National Parks Traveler Podcast

Kurt Repanshek
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Nov 14, 2021 • 31min

National Parks Traveler | Kīlauea Erupting

Enter the National Park System and you won't come away disappointed when you realize all that awaits you. At Hawaii Volcanoes National Park, it's impossible not to be awed by the volcanism that created the Hawaiian islands, and which is on full display at the crater atop the Kīlauea volcano. Jessica Ferracane, the park's public affairs specialist, gave me a primer on Kīlauea during an early November visit. Her broad knowledge of the park and its two volcanoes and enthusiasm in discussing all things Hawaii Volcanoes National Park quickly came across.
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Nov 7, 2021 • 50min

National Parks Traveler: Now Is The Time For The Traveler

The national parks have never been more popular...or more threatened. Now through the end of the year, we are asking for your support for a fundraising campaign to ensure the National Parks Traveler's ongoing coverage of national parks and protected areas.
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Oct 31, 2021 • 49min

National Parks Traveler | Grand Teton's Crowds

For Grand Teton National Park, this year has, to put it bluntly, been crazy busy. In September the park counted 570,584 visitors, the second-highest tally for that month in park history. Notably, it pushed the park's year-to-date visitation to 3,493,937, a record for an entire year, and with October, November, and December to go. Grand Teton Superintendent Chip Jenkins discusses the impacts of that visitation.
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Oct 24, 2021 • 49min

National Parks Traveler: Charles Sams, nominee to be NPS director

The Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee questioned Mr. Sams this past week during his confirmation hearing. He's an interesting nominee. He's from outside the National Park Service, and if confirmed he would be the first Native American director of the Park Service. Discussing his nomination are Phil Francis of the Coalition to Protect America's National Parks, and Kristen Brengel of the National Parks Conservation Association.
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Oct 17, 2021 • 42min

National Parks Traveler: News From Around The National Parks

Editor-in-Chief Kurt Repanshek and Contributing Editor Kim O'Connell discuss news from around the National Park System, from black bear incidents along the Blue Ridge Parkway to a Yellowstone visitor being sentenced to jail for getting too close to a grizzly bear sow and her cubs.
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Oct 13, 2021 • 6min

National Parks Traveler Postcard From The Parks: Cumberland Gap

Why visit Cumberland Gap National Historical Park? The gap was the portal to the heart of the country, as Daniel Boone discovered in the 1700s. And it's the one unit of the National Park System where you can take turns standing in Tennessee, Kentucky, and Virginia. Lynn Riddick gives you a brief preview of the historical park with this audio postcard.
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Oct 10, 2021 • 45min

National Parks Traveler: Wildlife Extinctions, Recoveries, And Future

We're in the middle of a world-wide extinction crisis. Here in the United States, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service just announced that nearly two dozen species, from the Ivory-billed woodpecker to two freshwater fish species, are extinct. How are wildlife in the parks doing? To explore that and other questions surrounding wildlife, we're joined by Dr. Joel Berger, a senior scientist with the Wildlife Conservation Society as well as the Barbara Cox Anthony University Chair in Wildlife Conservation at Colorado State University.
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Oct 3, 2021 • 34min

National Parks Traveler: Why Florida Needs A Wildlife Corridor

Key to the survival of many threatened and endangered species is the designation of wildlife corridors. The Traveler's Lynn Riddick talks to Tori Linder of the Path of the Panther Project about efforts to formalize the Florida Wildlife Corridor, a large and growing mosaic of protected forests and timberlands, swamps, pastures, and orchards that provide the green spaces that animals need to thrive.
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Sep 26, 2021 • 34min

National Parks Traveler: Solving Congestion At Rocky Mountain National Park

Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado year-in and year-out is one of the most popular units of the National Park System. Its rugged peaks attract climbers, its heavily forested backcountry lures hikers and backpackers, and its wildlife attracts photographers and visitors hoping to glimpse elk, or catch their unique bugling, or spot bighorn sheep. As popular as Rocky Mountain National Park is, it's not too surprising that the heavy visitation brings problems to the park. And in 2020, those problems were exasperated by the East Troublesome and Cameron Peak wildfires. To discuss those issues, and other issues in the park, we've invited Rocky Mountain Superintendent Darla Sidles to join us.
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Sep 18, 2021 • 48min

National Parks Traveler: What's In Your National Park Library

NPT Ep 136 Spot List - Run Time - 48:00 :02 National Parks Traveler introduction :12 Episode introduction with Kurt Repanshek 1:05 Parks Book Reviews 23:14 The Offering - Bill Mize - The Sounds of the Great Smoky Mountains 23:33 WNPA 23:54 Yosemite Conservancy 24:17 Blue Ridge Parkway Foundation 24:38 Potrero Group 25:06 North Cascades Institute 25:24 Nova Scotia 25:56 Parks Book Reviews Continue 43:22 Bass Harbor - Nature's Symphony - The Sounds of Acadia 44:07 Episode Closing 44:50 Washington's National Park Fund 45:26 Interior Federal Credit Union 46:00 Friends of Acadia 46:27 Grand Teton National Park Foundation 46:59 Orange Tree Productions 47:32 Splitbeard Productions 47:42 National Parks Traveler footer

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