httpS again. Is there ANY way to embed httpS YT vids?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=GfLW17_-X78#at=70
Even here, plants seen less than happy.
Quote from: Amaterasu on June 29, 2013, 11:02:22 PM
httpS again. Is there ANY way to embed httpS YT vids?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=GfLW17_-X78#at=70
Even here, plants seen less than happy.
[https] means that the video has embedded adds or features and requires a secure connection (What the 's' means).
I usually just go to the video and in the URL bar remove the 's' from 'https'. It doesn't always work though, as there might not be a video without the 'https'. ;D
Her is your video with a 'http' prefix:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GfLW17_-X78
Quote from: Amaterasu on June 29, 2013, 11:02:22 PM
httpS again. Is there ANY way to embed httpS YT vids?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=GfLW17_-X78#at=70
If I haz told ya ONCE I haz told ya a THOUSAND times :P The https is irrelevant... it is the rest of the carp that you have in the link that is not workng
::)
Look at your link https: //www.youtube.com/ watch?feature=player_embedded&v=GfLW17_-X78#at=70
A CLEAN Youtube link from your link would be
https ://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GfLW17_-X78
See the difference? In YOUR link you are attempting to embed a player along with the video "feature=player_embedded" and other carp at the end , in this case a screen size "#at=7o"
So it will mess up :D
If you use the youtube ICON (http://www.thelivingmoon.com/forum/Themes/WoW_2/images/bbc/youtube.gif)
And paste in ONLY the clean URL https ://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GfLW17_-X78 it will work
BUT all you need is the video ID same as they did at ATS That is everything AFTER = and BEFORE & or # so in this case "GfLW17_-X78"
I dinnae recall getting this lesson from Ye, z. I have it now.
So all I have to put in is the vid ID # like a spookz and it will still work here? (Just clarifying.)
Thanks to You, sw, for getting the vid up for Me. [smile]
Quote from: Amaterasu on June 30, 2013, 02:15:05 AM
So all I have to put in is the vid ID # like a spookz and it will still work here? (Just clarifying.)
yuppers :P
Awesome!
Quote from: Amaterasu on June 30, 2013, 03:10:19 AM
Awesome!
Future reference...
http://www.thelivingmoon.com/forum/index.php?topic=129.msg57895#msg57895
Thank Ye much.
So... Thoughts on the vid anyOne?
Quote from: Amaterasu on June 30, 2013, 03:36:47 AM
So... Thoughts on the vid anyOne?
Why are the other trees green?
My trees are green and bushy the ones across the street are dead and scruffy... maybe the radiation is falling on him only?
I would hazard to say those trees are not getting enough water or hit by a blight. I planted gooseberries and red currants this year and as soon as the temps hit 100F the leaves turned red brown like that from heat/sunburn and three out of 4 died. The forth I put in a pot and put it in the shade It might come back This happened in a very short space of three days
The guy across the street never waters his trees so if the ground water table is low they go brown
In that video the majority of the trees are green and healthy the ones that are dying look like they are in one row
My guess is not enough water in this case
Didn't look like "in a row" to Me - and if the guy is to be believed, there had been plenty of rainfall (however toxic) to provide water...
[shrug]
I watched the vid and noticed the gentleman stated several times it wasn't acid rain; but the trees he zoomed in on look exactly like a chemical burn from fertiliser or acidic materials...
seeker
ok..second attempt
the guy mentioned halifax so i looked it up and will post it below
but it didn't look like anything that would come from the sky.. it was too selective imo
we have had acid rain here from the mills..so i've seen it first hand
here's what i found with a quick search
thechronicleherald.ca/metro/106292-what-a-beech-evil-weevil-lands-in-halifax
What a beech: Evil weevil lands in Halifax
June 12, 2012 - 4:13am By FRANCES WILLICK Staff Reporter
Move over, brown spruce longhorn beetle. There's a new bug on the block.
The beech leaf mining weevil, identified last week by federal government agencies, has made its debut on the continent by chomping its way through beech trees in Halifax Regional Municipality.
The effects of the tiny black insect, only two millimetres long, were first noticed in the area last year when residents spotted beech leaves turning brown and becoming dessicated in May, well in advance of their usual autumnal demise.
This year, it happened again.
"The trees never really leafed out in green," said Waverley resident Roger Doyle, who has about nine beech trees on his property.
"As soon as the tiny little leaves started in the early spring, they were immediately attacked and they all turned brown. There was a little bit of green for a while, but now when you look out at them, all the leaves are mostly brown and dead."
Now, the problem is spreading.
Richard MacLellan, the city's environment manager, said he's received reports of affected beech trees from across the municipality this spring.
"They are everywhere," he said. "We're seeing them in Fall River, Lake Echo, Birch Cove, Fairmount, Dartmouth, Bedford. So they're definitely out there."
It's not the first time Nova Scotia has introduced insect pests to the continent. The brown spruce longhorn beetle emigrated from its native European and Asian climes to North America via Nova Scotia, where it devastated much of Halifax's Point Pleasant Park and prompted the Canadian Food Inspection Agency to set up quarantines where it was found.
Long before that, beech bark disease felled trees throughout the province in the 1920s after insects introduced a fungus that devastated the trees.
MacLellan said Halifax is often the first stop on the continent for many-legged travellers.
"Halifax, being an international port city and also having a changing climate, is fertile ground for new invasive species. It seems like every summer we have a new bug or a new plant that we need to deal with," he said.
"I don't know if I'd use the term pioneer, but this is where it came to shore."
The insect is so new to the continent that authorities here are still learning about the wee bug and investigating how best to stem its spread.
The CFIA notes that the weevil can damage beech trees, fruit-bearing trees such as cherry, apple, prune and pear trees, and some ornamental trees and hedges.
In Europe, weevils produce one generation per year, emerging in spring and beginning hibernation in late July to mid-September.
The municipality is working with the CFIA to track the bug's appearances. MacLellan said residents who suspect that beeches in their neighbourhood are affected can report the location by calling 490-4000 or emailing contacthrm@halifax.ca.
In the meantime, he said, residents shouldn't try to treat the damaged trees.
"The advice we have been given is that an otherwise healthy tree should be able to withstand an infestation of the beech leaf mining weevil," MacLellan said. "As such, we wouldn't recommend going to drastic measures such as cutting them down."
For now, Doyle isn't losing any sleep over the weevils.
"I'm not really worried about it," he said. "I have an awful lot of trees in my yard. If I lose a few beech trees, it's no big deal."
(fwillick@herald.ca)
About the Author
By FRANCES WILLICK Staff Reporter
here in pa we have the penn state extension service which is from the ag dept..they will help you with this stuff...i just sent them some photos of a bug in my hemlock seeds that i have never come across before.. the hemlocks are being attacked by a nasty little aphid but this is a larvea of something
here's what i send them
(http://i35.servimg.com/u/f35/13/55/53/83/hpim3910.jpg)
(http://i35.servimg.com/u/f35/13/55/53/83/hpim3911.jpg)
(http://i35.servimg.com/u/f35/13/55/53/83/hpim3912.jpg)
it has to be some type of moth ..but i haven't been able to find anything yet
so i am hoping they will get back to me by monday
there are so many tree problems right now it's scary
:(
Well, some of the affected trees were oaks, some other varieties...
But it could be a bug infestation, I suppose. Thanks for that, otter!
Seeker, it could be... But He is claiming that would leave spots on the leaves - not browning at the fringe w/yellow in center. I'm not familiar with what it looks like, acid rain damage...
Could be total BS. Could be something to it. [shrug]
there are a lot of things that can affect the trees...
sprays for lawns are just one
the oaks are having a fungus problem right now
the ash trees have the emerald ash borer..the larvea kill the tree before you know there's a problem
there are several types of blight in the other trees..
just to name a few
as with most things you need to gather more info before ASSUMING it is the gobenterment
out to get you..
humans are mostly their personal own worst enemy - jumping to conclusions and pointing fingers before getting all the facts
just sayin
:o