Share Outside Voices Podcast
Share to email
Share to Facebook
Share to X
By Resource Media
5
8383 ratings
The podcast currently has 27 episodes available.
Welcome to Walkie Talkies, a NEW Outside Voices bi-monthly roundtable conversation with co-hosts Sarah Shimazaki, Aly Ferguson, and Neecole Bostick! In addition to our regular content, you'll be hearing more from our co-hosts as we chat about our own experiences in the outdoors, outdoor equity, and reflect on the growth of the Outside Voices community.
This episode is all about Parks! Listen in as we talk about how parks can shape our relationships to the outdoors, the Coastal Act, and share some of our favorite memories. (Guess who brought hot wings to a dog park!)
Grab your headphones and join us around the campfire for a Walkie Talkie!
Co-hosted by Sarah Shimazaki, Aly Ferguson, and Neecole Bostick
Sound edited by Jeff Alvarez
A production of Resource Media
Follow us on Instagram: @OutsideVoicesPodcast
Learn more about Outside Voices
RateThisPodcast.com/outsidevoices
This week we feature an episode of a podcast we love: The Trail Ahead Podcast, hosted by Faith E. Briggs and Addie Thompson. They bring on outdoor industry leaders from all backgrounds to have interracial dialogue aimed at having tough conversations at the intersection of race, environment, history, culture, and the outdoors. Their ultimate goal? To diversity the outdoor industry and welcome everyone into outdoors spaces..
This episode features Adam Merry, a track and trail runner who has raced up to 100K! Despite his accomplishments, he’s faced challenges in diversity and representation in running, and is working towards building a more inclusive and community minded outdoor community.
You can find The Trail Ahead Podcast on Instagram @trailahead_podcast
and Adam Merry @amerryrunner
Podcast swap with The Trail Ahead Podcast, hosted by Faith E. Briggs and Addie Thompson.
Outside Voices is a production of Resource Media
Follow us on Instagram: @OutsideVoicesPodcast
Learn more about Outside Voices
RateThisPodcast.com/outsidevoices
Co-hosted by Sarah Shimazaki, Aly Ferguson, and Neecole Bostick
Sound edited by Jeff Alvarez
A production of Resource Media
Follow us on Instagram: @OutsideVoicesPodcast
Learn more about Outside Voices
RateThisPodcast.com/outsidevoices
As the daughter of Indigenous water rights advocates, Autumn Harry (@numu_wanderer) was able to establish a connection to water and fishing at a very young age. Since then, she’s used her skills and knowledge to educate others on the history of Kooyooe Pa’a, or Pyramid Lake, as the first Numu Woman Flyfishing Guide in the U.S (@kooyooepaa_guides). She’s also led advocacy work and mutual aid efforts for food and land sovereignty to help her community, the Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe, thrive.
Untangling is a three-part Outside Voices mini-series exploring our cultural connections to fishing, created in partnership with our friends at Take Me Fishing.
Resources: - Website of the Pyramid Lake Paiute Tribe - Information about Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women (MMIW) from Native Women’s Wilderness - Pyramid Lake Fishing Guide: Be a Respectful Visitor by Autumn Harry
Hosted and produced by Sarah Shimazaki Co-produced by Neecole Bostick Sound edited by Jeff Alvarez Album artwork by Ezra Manjarrez A production of Resource Media, with support from Pisces Foundation Follow us on Instagram: @OutsideVoicesPodcast
Please support our podcast by leaving us a review: RateThisPodcast.com/outsidevoices
A descendant of Filipino plantation workers who immigrated to Hawai’i in the early 1900s, Brianne Lauro (@brianne_lauro) is the daughter, granddaughter, and great-granddaughter of local fishers and hunters.
In this second episode of “Untangling,” Brianne opens up for the first time about imposter syndrome and credits all she’s learned as a fisher to her Uncle Lance. While Brianne herself is relatively new to fishing, she’s learned that it’s become a way to connect with her family history, build and take care of her community, and share culture and knowledge across generations.
Untangling is a three-part Outside Voices mini-series exploring our cultural connections to fishing, created in partnership with our friends at Take Me Fishing.
Hosted and produced by Sarah Shimazaki Co-produced by Aly Ferguson Sound edited by Jeff Alvarez Album artwork by Ezra Manjarrez A production of Resource Media, with support from Pisces Foundation Follow us on Instagram: @OutsideVoicesPodcast
Please support our podcast by leaving us a review: RateThisPodcast.com/outsidevoices
For the Gullah/Geechee people, fishing is culture. Everything comes back to "making a circle", shares Queen Quet, chieftess and head-of-state of the Gullah/Geechee Nation, from throwing a circular cast net out into the ocean, to bringing balance and harmony back to the natural environment, and passing down cultural traditions to the next generation. Tune in for a conversation between Host and Producer Sarah Shimazaki and Queen Quet!
The Gullah/Geechee Nation encompasses over 100 sea islands along the Atlantic coast and about 30 miles inland. The Gullah/Geechee are descendants of enslaved people from West Africa and have largely been able to preserve their traditions, including fishing, which they depend on for their livelihood.
October 22nd marks the Gullah/Geechee Seafood Festival. Bring family and friends to enjoy the Gullah/Geechee presentations, cuisine, and crafts along the shoreline at the Hunting Island Nature Center!
Untangling is a three-part Outside Voices mini-series exploring our cultural connections to fishing, created in partnership with our friends at Take Me Fishing.
Hosted and produced by Sarah ShimazakiSound edited by Jeff Alvarez Album artwork by Ezra Manjarrez A production of Resource Media, with support from Pisces Foundation Follow us on Instagram: @OutsideVoicesPodcast
Please support our podcast by leaving us a review: RateThisPodcast.com/outsidevoices
Full episode transcript available in our attempt to make this an accessible experience for all.
In this episode hosted and co-produced by Neecole Bostick, we spoke with Cristina Eisenberg — the Associate Dean for Inclusive Excellence and the Director of College Tribal Initiatives at the Oregon State University School of Forestry. As a professor of ecology and traditional ecological knowledge, Cristina brings a TEK lens to western science to enhance conservation efforts and create more sustainable ecosystems. Cristina tells her serendipitous journey to this way of knowing and understanding the natural world, introducing us to the beauty of having wolves in your backyard, sharing about intentional burning, and unearthing animals that went extinct during the last ice age.
You can find Cristina on twitter @Eisenbec.
Her books include:
The Carnivore Way: Coexisting with and Conserving North America's Predators
The Wolf’s Tooth: Keystone Predators, Trophic Cascades, and Biodiversity
Click here to learn more about her and her work.
Mentioned in this episode: Soot sprites from Spirited Away, Cristina’s research with EarthWatch, and the 2022 TV show Outer Range.This episode was edited and mixed by our Sound editor, Jeff Alvarez.
In this episode hosted and co-produced by Neecole Bostick, we spoke with Cristina Eisenberg — the Associate Dean for Inclusive Excellence and the Director of College Tribal Initiatives at the Oregon State University School of Forestry. As a professor of ecology and traditional ecological knowledge, Cristina brings a TEK lens to western science to enhance conservation efforts and create more sustainable ecosystems. Cristina tells her serendipitous journey to this way of knowing and understanding the natural world, introducing us to the beauty of having wolves in your backyard, sharing about intentional burning, and unearthing animals that went extinct during the last ice age.
Hosted and co-produced by Neecole Bostick.
Sound edited by Jeff Alvarez
A production of Resource Media
Follow us on Instagram: @OutsideVoicesPodcast
RateThisPodcast.com/outsidevoices
In this episode hosted and co-produced by Aly Ferguson, we spoke with Xavier Boatright — an environmental justice organizer and researcher who currently holds the position of Strategic Partnerships Director at Conservation Voters of South Carolina (CVSC), where he works to strengthen the conservation and environmental movement in his home state of South Carolina. Xavier shares his experience growing up on a farm, getting drafted into and playing for the NFL, spending time organizing for disability justice after a football career-ending injury, and going up against Duke Energy with his community in an environmental justice success story.
Featured in this episode:
Xavier Boatright (he/him). You can find Xavier on Instagram @allaboardforjustice and support his work with CVSC.
Hosted by Aly Ferguson
Edited by Jeff Alvarez
A production of Resource Media
Follow us on Instagram: @OutsideVoicesPodcast
Love this podcast? Be sure to rate, review, and subscribe, so you never miss an episode!
All resources can be found on our website
Coming off a traumatic year of increased anti-Asian hate and a seemingly never-ending pandemic, The Cosmos' co-founders Cassandra and Karen decided to create "Camp Cosmos." The intention was to facilitate safe spaces where Asian women could experience joy, community, and healing in nature.
Over the course of a month, Camp Cosmos participants went hiking, kayaking, and finally, camping. This episode highlights excerpts from their camping trip to Camp Rockaway at Fort Tilden, or Munsee Lenape lands.
This episode is made in partnership with Merrell and supported in part by Endel.
Featured in this episode:
Cassandra and Karen from The Cosmos, a home for Asian women to care for themselves, their community, their world. Hosted by Sarah Shimazaki Edited by Sarah Shimazaki A production of Resource Media
The podcast currently has 27 episodes available.