Video Tour of The Cable Natural History Museum | Northern Wisconsin Nature Activities
We invite you to take a video tour of the Cable Natural History Museum located in the beautiful Cable, Wisconsin Area of Northwest Wisconsin.
The Cable Natural History Museum is a regional resource dedicated to promoting appreciation of nature, providing opportunities for natural history education, and advocating stewardship for the environment.
Let the Cable Natural History Museum introduce you to our Northwest Wisconsin neighborhood: the 1.5 million-acre Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest; 3,500 lakes and countless rivers, creeks and streams; majestic Lake Superior, the largest lake in the world; beaches, waterfalls, orchids, wetlands, fish, wolves, pine trees, owls, deer, eagles ... well, you get the picture! Check out our web site -- - to get the lay of the land and to learn about the northwoods environment. Then come on up any time of the year and visit!
Admission is FREE and Open to the Public (ADA Accessible).
Episode 21: Bayfield County Wild Talks Natural History with Emily Stone
On this episode of Bayfield County Wild, Tourism Director Mary Motiff talks about the rich history that’s been preserved in Bayfield County with more museums per capita than most of the country and 22 sites on the National Registry of Historic Places. Co-host Nancy Christopher learns what a naturalist does from Cable Natural History Museum Education Director, Emily Stone. Plus, we highlight some great events in May.
Making History
A few years back, the Washington Post did an article about the number of museums in the United States, which is about double the number of Starbuck’s and McDonald’s locations combined. Data from the Institute of Museum and Library Services shows that Bayfield County had the 6th largest number of museums per capita in the entire United States. If you are a history buff, there’s a lot to see and do at museums and historic sites in Drummond, Cable, Mason, Bayview, Oulu, Cornucopia and beyond. According to Mary, many of the County’s 16 museums can be found along the WI Lake Superior Scenic Byway, which received that designation because of all the natural, cultural, historic and geographic resources and attractions along the way.
Those who like architecture will like visiting Bayfield County’s historic sites which include the Apostle Islands Lighthouses, Bayfield and Washburn’s Historic Districts and seven shipwrecks, some that are so close to the surface you can see them while kayaking or taking a cruise in a glass bottom boat. A brochure, produced by the Bayfield County Historic Society, can be ordered online by clicking on the “Request information” menu item on the Visitors section of the Bayfield County website.
Observing & Learning About the Natural World
A naturalist is “a type of biologist who studies the impacts of living species on each other and the environments in which they live.” Naturalist and Education Director at the Cable Natural History Museum, Emily Stone, says the best stories can be found in nature. Emily has a degree in outdoor education with an emphasis on natural history and a minor in geology from Northland College. She also has a master’s as a field naturalist from the University of Vermont. Emily says she is lucky to be working in Bayfield County where glacial history, protected lands and cool plants make it such an exciting place to explore. She shares her discoveries in a weekly column she writes for about a dozen newspapers called “Natural Connections” in Wisconsin and Minnesota, plus a compilation of her writings that can be found in two books of the same name.
Emily says the main mission of the museum is to showcase its collections of Northern Wisconsin native species, which she calls the “dead stuff,” and it's living collections which include a Red Tail Hawk and an American Kestrel, plus a salamander and two snakes. The staff puts on about 200 public programs every year. This year a new exhibit opens at the museum on May 25 called “Power Pollinators” featuring birds, wasps, beetles, bees, butterflies and moths and a new Curiosity Center for kids. The Center includes a two-story tree that kids can climb up - one branch of the tree has a slide and climbing wall. The other side has a bird’s nest where you can launch a flying squirrel on a zip line.
The museum also hosts master naturalist training and advanced master naturalist training throughout the summer for those who are interested in high-level training on land management and citizen science to work as volunteers at non-profits and other agencies.
On July 27, the museum throws its biggest party, its Summer Benefit, featuring a dinner, live music and auction. Proceeds benefit the museum.
The museum also conducts Junior Day Camps and Storytime at Redberry Books, as well as many more lectures and family programs. If you want to learn more about all these programs, you can visit the Cable Natural History museum’s website and sign up for its weekly e-newsletter. The newsletter includes Emily’s weekly column, a calendar of events and blogs by museum staff. You can also follow the museum’s Facebook and Instagram pages.
May Activities:
May 4 – 31: Hauser’s Annual Red Barn Plant Sale
May 9: Dam it: Why Beavers Matter, presented by Ben Goldfarb
May 11: Hungry Bear 100 Race
May 15 – June 9: Eat. Drink. Washburn
May 16 – 18: Chequamegon Bay Birding & Nature Festival
May 25: Cable Natural History Museum Grand Opening
May 18 – Oct. 20 Apostle Island Cruises begins regular schedule
May 25 – early October: Port Wing Saturday Market
June Preview:
We’ll talk about the world-class sailing opportunities and chat with Tim...
Explore Wisconsin's State Natural Areas
State Natural Areas protect the best remaining examples of Wisconsin's native landscapes -- its prairies, forests, and wetlands -- and habitat for rare plants and animals. They are open to the public for a variety of uses, including hiking, nature study, hunting and fishing.
The Breathtaking Natural Riches of Wisconsin
Wisconsin's fortune was built on timber and fur, and its plentiful natural resources helped bolster the burgeoning U.S. economy during the 19th century.
From: AERIAL AMERICA: Wisconsin
Meet Madison: Bethany Brander, assistant educator at the Wisconsin Historical Museum
By Elizabeth Hallbeck
Cablenet Flippin' (1983)
Here's a sample of channel flipping as taped on cable TV, more specifically from Cablenet of Mount Prospect, IL.
A list of things that come and go include:
- FCC color bars
- Electronic Cableguide (later Prevue, and even later TV Guide channel)
- Bulletin board layout of local news, weather and sports (songs heard include Eddie Rabbitt's I Love A Rainy Night and the James Ingram/Patti Austin duet Baby, Come To Me)
- Segment of Channel 5 News with Deborah Norville and Mike Jackson on WMAQ Channel 5, segueing into sports report with reference to Sox and Cubs comings and goings
- Snippet (not Snipet) of news report of local parade as tied to Mayoral race
- Marseilles Radar with electronic map of Illinois and surrounding states (Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana and Michigan) and weather report heard in background
- Excerpt of rerun from It Takes A Thief (?)
- Excerpts from Amazing Grace Bible Class on WCFC Channel 38
- Local Origination electronic card
- Financial News summary with opera (apparently from WFMT)
- Short excerpt of Take the Pepsi Challenge commercial
- Commercial with two women in exercise garb (Crystal Light?)
- Job Mart (with an uptempo tune playing in the background)
- Johnny Cash with Jerry Lee Lewis and Kris Kristofferson
- FCC color bars with Garden Party by Rick Nelson
- Public Access with notice of GSU Business Law - Class 3
- National News with Misty Roses by Johnny Mathis
- Excerpt from (?) movie
- Spanish language promo for Muy Especial with Iva Zannicki (an Italian singer)
- Polish discussion show (Polonia Today?)
- Part-Time Channel Index with more of Misty Roses
- Discussion program on CNN
- Coverage of tennis game
- Excerpt of old movie (likely The Girls Of Pleasure Island [1953], on WFLD Channel 32)
- Classified Cable - Motor Mart, with Give A Little Bit by Supertramp
- Brief expert of commercial for Top Flite XL golf club
- Sports News, with unknown radio station
- Little excerpt of movie (Victor, Victoria?)
- Asian (or Hawaiian?) singing duet
- Market Basket, with ending of re-recording (by ?) of We'll Sing In The Sunshine and disc jockey talking over it
- Excerpt from (?) movie
- Cablenet, with radio ad for Eagle supermarkets
- Scrambled cable channel
- Flight information from O'Hare International Airport (typesetting looks like what was on old Apple IIe computers), with United Airlines flights to and from detailed (music unknown)
- More from It Takes A Thief
- Mount Prospect - Local Origination
- Mount Prospect - Public Access
- Notice of upcoming start of Channel 63, for Mount Prospect local government programming
- A little more of the Electronic Cableguide
- Local Weather
- Bulletin Board with info on Illinois Jaycees (with Kenny Rogers playing?)
- Excerpt of music video by Flock of Seagulls
- Commercial with An Important Message for Parents of Children Age 2 to 7 from Weekly Reader Books
- PSA excerpt (?)
- Weather report from The Weather Channel (?)
- News report with clip featuring Chief Paul Burgess of Siler City Police Department
- Celebrity interview (looks like John Schuck among them)
- Excerpt from a Mr. Moto(?) film
- Roy Scheider talking about his latest film role (Blue Thunder most likely)
- More from Part-Time Channel Index
- Notice from High School District 214 about Buffalo Grove High School Spring Play of The Man Who Came To Dinner for May 13th and 14th
- Elementary District 59
- Elementary District 26
- Elementary District 57
- River Trails Park District
- Mount Prospect Library
- Harper College Access
- Oakton College Access
- Universities Access
- Lecture from ?
- Still more from Part-Time Channel Index
- ?
- Excerpt from Old Time Gospel Hour with Jerry Falwell on ?
- Yet more Part-Time Channel Index
- Excerpt from program with phone number at bottom
- More Cablenet
...at which point the recording ends.
My thanks to Joe Lynn for preserving this little ephemeral capsulette of TV.
This aired on local Chicago area TV on Sunday, May 15th 1983 within the 5:15pm to 5:45 time period.
About The Museum of Classic Chicago Television:
The Museum of Classic Chicago Television's primary mission is the preservation and display of off-air, early home videotape recordings (70s and early 80s, primarily) recorded off of any and all Chicago TV channels; footage which would likely be lost if not sought out and preserved digitally. Even though (mostly) short clips are displayed here, we preserve the entire broadcasts in our archives - the complete programs with breaks (or however much is present on the tape), for historical purposes. For information on how to help in our mission, to donate or lend tapes to be converted to DVD, and to view more of the 4,700+ (and counting) video clips available for viewing in our online archive, please visit us at:
So what I make fudge
At the fudgery Wisconsin dells
Welcome to the Body Farm | Explorer
Francesca Fiorentini goes to the Texas State University Forensic Anthropology Research Facility to see how donated bodies help solve crimes.
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First at Four NEWS Channel 9
Jennifer Eve interviews Rand Elliott about how Elliott + Associates Architects has been honored with 5 International Architecture Awards from the Chicago Athenaeum. There were a total of 89 awards given worldwide, 12 awards given to projects in the United States, and out of those 12 awards five of them went to E+A. Those projects were Car Park One at Chesapeake, ImageNet at Oak Park (Houston), Gaylord Pickens Oklahoma Heritage Museum, Chesapeake Boathouse and POPS. The Chicago Athenaeum International Architecture Awards is the only international architecture competition. The exhibition was held in Florence, Italy, and our own Miho Kolliopoulos attended. Also discussed on this show is the new project, Turbinomics which is an integration of vertical axis wind turbines into a building's structure in the interstitial spandrel spaces located between floors. Motivated by an international skyscraper design competition, Elliott crafted the concept that would allow an office tower to be energy-efficient because it could generate some or all of its own power thanks to the wind. Renderings show an office tower with spinning turbines and a stainless steel exterior.
Congrats to everyone who helped design and build these great projects!
National Mustard Museum - Middleton, WI
One man has collected thousands of varieties of mustard, so many that he started his own museum. Bill takes you inside the National Mustard Museum in Middleton, WI.
Branchville Railroad Shrine and Museum
The Branchville Railroad Shrine and Museum is the site of the world's first railroad junction. The museum features lots of antiques that were once used by the railway, such as a velocipede, old lanterns, maps and telegraph machinery.
Milwaukee Riverwalk Hyperlapse ft. Bronze Fonz
This is another test of Microsoft's Hyperlapse app (BETA) on the Samsung Galaxy S6. The speed used was 4x
Wheels A Rolling (1948) Chicago Railroad Fair
A history of transportation in America as presented at the 1948 Chicago Railroad Fair. The highlight of the fair was the Wheels A-Rolling pageant. This was a dramatic and musical presentation intended to showcase the development of transportation and the railroads across the country beginning with trails and waterways. The pageant included a recreation of the Golden Spike ceremony at Promontory, Utah, and various historic rolling stock and replicas of equipment in operation.
Railroad equipment used in the pageant included:
(Original equipment)
Empire State Express locomotive 999 on display at the Museum of Science and Industry in Chicago. No. 222 and coach
No. 637, Zulu and combine car
No. 10250
Cumberland Valley Pioneer and coach
Empire State Express No. 999
The General (1948 only)
John Hancock and coach
Illinois Central 201 and coach
Little Butter Cup and two coaches
Minnetonka and two logging trucks
Pioneer and coach
Pioneer Zephyr
Reuben Wells and coach
William Crooks and two coaches
William Mason and baggage car number 10
Replicas:
Atlantic and two replica coaches
Best Friend of Charleston
Chicago horse car
DeWitt Clinton and three coaches
John Bull and coach
Jupiter (portrayed by Virginia and Truckee locomotive Genoa) and combine car
Lafayette and two barrel cars
Pioneer horse car
Pullman coach number 9
State Street cable car
Tom Thumb locomotive and director's car
Union Pacific No. 119 (portrayed by Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy locomotive no. 35)
The Chicago Railroad Fair was an event organized to celebrate and commemorate 100 years of railroad history west of Chicago, Illinois. It was held in Chicago in 1948 and 1949 along the shore of Lake Michigan, and is often referred to as the last great railroad fair with 39 railroad companies participating. The board of directors for the show was a veritable Who's Who of railroad company executives.
The origin of the fair traces back to the Chicago and North Western Railway (CNW), which at the time was the successor of the first railroad to operate out of Chicago, the Galena and Chicago Union Railroad. CNW was seeking a way to commemorate 100 years of railroading in Chicago, especially as it was done on the CNW itself. Public Relations Manager F.V. Koval is credited with developing the idea behind the fair. The CNW advertising and public relation staff went to work to promote the show in the early months of 1948, beginning with a series of photographs made by company photographer Don Lidikay of people in 19th century costumes posing with the locomotive Pioneer, which had pulled the first train out of Chicago in 1848.
The fair was rapidly planned during the winter and spring of 1948, and originally scheduled to run between July and August of that summer. Erected on 50 acres of Burnham Park in Chicago between 21st and 31st Streets, the fair opened after only six months of planning. A grand opening for the fair commenced on July 20 with a parade that featured such spectacles as a military marching band and a replica of a troop train, a contingent of cowboys and Native Americans, a replica of the Tom Thumb, the first American locomotive, and the spry, octogenarian widow of Casey Jones, who served as honorary Grand Master of the parade. One dollar was the price of admission, and, except food, all the attractions, displays, exhibits and shows were free. Besides the thirty-nine railroads who participated in the fair, there were more than twenty equipment manufacturers, including General Motors.
A highlight of the fair was the presence of the of the Freedom Train.The Freedom Train traveled the country from September 17, 1947 through Jan 22, 1949 and was at the Railroad Fair from July 5 -- 9. It held many documents and artifacts from the National Archives. Available for public viewing were the original United States Constitution, Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights. Security of the documents was the responsibility of the Marine Corps.
Thirty eight railroads and more than twenty railroad equipment manufacturers participated in the Chicago Railroad Fair exhibiting equipment and interpretive displays around the fair's theme of 100 years of railroad history. The majority of the participating railroads maintained a direct rail connection to Chicago.
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Trolleys
Various trolleys from the United States and other countries.
Here’s what it’s like inside St. Louis' Gateway Arch
We took a trip to St. Louis’ Gateway Arch — the tallest man-made monument in the US. The arch is 630 feet high and its foundations are about 60 feet deep. It's made of 142 stainless steel sections, concrete, and structural steel.
The monument honors Thomas Jefferson's Louisiana Purchase and St. Louis' role in westward expansion of the US.
It's often called the gateway to the west.
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Paige Dansinger Reads: Future Jewish Museum of MN's Mission Statement
3-24-2009 Paige Dansinger, of Jewish Museum of Minnesota (JAMM) reads the Mission Statement.
Ongoing Costs of The Forgotten War - Christine Ahn #N3
In a ceremony commemorating the 60th anniversary of the Korean War cease fire, President Obama paid tribute to veterans of what is often called America's Forgotten War.
In an address in front of the Korean War Veterans Memorial on The Mall in Washington, Mr. Obama described the conflict as a victory in which freedom held its ground and free peoples refused to yield.
Many historians and critics of the war, however, lament that U.S. and allied troops were called on to die for a tie in the war, which ended not with a peace treaty but a cease-fire that resulted in a tense stand-off along the Demilitarized Zone at the 38th Parallel.
Tensions between North and South Korea have spiked in recent months as Kim Jong Un, the hereditary ruler of North Korea's ruling Communist dynasty, continued work on the country's nuclear weapons program and declared that his government was on a war footing.
Kim's regime treated the anniversary of the Korean War Cease-Fire as cause for a victory celebration. However, just a few weeks earlier, it sent a message to Washington indicating a willingness to engage in direct talks with the objective of defusing tensions and working to stabilize the Korean Peninsula.
Is there hope for an end to this decades-long conflict -- and relief from the financial burdens it has imposed on the United States, as well as both Koreas? Sixty years after overt military conflict ended in the Korean Peninsula, will the Korean War finally come to an end?
We'll discuss these questions with Christine Ahn, executive director of the Korea Policy Institute and co-founder of the National Campaign to End the Korean War.
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Next News Network's World News Program airs daily at 6pm and 11pm Eastern on Comcast, DirecTV and Over-the-Air and Online at
World News is available to 6 million viewers from South Beach to Sebastian, Florida and to 2 million viewers in Boston, Massachusetts via .
broadcasts on RF channel 44 (virtual channel 9) from Palm City and is carried on cable TV channels 44 (SD) and 1044 (HD) by AT&T, on cable channels 17 (SD) and 438 (HD) in West Palm Beach by Comcast, on satellite channel 44 (SD) in West Palm Beach by DIRECTV, and on -Boston which broadcasts on RF channel 38 (virtual channel 6) from the Government Center district in downtown Boston.
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Denver Vacation Travel Video Guide
Travel video about destination Denver in the United States of America.
Denver is the capital of the U.S. state of Colorado and is located at 1,600 metres above sea level, on a sunny high plateau on the edge of the Rocky Mountains.
A number of brave pioneers once believed that Denver would be an ideal centre of trade and despite Indian hostilities and various other hazards, they decided to build a town in this region.
The 16th Street Mall is the city's pride. Inaugurated in 1982, it is a splendid avenue that boasts the longest pedestrianised area in the U.S.A. Trees, fountains and sculptures adorn the street as well as horses and carriages.
On Arapahoe Street, close to 16th Street ,is the Daniels And Fisher Tower. In 1911, William Cooke Daniels ordered the construction of a bell tower above his shop. It resembled the Campanile of Venice and was designed to create a good degree of southern charm.
Denver became a boomtown when the railroad arrived in 1870. The Native Indians were forced to make way for those arriving by railroad and who were attracted by the possibility of making an easy buck.
This once lively village has now developed into a modern city and the former trading arenas for fur, gold and silver have now been replaced by a skyline of glittering skyscrapers!
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Expoza Travel is taking you on a journey to the earth's most beautiful and fascinating places. Get inspiration and essentials with our travel guide videos and documentaries for your next trip, holiday, vacation or simply enjoy and get tips about all the beauty in the world...
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Visit to Bayfield County (Wisconsin)
Slide show of two visits -- summer and fall -- to Bayfield County, near Cornucopia, Wisconsin, including Meyers Beach in the Apostle Islands National Lakeshore along Lake Superior.
Albuquerque, New Mexico - Breaking Bad, Old Town, Nuclear Energy and Sandia Peak
Product: Country Bound Microfiber Towel
Today we explore Albuquerque, New Mexico. Being a Breaking Bad fan I started my day by visiting some of the show's locations, including Twister's also known as Los Pollos Hermanos, Walter Whites house, the Car Wash, and Hank's home. Then I went to Old Town, had lunch at the oldest house Church Street Cafe. Then I visited the National Museum of Nuclear Science and History, and finally took a ride on the Sandia Peak Tramway.
We tow a 2015 Winnebago Micro Minnie 1706FB travel trailer. You are more than welcome to tag along in our travels by subscribing to this channel.
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Weber 51010001 Q1200 Liquid Propane Grill, Black
Weber 6557 Q Portable Cart for Grilling
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Coleman 333264 Propane Fuel Pressurized Cylinder, 16.4 Oz
Quik Chair Folding Quad Mesh Camp Chair - Blue
Camco Mfg Inc 44543 Large Stabilizer Jack Pad with Handle, 2 Pack
Bulls Eye Level RV Appliance and Game Table Leveler Motorhome Level (Mini Level)
Tri-Lynx 00015 Lynx Levelers, (Pack of 10) by Tri-Lynx
Camco 39755 RhinoFLEX 6-in-1 Sewer Cleanout Plug Wrench
Cartman 14 Cross Wrench, Lug Wrench
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Trailer Aid Tandem Tire Changing Ramp
Camco 40043 TastePURE Water Filter with Flexible Hose Protector
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