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Episode 84 WTIP Boundary Waters Podcast

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Manage episode 355449036 series 2080982
Content provided by WTIP Boundary Waters Podcast and WTIP North Shore Community Radio. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by WTIP Boundary Waters Podcast and WTIP North Shore Community Radio or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Climate change isn’t something most BWCA enthusiasts think of in early January. On the day permits for the upcoming paddling season go live – as they did Jan. 25 this year – the bulk of those people planning a canoe trip made their reservations for the upcoming season with winter still in full force. A warming planet seems an afterthought on such occasions. In this episode of the podcast, hosts Joe Friedrichs and Matthew Baxley explore the notion of where climate change fits into the planning (if at all) and adventures of an average canoe trip to the Boundary Waters. To add context, they bring in two of Minnesota’s two top climate experts: Pete Boulay, assistant state climatologist with the Minnesota State Climatology Office who works for the DNR; and Peter Reich, a renowned expert in forest ecology and a professor at both the University of Minnesota and University of Michigan, who has done extensive research on how climate change is and will impact the Boundary Waters. This episode has nothing to do with proving or debunking climate change. This is about the intersection of canoe tripping in the Boundary Waters and the future of the wilderness.
  continue reading

143 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 355449036 series 2080982
Content provided by WTIP Boundary Waters Podcast and WTIP North Shore Community Radio. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by WTIP Boundary Waters Podcast and WTIP North Shore Community Radio or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Climate change isn’t something most BWCA enthusiasts think of in early January. On the day permits for the upcoming paddling season go live – as they did Jan. 25 this year – the bulk of those people planning a canoe trip made their reservations for the upcoming season with winter still in full force. A warming planet seems an afterthought on such occasions. In this episode of the podcast, hosts Joe Friedrichs and Matthew Baxley explore the notion of where climate change fits into the planning (if at all) and adventures of an average canoe trip to the Boundary Waters. To add context, they bring in two of Minnesota’s two top climate experts: Pete Boulay, assistant state climatologist with the Minnesota State Climatology Office who works for the DNR; and Peter Reich, a renowned expert in forest ecology and a professor at both the University of Minnesota and University of Michigan, who has done extensive research on how climate change is and will impact the Boundary Waters. This episode has nothing to do with proving or debunking climate change. This is about the intersection of canoe tripping in the Boundary Waters and the future of the wilderness.
  continue reading

143 episodes

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