1 hr 7 min

His Photography Saves Wild Places with Acclaimed Photographer Robert Glenn Ketchum [EP 263‪]‬ Outdoor Biz Podcast

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Robert Glenn Ketchum is a pioneering conservation photographer, recognized by Audubon magazine as one of 100 people "who shaped the environmental movement in the 20th century." He tells us the stories of his photos and influential work from Mexico to Alaska and more.
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The Outdoor Biz Podcast
 
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Show Notes Introduction to the Outdoors When I was very young, my dad was a hunter and a fisherman and spent, a portion of his life, leaving his office and going with his friends to shoot pheasants in Nebraska or something. He didn't take me hunting, but he did take me fishing. And we did some stream fishing and I grew to love that process and started to really like being out of doors with my dad.
First Camera Half of my dad's business was based in Honolulu because he helped rebuild the fleet after he was in industrial auto parts manufacturing, and he distributed for all of the Eastern manufacturers. He distributed their parts on the West coast. And so when Pearl Harbor occurred and the Navy got bombed out and they had to rebuild the fleet, my father opened an office in Honolulu and help the Navy rebuild their fleet. And so he was in Hawaii oh, I dunno, six months a year doing all of that. And he when I was five, I think, maybe seven. He flew my mom and me over and said, why don't you spend the summer with me. And they didn't know what to do with me. So they brought me a brownie box camera and let me wander around in the Kahala Hotel garden and take pictures of random leaves. I had no idea what I was doing.
The Daily Bruin
The Whisky
Limekiln Creek
Two questions I asked myself:
"What are you doing? And my response was, I don't really know and what am I supposed to do? And the comeback was, what do you want to do? And I said if I could be Elliot quarter, but be out in front of these incidents rather than after the fact when they've already occurred, I would do that in a heartbeat." "This was really interesting because the next question was. Would you do it if you were never famous? Rock photography is about being famous. And so the question was what would you do if you were never famous and I was like, if I succeeded, I would do it as long as I succeeded." Elliott Porter
In Wildness Is the Preservation of the World by Elliot Porter and Henry David Thoreau
The Place No One Knew - Glen Canyon on the Colorado
National Park Foundation
Cuyahoga Valley National Park
Tongass Rainforest
Pebble Mine
Alaska Conservation Foundation
Advice I've been a conservation environmentalist, my whole life. It's frustrating. I think we have to be very wary of the idea of compromising, which is what Elliot Porter's book on the Glen Canyon pointed out. The compromise was the Grand Canyon gets saved, but Glen Canyon gets drowned. When I met with Elliott in his house, and I asked him about it and I said, "your book has inspired me, do you have any laments about this?" And he said, yeah, "that I couldn't do it before the project got started, and that everything I did was after the fact." And that inspired me to be in front of issues like the Tongass Rain Forest and the Pebble Mine so that they never even got traction and we shut them out before they got started.
International League of Conservation Photographers
Trade Show Banner: "Get outside and have fun"
Favorite Books: Regarding the Land Robert Ketchum, and The legacy of Elliot Porter, Arctic Dreams by Barry Lopez
Favorite Piece of Gear under $100: Patagonia Zip Turtleneck
Connect with Robert peace2rth@mac.com
Roberts Books
rbtglennketchum.blogspot.com
www.robertglennketchum.com
https://www.instagram.com/rbtglennketchum/ 






 


https://www.linkedin.com/in/rbtglennketchum 






 


https://www.pinterest.com/rbtglennketchum/ 






 


https://www.youtube.com/user/RbtGlennKetchum







 
Snippets
1:03 - 01:45 Intro to

Robert Glenn Ketchum is a pioneering conservation photographer, recognized by Audubon magazine as one of 100 people "who shaped the environmental movement in the 20th century." He tells us the stories of his photos and influential work from Mexico to Alaska and more.
Facebook Twitter Instagram
 
The Outdoor Biz Podcast
 
Please give us a rating and review HERE
 
Show Notes Introduction to the Outdoors When I was very young, my dad was a hunter and a fisherman and spent, a portion of his life, leaving his office and going with his friends to shoot pheasants in Nebraska or something. He didn't take me hunting, but he did take me fishing. And we did some stream fishing and I grew to love that process and started to really like being out of doors with my dad.
First Camera Half of my dad's business was based in Honolulu because he helped rebuild the fleet after he was in industrial auto parts manufacturing, and he distributed for all of the Eastern manufacturers. He distributed their parts on the West coast. And so when Pearl Harbor occurred and the Navy got bombed out and they had to rebuild the fleet, my father opened an office in Honolulu and help the Navy rebuild their fleet. And so he was in Hawaii oh, I dunno, six months a year doing all of that. And he when I was five, I think, maybe seven. He flew my mom and me over and said, why don't you spend the summer with me. And they didn't know what to do with me. So they brought me a brownie box camera and let me wander around in the Kahala Hotel garden and take pictures of random leaves. I had no idea what I was doing.
The Daily Bruin
The Whisky
Limekiln Creek
Two questions I asked myself:
"What are you doing? And my response was, I don't really know and what am I supposed to do? And the comeback was, what do you want to do? And I said if I could be Elliot quarter, but be out in front of these incidents rather than after the fact when they've already occurred, I would do that in a heartbeat." "This was really interesting because the next question was. Would you do it if you were never famous? Rock photography is about being famous. And so the question was what would you do if you were never famous and I was like, if I succeeded, I would do it as long as I succeeded." Elliott Porter
In Wildness Is the Preservation of the World by Elliot Porter and Henry David Thoreau
The Place No One Knew - Glen Canyon on the Colorado
National Park Foundation
Cuyahoga Valley National Park
Tongass Rainforest
Pebble Mine
Alaska Conservation Foundation
Advice I've been a conservation environmentalist, my whole life. It's frustrating. I think we have to be very wary of the idea of compromising, which is what Elliot Porter's book on the Glen Canyon pointed out. The compromise was the Grand Canyon gets saved, but Glen Canyon gets drowned. When I met with Elliott in his house, and I asked him about it and I said, "your book has inspired me, do you have any laments about this?" And he said, yeah, "that I couldn't do it before the project got started, and that everything I did was after the fact." And that inspired me to be in front of issues like the Tongass Rain Forest and the Pebble Mine so that they never even got traction and we shut them out before they got started.
International League of Conservation Photographers
Trade Show Banner: "Get outside and have fun"
Favorite Books: Regarding the Land Robert Ketchum, and The legacy of Elliot Porter, Arctic Dreams by Barry Lopez
Favorite Piece of Gear under $100: Patagonia Zip Turtleneck
Connect with Robert peace2rth@mac.com
Roberts Books
rbtglennketchum.blogspot.com
www.robertglennketchum.com
https://www.instagram.com/rbtglennketchum/ 






 


https://www.linkedin.com/in/rbtglennketchum 






 


https://www.pinterest.com/rbtglennketchum/ 






 


https://www.youtube.com/user/RbtGlennKetchum







 
Snippets
1:03 - 01:45 Intro to

1 hr 7 min