From the department of don’t poke the bear 🐻 in the the eye πŸ‘€

From the department of don’t poke the bear 🐻 in the the eye πŸ‘€… 

I am thinking maybe I should gas up my truck β›½ tonight when I go out and wash it and buy groceries. πŸͺ While the experts see gas prices actually trending lower, we know the president hasn’t been on his best behavior in the Middle East lately. That’s what you get when you elect a professional con artist to the White House. 

27 smartphone apps you should delete before 2020

27 smartphone apps you should delete before 2020

The modern smartphone app has existed for almost a dozen years now—ever since Apple launched the App Store back in 2008. In that time, apps have become a part of our daily lives, and some of them have even become essential for communication and work-related tasks. According to Variety, the average American checks their phone 52 times a day. App analytics and market data firm App Annie says that amounts to three hours a day of smartphone usage per person. And what’s taking up all the smartphone time? The apps, of course. Matter of fact, the average smartphone user uses 30 different apps a month and nine different apps a day.

And as we enter the third decade of the 21st century, apps are sure to become an ever-increasingly important part of our lives. Still, that means there are certain apps that you should probably cut out of your life for good—for the benefit of your finances, mental health, privacy, and time. As we kick off the 2020’s, here are the apps you should consider kicking off your smartphone.

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Just a friendly reminder that it’s still winter and while the east coast might be warm today, there is no guarantees that the mild winter will last.

A new way of identifying state game lands – EverybodyAdventures

A new way of identifying state game lands – EverybodyAdventures

The agency – responsible for managing all Keystone States wildlife for all residents, yet funded solely by hunters, trappers and shooters – is tweaking the names of its state game lands.

Signs on the properties will still identify them as “game lands.” But they’ll also make it clear they are “wildlife management areas.”

That’s to educate the non-hunting public.

The commission conducted two focus groups in fall, one in the southeast region and another in the southcentral, around Harrisburg. Each was made up of 15 people.

Penn State University researchers conducted the groups. They chose the members, too, getting a random yet statistically representative sample

They asked group members questions about their knowledge of who manages wildlife in the state, where they do it and how.