Common Groundwater

Michigan Environmental Council

Michigan is defined by the Great Lakes that surround it. But there's a so-called sixth lake that’s critical to our state, too: our groundwater. It flows deeply through every community and to every corner of our peninsulas. Yet, we have so much more to learn about this natural feature. Like groundwater, this podcast shows environmental issues felt deeply, widely and personally across the state. It tells stories around those issues and the solutions to them. It goes beyond the headlines to bring listeners and viewers something grand yet personal to us all.

  1. EPISODE 6

    Of Swallow-Wort & Celandine

    Swallow-wort. A vine with beautiful, star-shaped flowers. It tricks insects into laying eggs on its leaves. When the eggs hatch, the larvae eat the leaves—and die with a one hundred percent mortality rate. Lesser celandine. A plant with bright, glossy, yellow flowers. It blooms early in the spring, outcompeting other plants only to offer little nutritional value to insects fresh out of hibernation. It then dies and leaves a bare patch of ground for other harmful plants to inhabit. Both these plants are invasive species. They not only contribute to the suffering of pollinator insects, they do the same to the native plants those pollinators and other creatures depend on. Entire ecosystems thus suffer. Enter the world of Dr. Shikha Singh, biologist and coordinator of the Jackson, Lenawee and Washtenaw Cooperative Invasive Species Management Area. In our latest podcast episode on pollinators, Singh talks about the great relationship between pollinators and ecosystems, the toxic relationships invasive species create, and Tim Horton’s, the best coffee and donut chain. ---- Learn more about Singh's organization here. Or find an invasive species group near you here. This episode is part of a pollinator miniseries produced in partnership with NRDC. Learn about its latest pollinator work in Michigan here. ---- Common Groundwater is hosted by the Michigan Environmental Council and Beau Brockett Jr. Our music is "The Four Seasons" by Antonio Vivaldi, arranged by Derek Zhang and performed by Jackson resident Taj Wallace.

    32 min
  2. EPISODE 9

    Rising to the Sun

    The country roads around the small town of Albion are some of the prettiest you'll see in Michigan. Take it from this podcast host, who would run them with his cross country teammates at Albion College. Now, there are new neighbors out among the corn and soy and old trees, stunning in their own way but undeniably different: solar panels. Over 4,000 acres of them, generating enough electricity to power 60,000 homes. Bonnie Lord noticed these panels, too. She's the editor-in-chief of the Albion Pleiad, Albion College's student-run newspaper. She spent hours and hours researching the solar farms, meeting with local government and business leaders, and talking to folks living nearby. Then, she put all she learned into a three-part news comic series. Bonnie joins Common Groundwater for the start of our miniseries on solar energy development. Michigan will be powered by 100% clean energy by 2040, but local, state and national forces appear bent to keep this from happening.  Bonnie's story—and the area's—is grounded in truth and compassion, and they serve as a bit of a microcosm of the larger state of solar, showing us all the goodness (and worry) this renewable energy can bring to a community. ---- Read Bonnie's comic news series on Calhoun County's solar renaissance here. Check out other stories from the Albion Pleiad here. (And if you like what you see, support local journalism with a donation!) Learn more about the Environmental Council's latest clean energy efforts here. ---- Common Groundwater is hosted by the Michigan Environmental Council and Beau Brockett Jr. Our music is "The Four Seasons" by Antonio Vivaldi, arranged by Derek Zhang and performed by Jackson resident Taj Wallace.

    34 min

About

Michigan is defined by the Great Lakes that surround it. But there's a so-called sixth lake that’s critical to our state, too: our groundwater. It flows deeply through every community and to every corner of our peninsulas. Yet, we have so much more to learn about this natural feature. Like groundwater, this podcast shows environmental issues felt deeply, widely and personally across the state. It tells stories around those issues and the solutions to them. It goes beyond the headlines to bring listeners and viewers something grand yet personal to us all.