
8 episodes

Grouse Unknown
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- History
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4.7 • 100 Ratings
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Grouse is a show about the most controversial bird in the West and what it can teach us about hope, compromise and life in rural America.Hosted by Ashley Ahearn, Grouse is an eight-part podcast series produced in partnership with BirdNote Presents and distributed in collaboration with Boise State Public Radio.
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Episode 8: If Not Hope, Then Courage
In the final episode of Grouse, Ashley returns to a lek in Washington with biologist Michael Schroeder and finds it scorched by recent wildfire. Michael cries as he looks out over an area that was once home to one of the largest remaining pockets of sage-grouse in the state. But he says he’s not ready to retire yet — there’s more work to be done.
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Episode 7: The Death Of Compromise?
In 2015 the Obama Administration hammered out a deal with leaders and land managers across the west that avoided listing the sage-grouse under the Endangered Species Act.
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Episode 6: “Oil and Gas”
Western Wyoming is home to many sage-grouse mating and nesting sites. And, in recent years, it’s also become a hub of oil and gas extraction.
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Episode 5: The Story Of The Grieving Lady And The Sage Hen
The sage-grouse plays a big role in the cultural history of several western American Indian Nations. Wilson Wewa, an elder of the Northern Paiute of the Warm Springs Reservation in Oregon, still remembers the first time he saw a sage-grouse lek while gathering medicine with his grandfather.
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Episode 4: "All I Want To Do Is Protect This Dirt"
There are a lot of people who say cows are one of the biggest problems in the West — and are making life a whole heck of a lot harder for sage grouse. But cows are also a symbol of a way of life that many in sagebrush country feel is under attack.
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Episode 3: Streamers
As the climate warms and invasive cheatgrass moves in, thousands of acres of sagebrush are burning across the West each year. And sage grouse are feeling the heat too, as the ecosystem shift destroys their habitat.
Customer Reviews
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Coming here from Timber Wars, I was so happy yo see the same level of production and story telling! I would love to hear more about this and other species/landscapes that are in peril and what we can do. A
Nope
You lost me the moment you bragged about killing a rattle snake instead of relocating it or, heaven forbid, wait until it leaves.
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I feel the story was/is well told. As a previous Wyoming resident who has been in these conversation, I commend the multiple perspectives on this storytelling. Environmental consents are a complex conversation that a lot of folks don’t understand. It’s so easy to forget where these resource come from when your so dis-attached to the local issues, and so easy to play the blame game. I understand your personal commentary on so many levels. Please keep the conversation going.