Explore: A Canadian Geographic podcast – Détails, épisodes et analyse

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Explore: A Canadian Geographic podcast

Explore: A Canadian Geographic podcast

Canadian Geographic

Société & Culture
Sciences
Sciences

Fréquence : 1 épisode/20j. Total Éps: 131

Blubrry
Host David McGuffin talks to Canada’s greatest explorers about their adventures and what inspires their spirit of discovery.
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RSS
Apple

Classements récents

Dernières positions dans les classements Apple Podcasts et Spotify.

Apple Podcasts

  • 🇨🇦 Canada - placesAndTravel

    11/06/2026
    #39
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - placesAndTravel

    10/06/2026
    #52
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - placesAndTravel

    08/06/2026
    #93
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - placesAndTravel

    07/06/2026
    #37
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - placesAndTravel

    05/06/2026
    #58
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - placesAndTravel

    04/06/2026
    #58
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - placesAndTravel

    03/06/2026
    #99
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - placesAndTravel

    01/06/2026
    #94
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - placesAndTravel

    31/05/2026
    #35
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - placesAndTravel

    27/05/2026
    #34

Spotify

    Aucun classement récent disponible



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Score global : 42%


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Autumn paddling and northern lakes with musician Sam Polley

Épisode 89

mardi 3 septembre 2024Durée 50:51

Musician Sam Polley’s first canoe trip was with his dad, Blue Rodeo’s Jim Cuddy, his mom and siblings. He doesn’t remember much about it, but he clearly got hooked. All these years later, he’s still an avid canoe tripper with a love of the lakes and rivers in northern Ontario. Sam is best known for his rockabilly band Sam Polley and The Old Tomorrows and playing with The Jim Cuddy Band, fronted by his father. When Sam isn’t touring or in the studio or writing songs, he likes to feed his muse by taking off on canoe trips into the wilds north of Toronto. We’re into September now. Summer is drifting away, there’s mist on the water in the morning and a nip in the air, even when the sun is out. One of the things we get into in this conversation is Sam’s love of autumn canoe tripping. The lakes and rivers are largely empty of people and along with all that space and peace — and your pick of campsites — there’s also no bugs. And while Sam is a self-confessed Toronto boy through and through, he is proof that even if you live in the most densely populated city in Canada, amazing canoe tripping adventures are still accessible. We get into his trips in Algonquin Park, Killarney and Temagami. It’s a fun romp spiced with his own music.

Paddling the Peel Watershed with Bobbi Rose Koe

Épisode 88

mardi 20 août 2024Durée 50:52

With a passion for learning and a love for teaching, the Indigenous northerner talks about her experience guiding canoe trips and paddling through lands that her family has known for generations

RCGS Fellow and naturalist Brian Keating on our natural world

Épisode 79

mardi 26 mars 2024Durée 49:21

Journey around the planet in this Explore episode with stories and insights from one of Canada’s most well-travelled wilderness adventurers

Laval St. Germain: Mountains, oceans and the Arctic

Épisode 78

mardi 12 mars 2024Durée 59:14

The RCGS Fellow and extreme adventurer talks about his epic journeys across the globe from the middle of the Atlantic Ocean to the top of Mount Everest

Passing the Mic, Part 3 — The students of Netsilik School, Taloyoak, Nunavut

Épisode 77

mardi 27 février 2024Durée 18:21

Inuit youth from Canada’s most northerly community share their stories using their own voices and words

Passing the Mic, Part 2 — Taloyoak throat singers and hunters

Épisode 76

mercredi 14 février 2024Durée 26:59

In this episode, we're back in Taloyoak, Nunavut, mainland Canada’s most northerly community, to talk with Joyce Ashevak, Martha Neeveacheak and Roger Oleekatalik. They are three of the students who took part in Canadian Geographic’s Passing the Mic program, which aims to give Inuit youth the tools to share their own stories with the world. Joyce and Martha are both throat singers, a unique and incredibly powerful Inuit vocal art form. And Roger is one of the leading young hunters in this community, which sits on a peninsula jutting out into the Arctic Ocean, west of Hudson Bay. I got to spend an amazing week with them and 15 other students at the Netsilik School last October, teaching them interviewing, storytelling and podcasting. We’ll hear many of their stories over the next two episodes. I started with these three young people because their stories are rooted in the land and in Inuit traditions and you can sense the positive impact this has had on them. A strong connection to culture has been proven to be important in overcoming challenges around mental health and addiction, which are major issues in northern communities. Martha and Joyce have been throat singing for several years. It is an amazing thing to witness and it was a pleasure talking to them about how powerfully it changes them and their lives. We actually met Roger’s grandfather Jimmy on this podcast last fall, in an episode focused on Jimmy‘s effort to create the first Inuit-led conservation area around Taloyoak. Go check that out if you haven’t already. It’s amazing. Roger is a chip off that block, for sure. In his last year of high school, he spends as much time as he can on the land, hunting to provide for his family and the community. It's an occupation that brings him both pride and joy. I hope you enjoy these conversations, and the singing! Passing the Mic is made possible with the support of Polar Knowledge Canada. And also by listeners like you who donate to the RCGS Polar Plunge Fundraiser. The 3rd annual Polar Plunge is taking place March 4 in rivers, lakes and oceans across Canada. To find out how you can participate and donate, go to RCGS.org/polarplunge. You’ll be helping make this kind of unique Canadian Geographic storytelling possible.

Passing the Mic, Part 1 — Nunavut's viral TikTok Mayor Lenny Aqigiaq Panigayak

Épisode 75

mardi 30 janvier 2024Durée 20:42

In the first of three episodes from Taloyoak, podcast host David McGuffin speaks with Mayor Lenny Panigayak, who shares stories about embracing traditional Inuit life, his social media platform, being out on the land and more

The Northwest Passage: In the wake of Larsen and the St. Roch

Épisode 74

mardi 16 janvier 2024Durée 44:33

Veteran sailor and polar explorer Ken Burton discusses the story of RCMP’s Henry Larsen and his journey through the Arctic

Christmas at the Devil's Portage - A Canadian Geographic holiday tale

Épisode 73

mardi 12 décembre 2023Durée 08:34

Podcast host David McGuffin reads the story of Arctic explorer Charles Camsell, recalling a memorable Christmas along the trail to the Klondike in the 19th century

500 Days in the Wild: Walking the Trans Canada Trail with Dianne Whelan

Épisode 72

mardi 28 novembre 2023Durée 40:44

The award-winning Canadian filmmaker, photographer, author and multimedia artist discusses her epic six-year journey across the world's longest hiking trail 

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