Carrying the Fire Podcast

Hosted by journalist and writer Hal Herring, the Carrying the Fire podcast features the voices of writers and thinkers, homesteaders and conservationists, explorers, historians and futurists-human beings carrying the fire of our oldest verities through these tumultuous times. It is about reconnecting us to nature, and to each other. Subscribe to the Carrying the Fire Newsletter here - https://onyourownadventures.activehosted.com/f/19

Episodios

  1. The deep and tangled history of the Mississippi River with Boyce Upholt | Episode 4

    hace 1 día

    The deep and tangled history of the Mississippi River with Boyce Upholt | Episode 4

    In this episode of Carrying the Fire, host Hal Herring sits down with New Orleans-based journalist and author Boyce Upholt. Boyce is the author of The Great River: The Making and Unmaking of the Mississippi,  which Amazon calls, “Rich and powerful… a startling account of what happens when we try to fight against nature instead of acknowledging and embracing its power―a lesson that is all too relevant in our rapidly changing world.” While teaching school in the Mississippi Delta, Boyce took an assignment to write a magazine story about legendary guide and riverman John Ruskey. Ruskey took Boyce into a world he had not imagined- hidden behind the levees, lost beyond the green thickets that wall off the river. “I was entranced by the landscape I found there: a wilderness, threading through the heart of the nation. I began to write more stories about the Mississippi, in part just for the excuse to get back out there.” He would eventually paddle the river from St. Louis to the Gulf of Mexico and spend years collecting the stories and history that became The Great River.  Boyce Upholt also is the co-founder and editor of the bi-annual magazine Southlands “A magazine about the wild South, in all its forms. Take the low road.”  He lives in New Orleans with his wife and new baby.  This interview explores the deep, tangled history of the continent's most legendary waterway, tracking the river from its ancient, indigenous past to its highly engineered, precarious present. Hal and Boyce discuss the hubris of trying to "freeze time" on a dynamic river, the dark environmental and social legacies of the Delta's plantation economy, and what it truly means to "think like a watershed." Boyce shares the inspiration behind his latest venture, Southlands magazine, a new print publication dedicated to honoring the nature, outdoor culture, and rich literary heritage of the American South. Books & Magazines The Great River: The Making and Unmaking of the Mississippi by Boyce Upholt A Natural History of Empty Lots: Field Notes from Urban Edgelands, Back Alleys, and Other Wild Places by Christopher Brown  Meant to Be Wild: The Struggle to Save Endangered Species through Captive Breeding by Jan DeBlieu Pilgrim at Tinker Creek by Annie Dillard Rising Tide: The Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 and How It Changed America by John M. Barry Blood and Thunder: The Epic Story of Kit Carson and the Conquest of the American West by Hampton Sides Against the Machine: On the Unmaking of Humanity by Paul Kingsnorth Against the Grain: How Agriculture Hijacked Civilization by Richard Manning Against the Grain: A Deep History of the Earliest States by James C. Scott The Bear by William Faulkner Southlands – Boyce Upholt’s twice-yearly print magazine focused on nature, outdoors, and how the people of the South relate to the natural world. The Bitter Southerner – The digital publication where Upholt published his very first profile piece on canoeing guide John Ruskey. Mountain Gazette – Legacy outdoor print magazines referenced as regional benchmarks that Southlands looks to complement. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    1 h 40 min
  2. Southern Bison Trails and the Return of the Southeastern Grasslands, a conversation with Jeremy French and Dwayne Estes of the Southeastern Grasslands Initiative

    18 jun

    Southern Bison Trails and the Return of the Southeastern Grasslands, a conversation with Jeremy French and Dwayne Estes of the Southeastern Grasslands Initiative

    "Simplicity is extinction. The key to resiliency is biodiversity—saving enough species so that whatever happens next, we're okay." — Jeremy French, SGI Ecological Restoration Chief We’ve all heard the old myth: before European settlement, a squirrel could travel from the Atlantic coast to the Mississippi River without ever touching the ground. But it wasn’t true. From the wiregrass prairies of the coastal plain to the Barrens of Kentucky and all parts between and beyond, the American Southeast was a dramatically complex mosaic of forests, grasslands, savannahs and grazing-and-fire dependent wetlands, spiderwebbed with bison and human throughways, infinitely rich and complex, one of the most biodiverse places on earth. Most of it was long gone before it could even be recorded, known only from place names on old maps or the faded accounts of the Long Hunters like Daniel Boone or Uriah Stone.        In this episode of Carrying the Fire, host Hal Herring sits down in central Tennessee with Dwyane Estes (Co-founder and Executive Director) and Jeremy French (Ecological Restoration Chief) of the Southeastern Grasslands Institute (SGI). Together, they dig into the wild, unique and mostly forgotten history of the Southern grassland biome, a global biodiversity hotspot hiding in plain sight. Duane and Jeremy share their deeply personal origin stories, mapping out how childhoods shaped by poverty and isolation led them to seek shelter and solace in a profound immersion in the natural world. The life-force they discovered there saved them - and inspired in them a fierce determination to repay the gift with a hyper-focus on restoring one of the most beleaguered, complex and vibrant ecosystems on earth- the southern prairies and savannahs. From tracking the deep evolutionary memory of southeastern bison to launching a massive conservation movement across 17 states, this conversation is a masterclass in dreaming big, working hard, and looking at a landscape with entirely new eyes. Booklist, Podcasts, and Other Works Mentioned Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge by E.O. Wilson The Long Hunt: Death of the Buffalo East of the Mississippi by Ted Franklin Belue  A Sand County Almanac by Aldo Leopold Indian Harvest by Jannette May Lucas Backcountry University (Episode 1)  60 Minutes – The CBS news program, specifically a segment highlighting the economic hardships faced by soybean farmers in West Tennessee. The STRIPS Program – An agricultural research initiative out of Iowa State University focusing on integrating prairie filter strips into row-crop fields to mitigate soil erosion and water runoff. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    2 h y 17 min
  3. A Candid Conversation on Wolves with Diane Boyd

    4 jun

    A Candid Conversation on Wolves with Diane Boyd

    "We thrill to a little bit of wild in our life... and wolves really are the epitome of wild." - Diane Boyd In this episode of Carrying the Fire Podcast, host Hal Herring sits down with legendary wildlife biologist and researcher Diane Boyd, author of A Woman Among Wolves: My Journey Through 40 Years of Wolf Recovery. Diane Boyd is a pioneer in wolf research, having spent over four decades studying wolf ecology, behavior, and human tolerance in the American West and Midwest. Her book, A Woman Among Wolves, documents her unprecedented life on the frontlines of wildlife recovery. Decades before federal reintroductions in Yellowstone and Idaho became a lightning rod for the modern culture wars, Diane was on the ground in northwest Montana, living off-grid in a rustic cabin at the Canadian border. At just 24 years old, she immersed herself in the lives of the true pioneers—the native, native-born dispersal wolves that traversed hundreds of miles from Canada to reclaim their ancient territory on their own terms. Books and Other Works Mentioned A Woman Among Wolves: My Journey Through 40 Years of Wolf Recovery - Diane Boyd Of Wolves and Men - Barry Lopez Against the Grain - Richard Manning A Sand County Almanac - Aldo Leopold The Lewis and Clark JournalsThe Bolle Reports (The Bolle Committee Reports) Grimms' Fairy Tales In Memoriam - Alfred Lord Tennyson Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    1 h 38 min
  4. Awakening of American Indian Resistance with Peter Stark

    21 may

    Awakening of American Indian Resistance with Peter Stark

    Peter Stark is an explorer, journalist and adventurer who has become one of America's foremost writers of historical nonfiction. From his mind-blowing stories of the intersection of adventure and disaster,  Last Breath: Cautionary Tales from the Limits of Human Endurance, to his best-seller Astoria, an account the ruthless and bloody attempt to establish the fur trading post at the mouth of the Columbia River,  Stark is a writer working at the very top of his game. Join Hal and Peter as they discuss his new book, The Lost Cities of El Norte: Coronado's Quest, the Unconquered West, and the Birth of American Indian Resistance. It's a freewheeling conversation with detours into life, work, and how the inescapable tides of history are sweeping us all along, whether we know it or not.  Books by Peter Stark The Last Cities of El Norte: Coronado's Quest and the Unconquered West Astoria: John Jacob Astor and Thomas Jefferson's Lost Pacific Empire Gallop Toward the Sun: Tecumseh and William Henry Harrison's Struggle for the Destiny of a Nation At the Mercy of the River: An Exploration of the Luyanda River of Mozambique The Last Empty Places: A Journey Through Networkless America Nine Years Among the Indians by Herman Lehmann The Florida of the Inca by Garcilaso de la Vega Empire of the Summer Moon by S.C. Gwynne The Stand by Stephen King A Land So Strange by Andrés Reséndez Meditations by Marcus Aurelius The Wake by Paul Kingsnorth The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire by Edward Gibbon The Golden Bough by Sir James George Frazer "Frozen Alive" (1997): A famous article by Peter Stark published in Outside magazine regarding the science of hypothermia. https://www.outsideonline.com/2152131/freezing-death Cabeza de Vaca’s Account: The primary source journals of Álvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca. https://eada.lib.umd.edu/text-entries/account-of-cabeza-de-vaca/ The Old North Trail: An article by Peter Stark published in the Smithsonian Magazine  https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/the-old-north-trail-49911446/ Other Books & Works MentionedHistorical Journals & Articles Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    2 h y 4 min

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Hosted by journalist and writer Hal Herring, the Carrying the Fire podcast features the voices of writers and thinkers, homesteaders and conservationists, explorers, historians and futurists-human beings carrying the fire of our oldest verities through these tumultuous times. It is about reconnecting us to nature, and to each other. Subscribe to the Carrying the Fire Newsletter here - https://onyourownadventures.activehosted.com/f/19

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