Waterside Chat

Marine Fish Conservation Network

The Marine Fish Conservation Network's Waterside Chat series connects people who depend on healthy oceans and fisheries with the issues that directly affect them and their communities. Each episode, the Network's Deputy Director Tom Sadler talks with different guests about ocean policy and fisheries management topics. He engages them in genuine and thoughtful conversations about what policy decisions mean for people’s livelihoods, communities, recreation and coastal ways of life.

  1. 1 NGÀY TRƯỚC

    "The Ocean Called to Us as Kids" - A Waterside Chat with Theresa Labriola of Wild Oceans

    Theresa Labriola of Wild Oceans joined the Network for a Waterside Chat with the Marine Fish Conservation Network on April 6, 2026.  In a wide-ranging discussion, Theresa and host Tom Sadler talked about: How Theresa grew up fishing for striped bass and tuna from her family boat off Rhode IslandHer new role as president of Wild Oceans, an organization originally founded by recreational fishermen who saw the effects of overfishing in Northeastern U.S. watersWhy healthy fisheries doin’t exist in isolation — they’re part of a larger ecosystem affected by our actionsWhy we have an obligation to treat this resource with respect and to steward it for future generationsWhy the Magnuson Stevens Act is one of the most important marine resources laws ever put in place, why it drives innovation, and how updates over the years since its passage have made it strongerThe power of the Marine Fish Conservation Network to bring together diverse stakeholders, from commercial and recreational fishermen to chefs and scientists, and why the decision to create it gets validated over and overAnd of course, much more! Watch the video for the full experience. Look for more Waterside Chats in the months to come, and be sure to check out our recent conversation with sustainable fishmonger Lyf Gildersleeve. About Waterside Chat The Marine Fish Conservation Network’s Waterside Chat series connects people who depend on healthy oceans and fisheries with the issues that directly affect them and their communities. Each episode the Network’s CEO Tom Sadler talks with different guests about ocean policy and fisheries management topics. He engages them in genuine and thoughtful conversations about what policy decisions mean for people’s livelihoods, communities, recreation, and coastal ways of life. Join the Network’s email list to learn about future Chats. You can also watch past Chats and subscribe to the podcast on the Network’s website.

    42 phút
  2. 6 THG 4

    Waterside Chat with Sustainable Fishmonger Lyf Gildersleeve

    Lyf Gildersleeve joined the Network for an online Waterside Chat with host Tom Sadler on March 10, 2026. Lyf is a second-generation fish monger who actively promotes and protects sustainable use of our seafood resources. He owns Flying Fish Company, a retail fish market, meat market, and oyster bar in Portland, Oregon and its nonprofit arm, Sustainable Fishmonger. Among many topics, Lyf and Tom talked about: How cooking classes help bring people closer to their food so they can make better choices in the futureWhy it’s so important to move beyond the “big four” seafood species that dominate American tablesHow the regulatory framework created by the Magnuson Stevens Act creates an evolving framework that adds stability to coastal communitiesA new Monterrey Bay Aquarium program for restaurants that lets them put a label on menus for specific dishes made only with sustainable and environmentally responsible ingredients — which encourages customers to ask other restaurants about THEIR ingredientsWhy fishmongers feel such a connection to the sea, and why they’re the perfect messengers to educate chefs (and ultimately the public) about sustainable, local seafood optionsAnd of course, much much more!  About Waterside Chat The Marine Fish Conservation Network’s Waterside Chat series connects people who depend on healthy oceans and fisheries with the issues that directly affect them and their communities. Each episode the Network’s Deputy Director Tom Sadler talks with different guests about ocean policy and fisheries management topics. He engages them in genuine and thoughtful conversations about what policy decisions mean for people’s livelihoods, communities, recreation, and coastal ways of life. Join the Network’s email list to learn about future Chats. You can also watch past Chats and subscribe to the podcast on the Network’s website.

    50 phút
  3. 4 THG 2

    Waterside Chat with Jamie Workman

    Jamie Workman joined host and Marine Fish Conservation Network Executive Director Tom Sadler for an online Waterside Chat on January 8, 2026. Jamie is an author, advocate and communicator whose work has focused on water and our relationship with it. His books include Heart of Dryness and the new Sea Change: Unlikely Allies and a Success Story of Oceanic Proportions. In a wide-ranging discussion, Jamie and Tom talked about: How Jamie’s reporting helped stop a Disney theme park because there wasn’t enough water availableHow catch-share systems make fishing safer and encourage long-term stewardshipWhy such rights-based approaches to fisheries can build trust and confidence among people who would otherwise be fighting with each other, providing a model that can work in many places where people compete for scarce, depletable resourcesHow scientists, advocates and fishermen can move from an adversarial to a symbiotic, collaborative relationshipAnd of course, much more! ABOUT WATERSIDE CHATS: Watch Waterside Chat videos or subscribe to the podcast. The Marine Fish Conservation Network’s Waterside Chat series connects people who depend on healthy oceans and fisheries with the issues that directly affect them and their communities. Each episode the Network’s Deputy Director Tom Sadler talks with different guests about ocean policy and fisheries management topics. He engages them in genuine and thoughtful conversations about what policy decisions mean for people’s livelihoods, communities, recreation, and coastal ways of life. Join the Network's email list to learn about future Waterside Chats.

    1 giờ
  4. 24/03/2025

    Salmon, Logging, Mining & More: Waterside Chat with Tim Bristol of SalmonState

    Tim Bristol joined host Tom Sadler and the Marine Fish Conservation Network for an online Waterside Chat on March 4, 2025. Tim is SalmonState’s executive director, and he has had a long career in environment conservation, having worked for Trout Unlimited in Alaska, the Alaska Coalition, the Southeast Alaska Conservation Council, and the Save Our Wild Salmon Coalition. He is a recipient of the Alaska Conservation Foundation’s Olas Murie Award for outstanding professional contributions to conservation. Tim and Waterside Chat host Tom Sadler talked about Tim’s conservation journey, his work with SalmonState, the campaigns SalmonState has going on, and what the next few years with a new congress and administration may entail. They covered: Why fishing with his father — and a childhood close to infamous Superfund site Love Canal — directed Tim towards conservationHow recognition of the recreational value of forests helps us move away from logging-first and towards a mix of uses, including tourism, water quality, Native Alaskan subsistence AND loggingHow SalmonState, as a group of communicators, connectors and conveners, brings together abroad swath of communities, salmon markters, indigenous communities, commercial fishermen and moreThe importance of illustrating stories in a way that’s evocative — “The showing rather than telling is critical”Why bycatch is a massive threat to Alaska salmon, and why restraining it is not an easy problem to solveThe importance of the Tongass, America’s “salmon forest”, whose economic value for fishing far outstrips the value that would be realized from logging or road-buildingUpdates on mining activity that threatens Alaska salmon runs, including new uncertainty under the current administrationAnd of course, much much more! ABOUT WATERSIDE CHATS: Watch Waterside Chat videos or subscribe to the podcast. The Marine Fish Conservation Network’s Waterside Chat series connects people who depend on healthy oceans and fisheries with the issues that directly affect them and their communities. Each episode the Network’s Deputy Director Tom Sadler talks with different guests about ocean policy and fisheries management topics. He engages them in genuine and thoughtful conversations about what policy decisions mean for people’s livelihoods, communities, recreation, and coastal ways of life. Join the Network's email list to learn about future Waterside Chats.

    46 phút
  5. 05/02/2025

    Salmon, Grizzlies & Sage Grouse: Waterside Chat with Kris Millgate of Tight Line Media

    Author, filmmaker and Tight Line Media CEO Kris Millgate joined the Marine Fish Conservation Network and host Tom Sadler for an online Waterside Chat on January 29, 2025. Kris is an Emmy-winning multimedia journalist who started Tight Line Media in 2006. She hosted Time OUT(an outdoor TV news segment) for seven years, then created East Idaho Outdoors magazine in 2014. Her first book, My Place Among Men, was published in 2019. The sequel, My Place Among Fish, was published in 2021 alongside the debut of her salmon film Ocean to Idaho. Her third book, My Place Among Beasts, was published with her wildlife film, On Grizzly Ground, in 2023. You can learn more about these and her other projects and order your own copies at: https://www.tightlinemedia.com/ Among many other topics, Kris and Tom talked about: How she became an outdoor journalist despite shyness and a childhood fear of people with beardsHow she spent a summer in a camper following salmon from the ocean to their spawning streams in IdahoThe physical toll migration takes on salmon -- and on a filmmaker following themThe difference between a situation that makes you uncomfortable and one that's actually unsafeThe one thing everyone does when they come face to face with a grizzlyWhy it's so important to capture all points of view on a topic as controversial as dam removal in the WestWhy storytellers need to meet people where they are, understanding that they may take in information in different ways via different mediaHer newest project, Sage Wisdom West, which follows sage grouse in the high desert, "a fantastic landscape that sustains perhaps more wildlife than the mountains"ABOUT WATERSIDE CHATS: Watch Waterside Chat videos or subscribe to the podcast. The Marine Fish Conservation Network’s Waterside Chat series connects people who depend on healthy oceans and fisheries with the issues that directly affect them and their communities. Each episode the Network’s Deputy Director Tom Sadler talks with different guests about ocean policy and fisheries management topics. He engages them in genuine and thoughtful conversations about what policy decisions mean for people’s livelihoods, communities, recreation, and coastal ways of life. Join the Network's email list to learn about future Waterside Chats.

    55 phút
  6. 09/01/2025

    Waterside Chat with Brian Bennett of the Wild Steelhead Coalition

    The Wild Steelhead Coalition’s Brian Bennett joined host Tom Sadler for an online Waterside Chat on November 14, 2024, making his second appearance on the program. Brian is the Wild Steelhead Coalition‘s communications and social media manager, produces the organization’s podcast, “The Adipose,” and assists with other communication and advocacy efforts. Among many great topics, Brian and Tom talked about: Wild Steelhead as Pacific coast icon and watershed health indicator (the fish spawn in climate zones ranging from from high desert to temperate rainforest)The work of the Wild Steelhead Coalition and the Now or Never CampaignThe need to build a robust army of wild steelhead supporters as devoted to preserving the fish as they are to catching them, particularly as the climate changes around usHow a wild steelhead is a rainbow trout that goes to sea to feed, and how the fish return not just to the same stream to spawn, but to the same spot in the streamHow wild steelhead populations are at 3% of historical levels in Washington state, due to warming waters, habitat loss, harvesting and moreWhy a big pink salmon year in the Pacific means fewer wild steelhead in IdahoHow steelhead have been around for millennia and have been able to adapt to many environmental changes, but they have not been able to adapt to the genetic impacts of hatchery-raised fishHow rainbow trout start going out to sea as soon as we remove dams and other obstacles, making stream trout a genetic bank for the speciesHow the species and the industry need us to create a long-term plan for survival in the face of climate changeWhy if you’re in the fishing space, whether as a consumer, fisherman or brand, you have a responsibility to conserve the speciesAlso in this episode: The Adipose podcast, with the Linda Mapes interview mentioned in the Chat taking place on October 02, 2024. The Marine Fish Conservation Network's Waterside Chat series connects people who depend on healthy oceans and fisheries with the issues that directly affect them and their communities. Each episode the Network's Deputy Director Tom Sadler talks with different guests about ocean policy and fisheries management topics. He engages them in genuine and thoughtful conversations about what policy decisions mean for people’s livelihoods, communities, recreation, and coastal ways of life. Join the Network's email list to learn about future Chats. You can also watch past Chats and subscribe to the podcast on the Network's website.

    56 phút
  7. 07/01/2025

    Waterside Chat with Kate Masury of Eating with the Ecosystem

    Kate Masury, executive director of Eating with the Ecosystem, joined the Marine Fish Conservation Network for a Waterside Chat on October 16, 2024. Among many topics, Kate and host Tom Sadler discussed: Eating with the Ecosystem, the work they do, and how they are a nonprofit that started as a food gatheringTheir place-based approach to sustaining wild seafoodHow bribing people with delicious seafood is a good way to get them to the tableWorking with members from all parts of the local seafood supply chainWhy one of the best things you can do for sustainability is to eat a variety of ocean speciesWhy you’re connecting directly with the oceans when you’re eating local seafood, and why it’s better for people to choose seafood from their local areaCreating a Roadmap for Climate-Resilient Seafood Supply ChainsAnd of course, much moreThe Marine Fish Conservation Network's Waterside Chat series connects people who depend on healthy oceans and fisheries with the issues that directly affect them and their communities. Each episode the Network's Deputy Director Tom Sadler talks with different guests about ocean policy and fisheries management topics. He engages them in genuine and thoughtful conversations about what policy decisions mean for people’s livelihoods, communities, recreation, and coastal ways of life. Join the Network's email list to learn about future Chats. You can also watch past Chats and subscribe to the podcast on the Network's website.

    53 phút
  8. 06/06/2024

    Where Your Seafood Comes From: A Waterside Chat with Colles Stowell

    Colles Stowell, founder and president of the One Fish Foundation, joined the Marine Fish Conservation Network for an online Waterside Chat on May 30, 2024. Colles and host Tom Sadler discussed: How our seafood system has changed from mostly local or domestic to mostly imported in a few short decadesHow we've become so dependent on an industrialized food system that we don't know where our food is coming fromThe power of One Fish Foundation's Know Your Fish dinners, which connect seafood consumers with the people who catch their food and start people on the path to owning their relationship with seafoodHow One Fish Foundation goes to schools, including bringing a lobster trap to a kindergarten classWhy "good, clean and fair" should be a sustainable-seafood mantraThe important role of chefs in the seafood conversationHow consolidation in the seafood-distribution industry hurts local fishermenAnd much, much more!IN THIS EPISODE: One Fish Foundation MORE ABOUT COLLES: Colles Stowell's love of fish, fishing and food started early. From the Louisiana bayous of his youth, he moved on to New Hampshire's lakes and rivers and trout streams, world-class salmon rivers in Canada, and bonefish flats in the Bahamas. Along the way, he discovered a passion both for local seafood and for writing. Stowell's journalism career includes writing for The Boston Globe, United Press International and New Hampshire Public Radio. He began covering sustainable fisheries and seafood in 2011, and he now focuses on issues ranging from privatization of our oceans to the devastating impact of the proposed Pebble Mine in Bristol Bay, Alaska. Of the One Fish Foundation, Colles says, "Starting the Foundation is the confluence of my career and personal passions. My deep-seated interest in fisheries and in striking the right balance to support well-managed fisheries, transparent, local seafood systems, and healthy oceans for future generations drives One Fish Foundation." ABOUT WATERSIDE CHATS: Watch more Waterside Chats or subscribe to the podcast The Marine Fish Conservation Network’s Waterside Chat series connects people who depend on healthy oceans and fisheries with the issues that directly affect them and their communities. Each episode the Network’s Deputy Director Tom Sadler talks with different guests about ocean policy and fisheries management topics. He engages them in genuine and thoughtful conversations about what policy decisions mean for people’s livelihoods, communities, recreation, and coastal ways of life. Join the Network's email list to learn about future Waterside Chats

    57 phút

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The Marine Fish Conservation Network's Waterside Chat series connects people who depend on healthy oceans and fisheries with the issues that directly affect them and their communities. Each episode, the Network's Deputy Director Tom Sadler talks with different guests about ocean policy and fisheries management topics. He engages them in genuine and thoughtful conversations about what policy decisions mean for people’s livelihoods, communities, recreation and coastal ways of life.