3SHARES
DETOUR users can access their profiles and see trails near them online or through the app. Image: Ohio Department of Natural Resources
By Taylor Haelterman
The free mobile and web-based app, DETOUR, was downloaded over 5,800 times within the first few weeks of its release on April 7, said Tom Arbour, the trails coordinator for the department.
The department knew people wanted more recreational trails and better information about those trails, said Laura Briggs, the department’s director of policy initiatives. And the agency already is required to inventory all recreational trails in the state. The app is a way for people to easily access that information instead of filing it away in a cabinet.
Taunton (c) Christian Mueller / Shutterstock
- Credit: Archant
Laura Briggs seeks out some (perhaps) lesser known highlights in the county town of Taunton.
Remember to practice social distancing on your visit and book ahead wherever possible for restaurants and events.
Hestercombe - The Great Plat by Jason Ingram
- Credit: sub
Once the main entrance to Taunton from Exeter in the middle ages, the quaint and narrow Bath Place offers a number of independent shops and cafés for the visitor to enjoy. The street features on Taunton s heritage trail. Brendan Books, Bath Place Music and Ginger Fig all call this pretty street home.
Niños guatemaltecos refugiados, ayer y hoy nacla.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nacla.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Married to the job: how a long-hours working culture keeps people single and lonely
‘The pandemic has made many people face up to loneliness in a way they would not have done in the pre-lockdown world.’ Composite: Getty/Guardian Design/Getty
‘The pandemic has made many people face up to loneliness in a way they would not have done in the pre-lockdown world.’ Composite: Getty/Guardian Design/Getty
Demanding bosses, impossible workloads, 24/7 email – no wonder many employees feel they have no time outside work to find love
Thu 15 Apr 2021 05.00 EDT
Laura Hancock started practising yoga when she worked for a charity. It was a job that involved long hours and caused a lot of anxiety. Yoga was her counterbalance. “It saved my life, in a way,” she says.
After closing on the property a decade ago, it didnât take the Briggs family long to make the place their own. They built a roomy, two-story metal house and constructed livestock pens for hogs, goats, donkeys, and cattle. For a few years, the Briggs ranch delivered the rural splendor theyâd hoped for. âWhen you come out here, it is dry. There is no Starbucks. But there is a peace to that,â Laura said. âThis takes some stress off your shoulders and youâre like, all you really need in life is a pair of blue jeans and a good book.â