also known as ...

aka MYCOLOGICAL OBSERVATIONS

Sunday, August 26, 2012

The Growing Earth - Neal Adams - Coast to Coast AM Classic


The Growing Earth - Neal Adams - Coast to Coast AM Classic   





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John Marco Allegro - Healers of the Dead Sea VIDEO LISTEN


John M. Allegro - 

Healers of the Dead Sea   

jesus was a mushroom







Uploaded by TheHallOfRecords on Jul 19, 2011

This is an old television program featuring John Marco Allegro. But it was never shown on television.

Please note that this audio file is supplied by the Allegro Estate to Gnostic Media for the www.johnallegro.org website. Those interested may download this interview and additional audio files from the Gnostic Media homepage (www.gnosticmedia.com).
Category:

Education
License:



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Dead Sea Scrolls Cover Up John Marco Allegro WATCH VIDEO

Dead Sea Scrolls Cover Up
knowledge based information by :
John Marco Allegro



Discussion about the Dead Sea Scrolls with 
John Marco Allegro and Ian Walker, 1984.

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Uploaded by TheHallOfRecords on Jul 19, 2011

Discussion about the Dead Sea Scrolls with John Marco Allegro and Ian Walker, 1984.

Please note that this audio file is supplied by the Allegro Estate to Gnostic Media for the www.johnallegro.org website. Those interested may download this interview and additional audio files from the Gnostic Media homepage (www.gnosticmedia.com).







The Alchemical World of Frabato - Martin Faulks meets Lumir Bardon, Son of Franz Bardon

The Alchemical World of Frabato 
Martin Faulks meets Lumir Bardon, 
Son of Franz Bardon



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from youtube- Uploaded by MartinJFaulks on Aug 5, 2011

Born in 1909 in Opava, Czech Republic (former Czechoslovakia), Franz
Bardon dedicated his entire life to the study of the mystical arts. He
toured Czechoslovakia giving demonstrations of his spiritual abilities
under the stage name 'Frabato'. He used his mystical knowledge to
treat patients at his naturopathy clinic when conventional medicine
failed them. Persecuted by both the Nazis and Communist regimes,
attacked by a Satanic Lodge (known as FOGC), Franz Bardon's life came
to an end on July 10th, 1958 in a concentration camp.

Join the adventure - Martin Faulks, a dedicated student of Franz
Bardon's works, travels to the Czech Republic on a Hermetic pilgrimage
to the places where the Master worked, lived and perfected his art.
On this dvd Martin Faulks interviews Franz Bardon's son Lumir, to get
closer to the man behind the mystery.

Subjects include:
Who was Franz Bardon's spiritual teacher?
Miracles witnessed by the members of the Bardon family.
Franz Bardon's correspondence with the English occultist, Aleister Crowley.
Details of Franz Bardon's stage show.
Franz Bardon's tigers-eye ring and his link to Isis
The magic powers of Bardon's student, Dr M K
The deliberate mistakes in Bardon's works
Rune Yoga
The elemental methods Franz Bardon used to create the Spagyric remedies
Details of the training Bardon offered his apprentices
Advice on astral travel
Warning against pacts with spirits
The Evil Powers behind Nazi symbols
About Tarot cards and their symbolism
The 'true name' of Franz Bardon required to summon him.

Also includes footage of:
A visit to the Bardon family home
Outside Bardon's Naturopathy Clinic
A tour of Opava (Bardon's home town)
Paying respects at the Master's grave

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

The Death of Chemistry sets and dumbing down society step by step







Wired TVs nice title card to lead into the story about Chemistry Sets - 

The Death of Chemistry sets and dumbing down society step by step
Is the Ipad to replace skills? features that UFO guy Bob Lazar and his prop wife.





Bob Lazar, his wifey, and host



Chemistry Set from 1963 !

Chemistry Guru in training!

CONSPIRACY RISING -TRICK-NOLOGY know the plan in action PT122- face recognition -




Although this is an older segment it is even more relevent today as cameras and this technology has spread to many segments of the world and is a concern
as everyone is to be monitored.
This was old news even when it came out but just think deep about
how far advanced they are now with it and what they utilize it for.
Who is THEY??












Thursday, June 21, 2012

Secret World of Gardens-FUNGI-2004 MUSHROOMS FUNGUS

Secret World of Gardens-FUNGI-2004

hosted by Martin Galloway 



Secret World of Gardens-FUNGI-2004 by freqazoidiac

RAINWOLVES documentary - canada 2003 - wildlife-animals


RAINWOLVES documentary - canada 2003


   
BC's remote central coast is a landscape dominated by mountains, rich forests and deep river valleys, and it is home to a remarkable, rare, and little-studied wolf. This documentary chronicles these legendary rainforest wolves and follows young biologist Chris Darimont from Victoria as he collects samples for genetic research and respectfully observes the wolves' behaviour.


Obscured by coastal fog and hidden in the shadows of mountains, the Great Bear Rainforest is home to a rich diversity of life, including the Raincoast Wolf, a unique sub-species like no other wolf that walks this planet

Related Links:
Raincoast Conservation Society - Wolf Project
The Rainforest Solutions Project - Great Bear Rainforest
Northern Lights Wildlife


DV Cam
Mini DV
46 minutes
Colour

Documentary

Original version in English
       
Producers

Andrew Koster

David Springbett
Executive Producers

Andrew Koster

Ian McAllister
Director and Scriptwriter

Twyla Roscovich



RAINWOLVES- wolves-pacific northwest- native... by freqazoidiac

Sunday, June 3, 2012

AN UNBIASED DOWN TO EARTH REVIEW OF MONTESSORI SCHOOL FOR CHILDREN

The current incarnation of most Montessori schools in North America are standardized to the approach akin to that of being the McDonalds (fast food eatery) of the education system.


Monday, March 12, 2012

Great Canadian Parks-Lesser Slave lake-1999

Great Canada Parks-Lesser Slave lake-1999


Season 4, Episode 9 (EP 4 x 9) - Lesser Slave Lake Provincial Park

Airdate: 1999

The only neo-tropical bird banding station in the boreal forest is in Lesser Slave Lake Provincial Park. The park's namesake lake is a freshwater ocean that moderates the northern climate. Marten Mountain has a unique microclimate and ecosystem where species usually found in the Rockies, thrive.

 http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks

Great Canada Parks-Lesser Slave lake-1999 by freqazoidiac

Great Canadian Parks-evolution of CITY PARKS-canada-1996

Great Canadian Parks-evolution of CITY PARKS-canada-1996

Season 1, Episode 11 (EP 1 x 11) - Evolution of City Parks

Airdate: 1996

Canada has a strong tradition of preserving open spaces and calling them "parks. The definition, however, has changed over the years, following the patterns of settlement across the country and the evolving patterns of life. Definition and character of planned urban park space has changed with time, beginning with former military grounds and forts, cemetery grounds and smaller green spaces along transportation lines. Landfill sites were often reclaimed as green parks. The 1950's saw the expansion of recreational facilities as the priority of park space, supplemented by the donation of private estates for the public good. In our present time, a balance is being sought between preservation of natural space and the provision of facilities for human enjoyment and comfort.


 http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks

Great Canadian Parks-evolution of CITY... by freqazoidiac

Great Canadian Parks-GREENWICH National Park-PEI-2000

Great Canadian Parks-GREENWICH National Park-PEI-2000


Season 5, Episode 10 (EP 5 x 10) - Greenwich National Park

Airdate: 2000

A separate and self-contained addition to the existing PEI National Park, Greenwich protects a unique, migrating parabolic dune system. The spectacular dunes leave rare vegetation communities in their wake; and the continuously blowing sand has created an adjacent "skeletal" forest. Cultural artifacts have revealed 6000 years of M'iqmaq occupation, and an Acadian farming settlement.

 http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks




Great Canadian Parks-GREENWICH National... by freqazoidiac

http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xpdzbr_great-canadian-parks-greenwich-national-park-pei-2000_travel

Great Canadian Parks-LAC LA RONGE PROVINCIAL PARK-1997

Great Canadian Parks-LAC LA RONGE PROVINCIAL PARK-1997

Season 2, Episode 11 (EP 2 x 11) - Lac La Ronge Provincial Park

Airdate: 1997

Located in northern Saskatchewan, Lac La Ronge Provincial Park is dotted with 100 lakes and 1,000 islands. The northern half of the park is rock; enormous boulders rise from crystal clear lakes and rushing torrents of water thunder over remote rapids and waterfalls. The southern portion encloses the magnificent 40 square mile Lac La Ronge with treed islands of all sizes At its north end, Lac La Ronge empties into the mighty Churchill River over the spectacular 80 foot Nistowiak Falls. Because of the many lakes and abundance of fish, the area is home to a large population of majestic bald eagles. Researchers are particularly concerned about the health of the birds and their habitat; because Northern Saskatchewan is one of their last remaining breeding grounds.


 http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks


http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xpdl3l_great-canadian-parks-lac-la-ronge-provincial-park-1997_lifestyle

Great Canadian Parks-LAC LA RONGE PROVINCIAL... by freqazoidiac

Great Canadian Parks-PACIFIC RIM national park reserve-BC-1999

Great Canadian Parks-PACIFIC RIM national park reserve-BC-1999

Season 5, Episode 7 (EP 5 x 7) - Pacific Rim National Park

Airdate: 1999

Grey whales stop here en route to feeding grounds further north. On this misty edge of Vancouver Island, the powerful force of the Pacific Ocean batters lush old-growth forests, steep cliffs and secluded beaches. Pacific Rim's West Coast trail was first laid out as a life-saving trail for shipwreck survivors. Today, it is one of the most challenging, and most popular wilderness hikes in Canada.

 http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks

Great Canadian Parks-PACIFIC RIM national park... by freqazoidiac

Great Canadian Parks-Terra Nova National park-NFLND-1998


Great Canadian Parks-Terra Nova National park-NFLND-1998

Season 3, Episode 11 (EP 3 x 11) - Terra Nova National Park

Airdate: 1998

Eastern Newfoundland's Terra Nova National Park protects the 'fingers of the sea'. In this unusual landscape, the ocean's bays reach deep inland to meet the edge of the boreal forest. The 'fingers' of Terra Nova are sheltered and shallow, and whales, seabirds and other marine life thrives here. Most of the park is forest, which supports a large population of moose and a small number of the endangered Newfoundland marten. The moist climate of the park produces the right conditions for the growth of bogs, which sometimes rise up to 5 meters above the surrounding landscape.
 http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks


http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xpdl34_great-canadian-parks-terra-nova-national-park-nflnd-1998_travel


Great Canadian Parks-Terra Nova National... by freqazoidiac

Great Canadian Parks-MINGAN ARCHIPELAGO NATIONAL PARK RESERVE-Quebec-1997

Great Canadian Parks-MINGAN ARCHIPELAGO NATIONAL PARK RESERVE-Quebec-1997



Season 2, Episode 10 (EP 2 x 10) - Mingan Archipelago National Park

Airdate: 1997

The Mingan Archipelago consists of a coastal chain of 900 islands and islets in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, stretching over a distance of 150 km. The most striking features of the islands are their dramatic topography and rocky shorelines. For generations, lighthouse keepers have kept watch and guided ships through the often treacherous waterway. The Mingan has Canada's largest concentration of shoreline arches and grottoes as well as the immense limestone sculptures known as "monoliths". The combination of climate and latitude make the islands the ideal habitat for rare, arctic, alpine plants. Over 200 species of birds can be seen on the islands, but the most endearing is the Atlantic Puffin.


 http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks

Great Canadian Parks-MINGAN ARCHIPELAGO NATIONAL... by freqazoidiac

Great Canadian Parks-DINOSAUR PROVINCIAL PARK-Alberta-1996

Great Canadian Parks-DINOSAUR PROVINCIAL PARK-Alberta-1996




Season 1, Episode 9 (EP 1 x 9) - Dinosaur Provincial Park

Airdate: 1996

Dinosaur Provincial Park in Southern Alberta is world famous for its 75 million year old bone beds, unmatched in the world for sheer number and accessibility. This park is also the most extensive area of classic "badlands" in Canada, the result of the glacial melt that occurred 15,000 years ago and the effects of wind, ice and rain ever since. Breathtakingly beautiful and awe inspiring, it is the earth exposed and at its most vulnerable.

 http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks

Great Canadian Parks-DINOSAUR PROVINCIAL... by freqazoidiac

Great Canadian Parks-HECLA PROVINCIAL PARK-Manitoba-1998

Great Canadian Parks-HECLA PROVINCIAL PARK-Manitoba-1998



Season 3, Episode 10 (EP 3 x 10) - Hecla Provincial Park

Airdate: 1998

Hecla Provincial Park's natural and human history are so inextricably linked to the water, that it's easy to forget that this is Manitoba. The park's most fascinating inhabitants are the majestic white pelicans that nest on the offshore islands. Hecla's first group of European settlers came from Iceland in the 19th century, to start life afresh in what would become 'New Iceland.' Most of the Icelanders have moved away, but the Hecla of today commemorates both the natural and human history of the island.

 http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks



Great Canadian Parks-HECLA PROVINCIAL... by freqazoidiac

Great Canadian Parks-ST.LAWRENCE ISLANDS NATIONAL PARK ONTARIO-1999

Great Canadian Parks-ST.LAWRENCE ISLANDS NATIONAL PARK ONTARIO-1999



Season 5, Episode 1 (EP 5 x 1) - St. Lawrence Islands National Park

Airdate:1999

St. Lawrence Islands National Park is part of Ontario's 1000 Islands area, an 80 km-wide extension of granite hilltops joining the Canadian Shield of northern Ontario with New York's Adirondack Mountains. The park is a jewel enjoyed by millions of recreational boaters, but also protects a sliver of wilderness in the heart of busy southern Ontario.

 http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks

Great Canadian Parks-ST.LAWRENCE ISLANDS... by freqazoidiac

Great Canadian Parks-ALGONQUIN PROVINCIAL PARK-ONTARIO-1996

Great Canadian Parks-ALGONQUIN PROVINCIAL PARK-ONTARIO-1996




Season 1, Episode 10 (EP 1 x 10) - Algonquin Provincial Park

Airdate: 1996

Made famous by the Group of Seven Artists and the tragic figure of Tom Thompson, Algonquin displays its Autumn colours for that brief blaze of glory in late September, early October. Autumn is the best time to see Algonquin, not only because of the colours, but because the cooler weather means no mosquitoes, perfect hiking conditions, lakes like glass and fewer visitors. There are more than 1,500 km of canoe routes through thousands of lakes, ponds and streams. By paddle and portage, one can access areas of Algonquin that can't be seen otherwise. The 7,725 square kilometer area of forest, lakes and rivers is not really a wilderness park. Ironically, Algonquin owes its existence to the logging industry of the 1800's, which lobbied for the creation of a protected area here, not to preserve wilderness, which was already gone, but to serve as a wildlife sanctuary.

 http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks


Great Canadian Parks-ALGONQUIN PROVINCIAL... by freqazoidiac

Great Canadian Parks-CHURN CREEK PROVINCIAL PARK-BC-1999

Great Canadian Parks-CHURN CREEK PROVINCIAL PARK-BC-1999






Season 5, Episode 12 (EP 5 x 12) - Churn Creek Provincial Park

Airdate: 1999

This park protects British Columbia's rarest landscape: dry grassland. Only 1.8% of the province's native grassland remains, and provides much-needed habitat for a variety of species. At the core of the Churn Creek protected area is a historic, still-operating cattle ranch, which is also serves as the administrative center of the park.


 http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks

Great Canadian Parks-CHURN CREEK PROVINCIAL... by freqazoidiac

Great Canadian Parks-KHUTZEYMATEEN GRIZZLY BEAR SANCTUARY BC-1999

Great Canadian Parks-KHUTZEYMATEEN GRIZZLY BEAR SANCTUARY BC-1999





Season 5, Episode 2 (EP 5 x 2) - Khutzeymateen

Airdate: 1999
This northern wilderness is Canada's first Grizzly bear sanctuary. Over 100 bears prowl the fjords, rivers and forests of the Khutzeymateen. Visitation is limited; the curious can enter the Sanctuary only with a licensed guide, and numbers are limited so as not to disrupt the bears.



 http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks




Great Canadian Parks-KHUTZEYMATEEN GRIZZLY BEAR... by freqazoidiac

Great Canadian Parks-PRINCE ALBERT NATIONAL PARK-1999










Great Canadian Parks-PRINCE ALBERT NATIONAL PARK-1999






Season 5, Episode 3 (EP 5 x 3) - Prince Albert National Park

Airdate: 1999

This Saskatchewan wilderness is where the infamous conservationist, Grey Owl, made his home. The park marks the ecological transition from southern to northern Canada. The grassland, aspen parkland and boreal forest create a diverse mosaic. The park is almost 30% water, which makes it ideal for canoeing.

 http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks



Great Canadian Parks-PRINCE ALBERT NATIONAL... by freqazoidiac

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Great Canadian Parks-Cape Scott Provincial Park BC-1998


Great Canadian Parks-Cape Scott Provincial Park BC-1998 1of2



Season 3, Episode 9 (EP 3 x 9) - Cape Scott
Airdate: 1998


Cape Scott is a place of extremes: rugged, impenetrable wilderness on the northwest tip of Vancouver Island. The treacherous currents and unrelenting weather at Cape Scott is notorious among sailors and hundreds of shipwrecks dot the coast. The isolated Cape Scott lighthouse is one of the last in British Columbia still tended by a keeper. This climate and landscape can be unforgiving, and two separate attempts at settlement here ended in failure. The forest reclaims quickly; so the few poignant reminders of the park's human inhabitants are disappearing. Black bears forage along the beaches and enjoy the shelter of the dense forest. Seals and sea lions inhabit the offshore rocks and islands.

 http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks


GREAT CANADIAN PARKS-Kootenay National Park BC -S4-Ep8--1999


GREAT CANADIAN PARKS-Kootenay National Park BC -S4-Ep8--1999 1of2



Season 4, Episode 8 (EP 4 x 8) - Kootenay National Park
Airdate: 1999


Kootenay National Park is the "undiscovered" park of the Rockies, and shelters remarkable climactic and vegetation diversity. The park's Columbia Valley is part of North America's longest continuous series of wetlands, which provide habitat for over 250 species of birds.




(   from :   http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks

GREAT CANADIAN PARKS-Willmore Wilderness Park ALBERTA-1997


GREAT CANADIAN PARKS-Willmore Wilderness Park ALBERTA-1997 1of2



Season 2, Episode 9 (EP 2 x 9) - Willmore Wilderness Park
Airdate: 1997


Willmore Wilderness Park is situated in west central Alberta, sandwiched between the B.C. border, Jasper National Park and the Continental Divide. Willmore's landscape is typical Rocky Mountain, with foothills and mountainous terrain. Peaks along the Continental Divide exceed 3,000 meters in elevation. The Willmore is home to over 20% of Alberta’s bighorn sheep and mountain goats and about 600 woodland caribou. Other mammal species include moose, elk, black and grizzly bear.


http://www.goodearthproductions.com/viewshows.cfm?series=Great%20Canadian%20Parks&season=Season%201&episode=10


 http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks

GREAT CANADIAN PARKS-Fundy National Park NEW BRUNSWICK-1996 1of2



Season 1, Episode 8 (EP 1 x 8) - Fundy National Park
Airdate: 1996

New Brunswick's spectacular Bay of Fundy is famous for tides that rise and fall over 5 stories every 12 hours or so, moving one hundred billion tons of water. It is a rich, sheltered ocean shore environment and a bird watching mecca, with almost 350 species. The bay is also a staging area for popular whale watching excursions and research on the Right Whale, the rarest of the great whales.




 http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks

GREAT CANADIAN PARKS-Vuntut National Park YUKON-1997


GREAT CANADIAN PARKS-Vuntut National Park YUKON-1997 1of2



Season 5, Episode 8 (EP 5 x 8) - Vuntut National Park
Airdate: 1997


Located in the northern Yukon, Vuntut protects the Old Crow Flats, a vast plain of more than 2000 shallow lakes and ponds. The Flats are recognized as a wetland of international importance, and are one of the most important waterfowl areas in the world. The Porcupine caribou herd, one of the world's largest remaining herds of barren-ground caribou migrates through the Flats.




 http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks

GREAT CANADIAN PARKS-Ts'ilós Provincial Park BC-S1-Ep7--1996


GREAT CANADIAN PARKS-Ts'ilós Provincial Park BC-S1-Ep7--1996 1of2




Season 1, Episode 7 (EP 1 x 7) - Ts'ilós Provincial Park

Airdate: 1996

One of Canada's newest parks, Ts'ilós (pronounced sigh-loss) is bordered by the rugged Chilcotin ranges of coastal mountains. Stunningly beautiful and rich in wildlife, it is also a testament to creative park management. It is cooperatively managed with local native people, who carry on hunting, fishing and other traditional activities. The park's centerpiece is Chilko Lake, a magnificent aqua blue glacial lake that is the largest and highest natural freshwater lake in North America.

(   from :   http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks


GREAT CANADIAN PARKS-Kouchibouguac National Park NEW BRUNSWICK-S4-Ep10--1998


GREAT CANADIAN PARKS-Kouchibouguac National Park NEW BRUNSWICK-S4-Ep10--1998 1of2





Season 4, Episode 10 (EP 4 x 10) - Kouchibouguac National Park

Airdate:1998

Kouchibouguac has the most dynamic ecosystem in the national parks system; it is constantly changing. The park is a rich marine mosaic of bogs, salt marshes, tidal rivers, barrier islands, and sheltered lagoons. Colonies of both harbour and gray seals bark and splash on offshore dunes all summer.

(   from :   http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks


GREAT CANADIAN PARKS-Writing-On-Stone Provincial Park ALBERTA -S3-Ep7--1998


GREAT CANADIAN PARKS-Writing-On-Stone Provincial Park ALBERTA -S3-Ep7--1998 1of2



Season 3, Episode 7 (EP 3 x 7) - Writing-On-Stone Provincial Park

Airdate: 1998

Southern Alberta's Writing-On-Stone Park protects more rock art than any other location on the North American plains. For centuries, native people created petroglyphs and pictographs on the park's sheer sandstone cliffs. Writing-On-Stone has a unique and mystical landscape, characterized by mushroom-shaped rocks known as 'hoodoos' and 'coulees', damp, steep-walled ravines. Pronghorn antelope graze on the open prairies, white-tailed and mule deer cruise along the river and yellow-bellied marmots bask on the sun-warmed sandstone.




GREAT CANADIAN PARKS-Kananaskis Country ALBERTA-S4-Ep11--1998


GREAT CANADIAN PARKS-Kananaskis Country ALBERTA-S4-Ep11--1998 1of2



Season 4, Episode 11 (EP 4 x 11) - Kananaskis Country

Airdate: 1998




Located in the southwest corner of Alberta, "K-Country" encompasses 4000 square kilometers of rolling hills and rushing creeks, snow-capped peaks and lush forests. Kananaskis represents an experiment in land use; protected areas, wildlife sanctuaries, scientific research and recreational use co-exist here. Innovative local outfitters guide adventurers up to alpine areas using domestic goats as pack animals.
(   from :   http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks





GREAT CANADIAN PARKS-Mount Revelstoke National Park BC-S5-Ep6--1999


GREAT CANADIAN PARKS-Mount Revelstoke National Park BC-S5-Ep6--1999 1of2




Season 5, Episode 6 (EP 5 x 6) - Mount Revelstoke National Park

Airdate:1999

For such a small park, Mount Revelstoke has a great diversity of ecosystems from the old growth rainforest to the high alpine and abundant glaciers. Mount Revelstoke's alpine ecosystem provides habitat for caribou, bears, wolverines and Bighorn sheep. The park has a close relationship to the people of the nearby town of Revelstoke. In recent years they have devised a bear awareness program which has greatly reduced the number of bear moralities.

(   from :   http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks

\

GREAT CANADIAN PARKS-WAPUSK NATIONAL PARK-1997


GREAT CANADIAN PARKS-WAPUSK NATIONAL PARK-1997

Season 2 Episode 21-(ep8 of season)  (S 2 ep 21) - Wapusk National Park Manitoba
Airdate:1997



Wapusk National Park
Season 2 Episode 21

Canada’s 7th largest park was created in1996 near Churchill, Manitoba. Wapusk National Park protects an area of the Hudson Bay Lowlands, which contains the world’s largest concentration of polar bears. Wapusk National Park sits along the northern tree line, which is characterized by treeless tundra and boreal forest. During the short, intense summer, a variety of wild flowering plants spring from the tundra soil.
Length: 30 minutes



http://www.goodearthproductions.com/viewshows.cfm?series=Great%20Canadian%20Parks&season=Season%201&episode=10

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

GREAT CANADIAN PARKS-Juan De Fuca Provincial Park- The Fate of Sombrio -BC -S2-Ep7--1997


(received a DMCA notice - had to edit some of this post !)
first notice I've had - and weird the topic at hand
would generate a warning.


Season 2, Episode 7 (EP 2 x 7) - Juan de Fuca Marine Trail
Airdate: 1997

The Juan de Fuca Provincial Park is a 73 km hiking trail stretching along the western shoreline of Southern Vancouver Island. The trail offers rugged beauty, wildlife viewing and roaring surf in its course along the pacific coastline of the Strait of Juan de Fuca. The park is known for its series of tide pools teeming with marine species such as sea stars, anemones, mussels, barnacles, crabs and sea urchins. The serene seal grotto is a birthing den for hundreds of seals, and Northern Sea Lions frequent the park's offshore waters.

(   from :   http://www.tvdome.eu/tv-shows/great-canadian-parks 





 This picture is a reminder of what is no longer. The families of Sombrio have
been evicted from the Coast since 1997, shortly after the episode aired.



watch the episode in 2 parts below :


part 1




part 2 




Knowledge network of BC has a little blurb about Sombrio :

For over three decades, aging hippies, artists, New-Age alternative types, surfers, social misfits, and a family with ten children called Sombrio Beach home. On the picturesque shores of Vancouver Island's southwest coast, they built shacks out of driftwood and lived on what they gathered from the forest and the sea. Most just wanted to be left alone and follow their own idiosyncratic path in the sun and surf, but when the government determined that the beach fell within the perimeter of Juan de Fuca Provincial Park, it was time for them to go. Sombrio reveals the squatters' personal stories and convictions as they come to terms with their impending eviction.








There is a very excellent Documentary made about the  residents 
of the Trail.  
But they put out a DMCA against my blog
just for posting a short clip PROMOTING their
doc. Amazing..so I will no longer do so.


Here is a clip from the Doc :

(received a DMCA notice - had to edit some of this post !)






_________
The Globe and Mail (a newspaper) wrote this bit in 1997 
regarding the changes @ Sombrio Beach which took
place shortly after the Episode of Great Canadian Parks aired :

No home for the Flower Children

For decades, the southern shoreline of Vancouver Island was the idyllic home to social misfits, free spirits and unreconstructed hippies. Now the provincial government is sending out eviction notices.

Published: The Globe and Mail, February 1, 1997
Deborah Jones,  Sombrio Beach, B.C.

    WHEN Mike Callaway arrived on this remote beach 15 years ago, he just wanted time to recover from the painful break-up of a band he'd played in, the Codfish Cowboys. And so, on a rocky strip of land sandwiched between the Strait of Juan de Fuca and the towering mountains of southern Vancouver Island, accessed only by a narrow coastal road winding from Victoria 90 minutes away, Mr. Callaway set up house in a crude shelter under the moist canopy of rain forest. "I had a spiritual feeling that I belonged around here."

    He surfed the massive rollers that incessantly crash on his doorstep, played music, made forays to far-off stores to supplement the local seafood, drank clear water from the Sombrio River and only occasionally returned to his North Carolina home for brief visits.

    Eventually he acquired a family of abandoned cats he was too kind-hearted to let starve. He constantly improved his jerry-rigged home with driftwood and funky artifacts and erected an out-building where, behind a vast window with a view to die for, he started a business repairing surfboards. Now Mike Callaway has fully metamorphized into Rivermouth Mike, a cheerful guru of B.C.'s surfing scene and by dint of age (45) and tenure a relative old-timer in the diverse community of Sombrio Beach squatters.

    Within weeks, that community will change forever. Last fall, the provincial government formally warned most squatters that they'd have to move on. Starting yesterday and continuing through next week, they are being served legal notice of eviction.

    The arrival of bureaucracy heralds the end of an era on Sombrio. For decades, it and a chain of other beaches on the Canadian side of the Strait of Juan de Fuca have been home to free spirits who refuse to march to middle age and conformity with the rest of the baby boomers. Here amid abundant plant and animal life across from Washington State's Olympic Peninsula, the old ways -- early homesteader meets flower power -- prevail. Society's misfits and dropouts have also taken up residence. A less unusual group are the hardy campers who periodically spent a few months living on a beach before returning to everyday life.

    Now the B.C. government wants to open up their exclusive preserve to the public. It has turned 47 kilometres of spectacular coastline, owned by the Crown and private forest companies, into the Juan de Fuca Trail. The new park consists of four established parks, from Botanical Beach at the west end to China Beach at the east, and a trail linking them.

    During the past two years, park workers have built the rugged hiking trail between the beach and the "squats." Outdoor toilets have been erected, as has modern signage and information boards, gravel paths to the trail and a series of suspension bridges across rushing rivers. The relatively easy access and rave media reports have caught the attention of ambitious hikers, families on weekend outings and many more surfers.

    Some of the squats, including Rivermouth Mike, see themselves as hosts to these visitors from the outside world and cheerfully give them directions, teach them how to surf and clean up candy wrappers and pop cans after them. "The parks department should hire me!" he jokes.

    Others rail bitterly at the intrusion: Some systemically tear down park structures or simply keep out of sight when tourists appear.

    Park wardens, however, are taking a tough line. Under B.C. Parks rules, people are not allowed to reside on park land for longer than 14 days. And, points out Dave Chater, district manager for B.C. Parks, there are matters of sanitation (the squatters' toilets are holes in the ground in the woods), concerns about confrontations between more garrulous residents and park visitors, and the squalour of some of the dwellings -- rough, smelly hovels with dirt floors, that are surrounded by garbage.

    There is no running water, no electricity, no phones, no garbage dump. "There is also concern about damage to cultural sites," says Mr. Chater, noting that some huts are built over historical artifacts of the Pacheenaht First Nations.

    If the squats refuse to abide by eviction notices, they will eventually be escorted off park land, he says. "People could be arrested, but obviously that's the worst-case scenario. One hopes it will never come to that."

    Sombrio is by far the largest of the squatter communities. Its 15 to 20 dwellings each shelter between one and 11 people. Because so many of the people are transient an accurate population count is impossible, although Mr. Chater estimates there are as many as 35 squats.

    A few Sombrio residents will escape immediate eviction: Rivermouth Mike is one. So too is his next-door-neighbour Steve, an American who arrived 25 years ago and lives with his wife Barb and their nine bright children in two cedar houses surrounded by pens for goats and domestic fowl.

    The two families' clean and well-kept homesteads are located on a 1.2-hectare strip of private land owned by the estate of a deceased Seattle resident. Mr. Chater says the B.C. government is trying to contact the estate in the hopes of buying the land and adding it to the Juan de Fuca Park. But if the government is unsuccessful in acquiring the land, Rivermouth Mike, Steve, Barb and the children plan to stay put.

    Many of their neighbours have left, or are getting ready to do so. One that has already departed is the builder of an elaborate two-storey, cedar-sided house that sits abandoned on a rocky point, its valuable cedar shingles in the process of being ripped off. Visible through a gaping hole in the walls is an abandoned calico cat.

    As winter storms buffetted the coast and the Jan. 31 deadline for eviction neared, a few long-time residents made plans to set up an organic farm in Nelson, in B.C.'s interior, and continue their loosely communal lifestyle. For others, notably those who viewed Sombrio as a haven from a society they despise, the future looks unkind.

    Across the misty Sombrio River from Rivermouth Mike's home, right at the end of an incongruously modern suspension bridge, a hand-hewn cobblestone path leads to the home of Blue and Wendy, who settled at the beach nine years ago (Blue objects vehemently to being called a squatter).

    Their crude dwelling consists of a ground-floor room large enough for a few shelves, two tattered armchairs and a black wood stove. In the middle stands an artful winding staircase. Numerous soot-smudged cats crawl over the chairs and staircase and sprawl under the stove, while a big brown dog sits by Blue. "Home Sweet Home" reads a sign on the wall, not far from the eviction notice. The air reeks of urine, and everything, including animals and people, is coated with grime.

    "I hate the rich," Blue says, glaring at a reporter and photographer who have come inquiring about their eviction. "The rich want to make a park so they can play in it. They're kicking the squatters off it. Have you got any tobacco? We're out. Did you know that I'm a Zen Buddhist? And it's the judges who are the real criminals in society."

    Wendy, whom Blue says had four of their children taken away from her at birth by the provincial Social Services Department, huddles in one of the armchairs. "I don't want to talk about it," she whispers to Blue, as he starts describing how he was arrested by police when he tried to stop the department from taking the infant.

    It's not clear if Blue is more angry at the social workers or the park people. "They were buddy-buddy with us," he says. "They cut down trees and built the bridge and there was not one whisper about kicking people off [until last fall]. Nine years ago this place was really beautiful. Now it's completely destroyed."

    Abruptly, he gets up and holds the door open for me to leave. Asked what they will do about the eviction, he shrugs. "I'm not worried about it."

    Just outside the house a man and a toddler, clad in expensive outdoor clothing and leather hiking boots, cross the suspension bridge over the river, gazing curiously at Blue and Wendy's house amid the ancient forest.

    Is this a case of big government moving in and removing the little people? It's not that simple, of course. Some of the squatters happily live off government, collecting social-assistance cheques. The don't report their income from sporadic labouring jobs or selling crafts.

    Even the most enamoured residents admit beach life hasn't been perfect, but it has its special delights. "When you get up in the morning you can do whatever you want to, all day," smiles Lori, who comes from Ontario and has spent the past few years living an alternative lifestyle throughout North America with her partner Paul, whom she married on Sombrio beach last summer. Living expenses are minimal and the couple obtains money from welfare, craft sales, odd jobs and, recently, the sale of their dog's puppies.

    What does the future hold? "I don't know," she shrugs. "We're hoping they won't actually evict us."

    Nineteen kilometres down the road, in the hard-working forestry and tourism community of Port Renfrew (population 400), there are mixed feelings about the eviction of the squatters.

    Says Tomi Smith, who ran a community recreation program and counts many of the beach people as friends: "There are a few down there who are highly educated," she says, "but they can't live in society. They clean the beach after the tourists and if somebody is hurt, they would get help for them. But other people in town say they're on social assistance and shouldn't be spending their time squatting on the beach."

    Despite the changes, Barb and Steve hope to remain. "If I was raising nine kids in town, I'd go nuts," says Barb. "Here they can play." Steve points out, though, that they do have to watch out for cougars and, in the summertime, bears.

    And, sometime in the future, officials bearing eviction notices.

    Deborah Jones is a contributing editor to Report on Business and Chatelaine magazines.

Copyright Deborah Jones 1997

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