National Parks Traveler Podcast
By: Kurt Repanshek
Language: en
Categories: Society, Culture, Places, Travel, Science, Nature
National Parks Traveler is the world's top-rated, editorially independent, nonprofit media organization dedicated to covering national parks and protected areas on a daily basis. Traveler offers readers and listeners a unique multimedia blend of news, feature content, debate, and discussion all tied to national parks and protected areas.
Episodes
National Parks Traveler Podcast | The Fate of the Honeycreeper
Jan 11, 2026A dramatic battle is being waged on the flanks of Halealakā National Park to save rare Honeycreeper birds that exist only in Hawaii.
It's believed that the 50-odd known living or extinct species of honeycreepers all evolved from a single colonizing ancestor that arrived on Hawaii, the world's most remote island group, some three to five million years ago.
Threats to the birds began to surface around 500 A.D., when Polynesian colonists began to settle on the Pacific island chain. They began to clear most of the low elevation forests, inadvertently eating away at the b...
Duration: 00:44:54National Parks Traveler Podcast | Year in Review
Dec 28, 2025This year, 2025, likely will go down as the most transitional for the National Park Service. We've seen the loss of nearly a quarter of the permanent workforce, efforts to whitewash history in some parks, and the loss of a grand lodge to wildfire.
The past 12 months have been full of news impacting the National Park Service and national parks, not all of it good. It's been a somewhat tumultuous year, leaving many wondering what the new year will bring for the parks and their employees.
To help us look back over the past 12 months, we've...
Duration: 00:52:31National Parks Traveler Podcast | Historic Preservation in the Parks
Dec 21, 2025A century of seasons has worn the appearance of the log cabin Roy Fure built in present-day Katmai National Park and Preserve in Alaska, but his care of the small cabin, and later National Park Service restoration efforts, have enabled it to stand the test of time.
Dovetail-notched spruce logs still sit tightly together, the corrugated metal roof Fure replaced his sod roof with in 1930 and painted red could use a new coat of paint, but otherwise looks rainproof, and the windmill he erected to generate electricity still stands tall.
Across the 85+ million-acre National Park...
Duration: 00:39:27National Parks Traveler Podcast | Threatened and Endangered Species Intro
Dec 14, 2025After more than 50 years as one of the country's landmark environmental laws, the Endangered Species Act has gone from one of the most popular measures before Congress to one fueling demands that it be revised, if not discarded.
The National Parks Traveler is reviewing the Endangered Species Act's work and its record, spotlighting individual species that it's protected, those that it failed, and those that it recovered.
The monthslong series comes as ESA champions worry that the push to weaken the law could consign countless animals and plants to the growing list of flora and...
Duration: 00:45:27National Parks Traveler Podcast | Endemic Haleakalā
Dec 07, 2025Haleakalā National Park is deceptively wonderful and rich in biodiversity. But if we're not careful, we could lose some of that biodiversity.
Located on the island of Maui in Hawaii, the first thing you notice about this national park is its towering dormant volcano, Haleakalā, which rises from sea level to more than 10,000 feet.
While many visitors simply want to head to the top of the volcano to peer into its crater or enjoy a colorful sunrise or sunset, if you take a little time to get to know this park you'll be amazed by wha...
Duration: 00:44:14National Parks Traveler Podcast | Staffing and Funding the Park Service
Nov 30, 2025It's Thanksgiving Weekend, usually interpreted as a bountiful time of year when we can all sit back and be thankful. But can many who work for the National Park Service feel thankful in the wake of the staff reductions this year?
This year has been hard on the Park Service, what with the loss of roughly a quarter of the full-time workforce and questions around how the agency has long interpreted history.
But the Park Service has long struggled with its operations. Funding and staffing never seem to have met the needs of the Park Ser...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Shrinking Mount Rainier
Nov 16, 2025Gazing up at mountains from their valleys down below, it's hard, if not impossible, to detect any change on the top of the mountains. But change is ongoing, especially in recent history as the climate continues to warm.
From Tacoma or Seattle in Washington state, the snowy summit of Mount Rainier National Park appears unchanged from how it's always looked. Snowy. But is that truly the case? What would you think if someone told you the top of the summit no longer is 14,410 feet high, that the high point of the park has actually shrunk?
...
Duration: 00:55:49National Parks Traveler Podcast | Park Friends Under Pressure
Nov 09, 2025The government shutdown has been record-setting in terms of its length. So, too, has been the time that many employees of the National Park Service have been furloughed without pay.
How has the shutdown affected the parks, and how have the friends groups that support the parks responded? We're going to discuss that today with Chris Lenhertz from the Golden Gate Conservancy, Jacki Harp from Smokies Life, Eric Stiles from Friends of Acadia, and Cassius Cash from the Yosemite Conservancy.
Duration: 01:00:40National Parks Traveler Podcast | November NewsMatch Fundraiser
Nov 02, 2025What is a "typical" day at the National Parks Traveler like? When you surf over to the website there's always content there, ready to update you on news from around the National Park System. How is it generated, and who generates it?
Editor Kurt Repanshek and Contributing Editor Kim O'Connell dive into the logistics of running a news operation that's focused on national parks and protected areas.
Duration: 00:42:24National Parks Traveler Podcast | The Battle of Saratoga
Oct 26, 2025Though the Revolutionary War didn't officially end until September 1783 with the signing of the Treaty of Paris, a key turning point in the war for independence occurred six years earlier in a small corner of today's New York state.
The Battle of Saratoga stretched out from September 19 until October 7, 1777, and marked the first time the British Empire had been forced to surrender. British General John Burgoyne had stretched his forces too thin in marching down from Canada with the intent of capturing Albany and wound up with huge losses in his army of nearly 7,000.
His...
Duration: 00:53:27National Parks Traveler Podcast | Government Shutdown Blues
Oct 19, 2025The federal government is shut down, but the national parks – most of them, anyway – are open.
Back during his first term in office President Donald Trump also kept the parks open during the government shutdown that stretched from the end of 2018 into early 2019. That led to some vandalism to the parks and damage to some park resources.
How are things going this shutdown? To explore that question, our guest today is Kristen Brengel, the senior vice president of government affairs with the National Parks Conservation Association.
Duration: 00:48:09National Parks Traveler Podcast | Kansas Road Trip
Oct 12, 2025Kansas is a big place, and not one particularly well-known for national park destinations. But that doesn't mean you should overlook the Sunflower State.
In the closing days of September, as the country seemed destined for a government shutdown, the Traveler's Kurt Repanshek and Patrick Cone headed into Kansas to visit some of the parks there to better understand their role in the National Park System.
And we were not disappointed. Back in 2022 Kurt made a similar trip, and stopped at Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve in the Flint Hills of central Kansas. During that stop...
Duration: 00:33:46National Parks Traveler Podcast | Kansas Road Trip
Oct 12, 2025Kansas is a big place, and not one particularly well-known for national park destinations. But that doesn’t mean you should overlook the Sunflower State.
In the closing days of September, as the country seemed destined for a government shutdown, the Traveler's Kurt Repanshek and Patrick Cone headed into Kansas to visit some of the parks there to better understand their role in the National Park System.
And we were not disappointed. Back in 2022 Kurt made a similar trip, and stopped at Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve in the Flint Hills of central Kansas. During that st...
Duration: 00:33:46National Parks Traveler Podcast | Historical Interpretation in the National Parks
Oct 05, 2025How do national parks develop their interpretive materials? What influences come into play when a park begins to outline its approach and the direction it takes when crafting educational materials for visitors? Is the National Park Service careful to take a truthful path when presenting history?
Those are topical questions considering the Trump administration’s efforts to rid the National Park System of interpretive materials that disparage Americans.
But political influences on park messaging are not unique to the Trump administration. Robert Pahre, a political science professor at the University of Illinois, has been studying th...
Duration: 00:54:30National Parks Traveler Podcast | Historical Interpretation in the National Parks
Oct 05, 2025How do national parks develop their interpretive materials? What influences come into play when a park begins to outline its approach and the direction it takes when crafting educational materials for visitors? Is the National Park Service careful to take a truthful path when presenting history?
Those are topical questions considering the Trump administration's efforts to rid the National Park System of interpretive materials that disparage Americans.
But political influences on park messaging are not unique to the Trump administration. Robert Pahre, a political science professor at the University of Illinois, has been studying the...
Duration: 00:54:30National Parks Traveler Podcast | Rebuilding the Appalachian Trail
Sep 28, 2025Nearly 700 volunteers, including some from as far away as Japan, descended on the Appalachian Trail in the past year in an unprecedented effort to recover a landscape forever scarred by Hurricane Helene.
The storm in September 2024 shut down 431 miles of the AT. Trees were snapped in half, piled in what looked like a bizarre game of pickup sticks. Landslides and flooding tore away trails and treadway. Bridges and crossovers were gone.
It was — and still is — a disaster of historic proportions. But it's also a story of resiliency of the land and the people who are...
Duration: 00:46:23National Parks Traveler Podcast | Disappearing Black History
Sep 21, 2025This past week unspecified interpretive materials related to slavery were either removed or tagged for removal from Harpers Ferry National Historical Park in West Virginia. It also was reported that a troubling photo known as the "Scourged Back" that depicted the scar-riddled back of an enslaved man was taken down from Fort Pulaski National Monument in Georgia.
The National Park System has been pulled into the current-day battles of wokeism of sorts through the removal of those, and likely other, interpretive materials in the parks that help us better understand enslaved history. Where it will end, or...
Duration: 00:45:28National Parks Traveler Podcast | Historic Preservation
Sep 14, 2025We can't escape history. We're born into a world full of it, and we're making it as we go from day to day. But how are we at preserving history?
There's been a lot of concern this year that the administration of President Donald Trump is altering, if not entirely trying to erase, history. But can that actually be done? The National Park Service, often called the nation's storyteller, has been interpreting history for more than a century, and some of that interpretation revolves around sites that have lost their physical structures over the decades.
...
Duration: 00:48:14National Parks Traveler Podcast | Government Shutdown Blues
Sep 07, 2025We've made it past Labor Day. Which means fall colors in some parts of the country aren't too far off, seasonal wildlife migrations are getting under way, and summertime crowds in the national park system have thinned out.
Fall is a glorious time to be out in the park system. The question right now, though, is how will the park system be functioning come October? That's a very pertinent question, because the federal government is facing a shutdown on September 30 if Congress can't come to terms on a budget for fiscal year 2026, which starts October 1.
...
Duration: 00:44:37National Parks Traveler Podcast | Bison Benefits
Aug 31, 2025Once upon a time, there were tens of millions of bison on the North American continent. Today, there are somewhere between 400,000 and 500,000. Most are in commercial herds, with a relative few in private herds and on public lands.
Should there be more bison on the continent? There potentially is space for them on places like the 550,000-acre Thunder Basin National Grassland in Wyoming, the nearly 600,000-acre Buffalo Gap National Grassland in South Dakota, and the roughly 440,000-acre Comanche National Grassland in Colorado, just to name three locations.
And a new study out this past week...
Duration: 00:46:43National Parks Traveler Podcast | Rare Phenomena in the Parks
Aug 24, 2025It's been said that the night skies are the other half of the National Park System. And it only makes sense, for when you're in a park and the sun goes down you tend to look into the night sky to spot constellations or, if you're lucky enough and in the right place, a comet overhead.
Keeping that other half of the park system in mind, today's podcast will be a somewhat dark one. Our guest is Jeff Pfaller, a fine arts photographer who spent five years capturing night skies over national parks and other public lands.<...
Duration: 00:48:11National Parks Traveler Podcast | Keeping Glacier Bay's Whales Safe
Aug 17, 2025Vessel-whale collisions are a significant concern in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve, where nutrient-rich waters support a seasonal influx of humpback whales and other marine mammals. As one of the most visited marine parks in Alaska, Glacier Bay sees a high volume of vessel traffic, including cruise ships, tour boats, and private craft.
This summer an adult humpback whale was seen with a fresh, one-foot gash behind its dorsal fin which appeared to be from contact with a boat propeller. This week the Traveler's Lynn Riddick reaches out to biologist Chris Gabriele to discuss this incident a...
Duration: 00:42:18National Parks Traveler Podcast | Nature is Nonpartisan
Aug 10, 2025Is nature nonpartisan? Earlier this year we had an interview with Dr. Caleb Scoville from Tufts University, who received an Andrew Carnegie fellowship to explore whether environmental issues are highly partisan.
It can certainly seem that here in America just about everything is partisan these days, but is nature partisan?
As another of our guests pointed out, those who enjoy going out into nature come in all political flavors. That said, our guest today is Benji Backer, the driver behind the Nature is Nonpartisan campaign to get the American public – all of us – to convince the d...
Duration: 00:55:26National Parks Traveler Podcast | El Camino Real de los Tejas
Aug 03, 2025El Camino Real de Los Tejas is a network of trails that connected Spanish missions, settlements, and military outposts from Mexico through Texas and into Louisiana. Now a national historic trail, this road played a crucial role in the Spanish colonization of the region in the late 1600s. It served as a vital route for communication, trade, and military movement.
Over time, that trail facilitated cultural exchange and interaction between Spanish settlers, indigenous peoples, and later, Anglo-American pioneers. The 2500 mile route is marked by numerous historical sites, including mission ruins, forts, and early settlements. It provides a t...
Duration: 01:01:43National Parks Traveler Podcast | Theresa Pierno
Jul 27, 2025The National Parks Conservation Association is almost as old as the National Park Service. The Service, as you probably know, was established in 1916, and NPCA came along three years later.
Through the 106-year history of NPCA, there has been only one woman who held the title of president and Chief Executive Officer. That woman is Theresa Pierno, who has worked for the park advocacy group for more than two decades, and as NPCA's CEO and president for the past ten years.
At the end of this year Theresa will step down from the organization, but...
Duration: 00:45:13National Parks Traveler Podcast | The Future of Grizzly Bears
Jul 20, 2025Grizzly bears. They define charismatic megafauna. Huge animals that draw both human admiration and fear. Once they roamed the entire country, though that was a long time ago. Today there are pockets of grizzly bear populations in the Rocky Mountains from Yellowstone to Glacier National Parks.
Among the questions that revolve around grizzly bears is how many are too many, are they a threat to humans, should they be removed from the landscape, or protected?
To explore those issues our guests today are Erin Edge and Joseph Vaile from Defenders of Wildlife, a nonprofit wildlife...
Duration: 00:44:10National Parks Traveler Podcast | Appalachian Trail Crowds
Jul 13, 2025Running nearly 2,200 miles along the spine of the Appalachian Range from Georgia to Maine, the Appalachian National Scenic Trail arguably is the world's most famous long-distance trail.
Some think it's also one that can be very crowded in spots. Morgan Sommerville, the director of visitor use management for the Appalachian Trail Conservancy, joins us today to discuss the trail in general and whether it's too crowded.
Duration: 00:50:44National Parks Traveler Podcast | Intrepid Travel
Jul 06, 2025Heading into the National Park System this summer? Going it alone, or have you booked a tour company? What do you think about how the Trump Administration and Congress are treating the National Parks and the National Park Service? Have you reported any park signs to Interior Secretary Doug Burgum that disparage Americans, dead or alive?
As you can tell there's a lot going on in the parks. Some good, some not so good, and some downright bad. It's a lot to digest, and a lot to discuss. To help us gauge a sense of wh...
Duration: 00:41:04National Parks Traveler Podcast | ATC at 100
Jun 29, 2025Anniversaries and birthdays give us time to reflect on individuals, accomplishments, and moments in history. They often refresh our memories and can serve as motivators to do something.
This year marks the 100th anniversary of the Appalachian Trail Conservancy, which was established in 1925, just two years after the first sections of the Appalachian Trail opened.
To discuss the trail, some of its history, and the challenges it faces today, our guests are Sandi Marra, CEO of the Conservancy, and Brendan Mysliwiec, the Conservancy's Director of Federal Policy.
Duration: 00:51:16National Parks Traveler Podcast | Federal Lands Fire Sale
Jun 22, 2025There are some in Congress who think we should have a fire sale on public lands. Places across national forests and the Bureau of Land Management that politicians think should be offered for sale, either to try to adopt President Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill that would continue to offer the biggest tax cuts to the wealthiest Americans and corporations or simply because they don't believe there should be public lands.
This legislation, sponsored by U.S. Senator Mike Lee of Utah, could be the most devastating public lands measure to come before Congress. If passed, it...
Duration: 00:45:09National Parks Traveler Podcast | How Wild
Jun 08, 2025Today our guest is Marissa Ortega-Welch, a San Francisco-based freelance journalist who focuses on environmental issues. Last year she generated a series of podcasts surrounding the topic of official wilderness – the history of official wilderness and the idea of wilderness. It's an interesting series that you can find by searching for How Wild wherever you download your podcasts.
Duration: 00:36:07National Parks Traveler Podcast | Plight of the Parks
Jun 01, 2025So much is happening so quickly to the National Park Service. There have been staff reductions, hiring freezes, spending freezes, orders from the Interior Secretary to make sure that visitors find national parks welcoming, no matter what it takes.
Every week seems to bring something new, and quite frankly dire to the National Park Service. Most recently we've heard about the loss of about 60 employees from the agency's Alaska regional office, and there are concerns the Trump administration is going to push through even greater reductions in force for the Park Service.
How are those m...
Duration: 00:55:45National Parks Traveler Podcast | Environmental Partisanship
May 25, 2025Is green a red and blue construct? Put another way, is there a political partisan divide over the environment?
That's a particularly interesting question, no doubt more so in recent years as the country seems to have drifted farther and farther apart because of our political beliefs. To that point, a reader reached out the other day to say our stories shouldn't be negative on the Trump Administration because the national parks are going to need the help of all of us - Democrats, Republicans, Independents, and everything in-between - to survive.
But are environmental...
Duration: 00:48:42National Parks Traveler Podcast | Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility
May 18, 2025News around public lands these days seems to revolve entirely around the Trump administration. In the case of Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility, many of the steps the administration is taking with the operational efficiencies of the National Park Service and other land management agencies certainly are keeping PEER busy.
But what exactly is PEER, and what is their mission? For as long as the National Parks Traveler has been in existence, going back 20 years, stories recounting PEER and its lawsuits against land-management agencies have appeared frequently in our coverage. To explain the nonprofit organization's role, our g...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | North American Bird Declines
May 11, 2025True birders are some of the most determined and persistent hobbyists out there. If you want to call bird watching a hobby. For many, it's more like a passion. Many look forward to "Big Day" competitions, where individuals and teams strive to see how many different bird species they can spot in a 24-hour period.
Many birders log their sightings and identifications in eBird, a smartphone application created by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and the National Audubon Society. The good news is that millions of birders use this app. The concerning news is that their bird...
Duration: 00:53:54National Parks Traveler Podcast | Walt Dabney and Public Lands
May 04, 2025It's fair to say that the nation's public lands, those managed by the National Park Service, the Bureau of Land Management, the U.S. Forest Service and other federal land-management agencies are at risk under the Trump administration.
There's no hyperbole in that statement if you pay attention to what the administration already has done in terms of downsizing those agencies' workforces, and when you listen to Interior Secretary Doug Burgum say he wants to open more public lands to energy development and mining.
Federal lands in the United States are owned by all Americans...
Duration: 00:56:35National Parks Traveler Podcast | Congressman Jared Huffman
Apr 27, 2025The first 100 days of President Donald Trump's second term might be the most tumultuous first 100 days of any president. He certainly came in prepared to move his agenda forward, no matter what barriers to it existed.
We don't usually discuss presidential politics, but President Trump has released a blizzard of executive orders and directives touching all corners of the federal government, including the National Park Service.
What we have seen so far is the loss of perhaps 2,500 Park Service employees, and along with them some crucial institutional knowledge. Any day we expect to hear of...
Duration: 00:43:18National Parks Traveler Podcast | National Park Science At Risk
Apr 20, 2025There has been much upheaval in the National Park Service this year, with firings, then rehires, and staff deciding to retire now rather than risk sticking around and being fired. There have been fears that more Park Service personnel are about to be let go through a reduction in force.
While Interior Secretary Doug Burgum has ordered the Park Service to ensure that parks are properly to support the operating hours and needs of each park unit," that message said nothing about protecting park resources.
Among all this upheaval the question that goes begging is wh...
Duration: 00:37:52National Parks Traveler Podcast | George Wright Society
Apr 06, 2025George Melendez Wright was a brilliant young scientist with the National Park Service back in the 1920s and 1930s. You could say he was ahead of his time, in that he wanted the Park Service to take a holistic role in how wildlife in the parks was managed.
While Wright tragically left the world too young when he was killed in a car crash in 1936, his name lives on today in the George Wright Society, a nonprofit organization that is focused on stewardship of parks, protected & conserved areas, cultural sites, and other kinds of place-based conservation.
<... Duration: 00:42:52National Parks Traveler Podcast | Kilauea's Unrest
Mar 30, 2025One of the greatest shows on Earth has been going on now for several months in Hawaii, where the Kīlauea volcano at Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park has been erupting since late December. The Kīlauea volcano is the most active volcano on Earth. It's also a relatively safe volcano in that it spends most of its time simmering and bubbling without any spectacularly explosive eruptions. But lately it has been putting on some incredible shows of lava fountains, with one glowing string of magma soaring about 1,000 feet in the air, a truly spectacular sight to see.
To und...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Covering the Parks
Mar 23, 2025There are more stories to be found in the National Park System than one could write in a lifetime. Or several lifetimes.
Sometimes those stories can be hard to spot. How many were aware of the factoid from Great Smoky Mountains National Park that Jennifer Bain dug up, that if you stacked up all of the park's salamanders against its roughly 1,900 black bears, the salamanders would weigh more?
Talk about national park trivia.
We're going to talk about stories in the parks today with Kim O'Connell and Rita Beamish, two long-tenured writers for...
Duration: 00:52:27National Parks Traveler Podcast | A Little Volcanic Levity
Mar 16, 2025In this week's podcast we thought we'd take a break from the unsettling news happening in and around our national parks and federal lands regarding park staff reductions and threats of reducing park boundaries to make way for mining.
Instead, the Traveler's Lynn Riddick catches up with a former scientist who's now a comedian to hear about his experiences during his artist-in-residency program at Hawaii Volcanoes National Park on the Big Island of Hawaii. Selected for the residency by the National Parks Arts Foundation, Ben Miller spent a month with park staff and scientists to absorb as mu...
Duration: 00:39:15National Parks Traveler Podcast | National Park Service Upheaval
Mar 09, 2025There is, across the country, some upheaval going on as the Trump administration works to reduce the size of the federal government. Whether you support that effort or oppose it, you can't deny there's not upheaval going on.
That upheaval has hit all federal government agencies. At the National Park Service, seasonal ranger job offers were rescinded back in January. Roughly 1,000 probationary employees were fired on Valentine's Day. Another 700-1000 Park Service employees took up the administration's offer to resign now, but stay on the payroll through the end of the fiscal year. And this week the...
Duration: 00:49:38National Parks Traveler Podcast | Threatened Lands
Mar 02, 2025Across the United States there are hundreds of millions of acres of public lands. Indeed, there are more than 500 million acres of federal lands managed by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management, the U.S. Forest Service, and the National Park Service, just to name the three largest land managers in federal government.
A majority of those lands, the 245 million acres managed by the BLM and the 193 million managed by the Forest Service, are managed for multiple use. Logging, mining, recreation, and even official wilderness. The National Park Service lands, of course, are primarily managed for...
Duration: 00:43:06National Parks Traveler Podcast | NPS Cast Aside
Feb 23, 2025It was just over a week ago, on Valentine's Day, that the Trump administration wiped 1,000 employees off the National Park Service staff without any apparent strategy other than that they were dispensable staff still on probation and so lacking any real protection for being fired without cause.
Those cuts swept across the 433 units of the National Park System, taking custodial workers, scientists, even lawyers. Today we're joined by one of the 1,000 who lost their jobs, Angela Moxley, who was just ten days shy of clearing probation when she lost her job at Harpers Ferry National Historical Park...
Duration: 00:44:23National Parks Traveler Podcast | National Parks in Crisis
Feb 16, 2025The Trump administration's determination to reduce the size of government regardless of the cost is having a hard impact on the National Park Service.
Last month the agency was forced to rescind job offers to seasonal workers, saw a hold placed on millions of dollars distributed through the Biden administration's Inflation Reduction Act to address climate change, been told to prepare a reduction-in-force list of employees, and ordered to "hire no more than one employee for every four" let go.
There was a wee bit of good news late last week, with the decision Friday to...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | The Ghost Forest
Feb 09, 2025National parks are home to many iconic trees. Bristlecones pines, Whitebark pines, Sequoias, even mangroves. And, of course, redwoods.
These trees hold many stories. The size alone of redwoods and sequoias are enough to hold your attention. But there are backstories, as well. In the case of redwoods along the Northern California coast, the backstory can be heart breaking. There are chapters of logging fever, of course, as well as of political machinations, and stories of loss.
Greg King presents the stories swirling around Redwoods in his book, The Ghost Forest: Racists, Radicals, and Real...
Duration: 00:50:55National Parks Traveler Podcast | Keeping Cape Lookout Above Water
Feb 02, 2025Rising sea levels, stronger storms, eroding shorelines, and sinking terrain are taking a toll on the fragile ecosystems and historic resources at Cape Lookout National Seashore on the Outer Banks of North Carolina. A new study by the U.S. Geological Survey takes a close look at these threats and predicts how they will impact the national seashore over the coming years.
Climate change impacts are happening across the country, reaching into most, if not all, units of the National Park System. Sea level rise is particularly concerning because you just can't up and move a park, an...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Parks Under Pressure
Jan 26, 2025Here we are, a week into the second administration of President Donald Trump. It's certainly a time of change, some of which is expected, and some perhaps not. Do we really need to rename North America's tallest mountain, Denali in Denali National Park and Preserve?
There is much going on in the federal government, and not all is good. Hiring freezes are underway. There's much talk about reducing the federal budget, which requires cutting agency funding.
To try to gain some clarity on what's beginning to go on and what impacts it might have on t...
Duration: 00:49:44National Parks Traveler Podcast | Yellowstone Wolves at 30
Jan 12, 2025There are sounds that wake you up out of a deep sleep, only to be dismissed as you fall back to sleep. And then there are sounds that rivet you, make you sit bolt upright.
That was the type of sound that woke us while we were deep in the backcountry of Yellowstone National Park. Sunrise hadn't yet come, yet we were wide awake, listening to one of the most mesmerizing sounds you can encounter in the wilds: The melodious rising and falling howl of a wolf.
It was late summer in 2008 when two friends...
Duration: 00:43:11National Parks Traveler Podcast | Threatened and Endangered Parks
Jan 05, 2025We're five days into 2025, and already there's a lot of news concerning national parks and the National Park Service. Traveler Editor-in-Chief Kurt Repanshek is joined today by Contributing Editor Kim O'Connell to discuss the Traveler's 4th Annual Threatened and Endangered Park Series and other recent park-related news.
Duration: 00:50:17National Parks Traveler Podcast | A Walk in the Park
Dec 29, 2024Many of us like to take a walk in our favorite national park, whether it's a short stroll down one of the boardwalks at Yellowstone National Park, the hike to the top of Old Rag at Shenandoah National Park, or up the Mist Trail at Yosemite National Park, we like to get out and experience parks up close.
As you might imagine, there are walks in the National Park System, and then there are walks. Kevin Fedarko and his photographic sidekick Pete McBride took one of those "other" hikes in Grand Canyon National Park. And it didn't...
Duration: 01:07:47National Parks Traveler Podcast | Introducing St. Croix National Scenic Riverway
Dec 22, 2024There are across the country more than 430 units of the National Park System. And no doubt, most of us are only familiar with the so-called name brand parks. Places like Shenandoah, Acadia, Everglades, Yellowstone, Yosemite, the Grand Canyon… But just because you're not already familiar with a park unit doesn't mean you should write it off your to-do list.
While I am familiar with the names of most park units due to my day job, I haven't had the chance to visit them all just yet. Being a lover of water and paddling, when I consider going fo...
Duration: 00:45:05National Parks Traveler Podcast | The Elephant Seals of Point Reyes
Dec 15, 2024Elephant seals are not your small, cuddly marine mammals. They are behemoths. Males, known as bulls, can reach 5,000 pounds, while females, known as cows, routinely clock in at around 1,000 pounds or so.
If you're a wildlife watcher, now is the time to check elephant seals off your life list. Between December and March, they come en masse to Point Reyes National Seashore in California to give birth and mate again. But they don't come ashore to simply laze about and soak up the sun when it's shining. Males are building their harems much like bull elk do, a...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Into the Thaw
Dec 08, 2024Most, if not all of us, have bucket lists. Places we want to visit…but don't always get the opportunity.
This is Kurt Repanshek, your host at the National Parks Traveler. One of the destinations on my bucket list is Gates of Arctic National Park and Preserve and the Noatak River that runs through it. A week or two floating the river sounds pretty ideal to me.
While it's debatable whether I'll cross that off my bucket list remains to be seen, today's guest has floated the river more than once and backpacked all over Gate...
National Parks Traveler Podcast Episode 303 | Change Happens
Dec 01, 2024Change happens…and sometimes it doesn't.
Change certainly is underway in Washington, where the incoming Trump administration is putting its players in position with promises of changing, or maybe upsetting, the status quo.
Against that, the National Park Service continues to face long-standing problems with not enough staff or funding, compounded by National Park System damage from hurricanes, tornadoes, sea level rise, wildfires, just about everything under the sun.
We're going to explore those topics today with Phil Francis from the Coalition to Protect America's National Parks and John Garder and Chad Lord from t...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Omnibus Lands Bill
Nov 24, 2024As the calendar runs down on the current session of Congress, there are a number of pieces of legislation that would involve or possibly impact the National Park System if they find their way into an omnibus lands bill that gains passage before the session adjourns.
While we haven't seen exactly what might find their way into an omnibus lands bill, among the candidates are legislation that would turn Chiricahua National Monument into a national park, one that would create a "designated operating partner" to oversee the Appalachian National Scenic Trail, and another that calls for a B...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Red-Cockaded Woodpecker--A Decision Too Soon?
Nov 17, 2024The vulnerable red-cockaded woodpecker is known to be found in national park units throughout the southeast. Big Cypress National Preserve and Everglades National Park in Florida, Cumberland Island National Seashore in Georgia, and Great Smoky Mountains National Park in Tennessee are just a few of the parks that either are, or once were, home to the woodpecker.
Recently the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service moved to downlist the red-cockaded woodpecker from being an endangered species to being threatened. While that normally would be welcome news, the decision has been criticized as being premature and ignorant of c...
Duration: 00:42:29National Parks Traveler Podcast | Wildlife at Play
Nov 10, 2024Humans like to play, right? We play cards, we play baseball and basketball, we go fishing or take a hike into the mountains. It's our play time, time to recharge, refocus, relax.
Did you know animals like to play, too? And many times, our playgrounds infringe on wildlife habitat. But how does that affect their behavior? Does it affect their behavior? Today's guest, Dr. Joel Berger, a wildlife biologist based at Colorado State University but who considers the world's wild places as his playground, joins us today to talk about our human recreation and the impacts it h...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Essential Coverage
Nov 03, 2024Whether this is your first listen of our weekly podcast or number 299, welcome and thank you for listening. We hope you find these episodes interesting and present information or a side to the parks that you previously didn't know about.
Frankly, that's the approach that we try to take at the Traveler. Not only to provide newsworthy information, such as National Park Service funding for hurricane impacts, but also to highlight aspects of the National Park System that you may not have been aware of.
For example, take Jennifer Bain's story from Oregon Cave National...
Duration: 00:46:35National Parks Traveler Podcast | 4 Women, 4 Kidneys, 444 Miles, 4 Days
Oct 27, 2024The Natchez Trace Parkway is a scenic byway that rolls 440 miles through Mississippi, Alabama and Tennessee. A unit of the National Park Service, the trace winds its way through lush landscapes, diverse ecosystems and interesting historical sites.
Originally the trace was a foot path for Native Americans and later used by early pioneers and traders. Today it's popular for motorists, cyclists and others seeking adventure, tranquility and a peek into America's past.
Most recently, it was the chosen location for a remarkable initiative by four women interested in promoting living kidney donations. All living kidney donor...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Trail of the Lost
Oct 20, 2024The National Trail System in the United States spans many thousands of miles of foot trail. The crown jewels of that system, of course, are the Appalachian National Scenic Trail, the Continental Divide Trail, and the Pacific Crest Trail.
While the adventurous might look at those long trails and set their sights on hiking one end from end, not all manage to complete the journey. Many become disillusioned after days spent hiking in the rain, or because they become homesick, or because of the blisters that sprout on their feet.
And some simply vanish. Today...
Duration: 00:42:58National Parks Traveler Podcast | Crime Off The Grid
Oct 13, 2024Crime happens, even in national parks, national forests, and other public lands. There are murders, thefts, robberies and all sorts of crime that we'd hope to escape by heading into the kingdom of public lands.
It can be hard to accept that national parks are not immune from criminals and crimes. Just this past Fourth of July there was a horrific incident in Yellowstone National Park when a concessions employees armed with an automatic rifle threatened to go on a killing spree. Law enforcement rangers who responded prevented that from happening, killing the man in the process, b...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | The Aftermath of Tropical Storm Helene
Oct 06, 2024Who could have predicted that Hurricane Helene would carry her fury from the Gulf of Mexico and the coast of Florida hundreds of miles north into Appalachia? While there were forecasts calling for the hurricane to be downgraded to a tropical storm and drop quite a bit of rain in the region, the extent of damage in western North Carolina has been breathtaking.
Jacqueline Harp had her hands full when she took over as CEO of Smokies Life, a nonprofit organization that works with the National Park Service to develop educational and interpretive materials for Great Smoky...
Duration: 00:40:32National Parks Traveler Podcast | Rodanthe Beach Cleanup
Sep 29, 2024The coastal town of Rodanthe, North Carolina is just a small spot on the map, but it's a big place in the hearts of the people who live, own property, and vacation there. Located along Cape Hatteras National Seashore, Rodanthe has been in the national spotlight because of a succession of houses that have fallen into the Atlantic Ocean due to beach erosion. There have been ten houses affected in the past four years, and five this year alone.
As the Traveler and other national media outlets have reported, every time a beach house succumbs to the s...
Duration: 00:20:10National Parks Traveler Podcast | POWDR in Zion
Sep 22, 2024Concessions are the backbone of the National Park System. True, the National Park Service manages the parks and the wildlife and the visitors, but the concessionaires provide you with a bed, or campsite, to sleep in, restaurants to dine in, and gift shops to browse in.
Xanterra Parks and Resorts is one of the key players in the national park concessions industry. They operate lodges in Yellowstone, Crater Lake, Death Valley, Glacier, Grand Canyon and, until the end of this year, Zion National Park.
A newcomer on the park concessions scene is POWDR Corp., a...
Duration: 00:43:53National Parks Traveler Podcast | Voyageurs Wolf Project
Sep 15, 2024The National Park System is an incredible reservoir of wildlife, from charismatic animals such as grizzly bears, bison and wolves, to animals such as moose, and pronghorn and sea turtles that, while not usually labeled as charismatic, are indeed just that.
Wolves certainly fall under the charismatic megafauna classification. They're majestic and mystifying, and perhaps even lend some romanticism to your backcountry adventures if you are lucky enough to hear a pack howling in chorus after sundown.
While it's well-known that Yellowstone National Park and Isle Royale National Park have wolf populations, you might not kno...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Campaign for the Parks
Sep 08, 2024It was back in 1967 when the Congress chartered the National Park Foundation to serve as the official charity of the National Park Service, and over the decades it has raised millions of dollars for the parks.
The Foundation is in the midst of its Campaign for National Parks, a billion-dollar campaign that has already raised $815 million. A big chunk of that total came from a recent $100 million grant that greatly moved the foundation closer to its billion-dollar goal.
To discuss the campaign, how the money is raised and where it's being spent, we're joined today by...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Miserable Mammoth Cave
Sep 01, 2024Have you ever been to Mammoth Cave National Park? It's really not that impressive, is it. Sure, it's more than 425 miles long, but only about 10 miles are open to the public.
Mammoth Cave is indeed a big, dark hole in the ground. And apparently there are a fair number of visitors to the national park in Kentucky who are not impressed with the cave and its underground artworks created by dripstones, stalactites, and stalagmites. In fact, a recent survey ranked Mammoth Cave as the third-most disappointing destination in America.
Really? To get the park's response...
Duration: 00:50:33National Parks Traveler Podcast | Climate Change Impacts on Acadia
Aug 25, 2024From Maine to Florida, coastal units of the National Park System are being impacted in various ways by the changing climate. Some of the impacts affect wildlife, some natural resources, and some the human populations who either live in or come to visit these beautiful areas.
At the National Parks Traveler. We've been working on a series of stories looking at these changes that are showing up.
In recent shows we've discussed impacts to manatees that live in the waters of Everglades and Biscayne national parks as well as Cumberland Island National Seashore, and how...
Duration: 00:41:08National Parks Traveler Podcast | Lassen Peak's Volcanics
Aug 18, 2024When you hear the word volcano, where in the world do you think of? Mount Vesuvious in Italy? Mount Fuji in Japan? Maybe Cotopaxi in Ecuador? Do you ever think of Lassen Peak?
The National Park System is full of volcanoes. Some active, some dormant, some extinct. They all have fascinating stories to tell.
There was a series of eruptions of Lassen Peak in Northern California between 1914 and 1917, with the 1915 eruption largely playing a role in the establishment of Lassen Volcanic National Park.
Today we're going to be discussing Lassen Peak and its volc...
Duration: 00:54:09National Parks Traveler Podcast | Great American Outdoors Act Reauthorization
Aug 11, 2024It's hard to believe, but it's been four years since Congress passed the Great American Outdoors Act and President Trump signed it into law. Under that legislation, the National Park Service has been receiving $1.3 billion a year to pay for tackling the National Park System's maintenance backlog.
When the Great American Outdoors Act was passed, it was given a five-year life. That means it will have to be reauthorized next year to keep the program going. It's had wide-ranging impacts, paying for things like roadwork on the Blue Ridge Parkway, new bridges at Yellowstone National Park, improved...
Duration: 00:52:25National Parks Traveler Podcast | Save the Manatee
Aug 04, 2024Manatees are some of the most unusual looking wildlife creatures that you'll find in coastal units of the National Park System, places like Everglades National Park, Biscayne National Park and Cumberland Island National Seashore.
They are huge – the largest on record reportedly tipped the scales at 3500 pounds and was 13 feet long – and rather bulbous looking.
But manatees are also an endangered species under the Endangered Species Act. There are many threats to manatees along the Southeastern coastline of the United States, from power boaters to shrinking shorelines, and even climate change impacts.
To learn mor...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Grizzly Confidential
Jul 28, 2024What is it about grizzly bears that intrigues us, or scares us? They are magnificent apex predators that long have been vilified by some while admired by others.
Enter the National Park System and you often will find yourself in a landscape with bears. In the East you'll find black bears in Great Smoky Mountains, Shenandoah, and Acadia national parks, just to name three destinations with the bruins.
Head west and many parks have black bears roaming the countryside, with a few parks also being home to grizzlies.
In today's show we're going to be talking...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Investigating Recreation.gov
Jul 21, 2024One of the most troublesome aspects of heading out into national parks, national forests, and other federal lands for camping, paddling, or climbing – as well as many other recreational pursuits – is the rising tide of fees to do so.
There are reservation fees, cancellation fees, fees to change the date of your trip, even fees to gain a priority position to pay a fee for a permit.
Are these fees, generated through your use of the recreation.gov website that handles most, if not all, of the transactions, reasonable? It's a question the Traveler has follow...
Duration: 00:47:33National Parks Traveler Podcast | Coastal Climate Change Impacts
Jul 14, 2024Along 1,600 miles of the Eastern Seaboard, from Maine to Florida, sea level rise, subsidence, and more potent storms are challenging the National Park Service to figure out how best to protect wildlife and their habitats, as well as historic structures, archaeological sites, modern infrastructure, landscapes, and, of course, visitors.
In the coming months, the National Parks Traveler will be examining impacts tied to climate change and how the National Park Service is responding to them. We'll bring you the concerns of residents and communities that are left with the damage from hurricanes and the loss of tax revenues...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Reporting from Cape Hatteras
Jul 07, 2024There is never a shortage of stories to follow across the National Park System, whether you're in the West at Olympic National Park, the Northeast at Acadia National Park, or the Southwest at Grand Canyon National Park.
This week, Contributing Editor Kim O'Connell is down in North Carolina to spend a few days at Cape Hatteras National Seashore, which has no shortage of news to report on, whether it's leatherback sea turtles nesting, the restoration of Cape Hatteras Light, or the collapse of houses into the Atlantic Ocean at Rodanthe.
Kim is working on a n...
Duration: 00:40:43National Parks Traveler Podcast | Alaska's Stained Rivers
Jun 30, 2024In the remote wilderness of the Brooks Mountain Range in Alaska, where untamed rivers wind through vast expanses of tundra and towering mountains, a peculiar and alarming phenomenon is taking place. Since 2017 at least 75 pristine waterways, which once shimmered with crystalline clarity, have taken on a haunting hue of orange and now contain very concerning toxic metals and minerals.
As speculation gives way to investigation, a team of researchers has been looking at the region's rapidly thawing permafrost—a phenomenon they suspect may hold the key to unraveling this disturbing transformation.
This week the Traveler's Lyn...
Duration: 00:49:41National Parks Traveler Podcast | State of Grand Teton National Park
Jun 23, 2024Have you ever wanted to scratch beneath the surface of a national park and gain a better understanding of the issues the National Park Service is challenged with? Or to see what research is being conducted, or understand what goals are being chased?
The staff at Grand Teton National Park just released their 2024 Grand Glimpse of the Park and the many issues and challenges park staff, and even visitors, face. To dive into that report, we're joined by Grand Teton National Park Superintendent Chip Jenkins.
Duration: 00:50:31National Parks Traveler Podcast | Managing Yellowstone Bison
Jun 16, 2024As the National Mammal and a symbol closely tied to the National Park Service and the national parks, bison are highly revered in the United States. But that doesn't mean they're free of controversy.
Recently the staff at Yellowstone National Park released the Final Environmental Impact Statement on a bison management plan for the park. The preferred alternative in that plan calls for a bison herd ranging in number between "about 3,500 to 6,000 animals after calving." It also calls for a continuation of the transfer of bison to tribal lands via the Bison Conservation Transfer Program, and continuation...
Duration: 00:41:10National Parks Traveler Podcast | Letters from the Smokies
Jun 09, 2024There is so much rich history across the National Park System, from chapters of the Revolutionary War held in parks in the eastern half of the country to stories from the gold rush that stampeded through Alaska during the late 1890s.
This is Kurt Repanshek, your host at The National Parks Traveler. I've always been fascinated with history. And when you look at parks in the eastern half of the country, the reservoir is so much deeper than in the western half if only for the reason that more was written down.
Michael Aday has a...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Parks as Founts of Wildlife
Jun 02, 2024Recently I read "The Wolverine Way", by Douglas Chadwick. It's a book from 2012 that really dives into the lives of wolverines, a small mammal with a cantankerous reputation that the US Fish and Wildlife Service late last year announced would be a threatened species. The book is a fascinating biography, if you will, of wolverines. Chadwick has an engaging writing style and Glacier National Park provides a fascinating backdrop for the story, two things that keep the story flowing.
One thing that he mentions that struck me is how important Glacier National Park is for the wolverines survival. H...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Underwater Photography with the Submerged Resources Center
May 26, 2024Did you know that there are some five and a half million acres of our National Parks that are underwater? There are sunken ships and aircraft. There are remnants of industry and mining. There are coral reefs and underwater caverns.
The Submerged Resources Center of the National Park Service is where these water resources are explored and documented. Underwater photography is crucial in the understanding of what lies beneath the surface, and images taken by the SRC Staff are essential not only for mapping and documenting, but to help the parks address issues and solve problems.
This w...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Traveler's Summer Outlook
May 19, 2024Summer is almost here. The upcoming Memorial Day weekend is the official kickoff to the summer travel season, and I'm happy to say that the National Parks Traveler will be continuing to bring you news about the parks and how you can enjoy them.
As much as Editor-in-Chief Kurt Repanshek was looking forward to retiring, listener and reader support has enabled the news organization to continue on with its editorially independent coverage of National Parks and protected areas.
Kurt and Lynn will be discussing this good news this week, as well as exploring some of th...
Duration: 00:51:16National Parks Traveler Podcast | NPS Budgetary Blues
May 12, 2024With the summer vacation season not too far off, no doubt many National Park Service Superintendents are trying to figure out how to manage the crowds and avoid impacts to natural resources in the park system.
With Memorial Day weekend just two weeks away, and Congress in its usual battles over how to fund the federal government, we wanted to take a look at how the funding situation looks for the Park Service. To help understand the financial setting across the National Park System, we've asked Phil Francis, from the Coalition to Protect America's National Parks to provide s...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Smokies Life
May 10, 2024Smokies Life, which most of you who closely follow Great Smoky Mountains National Park know was previously known as the Great Smoky Mountains Association, produces educational and informational materials for Great Smoky Mountains National Park. This week we're joined by Laurel Rematore, the chief executive officer of Smokies Life, to discuss the name change as well as how her organization lends a big hand to the Park Service staff at Great Smoky.
Duration: 00:42:36National Parks Traveler Podcast | Fossilized Parks
Apr 28, 2024Have you ever closely inspected the landscape when you're touring the National Park System, particularly in the West? You never know what you might find.
Back in 2010 a 7-year-old attending a Junior Ranger program at Badlands National Park spied a partially exposed fossil that turned out to be the skull of a 32-million-year-old saber-toothed cat.
If you've ever visited Petrified Forest National Park you've no doubt marveled over the colorful fossilized tree trunks. There are also fossilized trees on the northern range of Yellowstone National Park, but nowhere near as colorful.
For this w...
Duration: 00:49:35National Parks Traveler Podcast | Wolverine Recovery in Colorado
Apr 21, 2024Wolverines, the largest land-dwelling members of the weasel family, once roamed across the northern tier of the United States, and as far south as New Mexico in the Rockies and southern California in the Sierra Nevada range. But after more than a century of trapping and habitat loss, wolverines in the lower 48 today exist only as small, fragmented populations in Idaho, Montana, Washington, Wyoming, and northeast Oregon.
However, there's soon to be an effort in Colorado to help the carnivores recover in that state. The Colorado legislature has been considering legislation calling for the Colorado Parks and Wildlife A...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Cultural Resource Challenge
Apr 14, 2024Spur a discussion about traveling to a national park for a vacation and odds are that it will revolve around getting out into nature, looking for wildlife, perhaps honing your photography skills, or marveling at incredible vistas.
Will the discussion include destinations that portray aspects of the country's history, or cultural melting pot?
Equating national parks with nature is obvious, but making a similar connection with history and culture might not be so obvious. And maybe that lack of appreciation for America's culture and history explains why the National Park Service has been struggling with p...
Duration: 00:42:15National Parks Traveler Podcast | Total Solar Eclipse of the Parks
Apr 07, 2024Tens of millions of people in the United States will be able to witness a Total Solar Eclipse on Monday as the rare astronomical event cuts a path from Texas to Maine, up to 122 miles wide in some spots. This is a great opportunity to see the exact moment when the moon fully blocks the sun, creating a blazing corona visible to those observing from the center line of totality.
There are a number of national park units within the eclipse path that runs from Texas to Maine that offer good vantage points to view the eclipse. An...
Duration: 00:46:29National Parks Traveler Podcast | Music Inspired by the Parks
Mar 31, 2024With March madness down to the Sweet 16, and Opening Day of Major League Baseball having arrived, we're going to take a break this week and dive into our podcast archives for this week's show.
This is Kurt Repanshek, your host at the National Parks Traveler. My NCAA bracket was busted the very first day, and while the Yankees won their opening day game against the Houston Astros, I don't think they'll go undefeated this year.
While I ponder the sports world, we're going to let Lynn Riddick reprise her interviews with National Park Radio and th...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Padre Island's Sea Turtles
Mar 24, 2024One of the most popular public events in the National Park System was the release of sea turtle hatchlings, shuffling off into the Gulf of Mexico at Padre Island National Seashore. I say was, because the number of those public events has been drastically scaled back in recent years.
The programs featuring the release of Kemp's ridley sea turtle hatchlings at Padre Island offered young and old a crash course in conservation of a species that has narrowly avoided extinction, and remains highly endangered. In 2019, before the COVID 19 pandemic shuttered the public hatchling releases at Padre Island, a...
Duration: 00:45:41National Parks Traveler Podcast | Polluting the Parks
Mar 17, 2024Air pollution and climate change impacts can have outsized effects on the National Park System, as well as lesser noticed but just as concerning effects. But are those impacts spread across the entire park system, or clustered around a few?
Back in 2019 the National Parks Conservation Association looked at how air pollution and climate change were impacting parks. They have updated that study with the latest data from the National Park Service, and the current state of affairs remains concerning.
To discuss NPCA's findings, we've asked Ulla Reeves, the interim director of NPCA's Clean Air...
Duration: 00:42:17National Parks Traveler Podcast | State of the Parks 2024
Mar 10, 2024While most visitors to the National Park System view the parks as incredibly beautiful places, or places rich in culture and history, there's a lot that goes on behind the scenes within the parks, and with the National Parks Service.
Traveler editor Kurt Repanshek has closely followed the parks and the Park Service for more than 18 years. Over that timespan, he's seen a lot of changes in the parks, and the agency itself. In today's show we are going to offer a sort of "State of the Parks" with you. After all, as much as you enjoy t...
Duration: 00:47:50National Parks Traveler Podcast | National Park Guidebooks
Mar 03, 2024With nearly 430 units in the National Park System, of which 63 are National Parks, we all probably could use a little help in planning our adventures into the park system. But do you simply visit a park's website to plan your trip? Find an online guidebook? Buy a hardcover guidebook? Or simply wing it when you reach your destination?
This is Kurt Repanshek, your host at the National Parks Traveler. I must confess, I've taken all three approaches, and I've even written a guidebook to the parks, and there's probably a fair amount of guidebook material on the...
Duration: 00:47:05National Parks Traveler Podcast | Staying Safe At Hawai'i Volcanoes
Feb 25, 2024Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park is such a unique destination in the National Park System. Located on the Big Island, it's surrounded by the Pacific Ocean, it has rainforests, and it boasts two active volcanoes in Mauna Loa and Kilauea.
A visit to Hawai'i Volcanoes comes with a number of options. Do you simply hope to catch an eruption of Kilauea and head somewhere else in Hawaii, do you explore the backcountry with its more than 160 miles of trails, or you try to soak in the Hawaiian culture?
Hopefully you'll do all of that and more, be...
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Vanishing Treasures
Feb 18, 2024From the Rocky Mountains to the West Coast and up to Alaska, there are thousands of historic structures and archaeological sites on National Park System landscapes. They range in variety from homesteader cabins to pre-historic cave dwellings.
Taking care of these buildings and archaeological sites is a valuable job for the National Park Service, as they speak to the country's history and its prehistory. But it hasn't always been easy for the agency's Vanishing Treasures program, which was created in 1998. At times administrations have proposed funding cuts for the program, and there's also the issue of too...
Duration: 00:48:32National Parks Traveler Podcast | Coming to the Aid of Giant Sequoias
Feb 11, 2024Stand before a giant sequoia tree in Sequoia or Kings Canyon national parks or nearby Yosemite National Park and you're overwhelmed by their size, and assume they're impervious to anything that might be thrown at them. But as we learned from wildfires in 2020 and 2021 in Sequoia and Kings Canyon national parks, that's not the case.
The Castle Fire in 2020 and then the KNP Complex and Windy fires in 2021 that burned through the two parks destroyed thousands of giant sequoia trees. Estimates put the losses at more than 14,000 mature trees, or roughly 13-19 percent of the world's giant...
Duration: 00:52:11National Parks Traveler Podcast | California Mountain Lions
Feb 04, 2024Mountain lions are an incredibly charismatic animal on landscapes within, and adjacent to, the National Park System. But they're seldom seen because of their nocturnal tendencies.
There recently was a new report that focused on a comprehensive estimate of mountain lions in California, and the number is much smaller than many had thought it was.
To discuss California's mountain lion population, and efforts to protect that population, our guest today is Dr. Veronica Yovovich, conservation scientist at Panthera, the global wild cat conservation organization.
National Parks Traveler Podcast | Manassas Battlefield Threats
Jan 28, 2024Manassas National Battlefield Park in Virginia protects one of the defining battlefields of the Civil War. It was there that the first battle of the war was waged, in 1861, it was the scene of a second battle a year later, and it was where Confederate General Thomas Jonathan Jackson got his Stonewall nickname.
Despite the significance of Manassas, the Prince William County supervisors in December agreed to rezone 2,100 acres adjacent to the battlefield to allow for the world's largest data processing center to be built there. A lawsuit recently was filed in a bid to stop the...
Duration: 00:46:00