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leisurepublishing Friend
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April 22, 2009 at 3:13 pm #140503So my title tags in my pages that display like blogs insert a huge amount (if not all) of the destination article’s content into the title=”” in the <a href> links below the main teaser. See http://www.blueridgecountry.com
The main teaser title inserts the article name in the <a href title=””> but the “More” links use the whole freakin content of the article. How do I change them to do the same as the main article name?
That is huge SEO overkill and I hate it. How do I remove it completely or ideally or is there a plug-in that will let me customize it?
1 user says Thank You to leisurepublishing for this useful post
leisurepublishing Friendleisurepublishing
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May 19, 2009 at 6:11 pm #305127It’s been a month with no reply so I believe it’s fair to give this a bump…
nguyenhuu quang Friendnguyenhuu quang
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May 19, 2009 at 6:13 pm #305128More descript allow me to help you
thanksleisurepublishing Friendleisurepublishing
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May 19, 2009 at 6:17 pm #305130If you look at the source code of my home page, you will see the ja-news items links have a title= tag, and within the tag, is the complete source of the article. IE:
<ul class="jazin-links">
<li>
<a title="The remains of mining and railroad can be found in this place, more reminiscent of eastern Maryland than of western.Outdoor types have been coming to western Maryland for centuries. Three Native American trails converged near Grantsville, enabling several tribes to use the area for hunting.
In the early 1700s, Meshach Browning was one of the earliest European settlers and known for his hunting skills. In “Forty-Four Years of the Life of a Hunter,” he describes life on America’s frontier and estimates he killed “1,800 to 2,000 deer, 300 to 400 bears, about 50 panthers and catamounts, with scores of wolves and wildcats.”
Self-styled vagabonds Henry Ford, Harvey Firestone, Thomas Edison and John Burroughs camped in the area in the early 1900s.
The formation of Deep Creek Lake in the 1920s – part of a hydroelectric project – substantially increased the number of visitors. As on most large artificial lakes, motorboating, kayaking, waterskiing, sailing, fishing and other water sports are popular, and Deep Creek Lake State Park exists for those of us who engage in land-based outdoor activities.
More than 95 percent of the park consists of regenerated forest, with hickories and oaks being the dominant trees. This protected terrain is home to black bears, bobcats, wild turkeys, white-tailed deer, skunks, chipmunks, squirrels, raccoons and numerous other small mammals. In addition to a swimming beach, park amenities include a campground, mini-cabins and a boat-launch facility. Ranger naturalists lead interpretive programs and the excellent discovery center is open year-round.
A network of pathways course into the park’s more isolated regions, providing the opportunity to escape the crowds around the lake and campground. Swelling up like the wave of a ripple on the landscape, Meadow Mountain rises to 3,000 feet and forms part of the divide that determines if precipitation falling in Garrett County ends up in the Atlantic Ocean or the Gulf of Mexico.
Begin your exploration at Parking Lot 3, by crossing State Park Road and ascending a connector trail for 300 feet to turn left onto the Meadow Mountain Trail. Less than a half-mile later, bear right onto the Old Brant Mine Trail.
Opened in 1923 by Delphia Brant and George Beckman, the trail’s namesake mine supplied the coal needed to heat local homes. The operation was a success, but the men died of lung disease within three years. Eventually the mine caved in, but the state has reconstructed a portion of the site. It’s worth spending time here to study the old tram car, tracks and mine entrance. (Interpretive hikes to the mine are scheduled throughout the summer; check at the park office for dates and times.)
Continuing beyond the mine, the hike rejoins the Meadow Mountain Trail by turning right and ascending along a woods road to reach the ridgeline at 1.2 miles, where the walking becomes easier with little change in elevation. A side trail to the right descends a short distance for a view of the lake with Roman Nose Hill rising up behind it. Unless this overlook has been recently maintained, you may not have much of a view, but you’ve only expended a little bit of energy and have walked through a part of the park you would have otherwise missed.
Besides, another pathway branching off of the Meadow Mountain Trail leads beyond a fire tower to another perspective of the lake.
Railroad ties in the Meadow Mountain Trail enable you to negotiate a mountain wetland area without getting wet feet. Be sure and slow down to appreciate this spot, whose vegetation of arrowhead-shaped leaves is more often associated with the marshlands of eastern Maryland.
Beyond the wetlands, this hike takes its leave of the Meadow Mountain Trail and descends steeply along the narrower Indian Turnip Trail, crossing a wooden bridge at 3.3 miles. Some of the water running underneath you may end up taking a long journey. Heading downhill into Meadow Mountain Run, it mixes with the waters of Deep Creek Lake and the Youghiogheny River. Flowing northward, the Youghiogheny meets the Monongahela River just south of Pittsburgh, Pa. This, in turn, joins the Allegheny River to form the Ohio River. Now moving to the west and south, the water from the small stream on Meadow Mountain mingles with drops of rain that fell upon the Rocky Mountains and the Great Plains, all of this liquid coursing down the Mississippi River to end up in salt water at the Gulf of Mexico.
To stay in the woods as long as possible, bear right to ascend along the Fire Tower Trail and learn a bit of the natural history of the area by negotiating the circular Snake Root Trail and consulting the brochure obtained from the park office.
Back on the Mountain Meadow Trail, come to the connector trail where you began this journey, turn left and return to your car at 4.9 miles.When You Go
The Hike: A moderate 4.9-mile outing with an 850-foot vertical rise that lets hikers visit an old mining site, enjoy a couple of vistas and study mountaintop wetlands.
Directions: From U.S. 219 in Thayerville, drive Glendale Rd. over two bridges across the lake, bear left onto State Park Rd. and follow signs to the end of Parking Lot 3. If you find the road closed (as it usually is in winter), park at the Discovery Center and walk to the beginning of the hike. This adds less than a mile to the outing.
Trail Information: For “50 Hikes in Maryland,” contact Countryman Press, 800-245-4151, countrymanpress.com. —LA
Downriver
Precision Rafting (800-477-3723, precisionrafting.com) runs the Upper Youghiogheny River’s Class IV and V rapids. The river has an average vertical drop of more than 115 feet per mile, with a one-mile stretch dropping more than 120 feet. Easy float trips suitable for the whole family are also available.
Downhill
Maryland’s only downhill skiing area, Wisp Ski and Golf Resort (800-387-4911, wispresort.com), has 22 trails with facilities for skiing, snowboarding, cross-country skiing and tubing. It also takes advantage of every season by having a golf course, mountain biking and mountain boarding routes, a skate park and other outdoor activities. —LA" href="/travel/wetlands-to-woodlands-hiking-at-ceep-creek-lake.html">
Wetlands to Woodlands: Hiking at Deep Creek Lake</a>
</li>
That’s a complete pain and will kill me with the search engines. How do I turn it off or get rid of it?
nguyenhuu quang Friendnguyenhuu quang
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May 19, 2009 at 6:22 pm #305131it is more article of Ja_news module.
pls open Ja_news module and You can see it. It is 3 ready more articlesnguyenhuu quang Friendnguyenhuu quang
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May 19, 2009 at 6:27 pm #305134and pls check your site on IE6, very bad in IE 6
Pls fix it
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May 19, 2009 at 6:29 pm #305135I’m not really wanting to get rid of the links, just all that text in the title=””
I don’t see anything in the ja news module that would allow me to do that? (I’m looking for an item called “More Article” or something close to it?)
nguyenhuu quang Friendnguyenhuu quang
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May 19, 2009 at 6:39 pm #305137mod_janewstmplblog_item.php
Line 53 to 56
<li>
<a title="<?php echo strip_tags($row->introtext); ?>" href="<?php echo $link; ?>">
<?php echo $row->title; ?></a>
</li>
Replace
<li>
<a title="<?php echo strip_tags($row->introtext); ?>" href="<?php echo $link; ?>">
</a>
</li>1 user says Thank You to nguyenhuu quang for this useful post
leisurepublishing Friendleisurepublishing
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May 19, 2009 at 6:46 pm #305138Thank you, I was able to take care of a couple of issues I had within that file! 😀
frodojrr Friendfrodojrr
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May 21, 2009 at 5:05 pm #305402Actually, this works best for me.
Replace this:
<li>
<a title="<?php echo strip_tags($row->introtext); ?>" href="<?php echo $link; ?>">
<?php echo $row->title; ?></a>
</li>With this:
<li>
<a href="<?php echo $link; ?>">
<?php echo $row->title; ?></a>
</li> -
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