Saturday, August 7, 2010

Program Highlights for the August 7, 2010 Weekend Edition


Saturday’s Weekend Edition is now available for download. Check out the great lineup of guests and topics for August 7, 2010. You can hear it along the Wasatch Front from 10 a.m.-11 a.m. on AM 630 KTKK.

>

Segment 1
Patrick Wiggins, NASA Solar System Ambassador to Utah, highlights a few big highlights in the August Skies
http://hubblesite.org/explore_astronomy/tonights_sky
http://www.skyandtelescope.com/observing/home/100126474.html
Download Worldwide Telescope for Free
See the Moon Surface with Moon Arounder
Download Stellarium for Free
Download Google Earth Free
Download Celestia Free
http://www.skyandtelescope.com/community/skyblog/observingblog/99304684.html
http://backcountryutah.blogspot.com/2010/08/august-skies-showcase-planets-and.html

Segment 2
Guy Perkins with Camp Chef is giving us a Sneak Peek and new Outdoor Cooking Gear
http://www.campchef.com

Segment 3
Mike Ottenbacher, with the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources, takes us Stream Fishing in the Southern Region
http://wildlife.utah.gov/hotspots/reports_sr.php
http://wildlife.utah.gov/cutthroat/BCT/literature/2000/2000-hepworth-et-al.pdf
http://wildlife.utah.gov/blueribbon/waters/sevier_east_fork.php

Segment 4
Gene Kaczmarek, with the Federation of Fly Fishers, is inviting you to the big Conclave in West Yellowstone, Montana
http://www.federationconclave.org
http://www.fedflyfishers.org
http://www.destinationyellowstone.com

Friday, August 6, 2010

August 9, 2010 - August 13, 2010 Drivetime Audio Segments Now Available




Download this week’s drivetime programming at our Network Page at http://www.backcountrynetwork.com/Download/Download.htm  . Check out the schedule below or find a station near you that airs Backcountry Utah.

>

August 9, 2010
 Monday Morning (Track 1) Planet Viewing in the Evening Skies-- Patrick Wiggins, NASA/JPL Solar System Ambassador to Utah
http://hubblesite.org/explore_astronomy/tonights_sky
http://www.skyandtelescope.com/observing/home/100126474.html

Monday Afternoon (Track 2) Planetarium Software for your Desktop-- Patrick Wiggins, NASA/JPL Solar System Ambassador to Utah
Download Worldwide Telescope for Free
See the Moon Surface with Moon Arounder
Download Stellarium for Free
Download Google Earth Free
Download Celestia Free


August 10, 2010
Tuesday Morning (Track 3) Return of the Perseid Meteor Shower-- Patrick Wiggins, NASA/JPL Solar System Ambassador to Utah
http://hubblesite.org/explore_astronomy/tonights_sky
http://www.skyandtelescope.com/community/skyblog/observingblog/99304684.html
http://backcountryutah.blogspot.com/2010/08/august-skies-showcase-planets-and.html 

Tuesday Afternoon (Track 4) Tips for better Meteor Viewing—Patrick Wiggins, NASA/JPL Solar System Ambassador to Utah
http://hubblesite.org/explore_astronomy/tonights_sky
http://www.skyandtelescope.com/community/skyblog/observingblog/99304684.html
http://backcountryutah.blogspot.com/2010/08/august-skies-showcase-planets-and.html 


August 11, 2010
Wednesday Morning (Track 5) What is a Meteor Shower?-- Patrick Wiggins, NASA/JPL Solar System Ambassador to Utah
http://hubblesite.org/explore_astronomy/tonights_sky
http://www.skyandtelescope.com/community/skyblog/observingblog/99304684.html http://backcountryutah.blogspot.com/2010/08/august-skies-showcase-planets-and.html  

Wednesday Afternoon (Track 6) Big Fly Fishing Even in West Yellowstone-- Gene Kaczmarek, Federation of Fly Fishers
http://www.federationconclave.org
http://www.fedflyfishers.org


August 12, 2010
Thursday Morning (Track 7) Fly Fishing Clinics for Youth and the Ladies-- Gene Kaczmarek, Federation of Fly Fishers
http://www.federationconclave.org
 http://www.fedflyfishers.org

Thursday Afternoon (Track 8) Meet the Fly Tying All Stars--Gene Kaczmarek. Federation of Fly Fishers
http://www.federationconclave.org
http://www.fedflyfishers.org


August 13, 2010
Friday Morning (Track 9) Free Admission to the Fly Fishing Conclave--Gene Kaczmarek, Federation of Fly Fishers
http://www.federationconclave.org
http://www.fedflyfishers.org/


Friday Afternoon (Track 10) Home Cooking with Camp Chef-- Guy Perkins, Camp Chef
http://www.campchef.com

August Skies showcase Planets and Meteors


Patrick Wiggins, NASA/ JPL Solar System Ambassador to Utah shares some exciting information about the night skies--

Planets Gather

The planets Venus, Mars and Saturn continue to gather in our evening western skies. They'll be closest to each other this coming weekend. A good time to watch will be right around 9:30 p.m. Any earlier and the sky will be too bright to see the fainter Mars and Saturn. Much later and Venus will have set.

In case you haven't seen it already, here's a quick animation showing the planets' movements:
http://users.wirelessbeehive.com/~paw/temp/planets01.mov


Meteors
The annual Perseids (purr'-see-ids) meteor shower is predicted to reach its peak the afternoon of Thursday the 12th of August. The skies will be too light for meteor watching at that time so Utahns' best chances to watch the shower may be in the early predawn hours of the 12th or between midnight the night of the 12th and dawn on the 13th.

Thursday evening will almost certainly be a bad time to watch. In fact evenings are almost always a bad time to watch any meteor shower as during evenings we are on the wrong side of the planet. It's only around midnight that the Earth has turned enough that we start to face the oncoming meteoroid swarm.

You may also want to check out this article from Sky & Telescope magazine:
http://www.skyandtelescope.com/community/skyblog/observingblog/99304684.html

Saturday, July 31, 2010

See Mountain Goats in Unique Terrain

Photo by Lynn Chamberlain, Utah Division of Wildlife Resources

Beaver -- You could see as many as 100 mountain goats on Aug. 7.


And you may not need binoculars to see them. At some of the past viewing events on the Tushar Mountains, the goats have gotten as close as 35 feet to those viewing them!

On Aug. 7, the Division of Wildlife Resources will host its annual Goat Watch on the Tushar Mountains east of Beaver.


The event is free.
The trip will begin at 8 a.m. at the convenience store at the bottom of Exit 109 off Interstate 15. (Exit 109 is the exit on the south side of Beaver.)

From there, participants will caravan to the top of the Tushar Mountains. When you reach the top, you’ll be close to 11,500 feet above sea level.

Lynn Chamberlain, regional conservation outreach manager for the DWR, says the view from the top of the Tushars is amazing. “You can see all of southern Utah,” he says. “And we can almost always find the goats.”

If binoculars or spotting scopes are needed, Chamberlain will have some you can borrow. But if you have your own viewing equipment, please bring it.

Chamberlain also encourages you to bring water, a hat, a jacket and a sack lunch. It’s also a good idea to travel in a vehicle that has high ground clearance. “The road can be rocky towards the top,” he says.

A unique area
In addition to seeing the mountain goats, you can explore the alpine-tundra ecosystem in which the goats live. Found only above the timberline at high elevations, it’s an ecosystem that’s uncommon in southern Utah.

Chamberlain says unique animals live in this alpine-tundra terrain, including yellow-bellied marmots and pika. “These high-elevation areas get extremely cold in the winter,” he says. ”To survive, the animals that live in them have adapted some pretty interesting behaviors.”

For more information about the goat watching event, call the DWR’s Southern Region office at (435) 865-6100.

See Ospreys August 7

Photo Courtesy Utah Division of Wildlife Resources

Summit County -- Large fish-eating birds called ospreys will be the center of attention on Aug. 7.

That’s the day the Division of Wildlife Resource’s Watchable Wildlife program will host a free field trip to see the birds.

The field trip will be held in Summit County.

With their five-foot wing span, the ospreys will be easy to see. And if you attend the field trip, you might even see some turkey vultures and great blue herons, says Bob Walters, Watchable Wildlife coordinator for the DWR.

To participate in the field trip, meet at the Rockport Reservoir dam from 6 to 7 p.m.

To reach Rockport, travel on Interstate 80 to Wanship. Then exit the freeway and travel south on state Route 32 to the dam observation site.

From the dam, participants will follow Walters in their own vehicles to viewing sites in and near Coalville, Wanship and Rockport State Park.

If you’d like to join the field trip at one of the viewing sites, please call Walters at (801) 209-5326 to make arrangements.


What you’ll see
Walters will have some binoculars and spotting scopes available, but if you have your own, he encourages you to bring them.

You’ll see osprey pairs and their young during the trip. Walters says each pair had one to three young, or eyases, this spring.

While there’s a chance you’ll see the ospreys fly, it’s more likely you’ll watch them as they feed and exercise their wings while on their nests. Sometimes three feet or taller in height, the nests themselves are something to see.

“The nests start looking like chimneys,” Waters says. “Sometimes I think they’d rather build nests than fish. It’s just incredible.”

During the trip, Walters will also point out waters you can visit at a later time to witness the spectacular feet-first ‘plunge dive’ of the osprey. Ospreys make these out-of-the-air dives to snatch fish that are swimming under the surface of the water.

Walters says ospreys are highly specialized to capture fish. Their outer toe is reversible, and their talons are covered with sharp hooks on the lower surface that allow them to grasp slippery fish in the water.

Walters calls the osprey’s plunge dive ”one of the true spectacles of nature.”

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Safe Boating Tip of the Week from Utah State Parks

\

Salt Lake City – While boating on Utah’s waters, be aware of marine stressors such as heat from the sun, glare off the water, vibration and noise of a boat's motor, and motion caused by waves and wind.

After nearly four hours on the water, these stressors produce a reaction time similar to being under the influence of alcohol. Marine stressors weaken your body and slow your reaction time enough to increase your accident risk. Rest frequently on land to reduce the impacts of stressors on your body.

For more safe boating tips visit http://www.stateparks.utah.gov/ or call (801) 538-BOAT. Wear it Utah!

Monday, June 28, 2010

July 4th Travel on the Rebound

SALT LAKE CITY, June 28, 2010 – High expectations dominate the travel landscape this upcoming Independence Day holiday weekend as more than 2.75 million residents from the Mountain West are projected to travel 50 miles or more from their homes. According to AAA’s latest travel survey, this represents a 19 percent increase compared to last year.

“A sense of contained optimism has created a hearty increase of travelers, compared to last year when the recession caused many people to change their plans,” says AAA Utah spokesperson Rolayne Fairclough. “Potential impacts to travel plans, like the Gulf of Mexico oil spill or volatility in the European financial market, aren’t stopping Mountain West residents from traveling, as they are decidedly on the move.”

Fourth of July marks one of the busiest national holidays. This year, AAA projects more than 2.43 million Mountain West residents will drive to reach their holiday destinations. That’s a 20 percent increase when compared to 2009. Air travel is expected to increase by 10 percent, with more than 140,000 Mountain Westerners expected to take to the skies to reach their holiday destinations.

Nationally, AAA forecasts just over 34.9 million people will travel 50 miles or more during the 4th of July holiday weekend, representing a 17 percent increase compared to last year.

Nationally, Independence Day holiday air travel is expected to increase 13 percent when compared to last year, with weekend airfares averaging $192 per ticket, according to the AAA Leisure Travel Index. Hotel rates at AAA Three Diamond lodgings are averaging $141.60 per night and weekend car rentals are forecasted to increase by four percent to an average rate of $54. A Mountain West family of four is expected to spend an average $579 over the weekend and the average road trip will cover 926 miles.

According to AAA’s survey, the primary leisure activities for Mountain West residents celebrating the nation’s birthday will be visiting family and friends, shopping, dining and sightseeing.

As part of AAA’s ongoing commitment to providing safety and protection to motorists, the AAA Tipsy Tow Program will offer a free tow for drinking drivers in Utah from 6:00 p.m. on July 4, until 6:00 a.m. on July 5.

Members and non-members alike can call (800) 222-4357 (AAA-HELP) for a free tow of up to five miles. "Just tell the AAA operator, ‘I need a Tipsy Tow’, and a truck will be on its way,” said Fairclough. “Service is restricted to a one-way ride for the driver and his or her vehicle to the driver’s home.”


AAA Tips to Avoid Air Travel Delays:
By following these defensive measures before traveling by air, you can avoid unnecessary frustration and disruption.

Avoid delay-prone flights. Before you book, make sure you’re on a flight that has a decent arrival history.

Know your airline. Avoid airlines that are known for labor disruptions or major instances where flights have been canceled.

Book a nonstop. If you fly directly to your destination, you won’t get stuck in a connecting city.

Fly mornings. Whenever possible, book the first flight of the day. Delays tend to worsen later in the day.

Leave enough time for connections. Schedule at least one hour for a connection. Give yourself more time if you have to change planes and go through security again.

Use small airports. Avoid airline hubs whenever possible. Secondary airports are usually less congested and less prone to delays.

AAA offers a variety of travel planning tools that include free TourBook travel guides and maps for members and the TripTik® Travel Planner, available free to all travelers at www.aaa.com/triptik . Three iPhone apps offer access to AAA products and services on the go. The AAA TripTik® mobile app provides information on gas prices, hotels, restaurants and attractions.

Projections are based on research conducted by IHS Global Insight. The Boston-based economic research and consulting firm teamed up with AAA as part of an agreement to jointly analyze travel trends during the major holidays. AAA has been reporting on holiday travel trends for more than two decades.

AAA Travel is the nation’s largest travel organization. AAA Travel offers trips, cruises, tours and vacation packages throughout the world. Call (888) 937-5523 for more information or visit us at your local AAA Travel office or online at www.aaa.com/travel .

AAA Utah offers a wide array of automotive, travel, insurance, DMV, financial services and consumer discounts to more than 175,000 members. AAA has been a leader and advocate for the safety and security of all travelers since it was founded more than 100 years ago.