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  • Nolan, Mike.
     
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  • Conservationists -- Newfoundland and Labrador -- Biography.
     
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  • Nolan, Mike.
     
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  • Conservationists -- Newfoundland and Labrador -- Biography.
     
     
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    Our stories. Mike Nolan [videorecording (DVD)].
    Glass Co.,
    Call #:DVD 639.9092 N788os
    Subjects
  • Nolan, Mike.
  •  
  • Conservationists -- Newfoundland and Labrador -- Biography.
  • Series
  • Our stories: snapshots of the past ; 09
  • URL856Series website
    Alternate title: 
    Mike Nolan: our stories [videorecording (DVD)]
    Format: 
    [videorecording (DVD)].
    Description: 
    1 videodisc (ca. 24 min.) : digital sd., col. ; 12 cm.
    Notes: 
    "Jane Glassco presents"--Container.
    "In the last 100 years, much has happened to Canada and to Canadians. For each of us the story is different. This is just one in the series."--Container.
    Originally Broadcast: September 20, 1994 on CBC Television.
    Home use only.
    Production: 
    Jane Glassco ; Director, Anne Pick.
    Summary: 
    Mike Nolan is one of those Newfoundlanders you rarely hear about - a man with a passion for the land not the sea. Mike was born in the St. Mary's Bay community of Mussel Pond, now called O'Donnells, 34 years before Newfoundland became a part of Canada. In the summer, people fished for their food. In the winter Mike's family would hunt for furs or birds, or work in the lumber yard. Mike was 12 when he began fishing full-time. At 20, Mike started trapping part-time and doing some carpentry work when it came his way. When World War II came along, Mike's brothers went to war. In 1957, the caribou herd on the Avalon Peninsula (the southern tip of Newfoundland) was down to 60 animals. Mike was enlisted by the Provincial Wildlife Department to do what he could to save the herd. He worked as a one man team, travelling alone for as long as three weeks at a time. To deter the poachers who would surely kill off the caribou, he left supplies and notes in cabins for imaginary fellow officers, and often talked to people in the settlements about his "colleagues'" activities. As the caribou herd grew, Mike was soon joined by real fellow officers and helicopters. Mike and his team fought hard to get an 850 square kilometer area in the middle of the Avalon declared a reserve. Enforcing it meant burning and cutting down a few cabins that owners wouldn't remove themselves. No littering either. His accomplishments are unknown to most Canadians, but are heralded as the single-handed most successful conservation effort in North America.
    Genre: 
    Television programs -- Canada.
    Biographical television programs.
    Documentary television programs.
    DVDs.
    Other authors: 
    Glassco, Jane.
    Pick, Anne.
    Glass Co. Inc.
    Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.
    Holds: 
    1
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    LocationCollectionCall No.Item typeStatus 
    Home Delivery - HNAdult Nonfeature DVDsDVD 639.9092 N788osAdult Dvds-7 DaysChecked inAdd Copy to MyList


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