Categories
Environment Food Health Music Top Stories

Deen Castronovo on Salem Water Alert: “Govt insiders told me they knew on the 21st”

Deen Castronovo: “Summer night in Salem. Water toxicity warning in our area so I’m stuck with drinking Cokes!!  Govt insiders told me they knew on the 21st but decided to let us all know last night at 10:30 pm.  If you hear me playing some stuff that can’t be humanly possible, it’s a new 3rd arm.”

Low levels of toxins caused by algae blooms in Detroit Lake in Detroit, Oregon have been discovered in Salem’s drinking water, prompting officials to warn people with compromised immune systems and children to not drink the tap water.

Castronovo is currently the drummer for The Dead Daisies.  He is also known for his work with Journey, Bad English, Wild Dogs, and as a touring/session drummer for Ozzy Osbourne, Steve Vai and Paul Rodgers.

Categories
Environment Music Opportunities Top Stories

Leonardo DiCaprio: Arctic Ocean Beaufort Sea Oil Drilling – “Trump’s Catastrophic Offshore Drilling Plans”

Leonardo DiCaprio: “TIME IS RUNNING OUT!  Right now, Secretary Zinke is working to destroy vital protections for the Arctic Ocean and the beluga whales that depend on it.  Dangerous new oil and gas exploration activities in the Arctic’s Beaufort Sea would effectively sabotage belugas’ ability to communicate and survive.  It’s on us to protect these highly sociable marine mammals from President Trump’s catastrophic offshore drilling plans.  Go to this location to make your voice heard before the May 30th comment deadline. #ProtectOurCoast”

Two years after President Obama “permanently” withdrew oil drilling in areas of Alaska’s Beaufort Sea, the Trump administration has proposed to resume leasing there in 2019.

Categories
Environment Health Listen Music Opportunities Top Stories Tour Dates

Dave Matthews Band: Donate to Elephant Sanctuary for Chance to Win Safari and Concert Tickets

Dave Matthews Band is taking a stand for the elephants and for community based conservation! Watch the video below and learn about Dave Matthews’ trip to Reteti Elephant Sanctuary Community United for Elephants while listening to his song, “Mother Of Africa.” Show your support by making a $10 contribution to the sanctuary, and enter to win a chance at a luxury safari to Kenya and see Dave in concert at this location.

The first $10,000 in funds raised will be generously matched by Elephant Gems, Inc.

Reteti Elephant Sanctuary is the first ever community-owned and run elephant sanctuary in Africa. The sanctuary provides a safe place for injured elephants to heal and later, be returned back to the wild. Reteti operates in partnership with Conservation International who provide critical operational support and work to scale the community-centered model to create lasting impacts worldwide.

Film by Ami Vitale with Dane Henry and Brett Lowell.

Categories
Documentaries Environment Listen Music New Releases Opportunities Top Stories

L7 Documentary Screening @ Inspire Theatre – Punk Rock Bowling and Music Festival Las Vegas

The documentary, L7: Pretend We’re Dead, will screen this year at Punk Rock Bowling and Music Festival in Las Vegas on Saturday, May 26th at 12:30-2PM.  A live in person Q&A with the band will follow the screening.  The event is free.

Inspire Theatre
107 S. Las Vegas Blvd
Downtown Las Vegas

Fierce, feminist pioneers of American grunge punk, the L7: Pretend We’re Dead documentary was directed by award-winning filmmaker Sarah Price (American Movie, The Yes Men, Summercamp).

Offering particularly revelatory insight into the band’s 16-year career and eventual dissolution in 2001, the film features exclusive interviews with Exene Cervenka (X), Krist Novoselic (Nirvana), Shirley Manson (Garbage), Louise Post (Veruca Salt), Joan Jett and more.

L7: Pretend We’re Dead is a culmination of the band’s re-ignited enthusiasm fueled by their fans’ outpouring of encouragement and support on social media when the band hinted at the idea of a documentary in early 2015. Culled from over 100 hours of unearthed vintage home movies taken by the band, never before seen performance footage, and candid interviews, L7: Pretend We’re Dead chronicles the band’s triumphs and failures. It takes viewers on an all access journey into the 1990’s grunge movement that took the world by storm. Charged with lyrics that had political bite and humor which proved irresistible to the disenfranchised, the marginalized, and the punk, they helped define grunge as the genre of a generation.

Categories
Documentaries Entertainment Environment Listen Movies Music New Releases Top Stories Tour Dates

Living in the Future’s Past w/ Jeff Bridges – Trailer

Jeff Bridges: “After a successful debut at SBIFF (Santa Barbara International Film Festival), follow the journey of Living in the Future’s Past as we take the documentary to film festivals around the world in 2018 and ask: ‘What kind of future would you like to see?’

Categories
Entertainment Environment Music Top Stories

UFOs-Tom DeLonge, “first ever footage of UAPs” (Unidentified Aerial Phenomena)

Tom DeLonge: “As promised, today we launched the beginning of the To The Stars Academy community of interest with an exclusive analysis of the first ever footage of UAPs (Unidentified Aerial Phenomena) that have been through the USG declassification review process and approved for release.  GO to coi.tothestarsacademy.com.

“At the same time, The New York Times is running a front page news story that prominently features Luis Elizondo, #TTSAcademy’s Director of Global Security & Special Programs and former manager of the USG Advanced Aerial Threat Identification Program.  That’s about as big as it gets.”

Categories
Biographies Books Concert Tickets Entertainment Environment Farewells Finance Food Gear Guitars Health Holidays Interviews Listen Music Music Festivals Music for Sale New Releases Opportunities Pre-Order Real Estate Recording RIAA Setlists Sports Tech Top Stories Tour Dates Uncategorized World

Full in Bloom is on Vacation, New Interviews + Podcast Coming Soon

Full in Bloom is currently on vacation; articles will resume on Monday, December 11th. We will continue to update our Twitter retweeted news feed found on the lower (center) section of the homepage.

Before the end of 2017, we will be launching our podcast and, once that happens, interviews will resume at a regular pace.

HAPPY TRAILS!

Categories
Environment Music Top Stories

Celebrities React to Trump’s Decision to Reverse Ban on Elephant Trophies

UPDATED:

Celebrities are using social media to voice their outrage over Donald Trump’s decision to allow hunters to bring trophies of elephants they killed in Zimbabwe and Zambia back to the United States, reversing a ban put in place by the Obama administration in 2014. A list of reactions have been posted below (we’ll add more as they come in).

Joan Jett:
Help urge Secretary Zinke, US Department of the Interior and the USFWS International to keep the elephant trophy import ban intact at this location.

Seth MacFarlane:
“You really have to be a special kind of human garbage to lift a ban on elephant trophy hunting.”

Russell Crowe:
“Dear people with no soul, stop shooting elephants”

The Lumineers:
“The fact that Trump has lifted President Obama’s ban on elephant trophies being imported into the country is a devastating blow to the survival of these beautiful animals. It’s savage and pointless. It breaks our hearts.”

Peter Frampton:
“Don’t tell me this is so his sons can go kill more animals for fun. Making America worse everyday! Arsehole”

Ron Jeremy:
“Lifting a ban on elephant hunting? They are endangered! Their excuse is they will raise so much money from the hunters they can save other elephants. How about you just give them the money to help save the elephants?”

Ricky Gervais:
“I’m an optimist, and I truly believe that in the long run, a cruel, irresponsible regime increases the individual’s sense of responsibly and compulsion to do good. It makes us grow up. Take charge. Protect the innocent. #BeKindToElephants”

Moby:
“Trump has overturned an Obama order that prevented bringing “trophies” from slaughtered elephants into the US. Let me be clear: Fuck you Donald Trump and fuck you GOP. It’s like Trump and the Republicans go out of their way to be as evil as they can.”

Tony Kanal:
“No longer surprised by the nefarious acts of Donald Trump and his administration but this is truly heartbreaking. Lifting the ban on bringing elephant “trophies” into the US is a massive step backwards in protecting these endangered creatures. There is no “sport” in hunting.”

Rep. Vern Buchanan (U.S. Congressman):
“I oppose lifting the ban against importing African elephant trophies. We should not encourage the hunting and slaughter of these magnificent creatures. We don’t get a second chance once a species becomes extinct.”

Myles Kennedy:
“Heartbreaking: Reversing the trophy import ban is a backward back for ethical conservation efforts & one we are deeply disappointed to see”

Laura German:
“I’m utterly devastated that Trump lifted the ban on importing elephant trophies. There is ZERO FKNG REASON to kill these beautiful majestic beings. My heart hurts.”

Nikki Sixx:
“Fuck You Donald Trump and your piece of shit family.”

Matt Sorum:
“When you thought it couldn’t get any worse. This is heartbreaking, I’m disgusted with this administration.”

Jackie Evancho:
“To roll back the ban on elephant trophy imports of these majestic, endangered, beautiful, creatures of God, is sad and wrong on every level!”

Kim Insley:
“Absolute insanity: Trump Administration to Lift Ban on ‘Trophy’ Elephant Imports”

Henry Winkler:
“At every turn.. for all life ..disrespect.
“If you met Natalie in person … she would jump right into your heart ! NOT put her head on a wall.”

Jay Walker:
“Our president reversed a ban on bringing elephant trophies back to the US. If you could spend 5 minutes with one of these animals and still want to kill it for sport, you’re a psychopath.”

Ellen DeGeneres:

Categories
Entertainment Environment Music Top Stories

Watch Archaeologists Unearth 2nd Century Amphitheater in Israel

Amazing.

Categories
Environment Music Top Stories Tour Dates

Roger Waters: CHEVRON CORPORATION v The Indigenous People of Ecuador Statement Issued

Roger Waters:
CHEVRON vs Everyone Who Cares about our Brothers and Sisters in Ecuador.
This morning I was outside OSGOODE HALL in Toronto, before a hearing of the case of CHEVRON CORPORATION v The Indigenous People of Ecuador. CHEVRON have demanded that the plaintiffs post a $1m bond to indemnify CHEVRON, against potential loss of costs. CHEVRON hope to end the trial by making it impossible for their victims to continue.
Is there no depth to which they won’t sink!
I will be there again tomorrow morning with First Nations leader Phil Fontaine.
Please join us at 9.00AM outside the Osgoode Hall, 130 Queen Street. Bring a banner if you can.
“IN SOLIDARITY WITH OUR BROTHERS AND SISTERS IN ECUADOR”
“DON’T LET BIG OIL DESTROY THE PLANET”
“HEY CHEVRON, LEAVE THEM KIDS ALONE”
So sick of this corporate bullshit, Ecuadorans are dying of cancer and CHEVRON have skipped town with the cash. Here is a link to Amazon Watch for a brief history of the case.
Please please, come, resist. Let CHEVRON know this is Canada and the people will not be bullied into subservience by CHEVRON’s army of corporate legal shills.
I’m off to the Ottawa gig now.
See you tomorrow.
ROGER WATERS

Categories
Environment Music

VIDEO: Watch the Trailer for The Smog Of The Sea featuring Jack Johnson

The Smog Of The Sea is a new documentary, from filmmaker Ian Cheney (King Corn), that chronicles a 1-week research expedition through the remote waters of the Sargasso Sea. The film has enlisted singer / songwriter Jack Johnson as a citizen scientist, joining marine scientist Marcus Eriksen, renowned surfers Keith & Dan Malloy, spearfisher woman Kimi Werner, and bodysurfer Mark Cunningham to study plastic in the ocean. The film, which includes live action footage, underwater cinematography, and an original song by Johnson, provides an artful call to action for rethinking single-use plastic.

After years of hearing about the famous “garbage patches” in the ocean’s gyres, the crew is stunned to learn that the patches are a myth: the waters stretching to the horizon are clear blue, with no islands of trash in sight. But as the crew sieves the water and sorts through their haul, a more disturbing reality sets in: a fog of microplastics permeates the world’s oceans, trillions of nearly invisible plastic shards making their way up the marine food chain. You can clean up a garbage patch, but how do you stop a fog?

Using nostalgic super-8 footage, sparkling underwater cinematography, an original score by Jack Johnson and shipmate Simon Beins, and live action footage of the crew’s research, The Smog of the Sea provides a new perspective on the once pristine oceans, and makes an artful call to action for rethinking the scourge of the sea — single use plastic. Directed by Peabody Award-winning and Emmy-nominated filmmaker Ian Cheney (King Corn, The City Dark, The Search for General Tso).

To learn more visit the official website.

Categories
Environment

Colorado’s Great Tree Die-Off

Since 2010, the amount of standing dead trees has jumped 30%, totaling 834 million, according to an annual Colorado survey – that’s 1 out of every 14 trees! Most of the die-off can be attributed to insect infestations, particularly the Pine Beetle and Spruce Beetle.

On Tuesday, the Report on the Health of Colorado’s Forests detailed the current state:

• Colorado’s mountain Pine Beetle epidemic killed trees across 3.4 million acres

From Wikipedia:
The current outbreak of mountain pine beetles is ten times larger than previous outbreaks.[21] Huge swaths of central British Columbia (BC) and parts of Alberta have been hit badly, with over 40 million acres (160,000 km2) of BC’s forests affected.[22] Under the presumption that the large areas of dead pine stands represent a potential fire hazard, the BC government is directing fuel management activities in beetle areas as recommended in the 2003 Firestorm Provincial Review.[23] Harvesting affected stands aids fire management by removing the presumed hazard and breaking the continuity of the fuels. These fuel management treatments are specifically designed to reduce interface fire threats to communities and First Nations located in the infestation zone. The interface is the area where urban development and wilderness meet.

Since 2004, Alberta has spent more than $414 million on pine beetle control.

As of May 2013, the Pine Beetle is aggressively devastating forests in all 19 Western States and Canada, effectively decimating approximately 88 million acres of timber at a 70-90% kill rate. Over 13,000 miles of power lines are being endangered with falling trees that increasingly raise the risk of fires that could cause widespread problems for millions of people. The mountain pine beetle has affected more than 900 miles (1,400 km) of trail, 3,200 miles (5,100 km) of road and 21,000 acres (85 km2) of developed recreation sites over 4,500,000 acres (18,000 km2) in Colorado and southeastern Wyoming; other outbreaks encompass the Black Hills of South Dakota and extend as far south as Arizona, and as far north as Montana and Idaho. The US Forest Service is working on a hazard tree removal strategy, prioritizing high-use recreation areas, such as campgrounds, roads and National Forest Service lands adjacent to vulnerable public infrastructure such as power lines and near communities.

• The Spruce Beetle epidemic has killed trees across 1.7 million acres

From Wikipedia:
The spruce beetle is one of many beetle species that have recently increased their breeding times. The overpopulation of beetles in some forests in Kenai, Alaska, have damaged several spruce species that are no longer able to dwell there. The spruce beetle destroyed 2,300,000 acres (9,300 km2) (2 billion board feet) of spruce forests in Alaska from 1992 to 1999 (about 30 million trees per year at the peak), and 122,000 acres (490 km2) of Utah forests in the 1990s (more than 3 million trees). Outbreaks from 1975-2000 were seen in Montana (loss of 25 million board feet), Idaho (loss of 31 million board feet), Arizona (loss of over 100 million board feet), and British Columbia (loss of 3 billion board feet). As of 2000 the beetle was responsible for the loss of about 400 million board feet annually.[14] D. rufipennis is also a part of the ecosystem in Colorado.

The current pine beetle infestation has been attributed to Colorado winters, which no longer get or stay cold enough to kill the beetles. It has also been suggested that rising summer temperatures may accelerate beetle development.

From Wikipedia:
Mountain pine beetles affect pine trees by laying eggs under the bark. The beetles introduce blue stain fungus into the sapwood that prevents the tree from repelling and killing the attacking beetles with tree pitch flow. The fungus also blocks water and nutrient transport within the tree. On the tree exterior, this results in popcorn-shaped masses of resin, called “pitch tubes”, where the beetles have entered.[8] The joint action of larval feeding and fungal colonization kills the host tree within a few weeks of successful attack (the fungus and feeding by the larvae girdles the tree, cutting off the flow of water and nutrients). When the tree is first attacked, it remains green. Usually within a year of attack, the needles will have turned red. This means the tree is dying or dead, and the beetles have moved to another tree. In three to four years after the attack, very little foliage is left, so the trees appear grey.[3]

As beetle populations increase or more trees become stressed because of drought or other causes, the population may quickly increase and spread. Healthy trees are then attacked, and huge areas of mature pine stands may be threatened or killed. Warm summers and mild winters play a role in both insect survival and the continuation and intensification of an outbreak. Adverse weather conditions (such as winter lows of -40°) can reduce the beetle populations and slow the spread, but the insects can recover quickly and resume their attack on otherwise healthy forests.

Other Areas of Concern:

• About 80 percent of Colorado residents rely on forest watersheds for their municipal water supplies

• Before 2050, average temperature increases by 2.5 to 6.5 degrees can be expected. This would result in an increased risk of severe wildfires, insect infestations and droughts.

“When so many trees die and large wildfires follow, our forests quickly turn from a carbon sink into a carbon source,” state forest service director Mike Lester warned. “Beyond the implications for our atmosphere, forests in poor health have implications for our water supplies, public safety, wildlife and recreation opportunities.”

Isn’t the forest regenerating?
“That’s our new forest. Now, I would much rather have a new forest without 800 million dead trees standing all over it,” Lester said.

“It’s more evidence the climate is changing and that it is having dramatic impacts”, Ted Zukoski, attorney for the environmental advocacy group Earthjustice advised. “We need to take strong action to address it.”

State forest officials urged lawmakers to increase efforts to protect watersheds and manage wildfire risk. As part of the forest restoration, they proposed to plant more seedlings and improve insect detection and responses.

Categories
Environment

Obama Enacts 1st Ever Carbon Pollution Limits for Power Plants

Obama Enacts 1st Ever Carbon Pollution Limits for Power Plants US power plants will have to deal with rules governing their pollution output for the first time after the Obama Administration announced a set of regulations on Friday. The industry is not going down quietly, however, as dozens of lawsuits are expected that will question the guidelines’ economic viability. The long-awaited and oft-revised rules from the Environmental Protection Agency will make it extremely difficult to put up new coal-burning plants without using expensive technologies to curb carbon emissions, technology the industry claims would kill profits.

The rules announce Friday represent a key first step in President Obama’s climate change package, first revealed in June. The rules have undergone several revisions since first being introduced for public and congressional input, The rules only cover new plants built moving forward, but provide a hint at how harsh expected regulations for existing facilities will be when they are revealed next year. The news sent coal-related stocks downward as investors grew even more pessimistic about the industry’s future. Opponents of the rules have called Obama’s climate change agenda a “war on coal,” while supporters note that pollution from power plants accounts for a quarter of the nation’s total carbon footprint.

Categories
Environment

AP: Settlement Reached in BP Oil Spill Case

The Associated Press reported Friday that BP Plc has reached a settlement with a committee of the attorneys representing the plaintiffs suing the company over the April 20th Gulf of Mexico oil spill. Judge Carl Babier, who presides over the Federal District Court in New Orleans where the case was filed, said that the trial will be postponed a second time so that the settlement may be reviewed. No new date for the trial has been set.

Barbier explained that the settlement will likely result in the parties involved in the suit realigning, necessitating major changes to the trial plan.. The judge did not elaborate any further, and made no mention of the status of BP’s talks with government officials or other parties.

An oil rig called the Deepwater Horizon exploded in the Gulf of Mexico in April 2010, killing eleven workers and leaking more than 200 million gallons of oil into the ocean from the Macondo well, which was owned by BP. The spill resulted in damage to sensitive wetland areas around the Gulf, reductions in the populations of area wildlife, and months of lost income to the region’s fishermen as commercial fishing was shut down for some time.

From BP’s standpoint, a settlement in the case would only represent a portion of its overall liabilities from the disaster, as many victims of the disaster chose not to join the class action suit and US officials are in discussions with the oil giant about regulatory fines and penalties for the spill. None of the parties involved in the suit disclosed an amount of the reported settlement.

Categories
Environment

Europe to Unveil Iranian Oil Sanctions Monday

Pressure is mounting for Iran to end its controversial nuclear program as the European Union announced Friday it will implement tough new sanctions on the Middle Eastern nation. According to a source close to the EU, officials will ban the import of Iranian oil, by far the nation’s biggest export, while also restricting Iran’s trade in precious metals and freezing certain financial assets. According to the US Energy Information Administration, 18 percent of the 2.2 billion barrels of oil Iran exports each day is shipped to Europe.

The eurozone’s sanctions on Iran have reportedly not been finalized, but it is expected that officials will allow a grace period of between three and eight months. This grace period will allow European refiners to negotiate new sources from which to obtain the crude before Iranian oil is cut off. The move will follow similar sanctions already launched against Iran by the US and the UK. The sanctions part of a broader effort to convince Iran to abandon its nuclear program, which the government claims is for peaceful purposes but officials around the world believe is aimed at developing weapons.

Right around 50 percent of the Iranian government’s revenue comes from its oil. Analysts say the nation will still be able to sell some of its oil, to countries like China, India and other Asian nations, but those buyers will likely demand discounts of 10 to 15 percent because of Iran’s narrowing pool of buyers. Currently, about 35 percent of Iran’s oil goes to China and India. Western powers have been careful in their approach to the Iran nuclear issue, wanting to pressure Tehran’s finances without creating an oil shortage, that could send oil and gas prices soaring.

Categories
Environment

Obama Rejects Keystone XL Pipeline

As expected, US President Barack Obama on Wednesday rejected a proposal from TransCanada Corp., which wants to build a pipeline to transport crude oil from Canada to Texas. Dubbed the Keystone XL, the pipeline has been the cause of abundant controversy in recent weeks, as supporters argue that the project will create jobs and opponents hang their arguments on the environmental impact of channeling oil 1,700 miles across the nation’s heartland.

Obama blamed his rejection of the Keystone pipeline on Republicans, who he said had given him too little time to review the proposal before asking for a decision. “As the State Department made clear last month, the rushed and arbitrary deadline insisted on by Congressional Republicans prevented a full assessment of the pipeline’s impact, especially the health and safety of the American people, as well as our environment.” Obama said in a televised press conference held to announce the decision. “As a result, the Secretary of State has recommended that the application be denied. And after reviewing the State Department’s report, I agree.”

Rejection of the fast-track approval of the project has been expected since, two weeks ago, the President asked Congress to give him until next year to decide on the proposal, a request Congress denied, requiring a decision by Wednesday as part of a bill containing a popular tax cut. Obama noted that his decision was not based on “the merits of the pipeline,” but by the State Department’s inability to gather enough information to ensure the safety of the American people.

The Republicans, meanwhile, have already begun working on a plan to circumvent the President and get the pipeline started. State Department officials noted that TransCanada can reapply for a permit if a portion of the intended route in Nebraska is re-routed away from an aquifer which critics have charged would be contaminated if a spill occurred. A spokesman for TransCanada complained that diverting the pipeline’s path around the aquifer would mean substantial delays and millions in additional costs for a project that is ready to get off the ground now.