulers. It's the sound of cleansing, healing. In a nod to normalcy, the Magic Bean Coffee Shop is perking again, too. Caitlin Mitchell, an islander all her 30 years, will soon have to rip out her shop's floors. For right now, lattes and lots of porch sitting are good for her neighborhood's soul.

"Helps me feel like we're moving in a forward direction," Mitchell said of the cleanup process. "It's wonderful to see people enjoying the space and just kind of sit and breathe and relax."

After more than a week of silence, the voice of Ocracoke, 90.1 FM, is on the airwaves again. Classes will start Monday for 175 school students. Tommy Hutcherson saw to it that the Ocracoke Variety Store would be open for his neighbors, reliable as a lighthouse.

"Our aim is to always be here for the people, and that's what we do, to be here for people in dire situations," Hutcherson said.

The rubbish heaps will eventually be gone, and we'll be mesmerized again by those other mounds from the dunes.

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Recovery continues on Ocracoke Island but at slow pace - WRAL.com

Marco Island police officers accused of sexually traumatizing a young woman – Wink News

MARCO ISLAND

A new lawsuit against the Marco Island Police Dept. says four officers repeatedly took advantage of a young woman. It is the latest accusation against a department that seems to be caught in an ongoing saga of controversy.

The warning letter states the MIPD officers capitalized on the fragility, vulnerability and instability of the woman. Kristine Hollingsworth, at the Florida Dept. of Health, said it is normal in similar cases.

This is not something that just happens once in a blue moon, Hollingsworth said. It happens 365 days a year, 24 hours a day and seven days a week.

The letter from the 21-year-old womans attorney, Dennis Webb, details what happened in 26 pages. Some of the evidence, such as sexually graphic text messages and videos, the attorney uses to claim that the womans reputation was sabotaged.

We spoke to the mother and father of the woman. The parents said they were not commenting at this time.

We do see that victims are also shamed, Hollingsworth said.

The document said it is Marco Islands fault for not providing appropriate training to the police officers and having them running amok.

The woman, is seeking money for lost wages and the cost of psychiatric treatment. The City of Marco Island has 21 days to respond or the lawyer said they would file the lawsuit.

As for Hector Fernandez, who lives in Marco Island, he hopes the scandal clears up soon.

We just had a little bit of a dysfunctional city government going for a bit, Fernandez said. And hopefully thats all been cleaned up, and things have gotten much more organized.

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Marco Island police officers accused of sexually traumatizing a young woman - Wink News

Survivor: Jeff Probst Eyes the Island of the Idols Cast – Parade

Over the past two weeks, Parade has presented interviews with this seasons castaways who will compete for the title of sole survivor. But before we get to tonights premiere, weve got one more cast breakdown. Before the season began, it was time to hear from host Jeff Probst and executive producer Matt Van Wagenen as to how they thought this group of twenty would fare.

From an overall perspective, the Island of the Idols cast boasts a diverse array of ages, locations, ethnicities, and life stories. Season 39 was the first cast put together after the departure of mainstay Lynne Spillman, which caused the show to look at the casting process differently. What resulted is a group of twenty fans who have gone through trials and tribulations to get to the island, and theyre ready to let Survivor change them.

This group is all very open about whats going on in their lives, says Van Wagenen. Its almost like LOST. Everyone is here for a purpose. A lot of people feel like this is a walkabout. Theyre going off on this adventure because its something thats needed in their lives. These people are great storytellers and very in touch with their feelings.

I think what the audience is going to see is that its the most powerful group of women weve ever had, adds Probst. Theres something undeniably happening in our culture, and you see that manifesting in womens new confidence. A sisterhood that Im not used to seeing. It would not surprise me at all if five or six women got together and said, Lets just run this game. Lets slay every man out there and claim there.'

In honor of the theme of this season involving veteran players Sandra Diaz-Twine and Rob Mariano as teachers of Survivor, Probst and Van Wagenen were asked assign the castaways Survivor superlatives. Read on for their answers, and be sure to check out Parade.com after the episode tonight for an exclusive breakdown of the premiere with Probst.

Most Likely to Find an IdolProbst: Good first question. A lot of these people are going to make the mistake of looking early because they are so eager. Im going to give that to Chelsea Walker. I think Chelsea is so impulsive, and shes wanted this for so many years. I dont know if she can contain herself. Shes going to run around like crazy. But shes so driven, used to winning and overachieving, that shes most likely to find one.Van Wagenen: Chelsea Walker. Its been her thing for years. I remember after she was cast, casting sent us a video of her in her dads garage. Her dad had built her a replica of the challenge where you have to balance a ball through a maze shaped like a snake. There was a video of her doing it and talking [expletive] afterward. She has been so excited for this. Shes been in the rotation for years, and this felt like the right time for her. Shes going to be aggressive. She probably goes in and tells herself, Chill out. I dont think she can help herself. And thats one of the things I love about her. We saw a shift last year with women finding idols. I hope we get to see more of that.

Most Likely to Get Tricked by a Fake IdolVan Wagenen: This is kind of a weird choice. I wonder if Tom Laidlaw would get fooled. Its like taking down a giant. I think hes going to be playing aggressively. As the oldest player on his tribe, Im curious how hes going to relate to younger people. I think hell feel it and start looking for things. He has so many people on his tribe who are tricky. If you go down the list of people on his tribe, they all have things up their sleeves. Tom is very confident, and hes one of those guys who I think can have their confidence catch up to them.Probst: Damn, thats a good question too. Tom Laidlaw is most likely to get tricked by a fake idol. And I dont think hell see it coming. It wont occur to him that it could be fake.

Most Likely to Go on a Challenge RunProbst: Tommy Sheehan. Tommys an all-around athletic guy. He seems pretty nimble in terms of thinking and staying light on his feet while having a sense of humor. That is the one thing that differentiates. People ask, How is Joe Anglim so dominant? Its not only that hes physically dominant, but hes also very calm. That adrenaline kicks in in challenges, and it takes over. Suddenly youre behaving in ways you wouldnt normally behave because your fight or flight is pushing you. With Tommy, I dont think he gets that excited about it. Hell stay calm.Van Wagenen: I would hate to be with this group physically speaking. Id look so short and schlubby compared to all these people. It was not intentional. Kellee Kim would be my pick. Its almost cliched at this point to get rid of the strong guys at the merge. The truth is the big, strong guys arent winning challenges. Its more about mental endurance with puzzles and a little bit of athleticism. If youre talking about an all-around player, Kellees IQ is sky-high, and shes clearly an athlete. Shes the type of person I could see locking in.

Most Likely to FlipProbst: Dan Spilo. There are a lot of flippers here. But Dan is most likely to flip. Hes a good read and would be smart when hes thinking about doing it. I also think Dan wants to play a big game. Sometimes that leads people to make moves simply to make a move. Quite often, that drives the story and does you well. Ive noticed over the years that with players who are reluctant to make moves, the game tends to start passing them by. If youre not driving, youre a passenger, as another player has said. Dan is definitely a driver.Van Wagenen: All of them! (Laughs.) I think the game has changed so much. When Cochran flipped years ago in his first season, there was such a backlash against it. Thats just not the case anymore. With voting blocs and trust clusters, whatever you call it. Thats part of the game now.

Least Likely to FlipVan Wagenen: I feel like Janet Carbin is someone who does not want to lie. She wants to be truthful. Shes going to have a hard time doing it. If she did, I think shed have a hard time not getting caught. Its also interesting talking with Elizabeth Beisel. I dont think shes going to have a hard time flipping. But being dishonest is going to be tough for her. Everyone is here to play the game. And these days, flipping is like an Immunity Challenge. Its what you do.Probst: I dont think anyone is likely to remain loyal unless its in their best interest. I think this is going to be a very competitive season. Theres no Edge of Extinction, so there is no second chance. They should all flip! Thats the name of the game. You just have to know when to get off the boat youre on and get on another one. Id be very disappointed if there were someone I could look at and say, Oh, theyd never flip. Theyre too loyal. Survivor is not about loyalty.

Class ClownVan Wagenen: Elaine Stott! I have a soft spot in my heart for Elaine. During casting, she actually took one of our casting associates and put him in an armbar until he tapped out. She is fantastic. She has so much charisma, so much fun with every situation shes in. Shes one of those people who I was immediately drawn to. I could sit and talk to her for hours. If we could get a bunch of Elaines from a factory, it would be fantastic. I cant wait to see how she does. Shes so charming and funny. Shes not physically intimidating. If she can last, I think she can do really well.Jeff: On one tribe, itd be Tommy. On the other, it would be Elizabeth. She has a great sense of humor about herself. She doesnt mind making fun of herself. When youve proven what shes proven of what shes capable of achieving, you cant hurt her. She laughs at herself. Tommys job of being a fourth-grade teacher allows him to use humor; thats how he inspires his kids to learn. He talked about it when we met him. Im the guy who everybody wants to be in class with because Im fun.

Biggest FlirtProbst: Chelseas a flirt, in the same way that Parvati is a flirt. There are certain people, men and women, who know that part of their charm is flirting. They know how to do it, and they know how to make the person theyre flirting with feel very special. Even though Chelsea is scattered with her energy, shes determined to get your attention.Van Wagenen: I think it will be one of the guys. Dean Kowalski likes to lay it on thick. I have a feeling in New York City, hes probably on Bumble getting a lot of dates. For the women, Ill also go back to Elaine. Elaine will flirt with men and women. It doesnt matter who you are. She said to me she likes taking things. Guarantee by the end of episode 1, shes already flirted with Jeff.

Most OutspokenVan Wagenen: Noura Salman. Shes going to tell you what she thinks. Shes going to sometimes get herself in trouble because shes not going to hold back. Shed like to, but I dont think she has it in her. Thats part of the reason why shes her. If we had people who were good at holding back, we probably wouldnt put them on the show. Noura is definitely in the front of the line for that.Probst: Id say Karishma Patel. Karishma may start quietly. But if her true personality comes out, she is very outspoken. She has strong opinions, shes boisterous, and she can be loud. All great qualities. She doesnt suffer fools at all.

Most OutdoorsyProbst: Janet lives in the water. Even though shes almost 60, she doesnt seem to tire. She doesnt care about the rain, injuries, or what she looks like. Her entire swimsuit could fall off and she wouldnt care. It doesnt matter to her. She wants to be out here and live in it. Shes the one who wants the weather to be difficult because she thinks it will be an advantage for her.Van Wagenen: I think Jack Nichting is pretty outdoorsy. At Ponderosa, while people werent looking, he went halfway up a coconut tree. I know Jack wants to make a mark as a jungle boy out there. I have a feeling hell actually flourish. He has big shoes to fill. He does have a really interesting story and is really smart. He was an alternate last year, and this has happened before. Jay from Millennials vs. Gen X came out as an alternate for Kaoh Rong, and it didnt work out. If Jack can leave his mark on the game the same way Jay did, then were going to be stoked.

Most DramaticVan Wagenen: Thats a tough one; theres a lot of them. Ill say Noura. Shes outspoken and dramatic with big energy. I hope she does well and doesnt get in trouble early. She is going to be drama. Even her life has been dramatic. She made a lot of money and was really successful in her career. Then she ditched it all. Shes going to continue to be dramatic out there.Probst: I think its Noura and Dan. If youre doing drama royalty, the king would be Dan and the queen would be Noura. And ironically, theyre on the same tribe. So it should be a lot of fun to watch.

Most UniqueProbst: Without question, Vince Moua. Ive never met anyone like Vince in my life or casting. Hes two completely different people. Theres College Vince and Homeboy Vince. Its like someone who speaks two languages. He can intercut between the two sides of his personality. He grew up in two separate worlds and knows how to use those. Thats a giant skill out here, so long as he can find when to use which one.Van Wagenen: Vince. That was actually one of the words we used to describe him when he walked through the door for the first time because of his background and culture. Hes destined to be a shaman in his family. Its amazing. But he also grew up in a tougher neighborhood, then went to Stanford. The thing with unique characters is that they can go one of two ways. Tai was very unique, but he fit in well. Other times people are unique, they stick out like sore thumbs. The question is what works out for him. I think he has a lot of upside.

Most AuthenticProbst: I think the most authentic is Lauren Beck. She is what she appears to be. She wears her heart on her sleeve. Shes super likable, very smart, beautiful on the outside and inside. And shes a dangerous Survivor player. Shell tell you, Dont think I dont know whats going on. Im playing just like you are.Van Wagenen: This is the one who really surprised me. I would say Ronnie Bardah. I loved Ronnie from the first time we met him in casting. Hes someone who I was cheering to be on the show. Hed be on the top of my list for any season. I just liked him because hes a great storyteller. Hes got an interesting backstory and hes going to play the game hard. As weve gotten closer to Day 1, hes really opened up. Its funny that you would say a poker player is authentic. If he can express that to everybody, its going to charm them. Because its charmed me. On the surface, he comes off one way. But I think theres such a deep level to him that its ready to open up and talk. It will be interesting to see how he is with everybody else.

Best LiarVan Wagenen: I think part of being a good liar is not looking like that type. Its the one who surprises you. In a weird way, I think Molly Byman is going to be one to catch people. Victoria Baamonde was a fantastic liar because she comes off as sweet and nice. But theres a dastardly side to her. Molly is a huge threat. Part of it is because shes got that big smile, big hair, big energy. I dont think shes lying just because she likes it. I think its for the sake of the game. Shes not used to that in her life, but shes going to take to that like a fish to water.Probst: Jason Linden is probably a pretty good liar. Im not saying he does it for a living. What he does in his career is maybe omit certain things or change the focus to help drive his story. Those skills allow him to easily not tell you the same thing six different ways to convince you his story is the one you should listen to.

Most Likely to SucceedProbst: The people that stand out would be Molly, Lauren, Missy, Tommy, Elizabeth, and Elaine. Ive listed all women except Tommy. Wow. Molly was the first person we put on the season. We met her and loved her. Then she called and said, I have to pay my tuition for school, which is during the same time that Survivor shoots. And we said, Dont pay your tuition. Well commit to you right now. That speaks to how much we liked her because we like to keep our options open to the last second. I like Molly because shes complex. Shes driven to accomplish things, as evidenced by her already big accomplishments in a young life. She also has a bit of a chip on her shoulder. She wants to show her dad she can do this. She studies Survivor like a savant. She has these boards with all these strategies. But theres another side to Molly thats impulsive and thrill-seeking. Shes the one who says, Yeah, Ill do that! Dont judge a book by its cover. Molly is a threat to win because she can call on any skill and is the type of player who might say, Im going to go for it.

Missy personifies why I still like doing this show. Its because of the people I get to meet. Missy is one of those people who youd get one impression from talking to her for five minutes and another from talking to her for an hour. She doesnt ever feel the need to brag or tell you things shes been through or accomplished. The more you dig, the more you realize, Oh my God, youre only 24?! I like Missy as a winner in this game. I think people are going to be surprised as they get to know how good she could be at playing. People who are quiet talkers seem to hold some power.

Van Wagenen: I think Molly is going to do fantastic. The only thing that can get in her way is if people see her coming because shes a triple threat. Shes worked hard for this. Shes at a good age. I think that helps you relate to older people and younger people. I think shes well-spoken and smart and shes going to do really well. I also think Jason is going to do well though maybe not right off the bat. He talked to me how about he looks like Rob Cesternino and said, Where Im from, they make molds of this face. (Laughs.) But he plans on playing a little bit like Rob. Hes with a lot of big jocks on his tribe. If he can endear himself with his tribe and get on a strong footing to begin with, I have high hopes for him.

I also have high hopes for Ronnie if he can successfully open up and not just come off like a gruff East Coaster and [expletive] talker. Weve also been surprisingly optimistic about Missy. At Ponderosa, she didnt give away a lot. I think people were wondering whats behind that face. Then she sits down with you and starts to warm up and charm you. All of a sudden, you want to listen to her. Shes a huge fan; shes athletic, shes smart. I have high hopes for her as well.

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Survivor: Jeff Probst Eyes the Island of the Idols Cast - Parade

Andaman, Nicobar Islands May Not Be Habitable In Future: Report – NDTV News

"Islands like Andaman and Nicobar, Maldives etc will have to be vacated," said an author of the report

Islands like Andaman and Nicobar might not be habitable in a few years due to rise in sea level and increase in climatic events like cyclones, said one of the key authors of a global report on climate change on Wednesday.

The Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate (SROCC), prepared by the intergovernmental panel on climate change (IPCC), has cautioned that warming of oceans will increase the frequency and severity of climatic events like cyclones in India.

"Islands like Andaman and Nicobar, Maldives etc will have to be vacated. People will have to be migrated from there as due to rising sea levels, these places will become uninhabitable," said Anjal Prakash, the coordinating lead author of the IPCC report.

He said the focus has to be on adaptation and building climate resilience.

"Even with an under two degree rise in global temperature, there will be sea level rise, glaciers will melt and many communities will be affected. Some of these events are irreversible. So focus has to be on adaptation for the coming future," said Mr Prakash, who is also an associate professor of Regional Water Studies at TERI School of Advanced Studies.

According to the report from the IPCC, a United Nations' body in charge of monitoring climate change, sea level has risen globally around 15 cm during the 20th century, but it is currently rising more than twice as fast - 3.6 mm per year and accelerating.

"The sea level will continue to rise. It would reach around 30-60 cm by 2100 even if the greenhouse gas emissions are sharply reduced and global warming is limited to well below 2 degrees Celsius. In the event of high greenhouse gas emissions, it would rise to 60-110 cm," the report said.

India has a 7,500 long coastline, which is the seventh longest coastline in Asia. The country has coastlines along the Arabian Sea to the west and the Bay of Bengal to the east.

"The impact of the warming of oceans will increase the climatic events such as cyclones. These events are predicted to be on a rise and will be more severe in future decades," the report prepared by nearly 30 authors said.

It said the salinity of water bodies will increase which will have impact on irrigation and domestic use.

"The salinity ingress will pollute the freshwater bodies and will have huge impacts on water for irrigation and domestic use. The shifting rainfall patters of Indian monsoon will also have bearing for people living on the coastal areas," it said.

According to the report, the world's oceans have absorbed more than 90 per cent of the warming that has occurred on earth over the last 50 years, with the rate of ocean warming more than doubling since 1993.

"It is virtually certain that the global ocean has warmed unabated since 1970 and has taken up more than 90 per cent of the excess heat in the climate system. Since 1993, the rate of ocean warming has more than doubled.

"Marine heat waves have very likely doubled in frequency since 1982 and are increasing in intensity. By absorbing more carbon dioxide (CO2), the ocean has undergone increasing surface acidification. A loss of oxygen has occurred from the surface to 1,000 metres down," the report said.

Warming oceans will lead to more frequent tropical cyclones, according to the report, which said extreme sea level events that have historically occurred once each century will occur every year by 2050, increasing flooding risks for low-lying coastal cities and island communities.

"As a result, some small islands, which are home to 65 million people globally, are at risk of becoming uninhabitable," the report said.

"Glacial melt, reductions in snow cover, and thawing of permafrost are also projected to increase the risk of landslides, avalanches, rockfalls, and floods in mountain regions," it said.

Get Breaking news, live coverage, and Latest News from India and around the world on NDTV.com. Catch all the Live TV action on NDTV 24x7 and NDTV India. Like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter and Instagram for latest news and live news updates.

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Andaman, Nicobar Islands May Not Be Habitable In Future: Report - NDTV News

Loneliness and Its Antidote on Orcas Island – The New York Times

Our columnist, Sebastian Modak, is visiting each destination on our 52 Places to Go in 2019 list. Before Orcas Island, he wrote about the Azores and their Instagram-ready beauty.

Dont you get lonely?

Its the question I get asked most, by old friends and new friends alike, usually right after the initial shock at the audacity of this yearlong trip has worn off.

On the personality spectrum, I lean toward extroverted: Though occasional time alone is nice, I feed off the energy of people around me. This year has taught me many things, but chief among them might be how to be comfortable with nothing but my own thoughts for company. Ive found peace in solitude on a full-day hike along the fjords of Norway, for example, or on an empty beach on Mexicos Pacific Coast. But, occasionally, that tranquillity has slipped into crushing loneliness, like during all the nights Ive spent in airport hotels, those uniformly strange and depressing places.

But nowhere has taught me as much about solitude and loneliness the difference between them and how quickly those emotions can swing as Orcas Island, a speck of land off the coast of mainland Washington State.

Orcas has all the ingredients of a perfect solo trip. There are miles upon miles of hiking trails that wind up through evergreen forests to viewpoints from which you can see the other San Juan Islands, little mounds of green charting the way into the horizon. On a clear day, from the top of Mount Constitution, the highest point on the island, you can see all the way to North Cascades National Park. Outdoorsy fun abounds, with mountain biking, kayaking and whale watching all ideal ways to eat up a summer day.

But, it was Labor Day weekend and I was in a major long-weekend destination in the Pacific Northwest. Extended families sat at long tables in restaurants, loudly laughing and trading inside jokes. Couples strolled along the beaches. Groups of friends at the grocery store in Eastsound, the islands hub, filled their shopping carts with all the ingredients of beer-heavy cookouts.

And then there was me, awkwardly asking for a table for one, silently Googling how to shuck an oyster at Buck Bay Shellfish Farm and figuring out what to do with myself for long afternoons, when time flowed like molasses.

I found company in signing up for group activities, which allowed me to engage in small talk something that, before this year, I never thought Id miss while also taking in the wild beauty of Orcas. I was there during the new moon and so booked a night kayaking trip with Shearwater. The darkness let the main attraction, bioluminescent plankton, shine even brighter. Each dip of the paddle cut through otherworldly light. There was laughter, too, as, an hour and a half into a two-hour journey, the man sharing my double kayak and I realized we both thought the other person was in charge of controlling the rudder (he was). Suddenly all the zigzagging made sense.

On a different day but at the same marina, Deer Harbor, I joined a whale watching tour. It was a small group, just seven of us (I was told the small group was because so many people were at weddings). Since childhood, Ive been fascinated by orcas, amazed by their intelligence, their grace and the complexity of their social relationships. (The island isnt named after the animal, but rather a Spanish viceroy with six names, one of which was Horcasitas.) We followed a group of four two males and two females as they skirted along a series of uninhabited islands. They dove deep every now and then, and we all scanned the horizon for where they would reappear.

Being alone let me reflect on my activities. Opinions are split on the possible environmental damage of whale watching tours, but theres no doubt that some of the Pacific Northwests orcas are in serious trouble. We were following seal eaters, the transient population that feeds on other marine mammals and is considered for the most part stable. But also in these seas are the salmon eaters, a resident population that is severely endangered. Dwindling salmon numbers, as streams are rerouted and contaminants are dumped into rivers, are part of the problem. Some say the noise from boat traffic including whale watching vessels could be messing with the echolocation the orcas use to hunt. What everyone I talked to agreed on though, is that the United States government isnt doing enough, even as the Canadians impose limits on whale watching in their waters.

Getting to Orcas isnt exactly easy, but the ferry ride from Anacortes, about an hour-and-a-halfs drive from Seattle, is half the fun. Book early and, if tickets arent available, try again 48 hours before your intended departure as more tickets are released then. Time the ferry ride for sunset, when youll be given a full-on show. Alternatively, a number of companies offer flights on light aircraft or seaplanes from the Seattle area.

Orcas is having a food moment right now, one of the reasons it landed on the 2019 52 Places to Go list. For the most innovative fare, head to Hogstones for farm-to-table, wood-fired pizza or The Loft at Madrona for fresh seafood, killer views and craft cocktails. Still, youd be remiss to skip classics like Buck Bay Shellfish Farm, where you pick (and shuck) your own oysters, washed down with a cold beer.

Hiking is the main activity on Orcas and between the more than 30 miles of trails in Moran State Park, and shorter hikes at hidden gems like Obstruction Pass State Park, you can do a hike a day and not get bored. Day passes to park your car at trailheads are $10, so consider investing in a Discover Pass, which, for $30, gives you access to all the state parks for a year.

To fill another afternoon, following one of many tips I received from readers (judging by my Instagram inbox, people really love Orcas), I went looking for some lakes. From the top of Mount Constitution, I hiked down through a series of switchbacks through dense forest. I had no one for company but a chipmunk who stared me down before ditching me for, probably, his friends. Despite my surroundings, breathing in air so fresh I could taste the oxygen, I felt a sadness creeping in. How much better would this be if I had someone to talk to; someone to marvel with at that woodpecker as its beak hammered a tree at the speed of a drumroll?

And then I reached the Twin Lakes, two oblong discs of deep green mirroring the pine trees that surrounded them. Having worked up a sweat, I figured, Why not?, and grabbed my towel for a quick and discreet change into my bathing suit. But then I realized there was no need for modesty. There wasnt a human being in sight. There were no sounds, but the breeze passing through leaves and the faint chirping of a bird somewhere higher up.

The moment I hit the water, diving headfirst into the clean, refreshing cold, I felt my emotions swing from sadness to elation. I broke the surface of the water, laughing out loud. The clouds parted and the sun shone down on me. I yelled, just because I could. I felt a rush of unbridled, childlike ecstasy because I was alone. This was my moment, and only mine.

A long weekend like Labor Day can be a tough time to spend alone and thats especially true when your 31st birthday falls right on Labor Day. I dont get overly sentimental about birthdays, but I was still sort of dreading this one.

But Ive started to call 2019 my Year of Strangers for good reason: more times than I can count, strangers have saved the day.

I woke up, as I had every day on Orcas, feeling better rested than I have all year. I was staying at the Once in a Blue Moon Farm, a slice of idyllic country life hidden down a narrow road on the western side of the island. The nights were quiet, the mornings still, but for the quacking of ducks and the bleating of goats. I walked as I had every morning toward the main house, where Id get a cup of coffee. I was greeted by Audrey Hepburn, the Border collie mix who runs the farm like a general, just as I had been every morning, and by Zach, the third of three generations living on the farm.

Zach and his family his sister, mother and 102-year-old grandmother had already shown great concern for my happiness. I had arrived to a box of freshly picked fruit figs, plums of different shapes and sizes, the juiciest peaches Ive ever eaten and theyd also given me a goose egg that I ate for breakfast (verdict: intense, but delicious). In one of many conversations I had with Zach over the preceding days, I dropped a mention of my encroaching birthday.

Weve got to do something to celebrate, he said.

So when I saw Zach walking up the driveway with a duck under his arm, I understood the celebration he had been envisioning. Though Once in a Blue Moon prides itself on being an animal sanctuary eggs are collected and sold from the geese, ducks and chickens, but no meat, and the goats and sheep are beloved pets an exception had been made. The farm was dealing with a duck overpopulation problem, and Zach had selected one of the older ones to be our dinner.

We got to work. After plucking the duck my sole contribution to the process Zach cut it up and left it to sit. I went out for a midafternoon hike to the ridges along Turtleback Mountain, an antidote to the more crowded trails of Moran State Park.

When I returned, we all gathered in the kitchen to cook: we prepared the duck in two ways, along with its liver, using ingredients fresh from the farm. Following Zachs instructions, I mixed together an ice cream using the rich yolk of goose eggs and a jam made from Mirabelle plums.

We gathered around the table and it felt like family. I heard stories about growing up in Brooklyn from Zachs grandmother. I told stories of my travels so far and gave tips to his sister, Sarah, who told me she feels a draw to Spain. They told me about life on the island and how, according to Zach, its undergoing a bit of a transition right now: from hippie to hipster, is how he put it.

At any other time this would have been a nice evening spent with new friends, something Ive experienced again and again this year. But what I had felt over the preceding days threw the moment into relief. If Ive learned how to deal with being alone this year, Ive also learned to value that feeling. Knowing loneliness makes the moments you connect with strangers and the one-off conversations that stick with you feel like pure magic.

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Loneliness and Its Antidote on Orcas Island - The New York Times

An island no more? State to put up fences to keep Antelope Island bison, sheep from reaching the mainland – Salt Lake Tribune

The trouble begins with this: Antelope Island isnt.

The Great Salt Lakes largest island has long served as a big-game sanctuary as well as one of Utahs most popular state parks. Chronic low lake levels, however, have turned Antelope and other islands in the lake into mere peninsulas, allowing bison and, potentially, bighorn sheep to reach the mainland.

Some also fear the reverse: that the big games domestic disease-carrying cousins could get to the island.

For several years, buffaloes have, at times, invaded the mainland. But the consequences for Antelope Islands bighorn herd have been more dire, prompting state officials to call for 10 miles of fencing around the islands south end.

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(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Bison near the shoreline of the Great Salt Lake at Antelope Island State Park, wit... (Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) A lone bison at Antelope Island State Park on Thursday Sept. 19, 2019. (Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Bison near the shoreline of the Great Salt Lake at Antelope Island State Park, wit... (Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Bison near the shoreline of the Great Salt Lake at Antelope Island State Park, wit... (Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) A lone bison at Antelope Island State Park on Thursday Sept. 19, 2019. (Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) A lone bison at Antelope Island State Park on Thursday Sept. 19, 2019. (Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Bison near the shoreline of the Great Salt Lake at Antelope Island State Park, wit...

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Bison near the shoreline of the Great Salt Lake at Antelope Island State Park, with Salt Lake City in the background on Thursday Sept. 19, 2019. (Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) A lone bison at Antelope Island State Park on Thursday Sept. 19, 2019. (Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Bison near the shoreline of the Great Salt Lake at Antelope Island State Park, with Salt Lake City in the background on Thursday Sept. 19, 2019. (Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Bison near the shoreline of the Great Salt Lake at Antelope Island State Park, with Salt Lake City in the background on Thursday Sept. 19, 2019. (Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) A lone bison at Antelope Island State Park on Thursday Sept. 19, 2019. (Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) A lone bison at Antelope Island State Park on Thursday Sept. 19, 2019. (Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Bison near the shoreline of the Great Salt Lake at Antelope Island State Park, with Salt Lake City in the background on Thursday Sept. 19, 2019.

Last year, a respiratory illness wiped out nearly all of the islands 150 wild sheep and the Division of Wildlife Resources was forced to kill the 26 survivors to ensure the disease would not spread. How the sheep were exposed to the pathogen remains a mystery, but the fencing to be built this fall is intended to confine the bighorns to the island.

Officials suspect a ram may have wandered off Antelope, been exposed to domestic sheep or goats that carry the pathogen, then returned to the island, where it spread the disease to other bighorns.

Officials hope the fence will prevent that from happening, even though other speculative theories explain how the herd got sick last year, according to park manager Jeremy Shaw. He noted there are no known instances in which a domestic animal got onto the island.

Once the fence is up, DWR plans to reestablish the islands bighorn herd by relocating 35 sheep from elsewhere in the state.

The eight-foot fence will be built into the lakebed about a quarter mile off the islands historic shoreline, Shaw said, at a cost of $300,000 to $500,000.

The Great Salt Lake has been near historic lows for the past several years, thanks to long-term drought and decades of upstream water diversions. Recent research indicates that water diversions would have to be cut by 29% just to keep the level from dropping even more.

Even so, additional diversions of the Bear River, the terminal lakes main tributary, are on the drawing board.

Today, more than 750 square miles of lakebed are exposed and several islands are connected to the the mainland, disrupting delicate ecosystems that depend on isolation. Feral pigs have migrated off the privately owned Fremont Island, showing up near Antelope Island. Coyotes now roam the North Arms Gunnison Island, home to one of the nations most important breeding colonies of beach-nesting pelicans.

Farmington Bay, framed by the 16-mile-long Antelope Island and Davis County to the east, is now completely dry, save for where the Jordan River inflow has cut a channel around the islands northeast shore.

A long-abandoned causeway connects the southern tip with Salt Lake City. Its the area around this causeway that forms the easiest passage for animals traveling between the island and the south shore.

Mule deer have migrated on and off the islands north end for years, even when water levels are high. The movement of deer does not pose a problem, Shaw said, but that is not the case with bison and bighorn sheep.

The Department of Natural Resources long has been concerned with bison exiting the islands south shore and wandering to the mainland east of Salt Lake City International Airport, according to agency spokesman Nathan Schwebach.

Its a tough spot, he said. Lake levels are low and with that come issues.

Earlier this month, park officials shot a 9-year-old male bison roaming the lakes south shore after it reached airport property.

"We're committed to relocating wildlife whenever possible. However, relocation is not always possible, especially where public safety is involved," Schwebach wrote in an email. "Unfortunately, when bison learn to leave the island, they tend to continually leave after being brought back."

For the past five years, bison periodically have reached the Audubons 1,514-acre Gillmor Sanctuary, located four miles from Antelope Island, according to Ella Sorensen, who manages the preserve that harbors shorebirds, waterfowl and other migratory birds.

They [bison] spend most of their time on the western side of Gillmor. We are OK with them here. It has been very quiet, she said. They have wandered back and forth [between the island and the sanctuary]. The fence will put an end to bison coming off the island.

It will also result in the return of bighorn sheep. In January, DWR plans to begin releasing Rocky Mountain bighorns on the island.

There has been some struggle with our bighorn sheep populations recently because of respiratory disease, said DWR biologist Jace Taylor, who oversees the bighorn sheep and mountain goat program. Part of our objective is to expand bighorn sheep populations where possible and to maintain the overall population in a sustainable and healthy way across Utah to provide quality opportunities for wildlife viewing and hunting.

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An island no more? State to put up fences to keep Antelope Island bison, sheep from reaching the mainland - Salt Lake Tribune

Caroline Flack teases Winter Love Island will be the ‘hottest one yet’ – cosmopolitan.com

If you're anything like us, you'd probably forgotten that Winter Love Island is an actual thing that's happening, and soon you'll have nightly entertainment to get you through the dark and dreary evenings.

Announced by ITV2 off the back of, er, Summer Love Island, a January version of the hit show is coming, with a number of singles being whisked off to South Africa in a bid to find love.

While fans are currently speculating that the show will follow the same format as the existing show, presenter Caroline Flack has been teasing some major details about January's series, promising it will be "hotter than ever".

Speaking to The Sun Online, she commented: "I literally cannot wait. It is going to be so hot. Probably the hottest one yet. Cape Town, can you believe it? Love Island's twice a year now, it's going to be mad."

OK, so it's not as if she's revealing the chosen contestants' middle names and phone numbers, but still. Hotter than ever.

This comes as Paul Mortimer, Head of Digital Channels and Acquisitions at ITV, explained why they had chosen to create a winter version of the show. "Off the back of a record-breaking year, we're delighted to be bringing an extra series of our biggest and sunniest show to the 2020 schedule.

"Love Island has proven yet again to be the perfect format that engages younger audiences. In response to this viewer appetite, a new batch of young singletons will deliver some highly anticipated post-Christmas romance and drama from our new and luxurious location."

That is our January sorted.

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Caroline Flack teases Winter Love Island will be the 'hottest one yet' - cosmopolitan.com