Skerwink Trail in Newfoundland
We visited the Trinity Bight area in June 2011. One of the best hikes in Newfoundland is the Skerwink Trail.
The Port au Choix Project Olga Spence the past the present the future
REG AND CHARLIE PAYNE
Reg and charlie pane
Newfoundland and Labrador Votes 2019: Dwight Ball wins second term as premier
Newfoundland and Labrador election special: Voters across the province head to the polls to choose the next provincial government and decide whether or not Liberal Leader Dwight Ball will get a second term as premier.
»»» Subscribe to CBC News to watch more videos:
Connect with CBC News Online:
For breaking news, video, audio and in-depth coverage:
Find CBC News on Facebook:
Follow CBC News on Twitter:
For breaking news on Twitter:
Follow CBC News on Instagram:
Download the CBC News app for iOS:
Download the CBC News app for Android:
»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»»
For more than 75 years, CBC News has been the source Canadians turn to, to keep them informed about their communities, their country and their world. Through regional and national programming on multiple platforms, including CBC Television, CBC News Network, CBC Radio, CBCNews.ca, mobile and on-demand, CBC News and its internationally recognized team of award-winning journalists deliver the breaking stories, the issues, the analyses and the personalities that matter to Canadians.
HMB Movie Promo 2009
Demo for the Homemade Bread Band
Here & Now Monday July 8 2019
Every day, around Newfoundland and Labrador, Anthony Germain and the entire Here & Now team pull out all the stops to cover your news and weather. If it's happening now, you'll see it here.
»»» Subscribe to CBC NL to watch more videos:
For your daily CBC NL news fix:
CBC NL on Twitter:
CBC NL on Facebook:
CBC NL is now on YouTube. Join us for news, live events, commentary, daily weather, comedy, music, more. Connect with us about what you'd like to see here.
One foot at a time: Hiking the breathtaking scenery of Newfoundland and Labrador
Hiking the hundreds of trails in Newfoundland and Labrador will take you through unspoiled wilderness, along majestic coastlines often visited by whales, rare birds and icebergs, past coves, beaches -- and even back in time. Don't be surprised if you stumble across long forgotten fishing villages, historic lighthouses clinging to cliffsides and ancient fossil sites. The history here is as powerful as the scenery, and both are just waiting for you to walk on by.
Primitive Technology: Tiled Roof Hut
I built this tiled roof hut in the bush using only primitive tools and materials. The tools I used have been made in my previous videos. It should be pointed out that I do not live in the wild and that this is just a hobby. It should be obvious to most that this is not a survival shelter but an experiment in primitive building technology.
To cut and carve wood I used the celt stone axe and stone chisel made in this video. To carry water and make fire I used pots and fire sticks made in this video. Finally, to store fire wood and dry, unfired tiles, I used the wood shed built in this video.
The wooden frame was built with a 2X2m floor plan and a 2m tall ridge line with 1m tall side walls. 6 posts were put into the ground 0.25 m deep. The 3 horizontal roof beams were attached to these using mortise and tenon joints carved with a stone chisel. The rest of the frame was lashed together with lawyer cane strips. The frame swayed a little when pushed so later triangular bracing was added to stop this. Also when the mud wall was built, it enveloped the posts and stopped them moving altogether.
A small kiln was built of mud from the ground and a perforated floor of clay from the creek bank. It was only 25 cm internal diameter and 50 cm tall. Clay was dug, broken tiles (from previous batches) were crushed and added to it as grog and it was mixed thoroughly.This clay was pressed into rectangular moulds made from strips of lawyer cane to form tiles. Wood ash prevented the clay sticking to the stone. 20 tiles were fired at a time. 450 flat tiles and 15 curved ridge tiles were made with only a few breakages. 26 firings were done in all and the average firing took about 4 hours. The fired tiles were then hooked over the horizontal roof battens.
An underfloor heating system was built into one side of the hut to act as a sitting/sleeping platform in cold weather. This was inspired by the Korean Ondol or “hot stone”. A trench was dug and covered with flat stones with a firebox at one end and a chimney at the other for draft. The flames travelled beneath the floor heating it. After firing it for a while the stones stay warm all night with heat conducted directly to the sleeping occupant and radiating into the room.
The wall was made of clayey mud and stone. A stone footing was laid down and over this a wall of mud was built. To save on mud, stones were included into later wall courses. The mud was dug from a pit in front of the hut and left a large hole with a volume of about 2.5 cubic metres.
The finished hut has a swinging door made of sticks. The inside is dark so I made a torch from tree resin. A broken tile with resin on it acts as a small lamp producing a lot of light and little smoke. The end product was a solid little hut, that should be fire and rot resistant. The whole project took 102 days but would have taken 66 days were it not for unseasonal rain. For a more in depth description see my blog (
Wordpress:
Patreon page:
I have no face book page. Beware of fake pages.
NEWFOUNDLAND & LABRADOR VOTES 2019
Here & Now - Every day, around Newfoundland and Labrador, Debbie Cooper and Anthony Germain, and the entire Here & Now team pull out all the stops to cover your news and weather. If it's happening now, you'll see it here.
»»» Subscribe to CBC NL to watch more videos:
For your daily CBC NL news fix:
CBC NL on Twitter:
CBC NL on Facebook:
CBC NL is now on YouTube. Join us for news, live events, commentary, daily weather, comedy, music, more. Connect with us about what you'd like to see here.
Here & Now Friday, November 8, 2019
Here & Now - Every day, around Newfoundland and Labrador, Anthony Germain and the entire Here and Now team pull out all the stops to cover your news and weather. If it's happening now, you'll see it here.
»»» Subscribe to CBC NL to watch more videos:
For your daily CBC NL news fix:
CBC NL on Twitter:
CBC NL on Facebook:
CBC NL is now on YouTube. Join us for news, live events, commentary, daily weather, comedy, music, more. Connect with us about what you'd like to see here.
Una Parrilla Argentina: Construcción, Asado y Picada
Bienvenidos a otro asado argentino en Canadá! En este video finalmente dejamos el grill norteamericano de lado y construimos una pequeña parrilla argentina usando ladrillos. En este asado preparamos entraña fina, vacío, asado de tira, chorizos medio picantes, y mollejas. También preparamos una linda picada con corazones de alcachofas, morrones rellenos, aceitunas verdes, proscuitto, salame picante, pan y queso. Y probamos un vermouth, y vinos argentinos de San Juan y Salta.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Síguenos en las redes:
AUDREY:
blog:
instagram:
facebook:
twitter:
SAMUEL:
blog:
facebook:
twitter:
instagram:
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Nuestro equipo de fotografía:
Panasonic GH5:
Canon G7X ii:
Rode Video Micro:
Joby Gorilla Pod:
SanDisk 16GB Extreme Pro:
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Una Parrilla Argentina: Construcción, Asado y Picada
Esperamos que hayan disfrutado nuestra una Parrilla Argentina. Planeamos hacer más Asado Argentino en el futuro y nos encantaría escuchar sugerencias de todos ustedes sobre lo que deberíamos hacer la próxima vez. Una pregunta que nos da mucha curiosidad es saber cuál es su corte de carne argentino favorito y su botella de vino tinto favorita de Argentina. ¿Dónde vives en Argentina y qué tipo de comida y bebida deben probar los visitantes cuando visitan tu ciudad? Gracias por su apoyo con nuestros videos de Asado Argentino y queremos que todos ustedes sepan que planeamos hacer un gran viaje a Argentina en 2019 haciendo una gran serie de viajes y comida en YouTube.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Música from YouTube
David Wilcock | Corey Goode: The Antarctic Atlantis [MUST SEE LIVE DISCLOSURE!]
Are we about to hear that ancient ruins have been found in Antarctica? Is there an Alliance working to defeat the greatest threat humanity has ever faced on earth? Could the Antarctic Atlantis be part of a full or partial disclosure?
Join David Wilcock on a thrill ride of discovery, beginning with Part One where he presents data on the Secret Space Program and shares the stage with legendary insider Corey Goode. This is the best public summary David and Corey have done of this amazing story that has captivated the UFO community.
Part Two begins at the 53-minute mark, with David connecting the dots between intel from multiple insiders to arrive at a stunning conclusion -- that we are on the verge of major new releases of information that will transform everything we thought we knew about life on earth.
A civilization of Pre-Adamite giants with elongated skulls appears to have crash-landed on a continent we now call Antarctica some 55,000 years ago.
Various groups we collectively call the Alliance are working to defeat the Cabal / Illuminati / New World Order, thus making the headlines crazier by the day.
If the Alliance succeeds, their plan is now to begin the disclosure process by telling us there was a civilization in Antarctica. We are already seeing multiple, compelling hints of this in corporate media.
Find out what the insiders are telling us and help spread the word!
This is a two-and-a-half-hour excerpt from David's Friday and Saturday presentations at the Conscious Life Expo 2017. In their original form they run six hours. David also spoke for three hours on Monday, presenting an incredible new model of the Cosmos based on sacred geometry -- and proving that the Sun is going to release a DNA-transforming burst of energy in our near future.
Reposting this video is stealing, so please share the link with your friends but do not re-upload it anywhere else. Our team does issue takedowns and it could lead to the loss of your channel.
Please help us by subscribing to this channel! Sign up at to be notified of new articles and videos upon release, and to get free gifts and Ascension updates from David as they become available.
Thank you for your support!
David's OFFICIAL Patreon site:
Gun Hill Hiking Trail, Trinity Newfoundland
A virtual tour of Gun Hill hiking Trail located in Trinity Newfoundland.
A Simpler Way: Crisis as Opportunity (2016) - Free Full Documentary
A Simpler Way: Crisis as Opportunity is a free-to-view, feature-length documentary that follows a community in Australia who have come together to explore and demonstrate a simpler way to live in response to global crises. Throughout the year the group build tiny houses, plant veggie gardens, practice simple living and permaculture principles, and discover the challenges of living in community. This documentary, our very first!, was shot while we were living on the property for the entire year as part of the community. The documentary includes interviews with David Holmgren, Helena Norberg-Hodge, Nicole Foss, Ted Trainer, Graham Turner, and more.
Download the documentary at:
Book by Samuel Alexander: Prosperous Descent: Telling New Stories as the Old Book Closes –
For more ideas for action, see:
** More about Happen Films **
Support us in making more films:
Website:
Twitter:
Instagram:
Facebook:
** Screen our films in your community! **
While our short films are free to view online, you’ll need to purchase a license to hold a public screening. Visit for info.
** Film credits **
Directed by: Jordan Osmond and Samuel Alexander
Written by: Samuel Alexander, Jordan Osmond, and Antoinette Wilson
Executive Producers: The Simplicity Institute, Marcus Foth, Dale & Clare Hembrow
Cinematography by: Jordan Osmond
Edited by: Richard Sidey and Aliscia Young
Music:
The General Assembly:
The Crash Narrative:
Samuel de Silentio:
Thanks to all the generous Indiegogo supporters who made this project possible!
What If We Detonated All Nuclear Bombs at Once?
Sources:
What happens if we make a huge pile from all 15,000 nuclear bombs and pull the trigger? And what happens if we make an even bigger pile?
Support us on Patreon so we can make more videos (and get cool stuff in return):
Steady:
Merchandise:
Newsletter:
Facebook:
Twitter:
Instagram:
Discord:
The Voice of Kurzgesagt:
Steve Taylor:
The music of the video here:
Soundcloud:
Bandcamp:
Youtube:
Facebook:
THANKS A LOT TO OUR LOVELY PATRONS FOR SUPPORTING US:Bogdan Oleksyshyn, Andrew Zur, Nicholas Kenwrick-Piercy, MossBro333, Harry Turner, Car Bureator, David Hauweele, Austin Travis, Eric Grießbach, Daan Scholten, Charalampos Koundourakis, Artur Herdt, Will Zheng, Bernie Anderson, Martin Laflamme, Wolf Gratz, Daniel Lambert, Edward Salt, Ryder Carroll, Tyler Hamm, Justin Nichol, Adam, Samuel Cahyawijaya, Steffani Silva, Tobias Endrigkeit, Nic Penry, Lansing DeLong, Lei Lei, Zombieff,Alek Grzegorzek, Adam Mata, Ricardo Moreno, Bender Yang, Michael Maroske, Sam Lutfi, Paul Sabatini, James Eugene, Liya Gambaryan, Matt, Rufflik, Jonathan Calhoun, Arminé Saghatelyan, Russel Fausnight, Marek Alexa, Andrew Greenberg, Torje Eriksen, Miklós Molnár, Ahmad, George, Steelheart, Pierre Bengtsson, Alex Zoellner, Jungoh Lu, Ben Claussen, Jeff Fillmore, Fritz Solares, Edgar Kaizawa, Patrik Pärkinen, Luci Morin, Trevor, Erik Johnson, Cameron Ivany, greg z, Sami Seal, Julia Casal, Dan Vicarel, William Fishwick, Karlis Jerins, Alex H., Austin Nader, Alex Willisson, Victor Mercado, Ryan Kist, Andrew Whitley, Maxime Fuchs, Sean, Artem Korenev, Luke Welton, Imre Farkas, Jonas Strube
Help us caption & translate this video!
Winter in Canada Vacation! Our Family Trip to a Cottage in Kawartha Lakes!
Join us for winter in Canada vacation as we highlight our week-long cottage family trip to the Kawartha Lakes. As an annual traditional Audrey's family has been renting a cabin during the heart of winter usually around Christmas and New Years to enjoy some winter activities, great food and family time. We give you a full tour of the winter cottage in Canada along with some behind the scenes action in the kitchen as we prepare meals. Togo, the German Shepperd, makes many appearances in the snow and inside of the cabin as he enjoys the vacation more than anyone. Some of the fun outdoor activities during a Canadian include going for snow walks, snowshoeing, tobogganing, ice fishing and playing ice hockey. If you're visiting Canada during the winter months we'd strongly recommend a family cottage vacation.
GEAR WE USE
Panasonic GH5:
Canon G7X ii:
Rode Video Micro:
Joby Gorilla Pod:
SanDisk 16GB Extreme Pro:
SOCIAL MEDIA & TRAVEL BLOGS
AUDREY:
blog:
instagram:
facebook:
twitter:
SAMUEL:
blog:
facebook:
twitter:
instagram:
Winter in Canada Vacation! Our Family Trip to a Cottage in Kawartha Lakes! Travel Video Transcript:
Happy Holidays! We hope you guys had a wonderful festive season. Sam and I are currently in the Kawartha Lakes. We had a little family getaway. And spent a week here.
A beautiful cottage by the lake. So nice. This is kind of turned into an annual event. We've been having a lot of fun. Honestly, we've just been filming a few clips here and there because half of the time we forget to bring out the camera because we're just like playing in the snow or like eating with family. Or sleeping around the fireplace.
We've been capturing little moments here and there and we thought it would be nice to share it with you guys so you can see what winter is like in Canada.
So in Canada you basically have three options you can embrace winter which is what we're doing. Trying to get the most out of it. You can endure it which is to get annoyed by it. Get annoyed by the cold all of the snow and all of the hassles of winter. Or you can escape and a lot of Canadians end up going to places like Florida and Cuba to warm up for the winter.
But we've been really enjoying embracing it. For a long time, I used to want to escape it. Honestly, I'm getting into it like going tobogganing and snowshoeing and walking through the forest. Lighting a fire. Preparing really nice meals like we made turkey dinner here we had Milanesa. We drank so much wine. We were stuffing ourselves with sweets all week long. And yeah just getting the fireplace going and kind of all huddling around in the common space is just really good quality family time. Great for bonding, great for just enjoying nature as well. It has just been fantastic overall.
So now we're going to roll the footage here is what we got up to this week.
We've had some incredible meals. Lots of bacon. We've had turkey, we've had Milanesa. We've had lots of desserts and drinking lots of wine.
I feel like the waistline has been ever expanding this week but I'm okay with that. Sam is going to give us the condensed cottage tour. The cottage tour because guys it is three levels.
There is some nice decorations. Very Canadian. There is a moose. On to the main part of the house. Yes.
This is my favorite part of the house by far. Huge open living room. Big leather comfy couches. We have a fireplace that we're going to light up. The fireplace has been incredible and if you're going to rent a cabin in Canada you've got to have a fireplace.
So that is it for our weekend here in the Kawartha Lakes. We hope you guys enjoyed our little video. We had a lot of fun and hopefully, we can come back next year. That would be awesome. Third year in a row. We'll see you guys in the next video. Bye.
This is part of our Travel in Canada video series showcasing Canadian food, Canadian culture and Canadian cuisine.
Music We Use:
50 Things to do in Seoul, Korea Travel Guide
Join us for a city tour of Seoul, South Korea! In this video we cover 50 things to do in Seoul including visiting the royal palaces, going to themed cafes, eating at local restaurants, enjoying the parks, and going to the museums. We also explore some of the best markets for shopping and street food in Seoul, dabble in Korean nightlife, and sing our hearts out at a noraebang. A few other fun cultural experiences worth mentioning are: watching a Korean baseball game, going to a jjimjilbang, and dressing up in a hanbok.
Some of the neighbourhoods covered in this Seoul guide include: Hongdae, Gangnam, Itaewon, Insadong, Samcheongdong, Dongdaemun, Myeongdong and more where you'll find major attractions, shopping, entertainment and dining experiences.
50 Things to do in Seoul Travel Guide - you can scroll to any of the items on the list by clicking on the timings!
1) Gwanghwamun Square (광화문광장) of King Sejong Statue (세종대왕 동상) and Admiral Yi Sun-Shin (충무공 이순신 동상) - 00:46
2) Gyeongbokgung Royal Guard Changing Ceremony - 01:14
3) Gyeongbokgung Palace (경복궁 - 景福宮) - 01:26
4) Bukchon Hanok Village (북촌한옥마을 - 北村韓屋) - 01:41
5) Galbi (갈비) Korean Barbecue - 02:26
6) Namsan Hiking in Seoul (남산) - 04:53
7) N Seoul Tower views of Seoul (N서울타워) - 05:24
8) Hongdae neighborhood for shopping and nightlife in Seoul (홍대 - 弘大) - 05:53
9) Noraebang Korean Singing Room (노래방) - 06:10
10) Jjimjilbang Korean Bathhouse and Sauna (찜질방) - 06:39
11) Insadong for souvenir shopping in Seoul (인사동 - 仁寺洞) - 07:35
12) Korean tea at traditional Teahouse (차) - 07:55
13) Samcheong-Dong for Hanok houses and shopping (삼청동 - 三淸洞) - 09:29
14) Samgyeopsal (삼겹살) Korean Barbecue - 09:44
15) Nightlife in Seoul, Korea (밤의 유흥) - 11:52
16) National Hangeul Museum (국립한글박물관) - 12:49
17) National Museum of Korea (국립중앙박물관) - 13:00
18) The War Memorial of Korea (전쟁기념관) - 13:10
19) Jogyesa Temple for Zen Buddhism (조계사) - 13:22
20) Korean Street Food in Seoul, South Korea (한국 거리 음식) - 13:46
21) Korean Baseball game at Jamsil Stadium (야구) - 14:26
22) Dongdaemun History & Culture Park (동대문역사문화공원) - 15:32
23) Dongdaemun Market (동대문시장 - 東大門市場) - 15:53
24) Gwangjang Market for Korean Street Food in Seoul (광장시장 - 廣藏市場) - 16:04
25) Bukhansan National Park for hiking in Seoul, South Korea (북한산국립공원 - 北漢山國立公園) - 16:20
26) Soondubu jjigae - Korean tofu stew (순두부찌개) - 16:39
27) Hanhwa 63 Building for views of Seoul on Yeouido island (63 빌딩 - 육삼 빌딩) - 17:25
28) Myeongdong for shopping and entertainment in Seoul (명동 - 明洞) - 17:38
29) Rent a Korean Hanbok to wear around the palaces in Seoul (한복 - 韓服) - 17:53
30) Changdeokgung Palace (창덕궁 - 昌德宮) - 19:07
31) Changgyeonggung Palace (창경궁 - 昌慶宮) - 19:24
32) Jongmyo Confucian Shrine (종묘 - 宗廟) - 19:27
33) Namsangol Hanok Village (남산골한옥마을) - 19:31
34) Cat Cafe in Seoul (고양이 카페) - 19:51
35) Dog Cafe in Seoul, Korea (개 카페) - 20:14
36) Raccoon Cafe in Seoul, South Korea (너구리 카페) - 20:50
37) Cheonggyecheon stream for walking and recreation (청계천 - 淸溪川) - 21:16
38) Namdaemun Market for shopping and street food in Seoul (남대문시장 - 南大門市場) - 21:33
39) National Folk Museum of Korea (국립민속박물관 - 國立民俗博物館) - 22:07
40) Ewha Womans University (이화여자대학교 - 梨花女子大學校) - 22:25
41) Han River Park for sports and recreation (한강) - 22:42
42) Seonyudo Park for walking in Seoul (선유도 공원) - 22:58
43) Seoul Forest for leisurely recreation (서울숲) - 23:07
44) Gangnam neighborhood for restaurants, shopping and nightlife in Seoul (강남 - 江南) - 23:15
45) Itaewon for international food, shopping and nightlife (이태원 - 梨泰院) - 23:28
46) Bulgogi - Korean grilled marinated beef (불고기) - 23:39
47) Olympic Park in Seoul for recreation and leisure (올림픽공원) - 24:08
48) Noryangjin Fish Market to eat Korean fish (노량진수산시장 - 鷺梁津水産市場) - 24:18
49) Lotte World indoor theme park for children (롯데월드) - 28:02
50) Korean Poop Cafe (또옹카페) - 28:15
50 Things to do in Seoul, Korea Travel Guide Video Transcript:
Welcome to Seoul, South Korea! With this video we wanted to take you on a tour of one of our favourite cities in Asia. Seoul is a place where street food abounds, where cafe culture is taken to a whole different level, where ancient palaces sit next to towering glass constructions, and where pockets of art and creativity give the city its pulse. In short, it’s a place you have to see for yourself!
In this video we’ll be showing you 50 things to do in Seoul. We realize this is a pretty long travel guide, so we’ve listed all of the sights, attractions, and foods to try in the description box. Enjoy this tour of Seoul!
And that’s a wrap for this massive video guide to Seoul. We hope that you enjoyed watching along and that you picked up a few ideas of things to do on your upcoming visit. As always, if you’ve been to Seoul before and are familiar with the city, we’d love to hear some of your suggestions of fun things to do, see, and eat around there, so feel free to share those in the comments below.
Music in this video courtesy of Audio Network.
Primitive Technology: New area starting from scratch
I bought a new property to shoot primitive technology videos on. The new area is dense tropical rainforest with a permanent creek. Starting completely from scratch, my first project was to build a simple dome hut and make a fire. First, I took some wood, Abroma mollis, for fire sticks. I knapped a small stone blade and used it to strip the fire sicks. Palm fibre was then taken for the tinder. The fire stick kit was then placed under a palm leaf to keep it out of the rain.
Next, a stone from the creek was fashioned into a simple hand axe. This was used to cut a staff that was used to clear a path to the hut location. The location for the hut was a clearing densely crowded by native raspberry. This was then cleared using the staff and a small 2.5 m circle was levelled ready for building.
Eight 2.75 m long saplings were cut using the hand axe and brought to the site. Eight holes about 25 cm deep were hammered into the ground in a circle 2.5 m in diameter and the saplings were then planted in. The tops were brought together at the top and tied with vine. A door lintel stick was lashed to the front about 75 cm off the ground giving a low door way.
A stone flake was used to cut about 600 palm fronds. These were split and lashed horizontally to the frame creating a thatched dome. Mosquitoes are a real problem here so a fire was lit. The fire sticks from before had a hole carved in the base boards and had a notch carved to let the powder pour out.
The spindle was twirled in the socket and smoking powder poured out producing a hot coal. This then ignited the palm fibre tinder. The fire was transferred to the hut and a small hearth was made of stones. The fire makes a big difference in the number of mosquitoes which seem unable to tolerate the smoke. The dome was completed up to the top and a small cap was made from lawyer cane and fronds to place on the top to keep rain out. When not in use the cap can be removed to let in more light like a sky light.
Finally wood was cut for a bed. This consisted of wooden stakes hammered into the ground at the back of the hut behind the fire pit. Part of the bed frame is attached to the sapling uprights that form the dome. This works ok without the frame shaking too much due to the low attachment point of the bed. Wooden boards were then placed on this and were covered with palm fibre for bedding. Firewood is stored just inside the entrance on the left side of the door looking in. The bed sits behind the fire pit so smoke and flames deter insects or large animals reaching the occupant. Fire sticks and tools are kept just inside the right side of the entrance.
The small hut is simple to build and creates a small, dry shelter for camping and storing tools. Though it is dark, the cap can be removed in fine weather to provide a fairly well-lit workspace protected from annoying insects. This new area has good stone, clay and materials lending themselves to elaborate shelters. A permanent creek runs through it. Mosquitoes are abundant here though and will be an issue. The Cassowary, a large, horned, flightless bird lives in this forest. It’s the most dangerous bird in the world, but generally only attacks when threatened.
Wordpress:
Patreon page:
I have no face book page, instagram, twitter etc. Beware of fake pages.
POR QUÉ EMIGRÉ DE ARGENTINA A LOS ESTADOS UNIDOS | Historia de Daniel - Parte 2
¿Por qué emigré de Argentina? - PARTE 2 // En este episodio, voy a describir como fue la salida de Miami en omnibus hacia la ciudad de Nueva York, el primer duplex donde vivimos, y las primeras experiencias tratando de buscar trabajo sin saber por donde comenzar y sin hablar el idioma. Les dejaré saber como fueron las primeras impresiones sobre la ciudad de Nueva York, que para gran sorpresa, no fue lo que uno se había imaginado al emigrar de Argentina. Esperamos que este video sea de su agrado y ya estamos preparando el capítulo 3.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Síguenos en las redes:
AUDREY:
blog:
instagram:
facebook:
twitter:
SAMUEL:
blog:
facebook:
twitter:
instagram:
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
Nuestro equipo de fotografía:
Panasonic GH5:
Canon G7X ii:
Rode Video Micro:
Joby Gorilla Pod:
SanDisk 16GB Extreme Pro:
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
POR QUÉ EMIGRÉ DE ARGENTINA A LOS ESTADOS UNIDOS | Historia de Daniel - Parte 2
Este video es parte de la serie Historia de Daniel, donde mi padre, Daniel, cuenta la historia de su vida, y la historia de inmigración de su familia, saliendo de Argentina para comenzar una nueva vida en los Estados Unidos y luego Canadá. Podrán encontrar la lista completa de los videos en esta serie acá:
En los primeros episodios de esta serie, Daniel recuerda su niñez en Argentina y nos cuenta una serie de eventos que forzaron a la familia a dejar el país por razones económicas. Él nos cuenta los desafíos de llegar a un nuevo país sin dinero, sin idioma, y sin conocer la cultura. La realidad económica, lo obliga a tener que tomar cualquier trabajo que esté disponible, para ayudar a su familia a salir adelante en este nuevo país.
En estos videos, él comparte sus experiencias de vida - los riesgos, las sorpresas, y las dificultades de comenzar una nueva vida en el extranjero. Las historias de vida en estos videos los llevarán desde Argentina, a los Estados Unidos, a España y finalmente a Canadá.
Esperamos que disfruten esta serie, y suscríbanse para ver futuros episodios.
Ping Pong Trick Shots 4 | Dude Perfect
We take Ping Pong Trick Shots to the CRAZIEST level yet!
Special thanks to Nerf for sponsoring this video!
►Click HERE to get your Nerf Dude Perfect HoverKup:
► Click HERE to subscribe to Dude Perfect!
► Click HERE to watch our most recent videos!
Music by Big Gigantic “C’mon (feat. GRiZ)
►Click HERE to download:
iTUNES: -
SPOTIFY -
FACEBOOK -
WEBSITE -
TWITTER -
INSTAGRAM -
► SHOP our NEW Merchandise! -
►Click HERE to join the exclusive Dude Perfect T-Shirt Club!
Play our NEW iPhone game!
► PLAY Endless Ducker on iPhone --
► PLAY Endless Ducker on Android --
► VISIT our NEW STORE -
► JOIN our NEWSLETTER -
► WATCH our STEREOTYPES -
In between videos we hang out with you guys on Instagram, Snapchat, Twitter, and Facebook so pick your favorite one and hang with us there too!
Do you have a GO BIG mindset?
See for yourself in our book Go Big.
►
A special thanks to those of you who play our iPhone Games and read our book. You guys are amazing and all the great things you tell us about the game and the book make those projects so worthwhile for us!
Dude Perfect GAME -
Dude Perfect BOOK - Go Big -
Click here if you want to learn more about Dude Perfect:
Bonus points if you're still reading this!
Comment: 4 Million likes for Ping Pong 4!
As always...Go Big and God Bless!
- Your friends at Dude Perfect
Business or Media, please contact us at:
Dude@DudePerfect.com
------------
5 Best Friends and a Panda.
If you like Sports + Comedy, come join the Dude Perfect team!
Best known for trick shots, stereotypes, battles, bottle flips, ping pong shots and all around competitive fun, Dude Perfect prides ourselves in making the absolute best family-friendly entertainment possible! Welcome to the crew!
Pound it. Noggin.
- Dude Perfect