WATCH: TIME LAPSE REEL EDGE OF ALASKA

These shots were all taken for the show Edge of Alaska on Discovery Channel. They were shot between March and May 2014.
Shot and Edited by Luke McKinney
Music: \”Figures in Black\”(clip) – Expo \’70

 

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Games to Remember from 2014

 

They kept us on the edge of our seats and brought us to our feet. They sent us into joyful celebration or left us in anguished disbelief. When we look back at 2014, these are some of the games – not to mention stock car races, tennis finals and golf rounds – we\’ll remember the most.…

 

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Theresa V. \”Terry\” Garagozzo, Bellmawr Senior Citizen Member, Sons of Italy Vita Nuova Lodge

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Philly , my baby is coming

 

PHILADELPHIA — \”Philly, my baby is coming!\” A young mother-to-be screamed those frenzied words Thursday night inside a packed transit train as it pulled into 15th and Market streets. Moments later, in the arms of a SEPTA Transit Police officer, her baby boy started to do some screaming of his own. And right behind them, watching…

 

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CNB HUNTING/FISHING PENNSYLVANIA: ARE PREDATORS HURTING OUR DEER HERD?

Biologists from within the Game Commission and across the country are talking about it.


If you want to start a lively discussion on Pennsylvania wildlife, just mention coyotes. 
There might be no other animal that so intrigues the state’s residents, and it’s easy to explain why. 
The coyote is surrounded by mystery. It’s inhabited some parts of the state since the 1930s, but it’s a relative newcomer in others. Game Commission biologists are finding indications the coyote population is increasing in some areas of the state, yet even those who log endless hours in the Pennsylvania outdoors might go their lives without seeing one in the wild. 

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Absecon Man Killed in Atlantic City

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14 drug dealers arrested, three charged in Blair County street-level sweep

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Delaware Authorities Urged Poultry/Bird Owners About Avian Influenza

Precautions, vigilance urged for avian influenza

 

DOVER (Dec. 24, 2014) – Delaware authorities are urging poultry and bird owners to be vigilant in the wake of avian influenza cases reported in Oregon and Washington state.

 

\”Though it’s far away at the moment, we know that avian influenza can spread rapidly,\” said Delaware State Veterinarian Dr. Heather Hirst, who heads the Delaware Department of Agriculture’s Poultry and Animal Health Section. \”Poultry growers and owners of backyard flocks can do their part by taking proper biosecurity precautions to prevent against the spread of the disease.\”

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Old Forge Pharmacist Sentenced to 15 Months’ Imprisonment

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CNB Hunting/Fishing Delaware: Fish & Wildlife Enforcement Blotter: Dec. 15-21

 

Reminder for the week: Avoid overloading your boat by checking capacity

 

DOVER DELAWARE (Dec. 24, 2014) – To achieve public compliance through education and enforcement actions that help conserve Delaware’s fish and wildlife resources and ensure safe boating and public safety, DNREC Division of Fish & Wildlife Enforcement Natural Resources Police officers between Dec. 15-21 made 569 contacts with anglers, hunters, boaters and the general public, including 33 vessel boardings for boating safety and fishing regulation compliance checks. Agents responded to 27 complaints and issued 14 citations, one of which was related to the C&D Canal Conservation Area and associated recreational trail, where there is an increased Fish & Wildlife Enforcement presence.

 

Citations issued by offense type included the following, with the number of charges in parentheses:

 

Wildlife Conservation: Unlicensed hunting (2)*, New Castle and Sussex counties; Failure to tag antlerless deer (1), hunting white-tailed deer during a closed season (1), hunting in a closed area on a state wildlife area (1), trespassing after hours on a state wildlife area (2), setting illegal leg hold traps (3), and setting traps without required permanent tag (3), Kent County.

 

Public Safety: Failure to display required hunter orange during a firearms deer season (1), Sussex County.

 

* One citation for unlicensed hunting was issued at the C&D Canal Conservation Area.

 

Are you AWARE?

DNREC’s Division of Fish & Wildlife Enforcement Section reminds boaters to check maximum weight/numbers of persons listed on the capacity plate of vessels before heading out on Delaware’s waterways. The capacity plate includes the maximum number and weight of persons on board, the maximum carrying weight of the boat and the maximum horsepower recommended for the boat. 

 

\”Because passengers move around and can cause an overloaded vessel to become unstable and capsize, boat owners/operators should make sure the weight of passengers and gear is at or preferably below capacity,\” said Cpl. John McDerby, Fish & Wildlife Enforcement. \”This consideration is important year-round, but in the winter, boaters who capsize their vessels face the added threat of cold water, which can cause hypothermia and even death very quickly.\”

 

For more information on safe boating practices in Delaware, including Delaware’s boating safety education courses, please visit Delaware_Boating_Safetyon the Division of Fish & Wildlife website.

 

The DNREC Division of Fish & Wildlife recognizes and thanks the majority of anglers, hunters and boaters who comply with and support Delaware’s fishing, hunting and boating laws and regulations. Citizens are encouraged to report fish and wildlife and boating violations to the Delaware Fish & Wildlife Enforcement Section by calling 302-739-4580. Wildlife violations may also be reported anonymously to Operation Game Theft by calling 800-292-3030 or online at www.dnrec.delaware.gov/fw/Hunting/Pages/OpGameTheft.aspx.

 

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