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Nerdy About Nature

Nerdy About Nature

Nerdy About Nature is a passion project that creates fun, educational content with the aim of inspiring folks to engage with the outdoor world, to fall in love with it, and to advocate on it's behalf so that we can create a more inclusive, diverse, equitable, and just future for us all. This series of 'Podchats' with different folks with different perspectives aims to get you thinking differently about the world we all share so that you can enjoy your time amongst it more. Visit NerdyAboutNature.com or @NerdyAboutNature on social media for more videos & ways to support this project. Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support

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Undercurrents | 2.20.24 - Changing Ocean Currents & Temps, Herbarium Shut Downs, Forest Composure & Droughts, and OGMAs

Undercurrents is a podcast series from Nerdy About Nature where we discuss recent studies, reports and news from the world of environment, ecology and climate which all impact our understanding of the world and the way we relate to it.  In other words, it?s all the unseen things that happen without much notice that impact the direction or flow of our society and the world we all share.

This episodes topics:

Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation Collapse

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2024/feb/09/atlantic-ocean-circulation-nearing-devastating-tipping-point-study-finds

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2416631-atlantic-current-shutdown-is-a-real-danger-suggests-simulation/

Global Ocean Temps

https://www.wired.com/story/ocean-temperatures-keep-shattering-records-and-stunning-scientists/

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2416231-hottest-january-on-record-sees-the-world-reach-1-7c-warming-mark/

Closure of Duke University herbarium

https://www.science.org/content/article/tragic-mistake-decision-close-duke-university-s-herbarium-triggers-furor

Forest composition affects drought resistance

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41561-024-01374-9

OGMA?s not actually Old Growth

https://www.todayinbc.com/news/less-than-13-of-bcs-old-growth-management-areas-are-old-growth-watchdog-7312857

"Old growth" antarctic moss beds as biological archives

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9826052/

Produced by Ross Reid

Hosted by Ross Reid & Julia Huggins

Nerdy About Nature is a passion project whose primary goal is to provide free access for all to education about this world so that people can enjoy it more, build connection and fall in love with it, and ultimately work in ways to steward it for future generations to enjoy.  We do this through short and long form videos all over social media @NerdyAboutNature, as well as this podcast you?re listening to now, and it?s all made possible thanks to support from folks like yourself.  If you?re enjoying the content we?re creating, you can help keep it going by supporting us at ??patreon.com/nerdyaboutnature??, or at ??nerdyaboutnature.com??

Natures pretty neat, ya know - let?s keep it that way!

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2024-02-20
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Thought Snacks | What is a Bioregion, and why do they matter?

What the heck is a bioregion, what does that mean and why does it matter? Well, I?ll tell ya, because thinking bioregionally is a key component of recognizing the ground underneath your feet and the role it plays in the broader systems of earth to create a better future for us all. A bioregion is an area of land that is defined by physical properties or boundaries like coastline and mountain ranges that contain a similar mix of biota, or plant and animal species throughout, and interdependent hydrological patterns of flow that unites the region. No matter where on this planet you live, you are part of a bioregion, and what happens in one part of the world has literal trickle down impacts to another, and beyond into the oceans that unite all these different bioregions. Everything is interconnected beyond our myopic, linear way of human-thinking, and once you?re able to see this, it affects your values and thus the choices you make. From big to small, every choice we make and actions we take impacts those around us, and thinking bioregionally allows one to realize that many of the issues we talk about in silos are not limited to one little region or community, that they have bigger cross-border implications that impact the quality of lives we all live. Thinking at a bioregional scale helps contain and quantify the impact one has as a stepping stone to thinking about our global impact. It put our actions into perspective so that we can make changes that when compounded, really can make a difference. Support people and businesses in your bioregion that operate with the health of both their and your communities in mind, take action against developments that threaten the interconnections you rely on, and let?s work to break down those arbitrary lines of division to realize that at the end of the day, we?re all in this together.

Like this vid? Support Nerdy About Nature on Patreon to make more engaging videos like this possible! ?|| SUPPORT THESE VIDEO PODCASTS ||?

Follow elsewhere Nerdy About Nature for more engaging fun-facts to make your next jaunt into the outdoors more rad! || ?YouTube ?|| ?Instagram? || ?TikTok

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2024-02-13
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Podchat 23 | Geomorphology of the Cascadian Bioregion w/ Pierre Friele - IE, how our land was formed

Do you ever stop to think about the dirt under your feet, or in this case the rock, and wonder how it got there? Well the answer is...complicated, but basically billions of years of intense geological and mechanical processes from erosion to volcanism and everything in between.

In this episode, I sit down with Pierre Freile, an award-winning geoscientist based in Squamish BC to chat all about how the landscape of North America and the Cascadian Bioregion in particular were formed, from the macro-scale actions of continents moving and colliding with one another, to the localized impacts of landslides that took place thousands of years ago, and rockfalls in our neighbourhoods just a few years ago.

This one may be a doozy of an information blast, but I promise you it's worth it, and it will give you a profound appreciation for the lands on which we live, and the forces that shaped them into what they are. Buckle up tight and hang on for the ride, cuz it ain't over yet!

Each episode of Nerdy About Nature makes a donation to a non-profit of the guests choosing using funds from Patreon supporters, and in this episode Pierre decided to send his donation to ?The Dogwood Society!

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you.  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, help me keep making them by joining the Patreon family for 1$ a month or more! - ?https://www.patreon.com/nerdyaboutnature?

Got Questions?  Want Stickers?  Want community?  Wanna engage?  Do it all as a Patreon member, it?s easy!

You can also make a one-time donation, get NAN merch, resources and more information at ?www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2024-02-06
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Undercurrents | 1.30.24 - Saving Bats, Plants Having Less Sex, How Tardigrades Survive, and an Incredibly Hot Planet

Undercurrents is a podcast series from Nerdy About Nature where we discuss recent studies, reports and news from the world of environment, ecology and climate which all impact our understanding of the world and the way we relate to it.  In other words, it?s all the unseen things that happen without much notice that impact the direction or flow of our society and the world we all share.

This episodes topics:

Saving Bats -

https://thenarwhal.ca/endangered-bats-fake-old-growth-trees/

Plants Evolving to have Less Sex -

https://nph.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/nph.19422

How Moss Piglets survive -

https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0295062
https://www.newscientist.com/article/2412569-we-finally-know-how-tardigrades-can-survive-extreme-conditions/

https://climate.copernicus.eu/copernicus-2023-hottest-year-record

Produced by Ross Reid

Hosted by Ross Reid & Julia Huggins

Nerdy About Nature is a passion project whose primary goal is to provide free access for all to education about this world so that people can enjoy it more, build connection and fall in love with it, and ultimately work in ways to steward it for future generations to enjoy.  We do this through short and long form videos all over social media @NerdyAboutNature, as well as this podcast you?re listening to now, and it?s all made possible thanks to support from folks like yourself.  If you?re enjoying the content we?re creating, you can help keep it going by supporting us at ?patreon.com/nerdyaboutnature?, or at ?nerdyaboutnature.com?

Natures pretty neat, ya know - let?s keep it that way!

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2024-01-30
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Undercurrents | 1.18.24 - Antarctic heatwaves, deep sea mining, dying matriarchs, and forest restoration, destruction and fire resilience.

Undercurrents is a podcast series from Nerdy About Nature where we discuss recent studies, reports and news from the world of environment, ecology and climate which all impact our understanding of the world and the way we relate to it.  In other words, it?s all the unseen things that happen without much notice that impact the direction or flow of our society and the world we all share.

This episodes topics:

Norway Seabed Exploration:

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-00088-7

https://doi.org/10.1017/S0030605320000277

Forest Restoration in WA:

?https://conbio.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/csp2.13004

Orca Matriarch Death:

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/bc-biggs-killer-whale-wake-presumed-dead-1.7074033

- Citzen Science for Whale ID: https://happywhale.com/

Lack of Oldgrowth in ON & QC affecting Caribou: https://www.mdpi.com/2073-445X/13/1/6

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/01/04/world/canada/canada-boreal-forest-logging.html

Lack of Oldgrowth left in QC:

https://www.nationalobserver.com/2024/01/10/news/push-protect-rare-old-growth-forests

Antarctic Heatwave and Atmospheric River:

https://journals.ametsoc.org/view/journals/clim/37/3/JCLI-D-23-0175.1.xml

Forest Fire Resilience in CA:

https://forests.berkeley.edu/sites/forests.berkeley.edu/files/The%20Fire%20and%20Fire%20Surrogate%20Study%20Summary_2.pdf

Produced by Ross Reid

Hosted by Ross Reid & Julia Huggins

Nerdy About Nature is a passion project whose primary goal is to provide free access for all to education about this world so that people can enjoy it more, build connection and fall in love with it, and ultimately work in ways to steward it for future generations to enjoy.  We do this through short and long form videos all over social media @NerdyAboutNature, as well as this podcast you?re listening to now, and it?s all made possible thanks to support from folks like yourself.  If you?re enjoying the content we?re creating, you can help keep it going by supporting us at patreon.com/nerdyaboutnature, or at nerdyaboutnature.com

Natures pretty neat, ya know - let?s keep it that way!

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2024-01-18
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Undercurrents | New Series Introduction

The first introduction episode to a new podcast series I'm starting here called 'Undercurrents'

Every couple of weeks, I'll be connecting with Julia Huggins (PHD, huge nerd) where we'll share interesting articles, studies, and news from the world of environmental science, ecology, climate, and everything in between!

The goal here is to be able to provide you all with more consistent, steady educational content to keep you up to date with the science and happenings of today, because as our understanding of the world around us changes, our relationship to it changes. This series is all about the subtle, unseen but often felt shifts in the undercurrent of our society that influences the direction we all flow.

Looking forward to releasing the first episode in just a couple of days, so stay tuned!

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you.  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, help me keep making them by joining the Patreon family for 1$ a month or more! - ?https://www.patreon.com/nerdyaboutnature?

Produced by Ross Reid

Hosted by Ross Reid & Julia Huggins

Got Questions?  Want Stickers?  Want community?  Wanna engage?  Do it all as a Patreon member, it?s easy!

You can also make a one-time donation, get NAN merch, resources and more information at ?www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2024-01-14
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Podchat 22 | Politics for a Better Future with Sonia Furstenau

At a top level, the lives we live are governed by political systems which control regulations, policy and set enforcements for how we treat each other not only within our human societies, but they can heavily impact the way our societies interact with the grander, more interconnected natural world that we all share.  In order to create lasting change for the better in the world today, it ultimately has to happen on a political level to officially set the direction of society?a daunting task, for sure.

I sat down with Sonia Furstenau, the leader of the BC Green party, to get her perspective on this whole system we have established in Canada, it?s strengths and shortcomings, and some of the most glaring issues we faced that still need to be addressed.  Honestly, the political landscape these days can often leave me feeling overwhelmed and frustrated, but chatting with Sonia gave me great hope for the future in that people like her are working hard every day to help create that better world.

Sit down with us outside the Parliament building in Victoria BC to learn all about the inner workings of policy and how they translate to on-the-ground protections for things like old growth forests and Northern Spotted Owls, the convoluted wedge politics of different parties that hinders collaboration, how we can humanize the politics and indigenize the institutions, and how every day folks like you and me can get involved for change.

Learn more about Sonia & the BC Green Party

Each episode of Nerdy About Nature makes a donation to a non-profit of the guests choosing using funds from Patreon supporters, and in this episode Sonia decided to send her donation to The Mother Tree Project!

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you.  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, help me keep making them by joining the Patreon family for 1$ a month or more! - https://www.patreon.com/nerdyaboutnature

Got Questions?  Want Stickers?  Want community?  Wanna engage?  Do it all as a Patreon member, it?s easy!

You can also make a one-time donation, get NAN merch, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2023-12-19
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Podchat 21 | Everyday Microbes & Life on Life on Life with Julia Huggins

On every surface of every single thing, there are tiny microbial forces at work creating the world we live in.  From oily sheens on pond water to streaks of red mud, the evidence of these little microbes is more obvious than you may think - you?ve just gotta know where to look, and what to look for!

Back for her third appearance, Julia Huggins takes us deep into the world of everyday microbes to share fun facts all about the life on life on life that surrounds us!  We learn about the power these little living beings have on the bigger planet we all share, which brings us to some pretty interesting conversation regarding what life is, and what it may look like on other planets.  Enjoy!

Each episode of Nerdy About Nature makes a donation to a non-profit of the guests choosing using funds from Patreon supporters, and in this episode Julia decided to support The Last Stand Legal Defence Fund.

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you.  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, help me keep making them by joining the Patreon family for 1$ a month or more!

Wanna ask a question?  Want community?  Wanna engage?  Do it all as a Patreon member, it?s easy!

You can also make a one-time donation, get NAN merch, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2023-10-30
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Podchat 20 | The Wonderful World of Bees with Emilie Usher

Have you ever stopped for a moment to think about where all our food comes from, and how it came to be? Well, if you know anything about ecology and life on this planet, you?d know that a vast majority of all that food either directly or indirectly comes from the work of pollinators. Without them, there would be no fruit, no squash or pumpkins, no berries and jam, no cattle or turkey feed so no meat?they literally are the reason we?re able to eat so much of this deliciousness. So today I?m sitting down with Emilie Usher, an urban bee-keeper and flower fanatic to chat all about our most beloved pollinators, bees. We tend to immediately think of honey bees here, but it turns out our native wild bees all around North America play massive roles not only in the health of our agriculture industries, but the functional ecology of the lands we all live amongst, and are incredibly important to biodiversity and our future on this planet.

So why are bees so important? Do they like certain flowers more than others? How long do they live? Do they all live in hives? Do they all sting? Whats going on with those flashy green bees I see from time to time? Let?s dive into this tiny, fascinating world with Emily here and learn all about these awesome little critters.

Learn more about Alveole

Each episode of Nerdy About Nature makes a donation to a non-profit of the guests choosing using funds from ?Patreon? supporters, and in this episode Emilie opted to support The Xerces Society!

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you.  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, help me keep making them by joining the ?Patreon? family for 1$ a month or more!

Wanna ask a question?  Want community?  Wanna engage?  Do it all as a Patreon member, it?s easy!

You can also make a one-time donation, get NAN merch, resources and more information at ?www.NerdyAboutNature.com?

Learn more about this episodes sponsor, ?Hoka & their Anacapa 2's

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2023-10-03
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Thought Snack | Changing Fire Regimes of North America

Fire is such a hot topic these days - pun intended! Yet we used to have a lot more fire across the landscape than we do today?so whats going on?
Fires are a naturally occurring part of a forest ecosystem, and are generally classified as either low-intensity burns (LIBs) or high-intensity burns (HIBs), both of which have different causes and impacts based on different forest types and factors.
Since colonization of North America by western societies, a combination of fire suppression and large scale land alteration through logging has left our forests in a highly vulnerable state all across the continent that makes them more susceptible to large-scale HIBs, which has big picture issues relative to both volume and frequency.
Speaking to volume, its estimated that roughly 85% of native forests here in North America has been lost, logged or modified to the equivalent of a HIB, which is an insanely large number, and much of this has been done in a manner that reduces the ecological function of these forests and actually contributes to large scale HIB?s that we see more and more often each summer.
In the last 400 years of western colonization roughly 85% of native forests have been lost to the equivalent of being burnt to the ground in a HIB (in some places 4x over), which historically only ever happened in much smaller scale fires every 1000 - 2000 years if at all, yet we?re calling this all natural and sustainable?sounds more like the apocalypse to me ?
So instead of trying to replicate these HIBs in our clearcut logging practices, we need to allow our forest ecosystems to mature in a healthier manner over a longer period of time, and we need to spend a lot of energy properly thinning and restoring the ecological function of the billions of hectares we?ve mismanaged thus far. Through prescribed burns and by replicating LIBs we can not only create a more humble, sustainable industry and jobs, but we can improve the ecological health and functions of the lands we live amongst for a better future in this uncertain era of climate change.

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you.  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, help me keep making them by joining the Patreon family for 1$ a month or more!

Wanna ask a question?  Want community?  Wanna engage?  Do it all as a Patreon member, it?s easy!

You can also make a one-time donation, get NAN merch, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2023-08-25
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Thought Snacks | Getting a PHEV Car in the era of Climate Change

After a serious of events that left me in need of a new car and long, arduous process of deliberation, I ended up getting a used PHEV, and decided to talk about my thought process here. Instead of going over the details, features, performance of the Rav4 Prime I ended up getting, I wanted to address the larger, more ethical issues associated with getting a car that still uses fossil fuels as gas, in addition to lithium in a battery, in this world we live in plagued by climate change driven impacts like extreme wildfire and drought.

I start by breaking down the choice between a car & public transportation in todays world, the differences between gas and electric cars ethically, affordability of the change, and the cultural shift of having to think of things differently in order to support technology that aims to create a better future. Lot's to cover here, so buckle up, and let's go for a ride!

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you.  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, help me keep making them by joining the Patreon family for 1$ a month or more!

Wanna ask a question?  Want community?  Wanna engage?  Do it all as a Patreon member, it?s easy!

You can also make a one-time donation, get NAN merch, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2023-08-21
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Podchat 19 | The Mental Health Benefits of Restorative Gardening with Jordan Mara

You may have heard that being amongst a forest can help calm your nervous system, but did you know that getting your hands dirty can help clear your mind too?  

This week, I sat down with self-made gardening entrepreneurial creator Jordan Mara to chat all about the mental health benefits and aspects of gardening, and what he aims to do through his project Mind & Soil.  Come join us in his glorious backyard garden as it pops off in peak summer to learn all about mental health connections to the outdoors, attention restoration theory, creating play in your work, the joy of experimentation, how to make the best of your backyard, and growing your own garden whenever you may reside!

Mind & Soil: Website | YouTube | Instagram

Study from the Royal Horticulture Society

Attention Restoration Theory

National Geographic take on Attention Restoration Theory

Each episode of Nerdy About Nature makes a donation to a non-profit of the guests choosing using funds from Patreon supporters, and in this episode Jordan opted to support Food Banks Canada!

Learn more about their work

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you.  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, help me keep making them by joining the Patreon family for 1$ a month or more!

Wanna ask a question?  Want community?  Wanna engage?  Do it all as a Patreon member, it?s easy!

You can also make a one-time donation, get NAN merch, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

Learn more about this episodes sponsor, Hoka & their Anacapa 2's

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2023-08-14
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Thought Snacks | Why don't we protect endangered ecosystems like we do species?

Extinction is a common threat to thousands of species these days as a result of human development, logging, pollution, habitat loss and fragmentation, and the plethora of impacts relative to anthropogenic climate change. In all these cases, the two biggest contributing factors to a species going extinct is habitat loss and limited genetic variation in the population - but what if we applied that same logic to ecosystems? Just some deep thoughts on the hypocrisy of trying to ?protect? certain species while simultaneously simplifying and destroying the complexity of the ecosystems they rely on to survive at a time when they may never develop to be the same ever again. Let's not let these forests go the way of the dodo and instead let's work to find solutions to keep these ecosystems intact to help mitigate the impacts of climate change, stabilize our soils, protect us from wildfires, host all of this amazing biodiversity and continue being the backbone of the culture we live in for generations to come. Like this vid? Support Nerdy About Nature on Patreon to make more engaging videos like this possible! || SUPPORT THESE VIDEO PODCASTS ||

Follow elsewhere Nerdy About Nature for more engaging fun-facts to make your next jaunt into the outdoors more rad! || YouTube || Instagram || TikTok

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2023-07-30
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Podchats 18 | Grassland Ecosystems & Oak Meadows of Cascadia with Nancy Shackelford

Grasslands are incredibly biodiverse and carbon rich ecosystems that perform numerous ecological functions, yet many of them across Turtle Island have all declined for various reasons, whether that be decades of development, fire suppression, removal of grazing animals, introduction of invasive species and lack of Indigenous stewardship or a combination of them all.  Here in coastal Cascadia, our native Oak Meadow Grasslands play an important role within many First Nations cultures and are the most biodiverse ecosystem we have.  Sadly, they?re also the most threatened, down to less that 5% of their native range in BC alone.  

I sat down with Nancy Shackelford, assistant professor at Uvic & director of the Restoration of Natural Systems Program, to chat all about what makes these wonderful ecosystems so unique, what threatens them, and what we can do to ensure their health for a better tomorrow.

Restoration Futures Lab

Grasslands Conservation Council of BC

Each episode of Nerdy About Nature makes a donation to a non-profit of the guests choosing using funds from Patreon supporters, and in this episode Nancy decided to support Stewards Of Sc?ianew!

Learn more about their work here: https://stewardsofscianew.com/

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you.  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, help me keep making them by joining the Patreon family for 1$ a month or more!

Wanna ask a question?  Want community?  Wanna engage?  Do it all as a Patreon member, it?s easy!

You can also make a one-time donation, get NAN merch, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

Learn more about this episodes sponsor, Hoka & their new Anacapa 2 

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2023-07-23
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Thought Snacks | Fire Mitigation Loopholes use to continue Logging Oldgrowth Forest

I'm going to start releasing some of my slightly longer video here in a new series I'm tentatively calling 'Thought Snacks', because that's what they are...not quite a full meal, but just enough to get those wheels turning and reflecting about the world we live in.

When it comes to impacts of climate change, wildfire is one of the hottest topics there is days - pun intended!  A majority of our forests across Turtle Island have become prone to very violent, catastrophic fires, whether as a result of fire suppression that has allowed stands to become thick and overgrown, or excessive commercial logging that has replaced stand diversity with an even-aged secondgrowth forest.
As a means of addressing these issues, forest thinning has become popular, where trees are felled to increase spacing so that fire, when it does occur, doesn?t have the fuel connectivity to spread and escalate.
In many commercial thinning operations, companies are granted access to previously off-limits oldgrowth forests in order to thin them for ?fire-proofing?, which in theory would consist of removing the smaller, immature trees to create the necessary spacing and reduce fuel load while leaving the older, more mature and naturally fire resistant trees that would have existed on those landscapes prior to colonization?but unfortunately that?s not often what happens.
This is expensive, skilled work and those little trees fetch very little market value, so instead this thinning is often done by ?high grading? these forests, which is a term that means they only take the biggest, most monetarily valuable old growth trees, and instead leave the smaller trees spaced out. This unfortunately does very little to increase the fire resilience and overall ecological function of these ecosystems, meaning that it?s no effective thinning for fire management.
Commercial operations hopping through loopholes and taking advantage of the situation by using either thinning or salvage as a justification to continue logging old growth forest for their own monetary gain, and doing so in a way that actually jeopardizes the health of these lands and our collective future amongst them is just unethical, irresponsible, and shouldn?t be allowed.  We need proper thinning efforts done to restore the health, vitality and resilience of these ecosystems first and foremost to create a better, safer future for our communities.

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2023-07-16
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Podchat 17 | Decarbonizing the grid & getting away from fossil fuels with Stephen Thomas

One of the biggest hurdles we face today is reducing our dependence on fossil fuels for energy, which are rampant in just about everything we do and consume on a daily basis.  Fortunately, it is possible and we have a roadmap for doing just that, which is the subject of today?s episode where we talk about decarbonizing the energy grid - that?s taking all of our electricity we?re currently using and finding ways to get the same amount from clean, renewable sources instead of from fossil fuels. What does that involve, what does it look like, and how do we get there as a society?

In this episode I sit down with Stephen Thomas, who is the Clean Energy Manager at the David Suzuki Foundation, to break it all down in terms of what it?s going to take for a country like Canada, which currently has plans to fully decarbonize the grid by the year 2035, to actually meet those goals.  

While we?re talking specifically about Canada in most of these examples here, many of these topics, methods, hurdles and solutions are very much applicable to communities and nations all over the world, especially those here on Turtle Island like the United States as we share lots of similarities in land use, long distances between cities across the continent, and how to ethically manage this change across existing nations in a decolonial way.

Lots to cover in this one from the types of energy we need to be focusing on, to the benefits of this energy, how much cheaper and more reliable it would be, to market opportunities and incentive programs in place to help support everyone throughout this transition so that no one gets left behind.  

Petition for Clean Energy in Canada

David Suzuki Foundation - Clean Energy

Shifting Power, Zero-Emissions Electricity Across Canada by 2035, DSF, 2022

Decarbonizing Electricity, and Decolonizing Power, DSF & Neegan-Burnside, 2022

Keeping the Lights On, DSF & Das-Martiskainan, 2022

Each episode of Nerdy About Nature makes a donation to a non-profit of the guests choosing using funds from Patreon supporters, and in this episode Stephen decided to send his donation to Mi?kmaw Grassroots Grandmothers!

Learn more and support them at https://stopaltongas.wordpress.com/donate/

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you.  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, help me keep making them by joining the Patreon family for 1$ a month or more!

Got Questions?  Want Stickers?  Want community?  Wanna engage?  Do it all as a Patreon member, it?s easy!

You can also make a one-time donation, get NAN merch, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2023-06-03
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Podchat 16 | The Impact of Open Net Fish Farms & Aquaculture on Wild Salmon with Dr. Kilian Stehfest

A few months ago in the news, you may have heard or seen articles about open net fish farms being removed from BC waters, and thought, ?Wow!  That?s great!?...and then not done or heard much since then.  As you may or may not be aware, fish farms are one of the biggest threats to our at risk and endangered populations of wild Pacific Salmon that travel all over the ocean from down south in Oregon up through BC and into Alaska, and the fight to get these farms fully removed from BC waters is still ongoing, despite what you may have heard (or not heard) in the news.  

I sat down with Kilian Stehfast who is a marine conservation specialist at David Suzuki Foundation to chat all about these fish farms, their history, how they came to be, the threats they pose to wild salmon and why that matters, and what the future of aquaculture looks like here in BC.  It?s a great episode and you?re gonna learn a lot not only about this industry, but what you can do to get involved to help ensure the survival of those awesome anadromous fish that tie us and these ecosystems we all reside in together.  

David Suzuki Foundation - Fish Farms

More on Indigenous Clam Gardens

Background on Fish Farming & Aquaculture

Each episode of Nerdy About Nature makes a donation to a non-profit of the guests choosing using funds from Patreon supporters, and in this episode Kilian decided to send his donation to Clayoquot Action!

Learn more about the advocacy they do at www.ClayoquotAction.org

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you.  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, help me keep making them by joining the Patreon family for 1$ a month or more!

Got Questions?  Want Stickers?  Want community?  Wanna engage?  Do it all as a Patreon member, it?s easy!

You can also make a one-time donation, get NAN merch, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2023-05-04
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Podchat 15 | Greenwashing and Misleading Sustainability Certifications in Forestry with Peter Wood

Have you ever seen those slick little certification logos on a product that claims it comes from sustainable forestry practices?  Unfortunately, those certifications aren?t those most ethical, accurate, and in some cases are just downright bogus, and may not truly reflect the logging practices used to obtain that wood.

Peter Wood is a campaigner for Canopy Planet, as well as an adjunct professor at the UBC Faculty of Forestry and a consultant for organizations such as Ecojustice.  With greenwashing being so prevalent these days, our forest products are no different, so I sat down with Peter to chat all about the nuances of these false certifications, how they came to be, current legal challenges, and what you can do to help create a better marketplace for ethically sourced wood products.

Links & Resources from this episode:

EcoJustice legal challenges:

Against the Canadian Standards Association (e.g. certified Teal Jones and Fairy Creek tenure) (July 2021):

Against the Sustainable Forestry Initiative (e.g. certified a large proportion of Canadian forestry, including all BC Timber Sales) (November 2022)

This letter was sent by Canada?s consulate to New York State Senators in response to their proposed Deforestation-Free Procurement Act. The letter argues that "widespread use of third-party forest management certification...provides added assurance that a forest company is operating legally, sustainably and in compliance with world-recognized standards for sustainable forest management?. 

In the end, these lobbying efforts were successful in making sure that this law did not apply to Canada, as detailed in this CBC piece.

Canopy Planet forest mapper tool

KPMG Article

TJ Watts before & after photos from certified ?sustainable? old growth clearcuts

Regime changes & logging affecting Salmonid survival study

OSO Landslide in 2014* logging influence

Unbuilders

Competition Bureau - 1-800-348-5358 - @CompBureau

EU Anit-Greenwashing

Protect Old Growth in BC 

Each episode of Nerdy About Nature makes a donation to a non-profit of the guests choosing using funds from Patreon supporters - this episode?s donation goes to The Awi?Nakola Foundation!

Learn more at https://www.awinakola.com/

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you.  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, help me keep making them by joining the Patreon family for 1$ a month or more! - https://www.patreon.com/nerdyaboutnature

Got Questions?  Want Stickers?  Want community?  Wanna engage?  Do it all as a Patreon member, it?s easy!

You can also make a one-time donation, get NAN merch, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2023-04-09
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Podchat 14 | Where Endangered Species, Policy & Biodiversity Goals Converge in BC (oh, and glyphosate) with Charlotte Dawe

Charlotte Dawe is a campaigner with the Wilderness Committee who works on various issues regarding policy around biodiversity, at-risk & endangered species, old growth logging, glyphosate spraying, and many more.  Her and I caught up to debrief on COP15, the United Nations Conference on Biological Diversity in Montreal, to hear all about the good, the bad and all the goss of this global shindig, and what it all means for BC, Canada and the world.  We talk all about hurdles to protecting biodiversity, shotty old outdated legislation that stands in the way, crazy loopholes, big corporate interests lobbying for their own needs, policy failures and successes, glyphosate spraying and much much more.

Learn more about the Wilderness Committee at WildernessCommittee.org or @Wildernews

Each episode of Nerdy About Nature makes a donation to a non-profit of the guests choosing using funds from Patreon supporters - this episode?s donation goes to Indigenous Climate Action!

Learn more at IndigenousClimateAction.com

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you.  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, help me keep making them by joining the Patreon family for 1$ a month or more! - https://www.patreon.com/nerdyaboutnature 

Got Questions?  Want Stickers?  Want community?  Wanna engage?  Do it all as a Patreon member, it?s easy!

You can also get NAN merch, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2023-03-19
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Podchat 13 | Indigenous Involvement in Outdoor Sports with Sandy Ward

A founding member of Indigenous Women Outdoors and coach with ILSA, Sandy Ward is an avid snowboarder, mountain biker and climber from the Lil'wat nation working to carve out a path for more Indigenous folks to get into the outdoors in a safe, welcoming space, and to see their ancestral lands from new a perspective through sport.  Her and I sat down to talk about her journey in the outdoor sports world as a coach, athlete and mentor, how mindsets have shifted towards these recreational activities both within and outside of Indigenous communities, and other issues regarding working with Indigenous nations when it comes to building bike trails, skateparks and more.

Sandy is a really inspiring, awesome human, and you're gonna love to hear what she has to say!  

For more on the work she's doing, you can check out: 

Indigenous Women Outdoors: https://www.indigenouswomenoutdoors.ca/ 

Indigenous Life Sport Academy: https://www.lifesportcanada.org/

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you!

If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, please don?t hesitate to support their production at my Patreon page for 1$ a month or more!

- https://www.patreon.com/nerdyaboutnature You can also get NAN merch, stickers, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2023-01-29
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Podchat 12 | Wolf Conservation Ethics, Caribou and the Wolf Cull with Chelsea Greer

Chelsea Greer is the Wolf Conservation Program Director at Raincoast Conservation, and we sat down one Autumn morning in the woods to chat all about wolves!  In this conversation, we delve into the concept of conservation ethics, different monitoring approaches, population dynamics, and their relationship with endangered mountain Caribou, as well as the history of wolves in Western Culture and how outdated misconceptions has lead to controversial Wolf culls throughout BC and beyond.

The takeaway - the big bad wolf you were taught to fear growing up was a flat-out lie.  They're actually a lot nicer, kinder and cooler than how they're commonly portrayed, and their future may depend on us learning how to see them differently.

More on Raincoast Conservation's Wolf Program: https://www.raincoast.org/wolf-science/

Learn More about the Trophy Hunt: https://www.raincoast.org/trophy-hunt/

Instagram: @raincoastconservation

Twitter: @raincoast @chelgreer

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you!  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, please don?t hesitate to support their production at my Patreon page for as little as 1$ per month!  - https://www.patreon.com/nerdyaboutnature

You can also get NAN merch, stickers, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2022-11-20
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Podchat 11 | Rebuilding Indigenous Culture and Community with Siginaak Court Larabee

Siginaak Court Larabee is an incredible human who also happens to be the director of the Indigenous Life Sport Academy, a non-profit which works to provide Indigenous youth access to outdoor sports as a means of healing, and to build culture and community.  In this Podchat, I sat down with Court to chat all about the work he is doing as a leader within these communities, the recent growth they've had, his recent appearance on TV & in the Amazing Race Canada, and some intricacies surrounding the current state of affairs across Turtle Island with different Indigenous communities, Land Back, and Decolonization.  It?s truly inspiring stuff, and I?m so stoked to share this episode with you!

Trigger Warning: We discuss sensitive subjects here including Residential Schools, the 60's Scoop, drug & alcohol abuse, and racism against Indigenous people.  There are also parts of this conversation which may be a bit uncomfortable for some of you to hear for other reasons, addressing things like the type of privilege that comes from the colonization of stolen lands or ways that that privilege is upheld in certain communities or industries that furthers division, so I?d just like to take a moment here and remind everyone that it?s ok to be uncomfortable sometimes. We?re all here in this big old mess of life together and in order to figure this all out, we?ve get used to sitting through some mild discomfort from time to time, because that?s where we learn and that?s where we grow. So let?s get into this, hear some different perspectives, think about it all differently so that we can all work together to create a better world for us all.

Learn more & support the Indigenous Life Sport Academy: https://www.lifesportcanada.org/

@ILSAcrew: https://www.instagram.com/ilsacrew/

Watch our short film, 'Riding Red': https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kNMtDDvPvdc

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you!  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, please don?t hesitate to support their production at my Patreon page for as little as 1$ per month!  - https://www.patreon.com/nerdyaboutnature

You can also get NAN merch, stickers, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

 

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2022-10-23
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Podchat 10 | Oceanic Microbes, Currents and Climate Change with Julia Huggins

The Oceans are an incredible feature of this planet that we all share, connecting not only coastal communities and ecosystems to one another, but all of the various inland ones that are impacted by and impact our oceans, from deserts in Africa to the temperate rainforests of Turtle Island.  My first repeat guest, Julia Huggins is a biogeochemist, forest ecologist, PHD student and microbe expert who is currently working to collect data on microbes in our oceans, so we sat down on a rugged coastal beach to chat all about it!  Lot's of great info here on the intricacies of our oceans, their current state, and what we can all do to become better stewards of the waters that connect us.

Information about ocean deoxygenation and the UN "Global Ocean Oxygen Network": 

https://en.unesco.org/go2ne

https://www.ocean-oxygen.org/

If you'd like more information on certain topics, feel free to contact Julia for papers and sources at [email protected]

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you!  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, please don?t hesitate to support their production at my Patreon page for as little as 1$ per month!  - https://www.patreon.com/nerdyaboutnature

You can also get NAN merch, stickers, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2022-09-19
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Podchat 09 | Biodiversity & Ecosystem Fragmentation in Old Growth Forests with Dr Rachel Holt

Dr Rachel Holt is a forest ecologist based out of Nelson BC, and one of the authors of the infamous 'BC's Old Growth Forest: A Last Stand for Biodiversity' Report that was published in 2020, which created a huge wake throughout Canada regarding forestry practices and our diminishing old growth forests.  The report and work she did also contributed to the BC Government's Strategic Review of Old Growth Forests which helped outline our current state of affairs and the direction the province needs to move in the future...so in short, Rachel is kind of a big deal in the world of forests.  Her and I sat down after working on another project together to chat through some of the details of biodiversity, habitat fragmentation, and what (if anything) is actually happening when it comes to changing the landscape of the forest industry in BC for the better.

Read BC's Old Growth Forest: A Last Stand for Biodiversity - https://sierraclub.bc.ca/wp-content/uploads/bcs-old-growth-forest-a-last-stand-for-biodiversity-report-2020.pdf

Science Alliance for Forestry Transformation - https://www.saftforestry.com/

Veridian Ecological - https://veridianecological.ca/

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you!  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, please don?t hesitate to support their production at my Patreon page for as little as 1$ per month!  - https://www.patreon.com/nerdyaboutnature?You can also get NAN merch, stickers, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2022-09-02
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Podchat 08 | Invasive Species and Shifting Baselines with Leslie Anthony

Leslie Anthony is a good friend of mine from the ski industry with a wide variety of skillsets.  Not only is he an outdoor travel and sports author, but a biologist who wrote a book called 'Aliens Among Us' a few years ago that's all about different invasive species, so I sat down with him alongside some train tracks to chat about it all!  Here we talk about different types of invasive species, what makes them invasive in the first place, how great they are at adapting, how they get around the world *cough*train tracks*cough*, and the different phases of preventing, detecting, eradicating and managing them.

Check out Leslies book 'Aliens Among Us' here: https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/0300208901/ref=x_gr_bb_amazon?ie=UTF8&tag=x_gr_bb_amazon_ca-20&linkCode=as2&camp=15121&creative=330641

Whistler Naturalists: https://www.whistlernaturalists.ca/

  

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you!  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, please don?t hesitate to support their production at my Patreon page for as little as 1$ per month!  -> https://www.patreon.com/nerdyaboutnature

You can also get NAN merch, stickers, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2022-08-16
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Podchat 07 | Oldgrowth Forests, Constructive Activism & Breaking Down Colonialism with Mark Worthing

Mark Worthing is the Coastal Projects Lead for Sierra Club BC and is an incredibly well-spoken, intelligent, and inspirational guy doing some really important work for our forests, indigenous nations, and the world at large.  He & I sat down to chat about the connections between forests and politics, and in this chat we cover quite a bit - Government / Industry ties that create forestry policy and the hype behind deferrals, the shortcomings of conservation groups in the past, what indigenous sovereignty looks like and how we can break down the barriers of colonization that still exist today, and even some more philosophical conversation around the concept of 'optimism' and what keeps him moving forward through what can often be very heavy, heartbreaking work.  

This chat may contain some sensitive talking points or perspectives, but I feel that it is really important for us all to embrace the discomfort that comes with these conversations.  These are incredible important issues that will only ever be solved through active, engaged participation and working through these uncomfortable scenarios together, so that we can all work to create a world that benefits us all.  Let's embrace that goal by learning and growing together.

Learn more about the Ma?amtagila www.maamtagila.ca

Find out about Sierra Club BC?s Campaigns at www.SierraClub.bc.ca

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you!  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, please don?t hesitate to support their production at my Patreon page for as little as 1$ per month!  -> https://www.patreon.com/nerdyaboutnature?

You can also get NAN merch, stickers, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2022-07-10
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Podchat 06 | The Microbial World of Forest Ecology with Julia Huggins

Julia Huggins is a forest ecologist, microbiologist, National Geographic Naturalist, PHD student and huuuuge nerd who specializes in the tiny world that makes up the big world we all share - microbes!  Her & I sat down amongst some Alders to chat about the role microbes play in our forests and the biogeochemical processes across the globe, and even got our hands dirty digging for microbial root nodules.  From bacteria to lichen, you're gonna love this chat!

Here's that TED talk from Paul Stamets we referenced - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XI5frPV58tY

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you!  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, please don?t hesitate to support their production at my Patreon page for as little as 1$ per month!  -> https://www.patreon.com/nerdyaboutnature?

You can also get NAN merch, stickers, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2022-06-14
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Podchat 05 | Re-envisioning Commerce for a Sustainable Future with Diane Rudge

Diane Rudge is a natural textile artist & one of the co-founders of The Den, a small refillery on the coast of Vancouver Island that focuses increasing access to organic, natural and locally made products.  Her and I sat down and chatted about the way that us humans use and consume products (often mindlessly) and all that she's doing to re-envision and re-educate folks on the way that we use household, cleaning, self-care, travel products & more in our day-to-day lives for a more sustainable and locally focused future.  

Learn more at www.TheDenUcluelet.com

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you!  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, please don?t hesitate to support their production at my Patreon page for as little as 1$ per month!  -> https://www.patreon.com/nerdyaboutnature?

You can also get NAN merch, stickers, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2022-05-31
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Podchat 04 | The Wonders of Wild Salmon with Tom Balfour

Tom Balfour is a fish ecologist and fish program manager at Redd Fish Restoration Society, working to restore habitat for Wild Salmon out on the coast of Vancouver Island.  He & I sat down in a creek and weathered a few little rain showers to chat all about these amazing fish, from their history in these Cascadian waters to all the factors that impact their populations today, and finding positive action in such dire times.  

Learn more about Redd Fish Restoration Society at https://www.reddfish.org 

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you!  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, please don?t hesitate to support their production at my Patreon page for as little as 1$ per month!  -> https://www.patreon.com/nerdyaboutnature

You can also get NAN merch, stickers, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2022-05-17
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Podchat 03 | Watershed Restoration for Salmon Habitat with Jessica Hutchinson

I sat down with Jessica Hutchinson amongst some ancient Redcedars and Salal to chat about forests and how they've been affected by modern logging practices, how that then impacts Salmon and the broader ecosystems in which we live, and all the good work she is doing at Redd Fish Restoration Society to help fix these problems created by our past.

Learn more about Redd Fish Restoration Society at https://www.reddfish.org

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you!  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, please don?t hesitate to support their production at my Patreon page for as little as 1$ per month!  -> https://www.patreon.com/nerdyaboutnature?

You can also get NAN merch, stickers, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2022-05-01
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Podchat 02 | Racializing the Outdoors with Indra Hayre

Indra Hayre & I took a drizzly day to sit down and chat about diversity, equity & inclusion in the outdoor world, and all that she's learned through her experiences growing up as a brown girl in a world often dominated by white men.

Learn more about Indra's project, Inclu-SKI-vity, at https://www.instagram.com/incluskivity

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you!  If you?re enjoying this podcast and videos, please don?t hesitate to support their production at my Patreon page for as little as 1$ per month!  -> https://www.patreon.com/nerdyaboutnature?

You can also get NAN merch, stickers, resources and more information at www.NerdyAboutNature.com

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2022-04-10
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Podchat 01 | Indigenous Language & Land with Myia Antone

I sat down with Myia Antone on the banks of the Squamish River to chat about Language, Land, and our ever-changing relationship to it as we, as a society of both settlers and Indigenous peoples, move forward together.  

Learn more about Myia's project, Indigenous Women Outdoors at https://www.indigenouswomenoutdoors.ca/

Learn more about the Snichim Foundation & support Squamish Language speakers at https://snichimfoundation.ca/

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2022-04-03
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Introduction

Hello there, fellow nature nerds!  Welcome to the Nerdy About Nature Podcast!  

After tons of feedback from all of you, I've decided to step into this unknown realm of audio for a whole new medium that's sure to have it's fair share of ups and downs, but all in good fun, right?!

Here's just a little introduction to my mindset for creating this series, as well some detail on the first few shows I have planned in a new series of 'podchats' where I sit down with various folks and talk about issues pertaining to nature, the world around us, or even human nature!  Because us humans, after all, are a part of nature, not apart from it.

Bear with me as I learn and grow from this awkward new venture, and stay tuned for more fun episodes to come!

Nerdy About Nature is an independent passion project that relies on support from folks like you.  If you're enjoying this podcast series or all the fun, goofy and educational videos on social media, you can help support their production by becoming a patron and my Patreon page via NerdyAboutNature.com!  You can join for as little as 1$ a month and get all sorts of sweet perks, and your support goes into giving me the stability to continue to put more energy into this whole project.

--- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nerdy-about-nature/support
2022-03-29
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