Mountain View Curs is a specific cur founded by Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Bloodgood, of Bonnieville, Kentucky. It is a type of working dog used for treeing and trailing game; mainly squirrel and raccoon, but also large game.
History
The Mountain View Cur was developed by Michael and Marie Bloodgood, now of Bonnieville, Kentucky. In 1987 the Mountain View Cur Kennel was formed in Afton, New York, where the breed was subsequently developed. Mr. and Mrs. Bloodgood obtained their first pair of yellow Mountain Cur pups in 1973. Though their skills were good, their sense of smell was a setback to being a good treeing dog, so they were sold and replaced with good hounds. After owning, raising, and training some outstanding coon hounds under the Black River Kennel name for over 20 years and finding it harder and harder to find hounds that handled well, they tried to locate good curs that could keep up with their hounds, but would handle better.
The search for curs that could fit this bill proved to be a difficult and challenging task. Mr. and Mrs. Bloodgood tried 56 Mountain Curs originally, only finding 6 that were considered to be top tree dogs. It was found that 4 of the 6 were of a certain ancestry. When checking records, they found that half of the 56 Mountain Curs tried were of the same breeding: the Kemmer Stock Cur variety.
The decision was made to concentrate on these 4 Mountain Curs, three females and one young male, all of which were not closely related. One brindle female was culled later because she produced ill tempered male pups and another female because her pups lacked intelligence and ability, leaving one exceptional female, Mountain View Dance and one exceptional male, Mtn. View Gold Nugget, for the foundation stock of the Mountain View Cur. This selectivity resulted in 2 out of 56 OMCBA registered, or 2 out of 28 Kemmer bred Mt. curs meeting the Bloodgood standard. Later an outstanding male cousin to Mountain View Gold Nugget, Mountain View Buckshot (1991), and an outstanding female, Mountain View KY Lady (1993), were added to the breeding program. Most of the IPDBA registered dogs today carry these dogs in their blood lines. A few other select Mt Curs had been tested to be added over the years, but none have meet their high standards.
In 1992 the Kemmer Stock Breeders Association Registry was started, and in an effort to keep the line pure as possible, Mountain View Curs were originally registered with this registry. When the KSBA began they started with all pure Kemmer bred Mt. Curs. However, they started to register other lines and due to a desire for stricter standards among the founders of the breed, and realizing that the Mountain View Cur's high percentage reproducing quality was unique from most other OMCBA and KSBA registered dogs, Mr. Bloodgood and eleven dedicated breeders resigned from the KSBA. These eleven founders felt that they should register their dogs as a separate breed and with a registry that would certify every tree dog before they would be used for breeding, and would assure that no other stock could be registered in the breed.
In April 1995 the American Squirrel and Night Hunters Association (ASANHA) was chosen to hold the registry. The name Mountain View Cur was chosen for two reasons. One was that founders knew of the great reputation of Mountain View Kennel, it being well known in the cur dog world. The second reason was that Mrs. Kemmer asked that their name not be used.
Because of policy changes in the ASANHA to register non-proven tree dogs, the Breed Advisors felt that the Mountain View Curs should have their own registry with its own policies. Therefore, in the fall of 1996, the Mountain View Cur Registry was formed as a subsidiary of the International Progressive Dog Breeders' Alliance. A few years later, the Mountain View Cur was accepted for full recognition with the International Progressive Dog Breeder's Alliance, 'IPDBA' dog registry. The Mountain View Cur Registry website was changed to the Mountain View Cur Association website and is the Mountain View Cur IPDBA Breed Charter and it's Board of Advisors have full control of their breed's registration requirements and Breed Standard.
All Mountain View Curs must first be Certified as Tree Dogs before they can be permanently registered and used for breeding. This assures their owner that they are from generations of proven and tested breedings. They are known for their high reproducing of 98% Natural Tree Dogs without any genetic problems known and make wonderful loving family pets with a strong willingness to please their owner, making them easy to train to do about any task canine possible. They are a versatile hunting dog, being used for not only treeing everything from small to big game, but also for hunting hogs, game birds, turkeys, retrieving waterfowl, decoying coyote, and even search and rescue as well as drug/bomb location.
Appearance
The Mountain View Cur comes in yellow (Blonde-gold-almost red), brindle, and all black coloring, often with white points (white on toes, muzzle, chest). The dog should be muscled with strong, straight legs. The weight should range from thirty to sixty pounds. The dog's build should be for speed.
History
The Mountain View Cur was developed by Michael and Marie Bloodgood, now of Bonnieville, Kentucky. In 1987 the Mountain View Cur Kennel was formed in Afton, New York, where the breed was subsequently developed. Mr. and Mrs. Bloodgood obtained their first pair of yellow Mountain Cur pups in 1973. Though their skills were good, their sense of smell was a setback to being a good treeing dog, so they were sold and replaced with good hounds. After owning, raising, and training some outstanding coon hounds under the Black River Kennel name for over 20 years and finding it harder and harder to find hounds that handled well, they tried to locate good curs that could keep up with their hounds, but would handle better.
The search for curs that could fit this bill proved to be a difficult and challenging task. Mr. and Mrs. Bloodgood tried 56 Mountain Curs originally, only finding 6 that were considered to be top tree dogs. It was found that 4 of the 6 were of a certain ancestry. When checking records, they found that half of the 56 Mountain Curs tried were of the same breeding: the Kemmer Stock Cur variety.
The decision was made to concentrate on these 4 Mountain Curs, three females and one young male, all of which were not closely related. One brindle female was culled later because she produced ill tempered male pups and another female because her pups lacked intelligence and ability, leaving one exceptional female, Mountain View Dance and one exceptional male, Mtn. View Gold Nugget, for the foundation stock of the Mountain View Cur. This selectivity resulted in 2 out of 56 OMCBA registered, or 2 out of 28 Kemmer bred Mt. curs meeting the Bloodgood standard. Later an outstanding male cousin to Mountain View Gold Nugget, Mountain View Buckshot (1991), and an outstanding female, Mountain View KY Lady (1993), were added to the breeding program. Most of the IPDBA registered dogs today carry these dogs in their blood lines. A few other select Mt Curs had been tested to be added over the years, but none have meet their high standards.
In 1992 the Kemmer Stock Breeders Association Registry was started, and in an effort to keep the line pure as possible, Mountain View Curs were originally registered with this registry. When the KSBA began they started with all pure Kemmer bred Mt. Curs. However, they started to register other lines and due to a desire for stricter standards among the founders of the breed, and realizing that the Mountain View Cur's high percentage reproducing quality was unique from most other OMCBA and KSBA registered dogs, Mr. Bloodgood and eleven dedicated breeders resigned from the KSBA. These eleven founders felt that they should register their dogs as a separate breed and with a registry that would certify every tree dog before they would be used for breeding, and would assure that no other stock could be registered in the breed.
In April 1995 the American Squirrel and Night Hunters Association (ASANHA) was chosen to hold the registry. The name Mountain View Cur was chosen for two reasons. One was that founders knew of the great reputation of Mountain View Kennel, it being well known in the cur dog world. The second reason was that Mrs. Kemmer asked that their name not be used.
Because of policy changes in the ASANHA to register non-proven tree dogs, the Breed Advisors felt that the Mountain View Curs should have their own registry with its own policies. Therefore, in the fall of 1996, the Mountain View Cur Registry was formed as a subsidiary of the International Progressive Dog Breeders' Alliance. A few years later, the Mountain View Cur was accepted for full recognition with the International Progressive Dog Breeder's Alliance, 'IPDBA' dog registry. The Mountain View Cur Registry website was changed to the Mountain View Cur Association website and is the Mountain View Cur IPDBA Breed Charter and it's Board of Advisors have full control of their breed's registration requirements and Breed Standard.
All Mountain View Curs must first be Certified as Tree Dogs before they can be permanently registered and used for breeding. This assures their owner that they are from generations of proven and tested breedings. They are known for their high reproducing of 98% Natural Tree Dogs without any genetic problems known and make wonderful loving family pets with a strong willingness to please their owner, making them easy to train to do about any task canine possible. They are a versatile hunting dog, being used for not only treeing everything from small to big game, but also for hunting hogs, game birds, turkeys, retrieving waterfowl, decoying coyote, and even search and rescue as well as drug/bomb location.
Appearance
The Mountain View Cur comes in yellow (Blonde-gold-almost red), brindle, and all black coloring, often with white points (white on toes, muzzle, chest). The dog should be muscled with strong, straight legs. The weight should range from thirty to sixty pounds. The dog's build should be for speed.
"Like Light to the Flies" or "Like Light", as it is often referred to, is a song by heavy metal band Trivium and is the first single and music video from their 2005 album, Ascendancy. The band originally considered using the song "Ember to Inferno" as their first single but changed their minds after recording this song (along with "Blinding Tears Will Break the Skies" and "The Deceived"). "Like Light" was released in 2005, and features a mix of screaming and singing. The song contains two guitar solos which are meshed into one longer solo, with a small interlude in the middle. The version used in the video is not the album version, but the demo found previously on the MTV compilation album MTV2 Headbanger's Ball: Volume 2.
Meaning
"This song is about people's attraction to all forms of tragedy. It seems like everywhere you turn to today (e.g., television, newspaper, magazine, movies, etc.) it's all about murder, violence, war, cruelty- and it's because this is what sells; people are totally captivated by subjects in this vein. We are the flies." - Matt Heafy
Trivia
* The video can be found on Roadrunner Records
* The bassist in the video is Brent Young, Paolo joined the band shortly after its release.
* The song is heard in the 2007 film Smokin' Aces.
* The song is also heard in the video game The Sims 2, in simlish
* The music video features the demo version of this song
* The song is featured on the soundtrack for The Cave
Meaning
"This song is about people's attraction to all forms of tragedy. It seems like everywhere you turn to today (e.g., television, newspaper, magazine, movies, etc.) it's all about murder, violence, war, cruelty- and it's because this is what sells; people are totally captivated by subjects in this vein. We are the flies." - Matt Heafy
Trivia
* The video can be found on Roadrunner Records
* The bassist in the video is Brent Young, Paolo joined the band shortly after its release.
* The song is heard in the 2007 film Smokin' Aces.
* The song is also heard in the video game The Sims 2, in simlish
* The music video features the demo version of this song
* The song is featured on the soundtrack for The Cave
IP VPN-Lite is a product from Nortel (now acquired by Avaya) that provides the ability to run IP Virtual private networks using Multiprotocol BGP (MP-BGP) extensions (based on RFC 4364) across a normal IP backbone infrastructure. Unlike Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) based VPNs, IP VPN-Lite is purely based on an end-to-end IP transport.
While still using the RFC 4364 framework at the control plane level, IP VPN-Lite delivers the same IP VPN capabilities over a IP routed backbone using simple IP in IP encapsulation. IP VPN-Lite differs from RFC 4364 MP-IBGP control plane by using a service IP address instead of a MPLS service label. The service IP address identifies a VRF on a per node basis and is used to carry the VPN traffic across the backbone as part of the outer IP header of the IP in IP encapsulation.
For end-to-end transport, the service IP addresses are used to identify the source and destination VRFs which form the VPN.
Overall, IP VPN-Lite provides support for the following:
* Filtering support (UNI side)
* MP-BGP extensions
* BGP route refresh
* BGP route reflection
* Peering to multiple route reflectors
* Route reflection server (NNI side)
* Full mesh and hub and spoke designs
* Extended community Type 0 and 1
* Import and export route targets and route distinguishers
* IP-BGP extensions
* Equal-cost multi-path routing
* VRF-based ping and traceroute
* UNI packet classification (port, VLAN, IP, VRF, and VPN)
* VRF UNI routing protocols (RIP, OSPF, EBGP)
While still using the RFC 4364 framework at the control plane level, IP VPN-Lite delivers the same IP VPN capabilities over a IP routed backbone using simple IP in IP encapsulation. IP VPN-Lite differs from RFC 4364 MP-IBGP control plane by using a service IP address instead of a MPLS service label. The service IP address identifies a VRF on a per node basis and is used to carry the VPN traffic across the backbone as part of the outer IP header of the IP in IP encapsulation.
For end-to-end transport, the service IP addresses are used to identify the source and destination VRFs which form the VPN.
Overall, IP VPN-Lite provides support for the following:
* Filtering support (UNI side)
* MP-BGP extensions
* BGP route refresh
* BGP route reflection
* Peering to multiple route reflectors
* Route reflection server (NNI side)
* Full mesh and hub and spoke designs
* Extended community Type 0 and 1
* Import and export route targets and route distinguishers
* IP-BGP extensions
* Equal-cost multi-path routing
* VRF-based ping and traceroute
* UNI packet classification (port, VLAN, IP, VRF, and VPN)
* VRF UNI routing protocols (RIP, OSPF, EBGP)
Adam Lee Brown (5 February 1974 - 17 March 2010) was a highly decorated United States Navy SEAL killed in action in Afghanistan during Operation Enduring Freedom.
Early life
Adam was born February 5, 1974 (along with twin sister Manda) in Hot Springs, Arkansas, the third of three children born to Larry and Janice Brown.
Honors and awards
Military awards
*60px Silver Star Medal
*60px Bronze Star Medal with V device
*60px Purple Heart
Silver Star
Brown was posthumously awarded the Silver Star in May 2011.
Other honors
In 2010, Lake Hamilton School honored Brown by naming Old Airport Road, in Lake Hamilton School District campus, after him.
Early life
Adam was born February 5, 1974 (along with twin sister Manda) in Hot Springs, Arkansas, the third of three children born to Larry and Janice Brown.
Honors and awards
Military awards
*60px Silver Star Medal
*60px Bronze Star Medal with V device
*60px Purple Heart
Silver Star
Brown was posthumously awarded the Silver Star in May 2011.
Other honors
In 2010, Lake Hamilton School honored Brown by naming Old Airport Road, in Lake Hamilton School District campus, after him.