Lake of the Woods; The Eastern Shores Trailer 2017
Lake of the Woods: The Eastern Shores, A History by Water Episode 2
Spring Release 2017
Produced by Greg Lowe, host Sean Kavanagh, narrator Jake MacDonald
Sioux Narrows-Nestor Falls
Northern Ontario Sportfishing Centre
City of Kenora
Lake of the Woods Discovery Centre
Kenora Wildlife Exhibit
Blair Malazdrewich gives us a look at The Wildlife Rescue Exhibit on display at Lake of the Woods Discovery Centre in Kenora.
kenora.ca
Inmate kills cellmate and hides body without guards noticing
Video shows inmate killing cellmate and hiding the body without guards noticing. The newly released surveillance video was taken at the Elgin-Middlesex Detention Centre in London, Ont.
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Canada, 1930's - Film 33942
Amateur home movie of Canada.
logging near railway. Could possibly be northern Ontario or New Brunswick. Logging camp pre fabricated houses. Two men wearing tin pots on their heads ( camp cooks?) moving trees with cranes and chains. Logging, boat on a lake. Plane yard. Log chute. Loading boats. Boat launch with streamers ( northern great lakes? Large buildings with cathedral towers in the background…Quebec? Dirt road in a buggy, up mountains. Harbour, a village, with horse drawn carriages and carts. Back to the logging camp. Logs rolling down hills.
Search and Rescue exercise at Rushing River
Search and Rescue exercise at Rushing River Provincial Park south of Kenora on Lake of the Woods with 435 Sqdn of 17 Wing, Ornge, LOWSAR
Ben drives the boat through Devil's Gap
From the South side to the North, my 11 year old son drives our Harbercraft 1925. Honda 130 HP through Devil's Gap..
2018 Kenora Winter Farmers Market
Spring is in the air... First Farmers Market of 2018! Don't miss the next market March 3rd!
Stumptown Historical Society Museum Tour
Visit - The Stumptown Historical Society in Whitefish, Montana was founded in 1982 by a group of individuals committed to preserving the history of Whitefish and the Flathead Valley. Since its inception the Society has grown with members from all parts of the USA and Canada.
The exterior of the building that houses our museum and offices for the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railroad and a few local businesses has been restored to its original Glacier National Park chalet-like appearance.
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See our listing on the Flathead Guide at:
The Bigfoot Stories You've Never Heard #WeirdDarkness
I KNOW THE MUSIC IS TOO LOUD. Unfortunately I had to learn that after I'd already posted this and it had been up for a while. My other videos do not have the same problem.
SOURCE: Cabinet of Curiosities by Troy Taylor:
Check out the HauntingStories channel!
This episode is a collaboration with my friends and Haunting Stories. I’ll be telling you about Bigfoot – and over at Haunting Stories they’ve posted another video, with me narrating a continuation of this regarding the Minnesota Iceman! Be sure to check out their video right after you watch this one! This is Weird Darkness – where you’ll find creepypastas, ghost stories, unsolved mysteries, crytptids like Bigfoot, and other stories of the strange and bizarre. Feel free to share your own creepy story at WeirdDarkness.com, I might use it in a future episode! Now.. sit back, turn down the lights, and come with me into the Weird Darkness!
It all started with a bunch of footprints at a construction site. Or at least the modern-day fascination with “Bigfoot” did. Stories of hairy giants in the woods and wandering “wild men” had been a part of American lore for nearly two centuries by the time the nickname “Bigfoot” was coined in the late 1950s. But it was then, with the advent of television and the modern media, that chasing down giants in the woods became a national craze.
It was the spring of 1957 and a road construction project was underway near Bluff Creek in northern California. The project was run by a contractor named Ray Wallace and his brother, Wilbur. They hired thirty men that summer to work on the project and by late in the season, Wilbur Wallace reported that something had been throwing around some metal oil drums at the work site. When winter arrived that year, cold weather brought the work to a halt, even though only ten miles of road had been completed.
In early spring 1958, some odd tracks were discovered near the Mad River close to Korbel, California. Some of the locals believed they were bear tracks. As it happened, this was close to another work site that was managed by the Wallace brothers.
Later on that spring, work started up again on the road near Bluff Creek. A number of new men were hired, including Jerry Crew, who drove more than two hours each weekend so he could be home with his family. Ten more miles of road were constructed, angling up across the face of a nearby mountain. On August 3, 1958, Wilbur Wallace stated that something threw a seven-hundred-pound spare tire to the bottom of a deep gully near the work site. This incident was reported later in the month, after the discovery of the footprints.
On August 27, Jerry Crew arrived for work early in the morning and found giant, manlike footprints pressed into the dirt all around his bulldozer. He was at first upset by the discovery, thinking that someone was playing a practical joke on him, but then he decided to report what he found to Wilbur Wallace. At this point, the footprints had not been made public. That occurred on September 21, when Mrs. Jess Bemis, the wife of one of the Bluff Creek work crew, wrote a letter to Andrew Genzoli, the editor of a local newspaper. Genzoli published her husband's Big Foot story and caught the attention of others in the area. One of these was Betty Allen, a newspaper reporter who suggested in a late September column that plaster casts should be made of the footprints. She had already talked to local Native Americans and interviewed residents about hairy giants in the area. She convinced Genzoli to run other stories and letters about Bigfoot. This would be the beginning of a story that would capture the imagination of America.
On October 1 and 2, Jerry Crew discovered more tracks, very similar to the first ones. In response to the new discovery, two workers quit and Wilbur Wallace allegedly introduced his brother Ray to the situation for the first time, bringing him out to show him the tracks. On the day after the last tracks were found, Jerry Crew made plaster casts of the footprints, with help from his friend Bob Titmus and reporter Betty Allen. He was irritated that people were making fun of him and wanted to offer the casts as evidence that he wasn’t making the whole thing up. On October 5, Andrew Genzoli published his now-famous story about Bigfoot. It was picked up worldwide by the wire services, and soon the term was being used in general conversation.
Voyageurs National Park | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
Voyageurs National Park
00:00:55 1 Geology
00:02:50 2 Access
00:04:11 3 Waters
00:05:55 4 Activities
00:06:04 4.1 Camping
00:06:48 4.2 Fishing
00:07:38 4.3 Boating
00:08:14 4.4 Hiking
00:08:36 4.5 In winter
00:11:30 5 Wildlife
00:12:04 6 History
00:12:34 6.1 First inhabitants
00:13:21 6.2 The Fur Trade
00:14:11 6.3 Logging
00:15:19 6.4 The Rainy Lake gold rush
00:16:44 6.5 Settlement and recreation
00:17:35 6.6 Commercial Fishing
00:18:40 7 Points of interest
00:18:49 7.1 Rainy Lake sites
00:21:24 7.2 Kabetogama Lake sites
00:21:59 7.3 Namakan Lake sites
00:23:14 7.4 Sand Point/Crane Lake sites
00:24:13 8 Weather
00:24:21 9 Warnings and safety
00:24:31 9.1 Boating safety
00:25:18 9.2 Winter
00:25:47 10 See also
Listening is a more natural way of learning, when compared to reading. Written language only began at around 3200 BC, but spoken language has existed long ago.
Learning by listening is a great way to:
- increases imagination and understanding
- improves your listening skills
- improves your own spoken accent
- learn while on the move
- reduce eye strain
Now learn the vast amount of general knowledge available on Wikipedia through audio (audio article). You could even learn subconsciously by playing the audio while you are sleeping! If you are planning to listen a lot, you could try using a bone conduction headphone, or a standard speaker instead of an earphone.
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The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
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Voyageurs National Park is an American national park in northern Minnesota near the town of International Falls established in 1975. The park's name commemorates the voyageurs—French-Canadian fur traders who were the first European settlers to frequently travel through the area. The park is notable for its outstanding water resources and is popular with canoeists, kayakers, other boaters, and fishermen. The Kabetogama Peninsula, which lies entirely within the park and makes up most of its land area, is accessible only by boat. To the east of the park lies the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness.
The park has several boat ramps and visitor centers on its periphery, though the main body of the park is only accessible by boat or, in the winter, by snowmobile, ski, or snowshoe. In 2017, the park hosted 237,250 visitors.