Spoilers ahead. Such is the case with season nine, which wrapped up its final episode on Thursday night. After 65 days in the wilds of Labrador, just two extremely worthy finalists remained: Juan Pablo Quionez, a 30-year-old Mexican native living in Manitoba, and Karie Lee Knoke, a 57-year-old wilderness teacher from Idaho. Last week I wrote about my affection for Knoke, so you can guess who I was rooting for as the hourlong episode reached its zenith.

By contrast, Sam Larson of Nebraska won season 5 in Mongolia by curling up in his shelter and sleeping each day away while not eating. That strategy, while successful, made for lousy TV. Not to knock Quionez, who proved himself to be a highly capable survivalist throughout season nine. But he also won by shutting things down and going hungry. While Knoke and contestant Teimojin Tan of Montreal were still hunting squirrels and foraging, Quionez had already given up on food.


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These leggings and top were an ABSOLUTE HIT! By far the best merino wool base layer I have ever used. They were warm and equally important, durable!! Even after I got home from wearing them every single day out in the field on Alone s7, I wore them when I got home for our whole winter season and they still look brand new! I would absolutely recommend these leggings for all who need a warm, durable base layer.

Leftfield Pictures contacted me after seeing my YouTube Channel Dave McIntyre-Colhane and asked me to make a casting tape to be considered as one of the contestants for season two of the History Channels hit reality show ALONE. After submitting the tape and being called in for an intense boot camp selection which I really enjoyed and found I was really well suited to the challenges, I was offered a position on the show. After about three seconds of thoughtful and fervent prayer, I accepted!!.

Global News spoke to Tan over the phone about his experience in Labrador (the show has already completed production, but no spoilers here!), how his training helped him in the wild and how real the threat of polar bears felt while out there all alone.

In this season of Alone, 10 survivalists competed for the big prize by fighting off black bears, wolves and other animals while dealing with the "bone-chilling" temperatures of a remote area in Saskatchewan.

The pair are still very much alone. The show's title is still very fitting and an accurate description.You're reaching. Stop it!They were in the wilderness, Alone.It's an incredible show to watch. I always wondered from other seasons, maybe if they had help, ppl may last longer and not struggle quite as much. I think in complete solitude, surprisingly, contestants do better. Never would have guessed that. Intriguing. Just basically end up with needing double the food and 2 ppl struggling together. Perhaps, the added worry over your partners health and concern is what makes it harder to last longer, as a pair, alone. So they tap sooner. One theory. Tell me yours!

This table details the result for every season of Alone. Columns can be sorted by clicking the header and are also filterable. Useful for a quick inspection of the key data items and a useful tool for the analysis.

For comparison I also ran a simulation based on the K-M estimated survival probabilities which came to 47% in a balanced season. This is again due to the drop off in survival past day 65. However, for the reasons discussed above, I think the Bayes model is better but we would come to the same conclusion that the chances of winning for men and women are effectively the same.

JP Quionez is the winner of ALONE season 9! Congratulations JP!!! And THANKS for including our Anorak in your kit. JP put on an amazing display of tenacity and sagacity! Everyone who takes a shot at this has some special talents, mental and physical. Way to go, JP and Benji and thank you both very much for choosing WeatherWool!

On 2 May 2019, a Friend of WeatherWool emailed me that History Channel had just posted the bios of the contestants for the upcoming season of their hit outdoor-challenge series ALONE. Here is Brady's bio and photo. And this is all I can post here now ... I phoned Brady right after I got the email note, but Brady couldn't say anything more than that he was really happy with the wool ... But shortly thereafter it was publicly announced that the 2019 ALONE series was held along the shores of Great Slave Lake in the Northwest Territories of Northern Canada. ... And a link to Brady himself explaining his selection of gear (but not his clothing).

BRADY NICHOLLS

Age: 36


Hometown: San Antonio, TX


Profession: SERE Specialist


Brady Nicholls is an active duty SERE (Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape) Specialist for the USAF and is currently stationed in San Antonio, TX. He first was introduced to primitive bushcraft while working for the Anasazi Foundation. After 6 years of working for Anasazi, Brady enlisted in USAF SERE program. There, he has become an instructor, teaching military personnel how to survive in the most remote and hostile environments on the planet. Brady plans to finish his degree and become a clinical social worker after the military. He looks forward to winning season 6 of Alone and returning home to his wife and four beautiful children.

I think you can see the whole season on History. If you are wondering, I can tell that Brady was doing great ... he was coasting ... his skills were really showing ... plenty of food. BUT ... after 30 days he decided another two months or so without seeing his family (wife and four little ones), or even knowing how they are doing, was NOT worth $500,000, so he decided to go home. Brady was very happy with the wool, and put up a review of his Anorak on YouTube.

The format of Alone varies slightly depending on the season and location, but generally involves 10 participants who are dropped off in separate, pre-scouted areas, far enough apart that they do not come in contact with each other. They pick 10 items from 40 available options and must source food, water, shelter, and fire, while coping with isolation, weather, predators, and physical and mental challenges.

Canadian locations have featured in many seasons of Alone, along with other prominent wildernesses around the globe, including northern Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Nahuel Huapi National Park in Argentina, Patagonia, Northern Mongolia, Great Slave Lake in the Northwest Territories, and Chilko Lake in interior British Columbia.

But this reiterates my point\u2014I\u2019ve always kind of felt an affinity for lilacs. We had a lilac bush in the backyard of the house I grew up in and my mom would cut them and put them in vases on the kitchen table in the spring. But I never really noticed how brief lilac season is in New England until I was in my 30s, living down the street from Harvard\u2019s Arnold Arboretum, which celebrates lilac season with an annual celebration called Lilac Sunday. It\u2019s a lovely explosion of pink and white and purple, the very essence of spring and blooming and new beginnings. The lilacs are usually in bloom for my birthday, which feels appropriate and deepens my love for them.

The idea of gathering together in relationships and family connections, digs that hole even deeper into the heart and soul of those sailing alone. And those who are seemingly externally connected may also feel that pit of despair, hopelessness and emptiness to the core, oftentimes unbeknownst to their loved ones. Feelings of loss are hollowing during a time of expected rejoicing.

The biphasic effect of oestradiol (E2) on gonadotrope responsiveness is clearly evident in orchidectomized sheep (wethers) receiving E2 and hourly pulses of GnRH. We hypothesized that the duration of E2-induced reduction in gonadotrope responsiveness differed between the breeding (November) and anoestrous (May) seasons in sheep. To test this hypothesis wethers (n = 6/group) were infused (i.v.) with E2 (2 micrograms/50 kg per h) and received hourly pulses of GnRH (200 ng/50 kg per pulse) or saline in May or November. The pattern of LH secretion during the 72 h infusion period was determined. Serum concentrations of LH did not differ with season in control wethers receiving vehicle alone. Similarly, continuous infusion of E2 resulted in a 3-fold reduction in serum LH, irrespective of season. This E2-induced suppression of serum LH was reversed by concurrent episodic delivery of GnRH. The interval between initiation of infusion and return of pretreatment concentrations of LH was taken as a measure of the duration of E2-induced suppression of gonadotrope responsiveness. The duration of this E2-dependent response varied with season, with suppression of gonadotrope responsiveness more prolonged (P < 0.05) in May (36.7 +/- 2.9 h) than in November (14.3 +/- 1.1 h). In a companion study we examined the effect of melatonin on the duration of E2-induced suppression of gonadotrope responsiveness. Wethers received blank or melatonin-containing implants in March. Sixty days after implant insertion (mid-May) wethers received E2 (2 micrograms/50 kg per h) and hourly pulses of GnRH (200 ng/50 kg per pulse) or saline for 72 h. Continuous delivery of E2 alone resulted in a 3-fold decrease in serum concentrations of LH in both control and melatonin-treated wethers. The duration of E2-induced suppression of gonadotrope responsiveness in animals receiving E2 and GnRH was extended (P < 0.05) in wethers with blank implants (48.0 +/- 0.7 h), relative to the duration of suppression in melatonin-treated wethers (14.5 +/- 1.0 h). Taken together these data indicate that E2-induced suppression of gonadotrope responsiveness is more extended during the anoestrous season. However, this seasonal effect can be reversed by continuous administration of melatonin.

Field studies were conducted in the Texas High Plains and south Texas to determine peanut response to flumioxazin and paraquat applied preemergence or 7 days after ground cracking (DAC). These herbicides were applied either alone or in combination. Smellmelon control was greater than 90% with all 7 DAC treatments while preemergence (PRE) treatments of flumioxazin plus paraquat controlled 87 to 97% in one of two years. No peanut injury was noted following either herbicide applied preemergence; however, early-season injury (stunting and leaf chlorosis/necrosis) was evident with flumioxazin and paraquat alone or in combination when applied 7 DAC. Early-season injury in south Texas from the 7 DAC applications of flumioxazin and paraquat varied from 9 to 63% with flumioxazin alone, 18 to 65% with paraquat alone, and 33 to 83% with combinations of the two herbicides. Injury in the Texas High Plains was never more than 40% with either herbicide alone or in combination. Mid-season injury in south Texas was at least 13% with any combination that included flumioxazin at 0.11 kg/ha while injury in the Texas High Plains varied from 12 to 25%. Peanut yields were not affected by flumioxazin and paraquat in the High Plains area although yields in south Texas were reduced from the untreated weed-free check with combinations of flumioxazin and paraquat. ff782bc1db

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