Description
Professional wildlife photographer Ryan Tidman has an up-close view of the damaging impact logging old-growth forests is having on Vancouver Island. The Trebek Initiative Grantee is investigating how cutting down the last remaining giant cedars and redwoods is taking away the dens of the island's black bear population. On that rainy island, caves are too wet for bears to live in, so holes in giant trees are where they spend their winters and raise their young. But for how much longer, and what can be done?Tidman also talks about why he loves photographing Vancouver Island's sea wolves more than any other animal. And what attracted him to do a story for Canadian Geographic on Canada's most endangered mammal, the Vancouver Island marmot. And there are some great lessons here about his experience breaking into photography, the importance of mentorships by legendary National Geographic photographers Paul Nicklen and Cristina Mittermeier, and why perseverance pays off.
I’m thrilled to have Ray Zahab back on Explore. Many of you know Ray as an extreme adventurer, Royal Canadian Geographical Society Explorer-in-Residence and friend of this podcast.Ray joins me to talk about his gruelling solo run across one of the hottest places on earth, Death Valley, California...
Published 11/26/24
More than military conquest: Manitoba's historic Dawson Trail with Pierrette Sherwood and Mimi Lamontagne We do love history here on the Explore podcast, and one of the reasons is that the more you poke around, the more you dig, and the wider you cast your research net, the richer the story that...
Published 11/12/24