TRENDING NEWS

POPULAR NEWS

Where To Go For Fishing In Greater Manchester/ North West

How much is a fishing license at Walmart and who must they work with to be allowed to sell such permits?

In most cases, you will need to provide some form of identification and proof of address. When finding out the answer to ‘How much does a Walmart fishing license cost?’ you will not be able to purchase your permit unless this information is provided at the time of purchase. Most Walmart branches will be able to assist you with your fishing license; however, it is important to realize that you will pay the same price for it here than you will anywhere else. You will then need to fill in one or two forms and pay for the license before it is granted.Average Price ChartResident Fishing License: For persons age 16 through 65. $19.00Resident Reduced-Cost Senior Fishing Fishing License: For persons age 66 and older, born on or after January 1, 1938. $10.00One-Day Fishing License: For residents and nonresidents, one One-Day Fishing Fishing License may be applied as credit toward the purchase of an annual fishing license (minus writing fee). Only one may be applied to the purchase of an annual license. $11.00Annual Nonresident Fishing License $40.00Three-Day Nonresident Tourist’s Fishing License $19.00Duplicate Fishing License: A fishing license that has been lost, stolen, or destroyed can be reissued from any license vendor or via the internet. $4.00

Is Manchester in Lancashire, Cheshire, both, or neither?

Spiritually it’s in Lancashire. The old city boundaries always used to fall within that county.Administratively, though, it’s in a new(ish) county called Greater Manchester, which has absorbed bits of Lancashire and Cheshire, including the bit I can see out of the window as I type this: Stockport.As Andy Mellor has pointed out, Stockport still thinks of itself as a Cheshire town to some extent; Bury and Bolton, likewise, are still culturally Lancastrian. Manchester, however, thinks of itself as Manchester, not as part of any county.

How did technological development shape human history from 12,000 bc to 15 century?

what was invented?
roads, ( easier transportation of goods + war)
deep ocean boats ( new worlds)
just off the top of my head

Homework Question: Joe walked 4 miles north, 9 miles east, 8 miles north, and then 7 miles east. If Joe now decides to walk straight back to where he started, how far must he walk?

The answer provided by User-9597828242429937573 is great, but there are couple of omissions that make its precision unacceptable for practical purposes:1. Our planet is not spherical: its height is less than width due to its rotation. We should take it into account;2. Joe is not a point, but rather a material object. We have to make calculations probably for his geometrical center or, maybe, his center of mass. It should be discussed and decided. If agreed upon geometrical center, 1/2 of Joe's height should be added to the radius;3. Since the journey is long, the result depends on the time he starts and his speed - because of thermal expansion of the Earth's surface heated by the Sun. If Joe is walking while the surface is expanding, his trip back may be longer if the temperature is still high;4. Of course, we should consider the Earth deformation due to the Moon's gravity;5. The answer has to be expressed in closest integer number of Plank lengths. Otherwise, it would be absolutely unrealistic.Other than that, it is pretty accurate and will probably satisfy Joe. :)

What are the best places in Manhattan to find nature (besides Central Park)?

Anywhere from the Upper West Side and Upper East Side north. Further north you go, the more parkland and greenery there is. All these are uptown parks with ample nature:Fort Tryon Park (Walk through the Heather Gardens or visit the Cloisters. Many quiet and secluded paths all over the place.)Inwood Hill Park (leave the street level park behind, it’s baseball fields and jogging paths, hike up into the forest and woods, great river views)Highbridge Park (many entrances/exits are closed right now for renovation but you can still enter on Dyckman and the Harlem River Drive. But you won’t be able to exit so easily. It’s very hard to describe. This is Manhattan’s most remote park. Save this for when it fully re-opens.)Sherman Creek Park (along the Hudson River at Dyckman Street and the Harlem River Drive across from Highbridge park)Washington Park - Runs along the Hudson above Riverside Park and below the GW Bridge. Stop at the Little Red Lighthouse directly under the GW Bridge.Riverside Park - West of Riverside Drive from W.72nd Street up. Also along the river.Isham park (small but will do the trick, hilly)Carl Schurz Park (small but will do the trick, East River views)Little Red Lighthouse (image: Google) under the George Washington Bridge in Washington Heights. A favorite quiet getaway of mine. Shhh…

TRENDING NEWS