
National Parks Traveler Podcast
389 episodes — Page 7 of 8

S2 Ep 89National Parks Traveler: Beluga Whales And The Pebble Mine
National Parks Traveler's Lynn Riddick connects with Dr. Tracy Romano of Mystic Aquarium in Connecticut to discuss the plight of beluga whales in Cook Inlet in Alaska and the threats they face, including the threats posed by the proposed Pebble Mine project.

S2 Ep 88National Parks Traveler: The Wilderness Land Trust
This week we look at a nonprofit organization whose sole existence is to acquire, from willing sellers, private lands surrounded by official, or proposed, wilderness in national parks, national forests, and other publicly owned lands. Once those lands are acquired and transferred to federal land managers, The Wilderness Land Trust will put itself out of business. But that's not going to happen overnight, as the Trust's executive director, Brad Borst, explains during our conversation.

S2 Ep 87National Parks Traveler: High Heat At Death Valley National Park
In this week's show, we look at one of the hottest places on Earth, Death Valley National Park in southeastern California and western Nevada. And this summer was especially hot. The park broke records in a number of categories as it experienced some of the hottest days ever recorded on Earth. August was particularly brutal, with record temperatures reached 12 times for both the daily high and the daily low. To take a closer look at these numbers and why they don't seem to be a deterrent to visitors, Traveler's Lynn Riddick spoke with Death Valley Superintendent Mike Reynolds.

S2 Ep 86National Parks Traveler: Roundtable Discussion On National Park News
Life in the National Park System doesn't pause for presidential elections. Indeed, there have been many issues across the parks to pay attention to and discuss. To help us with that task, we've invited Kristen Brengel, senior vice president of government affairs for the National Parks Conservation Association, and Sheridan Steele, a Park Service veteran who sits on the executive council of the Coalition to Protect America's National Parks.

S2 Ep 85National Parks Traveler: Visiting The Blue Ridge Music Center
In this week's show, we look at a national park site that celebrates distinctly American music -- the Blue Ridge Music Center near Galax, Virginia. Traveler's Lynn Riddick visits with Richard Emmett, director of the center, to find out what's happening in the interpretation, presentation, and promotion of traditional American mountain music. We'll kick it off with a clip from the Chatham Rabbits, who recently performed at the center.

S2 Ep 84National Parks Traveler: Fall Lodging In The Parks And Migratory Acadia
In this week's show, we welcome you to fall with a conversation with lodging experts David and Kay Scott on where best to relax and enjoy the fall foliage in the National Park System. And Lynn Riddick catches up with Seth Benz, the bird ecology director at the Schoodic Institute, to discuss fall migrations at Acadia National Park.

S2 Ep 83National Parks Traveler: Put Parashant NM On The Bucket List, Gone From The Parks
We're going to dream a little bit about places in the National Park System we'd like to visit with hopes we can help you discover a new park destination. To launch this audio bucket list, we're looking towards Arizona and Parashant National Monument, which despite its more than 1 million acres seems to fly below most park visitors' radar. Following that, we're going to continue to ponder the topic of species extinction, and whether national parks can help slow the sixth mass extinction.

S2 Ep 82National Parks Traveler: Covid-19's Impact On Outdoor Rec & Outdoor Afro Fundraiser
This week we take a look at the outdoor recreation industry and how it has been impacted by the coronavirus pandemic. We also take a look at the upcoming fundraiser for Outdoor Afro. Yosemite National Park Ranger Shelton Johnson will host the fundraiser for the organization that inspires and facilitates the connection of Black Americans to natural spaces everywhere.

S2 Ep 81National Parks Traveler: Yosemite Turns Into Assateague, And Species Extinction
In this week's show, we question whether national parks can serve as a barrier to slow the sixth mass extinction. But first, what can turn a five-day trip to Yosemite National Park into a one-day trip to Assateague Island National Seashore? Covid can. In this lighthearted and informative story of their trip to the beach, the Traveler's Lynn Riddick and her friend Michele Hogan demonstrate that it's all about flexibility when trying to find some outdoor space in the age of a global pandemic.

S2 Ep 80National Parks Traveler: Pandemics And Their Impact On National Park Travel
In this week's show, we're focusing on the current coronavirus pandemic as well as the 1918 flu pandemic and how those diseases impacted national park visitation. After discussing those two pandemics with Professor Terence Young from California Polytechnic State University, we visit with contributing writer Rita Beamish, who tried to escape the current pandemic by taking to the John Muir Trail for nine days. She found that many other hikers were being careful by keeping their distance and wearing face masks when necessary, while others were more cavalier.

S2 Ep 79National Parks Traveler: Listening To Nature In National Parks
National parks offer a variety of treasures: spectacular views, scenic trails and waterways and vast ecosystems of plants and wildlife. And what would these things be without accompanying soundscapes -- wind howling through a canyon on a scorching afternoon… or the "wall-of-sound" created by insects as soon as the sun sets… or birds singing so loudly outside your tent, they wake you up before you really wanted to wake up. For natural sound, too, is a treasure, and like many other aspects of the national parks affected by too much human activity.

S2 Ep 78National Parks Traveler: Using Satellites To Spot Wildfires In National Parks
An early detection of a wildland fire in Denali National Park in June brings to light how enhanced satellite technology is catching smaller fires sooner, providing better detail and more accurate fire predictions and assessments. As a result, fire managers are better able to determine needed actions and resources to meet the unique conditions of Alaska's landscape. National ParksTraveler's Lynn Riddick spoke with Alaska fire analyst Robert "Zeke" Ziel about this satellite technology, and Larry Weddle, National Park Service fire management officer for the Alaska Western Area and Denali National Park and Preserve, on how the season peaked without much drama this year.

S2 Ep 77National Parks Traveler: July's National Parks News Review
We look back at the top news stories from the National Park System in July. There was the passage of the Great American Outdoors Act by Congress, the ongoing issue of the coronavirus pandemic and how parks have been dealing with it, and news that the renowned Sea Turtle Science and Recovery Program at Padre Island National Seashore is to be greatly scaled back. Joining host Kurt Repanshek to discuss some of the news impacting national parks in July is Mike Murray, a member of the executive council of the Coalition to Protect America's National Parks.

S2 Ep 76National Parks Traveler: Great Smoky Mountains Institute At Tremont
Residential environmental learning centers are nonprofit facilities that connect people to nature. But they are tasked with serving a greater good -- to foster the development of better global citizens. Lynn Riddick speaks with Catey McClary of the Great Smoky Mountains Institute at Tremont to better understand this organization whose roots in outdoor learning go back some 50 years.

S2 Ep 75National Parks Traveler: North Cascades Institute's Park Connections
Nature is an incredibly powerful and successful teacher. Of course, students need teachers to deliver the lessons. That's where Residential Environmental Learning Centers come into play in national parks. Organizations like NatureBridge, the Cuyahoga Valley Institute, the Yellowstone Institute, The Great Smoky Mountains Institute. And the North Cascades Institute. These nonprofit organizations use national parks as their classrooms. Lynn Riddick talks with Saul Weisberg to understand how the North Cascades Institute teaches children well.

S2 Ep 74National Parks Traveler: National Park Acoustics, And Wildfire Ecology
Have you ever stopped to listen during your national park vacation? What do you hear? We share some of the sounds in this week's episode with hopes they inspire you to let your ears play a greater role in your enjoyment during your national park visit.

S2 Ep 73National Parks Traveler: Teaching Children Well In National Parks
The survival of Residential Environmental Learning Centers in national parks is in jeopardy. As the president of one such center says, "the impact of coronavirus is an 'extinction-level event.'" Listen to how they are working to keep their doors open.

S2 Ep 72National Parks Traveler: Monthly News Review With Kristen Brengel
June has been an especially newsworthy month across the National Park System. The U.S. Senate passed what has been called the most important public lands bill in decades, and more national parks have reopened areas to the public. The U.S. Bureau of Land Management is proposing a large oil and gas lease auction for lands near Arches, Canyonlands and Capitol Reef national parks, and the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a natural gas pipeline could be tunneled beneath the Appalachian Trail. Kristen Brengel, senior vice president of government affairs for the National Parks Conservation Association, discusses the news events.

S2 Ep 71National Parks Traveler: Oil and Gas and National Parks
We take a look at the U.S. Bureau of Land Management's move to offer more than 110,000 acres in Utah for oil and gas development. How might that proposal impact Arches, Capitol Reef, and Canyonlands national parks? Erika Pollard from the National Parks Conservation Association joins us to explain some of the issues in play. After listing to our conversation, take a look at this story that looks at the issue in more detail. Finally, we leave you with a rationale for instituting a reservation system for visiting some units of the National Park System.

S2 Ep 70National Parks Traveler: The Yellowstone Volcano Observatory
There's always a lot of shaking, rattling, and occasional rolling going on in Yellowstone National Park. Keeping track of it is the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory, one of five such observatories under the purview of the U.S. Geological Survey. It keeps real-time tabs on volcanic, hydrothermal, and earthquake activity in the Yellowstone Plateau volcanic field. Lynn Riddick speaks with the scientist-in-charge of the observatory, Michael Poland, Ph.D. From his home in Vancouver, Washington, Poland gives us a glimpse into the latest monitoring systems in Yellowstone National Park and the park's recent geologic activity.

S2 Ep 69National Parks Traveler: A Conversation with landscape photographer Clyde Butcher
In this week's show, we're going to delve into landscape photography in the National Park System. "Good photography is about creating a feeling of things, rather than a picture of things." That's the philosophy of our guest, Clyde Butcher, acclaimed photographer and environmentalist. You might be familiar with his iconic black and white large format landscape photos that often are part of larger efforts to protect fragile ecosystems that he knows so well. And as Lynn Riddick found out in her conversation with Butcher from his home in Venice, Florida, he doesn't mind wading chest-deep through a cypress swamp or facing off against a hoofed animal to show why a place is worth protecting.

S2 Ep 68National Parks Traveler: Monthly News Recap, Endangered Black-footed Ferrets
We sit down with Becky Lomax, author of Moon's USA National Parks, to discuss news stories that arose from the National Park System during May. And we bring you an interesting story about efforts to recover populations of endangered black-footed ferrets in the West. Two places where they're working on that are Wind Cave and Badlands national parks in South Dakota.

S2 Ep 67National Parks Traveler: Close The Park, And An Extension To Lewis And Clark National Historic Trail
We're joined this week by Costa Dillon, a National Park Service veteran who ended his long career as superintendent of Indiana Dunes National Park, to discuss a novel management decision in Thailand to close that country's national parks every year for two months to give wildlife a break from humans. Would such a move be good for America's national parks? Lynn Riddick returns this week with a story about a roughly 1,200-mile extension to the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail that runs from St. Louis to Pittsburgh.

S2 Ep 66National Parks Traveler: Camping's Popularity, And The Dark Side of National Parks
In this week's program, we talk with Toby O'Rourke, the president and CEO of Kampgrounds of America, about a study KOA commissioned to gauge Americans' interests in returning to campgrounds on and near public lands as the fight with the coronavirus pandemic continues. The findings are quite interesting and point to renewed interest in camping as a recreational pursuit. After that conversation, we tempt you to explore the dark side of the National Park System. No, not the night skies overhead, but rather the subterranean world of Jewel Cave National Monument and Wind Cave National Park, two parks in South Dakota separated by fewer than 20 miles as the crow flies.

S2 Ep 65National Parks Traveler: Sea Level Rise And National Parks, Great Sea Kayaking Park Destinations
This week we talk with Robert Young, director of Western Carolina University's Program for the Study of Developed Shorelines about a project to more accurately determine the cost sea level rise could inflict on coastal units of the National Park System. We also take a look ahead to summer in the National Park System, the watery side of the system specifically, with a look at some of the prime sea kayaking destinations awaiting paddlers in the National Park System.

S2 Ep 64National Parks Traveler Episode 64: Artistic Interpretation And The Blue Ridge Parkway Foundation
Who makes those colorful interpretive panels found in the National Park System? One person is Steve Patricia. He's an independent artist and content specialist who provides illustrations and diagrams for waysides, exhibits, and murals at national parks, monuments, and historic sites all over the country. From his home in the Laurel Highlands of southwestern Pennsylvania, he shares some insights with Lynn Riddick.

S2 Ep 63National Parks Traveler: National Park Nostalgia, Friends Of Acadia Update
This week we pick up with the musings of Doug Leen. As a young park ranger in the 1970s, Leen stumbled upon a poster promoting a meet-the-ranger event at the Grand Teton National Park. It turned out to be one of 14 long-forgotten silk-screened posters made under the Works Progress Administration to promote tourism to the national parks. In the 50 years since that discovery, Leen has been searching high and low for the rest of the missing posters. His efforts have yielded noteworthy success, stirring up widespread interest in the posters and evolving into a thriving printing business of his own. As Lynn Riddick continues her talk with Doug, he discusses his business, Ranger Doug's Enterprises, and how the popularity of the posters has generated millions of dollars in revenue for the national parks. We also check in with Earl Brechlin, the communications director for Friends of Acadia, to get the latest on how the coronavirus pandemic is affecting that friends group and how it is responding.

S2 Ep 62National Parks Traveler: Ranger Doug To The Rescue, Rethinking America's Best Idea
Lynn Riddick sits down with Doug Leen, the force behind Ranger Doug Enterprises, to discuss his decades long search for original Works Progress Administration posters that depicted national parks across the West. And we leave you with some thoughts on what we all should be thinking about for National Park Week.

S2 Ep 61National Parks Traveler: 21st Century Campgrounds In The National Parks
What will the 21st century national park campground look like? What amenities are you interested in finding when you pull into a campground? Derrick Crandall, counseler for the National Park Hospitality Association, joins us to discuss two studies that examine the campgrounds, the issues they face, and the demands today's campers want.

S2 Ep 60National Parks Traveler: Wild Yellowstone and the Public Lands Alliance
Join us for a trip, at least an audio trip of sorts, to the heart of Yellowstone National Park and its wild kingdom. A place where wolves, grizzlies, and elk roam free and sandhill cranes catch your attention with their curious chortling. And Dan Puskar, the president and CEO of the Public Lands Alliance, discusses how its membership works to provide educational and interpretive materials for the parks, and how the coronavirus pandemic has impacted those groups.

S2 Ep 59National Parks Traveler: Richard Louv and Our Wild Calling, Mission San Juan
National Parks Conservation Association President and CEO Theresa Pierno discusses the impact coronavirus is having on the National Park System, and we have a conversation with author Richard Louv on his latest book, Our Wild Calling: How Connecting with Animals Can Transform our Lives, and Save Theirs. And Lynn Riddick concludes her four-part series on San Antonio Missions National Historical Park with a visit to Mission San Juan.

S2 Ep 58National Parks Traveler: Coronavirus in the Parks, Mission Espada at San Antonio Missions NHP
The impact of coronavirus on the National Park System truly is unprecedented. Unlike the impacts partial or full government shutdowns have on the parks, government funding won't solve those created by the growing spread of coronavirus overnight. To take a look at how coronavirus is affecting the parks and the National Park Service, for this week's show we've gathered three park experts, including former National Park Service Director Jon Jarvis, who combined have more than a century of experience with the national parks and public lands. And Lynn Riddick continues her tour of San Antonio Missions National Historical Park with a visit to Mission Espada.

S2 Ep 57National Parks Traveler: Mission Concepción In San Antonio, High-End Lodgings In The Parks
National Parks Traveler continues its tour through San Antonio Missions National Historical Park as Lynn Riddick visits Mission Concepción, and David and Kay Scott discuss the high-end national park lodges you would stay in if money were not an object.

S2 Ep 56National Parks Traveler: Mission San Jose and The Water Desk
This week we feature Lynn Riddick's segment on Mission San Jose, the first of a four-part series on San Antonio Missions National Historical Park in Texas. We also talk with Mitch Tobin, Director of The Water Desk at the Center for Environmental Journalism at the University of Colorado, to understand why his organization is underwriting journalism revolving around the Colorado River.

S2 Ep 55National Parks Traveler: Parks For Newbies, San Antonio Missions, And Voices From The River
This week we have a wide-ranging discussion about visiting the parks with Jason Epperson from the America's National Parks podcast and David and Kay Scott, authors of The Complete Guide To the National Park Lodges. We preview upcoming podcasts on the missions of San Antonio Missions National Historical Park, and recap our series on the Colorado River and its impacts on Canyonlands National Park and Glen National Recreation Area.

S2 Ep 54National Parks Traveler: Colorado River Economics, Rebranding Bandelier National Monument
In recent years there has been a movement of sorts to rebrand units of the National Park System as "national parks," a movement motivated in large part by the economic boost such a redesignation is hoped to have. In New Mexico there's a group that's opposed to turning Bandelier National Monument into Bandelier National Park. We discuss that issue with Tom Ribe, executive director of Caldera Action, a nonprofit advocacy group in New Mexico. And we continue our series on how the health of the Colorado River impacts Canyonlands National Park and Glen Canyon National Recreation Area in Utah. To get a better understanding of the river economics in play, we talk with Megan Lawson, an economist with Headwaters Economics.

S2 Ep 53National Parks Traveler: Special Report On The Colorado River, Grand Portage NM
This week's show kicks off our coverage of the Colorado River and how its health, or lack of health, impacts Canyonlands National Park and Glen Canyon National Recreation Area in Utah. We also take a peek at Grand Portage National Monument in Minnesota and what awaits intrepid park travelers who put it on their to-do list.

S2 Ep 52National Parks Traveler: Accessible Parks, Utah's Dismantled Monuments
Candy Harrington, a journalist who traveled the National Park System to see how accessible lodges and trails in the parks really are, discusses her new book on accessibility in the parks. And Cory MacNulty and Erika Pollard from the National Parks Conservation Association's Southwest Regional Office discuss the U.S. Bureau of Land Management's plans for managing the greatly reduced in size Bears Ears and Grand Staircase monuments.

S2 Ep 51National Parks Traveler: Scenic Science In The National Parks, And Bison Management Planning
Emily Hoff and Maygen Keller discuss their upcoming book, Scenic Science of the National Parks, an Explorers Guide to Wildlife, Geology, and Botany. The book, scheduled to arrive March 31, is a wonderfully new guidebook to help you get the most out of your national park adventures. Tanya Shenk, National Park Service scientist, explains a draft framework for bison stewardship in the Midwest Region of the park system. It's a region where you can find bison at Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve in Kansas, Badlands National Park and Wind Cave National Park in South Dakota, and Theodore Roosevelt National Park in North Dakota.

S2 Ep 50National Parks Traveler: New Allosaurus From Dinosaur NM, And Saratoga National Historical Park
This week's show, our 50th, looks at a Jurassic Period carnivore dubbed "AJ," a new species of allosaurus, found in Dinosaur National Monument in Utah, and takes a short Revolutionary War history tour of Saratoga National Historical Park in New York State.

S2 Ep 49National Parks Traveler: Public Lands, Federal Regulatory Changes
John Freemuth, who holds the Cecil D. Andrus Endowed Chair for Environment and Public Lands at Boise State University, and Nada Culver, the vice president for public lands and senior policy counsel at the National Audubon Society, discuss efforts in Washington to tweak the National Environmental Policy Act as well as the Endangered Species Act.

S2 Ep 48National Parks Traveler: Institute for Parks, People and Biodiversity, Visiting Tumacácori National Historical Park
Former National Park Service Director Jon Jarvis discusses the Institute for People, Parks, and Biodiversity that he launched at the University of California-Berkeley and how it's trying to guide climate change work in the National Park System. We also visit with Tumacácori National Historical Park Chief of Interpretation Anita Badertscher to learn about her park and what awaits visitors there.

S2 Ep 47National Parks Traveler: Expanding The National Park System And Winter Park Destinations
Michael Kellett, the executive director of RESTORE: The North Woods, discusses a campaign to see the size of the National Park System roughly tripled to more than 182 million acres. And Traveler contributing editor Erika Zambello and Becky Lomax, author of Moon's USA National Parks, the Complete Guide to All 59 Parks, join Kurt Repanshek to discuss their favorite winter national park destinations.

S1 Ep 46National Parks Traveler: Looking Back At The National Parks In 2019
The past year brought many news-making events to the National Park System. It started, of course, with the partial government shutdown that created more than a few problems for the park system, the continued lack of a Senate confirmed director of the National Park Service, hurricanes inflicting damage on coastal parks, and construction of a border wall in Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument that possibly destroyed some archaeological sites there. To help us look back on 2019 and the national parks, we're joined by Theresa Pierno, president and CEO of the National Parks Conservation Association.

S1 Ep 45National Parks Traveler: Threatened and Endangered National Parks
With many national parks across the country in trouble from such myriad threats as climate change, overcrowding, energy exploration, invasive species, and poor air quality, National Parks Traveler's new "Threatened and Endangered Parks" lists identify parks that are struggling to retain the very essence that led to their inclusion in the National Park System in the first place. In this week's show, Phil Francis of the Coalition to Protect America's National Parks and Mark Wenzler from the National Parks Conservation Association discuss the threats facing the parks.

S1 Ep 44National Parks Traveler: Invasive Species Plague Parks, And Photogenic Parks
How big of a problem are invasive animal species in the National Park System? This week we examine the topic of invasive animal species – think Burmese pythons in Everglades National Park, wild hogs in Great Smoky Mountains National Park, and even feral cats at Cape Hatteras National Seashore – and how the National Park Service is trying to tackle the problem. Traveler's staff looks at some of the most photogenic destinations in the National Park System. And we include some surprise locations.

S1 Ep 43National Parks Traveler: Longest Terrestrial Migrations, Jean LaFitte National Historical Park
Kyle Joly, a National Park Service wildlife biologist who long has studied terrestrial migrations in national park units in Alaska, discusses the world's longest land migrations in this week's show. Caribou and reindeer are at the top of the list of long-distance travelers, but what about wolves? Contributing writer Kim O'Connell, fresh back from a visit to New Orleans, gives us a preview of her time at Jean LaFitte National Historical Park and Preserve. 1

S1 Ep 42National Parks Traveler: Yellowstone's Grizzly Bears, Visiting Fort Matanzas National Monument
How are Yellowstone National Park's grizzly bears faring? Kerry Gunther, the park's bear expert, joins the Traveler this week to discuss the current state of grizzlies in the park and whether their population is growing or dropping. Erika Zambello takes listeners on a short audio trip to Fort Matanzas National Monument in Florida.

S1 Ep 41National Parks Traveler: Addressing The Backlog, Out In The Parks, Spaceport Secrecy
John Garder, senior director of budget and appropriations for the National Parks Conservation Association, discusses congressional action on legislation to address the roughly $12 billion in backlogged maintenance needs across the National Park System. Becky Lomax, author of Moon USA National Parks, discusses what she's seeing in the parks in terms of that maintenance backlog, and we share thoughts about efforts to build a commercial spaceport just west of Cumberland Island National Seashore.

S1 Ep 40National Parks Traveler: Counting Saguaros, Off-Season At Cumberland Island
While there's concern that one day Joshua trees might no longer grow in Joshua Tree National Park, or that Glacier National Park might lose its rivers of ice, what about Saguaro National Park and its iconic cacti? Kurt Repanshek travels to Saguaro National Park to discuss the decadal survey of saguaros with park biologist Don Swann. Erika Zambello heads to coastal Georgia for an off-season visit to Cumberland Island National Seashore.