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#91
November 2025: Top Adventure Towns

On the Cover: Illustration by Grayson Cooper @mossymorels Departments Field Report A new North Carolina climbing gym blends bouldering routes, an arts-forward vibe, and a whole lot of plants. The Goods Find the perfect gift for the adventurer in your life in our annual gear gift guide. The Out and Back National parks should be […]


The post November 2025: Top Adventure Towns appeared first on Blue Ridge Outdoors Magazine.


Source: November 2025: Top Adventure Towns
#92
Holiday Hideaway at Red Leprechaun







11/20/2025 to







12/28/2025

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Step into the magic of the season at Red Leprechaun’s Holiday Hideaway, a full-venue Christmas pop-up at The Banks in downtown Cincinnati! This Irish-style pub transforms into a sparkling winter


Source: Holiday Hideaway at Red Leprechaun
#93
Holiday Junction at the Cincinnati Museum Center







11/14/2025 to







01/05/2026

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Celebrate 79 years of winterland whimsy at Holiday Junction, where the Duke Energy Holiday Trains continue a beloved Cincinnati tradition dating back to 1946. More than 300 rail cars and 50


Source: Holiday Junction at the Cincinnati Museum Center
#94
Christmas at the Mill Top







11/29/2025 to







11/30/2025

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Excitement and holiday spirit is in the air!
Get ready to be part of something extraordinary at Hope And Recovery Centers Inc's fundraising vendor shopping market at Mill Top Banquet and Conference


Source: Christmas at the Mill Top
#95
Christmas at the Orchard: Photos with Santa







11/29/2025 to







12/13/2025

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Join us as we transform our Civil-War-Era Barn Market into a winter wonderland and welcome Santa to the Orchard! Take professional photos with Santa sitting in his one-horse sleigh by the stone


Source: Christmas at the Orchard: Photos with Santa
#96
Politics Podium - CAUTION / College football coach John Be...
Last post by Admin - Nov 29, 2025, 03:07 AM
College football coach John Beam from 'Last Chance U' has died after being shot, Oakland police say


OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — College football coach John Beam, who was featured in the Netflix series “Last Chance U”, has died after being shot on campus, the Oakland Police Department said Friday, and a suspect has been arrested.


Police Chief Floyd Mitchell announced the coach’s death at a news conference on Friday, a day after the shooting at Laney College.


“This was a very targeted incident,” Assistant Chief James Beere said, adding that the suspect and Beam knew each other and although they weren’t close, the coach was “open to helping everybody in our community.”


Beere did not elaborate on how they knew each other or why the suspect was on campus, saying the suspect played football at Skyline High School but not when Beam worked there. The suspect was taken into custody without any altercation and a gun has been recovered, the assistant chief added.


Few other details were available. It was the second shooting in two days at a school in Oakland.


The Netflix docuseries focused on athletes at junior colleges striving to turn their lives around, and Beam’s Laney College Eagles starred in the 2020 season. Beam came across as competitive, but he also seemed to form connections with his players.


Two of Beam’s former players — brothers Nahshon and Rejzohn Wright, now in the NFL with the Chicago Bears and New Orleans Saints — posted on social media after the shooting.


“You mean the world to me,” Rejzohn Wright said in a post with a photo of Beam.


His brother shared a photo of the coach alongside a broken heart emoji.


Mayor Barbara Lee described Beam as a “giant” and a mentor, educator and lifeline for young people.


“For over 40 years, he has shaped leaders on and off the field, and our community is shaken alongside his family,” Lee said.


Beam, currently serving as athletic director, joined Laney College in 2004 as a running backs coach and became head coach in 2012, winning two league titles. According to his biography on the college’s website, 20 of his players have gone on to the NFL.


“The Peralta community is devastated by his shooting and deeply concerned for his well-being. We are stunned and heartbroken that such violence has touched our campus,” Mark Johnson a spokesperson for Peralta Community College District said in an emailed statement on Beam’s current medical status.


Beam’s shooting came a day after a student was shot at Oakland’s Skyline High School. The student is in stable condition.




Categories: More Sports, National News, News, Sports


Source: College football coach John Beam from 'Last Chance U' has died after being shot, Oakland police say
#97
What to Do When You Need to Break Down a Door: Step-by-Step Emergency Guide

     SAFETY AND LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Use this skill only in true emergencies on property you own or where you have clear duty or permission. When learning how to break down a door, wearing protective eyewear and gloves will reduce injury risk.










Quick Answers to Common Questions on How to Break Down a Door
     Readers tend to ask the same practical things. Keep these  information in mind when you train or teach others on how to break down a door:





     Q: Can you kick open an interior door?
     A: Sometimes. Expect multiple controlled strikes at the latch side.





     Q: Should you kick or use your shoulder when trying to break down a door?
     
A: Kicking offers better reach and power. However, using your shoulder offers control and less ankle risk. Choose based on footing and space.





     Q: When trying to break down a door, where do I aim?
     A: Aim at the latch area beside the knob, a few inches from the edge. Make sure to avoid the knob itself.










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Last update on 2025-11-28 / Affiliate links / Images from Amazon Product Advertising API





It is a quiet Saturday morning. Water runs behind a locked bathroom door. Your teenager answered once, then went silent. You hear the tub filling and a dull bump against the porcelain. You have a compact pry bar in the car and basic tools in a drawer. You need a fast, safe way in.  Should you just wait it out, or should you start planning an intervention?





Ignoring this scenario or any similar situation can sometimes lead to a bigger tragedy. According to the American Association of Pediatrics,  most in-home child drownings happen in bathtubs during lapses in supervision. In many cases, a bathroom door locked from the inside can hamper any attempts to check in on children or attend to an emergency.   Learning how to break down a door in an emergency can make the difference between a timely response and  being too late to do anything.





This guide keeps you in that hallway and shows you how to act without wasting motion. You will start with low-damage methods. If those fail, you will use controlled force at the latch side. If the lock area will not give, you will work the hinges or choose another entry. After you get inside, you will control the swing, help the person, and secure utilities.





How to Break Down a Door in an Emergency: Immediate Assessment





how-to-break-down-a-door-in-an-emergency




Before you reach for tools, confirm that entry is necessary and choose the lowest-risk path. A quick assessment prevents avoidable damage and speeds the right choice.





Steps to verify and choose the method
Work through this short check so you do not break a door that would open with a simple fix.






  1. Confirm the emergency. Call through the door. Ask the person to move away and answer. Listen for running water, a collapse, or any sign of distress. Feel near the top of the door with the back of your hand. If it is hot, do not open. Find another path.




  2. Identify door type. Interior hollow-core that swings inward is common and easier. Exterior solid wood or metal is tougher. If the door opens outward, plan for hinge work or another entry.




  3. Check the gap and hardware. Look at the latch line, strike plate screws, and hinges. Note anything loose or exposed that you can use.







           
           


   
   

       
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Last update on 2025-11-28 / Affiliate links / Images from Amazon Product Advertising API





Low-Damage Options That Work Fast





Many interior doors are locked by a spring latch, not a deadbolt. This makes it more difficult to break down a door by brute force alone. To save time and repairs, try these measures that allow you to pick the right method and minimize damage: 






  • Latch slip. Slide a rigid card or shim at the latch line, slightly above the latch, angled toward the strike plate. Wiggle and pull.




  • Remove the knob. Use the release hole or exposed screws. Pull the knob and move the latch tab with a flat tool.




  • Pop hinge pins. If the door opens inward and the pins are visible on your side, tap them up and lift the door.




  • Unscrew the strike plate. Two to four short screws may be all that holds the latch.





If none of these work and the situation is getting worse, move to controlled force.







           
           


   
   

       
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Last update on 2025-11-28 / Affiliate links / Images from Amazon Product Advertising API





How to Break Down a Door: Controlled Force on Inward-Opening Doors





how-to-break-down-a-door-controlled-force




Once you start trying to break down a door, you become committed to entry. Remember that your goal is to fail the frame at the latch area, not to smash the center panel. As such, work with balance and short bursts of power instead of going all-out.





Principles for safe, effective force
Get stable, target the weak point, and reassess after short sets.






  1. Set your stance. Feet shoulder width. Angle your body toward the latch side. Protect your eyes. Clear bystanders from the swing arc.




  2. Choose a power method.

    • Heel kick. Drive the heel of a sturdy shoe into the panel line beside the lock. Reset your footing between strikes.




    • Shoulder check. Tuck your chin, forearm over your face, and strike the same zone.




    • Pry assist. Seat a pry bar in the latch gap and lever while you kick or lean.






  3. Work in short sets. Deliver two to four clean strikes. Pause. Look for splitting near the strike. If you see movement, continue along the same vertical line a few inches higher or lower.




  4. If the lock side will not give. Shift to the hinge side. Remove hinge screws if visible. If not, place controlled strikes near the top hinge first, then the bottom. The top hinge carries more load.




  5. Control the swing. As the latch fails, catch the edge with a foot or hand to slow the door. Announce your entry and clear debris.





Mid-sequence visual: Water creeps under the threshold. Your first set flexes the frame. You reseat the pry bar at the strike gap, lean in, and deliver two clean strikes. The latch gives. You guide the door open and step in with control.





Outward-Opening or Reinforced Doors: Alternate Entry Paths





Some doors resist latch-side force or open outward. In these cases, pick the path that fails the fewest parts in the least time.





Options when the strike side cannot be forced
Use the simplest mechanical weakness you can reach.






  • Work the hinges. If hinge pins or screws are visible on your side, pull them and lift the door.




  • Choose another path. Interior drywall between studs is often faster to breach than a reinforced jamb. A small window covered with a thick cloth can allow safer entry with controlled glass.




  • Call for help if needed. If nothing gives and a life is at risk, request professional assistance while you manage the scene.





What Usually Goes Wrong and How to Fix It





Most errors come from poor aim and wasted energy. Small changes prevent injuries and save time.





Common mistakes and simple fixes
Match each issue with a quick adjustment that improves results.






  • Aiming at the knob. Aim beside the latch where the frame is weakest.




  • Throwing wild strikes. Use short, repeatable power to protect ankles and shoulders.




  • Skipping reassessment. After two to four strikes, stop and check progress. Change tactics if nothing moves.




  • Forgetting simple tools. A mini pry bar, screwdrivers, and shims solve many lock-only problems.





After You Break Down a Door: Stabilize, Document, and Harden





4




Gaining entry is not the end. Secure people and hazards, then make quick repairs to prevent repeat failures.





Immediate steps after entry
Follow this sequence to prevent secondary harm.






  • Victim care. Move the person from the hazard. Manage bleeding and airway. Call EMS if not already on the way.




  • Utilities. Shut off water, power, or gas to the room if needed.




  • Scene safety. Prop or remove the broken door so it cannot trap anyone.




  • Document and repair. Photograph the damage. Replace strike plate screws with 3 inch screws and reinforce the frame.





After-action narrative
After the door gave, you shut off the water and confirmed your teenager was responsive. The room calmed. You propped the broken door so it could not trap anyone, placed the medical call, took two photos for documentation, and upgraded the strike plate on the spot. The controlled strikes at the latch side worked on the first cycle, which kept damage contained. From here, schedule a checkup, replace the rest of the interior strike screws with 3 inch hardware, and stage a mini pry bar in the hall cabinet so the next response is faster and cleaner.





Minimal Rescue Breach Kits for Real Homes





how-to-break-down-a-door-tools




The right tools turn a hard problem into a short task. Build a staged kit so you always have a workable option.





Good, fits in a drawer
Safety glasses, work gloves, flat screwdriver, stout putty knife, duct tape, mini pry bar.





Better, lives in the vehicle
18 to 24 inch pry bar, #2 Phillips and flat drivers, adjustable wrench, compact folding saw, trauma shears, headlamp.





Best, for community responders
Halligan-style multipurpose pry, 2 to 4 lb sledge, door shims, window punch, heavy gloves, eye and ear protection, compact trauma kit with tourniquet and gauze.





Breaking Down A Door in an Emergency Requires Skill With Restraint





6





Knowing how to break down a door is a rescue skill. You learn it so you can act when seconds matter. You keep it in reserve the rest of the time. Use it for life and safety, not out of frustration or anger. The same discipline that carries you through a clean entry also tells you when to step back, try a less destructive option, or call for help. Mastery is the judgment to know when to act and when not to, and the confidence to execute cleanly when it counts. 





To learn more skills and technique that can potentially save the day, check out our SHTF Skills page.






Source: What to Do When You Need to Break Down a Door: Step-by-Step Emergency Guide
#98
Santa's Wonderland at Cabela's






Categories: Community, Entertainment, News at Noon, Noon Guests


Source: Santa's Wonderland at Cabela's
#99
These Hospitals Figured Out How to Slash C-Section Rates

Financial and social incentives can nudge doctors away from the operating room.
Source: These Hospitals Figured Out How to Slash C-Section Rates
#100
What's a Digital Passport and How Does It Work?

Apple joined Google this week in allowing travelers to add their passports to their cellphone "wallets." As the holiday travel season nears, here's what you need to know.
Source: What's a Digital Passport and How Does It Work?