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STRANDED ORCA SWIMS TO FREEDOM
Written by: ED EVANS
04/29/2024
A small logo depicting the news story STRANDED ORCA SWIMS TO FREEDOM

In what’s being termed “The great escape”, a young orca's bid for freedom occurred at high tide from a remote Vancouver Island tidal lagoon early Friday morning where it had been trapped for more than a month.

 

The young whale was enticed to the lagoon outlet by members of two local first nation tribes using a small inflatable vessel and sea lion meat.  The escape involved swimming through a swift-moving, narrow channel and underneath a bridge and then immediately swimming toward the open ocean and making calls for its extended family members, according to rescue officials.

 

The orca has been the focus of intense rescue efforts since March 23, when her pregnant mother became stranded on a rocky beach and died. 

 

There were concerns that the young whale might strand itself on the same rocky beach where her mother died during low tide.

 

The Canadian Fisheries Department will now work with First Nations, whale watchers, researchers and boaters to monitor the location of the orca calf's extended Bigg's killer whale family.

 

The rescue team will continue to monitor the young orca's whereabouts, her condition, and if she has a chance to reunite with family.

WORD OF THE WEEK -
Written by: MARY NORTON
04/29/2024
A small logo depicting the news story WORD  OF  THE  WEEK -

The Klallam word of the week is  "HAND". 


In Partnership with the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe, KSQM brings you the Klallam Word of the Week.


“Word of the Week” is a short educational feature spotlighting a Klallam language word by pronunciation, definition and use.  Vocal talents provided by Mary Norton, Charlene Dick and Loni Greninger and Timothy O'Connell. 


Music performed by Jonah LittleSunday.



“Word of the Week” is heard on KSQM every Monday, Wednesday and Saturday at 12:30 and 5PM, and is made possible through the support of The Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe.


“Word of the Week” is also heard on KPTZ 91.9 FM every Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at 5:15PM. 


Visit their website: www.kptz.org.

Seed Shooter
Written by: Dennis Again
04/27/2024
A small logo depicting the news story Seed Shooter

Dennis again. One more pic of that seed-shooting weed.

Save Oscar!
Written by: Camille
04/27/2024
A small logo depicting the news story Save Oscar!

Hi Ciscoe - We have a Dracaena Marginata (his name is Oscar ;)) that is 40+ years old and very tall (~8-9'). We repotted him several years back and added new soil in the last year as well as fertilized. He has been very happy in the same location for 4 years but in the last few months several of the branches have started to yellow then brown and fall off (see attached picture). The branch itself feels kind of squishy like it's rotting. However, I am very careful about watering him and only do so when he is beyond a finger's length into the soil. I am not sure what to do at this point. Any ideas what could be going on and a remedy to try?

Thanks so much! #saveoscar  Camille

Nematodes and Blueberries
Written by: Cindy
04/27/2024
A small logo depicting the news story Nematodes and Blueberries

Hello,

I Hybridize & grow Dahlias in a 32 x 50 plot, on 5 acres.  I've never used Beneficial Nematodes but I'm interested in giving them a try.  It seems that there are different types of Nematodes.  Can you recommend which ones would be best for my purposes?

 

Also, one of my Blueberry bushes had "rusty spots" on the leaves last year.  Should I be spraying something on it to prevent it?  I have 3 azaleas with it also.  Cindy

THE BC CANADA WEEKLY UPDATE
Written by: CELESTE STEINDL, KSQM NEWS, BC
04/12/2024
A small logo depicting the news story THE BC CANADA WEEKLY UPDATE
From the KSQM News Desk in Victoria – 
This is the BC Canada WEEKLY UPDATE:


British Columbia’s credit status took a double blow on Tuesday, with S&P downgrading the province due to the risk of “outsized” deficits.

S&P Global Ratings blamed big government spending as it dropped its credit rating for the province and BC Hydro’s provincially guaranteed unsecured debt from AA status to AA-minus.

It’s the third ratings drop since 2021, when B.C. lost AAA status.

“The Province of British Columbia’s 2024 budget outlines continued extensive investment for operations and record levels of capital spending over the next three years, which will lead to outsize after-capital deficits of more than 15 per cent of total revenues and a relatively steep increase in debt through to fiscal 2027,” said S&P in a statement.

It said that in the next two years there was at least a one-in-three chance the current fiscal course would result in rising debt levels and very low internal liquidity, and that would mean another ratings cut.

Another global ratings agency, Moody’s Investors Service, also revised its outlook for B.C. to negative on Tuesday. S&P said a reversal of the province’s “fiscal trajectory” is needed along with stronger economic growth for the outlook to be revised to stable.

It said the province’s commitment to fiscal discipline and stability have “wavered” recently as B.C. as it increased spending on operations and capital investment to what S&P calls “unparalleled levels” amid slowing growth.

 

IN OTHER NEWS

The B.C. government is relaxing some of its rules related to liquor sales at breweries, wineries, cideries and distilleries as the summer tourism season approaches.

The changes largely revolve around how much alcohol can be sold to a customer, and where and when samples can be offered on guided tours.

Wineries can now offer more servings of their products up to a maximum of 10 ounces per customer.

Meanwhile, breweries and cideries can offer up to 24 ounces, while distilleries can serve a maximum of 3 ounces of a spirit, not including any mixers like tonic water.

The province also announced that alcohol manufacturers are allowed to offer another seating area where visitors can try samples during tours, so long as it is supervised.

The province notes that these new stops during tours should not be considered an alternate consumption area for alcohol.

Additionally, packaged liquor can now be sold during tours, and not just in designated areas.

OUT AND ABOUT IN BC

In a world-first, scientists had what they call a "conversation" with a whale. Now, researchers are trying to find out what they are actually saying.

 

Researchers who "conversed" with a humpback whale say their encounter could be the first step towards communication with non-human intelligence.

 

It was in 2021, off the coast of south-east Alaska, that a team of six scientists played a recording of a humpback greeting call using an underwater speaker. They were stunned when one humpback whale they had named Twain, responded in a conversational manner.

 

"It's like experiencing another world. You hear them come up to the surface. Then there's this big breath, you can see it, and they're all together as a group. It's just incredible," said Josie Hubbard, an animal behaviourist currently studying for her PhD at the University of California, Davis.

 

Hubbard is part of a Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence or Seti research team, hoping to understand the communicative complexity and intelligence of humpback whales.

 

Acoustician, Brenda McCowan was broadcasting a recorded humpback contact call through an underwater speaker and Twain had "spoken" back, engaging in a "conversation" that lasted a full 20 minutes.

 

The songs of the humpback whale are thought to be among the most complex in the animal kingdom. The first recording of humpback whale song was made in 1952 by US Navy engineer Frank Watlington.

 

Almost 20 years later, marine biologist Roger Payne noticed these calls were organised and in repeating patterns. This transformed our understanding of whale vocalisations and sparked an interest that would lead to decades of research.

 

The research team plans to vary the calls they broadcast. The big challenge will be in classifying those signals and determining their context, so they can ascertain their meaning.

 


 

Celeste Steindl            KSQM News                 Until We Meet Again

 

 

 

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