47 episodes

Are you looking at our society racked with disconnection, poor mental and physical health, social injustice, and the wanton destruction of the natural world and asking yourself, “What can I do?” Join experimental anthropologist Peter Michael Bauer as he converses with experts from many converging fields that help us craft cultures of resilience. Weaving together a range of topics from ecology to wilderness survival skills to permaculture, each episode deepens and expands your understanding of how to rewild yourself and your community.

The Rewilding Podcast w/ Peter Michael Bauer Peter Michael Bauer

    • Society & Culture
    • 4.9 • 77 Ratings

Are you looking at our society racked with disconnection, poor mental and physical health, social injustice, and the wanton destruction of the natural world and asking yourself, “What can I do?” Join experimental anthropologist Peter Michael Bauer as he converses with experts from many converging fields that help us craft cultures of resilience. Weaving together a range of topics from ecology to wilderness survival skills to permaculture, each episode deepens and expands your understanding of how to rewild yourself and your community.

    What is a Subsistence Economy and What Makes Them So Resilient w/ Dr. Helga Vierich

    What is a Subsistence Economy and What Makes Them So Resilient w/ Dr. Helga Vierich

    To attain the level of resilience that cultural rewilding calls for, requires moving away from an economy based on extraction for profit that lays waste to local ecosystems and destroys ancient ways that people have lived from the land. To move away we need alternatives, and examples of how other people have found and maintained sustainability. How have humans lived in a myriad of ways for millennia without destroying their land and not living in greatly unequal societies? What is a subsistence economy and what makes them so resilient? To talk with me about this today is Dr. Helga Vierich

    Dr. Vierich was born in Bremen, west Germany and immigrated with her parents to Canada, growing up in North Bay, Ontario. She began her studies at the University of Toronto in 1969. From 1977-1980, as part of her research, she lived in the Kalahari among hunter-gatherers in the Kweneng district with Richard B. Lee supervising. During this time she worked as a consultant on the effects of the extreme drought in Botswana. She was awarded her Ph.D. by the University of Toronto in 1981 and went to work as a Principal Scientist at the West African Economics Research Program, International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (headquarters in Hyderabad, India). She worked as a visiting professor of Anthropology at the University of Kentucky from 1985 to 1987, then as an adjunct professor of Anthropology at the University of Alberta from 1989 to 1997. From 1999-2022 she worked as an instructor at the Yellowhead Tribal College in Alberta. Now retired, she spends her time on a rural farm with her husband.

    Notes:

    • Dr. Vierich’s Website
    • Why they matter: hunter-gatherers today
    • Before farming and after globalization: the future of hunter-gatherers may be brighter than you think
    • Changes in West African Savanna agriculture in response to growing population and continuing low rainfall

    Photo by Vasilina Sirotina
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    • 1 hr 13 min
    The Reality of Hunter-Gatherers w/ Dr. Robert Kelly

    The Reality of Hunter-Gatherers w/ Dr. Robert Kelly

    Rewilding is about seeking a reciprocal relationship to the environment and to one another. Material and cultural conditions kept humans in relative check with their ecologies for potentially millions of years, so what were they? If we are to understand this, we must hold up a lens and look at the diversity of hunter-gatherers (both past and present) to fully realize what their cultural and environmental limitations were–and are–today. Why did some abandon that way of life while others have fought to the death to defend it? What led humans to switch from one subsistence strategy to another, and what were the social and ecological effects of these changes? Is it possible to fully know? What do we know? To talk about these core rewilding questions with me, is Dr. Robert Kelly.
    Dr. Kelly first became involved in archaeology in 1973, as a high school student. He received his BA from Cornell University in anthropology in 1978, his MA from the University of New Mexico in 1980, and his doctorate from the University of Michigan in 1985. He has taught at various Colleges since 1986; from 1997 until retirement in 2023 he taught at the University of Wyoming. Dr. Kelly is the author of over 100 articles, books, and reviews, including The Lifeways of Hunter-Gatherers, The Fifth Beginning, and Archaeology, the most widely used college textbook in the field. He is a past president of the Society for American Archaeology, past editor of American Antiquity, North America’s primary archaeological journal, and past secretary of the Archaeology Division of the American Anthropological Association. He has been a distinguished lecturer at many universities around the country and the world, including Argentina, Germany, France, Finland, Norway, Japan, and China, and he has worked on archaeological projects in Nevada, California, New Mexico, Kentucky, Georgia, Maine, Chile and, for the past 25 years, Wyoming and Montana. He has received over two million dollars in funding, with multiple grants from the National Science Foundation. Since 1973, the archaeology, ethnology, and ethnography of foraging peoples has been at the center of his research.

    Notes:
    Robert Kelly, Professor Archaeology at University of Wyoming
    The Fifth Beginning
    The Lifeways of Hunter-Gatherers: The Foraging Spectrum (Revised)
     CARTA: Violence in Human Evolution – Robert Kelly: Do Hunter-Gatherers Tell Us About Human Nature?
    ANTHRO, ART, (CLOVIS) and the APOCALYPSE: Live from the field with Dr. ROBERT KELLY | DIH Podcast #1
    Human Behavioral Ecology (Cambridge Studies in Biological and Evolutionary Anthropology, Series Number 92) 1st Edition
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    • 1 hr 17 min
    Rewilding Cities Through Place-making Permaculture w/ Mark Lakeman

    Rewilding Cities Through Place-making Permaculture w/ Mark Lakeman

    City landscapes are perhaps the most decimated and human centric habitats in today’s world. These landscapes are in need of thoughtful rewilding. Cities are some of the most domesticated places, but also positioned in some of the most historically fertile places. Cities were built where they are, because these places had access to a diverse array of resources. Many think rewilding means running away to the wilderness–but that’s not the case. For one, this is not a practical reality for most people. Two, because of their prime location and social capital, cities are both ripe for, and in desperate need of, rewilding. Permaculture, with its inspiration and core principles deriving from more regenerative sedentary, delayed-return societies such as indigenous horticulture, can be an effective tool for the urban rewilder. Using permaculture for place-making, becoming a part of your place, is a great way to start this journey. To talk with me about this today is Mark Lakeman.
    Mark is the founder of the non-profit placemaking movement and organization known as The City Repair Project. He is also principal and design director of the community architecture and planning firm Communitecture. He is an urban place-maker and permaculture designer, community design facilitator, and an inspiring catalyst in his very active commitment to the emergence of sustainable cultural landscapes everywhere.  Every design project he is involved with furthers the development of a beneficial vision for human and ecological communities. Whether this involves urban design and placemaking, permaculture and ecological building, encourages community interaction, or assists those who typically do not have access to design services, Mark’s leadership has benefited communities across the North American continent.
    Notes:
    Communitecture
    City Repair Project
    Maya Forest Garden, by Anabel Ford  and Ronald Nigh
    A Pattern Language by Christopher Alexander
    Phenology
    Photo by Greg Raisman
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    • 1 hr 19 min
    Rewilding Your Connection to the Land Through Stories w/ Jason Godesky

    Rewilding Your Connection to the Land Through Stories w/ Jason Godesky

    The longer a culture exists in a place, the more stories they have of that place. These stories act a way for people to interact with the land where they live and also act as social filters for how to perceive the land as well. Stories also engage people with the landscape through their imagination and when linked to a physical activity can make the connection more embodied and enjoyable. Humans learn through play, and playing with stories can be a great way to reconnect ourselves with the landscape and its inhabitants. To talk with me about this on the podcast, is a returning guest, Jason Godesky. 
    Jason Godesky is an independent tabletop roleplaying game designer and world builder. He and his wife Giulianna Lamanna are the creators of the Fifth World, an open source shared universe that imagines what the future that we in the rewilding community want could look like.

    Notes:
    The Fifth World
    The Power of Myth by Joseph Campbell
    If This Is Your Land, Where Are Your Stories? By J. Edward Chamberlin
    Wisdom Sits in Places: Landscape and Language Among the Western Apache by Keith H. Basso
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    • 1 hr 10 min
    Hunting and Gathering Like a BOSS w/ Randy Champagne

    Hunting and Gathering Like a BOSS w/ Randy Champagne

    There are few opportunities for people living in modern contexts to experience what life would be like living in a band of hunter-gatherers. While there are still several cultures in the world living this way, most are protected from outsiders through organizations like Survival International. While rewilding isn’t a synonym for primitive living, or a total return to hunting and gathering societies, we can learn a lot about how to live in a regenerative way through contemporary hunter-gatherer societies, as well as experiences that can replicate aspects of those societies. Boulder Outdoor Survival School (BOSS) in Utah is one such place to get a taste of the immediate-return hunting and gathering experience. I recently attended their Hunter-Gatherer course, and here to talk about it with me is one of the core instructors for that program, Randy Champagne.
    Originally from Michigan, Randy found his way to the deserts of Utah after taking a survival course that sparked his love for the wild. He has been at the Boulder Outdoor Survival School since 2008 where he’s been teaching and practicing ancestral and modern survival skills. His passion is in traditional hunting and gathering techniques. He was a participant on the television show ALONE, testing his skills solo on Seasons 2 and 5 on Vancouver island and in Mongolia.


    NOTES:
    Randy Champagne Instagram
    BOSS Hunter-Gatherer Course
    Support the show

    • 1 hr 15 min
    Rewilding as Anti-Fascism w/ Cara Delia Schwab

    Rewilding as Anti-Fascism w/ Cara Delia Schwab

    Fascist ideology has been on the rise, with a calculated effort on the part of fascists, to infiltrate environmental movements. Rewilding has seen its fair share of this over the years. As a return to our egalitarian roots, rewilding is the political opposite of fascism. And yet, there are foot holds of sort, within the ideology and world view that fascists can exploit for their own gain. To protect ourselves from this fascist creep, we need to be aware of it and also aware of the problematic aspects of where our own ideologies can be misconstrued to lead us astray. In this episode I’m chatting with Cara Delia Schwab.
    Cara is an anthropologist with a masters degree from the University of Heidelberg. Her thesis was on racism and resistance through media and art in the US. She went back to school to get a B.A. in social work and has been working in that field since 2015 (with immigrants and refugees mostly). She is a “wilderness” instructor in training with Wildnisschule Odenwald. Her plan for the future is to teach foraging classes through her business www.wildnisliebe.de. She has an allotment garden, where she grows her own food. Her ideal life would be writing and spending the rest of the day outside somewhere weaving baskets and working with her hands.
    Notes
    Cara Delia Schwab
    www.wildnisliebe.de
    Cara’s Instagram
    Wildnisschule Odenwald

    The Rise of Ecofascism
    Hierarchy in the Forest
    Mothers and Others
    The Lies That Bind
    No Politics But Class Politics
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    • 1 hr 32 min

Customer Reviews

4.9 out of 5
77 Ratings

77 Ratings

Buglet17 ,

Absolutely fascinating

If you’re interested in anthropology, human history, or how to navigate our future in a world on the precipice of catastrophe, Peter’s podcast is a must listen. His guests and interviews are absolutely fascinating—not just interesting in a “this is smart and good for me so I should listen to it” sort of way, but in a truly riveting, “I can’t turn this off” kind of way. Honestly, I can’t listen to most podcasts because I’m a journalist and find most interviewers infuriating because they’re so ego-centric they don’t actually listen to their guests and ask the right questions; Peter, on the other hand, has evolved into a master interviewer over the years of this show. He always puts his guests first and knows how to adeptly steer the conversation to let his guests shine and make every episode truly delightful for the listener. Thank you, Peter! You make my unfathomable hours in the car in Los Angeles (as I figure out my own rewilding path) actually bearable.

lunapractica ,

mind-opening

i started with episode 6 with dr leonard martin and since then, i’ve listened to a few episodes. each listening my mind is opened a bit further. ideas about collapse, the sixth extinction, rewilding are presented with care and depth. personally i had never heard of some of these ideas before, but the deep resonance in my body tells me that these are just names to experiences that we have already been living through. in a sense, it’s comforting to talk about the crisis we’re living through with openness. it reminds me that to be scared or to grieve is understandable and healthy. and for giving some contextual understanding to what we’re living through, i am so grateful.

ella.weed ,

enriching and inspiring

peter is an incredible host - knowledgable, engaging, funny and passionate. each guest shares wonderful insights and information. truly enriching and inspiring. my new favorite podcast!

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