Top Stories From Ncpr

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 8:14:39
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Sinopsis

NCPR provides locally-produced news stories from around the Adirondack and North Country regions of New York State, as well as Western Vermont, and Ontario and Quebec in Canada.

Episodios

  • Natural Selections: Where do coral reefs get their food supply?

    27/05/2021 Duración: 05min

    (May 27, 2021) A coral reef is kind of like Manhattan, a huge number of mouths to feed in a packed parcel of real estate. A reef doesn't have upstate farms to keep them all fed. So how do they get by?

  • North Country at Work: Connecting animals and students with North Country School's Erica Burns

    21/05/2021 Duración: 05min

    (May 21, 2021) In early March, the snow crunched underneath Erica Burns’s boots as she walked from the horse barn to the pasture. A white horse had dug through the snow to find some grass and was grazing. “This is Lola. She’s our oldest horse,” Burns said. “That one’s Clover. Hey, Clove!”

  • Ask an epidemiologist: Why should I get the COVID-19 vaccine?

    19/05/2021 Duración: 05min

    (May 19, 2021) Syracuse University epidemiologist David Larsen answers questions and shares background on the COVID-19 vaccine.

  • Need a new summer sport? Try Irish road bowling

    13/05/2021 Duración: 03min

    (May 13, 2021) Summer's the perfect time to get your friends together for a low impact lawn game: bocci, croquet, horseshoes. Turns out there's another game to add to your list: Irish road bowling.

  • Natural Selections: The tip-toe ballet of the walking deer

    13/05/2021 Duración: 04min

    (May 13, 2021) Few creatures move with more grace than deer. Martha Foley compares them to ballerinas. Curt Stager says there's a reason for that. As ballerinas often do, deer walk on their tip-toes.

  • North Country summer camps coming back to life and filling up fast

    11/05/2021 Duración: 03min

    (May 11, 2021) Most summer camps were unable to open last summer because of the pandemic. But this spring, summer camps got the green light and ones in the North Country are filling up.

  • Closing the college gap: North Country program aims to provide path to higher ed

    03/05/2021 Duración: 05min

    (May 3, 2021) While students in rural America, like the North Country, graduate high school at relatively high rates, they’re less likely to pursue higher education, and more likely to drop out once they’re there. It’s called the ‘rural opportunity gap’.

  • Natural Selections: How rocks recycle

    29/04/2021 Duración: 04min

    (Apr 29, 2021)

  • $2.3 billion: how the 'historic' state budget reboots child care

    22/04/2021 Duración: 04min

    (Apr 22, 2021) $2.3 billion federal dollars have been set aside in New York’s 2022 budget for child care, which passed in early April. It's a historic amount of money, which supports and changes the way child care works in NYS.

  • Every rock tells a story

    15/04/2021 Duración: 05min

    (Apr 15, 2021) Curt Stager has his students start the semester by picking out a "pet rock." At the end of term, they have to tell the story of that rock - what it is, what it's made of, and what happened to shape it it over the ages.

  • North Country at Work: how Chambers of Commerce pivoted during COVID-19

    12/04/2021 Duración: 04min

    (Apr 12, 2021) Typically, tourism organizations are all about the traveler, and trying to get them to visit. But during the coronavirus pandemic, Chambers of Commerce across the region flipped that script.

  • Ottawa cellist Raphael Weinroth-Browne digs deeper during isolation

    06/04/2021 Duración: 04min

    (Apr 6, 2021) Efforts to control the coronavirus pandemic have meant clearing the performance schedules of countless musicians. One cellist in Ottawa has embraced this chance to dig a little deeper, redefining himself during isolation, and he suggests we all do the same.

  • The science behind maple syrup

    18/03/2021 Duración: 05min

    (Mar 18, 2021) You can get the sugar out of a lot of trees, but there's something special about the sugar maple. Its trunk is highly efficient at storing and moving sap. That's in part because the sap is stored throughout the trunk, rather then down in the roots, as with most trees in winter. Martha Foley and Curt Stager look at that other "sweet science," the one behind our favorite breakfast condiment.

  • Is subsidized child care coming to the North Country?

    18/03/2021 Duración: 05min

    (Mar 18, 2021) Child Care advocates say it needs to be treated as a public good. COVID-19 stimulus programs are treating it that way.

  • How the new 2021 'child tax credit' works, and what it means for North Country families

    11/03/2021 Duración: 03min

    (Mar 11, 2021) Imagine going out to your mailbox each month, and picking up a $300 check for each of your children. That’s what the new child tax credit will look like. And it's a big deal for middle and low income families.

  • Glitches? Could be gremlins, could be cosmic rays

    04/03/2021 Duración: 05min

    (Mar 4, 2021) Martha Foley and Dr. Curt Stager discuss cosmic rays. While many people may think cosmic rays only affect astronauts or satellites - objects in space - computers and other electronic equipment on Earth can be affected, too.

  • Animals that make their living outside the box

    11/02/2021 Duración: 05min

    (Feb 11, 2021) In general, plants make food from sunlight, and animals fuel themselves by "burning" oxygen. But some animals think outside the box. Curt Stager and Martha Foley look at a photosynthetic slug that hijacks the genetic machinery of the algae in its diet, and at a jellyfish that needs no oxygen, burning the alternative fuels of hydrogen and sulfur.

  • North Country at Work: digging out trains during the great snowstorm of 1912

    02/02/2021 Duración: 04min

    (Feb 2, 2021) On February 21, 1912, disaster struck in the form of a train collision on the New York Central Railroad line between Utica and Ogdensburg. The story goes like this: the winter of 1912 - especially February - was a pretty rough month weather-wise for the Northeast. Record-setting low temperatures and frequent snowstorms were disrupting the railroad, and supplies were running low in small communities that relied on it.

  • NYS Offices for the Aging setting up vaccine appointments for the elderly

    01/02/2021 Duración: 01min

    (Feb 1, 2021) The COVID-19 vaccine continues to be distributed to the 7 million New Yorkers in groups 1A and 1B. They include healthcare workers, teachers, and people over the age of 65. Getting the vaccine is a fairly simple procedure; signing up for it is proving to be a lot harder, especially for those uncomfortable with modern technology, like computers and smartphones. That’s where New York State’s Offices for the Aging are stepping in.

  • How you and me and flowers and bees get charged up (with static electricity)

    28/01/2021 Duración: 05min

    (Jan 28, 2021) It's the reason opposites attract and doorknobs shock, why lightning strikes, and the way bumblebees find the sweet spot in flowers. Whenever an object has more or fewer electrons than its neighbor, there is the potential for static discharge. Martha Foley and Dr. Curt Stager talk about the mysterious and hair-raising ways of static electricity.

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