The Ranger PamPaw Podcast

Tezels on the Road

Stories, perspective, and park wisdom from a lifetime in the National Parks Ranger PamPaw Podcast is a podcast from Tezels on the Road about America’s national parks, the stories they hold, and what a lifetime of experience inside the National Park Service can teach us about the places we share. Hosted by Mark Tezel—known to his grandkids as Ranger PamPaw—the show reflects a transition from active service to reflection, storytelling, and legacy. After nearly four decades with the National Park Service, Mark brings a personal, ranger-honest perspective shaped by years as an interpreter, supervisor, trainer, and servicewide support professional working with parks across the entire National Park System. Each episode blends park news and context, behind-the-scenes insights, thoughtful storytelling, and practical visitor advice grounded in real experience. Instead of focusing on hype or checklists, Ranger PamPaw Podcast explores why national parks matter—as shared civic spaces shaped by history, stewardship, and people. This podcast is for park lovers, travelers, history enthusiasts, and anyone curious about how national parks actually work. The tone is conversational, reflective, and earned—the voice of a ranger who has stepped out of the uniform but continues to care deeply about the places it represents.

Episodes

  1. Why Wildlife Doesn't Need Your Help — What Rangers Really Want Visitors to Know

    May 27

    Why Wildlife Doesn't Need Your Help — What Rangers Really Want Visitors to Know

    The three most common wildlife mistakes visitors make in national parks are feeding, rescuing, and getting too close. Most people who make them think they're doing something harmless. Some think they're helping.   In this episode, Ranger PamPaw draws on nearly four decades of National Park Service experience to explain what actually happens when wildlife gets conditioned to human food, when a well-meaning visitor picks up a fawn, and when a visitor closes the distance for a selfie with a bison.   You'll hear about bear school at Katmai, the remarkable return of black bears to Big Bend National Park, the baby squirrel call at San Antonio Missions, and a close encounter with a mother bear and her cubs on the Basin Loop Trail — an encounter that worked because a ranger knew when to step aside.   This episode is about the chain of good decisions that makes wild places stay wild — and your role in it.  CHAPTERS: 0:00 — Cold Open: The Kid at the Wall — Rainbow Curve 02:04 — Segment 1: Feeding Wildlife — Why It Matters 08:20 — Segment 2: The "Rescue" Instinct 13:06 — Segment 3: Proximity, Phones, and the Selfie Problem 16:37 — Segment 4: What Respectful Wildlife Observation Looks Like 20:57 — Closing: The Chain of Good Decisions Ranger PamPaw Podcast is hosted by Mark Tezel — known to his grandkids as Ranger PamPaw — after nearly four decades with the National Park Service. New episodes drop every other Wednesday. Part of the Tezels on the Road family. Support the show Thanks for joining me on the trail today. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who loves our national parks as much as you do. If you have a question, a story, or a park memory you’d like to share, I’d love to hear from you. Visit www.tezelsontheroad.com/rangerpampaw or email me at rangerpampaw@tezelsontheroad.com. Thanks for walking the trail with me. I’ll see you in the park.

    23 min
  2. May 13

    Fire, Flood, and Change: How Parks Adapt Over Time

    What does a park on fire look like? Or a river reclaiming its floodplain after a century of dams? Or a glacier you could touch in 2010 that's now out of sight up the mountain?  In this episode of the Ranger PamPaw Podcast, host Mark Tezel talks about fire, flood, and ecological change the way a ranger who lived it would — through direct field experience, specific stories, and the long view that only a career in the parks can give you.  You'll hear the story of a sand hill in Boquillas Canyon that was there in 2005 and mostly gone twenty years later, why Smokey Bear's motto overachieved and what it cost the science, how the Elwha River reclaimed its floodplain after two dams came out, what a ranger notices about cherry blossoms over a decade of trips to Washington, and why "unimpaired for future generations" doesn't mean what most people think it means.  This isn't a doom episode. It's not cheerful denial either. It's the informed calm of someone who has watched these places change — and still believes they're worth protecting.  Ranger PamPaw Podcast is hosted by Mark Tezel — known to his grandkids as Ranger PamPaw — after nearly four decades with the National Park Service. New episodes drop every other Wednesday.  Part of the Tezels on the Road family. Thanks for joining me on the trail today. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who loves our national parks as much as you do. If you have a question, a story, or a park memory you’d like to share, I’d love to hear from you. Visit www.tezelsontheroad.com/rangerpampaw or email me at rangerpampaw@tezelsontheroad.com. Thanks for walking the trail with me. I’ll see you in the park.

    23 min
  3. Apr 29

    Stories They Don’t Put on the Signs

    Every national park has an official story — the one on the signs, the plaques, the brochures.    This episode tells the other stories. After five episodes building context and credibility, Ranger PamPaw steps back from explaining how parks work and does something different: he sits down and tells stories. The funny ones — including the number one question asked at every park in America, a visitor who needed directions to El Paso and didn’t quite grasp the size of Texas, and a patch of prickly pear cactus that grew on a ranger office roof and became an impromptu natural history lesson. The quiet ones — including 1,700-year-old Bristlecone pines at Cedar Breaks National Monument and a story that didn’t finish until thirteen years after the hike that started it. The meaningful ones — a perfect interpretive moment on the San Antonio River with a school group, and the release of Kemp’s Ridley sea turtle hatchlings at Padre Island, one of conservation’s quiet success stories. And the one that stays: a story about former students spread across the National Park System — from Alaska to Indiana, from the National Mall to the canyon country of Utah — and what their work says about the future of the NPS. It all starts with a grandmother, a backpack, and a kid who wanted to be a ranger. Ranger PamPaw Podcast is hosted by Mark Tezel — known to his grandkids as Ranger PamPaw — after nearly four decades with the National Park Service. New episodes drop every other Wednesday. Part of the Tezels on the Road family. www.tezelsontheroad.com Support the show Thanks for joining me on the trail today. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who loves our national parks as much as you do. If you have a question, a story, or a park memory you’d like to share, I’d love to hear from you. Visit www.tezelsontheroad.com/rangerpampaw or email me at rangerpampaw@tezelsontheroad.com. Thanks for walking the trail with me. I’ll see you in the park.

    25 min
  4. What I Wish Every Park Visitor Knew — Stewardship, Rules & Real Ranger Advice

    Apr 15

    What I Wish Every Park Visitor Knew — Stewardship, Rules & Real Ranger Advice

    Most park visitors want to do the right thing. But wanting to and knowing how aren’t always the same.   In this episode, host Mark Tezel — Ranger PamPaw — delivers the practical, honest advice that rangers wish they could give every visitor: what Leave No Trace actually means beyond the slogan, the real stories behind the rules that seem arbitrary, and why some of the most obvious-seeming rules are the hardest to enforce.   You’ll hear about the three visitor behaviors rangers deal with most — the wildlife selfie, the trail shortcut, and the feeding of wildlife — and what rangers genuinely understand about why they happen. You’ll also learn how visitors can actively help parks survive, and what Ranger PamPaw truly wishes he could say to every person who walks through the gate.   This is Episode 5 of Season 1 — the episode where Ranger PamPaw has earned the right to give some real advice. And he does.   Ranger PamPaw Podcast is hosted by Mark Tezel — known to his grandkids as Ranger PamPaw — after nearly four decades with the National Park Service. New episodes drop every other Wednesday. Part of the Tezels on the Road family.  www.tezelsontheroad.com Thanks for joining me on the trail today. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who loves our national parks as much as you do. If you have a question, a story, or a park memory you’d like to share, I’d love to hear from you. Visit www.tezelsontheroad.com/rangerpampaw or email me at rangerpampaw@tezelsontheroad.com. Thanks for walking the trail with me. I’ll see you in the park.

    22 min
  5. What Does a Park Ranger Actually Do? — A Day in the Life | S1E4

    Apr 1

    What Does a Park Ranger Actually Do? — A Day in the Life | S1E4

    Ask ten people to describe a park ranger, and you'll get ten different answers. A tour guide. A law enforcement officer. Someone who fixes trails. Someone who works in the visitor center.   Here's the thing — they're all right.   In this episode of the Ranger PamPaw Podcast, host Mark Tezel brings you inside a full day in the life of the National Park Service: the early mornings, the public-facing work, the invisible planning, and the flexibility that holds it all together.   You'll hear about opening an eighteenth-century mission church before the visitors arrive, what the NPS Organic Act actually says and why it still drives every decision, the story of 14 miles of historic acequia and the seven-year plan to maintain them, and why there is truly no such thing as a typical day — or a typical park.   Whether you've visited a dozen national parks or you're just curious how they actually work, this episode will change the way you see the ranger hat.   Ranger PamPaw Podcast is hosted by Mark Tezel — known to his grandkids as Ranger PamPaw — after nearly four decades with the National Park Service. New episodes drop every other Wednesday.   Part of the Tezels on the Road family. www.tezelsontheroad.com Support the show Thanks for joining me on the trail today. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who loves our national parks as much as you do. If you have a question, a story, or a park memory you’d like to share, I’d love to hear from you. Visit www.tezelsontheroad.com/rangerpampaw or email me at rangerpampaw@tezelsontheroad.com. Thanks for walking the trail with me. I’ll see you in the park.

    23 min

About

Stories, perspective, and park wisdom from a lifetime in the National Parks Ranger PamPaw Podcast is a podcast from Tezels on the Road about America’s national parks, the stories they hold, and what a lifetime of experience inside the National Park Service can teach us about the places we share. Hosted by Mark Tezel—known to his grandkids as Ranger PamPaw—the show reflects a transition from active service to reflection, storytelling, and legacy. After nearly four decades with the National Park Service, Mark brings a personal, ranger-honest perspective shaped by years as an interpreter, supervisor, trainer, and servicewide support professional working with parks across the entire National Park System. Each episode blends park news and context, behind-the-scenes insights, thoughtful storytelling, and practical visitor advice grounded in real experience. Instead of focusing on hype or checklists, Ranger PamPaw Podcast explores why national parks matter—as shared civic spaces shaped by history, stewardship, and people. This podcast is for park lovers, travelers, history enthusiasts, and anyone curious about how national parks actually work. The tone is conversational, reflective, and earned—the voice of a ranger who has stepped out of the uniform but continues to care deeply about the places it represents.