Kayak Fishing - Kayak Centre of RI Demo Day. North Kingstown town beach.
Dropped off some canned goods for the food pantry at the Kayak Centre of RI in demo day at the North Kingstown town beach. Met up with a buddy that represents Feel Free kayaks. I arrived on my Hobie Revolution 13. It was early in the season, but I brought my fishing gear anyways.
KAYAKING N.K. Town Beach, Wickford, Wilson Park, Duck Cove
Launch from North Kingstown Town Beach, to Wickford Harbor, Wilson Park, Duck Cove.
(North Kingston, R.I., 25JAN2015)
Fishing Cove, Wickford, RI
Brought the boat onshore to a little beach I used to play on as a child. Was great to walk with the crunching sound of dried sea reeds under foot. Lots of sea lavender, fiddler crab holes, and some horseshoe crab carapaces.
Webinar: How to Harvest Your Own Clams in Rhode Island
Brush Up Those Clamming Skills: Ready yourself for summer by joining URI Coastal Resources Center/Rhode Island Sea Grant sustainable seafood specialist Azure Cygler and local quahogging legend Jody King for a webinar -- How to Harvest Your Own Clams in Rhode Island. King, host of a state-sponsored Come Clam With Me summer program for the public, will share the basics of recreational clamming - from where to go and what to bring, to tools of the trade and tips for delicious clam dishes.
The webinar is a program of the Rhode Island Shellfish Initiative. The Initiative honors the legacy and vital role shellfish play in supporting our environment, families, traditions, and economy. Through a partnership of government, business, academia, and community, the Initiative will strengthen our state's shellfish management practices and promote growth and innovation within out local seafood industry. Visit the Initiative at
Paddle out of U.R.I. Bay Campus, Narragansett R.I. 06MARCH2010
Shortly after launch, heading north to Rome Point. Paddlers are: Paul B., Kerry, Wayne S., Carole, Camillo,
Bob H., Rick T., and myself (Tony).
Neighborhood Records, Riverside, Rhode Island!
Matt travels 'back to the future' and takes you to 'Neighborhood Records' in Rhode Island ! An awesome place!! He finds some Elvis and one of the weirdest Beatles related Apple records ever !!!
A Visit with Save the Bay
BoatingLocal editor Tom Richardson meets up with Narragansett Baykeeper John Torgan for a personal tour of the state-of-the-art Save The Bay Center on the Providence River.
Earth Day 2018
Beach Cleanup
on Jamaica Bay, NY
Jamaica bay clean up Hosted by Ocean Action Research Rockaway - OARR
Wickford Art Festival 50th Anniversary Celebration in 2012, Wickford RI
A 50th Anniversary celebration of the Wickford Art Festival in 2012. Produced by the Wickford Art Association since 1962, this is a fine art festival with over 200 artists exhibiting their work in Wickford Village, North Kingstown, RI. To learn more, visit wickfordart.org
Some of the artists or artwork featured in this video: Ken McDonald, John Sheer, Horatio Letoura, Stephen Ray, John Burr, Kim Ellery, Cindy Wilson, M. A. Podolak, Marian O'Connell, Teri Oja, Tiffany Holgate, Carol Berren, Sheri Rubeck, Lloyd Garrison, Nancy Nielson, Judith Anderson, Jesse Mechling and many more
Footage of Rhode Island Salt Marsh Restoration Work - Sachuest Point
This federally funded Hurricane Sandy resilience project will restore 400 acres of salt marsh at key coastal areas at the Rhode Island National Wildlife Refuge Complex. Footage taken at Sachuest Point National Wildlife Refuge, with staff clearing and creating ditches along the Maidford River marsh area to improve salt marsh drainage and reduce infestation of invasive marsh plants called phragmites.
Video by Charlie Vandemoer/USFWS
How to Become A Clam Whisperer. . .
While on vacation visiting my father on Eastern Long Island, I returned to my clamming roots and created a video that shows how anyone can become....a Clam Whisperer.
Here I reveal The Clammer's Code - Take what you need, but leave the rest for the next guy.
A new video is added every Monday morning, so be sure to subscribe.
Enjoy this cool playlist of more of my hit songs by clicking here -
These original songs will touch the hearts of all ages. They have been enjoyed in countless elementary school classrooms throughout the years. Now, they are available for you here! A new video is added every Monday morning, so be sure to subscribe. You will receive a notification, and you will be among the first to enjoy it. Be sure to comment and let me know what you and your students think about it.
Dockside in March at Narrow River North Kingston RI by Walt Barrett
A view of the late winter shore and docks at Narrow River in North Kingston, Rhode Island.
Narrow river is a wonderful boating and shell fishing area in North Kingston, Rhode Island.
There is a Kayak rental business at Middlebridge.
Body Discovered At Johnston, RI Recycling Center
Police say they discovered a body in a recycling center in Rhode Island.
Rhode Island's Venomous Snakes
Rhode Island's Venomous Snakes
Snakes play an important role as both predator and prey.
Snake venom can kill but is also used to create life-saving medicines.
Snakes prefer to avoid us and we should always avoid them.
Rhode Island's native population once included venomous snakes!
The historically native Timber Rattlesnake is believed to have been extirpated from the State of Rhode Island.
Snake identification is an invaluable survival skill.
Learn about snakes so you may know how to distinguish friend from foe.
MUSIC TITLE: Venomous
WRITTEN BY: Doug McClaflin
PERFORMED BY: DisBand
PRODUCED, ARRANGED, EDITED, MIXED BY: Doug McClaflin
(C) (P) 2016, All Rights Reserved.
RELEASED BY: McClaflin Music
ORIGINAL RELEASE DATE: 10 December 2016
Real World Survival Gear
McClaflin Music
© Real World Survival Gear 2017, All Rights Reserved.
Snug Harbor fishing with my Uncles in Wakefield, RI
Snug Harbor fishing with my Uncles (old dudes)
Wakefield, RI
Out fishing between Wakefield and block island, Fun Stuff!!'
Software ---- Wondershare Filmora
Music -------- Licensed via Wondershare Filmora and AudioBlocks
Hardware -- Sony Cyber-shot DSC-RX100 IV
GoPro HERO5 Black
AKASO EK7000 4K WIFI Sports Action Camera Ultra HD
DJI Mavic Pro
Samsung Galaxy S8+
MS Surface Pro 4
WICKFORD VILLAGE HARBOUR FESTIVAL RI 2008 part 1 - make certain to watch part 2 below also !
WATCH 2ND PART TOO ! BEAUTIFUL WICKFORD - HARBOUR FESTIVAL - NORTH KINGSTON RI CHORUS - ROMPS BAND - BEAUTIFUL WICKFORD HARBOUR FESTIVAL NORTH KINGSTON RI CHORUS ROMPS BAND MARILYN SHELDON POLICE WATER OCEAN SAILBOATS RIVER FESTIVALS ENTERTAINMENT
Marvin Creek
The Marvin Creek development is full of amenities. Cool down in the community pool, slide down the twisty slide, or take a break in the lazy river after an afternoon of tennis or basketball. Don't forget to check out the fitness center inside the club house!
DEM: 2 ponds closed to shell fishing
The R.I. Department of Environmental Management and the R.I. Department of Health are warning consumers to avoid shellfish harvested from two areas in the state; the northern half of Point Judith Pond and Winnepaug Pond.
Great Swamp Fight
On November 2, 1675, Josiah Winslow led a combined force of over 1000 colonial militia including about 150 Pequot and Mohegan Indians against the Narragansett tribe living around Narragansett Bay. The Narragansett tribe had not yet been directly involved in the King Philip's War, but had allegedly sheltered many of King Philip's men, women and children and several of their warriors had reportedly been seen in Indian raiding parties[citation needed]. The colonists distrusted the Narragansett and feared the tribe would join King Phillip's cause come spring, which caused great concern due to the tribe's location. The decision was made to preemptively strike the Narragansett before an assumed uprising. Several abandoned Narragansett Indian villages were found and burned as the militia marched through the cold winter around Narragansett Bay. The tribe had retreated to a large fort in the center of a swamp near Kingston, Rhode Island. The building of such a defensive structure gives credence to the argument that the Narragansett never intended aggressive actions, thus the colonist's preemptive attack may have been unwarranted and overzealous.
Led by an Indian guide, on December 16, 1675 on a bitterly cold storm-filled day, the main Narragansett fort near modern South Kingstown, Rhode Island was found and attacked by the colonial militia from Plymouth Colony, Connecticut Colony and Massachusetts Bay Colony. The massive fort occupying about 5 acres (20,000 m2) of land and was initially occupied by over a thousand Indians was eventually overrun after a fierce fight. The Indian fort was burned, its inhabitants, including women and children, killed or evicted and most of the tribe's winter stores destroyed. It is believed that about 300 Indians were killed (exact figures are unknown) in the fighting. Many of the warriors and their families escaped into the frozen swamp; there hundreds more died from wounds combined with the harsh conditions. Facing a winter with little food and shelter, the whole surviving Narragansett tribe was forced out of quasi-neutrality some had tried to maintain in the on-going war and joined the fight alongside Philip. The colonists lost many of their officers in this assault and about 70 of their men were killed and nearly 150 more wounded. The dead and wounded colonial militiamen were evacuated to the settlements on Aquidneck Island in Narragansett Bay where they were buried or cared for by many of the Rhode Island colonists until they could return to their homes.
The Great Swamp Fight was a critical blow to the Narragansett tribe from which they never fully recovered.[1] In April 1676, the Narragansett were completely defeated when their chief sachem Canonchet was captured and soon executed. On August 12, 1676 the leader of King Philip's War the Wampanoag sachem Metacom was shot in the heart by John Alderman, a Native American soldier. One of the greatest native uprisings in the New England failed.
-Wikipedia
October 12, 2017 New England Fishing Report with Toby Lapinski
Connecticut
• The big news in Connecticut was the opening of the fall blackfish season on Tuesday, and the early reports have been good pretty much throughout the Sound. Mike Prete of Plum Island Swimbaits nailed a nice 10-pounder on Tuesday, and I got word of a good number of other fish just shy of the double-digit mark.
• And speaking of big blackfish in Connecticut, this weekend is the 4th Annual Tog-Tober Tournament presented by Black Hall Outfitters. Check out TheFIsherman.com for all the details.
Rhode Island
• While there is some decent fishing for bass and blues in Rhody waters, the state is also in the middle of its fall trout stocking push. They have been stocking both brown and rainbow trout across the state, but they also dropped some special golden trout in Olney Pond, Lincoln Woods State Park. Earlier in the year they also stocked these special fish in Peck Pond, Burrillville; Browning Mill Pond, Exeter; Silver Spring Lake, North Kingstown; Upper Melville Pond, Portsmouth; Meadowbrook Pond, Richmond and Shippee Sawmill Pond, Foster.
• Remember that if you are lucky enough to catch a golden trout and send your photo to Jessica Pena at Jessica.pena@dem.ri.gov you’ll qualify for a special golden trout pin.
Massachusetts
• The fall pollock season in the Gulf of Maine is in full swing, and the Yankee Fleet has been hammering some hefty pollock on recent trips. This is a great late-season fishery for both hard-fighting and good eating fish. Stay tuned for an article on how you can get in on this bite due out in the November issue of The Fisherman Magazine!