Episodios
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An Amy & Julia reunion! Julia joins to talk about a complicated web of issues facing West Coast crab fishermen, driven primarily by warming oceans and unprecedented changes to ocean conditions. To hear the rest of the story, check out fanlink.to/drilled
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While we work on episodes for another season of Range, check out Peace of Mind with Bhi Bhiman, launching January 18th on the Critical Frequency network.
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Today we bring you a quick preview of another Critical Frequency podcast: Drilled, a true-crime podcast about climate change.
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Meet Norris Albaugh, whose Old Testament-inspired ways have him ranching more sustainably than most, and keeping the family ranch afloat doing it. (more info: www.albaughranch.com) Episode sponsor: Zola - visit zola.com/range to start your FREE wedding website and get $50 off your wedding registry.
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On the heels of yet another catastrophic fire season in the West, we take a look at why fires are worsening, from climate change to forest management practices, development, and more. Episode sponsor: Zola - visit zola.com/range to start your free wedding website and also get $50 off your registry on Zola
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Now in its third year, the Run4Salmon is a 300-mile trek on foot, motorboat, bikes, horses and kayaks from the mouth of the Sacramento River, north to Shasta Lake, to send out prayers and raise awareness about their fight. It’s led by Winnemem Wintu chief Caleen Sisk, and is meant to be a spiritual journey to stop the Shasta Dam heightening, and bring back nearly extinct salmon.
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An initiative on the ballot in Lyon County, NV this November will ask residents to vote on whether or not they want to revoke the county's brothel licenses. All of the county's brothels were owned by Dennis Hof, who died suddenly on October 16th. In this episode we talk to one of Hof's working ladies and visit his arch rival at The Mustang Ranch to get a better sense of Nevada's legal brothels and their history. Episode sponsor: Casper Mattresses -- For $50 off select mattresses visit casper.com/range and use Range at checkout.
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Frustrated with the online camping registration process, Alyssa Ravasio taught herself to code at 26, then launched HipCamp to streamline the process. She quickly realized the camping system had another problem: not enough sites, and state and national parks were losing more all the time. She came up with a solution that is revolutionizing American camping. Learn more about The North Face She Moves Mountains initiative: https://www.thenorthface.com/featured/she-moves-mountains.html
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For The North Face She Moves Mountains campaign, photographer Laurel Golio put together an all-women team to shoot some of the company's amazing women athletes. It's an unusual thing in photography and here she tells us how it worked and why it matters. For more on She Moves Mountains, visit: https://www.thenorthface.com/featured/she-moves-mountains.html
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In the third installment of The North Face She Moves Mountains series, we profile Bethany Lebewitz, founder of Brown Girls Climb. Bethany started rockclimbing on a vacation and found a passion for it. When she came back to the U.S. and started climbing, she realized that most climber didn't look like her, but when she started tagging her photos with #browngirlsclimb she found and connected a large and growing community of WOC climbers. For more on the She Moves Mountains campaign: https://www.thenorthface.com/featured/she-moves-mountains.html
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The list of "first woman to"s following Hilaree Nelson's name are too many to fit in a podcast description. Just this month she became the first person to ski down Mount Lhotse, a sister peak to Everest and the 4th highest mountain in the world. After summiting Everest a few years ago, she decided to keep going and climb another sister peak without resting. The woman is a machine. She's also a mother, and a person who thinks deeply about what it means to be human and part of this world. In the second installment of The North Face's She Moves Mountains series, we get deep and go big. For more info visit: https://www.thenorthface.com/featured/she-moves-mountains.html
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Presented by The North Face as part of its She Moves Mountains series, in this episode we profile rock climber Emily Harrington. Harrington spent the first decade or so of her career trying not to be afraid because she thought only girls were fearful of big climbs. Now one of the best climbers in the world, she says she's learned to see fear and doubt as driving forces and accept emotions as sources of strength too. They helped propel her on a freeclimb of El Capitan in Yosemite recently and have kept her alive during many a mountain adventure. More from The North Face: https://www.thenorthface.com/featured/she-moves-mountains.html
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Introducing The Fifty One! In this episode we give Range listeners a little preview of The Fifty One with a West Coast episode on how San Diego's ethnic markets are helping to solve the food desert problem, but are often ignored in policy discussions about how to improve access to healthy food. You can see more here: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-fifty-one/id1361701448?mt=2
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The Hawaiian sovereignty movement has been picking up steam the past few years, catalyzed in part by a protest to protect the sacred mountain of Mauna Kea from development. In this episode, we speak to one of the leaders of that movement about what's behind it, and ahead of it.
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The Democrat primary in California District 4 has become fairly dramatic in recent months as three first-time candidates, all women under 40, vie for a shot to take on incumbent Tom McClintock in one of California's reddest districts.
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We're headed into election season and in the Mountain West that means dramatic races for things that we sometimes forget are even elected offices. In Nevada County, Ca in the Sierra, the races for sheriff and district attorney are hotly contested this year, and full of drama. In this episode, Sarah Miller, a writer and editor with Popula magazine, joins us to dig deep into the story of two would-be DAs, a cop known for writing shady warrants, and how shifting cannabis laws are changing the political and legal landscape in this part of the country.
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In this special crossover episode, we introduce you to Bearcat, a new podcast distributed by our network, Critical Frequency. Bearcat's debut episode features someone Range listeners might appreciate: Rita Collins, the Montana-based purveyor of the country's first traveling bookstore.
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Last month, reporter Mary Catherine O'Connor joined us for an episode on the intersection between ski resorts and the mining industry in the West. One of the interviews she did for that story, with Brian McInerney, a hydrologist with the National Weather Service, didn't make it into the final story, but it's one I wanted listeners to hear. In this bonus episode, Brian traces the politicization of climate change, how surprised scientists were to see people accusing them of bias, and what the difference is between climate and weather.
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When millions of people hit the slopes each year at ski resorts throughout the West, they probably don't realize that they're often skiing on abandoned mine sites. In fact, some of the West's most popular ski resorts sit right alongside some of its largest superfund sites. In this episode we look at the fascinating intersecting history of mining and skiing in the West, and how resorts are handling their past and preparing for their futures today. Show Notes: You can find Bradley Snow's book, Living with Lead, here When contacted for comment on the case pending against United Park City Mines, the EPA said it does not comment on active litigation. For updates on that action as they're available, check the EPA news release feed. In February 2008, Susan Bodine did make an announcement saying the EPA is getting tough on polluters, but The New York Times reported that much of the rulings Bodine touted were made at the tail-end of the Obama Administration.
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The California Coastal Commission was formed in the 1970s to balance development goals with public rights to the beach. In recent decades, as our guest host Jill Replogle discovered, public access to the beach has moved beyond development questions. A recent survey found that 90% of Californians love the beach and want access to it, but more than 60% also said there are various economic and class barriers to getting there. Links: Jill's High Country News story: http://www.hcn.org/articles/making-the-california-coast-public-for-all Interactive UCLA report on public access: https://www.ioes.ucla.edu/coastal-access/
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