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Whales have Free Willy. Dolphins have Flipper. But what about the humble porpoise?
The porpoise doesn’t star in any Hollywood blockbusters. These shy, elusive “deer of the sea” are often overshadowed by their more charismatic cousins – but don’t let their social anxiety fool you. In fact, porpoises are speed-fiends with an insane metabolism and an outrageous sex drive.
Host Nate Hegyi and producer Marina Henke explore the Olympic sprinters of the sea and wonder if the fate of the endangered vaquita might hinge on being oh-so-very-cute.
Featuring Michelle Dutro, Barb Lake and Ruxandra Guidi.
Produced by Nate Hegyi. For full credits and transcript, visit outsideinradio.org.
Ripped logo credit: Jeremy Keith / Flickr
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LINKS
The second season of Rux Guidi’s podcast, The Catch, covered the plight of the vaquita.
In 1999, the Department of Defense studied the speed and hydrodynamics of dolphins, whales and porpoises to build better underwater drones.
Here’s a picture of a porpoise penis, but don’t say we didn’t warn you.
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We launched a Patreon! Become an Outside/Insider for just $5 per month, and you can get AD-FREE episodes of the podcast, plus access to behind-the-scenes blog posts and more.
Sardines are in vogue. Literally. They are in Vogue magazine. They’re delicious (subjectively), good for you, and sustainable… right?
Recently, a listener called into the show asking about just that.
“I've always had this sense that they're a more environmentally friendly fish, perhaps because of being low on the food chain. But I'm realizing I really have no sense of what it looks like to actually fish for sardines,” Jeannie told us.
The Outside/In team got together to look beyond the sunny illustrations on the fish tins. Is there bycatch? What about emissions? Are sardines overfished? If we care about the health of the ocean, can we keep eating sardines?
This episode was originally published in 2025.
Featuring Jeannie Bartlett, Malin Pinsky, and Zach Koehn.
Rip logo photo: Canned seafood by Jack Kennard (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0).
Produced by Justine Paradis. For full credits and transcript, visit outsideinradio.org.
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Manglende episoder?
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Put salt (aka sodium chloride) in your pasta water and you’ll end up with delicious spaghetti. Put pure sodium in it instead… and it will explode.
It’s the latest edition of “The Element of Surprise,” our occasional series about the hidden stories behind the periodic table’s most unassuming atoms, isotopes, and molecules. This time we’re talking all about sodium.
It’s the periodic table’s saltiest element. It powers your body like a battery and you need it to survive. So why is too much of it bad for you? Plus, how did salt help the North win the Civil War?
Featuring Raychelle Burks, Trisha Pasricha, Ashley Dumas.
Produced by Felix Poon. For full credits and transcript, visit outsideinradio.org.
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Watch a 1947 newsreel of the US Army disposing thousands of pounds of pure sodium into a lake in Washington State, causing massive explosions.
See images of the Slanic Salt Mine in Romania and the Wieliczka Salt Mine in Poland, now major tourist sites.
Check out Theodore Gray’s “Sodium Party” YouTube video series where he drops sodium chunks of various sizes into water to observe how they explode. Here’s the first video in the series.Want to learn more about the role of salt throughout human history? Read Mark Kurlansky’s Salt: A World History.
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When 10-year-old Doug Crandell joined the 4-H program, he was supposed to learn about raising, feeding, and selling a cow. What he wound up learning was something else entirely.
“I wanted to be a hog man, like my father,” he said. “But I knew pretty early on that you couldn’t have these animals forever.”
From producer Shaina Shealy, this is the story of a boy and his cow, Speckles.
Featuring Doug Crandell.
Produced by Shaina Shealy. For full credits and transcript, visit outsideinradio.org.
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Megan Eaves-Egenes grew up under the very starry skies of rural New Mexico. During those years, she developed a deep appreciation for astronomy.
The fascination is, of course, not hers alone. But, a starry sky requires one pretty important ingredient: darkness. One study recently reported that since 2011, the night sky has gotten brighter at about 10% per year.
All that light pollution has brought dire consequences to life on planet earth. Crickets can’t tell whether it’s day or night, bird migrations have gone haywire, and our own natural alarm clocks are constantly confused.
In a world where switching on a lamp during evening hours is, as Megan writes, “almost as basic as breathing” is there hope for our night skies? Or have we illuminated our way to a point of no return?
Featuring Megan Eaves-Egenes.
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To share your questions and feedback with Outside/In, call the show’s hotline and leave us a voicemail. The number is 1-844-GO-OTTER. No question is too serious or too silly.
Outside/In is made possible with listener support. Click here to become a sustaining member of Outside/In.
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LINKS
You can order a copy of Megan’s book Nightfaring: In Search of the Disappearing Darkness on her website.
Want to plan travel around dark sky locations? Dark Sky International offers a variety of guides and tips on how to visit darky sky locations responsibly.
There are many popular stargazing apps. Megan uses SkyView, but also recommends Stellarium or SkySafari.
Learn more about satellite’s role in light pollution from our 2024 episode, “The new space race.”
Made nearly 10 years ago, here is our episode about light pollution emitted from a New Hampshire greenhouse.
CREDITS
Produced by Marina Henke. For full credits and transcript, visit outsideinradio.org
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President Trump recently signed an executive order to make certain psychedelic drugs more available to treat mental health conditions like depression and PTSD. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Joe Rogan were in the oval office, and President Trump even joked during the signing ceremony, “can I have some, please?”
Maybe this executive order wasn’t on your 2026 political bingo card… but interest in these substances for mental health isn’t new. In this episode, we’re revisiting the story of Kathy Kral. In the midst of her battle with cancer, Kathy found herself facing a diagnosis of major depression.
So, she signed up for a clinical study to see if psilocybin – the psychedelic compound found in “magic mushrooms” – could help her confront her fears about cancer and death, as well as her deepest inner demons.
This episode was first published in 2023. Featuring Kathleen Kral, Manish Agrawal, and Norma Stevens.
Produced by Felix Poon. For full credits and transcript, visit â outsideinradio.orgâ .
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Trump’s order is a milestone for proponents of using psychedelics as medicine. (NPR)
Listen to the Sunstone Psilocybin Spotify Playlist that patients listen to during their psychedelic-assisted therapy sessions.
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Like a typecast actor who can’t escape the blockbuster franchise they’re known for, the element of silicon is inescapably associated with Silicon Valley. But that association undersells just how important, how foundational silicon is for human civilization.
It’s another edition of “The Element of Surprise,” our occasional series about the hidden stories behind the periodic table’s most unassuming atoms, isotopes, and molecules. And this time, it’s all about silicon.
From humankind’s early tools, to the quartz crystal hidden in your digital watch, we’ll cover how this underrated element has a lot more to offer than one California valley might suggest.
Featuring Vince Beiser, Megan Brewster, and Rachel Maines.
Produced by Taylor Quimby. For full credits and transcript, visit outsideinradio.org.
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Still confused about the difference between silicon, silica, and silicone? We think this explanation is helpful.
See the inside of a silicon wafer fab. It’s wild.
Or watch this old video on how silicon wafers are made. Also wild.
If you are very into watches, you might enjoy this detailed history of how the “Quartz Crisis” upended the Swiss watch industry.
Want to learn more about the environmental impacts of sand mining? Check out this 2019 UNEP report.
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In the spring of 1936, the producer of King Kong hauled a film crew to the desert of Arizona to shoot a sweeping romantic epic. But the heat was so punishing that it melted film stock, caused the lead actress to pass out, and killed the production’s mascot – a baby camel.
It was the beginning of a heat wave that parked itself over America for months, quickly becoming one of the deadliest natural disasters in our country’s history. It blew up sidewalks, cooked onions in the ground, claimed at least 12,000 lives, and turned the United States into a literal frying pan.
Host Nate Hegyi talks with Geoff Williams, author of the forthcoming book The Summer of Death, about a ‘heat horror show’ that transformed American life 90 years ago, and what lessons it gives us on how to survive a hotter world today.
Featuring Geoff Williams
Produced by Nate Hegyi. For full credits and transcript, visit outsideinradio.org.
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LINKS
You can check out Geoff’s book, The Summer of Death, here.
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt gave a speech about the impacts of the drought and heat wave in the fall of 1936.
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We’re cleaning out the proverbial fridge, but instead of old food, it’s fantastic and forgotten questions from the Outside/Inbox. Conversation topics include Taylor’s humiliatingly old headlamp, the olfactory experience of a dead whale and, of course, the answers to the following queries…
Why do dogs like to roll in dead stuff?
Do humans have a mating season?
Why do so many deer collisions happen in November?
When did headlamps start to have red light?
I live next to a highway. What can I do about the noise pollution?
In the final Lord of the Rings movie, there’s a crust that forms on top of the lava that the ring is thrown onto. Is that legit?
Featuring Christopher Schell, Eric Nystrom, and Erica Walker.
Thanks to our listeners who called in: Dusty, Kyle, Claire, Amanda, Gretchen, Zach, and Sabrina.
We’re looking for new submissions to the Outside/Inbox! Send us those questions by recording yourself on a voice memo, and emailing that to us at [email protected]. Or you can call our hotline: 1-844-GO-OTTER.
SUPPORT
Outside/In is made possible with listener support. Click here to become a sustaining member of Outside/In.
Follow Outside/In on Instagram and BlueSky, or join our private discussion group on Facebook.
LINKS
If you want to learn more about noise pollution listen to our episode “Shhhh! It’s the sound and silence episode.”
Check out for yourself what those clunky old mining headlamps used to look like.
CREDITS
Produced by Marina Henke, Felix Poon, and Nate Hegyi. For full credits and transcript, visit outsideinradio.org
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Every December, tens of thousands of volunteers look to the skies for an international census of wild birds.
But during migration season, a much smaller squad of New York City volunteers take on a more sobering experience: counting dead birds that have collided with glass buildings and fallen back to Earth.
In this episode, we find out what kind of people volunteer for this grisly job, visit the New York City rehab center that takes in injured pigeons, and find out how to stop glass from killing an estimated one billion birds nationwide every year.
This episode was first produced and published in the spring of 2024.
Featuring Melissa Breyer, Linda LaBella, Gitanjali Bhattacharjee, Katherine Chen, and Tristan Higginbotham. Produced by Taylor Quimby. For a transcript and full list of credits, go to outsideinradio.org.
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Subscribe to our newsletter (it’s free!).
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LINKS
Want to see the migration forecast? Check out Birdcast.
Want to be a citizen scientist and report dead birds? Check out dBird.
Want to see volunteer Melissa Breyer’s photos of dead birds? Check out Sad Birding.More about Project Safe Flight.
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With the ubiquity of plastic products, it’s maybe no surprise that a growing body of research shows tiny pieces of plastic are getting inside of us.
But what is all this plastic doing to our bodies? And once it’s there… is there any way to get it out?
Producer Haleema Shah looks at what the research says (and doesn’t say) about plastic and health, and explores a new trend in wellness: the microplastics cleanse.
Featuring Charmaine Dahlenburg, Marcus Garcia, Yael Cohen, and Sarah Morath.
Produced by Haleema Shah. For full credits and transcript, visit outsideinradio.org.
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Zeyneb Magavi is a bona fide climate nerd; she drives an electric car, has solar panels on her roof, and worries about natural gas leaks because they’re a major source of planet-warming emissions.
Bill Akley is a lifelong natural gas guy; he grew up smelling heating oil in his kitchen, spent decades in the energy industry, and eventually became head of New England’s largest gas utility.
So what brought this improbable duo together? The answer is under your feet. In this episode, how a geothermal pilot project in Massachusetts is bringing together unlikely alliances that might be key to our clean energy future.
Featuring Zeyneb Magavi, Bill Akley, and Kevin Kircher.
Produced by Felix Poon. For full credits and transcript, visit outsideinradio.org.
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Learn more about the networked geothermal pilot in Framingham, MA, and how it works.Learn more about the “gas-to-geo transition” that HEET advocates for.
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In 2009, the state of Maine ordered farmer Dan Brown to stop selling his raw milk. It kicked off a five-year legal battle that stoked the flames of Maine’s dairy wars. But, after Farmer Brown lost his case and hung up his milking hat, things quieted down.
Twenty years later, raw milk has surged back into the zeitgeist. Influencers are saying it tastes like ice cream, RFK Jr. is taking shots of it at the White House, and Gwyneth Paltrow is putting it in her coffee.
All of which makes for a pretty obvious question… What’s the appeal? Is raw milk some kind of superfood? Or something to avoid at all costs?
Featuring Dan Brown, Andy Bisson, Danny Bisson, Nicole Martin, Pamela Ruegg, and Mary McGonigle-Martin.
SUPPORT
To share your questions and feedback with Outside/In, call the show’s hotline and leave us a voicemail. The number is 1-844-GO-OTTER. No question is too serious or too silly.
Outside/In is made possible with listener support. Click here to become a sustaining member of Outside/In.
Follow Outside/In on Instagram and BlueSky, or join our private discussion group on Facebook.
LINKS
For a comprehensive history of dairy check out Milk! A 10,000 Year History by Mark Kurlansky.
During the height of Dan Brown’s case he gave a speech to a rousing crowd in Blue Hill. You can watch that here.
The debate over raw vs. pasteurized milk has been happening for a long time. The Milk Question by Milton Joseph Rosenau is a fascinating (we daresay, poetic) read.
The Pasteurized Milk Ordinance is a nearly 500-page document that outlines the intricacies of milk regulation in the U.S. Here’s its most current version.
The FDA fact-checks many different raw milk claims â on this pageâ , including pasteurization's affect on vitamin content and potential probiotic benefit.
CREDITS
Produced by Marina Henke. For full credits and transcript, visit outsideinradio.org
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In 2023, dozens of strangers gathered together in the Catskill Mountains of upstate New York for three straight days. Their mission? Teach people of color how to kill, gut, and butcher a deer for the first time.
Producer Felix Poon was there as a first-time hunter. He wanted to know: what does it feel like to take an animal's life to sustain your own? Given the opportunity… would he pull the trigger?
In this episode we follow Felix out of his depth and into the woods, to find out if one weekend can convert a longtime city-dweller into a dedicated deer hunter.
This episode was first published in early 2024, and was produced by Felix Poon.
For a transcript and full list of credits, go to outsideinradio.com. Featuring Dorothy Ren, Brandon Dale, and Brant MacDuff.
SUPPORT
Outside/In is made possible with listener support. â Click here to become a sustaining member of Outside/In. â
Follow Outside/In on â Instagramâ or join our private â discussion group on Facebookâ .
LINKSâ
Lydia Parker, executive director of Hunters of Color, discusses how to make the outdoors more equitableâ . (The Nature Conservancy)â
Melissa Harris-Perry talks to Brandon Daleâ , the New York ambassador for the Hunters of Color organization, on WNYC’s The Takeaway.
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A fishing tycoon is arrested in an elaborate sting operation, but claims he’s the real hero fighting back against an overbearing state. So who is Carlos “The Codfather” Rafael really – a folk hero, a crook, a righteous rebel, or a selfish conman?
This week we’re sharing the first episode from “Catching The Codfather,” the third season of GBH’s hit podcast The Big Dig. It’s a series about fishing regulations disguised as a true crime caper unlike any you’ve heard before.
Produced by Ian Coss and Isabel Hibbard. To hear the rest of the series, subscribe to The Big Dig wherever you get your podcasts.
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There’s few certainties in life. But the sun will always rise, the seasons will change, and the Outside/Inbox will forever remain answered.
From lighthouse paint hues to polar bear lovers, this week the team takes up your questions on all things red.
What makes cardinals red?
Why do albino animals have red eyes? â
â Why are so many lighthouses painted red? â
Do our dogs love us?
â Do some animals have same-sex relationships?â
â How do environmental changes affect pair-bonding? â
Featuring Alex Funk, Jeremy D'Entremont, Karyn Anderson, and Francesco Ventura.
Thanks to Outside/In listeners Liz, Tyler, Monica and Lera for their questions.
We’re looking for new submissions to the Outside/Inbox! Give us your weirdest, nichest, most bizarre questions you can think of. Send us those questions by recording yourself on a voice memo, and emailing that to us at [email protected]. Or you can call our hotline: 1-844-GO-OTTER.
SUPPORT
Outside/In is made possible with listener support. â Click here to become a sustaining member of Outside/In. â
Follow Outside/In on â Instagramâ and â BlueSkyâ , or join our private â discussion group on Facebookâ .
LINKS
Here’s Karyn’s paper on how â same-sex behaviorâ in animals is far more common than previously thought.
Olney, Illinois is known as “the home of the white squirrels.” Learn more about â how they’re trying to protect these rare albino animalsâ in this small Midwest town.
Here’s the â Northeast District’s 2025 US Light Listâ , which lists an astounding 40,000 different lights, sound signals, and other visual aids to navigation.
Francesco Ventura’s paper analyzing divorce rates in albatrosses came out in 2021. â You can find it hereâ .
CREDITS
Produced by Marina Henke, Felix Poon and Nate Hegyi. For full credits and transcript, visit outsideinradio.org
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Hemp used to be a staple of life in America. King James I demanded that colonists produce it. Hemp rope and fabric were ubiquitous throughout the 18th and 19th centuries. The USDA even produced a WWII newsreel called “Hemp for Victory.”
But other materials came to replace hemp – wood pulp for paper, and cotton and synthetics for fabric. Why?
For that matter, what is hemp? Is it different from weed? And does it actually have 25,000 uses as its proponents claim?
Featuring Hector “Freedom” Gerardo, David Suchoff, John Fike, and Danny Desjarlais.
Note: This episode originally aired in April, 2024.
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A few weeks ago, Nate gathered a group of storytellers in front of a live audience in Portsmouth, N.H. to celebrate 10 years of Outside/In. From goats to ghosts and ill-fated coloring book pages, this motley crew of storytellers explored the theme of metamorphosis in a changing world.
If you’ve got a special moment or episode from Outside/In’s long history, we’d love to hear about it. Send us a note at [email protected].
Featuring Gretchen Legler, Kianny Antigua, Sara Lamagna, Jake Lewis, Aubrey Nelson, Dave Anderson
Produced by Taylor Quimby and Zoë Mitchell. For full credits and transcript, visit outsideinradio.org.
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LINKS
Check out Gretchen Legler’s blog, where she writes about all sorts of nature and farm-inspired subjects, here.
More on the work of Kianny Antigua can be found on her website.
Listen to Sarah Lamagna’s interview for a previous episode of Outside/In, where she and Taylor talk about tricking kids into loving hiking.
Interested in learning more about Aubrey Nelson's call for "more purposeful, real-world education?" You can contact her "Ecosystem of Educationeers" via this form.
Listen to more musings from naturalist Dave Anderson on NHPR’s Something Wild.
If you want to hear more of Nate’s music, check out “Snoweater on Bandcamp.
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Ravens get a bad rap in western culture. They’re an ominous symbol of death, considered “unclean” by the bible, and star in Edgar Allen Poe’s haunting gothic poem, “The Raven.” A group of ravens is called an “unkindness.” What a burn.
But host Nate Hegyi is on a mission to show that we should give the raven a bit more credit. It’s one of the most intelligent creatures on earth — an animal that can use tools like a chimpanzee, speak like a parrot, do tricks like a dog, and investigate murders like Sherlock Holmes.
So today on the show, another edition of our ongoing series, Holy Scat: raven edition.
Featuring Sophie Nilles and Will Geiger.
Produced by Nate Hegyi. For a transcript and full list of credits, go to â outsideinradio.orgâ .
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LINKS
Dr. Kaeli Swift is one of the foremost corvid researchers on the planet, and she’s done a deep dive into corvid funerals.
Here’s the study that shows ravens parallel great apes in terms of intelligence.
If you want a real creepy experience, you should watch Vincent Price recite Edgar Allen Poe’s ‘The Raven.’
Need more raven stories from southeast Alaska? The Sealaska Heritage Institute just published a collection.
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After the Irish fought for and won their independence from the British in 1921, they had a problem. Centuries of exploitation had left the island one of the least forested nations in Europe, with less than 2% tree cover.
So, they started planting a non-native American tree: fast-growing Sitka spruce capable of rebuilding their timber resources in record time. And it worked. Today, about 17% of the island is forested. But in the rural areas where iconic rolling hills have been replaced by rows and rows of conifers, farmers are not happy.
Outside/In host Nate Hegyi takes us to County Leitrim, an area of Ireland hit hard by the Troubles and the Great Famine, to meet the townspeople who are fighting what they say is a new wave of colonialism: Sitka spruce plantations.
Featuring Justin Warnock, Brian Smyth, Donal Magner, Liam Byrne and Jodie Asselin.
This episode originally aired in March 2025.
Produced by Nate Hegyi. For a transcript and full list of credits, go to outsideinradio.org.
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LINKS
Donal Magner wrote a book covering the history of Ireland’s forests and timber industry.
Sitka spruce plantations are controversial in other parts of Ireland as well, including Cork.
There are also efforts to rewild parts of Ireland with entirely native trees and to protect and restore carbon-sequestering bogs.
It can be really tough to figure out exactly what was growing in Ireland thousands of years ago – but these scientists used ancient pollen counts to figure it out.
Researchers at University College Dublin produced a detailed socio-economic impact report on Sitka spruce plantations and County Leitrim in 2019.
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