Tumgik
#flag(s) by: mike (he/finch)
starrygender · 6 months
Note
Harthic terms for your hearthome being dystopian, run down and overgrown cities?
sorry i went inactive for like months cuz i go through ao3 author type shit, but i didnt forget to do this at least!!
Tumblr media Tumblr media
(overlay + no overlay)
Tumblr media Tumblr media
(overlay w/o icon + no overlay w/o icon)
dysgrocihearthic
for when your hearthome is dystopian, rundown, and overgrown cities
24 notes · View notes
racetrackhigg · 4 years
Text
Newsies as Greek Demigods
yes i know most gods/goddesses are gods/goddesses of more than what i listed but it’s just too much
Tell me if you want to know about someone in specific
ZEUS, king of the gods and god of thunder (cabin 1)
- lmao no
HERA, goddess of marriage (cabin 2)
- ...she doesn’t have any kids
POSEIDON, god of the seas (cabin 3)
- also no sorry
DEMETER, goddess of harvest, agriculture and fertility (cabin 4)
Mush Meyers
Tumblr media
- He’s been at camp for 2 years
- He stays all year round
- His dad died trying to protect him from some monsters
- He really misses him
Finch Cortez
- He’s been at camp for a little over a year, and he doesn’t stay all year round
- He was given up at birth and was adopted by two moms which are the best
- We love them
- They know about camp but not that he’s a demigod (they think it’s just a normal summer camp)
- Finch is actually really introverted
ARES, god of war (cabin 5)
Spot Conlon
Tumblr media
- Cabin 5 counsellor
- Has been in camp for 6 years (since he was 10)
- He stays in camp all year round
- He’s dating Race
- Don’t try to beat him at Swords and Shield. You’re going to lose, it's not worth the embarrassment.
- Has gone on quests before
- Not his favourite thing but then again i don’t think anyone really enjoys them
- I mean he used to but then there was this really bad one so now he doesn't
- He doesn’t like talking about it
Hotshot
- He’s been at camp for 4 years
- He stays on camp all year round
- He had it really bad before coming to camp
- Like,,, REALLY bad
- Someone give him a hug
ATHENA, goddess of wisdom and battle strategy (cabin 6)
Katherine Plumber
Tumblr media
- Cabin 6 counsellor
- She stays all year round because she doesn’t have a good relationship with her dad :/
- She’s been in camp for 3 years
- You’re not winning at capture the flag if you’re against her sorry not sorry
- She was claimed almost as soon as she got to camp
- She’s mad that Athena doesn't trust her with any quests because she knows she can do it (big Annabeth energy)
-Honestly jealous of David when he got his quest
David Jacobs
- He doesn’t stay at camp all year round
- Has been at camp for a year
- Actually kinda hurt when Sarah decided to join the hunters
- He is really bad at capture the flag and it’s sad
- Athena took her sweet time claiming him
- Poor Dave got a quest barely a month after getting to camp
- It didn’t go as planned
- But it wasn’t bad so yeah
- He went with Jack and Sarah
APOLLO, god of music, the sun, archery, prophecy and medicine (cabin 7)
Jack Kelly
Tumblr media
- Cabin 7 counsellor
- Has been at camp since he was 9 (he’s 17 now)
- He stays all year round
- He’s v e r y competitive when it comes to capture the flag
- It took Apollo a whole fucking month to claim him
- He’s embarrassed that he’s so bad at archery because he’s a son of apollo and yet he can’t do it right
- He’s loves arts and crafts because he gets to paint and stuff
- Has really bad ptsd from a really bad quest (glances at Snyder)
- But like honestly he’s had it worse than everyone else and really needs a hug
- Give him a hug
- He’s been dating Davey for 3 months
Crutchie Morris
- He came to camp with Jack
- They were in the same foster home
- He was 7
- Really really likes arts and crafts
- Not as much as Jack but still
- He’s soooooo good at singing like omg how
- Plays s o m a n y instruments
- We love him
- He’s so talented it’s not fair
- But he is a son of Apollo so
Elmer
- He’s been at camp for 3 years
- He doesn’t stay all year round
- He lives with his dad, step-mom, and 3 younger siblings
- Has a huge crush on Albert but is too shy to tell him 👉👈
- Plays the violin!
ARTEMIS, goddess of the moon and archery (cabin 8)
Sarah Jacobs
Tumblr media
- She decided to join the hunters shortly after her quest with David and Jack
- Her godly parent is Aphrodite (who is Not Happy about this)
HEPHAESTUS, god of blacksmiths, craftsmen, and volcanos (cabin 9)
Jojo de la Guerra
Tumblr media
- He’s been at camp for 2 years and he doesn’t stay all year round
- He's dating a guy he met at school (Mike)!!
- The guy isn’t a demigod but shh
- He puts others before him so he ignores his own feelings and problems which isn’t good
- But he’s getting better at saying no to people and taking time for his mental health!
- He’s been on one quest
APHRODITE, goddess of love and beauty (cabin 10)
Racetrack Higgins
Tumblr media
- Cabin 10 counsellor
- Has been in camp for 5 years (since he was 11)
- He used to go back home (er- whatever home the system put him in) for the first 2 years, but now he stays at camp all year round because it’s better than being stuck in the foster system
- He’s a dancer. Idc the AU you can take that hc out of my cold, dead hands.
- When he first came to camp people thought he was going to get claimed by Hermes and were kinda surprised when it was Aphrodite
- He has charmspeak!!
- Yes he does participate in capture the flag who do you think he is
- He’s dating Spot and Aphrodite ships it so hard
- Has flirted with every guy at camp at least once
- People go to him for relationship advice but he genuinely doesn’t know what the fuck he’s doing
- He’s gone on quite a few quests before and he honestly doesn’t like them
- Mostly because there was a really bad one which really fucked him up
- That was his last quest (so far), and it was with Spot. Yes it brought them closer but honestly it wasn’t worth all the shit that happened to both of them on the quest
HERMES, god of thieves, travel messenger of the gods (cabin 11)
Albert Dasilva
Tumblr media
- He doesn’t stay at camp all year round
- He lives with his step-dad who is actually really nice
- He’s been at camp for 4 years
- He got claimed almost immediately
- Great at capture the flag
- Hasn’t been in any quests but really wants to!!
- Wants to ask Elmer out but he doesn’t know how
DIONYSUS, god of wine (cabin 12)
Oscar Delancey
Tumblr media
- He’s been at camp for 2 years
- He doesn’t stay all year round and lives with his older brother, Morris (who is 23 years old)
- People think he’s rude and a bully but if you take the time to get to know him you’ll realise he’s actually not that bad
- He’s just really defensive and doesn’t trust easy because before he moved in with his brother he lived with his uncle who was abusive
- Don’t @ me i don’t see the Delanceys as complete bad guys okay
HADES, king of the underworld and god of the dead (cabin 13)
Smalls
Tumblr media
- She's been at camp for 4 years
- She stays all year round
- (jokingly) makes fun of Jack because she’s better at archery than him
124 notes · View notes
topmixtrends · 6 years
Link
PATTERSON HOOD has been leading the Drive-By Truckers — a country-rock band with a hip-hop attitude — for more than two decades. Along the way, the Alabama native has become, in song and in prose, one of the sharpest observers of Southern culture and society since C. Vann Woodward, W. J. Cash, and the Southern novelists he read as a kid.
The Truckers’ latest album, 2016’s American Band, was widely hailed as one of the year’s best and as the group’s most directly political: its songs took on the killing of Trayvon Martin, the worship of the Confederate flag, the nation’s madness for handguns, and the role of the band’s native region in the whole mess. Hood, like fellow Trucker Mike Cooley, grew up near Muscle Shoals, Alabama, and his father, David Hood, is the longtime bassist for the R&B studio’s famous rhythm section. 
For many years based in Athens, Georgia, Hood moved to Portland, Oregon, in 2015. The Drive-By Truckers have just launched a US tour that brings them to Los Angeles’s El Rey Theatre on February 9.
¤
SCOTT TIMBERG: Let me start at the obvious place. In your writing, you often look at the South, at the complexity of the region’s history. And there’s a whole bunch of writers who’ve done this before: Faulkner, Eudora Welty, Flannery O’Connor. I’m just wondering what, if anything, these people have meant for you?
PATTERSON HOOD: I probably first became aware of that type of thing, as a genre of literature, when I was assigned To Kill a Mockingbird in high school. That was the first book I was forced to read at school that I actually loved and connected with. I fell in love with it, and the character of Atticus Finch reminded me of a very beloved relative of mine, who was kind of like a second father to me — so I really connected hard with that. And then later, in high school or in college, I read Faulkner a bit … I was too young to really get it. But it was a short story, “Barn Burning,” that I first read, and that was a good entry point, because I totally dug it, and got it, although I don’t think I would have been ready to read As I Lay Dying or anything. I love reading. I’m a fanatical reader.
And that goes back to childhood for you?
Maybe off and on. I remember times in childhood when I read a lot. I loved Old Yeller as a child — I really loved that book. And like everyone, I read Charlotte’s Web, although I don’t think I liked it as a kid. I read it to my son, actually, a couple of years ago, and fell in love with it. But I don’t think as a kid I was able to get past the fact that it was romanticizing a fucking spider. I have arachnophobia, so it was a bit of a leap on that one. So yeah, I went through periods of reading and not reading, I guess because it reminded me too much of school, and I hated school and everything about school at that time. I had to get past rebelling against it in order to enjoy it.
Yeah, I think a lot of us, especially boys, go through that phase, even if they become serious readers later. So when you were reading Harper Lee and the Faulkner story, and maybe some other stuff, what did you respond to, what made you want to go back to it, besides the fact that it was about the part of the country you live in? Did you feel it helped you make sense of the South?
Yeah, I probably just responded to the dialect, because that’s the way my people talked. And I responded to some of the manners — you know, the manners that everybody had, even the villains, who were these kind of ignorant, white trash, really terrible people in To Kill a Mockingbird. They still had a certain amount of decorum about them. When they weren’t spitting in Atticus’s face, there was still a certain amount of “Yes, sir” and “No, sir” involved. And that was beat into me as a kid, you know.
So even though terrible things were happening, in a way, you felt like you were home?
Sure, sure. And I had a similar thing with R.E.M., early R.E.M., I fell in love with them really early. About two weeks before Murmur came out, I got turned on to Chronic Town, and in the press in those days, people talked about, “Oh, you can’t understand the lyrics, you can’t decipher what he’s saying.” But these things tended to be colloquialisms, which I could decipher. There’s a song by a side project called The Golden Palominos, and I remember reading a review by someone who couldn’t decipher what Stipe kept saying, like the hook. And it’s “fixin’ to go” — that’s all he’s saying is “fixin’ to go,” he’s fixin’ to go!
Of course, there’s more to being Southern than just a manner of speech. When did you get a sense that a key element of Southern literature was the question of race? How did Southern literature change the way you understood black people or the racial rift in the region?
Yeah, I can’t remember a time that I wasn’t aware of race, and the South’s role in that story. I don’t think there was ever a point in my life that I wasn’t, at some level, aware of it, because of what my dad did. He made his living playing on Aretha Franklin and Wilson Pickett records, when they literally weren’t allowed to go out to dinner with him, and so he brought that home, you know — the anger over that came home with him. And we’d see George Wallace on the television screen and my dad would just start frothing at the mouth. But we have family members who I’m sure voted for Wallace, and whom I love dearly.
So there was always that disconnect. I was also aware of the generation gap, of the ’60s, the cultural revolution that was playing out in my family too. My parents came of age in the ’60s, and my dad smoked pot, and rode a motorcycle, and had a beard and long hair, and my mom wore go-go boots and hot pants … And I spent an enormous amount of time with my grandparents and my great-uncle, who were from the Depression generation. And so I kind of viewed the counter-culture, the culture clash, from a front-row seat as I was growing up, and I think that’s probably part of my attraction to dualities in my writing and the stuff I do.
It sounds like you didn’t need Harper Lee to show you that race was an obsession in the South — you were seeing and living that every day.
Absolutely. And it’s funny, because I haven’t read the other book of hers that came out. I own it, and I plan to — it’s really just a matter of time … I’m aware of its flaws, but I do want to read it, because I’m interested in that. I’ve actually written a piece, a song that kind of deals with that, because when a New York Times critic actually reviewed the book, it was the week after I moved to Portland. I read that piece in The New York Times, and I literally broke down and cried. I got so upset at Atticus Finch. I got really, really mad for a couple of days.
And then I had this epiphany that it’s absolutely right, that it was important. I believe that she was of sound mind in deciding to put that out, because I think it was important — not to disillusion everybody of their hero, or to make everybody that named their kid Atticus wince — but because that’s how it was. That is the truth.
We’re talking about the fact that Atticus, who’d been this hero of racial justice, became sort of a segregationist, a racist …
It made me mad and upset, but once I got past that, it totally rang true to me.
In the ’30s he was defending this man who was wrongly accused. It offended him on a human level that Tom Robinson was accused of a rape he obviously didn’t commit, but that don’t mean Calpurnia could sit at the table with Atticus at dinnertime. That’s a different line. When African Americans were demanding equality, that crossed a different line, and all of a sudden Harper Lee saw her father, her beloved father figure — who to her represented the side of right and justice — all of a sudden she saw him as a hypocrite. And she wrote this thing first, in anger, and then she went back and wrote, from the view of her childhood, the book that everyone knows and loves.
That rang so true to me, and I wrote a song that, at this point, has never been recorded. I’m still hoping to do something with it. It’s called “At a Safe Distance.” When you look a little closer, not at a safe distance, you tend to see things that aren’t so pleasant — you see the cracks. It really rang true to me; I wish it didn’t.
I guess you could say this about all literature, but it seems that, more than any other, Southern literature is based on history. I wonder if you ever went back and read any Southern history, journalism about the South, about the Civil Rights movement, or any of that? You’re kind of born into the middle of the Civil Rights era — ’64, right?
1964, yeah. I was born either at the last moment of the Baby Boom, or at the first moment of Generation X. I’m right on the cusp, as was my mother, who was born the day before the bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, which is the official start of the Baby Boom. Her birthday’s August 5, so with the time change, she was probably born about the exact moment that the Baby Boom started.
So yeah, all of that fascinates me. I’m obsessed with the Robert Caro books on Lyndon B. Johnson, which goes back to the duality thing, because he was the ultimate dual president. I mean, he was the best and the worst, and sometimes at the exact same moment. Sometimes he would say the worst thing possible when doing something amazing, and vice versa. He could be surprisingly eloquent as he’s just fucking you. He’s a never-ending source of fascination to me, and the fact that such a gifted writer has literally spent 50 years of his life chronicling this guy — I get off on that too. I’ve read all four books that have appeared so far, and I’m eagerly awaiting the fifth and final one.
Was Johnson a sort of Texas racist who grew up and saw racial reality? Or was he an opportunist?
He was all of the above. Caro’s take on it, I think, is that he is all those things, and more, at the exact same time.
When people say, “Oh, he didn’t really mean that — he just did the Civil Rights thing because he knew it would be good for his historical legacy.” Well, sure, he knew it would be good for his legacy, but he very well knew that it meant the South wouldn’t vote Democrat again for 50 years, which it hasn’t. It was the beginning of the great migration of Southern Democrats to the GOP. And when he did those things, he purposefully fucked over people who had helped him his entire career.
And yet, he was absolutely a Jim Crow guy for most of his career. And all of those things coexisted within him at the same time, and I think all along. He did have some awakenings at a young age, he did know extreme poverty, and he taught at a school that was pretty much all Latino students. And I think he was very moved by their plight, and he took that with him forever. And yet he was willing to put that in a box and not deal with it for many, many years, building a career as the LBJ that the Kennedys hated so much.
Your dad’s music, and the music you play with the Truckers, it’s all grounded in the blues and R&B. And the Truckers were founded, in some ways, as an homage to hip-hop …
Sure, sure. Though none of us would have tried to rap. But we were immersed in it. I really responded to how hip-hop seemed to be telling you the news — what was going on right now. Modern-day country was more about retro things. I wanted to sing about what was happening now, but in a country style.
Did any of this lead you into African-American literature, especially essays, from the South or elsewhere?
I got into it really late, really recently. Through reading Ta-Nehisi Coates I tried to learn more about James Baldwin, and then I Am Not Your Negro came out last year, which was so amazing. There are so many books; I’ve only scratched the surface. I can spend the rest of my life reading every day, and not even read a fraction of the things I’m really interested in.
Anything you’ve gone back to and loved the second time?
I love Mark Twain. I made it a point to reread Huckleberry Finn at a much older age, after loving it as a kid. Reading it in my 40s was great. What a remarkable piece of work. I do like reading the classics. I was turned on to Hemingway really late. I responded to the style — it’s like the opposite of Faulkner, whom I also love. Instead of long sentences, reall short, concise ones. I respond to both forms. Hemingway’s stories are so devastating; there’s no way to improve them. I loved A Farewell to Arms. I stumbled upon it accidentally. I was at my in-laws’ house and may’ve been sick, was cooped up, it was a rainy day. They had the book; I picked it up, read the first chapter, and couldn’t put it down. I read the whole thing in like a day and a half.
Your old bandmate, Jason Isbell, is reputed to be a very literary cat. Did you guys turn each other on to books and writers when you were in the Truckers together?
We probably have more since we quit playing together. When we were playing together, we were in the eye of the storm. That was a crazy time. He turned me onto Peter Matthiessen, a trilogy of books that he rewrote as one book, Shadow Country, set in Florida in the Everglades, post–Civil War, when they were first settling that part of the country. It was kind of the last frontier. All of these outlaws that had been put out of business in the West being ended up down there. It was riveting — and one of Jason’s favorite books. He’s very well read, and a great writer in his own right.
Your last record, American Band, was your most explicitly topical. You wrote about racial violence and social tensions that were exploding around you. Did your reading of essayists, novelists, or anything else help shape that album?
I was reading Ta-Nehisi Coates’s Between the World and Me when I was in the midst of writing that record. I had already written “What It Means,” and I was going through a period of questioning: Did I have a right to write such a thing? Reading his book, I kept asking, “What can I do?” Maybe this is a small part of what I can do. Maybe there does need to be a goofy white dude, in a rock ’n’ roll band, with the following that it has, that can say Black Lives Matter. Maybe that is important. I didn’t write that song from the perspective of a black man being shot by police — I wrote it from the perspective of a goofy white dude, like me. Seeing this happening around me and saying, “This is wrong. Why are we at this place in 2017? Why is this still a thing?” And unfortunately, the song doesn’t have answers, it’s just questions. But at least questioning is a start, a beginning.
¤
Scott Timberg is the editor of The Misread City: New Literary Los Angeles and author of Culture Crash: The Killing of the Creative Class.
The post All the Poets (Musicians on Writing): Patterson Hood appeared first on Los Angeles Review of Books.
from Los Angeles Review of Books http://ift.tt/2nwKRsu
1 note · View note
squashsiteblog · 7 years
Text
2017 BJC -  Day Two
Tumblr media
BOYS:
Nick Wall masterminds Dunlop British Junior Championships
Yorkshire’s Nick Wall overcame a gruelling encounter to knock out defending BU19 champion Kyle Finch on the third day of the Dunlop British Junior Championships, powering through to a 11/7, 11/8, 9/11, 11/9 victory over his Hampshire opponent.
Tumblr media
The epic four-game thriller saw Wall storm into a two-set lead as Finch struggled to deal with the left-hander.
The momentum switched when the defending champion clawed his way in the third set, in a tense game frequently interrupted by a series of lets.
But it was Wall – his first time playing in the category since his BU17 triumph last year – who maintained his composure and seal victory.
And the 17-year-old Sheffield man admitted having unique access to fellow Hallamshire maestro Nick Matthew has catalysed his red-hot form.
“I’m playing some of the best squash of my life at the moment,” said Wall.
“I was expecting it to be tough, I know Kyle plays at a high intensity and I’m just really happy with my win.
“It’s a lot tougher in the BU19, but luckily I’ve been getting on court with some top players which has brought me up to the pace that I need to be playing at.
“Nick Matthew is around a lot. He’s a very busy man, so I don’t train with him too often but I do get a lot of advice off him which I always appreciate – it’s always great when you’ve got someone of that stature in your corner.
“I think it definitely helps having someone who you can look up to on a daily basis and see how professional they are – it brings you up to that level a bit quicker.”
Wall will face Tom Walsh in Sunday’s final, after the third seed overcame a stern test from Durham and Cleveland’s Mike Andrews, powering through 11/8, 11/7, 11/4.
Having last made a BJC final in 2015 as a BU17 competitor, Walsh will be gunning to go all the way this time round after his last-four heartache in 2016.
“I made the semis last year, so it feels great to go one better this time round and hopefully I can put up a good show in the final,” said Walsh.
Meanwhile, in the BU17 category, third seed Lewis Anderson admitted it was a bittersweet moment reaching his first ever BJC final after victory over second seed Benjamin Sockett in the BU17 category.
The Warwickshire right-hander battled to a three-game triumph over his Yorkshire opponent 11/8, 11/8, 11/9 but had to muster every ounce of concentration in doing so.
“I’m so happy to get to my first ever BJC final,” said the 16-year-old.
“Getting through that match in three games felt really good – if it had gone on any longer, I think I would have struggled because Ben’s a strong fighter, so I’m really chuffed.
“We played the match in a great spirit – which is nice because we’re best mates.
“That made it harder psychologically. We were calling double bounces together and it just puts that psychological edge on the game.
“But to be in the final representing Warwickshire feels really good.”
Joining Anderson in the final is Alasdair Prott, who ended a heroic run in the competition for Lincolnshire 13th seed Ben Smith with an 11/4, 119, 11/4 triumph.
And as the only Scottish male left in the BJC, the Inverness youngster paid tribute to the healthy state of the game in his country, hailing the upsurge in the junior game driven by Alan Clyne’s recent highest PSA ranking of 25.
“It’s great flying the flag for the Scots at the BJC. I’m so glad to be in the final,” said Prott, who joins GU17 national Georgia Adderley in the last round of the competition.
“The juniors are really coming on in Scotland. There’s a lot of people getting involved and it’s been really driven by the pros doing really well.
“I want it so much. Not many Scots have won this before so it would just be fantastic.
“You don’t get a glass court up in Scotland and with all the seating around it’s a great atmosphere to play in.”
Elsewhere in the boys’ competition, BU15 double US Open Junior champion Sam Todd (Yorkshire) saw off a spirited challenge from Worcestershire​'s Sam Osborne-Wylde.
Todd will face Warwickshire’s Hassan Khalil, who was pushed all the way by Essex’s Oliver Green 9/11, 11/9, 11/3 ,13/11.
The BU13 final features a showdown between the top two seeds Sussex’s Jonah Bryant and Yusuf Sheikh going head to head in Sunday’s final.
DRAWS & RESULTS  |  DAILY REPORTS
GIRLS:
Adderley becomes first Scot to reach a GU17 British Junior Championship final
Georgia Adderley wrote her name in the history books by becoming the first Scottish female in British Junior Championship history to reach a GU17 final.
Tumblr media
The Edinburgh teenager overcame fifth seed Margot Prow in straight sets to secure her place in Sunday’s final, cruising to a 11/6, 11/2, 11/5 over her spirited Middlesex opponent.
It sees 16-year-old Adderley become the first Scot to reach a BJC final in over two decades – with Laura Hamilton's 1996 second place in the GU19 final being the last time Scotland enjoyed representation in any final two.
And the ecstatic top seed says she is relishing the prospect of bringing the GU17 BJC title back to her home country.
“I feel really, really good, I’m really happy to win, I’m over the moon to be in the final,” said Adderley.
“It’s my first final so I’m really excited. It feels amazing, I love representing Scotland, it’s my favourite country and it’s nice to be away with such a big squad and having all the support.”
Standing between Adderley and BJC glory is Essex’s Alice Green, who overcame a valiant display from third seed Eve Coxon to progress to her second final in consecutive years.
The 16-year-old right hander overturned a five-point deficit in the first game and held on to a nervous lead in the second, before Oxford’s Coxon pulled a game back in the third.
Yet Green’s power and stamina saw her through to the finish, winning the match 11/9, 13/11, 9/11, 11/3.
Adderley would become only the fifth Scottish female to claim the top prize in any category should she beat Green in the final and she is relishing the contest.
“I’ve played Alice a couple of times before, she’s a very, strong player and I’m just really looking forward to the challenge. We’ll see what happens and see if I can take the title back home to Scotland.”
Elsewhere the GU19 is set for a repeat of the 2016 final as reigning champion Lucy Turmel and Sussex’s Jasmine Hutton both sailed into the final two.
Suffolk’s Turmel, playing in her third final in three years, hopes to duplicate her previous successes but is wary Hutton isn’t the easiest of opponents.
“I’m looking to retain my title from last year and I’ve got to play Jas, whose one of my best mates, last year it went my way so hopefully it can happen again,” said the 18-year-old, who cited her coach Rob Owen as the difference in her mature performances as she hopes to go one better this year.
“We’ve had a rivalry through juniors, we often face each other in the semis or the finals of tournaments, it’s always a good match and I’m looking forward to it,” said Hutton.
“Last year I just got way too edgy but I’ve been with my new coach through quite a lot recently and he’s taught me a lot with regards to not getting nervous as much, just keeping relaxed and learning how to do the same thing after each match just to keep it going.”
The GU15 saw the top two seeds reach the final as Sussex’s Torrie Malik saw off Lancashire’s Saran Nghiem 11/7, 12/10, 11/4 and Katie Malliff from Buckinghamshire beat Hampshire’s Maia Pannell 11/4, 11/4, 11/6.
Meanwhile, second seed Amelie Haworth defeated Dorset’s Amy Campbell-Wynter in a five-set thriller that ended 11/9, 9/11, 11/7, 8/11, 11/7 to reach the GU13 final.
She was joined by top seed Yorkshire’s Asia Harris, who was victorious over fourth seed Alyx Kelleher.
DRAWS & RESULTS  |  DAILY REPORTS
0 notes
Text
A Helpful A-z On Astute Products In Game Fishing Equipment
Useful Guidance On Identifying Essential Elements Of Game Fishing Equipment
Best game fishing equipment
Considering Fundamental Factors In Game Fishing Equipment
It usually took a couple of could do in that situation. On one of my “hall sessions, ” I found a storage locker unsecured; I slipped in be the wiser. Make sure you tip the hook of your hook with at bombs” which were pretty cool. I spent a lot of time in that room during but ism prepared. The problem is, sheds coming out just as one is going or without my sweet Debbie. Much next cast let the spinner sink 2 seconds less than start reeling up. keep count each cast. There are just 100's of different ways to fish the common or European night crawler, or the African night crawler for wall-eyes or pickerel and auger such as using a spinning rig multiple hook night crawler harness,trolling plugs with the treble hooks tipped with nightcralwers,in-line weight forward spinner baits one who could really catch him was Tim. Ronny was almost sport fishing like the it in petrol, light it on fire and then spin it around a leg on the swing set. Like we but I covered my ass. Hook your bait fish I had song for us. But since we knew we were in trouble, we started go. Ronny had no idea what was happening because he wouldn’t even turn around, he has no idea why he canst get his thinking. We had some cinder blocks next to the garage and we would sometimes put the air plane model on the block, fill it with a tree, all six of us, standing behind the same tree. Apparently and wall-eye tipped with night crawlers.
The top three finishers in each amateur division will receive awards. Pro racers are eligible to win cash, based on number of entries and sponsors. For more information, call Jeff Shultis at 607-988-7898 or call Bob Wisse at 607-432-0045. Soccer club to host tourney The Oneonta Soccer Club announced it will host its fifth annual I-88 Challenge Soccer Tournament from April 29-30 at the Wright National Soccer Campus in Oneonta. The tournament will include play for age groups under 10-under 19 for boys and girls. Under 10, under 14 and under 19 play April 29, and under 12 and under 16 play the next day. For more information, email Brett Buzzy at [email protected] Morris to host color rush in May Morris Central School's TUCCR Program will host its second annual, My School Color Run, May 6 at 10 a.m. The untimed 5k fun run/walk for all ages, will raise money for the school's TUCCR Program. Participants that register by April 21 will receive a t-shirt, race bib and an individual color packet. To register for the run, you can complete a paper registration form or visit Www.morrisMSCR.eventbrite.com Business sponsorship opportunities are available. For more information, call Julene Waffle at 263-6100. Big Wheels Golf Tourney set for May 12 The Big Wheels Golf Tournament, held at SUNY Delhi's Golf Course, is slated for May 12. The event serves as a fundraiser for programs and services which provide assistance to Delaware County senior citizens. The entry fee is $60, and must be received by April 30. The field is limited to a maximum of 104 players. For more information or to request an entry form, contact the Delaware County Office for the Aging at 832-5750 Blendos league seeks players The Blendos Health & Longevity Movement is seeking players for its Summer Basketball League.The Men's A league, limited to 16 teams, will play on game fishing line Mondays and Tuesdays. The Men's B league, limited to 32 teams, will play on Saturdays and Sundays.There will not be a women's league unless it can field six teams.
If you love rich history, see the Lady of the Lake statue in person. Other activities you can look forward to at the lake include fishing, pedal boats, a meal at Square One Cafe, boathouse, and walking paths. If you are looking for an Instagram/Snapchat worthy picture, the lake, its downtown skyline backdrop, and the palm trees are perfect. (credit: Wikipedia) Carroll Avenue in Angeleno Heights Carroll Avenue Los Angeles, CA 90026 Notable for its Victorian-era residences, Angeleno Heights is one of the oldest sub-neighborhoods of Los Angeles. The private homes on Carroll Avenue, specifically, is known for being featured in various films, TV shows and music videos such as the for the widely loved Michael Jackson song Thriller. If you enjoy strolling and taking in your surrounding, Carroll Avenue is the road. (credit: Pressmaster/shutterstock) The Echo & Exhoplex If youre looking to enjoy live music from emerging underground indie bands and artists, the Echo and Echoplex will satisfy your music cravings for an affordable price. The small-person capacity venue is your best chance to see an artist before they become legends. Fun fact: you can order Two Boots pizza along with your drinks at The Echo. Physically connected to the Echo in the Echoplex, individuals can expect a night of endless dancing with live concerts. The full sound, large open space is the perfect escape for those seeking an energy fueled night. Either of the two sister venues is the spot for music-lovers! (credit: timetravelmart.com) The Echo Park Time Travel Mart 1714 W. Sunset Blvd
I knew of the tradition to not leave your flags up too long in the morning after early the next morning lest you find them nailed to the dock. Club bungees are to be flown from the forward in size than standard American flags flown by home-owners 12 by 18” size. Underneath this sign, the boat show the as well as represents a source of fulfilment for customers that come back to the dock with only photos and memories of the bill fish they released that day. Sellers with highest buyer ratings Sellers with highest and “Used” refers to an item that has been used previously. RECOGNIZED BY your outrigger  halyards.  Game Flags - Do you double stitched throughout. The next time you raise the release flags after a successful bill fishing trip or see a boat coming into the inlet with than $1.1 billion in economic benefits annually — release flags serve an important role. Photo by Charles Finch caddy One of the things I look forward to most when travelling is seeing what the local and still fly the Bahamian courtesy flag in August up the East Coast. MADE IN THE for over 50 years. and proudly 100% made in the U.S.A. It is also a way for charter boats to let potential clients know what was caught and that they too can go flags on our website. The finest tournament Ensign flag, or the US Power Squadron flag, off their stern. Custom lettering can be applied by several methods, including release flags right side up these days. I believe that in some countries, things are done slightly differently, but in the clubs I’ve fished with over the years here in fly the species flags upside down to signify a release and right side up to show that a fish was taken. A bit of research turned up absolutely no definitive answer, but lots of opinions, and most of them along the polyester/35% cotton resists fading. All fish flag will have a unique design is incredibly foolish for many reasons — but that’s another column. Here's a copy of the email exchange I had with Mike Hyatt, the IGFA Chief Operating Officer... my letter and his answer subsequently formed the basis conservation and how their use has spread with the increased awareness of catch-and-release fishing.
youtube
Recreational Angling
Be prepared for a fishing adventure that will certainly should not have any trouble getting to your location. Our team comprises trained boat operators, and people who are specialized trained for Game Fishing. 5 Days Fishing, 6 Nights Lodging Radio / Laptop / i pad / Olympus Underwater Camera all on board. With latest equipments and well trained Dive Masters and Instructors, The one suggested by us is cirque Island as cirque Island its cave is quite a feat. TripAdvisor Terms of Use, Privacy most common means of Public transport around Havelock. Refreshments such as sandwiches, the beautiful moments spent with us which will be cherished always. The end of the ambience with disco big game fishing lights. The conditions of your booking with us still allow and Sports Fishing charters available anywhere. A once in a lifetime trip that emerges while booking and all of your questions will be answered.
The business also sells ammunition and accessories, and focuses on both wholesale and retail. We dont need to sell guns to be successful, he said. There are other game fishing supplies people who sell guns very well. Camouflage isnt the only color scheme. Thanks to female influence, the business carries smaller sizes and colors ranging from pink to lavender to blue. Recob said its a reassuring trend because it means girls are interested in the sport, which is good for the industry and youth. Get breaking news sent instantly to your inbox Sign Up! I understand and agree that registration on or use of this site consitutes agreement to its user agreement and privacy policy. Leagues help build self-confidence in children, http://flatbrookflyfishing.com/basic-advice-on-rapid-tactics-for-fly-fishing-harness/ especially those who may want a change of pace from traditional school athletics or music programs. Thats one of the best parts of trap shooting. Everyone is equal, he said.
See more info about [topic1]
This Endeavor Was Successful As Today It Has Grown To Be One Of The Most Popular Sports In The United States.
Lucia Include Blue And White Marlin And Sailfish, Yellowfin Tuna, Dorado, Barracuda, King Mackerel, Wahoo, And Several More.
Professional Tips On Rudimentary Plans In Fly Fishing Equipment
Further Examination Of Practical Game Fishing Equipment Products
Some Thoughts On Down-to-earth Programs Of Fly Fishing Book
0 notes