The Külf is a ridge, up to 260 m above NN, in the Leine Uplands in the district of Hildesheim in the German state of Lower Saxony.
With seven main summits, the Külf stretches for about 9 kilometres, lying in a triangle formed by the settlements of Gronau, Alfeld and Duingen. It is located between Eime and Banteln to the north, Dehnsen to the east, Limmer to the southeast, Brunkensen to the south and Hoyershausen, Lübbrechtsen and Deinsen to the west. West of the Külf is another ridge, the Thüster Berg, to the southwest is the Duinger Berg and to the east are the seven hills of the Sieben Berge. The B 3 federal road runs through the Leine valley from Gronau to Alfeld east of the Külf.
Geologically the Külf is part of the Alfeld Saddle, to which the Rettberg and Hackeberg to the south also belong (and extending to the north from Freden). Its underlying rocks consist of limestones of the muschelkalk, hard Trochitenkalk (Upper muschelkalk) and Wellenkalk (Lower muschelkalk).
KULF (1090 kHz) is an AM daytimer radio station based in Bellville, Texas broadcasting a Spanish music format known as "Radio Luz". Licensed to Bellville, Texas, USA, serving the Victoria, Texas and Houston, Texas regional area. The station is currently owned by Jerome Friemel, through licensee JLF Communications, LLC.
The station operates on a Class D daytime license on 1090 kHz. Because KULF shares the same frequency as clear-channel station station KAAY in Little Rock, Arkansas, it broadcasts only during the daytime hours.
1090 signed on the air in 1974 as Austin County's first and only licensed radio station. It was owned by Mr. & Mrs. J. Lee Dittert. 1090 was granted the calls of KACO, representing not just service to its community of license Bellville, but to the entire Austin County population. KACO started as a 250 watt daytimer featuring a country & western format. In 2010, 1090 moved its tower site out of the City of Bellville itself, opting to build a new site 8 miles southeast of Bellville, Texas with an increase in power to 1 kilowatt, in an effort to cover more of the Houston-Galveston metropolitan area. In 1993, the Dittert family sold the facility to Roy Henderson, and the original KACO calls would be retired, as 1090 changed its callsign to KFRD, which had been at 980 AM in Rosenberg, Texas since its sign on in 1949. 4 years later, 1090 received a grant to change its call letters again and use the KNUZ calls that had occupied 1230 AM in Houston since the 1940s. As KNUZ, and under Roy Henderson's direction, the station simulcasted "Lite 94.1" KLTR out of Brenham. In 2009 the facility dropped the KNUZ call letters and briefly used KBAL, until a switch could be made with the co-owned facility in San Saba. As a result of the call switch, the KNUZ calls are now used for 106.1 FM in San Saba, Texas, the former KBAL.
KULF may refer to one of several stations in Texas that have carried the callsign:
Your morning smile of torture
Holds me in its grip
You trace the taste of yesterday
The bruise upon my lip
You touch my eyes and hypnotize
And slip inside my heart
I wait for this forever
But we always fall apart
You want to hold me closer
And secretly entice
You take the size of shadowed men
And punish me with kisses every night
This espionage is sweeter now
Now that we're alone
But I meet your eyes and then despise
All we call our own
I write my name in lipstick
On the mirror as I leave
To stay would be too dangerous
To break the make-believe
You want to hold me closer
And secretly entice
You take the size of shadowed men