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If youre in the yachting industry, you'll probably have to do a so-called yacht crossing at one point or another in your career.
Many vessels of the Wellingtons caliber undergo a grueling trip before the start of every summer and winter cruising season to reach either the Caribbean Sea or one of the many bustling ports in the Mediterranean. These trips usually happen in the mid-spring or mid-fall to maximize yachting season on either end of the voyage.
Aspiring yachties like Rob who take part in crossings can use their time on board to get in shape, get to know the crew and, of course, get to know the boat. Since there are no guests on board, theres really no better time to get in sync with the crew and learn the vessel from the inside out.
Crew members also get to brush up on their safety knowledge, practicing man overboard drills (remember Ashton's accident on the Tahiti season?), fire safety drills, and even abandon-ship drills.
But crossing the Atlantic is very different than simply sailing around the Mediterranean. When Rob first approached David, the first mate, to ask about joining the crossing, David told him he needed to be 100 percent certain about his decision. Thats because it takes a lot more knowledge, skill, and a different set of licenses and insurance for crew to complete a trip like this.
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What Is a "Crossing" in 'Below Deck'-Speak? What the Term Means - Distractify
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GRAFTON, W.Va. A woman has been charged after a child under her care fell from a second-story deck and had to be transported to the hospital while she slept, officers said.
According to a criminal complaint, on September 23, officers with the Grafton Police Department were dispatched to a residence on Long Street in Grafton in reference to a child falling from a second-story deck.
When officers arrived on the scene, they contacted the caller who told them that her husband had been outside and cleaning his truck when he saw children playing on the back deck of the residence, officers said.
The witness told officers that her husband saw the children throwing toys off the deck into the backyard, then saw one of the children, approximately 1-2 years in age, fall through the railing, according to the complaint.
The child landed on a concrete slab below the deck, and the witness and her husband went over to render aid to the child; while the witness was tending to the child, her husband was beating on the door to attempt to make contact with anyone inside, officers said.
At that point, the witness said one of the children claimed that there was someone asleep inside, and the witness then took the injured child to her porch, according to the complaint, and before law enforcement arrived on the scene, Julie Truax, 25, of Grafton, approached the witness, according to the complaint.
When Truax arrived, she brought items to change the childs diaper, but when the witness informed Truax that she had called 911, Truax got upset and told [the witness] she was f***ed up for calling 911, officers said.
EMS then transported the child to Grafton City Hospital, but Truax had already left the scene and returned to her home, and officers called the child abuse hotline; the child was later taken to the WVU Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, according to the complaint.
When officers observed the diaper Truax had changed, it was completely saturated with urine and when the [witness] had picked the child up she stated her side was wet with urine, officers said.
Medical records from Grafton City Hospital and Ruby Memorial Hospital both confirm head trauma, a skull fracture to the left side and that the injury is consistent with his fall from the deck, according to the complaint.
The child also had had a bruise on the left side of [his] back, a mark on the right side of his chest, abrasions on his right leg, and what appears to be diaper rash, officers said.
Truax has been charged with child neglect resulting in injury. She is currently being held in Tygart Valley Regional Jail.
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Grafton woman charged after child under her care fell from 2nd-story deck and had to be transported to the hospital while she slept - WBOY.com
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BENTONVILLE -- Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art announced Thursday it will be collaborating on an upcoming development project with the Scott Family Amazeum.
A play area called Convergence and a six-story parking deck with performance space will be built on 4 acres on the southeast side of Crystal Bridges' 120-acre campus and the adjoining western edge of the Amazeum's property, according to venue representatives.
"We've always been looking for ways to collaborate," said Paul Stolt, Amazeum marketing manager. "It's rare to have two really nationally recognized cultural institutions so close to each other."
The public space will be free to access and will have interactive elements and water features mimicking the Ozark landscape, according to the release.
"It's new and exciting, and it also allows us to show off the natural landscape and really play up the uniqueness of the Ozarks," said Beth Bobbitt, Crystal Bridges public relations director.
The area will feature opportunities for educational art and science programming, she said.
"Crystal Bridges is really good at art, and the Amazeum is really good at science," Bobbitt said. "We're just excited for the opportunity to work with the Amazeum in this unique way and have this offering that builds on both institutions' expertise."
The design is being paid for by the Walton Family Foundation's Northwest Arkansas Design Excellence Program, which promotes high levels of design for public buildings and spaces in the region, according to the release.
The grant to Crystal Bridges for the design is $382,037, said Luis Gonzalez, senior communications officer for the foundation's Home Region Program.
The parking deck will include 800 free parking spots and a proscenium with two levels of program and engagement space on its west side, according to the release. The parking deck will help meet the Amazeum's projected growth, Stolt said.
The Amazeum was projecting almost 280,000 guests this year prior to the pandemic, Stolt said.
"That is probably 40,000 or so more than we've had in years past," he said.
Crystal Bridges experienced its greatest number of visitors in 2019 with more than 700,000 guests, Bobbitt said. The museum historically fluctuates between 500,000 and 700,000 visitors annually.
Increased visitation to the Amazeum has caused parking to overflow into nearby parking lots, Stolt said.
"Having a way to create more parking in a very beautiful and artistic way is something we'd like to do," Stolt said.
The parking deck is being designed by Fayetteville-based Marlon Blackwell Architects, he said. The design is being completed by Philadelphia-based Studio Bryan Hanes, according to Stolt. Planning for the project began three years ago, Bobbitt said. Construction will begin in spring 2021 and is anticipated to be completed in the fall of 2022, according to the release.
A concept rendering of Convergence presents ideas for the four-acre outdoor playscape collaboration between Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art and the Scott Family Amazeum.
Learn, Grow and Explore
Scott Family Amazeum, 1009 Museum Way in Bentonville, http://www.amazeum.org .
Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, 600 Museum Way in Bentonville, crystalbridges.org .
Source: NWA Democrat-Gazette
Mary Jordan can be reached by email at [emailprotected] or on Twitter @NWAMaryJ.
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The parking deck is expected to be revenue positive by 2026. In its life span, it is estimated to make nearly $25 million for the Town.
But Bassett said the deck is not meant to be a profit center, and will bring other benefits to the Town. These benefits include keeping the parking fund healthy, improving downtown and expanding access to bike and bus stops.
However, members of the Chapel Hill and Carrboro organization NEXT said they see this deck as an expense that will reduce the Towns capability to borrow money for other projects, such as affordable housing and public transportation.
Stephen Whitlow, a member of NEXT, said he finds this economic development project to be in conflict with the Town's developing climate action plan.
I find it to be a weird position of the Town to tell residents to drive less for climate change, while also putting themselves in a financial spot where they need people to be driving and parking downtown, Whitlow said.
Joe Dye, the executive vice president of Grubb Properties, said he and his team recognize the growing concern of a decline in activity in downtown Chapel Hill and see this deal as a win-win situation. Through the new East Rosemary deck, he said the Town will be able to create public infrastructure while also promoting the businesses of downtown Chapel Hill.
We think this redevelopment effort will be a very positive catalyst for downtown Chapel Hill as it promotes a way to come and spend time downtown with easy access to parking, he said.
Members of the Chamber for a Greater Chapel Hill-Carrboro have responded to the Towns decision to approve the economic development agreement with full support.
Town investment in infrastructure is just plain necessary," Katie Loovis, a member of the chamber, said at the Sept. 30 Town Council meeting. "Its necessary to attract the private capital required for the office and lab space that we desire.
With the economic development agreement passed, Dye said the Town will now seek Local Government Commission approval for funding. If approved, construction on the deck will begin in spring 2021.
Dye said the deck would be completed and open to the public a year later, in spring 2022.
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The view of Omaha downtown from the rooftop of 1005 Park Ave at Courtyard on Park in Omaha on Tuesday, September 01, 2020.
The kitchen and living room area are seen at 1005 Park Ave at Courtyard on Park in Omaha on Tuesday, September 01, 2020.
The front window and dining area are seen at 1005 Park Ave at Courtyard on Park in Omaha on Tuesday, September 01, 2020.
The open floor plan of the dining, kitchen and living areas are seen at 1005 Park Ave at Courtyard on Park in Omaha on Tuesday, September 01, 2020.
The 2 car garage is seen at 1005 Park Ave at Courtyard on Park in Omaha on Tuesday, September 01, 2020.
The master bedroom's walk in closet at 1005 Park Ave at Courtyard on Park in Omaha on Tuesday, September 01, 2020.
The rooftop patio at 1005 Park Ave at Courtyard on Park in Omaha on Tuesday, September 01, 2020.
A full bathroom is seen at 1005 Park Ave at Courtyard on Park in Omaha on Tuesday, September 01, 2020.
The back deck and sliding door are seen at 1005 Park Ave at Courtyard on Park in Omaha on Tuesday, September 01, 2020.
The exterior of Courtyard on Park in Omaha is seen on Tuesday, September 01, 2020.
A kitchen and dining room at the new Courtyard on Park Townhomes on Park Avenue. The project includes 12 residences.
The dining area and view of Park Avenue is seen at 1003 Park Ave at Courtyard on Park in Omaha.
Adam Beaver worked downtown, but lived in suburbia, and wanted to give the urban lifestyle a whirl.
Its been a month or so since he and his daughters moved to the new Courtyard on Park Townhomes, and he said theyre not disappointed.
I love it, Beaver said, noting he got rid of a long commute from Valley and that his girls are exploring new territory. The kids and I had a suburban life, and we wanted to move to a more urban area.
They are among the first residents of the white-bricked town homes on Park Avenue south of Leavenworth Street priced at $315,000 and above.
The 12-residence project of Milestone Development stands out on thetransforming midtown corridor because it infuses brand new for-sale homes among apartment buildings (many of them recently rehabbed) and aging houses.
So far, a third of the town homes that span about 1,640 square feet are claimed, said leasing agents Debbie and Bob Jensen of NP Dodge Real Estate. Each comes with two bedrooms, their own two-car garage, deck and front patio.
The Beavers have a rooftop terrace and views of the downtown riverfront. On a day last week, dad was helping to move in new patio furniture, as daughters Kyrsten, a college freshman, and Abbigale, a high school sophomore, took their dog for a walk.
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Below Deck Mediterranean's crew isn't done dishing on the unforgettable Season 5 just yet. The Wellington yachties will come together to discuss all of the buzzy moments at the upcoming Season 5 reunion, The Daily Dish has confirmed.
Host Andy Cohen will sit down virtually with the Below Deck Med crew in an upcoming special episode of Watch What Happens Live to discuss all the departures, workplace drama, romance, and wild charter guest moments we witnessed this season. Secrets will be revealed, behind-the-scenes tea will be spilled, and jaws will be dropped as the Below Deck Med crew takes a deep dive into everything that went down.
All aboard for an incredible Below Deck Med reunion.
Want more Below Deck Med? New episodes air every Monday at 9/8c or catch up on the entire series through the Bravo app.
The Below Deck Med Season 5 adventure isn't over yet. See what's coming up, below.
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Tension Between Jessica More and Robert Westergaard Continues to Rise
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Veteran umpire Joe West is well known in baseball circles -- and oftentimes it's for the wrong reasons. File what is coming below under the "wrong reason" label as well.
During Sunday's Nationals-Braves (ATL 10, WAS 3) bout in Atlanta, West appeared to eject Nationals president and general manager Mike Rizzo, who was sitting in a suite high above home plate. West even called security.
The moving pictures:
Reports from those on the scene indicate Rizzo was in the third deck. To reiterate: Joe West ejected someone for yelling at him from the third deck. It's unclear exactly what sparked the ejection, but West repeatedly told him to "get out."
Man, that's just sad, isn't it? As someone who constantly ignores vitriol on social media after years of getting worked up about it, take it from me: Your life becomes so much easier when you simply ignore the yelling. I can't even imagine it was very loud coming from three decks away, either. Be better than this, Joe.
West has been a full-time umpire since 1978 and is president of the MLB Umpires Association. In a position of authority, he needs to be better than this.
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WATCH: Joe West appears to eject Nationals GM Mike Rizzo from third deck - CBS Sports
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It wasn't totally smooth sailing for The Wellington crew as they docked in Ibiza in the September 7 episode of Below Deck Mediterranean. The stern line fell into the water not once, not twice, but three times as deckhand Rob Westergaard tried to throw it to the dock.
Rob eventually got the stern line successfully to the dock, but bosun Malia White was definitely not happy with how long it took the deckhand to do so, later explaining why every second counts during docking in the Below Deck Mediterranean Season 5 After Show, which you can view, above.
"That's a thing on deck that's like a rite of passage is your heaving lines, you get those heaving lines on the dock. And if you don't, if it falls in the piss once, then that's usually a deck fine, meaning like a six-pack of beer. If it falls twice and then it falls a third time, that's rookie. That's a rookie, rookie error," Malia said. "I normally wouldn't get so upset, but that heaving line as we're coming in is critical for us docking. That was pulling our stern in, especially in that space where we were going."
"We were about to lose the stern, and those are errors that just can't happen," Malia continued. "That's jeopardizing the boat and potentially putting us in a bad situation. So yeah, I came down on him."
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Though Captain Sandy Yawn couldn't see what was happening on the aft deck while docking the boat from the wing station, she later heard about the incident and reflected on what could have gone wrong. "When the line goes in the water, that's very dangerous," Captain Sandy said during the After Show. "I could crash into another boat, crash into the dock."
Rob, who shared during the After Show that he felt "under pressure" and "like an idiot" during the docking, said that he knows how much damage a mistake like this could cause. "Captain Sandy's relying on the measures we take to secure the vessel. If it's just gonna be floating around and doing its own thing, that could cause a lot of s--t, going into other boats," he said. "I was in my head. I just f--ked up big time. I know the consequences of this. It's something so small, but it can have a big effect on everything."
Knowing how crucial it is to successfully throw a heaving line, The Wellington's first mate David, who we don't usually see appear on-camera on Below Deck Med, offered to help Rob. "You know, David actually came to me and was like, 'We can go to the dock and learn how to throw a heaving line,'" Rob revealed in the After Show. "I know how to throw a heaving line; I just had a brain fart three times. Like, leave me alone. It happens to the best of us."
Want more Below Deck Med? New episodes air every Monday at 9/8c or catch up on this season through the Bravo app.
There's more docking drama on the way on Below Deck Med. Check out a preview, below.
Preview
Tension Between Jessica More and Robert Westergaard Continues to Rise
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Rob Westergaard Reveals What First Mate David Said to Him After That Docking Mishap - Bravo
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Artwork by Riot Games
Call of the Mountain is now in its third week and the meta has finally started to take a more definite shape. Although deck tiers are still semi-defined, the primordial soup of experimental decks has made way to more refined lists.
This article takes a look at some of the best decks in Legends of Runeterra (so far) in Call of the Mountain, updated as of September 9, 2020.
Swain/Twisted Fate was the first deck to hit Master in Call of the Mountain and it's remained the absolute best deck in the expansion so far. It consistently hits Master at the hands of top players and is an absolute meta-defining deck.
There's not much to say about it do chip damage to level up Swain, drop it as soon as you do, and use Riptide Rex plus The Leviathan to kill or stun-lock the opponent.
Scouts are another old archetype, but what can we expect it's hard to come up with a new and better Demacia/Bilgewater deck with four new cards.
This is a very standard list, virtually unchanged from the Rising Tides meta. Use Scouts' Rally to trigger multiple Miss Fortune effects and level her up quickly. Then, proceed to zerg rush the enemy.
They Who Endure is just a fantastic card and has been the cornerstone of the Endure Midrange archetype since the early days of the Legends of Runeterra. It started as a slower midrange deck, moved to a more tempo version in Rising Tides, and has now gone aggressive in Call of the Mountain.
This list by Swim uses Kalista as the only champion and lots of cheap Shadow Isles followers to apply early aggression. They Who Endure, of course, remains as the big finisher, but oftentimes the deck can just outright kill with its Kalista Aristocrats army.
Together with Nocturne and Diana, Lulu has been one of the strongest champions in Call of the Mountain so far.
The list runs all the usual Demacian suspects that you'll see in every Scouts deck, which are then empowered by the supporting of Lulu and Shen. Lulu can grow cheap units like Cithria of Cloudfield and Fleetfeather Tracker to threatening 4|4 size, giving a lot of early game power to the deck.
The Lux/Sol Control is a relatively new deck, but one that's already making waves in the top Master ranks. The deck plays exactly as you'd expect from a Lux control few followers, lots of expensive spells, and high-end finishers in Aurelion Sol and Radiant Guardian.
Sunburst into Lux's Spark is a fantastic board clear, while Starshaping and Hush can generate even more Lux fuel, enabling Spark after Spark, after Spark...
The GP/Sejuani Tempo, sometimes called "Turbo Sejuani" is an old archetype from Rising Tides, which has gained prominence in the current meta due to its potency against aggro decks, which are dominating the game right now.
The deck does a lot of chip damage with its Powder Monkeys, which level up Gangplank and Sejuani at the same time, meaning they almost always will come in play leveled up. The deck also has a lot of Nab effects, making it very difficult to play against it, as well as a lot of cheap damage removal, which is great against aggro. Definitely a deck to try if you're struggling against fast decks.
Another Rising Tides archetype that got stronger in Call of the Mountain. The TF/GP combination is a fast midrange deck (sometimes it even goes full aggro), which can apply a lot of pressure, but also has ways to deal with aggro. It's cheap army not only helps to level up Gangplank fast, but can serve as blockers to survive against aggro decks until a level 2 GP enters the field after that, it's pretty much game over.
Targon Ezreal is the only combo deck that's been getting good results in Call of the Mountain (Karma/Ezreal is trying to get back to top tier, but we'll see how far it'll go).
The goal of the deck is like that of every single Ezreal-centric deck: play as much removal as you can to survive and level up Ezreal, while using Vi as your midrange threat/unit killer. After Ezreal is leveled up, you should have a lot of cheap burst spells between Gems, Rummage, Guiding Touch and Pale Cascade to one-turn-kill the opponent before they can even react.
Trundle/Sol Ramp is the other good slow deck in the meta and it really is unmatched in the late stages of the game. Wyrding Stones and Catalyst of Aeons can accelerate mana production to get you to Trundle faster, which then stabilizes the mid/late game. The deck then wins with Infinite Mindsplitter and, of course, Aurelion Sol, as it completely takes over the late game.
The challenge is, of course, to survive. The deck only runs Avalanche as removal and relies mostly on Nexus heals to live till Trundle. A strong aggro opening with no Avalanche in hand can therefore mean quick death for the Sol Ramp.
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The best Legends of Runeterra decks in Patch 1.8 Call of the Mountain [UPDATED 9/9] - InvenGlobal
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