One of our favorite new podcasts this summer starts off with a somewhat fair self-own: 鈥淗i, I鈥檓 Alex Honnold, and just like everybody else in the pandemic, I started a podcast.鈥 He鈥檚 right: the听听number of active podcasts jumped from about 850,000 to 1 million between 2019 and 2021 (though we鈥檒l point out that 国产吃瓜黑料 started 听way before it was cool). The number听of people regularly listening to audio shows also听in the past year. Whether you鈥檙e into birding, climbing, or the politics of fire management, there鈥檚 a show for you that 诲辞别蝉苍鈥檛 sound like it was recorded out of sheer boredom from someone鈥檚 bedroom. (Real podcasters record from their closets.)
Bring Birds Back听
Like ,听Tenijah Hamilton got into birding during the pandemic. It鈥檚 a good thing she did, because Hamilton turns out to be a charming combination of knowledgeable and relatable鈥攖he perfect host to appeal to fellow new birders, birding veterans, and people who really still don鈥檛 get听the hype. Appealing to just about anybody is the point of the show: citing a that said we鈥檝e lost 29 percent of North American birds in the last 50 years, Hamilton says, 鈥淚n order to bring birds back, we have to invite all kinds of people to the table.鈥 The show covers a lot of ground in under 30 minutes: the first two episodes discuss success stories in bird conservation, the history of ornithology, and how state-sanctioned violence against Black people contributes to safety concerns in nature. Hamilton, who also works on educational programming at PBS鈥檚 science series NOVA, knows how to pack scientific and historical information into easy-breezy conversations. She trades jokes just as readily with biostaticians as with her mother (who makes an appearance in the inaugural episode). And she鈥檚 honest about both her complicated relationship with the outdoors and her identity as a beginning birder. In the second episode, she asks Black Birders Week cofounder , 鈥淲hat do you say to make [birding] sound as cool as you think it is? Because I struggle with that.鈥 In fact, Bring Birds Back does a very good job of making birding sound cool, exploring ways to make it more welcoming, and showing how we can鈥檛 talk about conservation without talking about inclusion.
Climbing Gold
In the first episode of Alex Honnold鈥檚 , he notes that he鈥檚 in his closet, recording on GarageBand, with ice axes in his face. He and cohost听Fitz Cahall spend a few minutes making a case for why Honnold felt compelled to podcast, as if we need an explanation. Even if Honnold wasn鈥檛 the world鈥檚 most mainstream-famous climber, Cahall has made a name in his own right as cofounder of production company and host of the long-running outdoor storytelling podcast . The high production values and the host鈥檚 connections make Climbing Gold better than most other athlete-led interview podcasts (sorry). Honnold talks to climbing legends like Peter Croft and Joanne Urioste about their careers and what the sport鈥檚 culture looked like when they were coming up. The theme of these interviews, Honnold explains, is that the history of the sport often comes through 鈥渃ampfire stories鈥 that aren鈥檛 as often formally covered in media. As climbing explodes in popularity, we can look back on these stories as a guide to the values that built the sport. With clever explanatory banter and sound clips breaking up the chats, plus the easy interview dynamic that comes from people who completely understand one another鈥檚 obsessions, Climbing Gold makes good on its thesis鈥攁nd presents听an exceedingly strong case that this isn鈥檛 just a vanity project.
Fireline
Fire is a pretty expansive concept, being one of the four elements and all, but argues that the American approach to fire management听has been strikingly limited in recent centuries. The Montana Public Radio podcast looks at a wide range of these shortcomings:听relying too much听on fire suppression, ignoring (or outlawing) beneficial burning practiced by Indigenous people, and providing听insufficient mental health support for firefighters. Host Justin Angle uses this background as a jumping-off point to explore how we could think more openly about the role of fire in the West, finding ways to live with it even as wildfires become increasingly out of control. (Fittingly, the name of the podcast refers to a line scratched into the ground where fuel sources have been removed, hopefully defining the area where a wildfire will be contained.)听Fireline offers no easy answers. But what makes it most compelling is how much time Angle spends with people who live at the sometimes-literal intersection between wanting to live with fire and wanting to keep it away. In the first episode, we hear on-the-ground recordings from wildland firefighter Lily Jane Clarke, who grew up in a fire-prone area of听Montana. 鈥淚 remember having a conversation with my mom and her just saying, 鈥榊ou know what? If a fire takes our home, that鈥檚 OK,鈥欌 she says, 鈥溾榖ecause that means that we didn鈥檛 necessarily put firefighters in there, and their lives are worth more.鈥欌
Lost Hills
In June 2018, Tristan Beaudette was camping in Malibu Creek State Park in California when he was shot and killed in his tent. His two young children were sleeping right beside him. It turns out that this wasn鈥檛 the first time someone had been shot at in the park, though park authorities had not warned visitors of this. The first four episodes of , hosted by New Yorker writer Dana Goodyear, cover much the same ground as 国产吃瓜黑料鈥檚 2019 story about the shootings.听A suspect, Anthony Rauda, was arrested and charged for all the shootings, but some locals believe the real perpetrator is still at large. Beaudette鈥檚 widow, Erica Wu, also filed a $90-million civil lawsuit against various agencies in California for failing to warn the public about the danger at the park. In the second half of the season, Goodyear brings in some new interviews and developments to investigate whether Rauda really did it and why officials didn鈥檛 even put up signs alerting visitors about the shootings. Lost Hills is less voyeuristic true crime and more in the mold of Serial, taking a second look at a well-known case with actual reporting. Given that, it shouldn鈥檛 be surprising that the podcast 诲辞别蝉苍鈥檛 come to any rock-solid conclusions about the case. But Goodyear meets just about everyone who鈥檚 involved, including Beaudette鈥檚 family, hikers who walked by Rauda鈥檚 campsite before the shooting happened, and Rauda himself. Goodyear often leans into the contrast between the bizarre and seemingly random shootings and the place they happened鈥擬alibu is known by some as the 鈥減ink bubble,鈥 perhaps for the hue of its sunsets, and definitely for its residents鈥 wealth, insularity, and distrust of outsiders. At one point, Wu remembers meeting an official at the park after Beaudette was murdered, telling her, 鈥淭his never happens, you know. This kind of stuff never happens here.鈥
Trail Weight
This podcast鈥檚 title is doing a lot of heavy lifting. Trail weight is, literally, what the most essential parts of a tent weigh. Meanwhile, the is ostensibly about host Andrew Steven鈥檚 goal to lose 100 pounds and then hike the 211-mile John Muir Trail. But he 诲辞别蝉苍鈥檛 actually spend much time talking about his journey to the trailhead with his partner Rocky Strobel. Instead, the trail weight in question ends up meaning, mostly, emotional weight: not only the grief or existential crises that hiking can relieve, but also broader worries around being a responsible outdoorsperson. 鈥淟ike Cheryl Strayed or Jack London, we had our call of the wild, but unlike those two, we weren鈥檛 running from something,鈥 Steven says in the first episode. 鈥淎t least we didn鈥檛 think we were.鈥 The show is partly an audio diary for Steven, a career podcaster, as he grapples with the anxieties of such an ambitious goal and the death of his mother just a year before he heads out on the hike. But in each episode he also interviews guests such as comedian Joey Clift, who talks about using narrative tropes to understand your own life; writer Dina Gilio-Whitaker, who discusses Indigenous environmental stewardship; and runner Alexi Pappas, who provides all-purpose life coaching. The show is an accidental guide for anyone who鈥檚 interested in thru-hiking but completely intimidated by the idea of it, and an intimate deep dive into what it takes to hike long trails.