Thứ Sáu, 15 tháng 9, 2017

Waching daily Sep 16 2017

First I painted the form with spray paint to make the wood less porous

After the paint has dried I mixed 100%silicone caulk with wheat flour

Then I begin making the mold by presing the mixture around the form

After about 3 hours when the silicone has cured I start mixing some plaster of paris and hemp fibers to make the outside mold

I applied some oil, but that's not really necessary

Then I applied the plaster over the silicone mold, this will keep the mold together during the pouring process

Once a half of the mold it's done I'm making the other half

With a little bit of persuasion from the rubber hammer I removed the outside mold

Then I cut the silicone mold so I can get it out of the form

Here I oiled the mold so I can pour the plaster of paris for the piece that I want to make

I used some painters tape to put the mold together

Here I used grease to make a seal between the mold and the laminated board, but it works fine just with oil

I vibrated the mold so any air bubbles should rise to the top

The piece it's done!!! :)

For more infomation >> Cheapest way to make silicone molds at home - Duration: 11:19.

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Simha Rashi, Vara Bhavishya, September 18 to September 24, in Kannada - Duration: 1:07.

Bhavishya Darpan 4U YouTube Channel

Vara Bhavishya

Simha Rashi

For more infomation >> Simha Rashi, Vara Bhavishya, September 18 to September 24, in Kannada - Duration: 1:07.

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Mithuna Rashi, Vara Bhavishya, September 18 to September 24, in Kannada - Duration: 1:07.

Bhavishya Darpan 4U YouTube Channel

Vara Bhavishya

Mithuna Rashi

For more infomation >> Mithuna Rashi, Vara Bhavishya, September 18 to September 24, in Kannada - Duration: 1:07.

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The County Seat Utah County Profile - Duration: 28:51.

Hi everybody, welcome to this week's

episode of The County Seat. I'll bet

you cannot guess where we are if you

have lived in the state of Utah for any

time at all you probably have been

here at Bridal vail falls. Wel today on

The County Seat our entire focus of

the show is going to be about Utah

County. We have not done this in the

past we are going to a series of shows

this year highlighting counties. You

know that the pioneers one of the

first place that they expanded to out

of Salt Lake was to move South with

the fresh water Utah Lake and the big

fertile soil along the shores it was a

perfect place for vineyards and

orchards and agricultural pursuits.

Little communities started to dot up

they have expanded to become

Utah's 2nd most populous county and

one of the fastest most dependable

growing places. That brings with it a

lot of challenges and these are the

sorts of things that we will cover

today on our show. Let's start with

the history of the county.

Utah County calls itself the heart of Utah. The

reason for it could be two fold. The first and

most obvious is that it is located near the center

or heart of Utah. The second reason is less

obvious but if you get to know the culture and

economy, you'll see Utah County is at the heart

of what makes Utah, Utah.

To understand what makes Utah County a

unique place in the state you have to

understand how the county got its start.

It is speculated that the first non-native

americans to visit were Father Dominquez and

Father Escalante, when their party arrived in

the area on September 23, 1776.

The explorers didn't stay long and it would be

over 70 years before settlers would come to put

down permanent roots.

"Provo's history is different in several ways

from other places in Utah, other counties in

Utah, the people actually wanted to come to

Provo, Brigham did not have to call them to

come here. They were pestering him to come

here and when he finally relented in 1849, they

moved down and started their colony on the

Provo River."

The settlers began to move and build their new

home but a struggle for the land was right

around the corner.

"The only problem being this is where the Utes

like it too, the Timpanogos Utes liked it here. So

there was a sort of head butting experience

right from the very first."

Despite these early issues, the settlers persisted

and went on to form towns like Provo,

American Fork, Lehi, and Pleasant Grove, and

the county was officially founded in 1850.

It has been more than 160 years and people are

still clamoring to come live there.

In 2010 there were 448,000 people living in the

county and in 2015 that number grew to over

575,000. That is a 28.3 percent increase in just

five years.

The county features a thriving education system

with two Universities, BYU and Utah Valley

University. 93.3 percent of the county

population over 25 has a high school diploma

and 37.3% have a bachelor's degree or higher. It

is statistics like this that have made Utah

County a destination for businesses.

Over the last 15 years Utah County has

experienced explosive job growth as more new

businesses arrive. What once was a nearly

vacant hillside area is now the Silicon Slopes

filled with high end businesses like Adobe. This

new growth isn't surprising considering the

county history with technology.

"When you think of Utah County specifically

kind of the reason a lot of the energy is here,

why there is so much tech companies popping

up, why entrepreneurship is supported in such

a big way, you really have to look back at Utah's

history right, when it comes to tech. Two of the

three biggest tech companies in the world, in

the early 90's, were based in Utah with Word

Perfect and Novell and I think we just have this

strong rich tech history in Utah County."

Utah County isn't just a great place to work; it's

a great place to live. Which is why some

businesses choose to be there despite most of

their work being done out of the county.

"Then it came time to build a new building, to

grow and people said, 'Surely you're going to

build in Salt Lake, because that's where 90% of

your business is.' So I thought about it for a long

time, we talked to our employees and said if we

build in Salt Lake, what's going to happen? Will

you move? Will you commute and a large

portion of them said 'Geez Mary I don't think

we will. We want to stay in Utah County', and

that's when I realized, I did too, I wanted to stay

here."

And why wouldn't you want to live there? Utah

County has safe communites

"I love this lifestyle down here. I love the nature

of the people, their kindness, their community

oriented natures. I wanted to live in place

where I could send my kids to the baseball

fields on their bikes and not have to worry

about them."

.excellent education opportunites, and access

to wonderful recreation opportunities like

Bridal Veil Falls, Utah Lake and of course

"Sundance is an amazing assest. You can see

amazing plays there, you've got skiing and in

the summer it's one of the better places to go

mountain biking in the whole state."

For the County Seat, I'm Malia Stringham.

We are going to take a break we will

return to the studio with the

commissioners of Utah County to find

out more on The County Seat.

Welcome back to The County Seat

our highlight this week is focused on

Utah County we are spending the

entire half hour talking about the

county, its history its challenges

joining us for the conversation

Commissioners Nathan Ivy and Bill

Lee, gentlemen thank you for joining

us today. It's really good to see both

of you fellas. So obviously we see

from the story that Utah County is

poised for and has done a great job of

growing it's currently growing and

what is the vision you all see for the

future laying out 10-20 years.

The first future is we are going to

move that monument from this is the

place up there in Salt Lake area down

here to Utah county. Because

through studies and models and

everything we know there is a lot of

people coming here to Utah County

or projected to come this direction

and so that puts pressures on us to

make sure that we do police and law

enforcement transportation is

appropriate recreation as well that

we have in there and that we keep

the quality of life that we have right

now and maintain that as we are

going forward.

Is that a juggling act Nathan?

Yes, it's a very big juggling act to try

and find the proper balance

especially when you face with

growth. In Utah County has a very

unique balance to keep because we

have an amazing tech hub around the

point of the mountain the silicone

slopes we are attracting major world

companies like Adobe and others and

then in the South end of our county

we have actually lead the nation in

things like tart cherry production and

we lead the state in agricultural

receipt production and so as a county

we have a major diversity and so

finding the proper balance to make

sure that growth happens and we

promote our businesses and all those

wonderful things happen being our

technology hub our financial hubs but

stay true to our roots and agriculture

is a challenge.

Do you feel like when you come into

commission meetings sometimes it's

like a Dr. Jackal and Mr. Hyde you

have these hats you have to switch.

We always have to do that. We go

from issue to issue and they are wide

ranged in what we try to accomplish

and what we try to do so yes it is it's

a back and forth it's a balancing act.

Why do you think there is such an

appeal to Utah County? I am sure

part of it is what you just mentioned

Nathan that within one county you

can come here for good urban

business but you can go pick cherries

right off the tree. What do you think

the general appeal is that is drawing

all this growth?

I think one of the things that is the

great appeal is our taxes. Utah

County is the lowest tax county in the

entire state of Utah. We live by the

philosophy of small limited

government and allowing the people

to what the people do best. As a

result we have created an

atmosphere where we attract

wonderful people who do wonderful

things.

Have anything to add to that.

The greatest resource we have here

in Utah county is the people and they

are willing to go out and take chances

in businesses and willing to be

entrepreneurs and say let's try this

and willing to say this is what we do

not want and we are willing to stay

where we are. So I applaud that.

ago there were a whole bunch of

models of what your future looks like

would there be one you would like to

pick and just kind of paint in a broad

brush what 10 years down the road

looks like for Utah county.

The Gardner Institute I sat on a panel

up in Salt Lake they went through a

whole bunch of different models of

which they take all the factors and

they put them in place and they say

how is Utah County going to grow

and why and they went through

about 48 different models and picked

the average on that and they are

saying that by 2065 we are going to

be 1.2 million people in this valley

and so right now we are a little over

600,000 so we are going to grow

rapidly.

If you stop to think about that I was

an adult but the time Utah crossed

that kind of a number as far as a

million people just within my lifetime

I can see that happen to one county

that is just phenomenal. Do you

think you are going to carry a lot of

the population growth for the state in

the coming years?

Absolutely as you look at one of the

factors is geography, right. Salt Lake

County is getting pretty dang full they

don't have much more of the land

space in Utah County we do have

some land space available and

especially looking west in our Eagle

Mountain area and southwest in our

little places like Goshen. There is

land there and so when you look at

those particular areas we have some

land capacity to have more people

whereas a lot of the other more

urban areas of the Wasatch Front are

becoming a fairly built out we still

have some room to grow.

We are going to take a quick break

when we come back we are going to

turn our attention to some of the

challenges that all this growth is

going to bring and how the counties

and Utah county in particular will

need help achieving their goals we

will be right back with The County

Seat.

Welcome back to The County Seat we

are talking to the Commissioners of

Utah County as we highlight Utah

County for the entire half hour of the

county seat this week we talked

growth what are your concerns what

do you see as the biggest challenge

facing the county?

Well I think transportation is always

going to be one where we have

concerns and infrastructure because

although we have a lot of land it's not

developed land in the way of growth

that is coming there is going to be

infrastructure challenges

transportation challenges and then

finding the right blend between what

we have in our county which is urban

and rural and how that interfaces

between the two. We are seeing

some of those buffers hit right now

that are causing problems with

perceptions and what is going on so

those are the challenges that we

have.

Along with some of those challenges

and I think it touches on what

Commissioner Lee mentioned here

one of the things that is beautiful

about Utah County is our recreational

opportunities we have places like

American Fork Canyon Provo Canyon

Payson Canyon Spanish Fork these

are amazing places to go and recreate

and mountain bike ski hike do those

types of things that Utahans like to

do as we see a ginormous influx of

people those recreation areas face

increased pressure from usage and so

what are we doing now to make sure

that we are preserving large diverse

recreational opportunities so that in

50 years from now when we have 1.6

million living here that we still have

those diverse recreational

opportunities to go to because today

we look to the future and created

vision to protect those areas that

once you lose you never get back.

So is part of that equation looking for

new place to set aside as you expand

out for recreational opportunities like

west mountain or something like

that.

Sure you know I remember years ago

and I know that Salt Lake County still

kind of going through the changes of

this but when we were laid out every

15 miles there was a city there was a

lot a of space in between but as you

grow together you lose that space in

between and if you do not do

something or if communities do not

do something to have open space

then you wind up with everything

melted together and then your start

going the other direction and try to

buy stuff to get spaces in between

and that is what Salt Lake County has

been trying to do and so if we can

look now and say why don't we have

areas that are set aside cities and

counties make those areas available

we can have that richness that we

want.

Is that sometimes an unpopular

thing?

From my perspective my interaction

with the community it has not been

unpopular its actually very supported

because the people have come here

because they love those types of

activities and when they see elected

officials working with the various

mayors or other entities to try and

accomplish those goals that we have

as a broad county they are very

supportive of those ideas. Now they

are challenging because they are

expensive what is the right area how

do you build the right infrastructure

to it how do you find the money to

pay for some of those things but

those are the challenges that come

with it but there is general broad

support for that forward looking

vision from the county people from

my perspective.

If most of your growth is out west so

looking Provo Orem Spanish Fork we

are kind of filled in here so seems to

me that it's going to be out west that

you have that expansion and before

the show you were mentioning the

extension of water out there.

We are looking to trying to bring

water particularly to the southwest

end of the county it is a more dry

area what can we do to have

agriculture and residential water

usage out there and making sure that

its northwest Saratoga Springs area

they have good water now but that is

now what do we have down the road

for that future population and what

do we do to make sure we put the

proper infrastructure in place now so

that again when we get to those

critical points it is there and

deliverable instead of being reactor

to a problem and we had forward

thinking on all those issues.

Transportation is one of those things

I see a huge challenge in Utah County

because you have a lake right in the

middle of the county while its only 8

feet deep it's still a lake in the middle

of the county.

Like you said its right in the middle of

the county sour our Northwest

corridors are important to us we

have to have to move people back

and forth you look at other counties

like Salt Lake County they are east

and west of what they are dealing

with now trying to get people out like

our north and west so we have those

in place there are models out there

that we are looking at we are trying

to do preservation corridors so we

can purchase the lands now so when

its available for us to put the

transportation out there we will have

that land already purchased and

ready to go and that is one of the

things we are looking at.

In touching on that and this is what

Commissioner Lee lead out on and

was fantastic with is trying to build a

better working relationship with our

federal agencies like most counties in

Utah we have a large amount of

federally owned land and periodically

we get a small chunk of federally

owned land when we are trying to

put a sewer line through or a road

through and then in becomes very

cumbersome so we are trying now to

work through those challenge with

our federal land issues make sure

when growth hits partially again in

that west side where we have a lot of

federal land that those are handled in

a manner that allows us to efficiently

and quickly put in those sewer lines

and roads and other infrastructure

needs that come along with that

growth.

When you have a smaller county like

Utah County that has a fair chunk of

federal land in it does this seem like a

logical places where maybe the

transfer which has been a very

controversial issue would make

sense?

It absolutely will we went through

our resource management plan and

we just adopted that this year and

like Commissioner Ivy mentioned

there are areas where the federal

land comes down and it does not

make sense at all for them to have or

hold that. And like we all know on a

federal basis that will take years to

get something passed and to the

ground and on a disposal basis and it

may take ten years but we have to

start now because we cannot allow

for growth to hit that and then cause

problematic areas for us. So the

transfer of federal lands is very

important to us not just to our county

but for other counties as well but we

need to be on the forefront of going

forward with that.

It would almost seem it's a bigger

issue here potentially be a bigger

issue here than in the counties that

are still grazing a lot. They may find

peace with their federal partners and

continue their lifestyle but as you

organize it seems like it could be a

really big problem.

As you urbanize you run into a lot of

conflict take forest management for

example. We have a lot of our cities

that are now abutting forest land and

the forest service is doing a poor job

of managing that and keeping things

like beetle kill out and then we run

into serious fire issues that

immediate threaten homes and so it

is critical that we have those good

management practices honed in on a

local level so we can control and

protect our citizens from those types

of natural disasters that are

preventable.

That would also have an impact on

your watersheds too I suppose.

You bet, absolutely.

Wow we are going to take a quick

break and we will come back with the

County Seat and continue our

conversation we will wrap things up

here on our highlighting of Utah

County and been a great

conversation so far we invite you to

return with us right after this quick

commercial break.

Welcome back to the County Seat we

have been talking about Utah County

the plusses, minuses, the challenges

the benefits of living here with a

great bunch of people that run the

county the Commissioners have been

a lot of fun to talk to today just in a

wrap up anything that you feel is

really important that you should tell

the people of Utah about Utah

County.

I think for me it is the heart of Utah

County that is our story but I truly

believe that. Everything that

happens here affects Utah the good

things we do here are part of why

Utah is so successful. We create a

model of government and a culture in

a society that is truly reflective of the

American spirit and dream and that

dream and spirit lives here in Utah

County and because we help push

the blood to the rest of the state

Utah has become the shining

example to the nation of what can

happen when you live by good

principals and those are the

principals and ideal that we embrace

here in Utah County being a good

neighbor and keeping government

small and limited and allowing the

people to have freedom.

What are your thoughts on that?

A lot along the similar lines that

Commissioner Ivy has there. Again

our greatest resource is the people

that we have here in the county and

again they do phenomenal jobs in

keeping government under its proper

role I believe give the county greater

flexibility and greater opportunity

and there is a lot going on here from

Sundance to Bridal Vail Falls to out at

the lake to shooting at other side of

the lake there are so many things

that are happening here in Utah

County it's just fun to be a part of it

and see the good things that are

happening.

You just have a really good working

relationship I get the sense that you

guys have a united front and there a

good unified motion forward with

your leadership. Is that a fair

statement?

I think so and actually within the

commission we are striving very hard

to have good communication and be

on the same page and work together

and within the whole entire Utah

county government from our

assessor's office to our recorder and

treasurer our sheriff's department we

are all committed to helping this

place be a wonderful place to live and

I think that spirit of cooperation not

within our commission office but

county wide.

My hope is by the end of this I can

ride a horse half as good as you do.

That would be an accomplishment.

Well he's getting closer we are

working on it.

Gentlemen thank you so much for

taking so much time from your busy

schedules to talk to us about Utah

County it has been a great

conversation appreciate it immensely

thank you for tuning in for watching

the county seat each week these

programs are important they

highlight the most important level of

government that you will encounter

in life local government county

government is where your life

happens check out our social media

we love your engagement there talk

to us what you think about things and

we will see you next week on The

County Seat.

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