Description given on Youtube:
Presentation by Brent Bean, Nexsteppe
Archives for April 2016
How to Weld
Description given on Youtube:
This Video is a basic introduction to Stick Welding using a Miller Thunderbolt 235 AC/DC welder and a Hobart 1/8″ 7018 electrode.
Intro Music is Creative Commons from Sikhara Live on KBOO’s Sounds Unsound http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Sikhara/Sikhara_Live_on_KBOOs_Sounds_Unsound/
Tractor | Car Garage | Car Repair
Description given on Youtube:
Download the fun and educational Candy Car Wash game for kids FREE:
Apple iOS: https://itunes.apple.com/in/app/candy-carwash/id972354482?mt=8
Android: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.carwash.game
Watch as toys come to life! This video targets children, stimulating their imagination with the help of colorful objects. Each episode will help the child develop his or her creativity and logical reasoning.’
Denis Gibbons – The Wild Colonial Boy. (Australian Folk Music)
Description given on Youtube:
Throughout the fifties and sixties, one of Australia’s leading interpreters of traditional Folk Music was Denis Gibbons.
Denis’ fan base was probably largest in Victoria, but, Australia-wide, he gained a reputation as one of Australia’s leading…and most authentic…folk singers.
This track is taken from an EP issued in the very early 60’s by Melbourne’s W&G Records, titled “Bush Songs”, cat. # WG-E-1094.
The record is very well presented, with an Arthur Boyd painting on the front cover, and good background info for each track on the back.
This upload is from the original EP…and, I have uploaded all four tracks to YouTube.
*** If you like my channel, why not SUBSCRIBE?
I have, literally, thousands of tracks I can upload as time permits, and, by subscribing, you’ll be one of the first to know about them. ***
Dad & Dave Episode 119 Old Time Australian Radio Show 1937
Description given on Youtube:
“Dad & Dave from Snake Gully” was a 1937 Australian 11 Minute daily Radio Soap Opera.
It is the story of a country family in the fictional town of Snake Gully, Australia.
It is relaxing to listen to the stories involved in the peaceful lives of these Snake Gully family members & friends.
Favorite meeting place? Why, the local neighborhood pub, of course. Enjoyable program!
Please feel free to copy and share as this material is in the public domain.
Dairy cows breeds
Description given on Youtube:
Dairy cattle (also called dairy cows or milk cows) are cattle cows bred for the ability to produce large quantities of milk, from which dairy products are made.A cow will produce large amounts of milk over her lifetime. Certain breeds produce more milk than others; however, different breeds produce within a range of around 6,800 to 17,000 kg (15,000 to 37,500 lbs) of milk per lactation. The average for a single dairy cow in the US in 2007 was 9164.4 kg (20,204 lbs) per year, excluding milk consumed by her calves, whereas the same average value for a single cow in Israel was 12,240 kg in 2009.
Agricultural Subsidies: Corporate Welfare for Farmers
Description given on Youtube:
“The government is bailing out the banks…but who’s going to bail out the government?” asks Texas cotton farmer Ken Gallaway, a vocal critic of agricultural subsidies that cost U.S. taxpayers and consumers billions of dollars a year in direct payments and higher prices for farm goods.
Agricultural subsidies were put in place in the 1930s during the Great Depression, when 25 percent of Americans lived on farms. At the time, Secretary of Agriculture Henry Wallace called them “a temporary solution to deal with an emergency.” Those programs are still in place today, even though less than 1 percent of Americans currently live on farms that are larger, more efficient, and more productive than ever before.
Consider these facts. Ninety percent of all subsidies go to just five crops: corn, rice, cotton, wheat, and soybeans. Two thirds of all farm products—including perishable fruits and vegetables—receive almost no subsidies. And just 10 percent of recipients receive 75 percent of all subsidies. A program intended to be a temporary solution has become one of our governments most glaring examples of corporate welfare.
U.S. taxpayers arent the only ones who pay the price. Cotton subsidies, for example, encourage overproduction which lowers the world price of cotton. Thats great for people who buy cotton, but its disastrous for already impoverished cotton farmers in places such as West Africa.
U.S. farm programs cost taxpayers billions each year, significantly raise the price of commodities such as sugar (which is protected from competition from other producers in other countries), undermine world trade agreements, and contribute to the suffering of poor farmers around the world. Its bad public policy, especially in these troubled economic times.
“Agricultural Subsidies: Corporate Welfare for Farmers” is hosted by Reason.tv’s Nick Gillespie and is approximately 8.30 minutes long. The producer-writer is Paul Feine and the producer-editor is Roger Richards.
2011 SE Iowa Cattle Dog Trials Trailer
Description given on Youtube:
Here is a sample of the dvd you have been waiting for. AMAZING dogs! They love what they do. IWonderfully focused, dedicated, loyal athletic animals. Our congrats to the handlers. It was fun to build this dvd of the successful runs the day we attended.
2 & 1/2 hours of cowdog action. Check it out and let us know what you think.
– Hereford – Purebred Cattle Management – Breeding Principles
Description given on Youtube:
Purebred Cattle Management
Breeding Principles
Produced by the Canadian Hereford Association
Scripted & Narrated by Lance Leachman
Video Production by Livestok Media +
The Plants & The Bees: Plant Reproduction – CrashCourse Biology #38
Description given on Youtube:
Hank gets into the dirty details about vascular plant reproduction: they use the basic alternation of generations developed by nonvascular plants 470 million years ago, but they’ve tricked it out so that it works a whole lot differently compared to the way it did back in the Ordovician swamps where it got its start. Here’s how the vascular plants (ferns, gymnosperms and angiosperms) do it.
Crash Course Biology is now available on DVD! http://dft.ba/-8bCC
Like CrashCourse? http://www.facebook.com/YouTubeCrashCourse
Follow CrashCourse! http://www.twitter.com/TheCrashCourse
Table of Contents
1) Sporophyte Dominance 01:55
2) Ferns 02:14
3) Gymnosperms 03:35
4) Angiosperms 05:33
5) Truth or Fail: Fruit Edition! 08:28
References for this episode can be found in the Google document here: http://dft.ba/-2d8V
crash course, biology, plant, reproduction, sporophyte, gametophyte, diploid, haploid, cell, alternation of generations, vascular plants, cone, flower, strategy, reproductive, sex, dominance, chromosome, sporophyte dominant, fern, spore, frond, extinct, pollen, ovule, seed, evolution, gymnosperm, conifer, ginko, cycad, lodgepole pine, serotinous, forest fire, competition, angiosperm, flying insect, coevolve, mutualism, perfect flower, male, female, sepal, petal, anther, filament, stamen, ovary, style, stigma, pollination, bee, fertilization, fruit, hank green Support CrashCourse on Subbable: http://subbable.com/crashcourse
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
- Next Page »