Explore every episode of the podcast Earthworms
| Title | Pub. Date | Duration | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Doug Tallamy: The Nature of Oaks | 12 Jan 2025 | 00:34:47 | |
If you can only plant one tree, make that tree an Oak.
Doug Tallamy, national advocate for restoring the LIFE in our places with the power of Native Plants, celebrates the mighty Quercus family of trees with this latest book, his third as definitive matchmakers for humans and plants. The Nature of Oaks: the Rich Ecology of our Most Essential Native Trees (Timber Press, 2021) is Tallamy's personal story, scientific observation chronicle and love song to the oak trees around his home. He connects tree lore to healthy soil, songbirds, and more caterpillars than even he (an expert entomologist) can count. Earthworms host Jean Ponzi welcomes Doug Tallamy back to KDHX, in a conversation part Eco-FanGirl idolizes Bug Guy, part Summit of Biodiversity Peers. Prepare to want to grow with an Oak! THANKS to Andy Heaslet, Earthworms audio engineer and Sierra Club national communicator, and to Andy Coco and Jon Valley, KDHX Production Guys. Related Earthworms Interviews: Nature's Best Hope? Ecologist Doug Tallamy Says WE ARE! (Feb 2020) In the Company of Trees: Forest Bathing with Andrea Serrubi Fareshteh (January 2019)
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| Illinois Clean Energy Policy - Andy Heaslet on the making of a model | 27 Nov 2024 | 00:47:51 | |
Renewable energy Return On Investment is booming, across the U.S. and worldwide. With uber-real concerns about this trajectory on environmental minds, Earthworms reviews how a powerful coalition of advocates - in a timely turn of events - moved Illinois state lawmakers to achieve results for people, planet and economics. Consider what we can learn and apply from this story, as the Fossil forces go for every last greenhouse gasp. Andy Heaslet, Earthworms' esteemed audio engineer, dug into the details of CEJA, the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act enacted into Illinois law in September 2021. He shares the story from his research for Masters' level coursework at Southern Illinois University, which was one nexus of collaborative activism that make this landmark policy a law both powerful and replicable.
Give a listen - be inspired! Thanks, Andy, for how Earthworms sounds - with BIG THNX as well to Jon Valley of KDHX Production. Related Earthworms Conversations: Diversifying Power: Energy Democracy with Jennie C. Stephens (Sept 2020) Rule of Five: the Supreme Court and CO2 (July 2020) Leah Clyburn: Organizing to Act on Environmental Racism in St. Louis (Oct 2019) Drawdown: Solutions to Reverse Global Warming (March 2018)
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| Nee Kee Nee: Urban Park Stream Revived! | 16 Feb 2024 | 00:32:54 | |
In a south St. Louis city park created in Victorian times, Indigenous culture, native plant ecology and 21st century engineering are newly united in a southwesterly flow. Tara Morton, Community Engagement Manager for this project's urban someplace, Tower Grove Park, shares the story of Nee Kee Nee, a riverine revival.
Named Nee Kee Nee, or “revived water” in the language of the Osage People who once inhabited the land, the East Stream captures stormwater from 43 Park acres and provides a naturalized play area for many of kinds of nature relatives, including humans young-to-old.
East Stream’s headwaters are fed by a user-activated potable water source. Stormwater from intakes on adjacent Arsenal Street rejoin the stream 300 feet below the headwaters and flow through a system of weirs and rain gardens. Shunted underground for more than 100 years, East Stream is now a biodiverse, living partner in the Park's nature stewardship: a waterway working with human needs, designed to divert stormwater - up to 3.8 million gallons annually - from overloading the urban sewer system. Nee Kee Nee is also reviving culture. Tower Grove Park staff worked with the Osage Nation’s Tribal Historic Preservation Office on design of the stream, the direction it flows and landscaping with pawpaw, arrowwood, and many other kinds of native plants. Physical and interpretive elements embody the Osage People's origin story and elements of Osage community life. Tower Grove Park is open daily, sunrise to sunset, in the City of St. Louis, Missouri. THANKS to Jon Valley, KDHX Audio Production Pro Related Earthworms Conversations: Artist Jayvn Solomon Envisions Loutopia (Dec. 2021) | |||
| Garry Guinn Offers Humane Wildlife Solutions | 27 Mar 2019 | 00:46:05 | |
You say you've got squirrels in your attic. Garry Guinn says you've got a hole in your house, and works with you to secure a fix that benefits both the critters and you. Meet Garry Guinn and Humane Wildlife Solutions LLC at the Green Living Festival - Saturday June 1 - Missouri Botanical Garden. Music: Big Piney Blues, performed live at KDHX by Brian Curran THANKS to Andy Heaslet, Earthworms podcast engineer Related Earthworms Conversations: Nancy Lawson, the Humane Gardener (Feb 2019) Bug Off! Mosquito Control Need-to-Know (June 2017) Camera Traps: Tools for Conservation (Aug 2016)
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| Coal Ash Ponds: Pollution Pits, Options for Clean Water Action | 13 Mar 2019 | 00:34:07 | |
A power plant burns coal to produce electricity. As with any other combustion, ash remains. This ash is typically stored in "ponds" near the plant. What do ponds do? The fill up, they overflow, they leak into groundwater. With coal ash in this flow, toxics like Arsenic, Lead, Molybdenum, Mercury and more get into our water supplies. Groups like LEO across the country are working to hold power plants responsible for cleaning up coal ash ponds, and managing coal combustion waste responsibly. In Missouri, a public comment period through March 28 gives citizens the chance to comment on MO-Dept of Natural Resources proposal to regulate coal ash. You can sign a LEO petition through March 21. Check out related coverage by Eli Chen of St. Louis Public Radio. THANKS to Andy Heaslet, Earthworms Green-savvy enineer Music: Stomp Hat, performed live at KDHX by Matt Flinner | |||
| Handprints: Gregory Norris Retouches Human Impacts | 05 Mar 2019 | 00:42:15 | |
A lot of enviro-info dis-credits our human species for the impacts of our "footprints" on Earth's systems, and on beings other than ourselves.
Scientist and public health advocate Greg Norris was inspired, while working with Life Cycle Analyses, to look up from Footprints and focus on the human part that can collaborate, create and restore. "Handprinting" has become a vehicle to encourage and measure our capacity to be a benefit on Earth. Beneficial actions - and the ripples of influence they create - can now be measured through a key piece of Norris' work-in-progress, the app Handprinter.org. This tool and idea aim to ensure that Earth is better off because of human beings, than without us. Gregory Norris will presents "Handprints and Footprints" in St. Louis on Tuesday evening, March 12 for the U.S. Green Building Council-Missouri Gateway Chapter THANKS to Andy Heaslet, Earthworms net-positive impact engineer Music: Trambone, performed at KDHX by Brian Curran The Patterning Instinct in Human Nature with Jeremy Lent (June 2017) | |||
| Nancy Lawson - The Humane Gardener | 27 Feb 2019 | 00:34:41 | |
You too can BEE one! Or Taconite Fly or Opossum or Golden Ragwort one, gardening on an eco-logical team with critters and plants you've overlooked, or maybe even maligned.
Nancy Lawson invites us to understand more of the habits and roles of species around us, to bust the dualistic myth of Pest vs Beneficial. Her book The Humane Gardener: Nurturing a Backyard Habitat for Wildlife is a long love note to relationships we can all enjoy. Such as with Tachinid Flies. THANKS to Andy Heaslet, Earthworms engineer and listening buddy. Related Earthworms Conversations: Relatives, Responsibility, Mindfulness with Dr. Daniel Wildcat (Oct 2018) | |||
| Sacred Earth: Our Call to Action Conference Led by STL Youth and Adults | 20 Feb 2019 | 00:40:25 | |
In 2015, Pope Francis message about Climate Change called on people of faith world-wide - not only Roman Catholics - to take action to protect Earth's resources. A St. Louis consortium of Catholic parents, students and leaders is calling this community to convene, learn, strategize and respond. This edition of Earthworms talks about why, and how, this response is growing.
Guests Jamie Hasemeier of Holy Redeemer Parish, Mark Etling from St. Nicholas Parish, and Maggie Hannick of St. Joseph's Academy are conveners, with other partners, of this conference. Music: For Michael, performed live at KDHX by Brian Curran THANKS to Andy Heaslet, Earthworms so-green engineer, on loan from Sierra Club Related Earthworms Conversations: Drawdown: Solutions to REVERSE Global Warming (March 2018) On Care of Our Common Home: Exploring Pope Francis' Message (Jan 2016) Zero Waste Fish Fry: Holy Redeemer Parish is Hooked on Green (Feb 2018) | |||
| Reduce, Prevent and Transform WASTE - with Kelley Dennings | 06 Feb 2019 | 00:42:07 | |
So you know the "Three Rs," right? Recycle is the famous one, but #1 in this trio (REDUCE) deserves more creative attention and - use! When Dennigs added a degree in Public Health to her credentials and influence potential, she framed the sort of off-putting Reduce idea of in the human-centered focus of Prevention. Could this be a way to get our species to explore more New Dream's territory? Their motto: More Fun - Less Stuff! Resources that come up in this Earthworms conversation include New Dream's So Kind Alternative Gift Registry, an E-Z online way to request and give day-of-event help, shared experiences, homemade and secondhand gifts - and more. Plus references to Zero Waste, Scrap Exchange, Product Stewardship Institute and other Reduce-Reuse activity in the Waste Space.
THANKS to Andy Heaslet, Earthworms so-Green engineer Related Earthworms Conversations: Zero Waste Fish Fry Hooks Holy Redeemer in STL (Feb 2018) | |||
| In The Company of Trees with Andrea Sarubbi Fareshteh | 22 Jan 2019 | 00:33:31 | |
Getting modern humans out of our house-car-school-work boxes is no small feat. But whenever that may occur, our tall, spreading, leafy neighbors have what it takes to help our kind be more of our best selves. Potentials are TREE-mendous! Music: Bitter Root, performed live at KDHX by Matt Flinner Related Earthworms Conversations: Urban Forests: Seeing the Benefits from Trees - Oct 2016 PawPaw: Reviving America's Forgotten Fruit (Tree) - Sept 2015 | |||
| The Farm Bill - a Citizen's Guide | 15 Jan 2019 | 00:53:36 | |
Renegotiated by Congress every 5-7 years The Farm Bill impacts food production, nutrition assistance, habitat conservation, international trade, and much more. But try digging into its 1,000+ pages!
Christina Badaracco, a registered dietician, dug deep into this topic for her new book (with researcher and author Daniel Imhoff) The Farm Bill: A Citizen's Guide (Island Press, Jan 2019). She brings perspective from this accessible, graphics-rich book to this Earthworms conversation. With a new farm bill just signed into law, we all need to understand the implications of food policy. What’s the impact of crop insurance? How does SNAP actually work? What would it take to create a healthier, more sustainable food system? Eaters, taxpayers, sustainable food system advocates: listen up! Music: Who Gives, performed live at KDHX by Brian Curran Thanks to Andy Heaslet, warmly welcomed back this week as Earthworms' engineer. Related Earthworms Conversations: Urban Agriculture Guide: a New Tool for City Farmers (June 2016) Citizenship: Responsibility is our Civic Ability to Respond (Nov 2018) People's Pocket Guide to Environmental Action with Caitlin Zera (July 2017) | |||
| Modern Homesteading: the Dirt on Self-Reliant Rural Life | 08 Jan 2019 | 00:39:20 | |
Kirsten Lie-Nielsen lives her dream of self-sufficiency in rural Maine - and shares the experience in her new book, So You Want to be a Modern Homesteader? (New Society, 2018).
From finding the home place to prioritizing work and funds to enjoying the community flow when neighbors drop in, Kirsten covers options with practicality and a smile in her voice. Her goats are never far from the phone! Check out Kirsten's blog at hostilevalleyliving.com. Music: Cuttin' at the Point, performed live at KDHX by The Freight Hoppers. Special THANKS tonight to Anna Holland, Earthworms audio engineer for the past year+. We say farewell with this edition, Anna, appreciating the media professional you already are, and wishing you the BEST in your next round of College work. It was especially fun to have your perspectives on Citizenship on the show we produced right after the 2018 Election. Keeping Geese with Kirsten Lie-Nielsen (Nov 2017) Crystal Moore Stevens: Grow, Create, Inspire (Oct 2016)
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| Forest ReLEAF of MO - 25 Years, 200,000 Trees! | 12 Dec 2018 | 00:39:12 | |
In their super-service quarter-century, Forest ReLEAF of Missouri has moved over 200,000 native species trees from seedlings to nursery transplants to solid ground in communities around the Show-Me-State.
ReLEAF works with Seniors to Young Friends to community folks. This intrepid non-profit trains and supports volunteer powered efforts to grow, track and maintain healthy Urban Forests. Community Forester Tom Ebeling talks with Earthworms host Jean Ponzi (some of her best friends are Trees) about this work, in a conversation celebrating ReLEAF's 25th anniversary and the many benefits of urban trees.
If this interview inspires you to check out ReLEAF volunteer opportunities, don't resist! The work will grow on you. THANKS to Anna Holland, Earthworms Engineer Music: Magic 9 performed live at KDHX by Infamous Stringdusters | |||
| Traditional Ecological Knowledge with Cat Techtmann | 05 Jan 2024 | 00:40:40 | |
Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) offers indigenous wisdom to "conventional" society, where responses to issues like climate change and biodiversity loss need all hands to work together.
Cathy “Cat” Techtmann serves as a University of Wisconsin-Extension Environmental Outreach State Specialist. She weaves together indigenous science, place-based knowledge, and academic science to “decolonize” climate education. Cat coordinates the UW- Extension Climate Leadership Team and is a member of the UW-Extension Native American Task Force. She lives and works in the homeland of the Lake Superior Ojibwe people and works out of the Iron County UW-Extension Office in Hurley, WI. Cathy “Cat” Techtmann, University of Wisconsin-Extension Environmental Outreach State Specialist. She weaves together indigenous science, place-based knowledge, and academic science to “decolonize” climate education. Cat coordinates the UW- Extension Climate Leadership Team and is a member of the UW-Extension Native American Task Force. She lives and works in the homeland of the Lake Superior Ojibwe people and works out of the Iron County UW-Extension Office in Hurley, WI.
Links to: Daniel Wildcat Heather Navarro - MCC
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| Custom Foodscaping with Matt Lebon | 04 Dec 2018 | 00:41:11 | |
Want to eat your home landscape? Want to work with Nature in some of the most efficient, effective and - Yes, EASIEST ways? Farmer and Permaculture practitioner Matt Lebon will set up your place to grow a feast for you - and for your bug-bird-nature neighbors.
Matt recently parlayed his five years of deep experience as manager of our town's EarthDance Organic Farm (home of the Farmer Training School) into his innovative enterprise Custom Foodscaping. He can design and plant a custom edible landscaping package for home or business customers, or work with you hands-on to help develop your own Herb Garden, Food Forest or profitable Vegetable Farm. Matt's enthusiastic skills can produce Edible Schoolyards to Chef's Gardens to Taste-Full Home Gardens. As he says, "Have your landscape and eat it too!" Photos of Foodscape at VICIA Restaurant, Permaculture Orchard at Principia College, Chicken Food Forest at a private home. THANKS to Anna Holland, Earthworms audio engineer. Related Earthworms Conversations: St. Louis Food Policy Coalition Grows Health & Environmental Resources (Dec 2015) Farming on a Downtown Roof: Urban Harvest STL (June 2015) Permaculturist Tao Orion Goes Beyond the War on Invasive Species (March 2016) Urban Flower Farming with Mimo Davis and Miranda Duschack (Feb 2015) | |||
| Climate: A New Story with Charles Eisenstein | 21 Nov 2018 | 00:31:28 | |
Social philosopher and mathematician Charles Eisenstein takes on the issue of our time, in terms that may give humankind another way to get our minds, hearts and action around Climate Change.
Drawing from Eisenstein's new book Climate, A New Story, this conversation with Earthworms host Jean Ponzi offers perspective, options and much-needed hope for our species capacity to course-correct relative to the systems that support life on Earth, including us. Music: Abdiel, performed live at KDHX by Dave Black.
Joan Lipkin: Theater Takes on Climate Change (October 2017)
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| Citizenship: Responsibility is Our Civic Ability to Respond | 13 Nov 2018 | 00:40:42 | |
What does "Citizenship" mean - and how can we revive, revitalize and re-energize it in society today?
Earthworms host Jean Ponzi explores Citizenship ideas and options with guests David Wilson - longtime regional sustainability professional who has led Citizenship Education Clearinghouse, MO Coalition for the Environment, and the OneSTL Regional Sustainability Plan process for East-West Gateway Council of Governments - and Anna Holland - student at Lewis & Clark College, volunteer for the 2018 Illinois Congressional campaign of Betsy Londrigan - and Earthworms audio engineer! Citizens - Listen Up! Thank you! Music: Balkan Twirl, performed at KDHX by Sandy Weltman and Carolbeth Trio
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| STL Superfund Site, Water Action Updates - MO Coalition for Environment | 06 Nov 2018 | 00:39:21 | |
Missouri Coalition for the Environment's Ed Smith, Policy Director, and Water Policy Coordinator Maisah Khan present a report on current energy, water and pollution-related issues from the St. Louis Region.
This update covers potential EPA Superfund resolutions to the radioactive-material contaminated West Lake Landfill, clean-up proposals for lead contamination in the Big River, and more fine work from MCE. Music: Hunter's Permit, performed live at KDHX by Mister Sun THANKS to Jon Valley, engineering this week's Earthworms
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| Relatives, Responsibility, Mindfulness with Dr. Daniel Wildcat | 31 Oct 2018 | 00:41:32 | |
Daniel Wildcat, Ph.D., proffers Traditional Ecological Knowledges as antidote (literally) to destruction. His scholarship and teaching at Haskell Indian Nations University in Lawrence, Kansas, is rooted in the relationships of Indigenous knowledge, technology, environment and education - elements related to each other, and to us.
What can each of us learn from an Indigenous cultural and ecological perspective? And how can we apply ourselves as individual antidotes to destruction along this kind of path? Dan Wildcat directs the Haskell Environmental Research Studies Center, and is a founder of the Indigenous Peoples Climate Change Working Group. Dr. Wildcat comes to St. Louis on November 8 as guest of the Harris World Ecology Center, and one of three speakers about Traditional Ecological Knowledge. This event is free, but registration is required. Music: Cadillac Desert, performed live at KDHX by William Tyler THANKS to Anna Holland, Earthworms diligent engineer. Related Earthworms Conversations: Plants, Indigenous People and Climate Change with Ethnobotanist Dr. Jan Salick (December 2015) The Patterning Instinct in Human Nature (June 2017)
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| Journey to Well-Being: Jeanne Carbone and Japanese Garden Walks | 16 Oct 2018 | 00:44:48 | |
Our minds and bodies are powerful healers, and strong in maintaining well-being for each of us, overall. But do we use these inner tools?
The profession of Therapeutic Horticulture brings together plants and people, to explore and promote well-being in both profound and simple ways. Jeanne Carbone and her colleagues on the TH team at Missouri Botanical Garden offer a new program to help us explore and strengthen well-being, in partnership with Nature. The setting for this exploration is Seiwa En, the Japanese Garden of Pure, Clear Harmony and Peace, at Missouri Botanical Garden in the City of St. Louis. Pathways and reflection points provide many opportunities to cultivate personal well-being.
This new program, Journey to Well-Being, includes three guided visits to Seiwa-En and prompts to experience and reflect on your own, in a series of weekly walks. Self-guiding options make this journey as convenient as it is powerful, especially in relation to a jewel of nature in the St. Louis region. Registration is open for the winter session, with additional sessions coming in 2019. Music: Bitter Root, performed live at KDHX by Matt Flinner THANKS to Anna Holland, Earthworms engineer Related Earthworms Conversations: Grow, Create, Inspire with Crystal Stevens (December 2016) | |||
| Brian Ettling: Climate Change Advocacy Marches On! | 02 Oct 2018 | 00:31:55 | |
What's possible when we humans talk to each other? Brian Ettling believes a talk can turn the tide of harmful changes to Earth's climate. He's been acting on this conviction since 2012, when he joined the Climate Leaders Network, and became an active force in the Citizens' Climate Lobby. Brian returns to Earthworms with an update on his interactions with legislators and fellow citizens - and an emphasis on key solutions each of us has the power to achieve:
Coming to St. Louis October 17 - Brian Ettling and Fred Miller present "How to Speak about Climate Change with Confidence" hosted by St. Louis University - AND teaching a 3-hour adult class on Climate Change at St. Louis Community College, October 13. Music: Jamie, performed live at KDHX by Yankee Racers THANKS to Anna Holland, Earthworms Audio Engineer Related Earthworms Conversations: DRAWDOWN: Solutions to Reverse Global Warming (May 2018) Climate of Hope with Sierra Club's Carl Pope (April 2018) Brian Ettling for the Citizens Climate Lobby (December 2016)
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| Tibetan Sacred Arts Tour Comes to St. Louis | 25 Sep 2018 | 00:39:47 | |
In a downtown office building, entrepreneurs work side by side with a visiting group of Tibetan monks. Business ideas are taking shape and a brilliantly vivid "painting" with sand is, literally, making peace. It's all in a week's work for innovation culture in St. Louis!
Earthworms' guest Geshe Monlam Gyatso and his fellow monks of the Drepung Gomang monastery are on a Sacred Arts Tour to U.S. cities. Earthworms' friend (and fellow guest) Patty Maher is hosting this group, as she has with groups of monks for several years. The T-Rex incubator welcomes their creation of a World Peace Mandala, Sept 25-30. On Friday Sept 30, the monks' Dissolution Ceremony will transform this beautiful work into a blessing of the waters of the Mississippi River in a ceremony everyone is welcome to attend. Namaste! Music: Balkan Twirl, performed live at KDHX by Sandy Weltman and the Carolbeth Trio THANKS to Anna Holland, Earthworms' ace audio engineer. Related Earthworms' Conversations: Photographer Neeta Satam Documents Himalayan Climate Change (March 2018) Patty Maher's Historic Green Home Rehab (August 2017) | |||
| Battery Recycling: Call2Recycle for Options, Nation-Wide | 11 Sep 2018 | 00:35:43 | |
Batteries. We rely on them, we burn through them - some of us want to recycle them. The national Product Stewardship partnership Call2Recycle works with battery manufacturers to support "circular economy" management of resources in batteries, for us all. Tim Warren, Earthworms host Jean Ponzi's longtime recycling colleague, shares a thorough report on the what-why-how of battery recycling for the U.S. today. If you use power tools, a mobile phone, a laptop, a wristwatch or hearing aid, or drive a hybrid vehicle - or simply continue to use a flashlight - this update will be useful! Music: Rear View, performed live at KDHX by Belle Star | |||
| River Des Peres Watershed: Theo Smith's Appreciative Flow | 27 Aug 2018 | 00:33:08 | |
City of St. Louis and near-suburb residents might think "our" watershed is nothing more than a concrete drainage ditch. Theo Smith, coalition chair, and other members of the River Des Peres Watershed Coalition, see this urban waterway differently.
River Des Peres drains over 115 square miles in the City of St. Louis and nearest suburbs, before it joins the Mississippi River. A coalition of Water quality and biodiversity advocates are joining together again this fall to raise awareness of the vital role of River Des Peres - and to pull out the trash that compromises its capacity in our regional watershed, overall. The River Des Peres Trash Bash will mobilize dozens of volunteers to support this waterway, on Saturday October 20, 2018, from 8 am to 2 pm.
Results from 2017: Hardworking Trash Bash volunteers cleared 6.6 tons of trash from the rivers and creeks in the River des Peres watershed in just 3 hours! This tally includes 2.2 tons of scrap metal and 1.8 tons (101) of tires that were recycled! See yourself this year in this cadre of water quality champions! Music: Giant Steps performed live at KDHX by Dave Stone Trio THANKS to Anna Holland, Earthworms' audio engineer Eco-Logic Applied to Road Salt Application Protocols (July 2018) | |||
| Nature OF and FOR Healthy Human Culture with Jo Pang | 01 Dec 2023 | 00:41:45 | |
From his personal relationships with the organizations we know as Forests (where Collaboration AND Competition thrive), Jo Pang helps good health flourish in human orgs, specifically those focused on "social good."
The work of Culture Wise, Jo's enterprise, supports organizations who envision a more compassionate and just world, to develop capacity for leadership in ways that can turn around society's dominant and colonizing modes. This work can take groups out of doors in activity at once super-purposeful and playful. When Earthworms host Jean Ponzi joined one of these experiences, she felt wake-up-genuinely inspired by Jo's approach to "consulting and facilitating" - and wanted to share Jo's perspective with you. Around the grounds of Kindred Forest, the nature retreat Jo Pang and family are cultivating (near Bourbon, MO, about an hour from St. Louis), individuals and groups can experience Forest Bathing, with Jo as your certified Forest Therapy Guide. With a Doctorate in Strategic Management in the works from University of Missouri St. Louis, look for lively leadership to continue to evolve from among the circles of trees and humans who inspire and teach Jo Pang. From TEDx Gateway Arch, hear Jo Pang share How Mindfulness Transforms Us THANKS to Andy Heaslet for audio-engineering this edition of Earthworms, and to Jon Valley, KDHX production Wiz Related Earthworms Conversations: In the Company of Trees with Andrea Sarubbi Fareshteh (Jan. 2019) | |||
| Perennial City Composting: Urban Mavens of Productive Decay | 22 Aug 2018 | 00:39:02 | |
When a chance college dorm meeting prompts parlay about urban ag and life's design, can a live/work partnership based on decay, and inspired by nature, be far behind? In the everyday and enterprise of Tim Kiefer and Beth Grolmes-Kiefer, for sure YES. Perennial City Composting is a novel subscription service, providing St. Louis City and central-county area customers with regular organic waste pickup. Their on-the-road amenity feeds abandoned lot soil toward Tim and Beth's near-term goal of NOURISHing their subscribers with veggies from the composted scraps these same folks pay them to haul away.
This Earthworms conversation spotlights the Kiefer's unique, hard-working and visionary efforts, while also enlightening Beth and Tim to options host Jean Ponzi knows from her STL work and previous shows. Listeners: Be ready to Rot & Roll! Music: Jingle Bells - played live at KDHX by the Civiltones Earthworms is honored by engineering this week from Andy Coco, host of KDHX Rhythm Section and station Production Director. THANKS! Related Earthworms Conversations: Elaine Ingham: Soil Science Rocks Plant Health (Nov 2017)Fungus Farming for Food & Fun - McCully Heritage Project (Feb 2018) Food Policy Coalition Grows Health & Resouces (Dec 2015)The Easy Chicken - Fowl Fun Comes to You (Dec 2016)
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| Green Finned Hippy Farm: Purpose, Passion, Perspective, Hogs | 14 Aug 2018 | 00:50:28 | |
Alicia and Josh Davis are farmers (and both are, by training, engineers) on a plot they call Green Finned Hippy Farm, near Pocohontas, Illinois. They started life together, and their farming ambition, aquaponically raising ("green," finned) Tilapia fish. That was 2010. Today their rural 18 acres support hens in pasture, their family of three (son Bean was born there), organic veggie beds, and herds of goats and of the endangered heirloom American Mulefoot Hog.
Resourceful and determined, Josh and Alicia are figuring out farming as they go - helped by the Internet and their family-farming heritage. Innovations like their chicken truck and egg-washing apparatus continue to sprout, making their hard work more efficient. Farm events like Goat Yoga, Sips & Snuggles Baby Goat Happy Hour, and the truly sacramental Swine and Dine are growing their network of customers and friends.
Where there are now is inspiring. Where they aspire to be in 10 years, Josh sums up: "I envision a community where we're Their Farmer, like someone is Their Doctor." Alicia adds: "Our hog program is a conservation effort. We selectively breed to produce excellent genetics. Our hope is that by humanely bringing this animal back to the table, we can remove it from the critically endangered list." Having this Earthworms conversation - and reading Josh and Alicia's blogs - I am in awe. These beautiful humans are working so hard to preserve and restore both a species of fellow living creature, and an essential way of life. Enjoy their story - and try their food! Music: Washboard Suzie, played live at KDHX by Zydeco Crawdaddies THANKS to Anna Holland, Earthworms engineer Related Earthworms Conversations: Slow Money: Woody Tasch on Investing in Food and Soil (July 2018) Fungus Farming for Food & Fun (February 2018) A Climatic Ode to Seed Savers (November 2016) Alpacas of Troy: Sustainable Farming on the Hoof (July 2016) Urban Agriculture Guide: New Tool for City Farmers (June 2016) The Easy Chicken: Fowl Fun Comes to YOU (December 2017)
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| Danelle Haake Applies Eco-Logic to Protect Streams AND Roads | 31 Jul 2018 | 00:34:37 | |
Winter weather brings out fleets of vehicles working to keep roads clear and parking lots free of icy hazards. But run-off of the salt and chemicals used will harm the life in creeks and streams. Her perspective can help officials and citizens alike care for aquatic critter health. This Earthworms conversation affirms the importance of urban and suburban streams and supports transportation safety efforts. Local presentations on this topic are open to the public. Summer is the time to consider ecological winter road maintenance.. THANKS to Anna Holland, Earthworms audio engineer. Music: Inferno Reel, performed live at KDHX by Matt Finner | |||
| Slow Money's Woody Tasch on Culture, Poetry, Imagination, SOIL | 24 Jul 2018 | 00:48:34 | |
Investment pro Woody Tasch is evolving his own field. Profoundly inspired by the nature of soil - yes, that BROWN stuff we typically march right over - his work serves its loamy muse by plowing, so to speak, "Nurture Capital" directly into the Local/Sustainable Food movement, yielding ROI of healthier soil and stronger local community economics and culture. He calls this prophet-able enterprise Slow Money.
Woody Tasch's turns of phrase and process grew an investment movement from his publication a decade ago of the now-classic Inquiries Into the Nature of Slow Money - Investing As If Food, Farms and Fertility Mattered. Now he is structuring SOIL, Slow Opportunities for Investing Locally. He articulates how and why the transformative aim of this economic system works in his mytho-poetic and colossally detailed new book SOIL 2017 - Notes Toward the Theory and Practice of Nurture Capital. Tasch is the bard of a new economic saga, the story of bringing our human relations with money soundly back to Earth. His work is surely, slowly meeting a "lively serious," planetary-scale human need. Music: The Exotic Future of Money, performed live at KDHX by Kinetics 2% Solutions for the Planet, Courtney White's Super Stories of Green Innovation (Oct 2015) | |||
| Kate Estwing Grows, Arranges, Loves . . . . SLOW Flowers | 17 Jul 2018 | 00:39:46 | |
Grown locally and designed in-season. Using nature's diversity of shapes, textures and hues in pods and leaves as well as vivid blossoms. Keeping plastic and other material waste to a minimum. The trend in SLOW FLOWERS embraces all of these. Gardener turned floral business owner Kate Estwing makes these ideals (and more) work, beautifully, in her St. Louis enterprise City House Country Mouse.
Floral artistry that can sustainably bedeck a wedding as easily as creating a planter box of succulents adds value to a service that everyone enjoys. And the values at work for Estwing help grow a bouquet of community resources along with her business!
Open House August 16-18 at the new City House Country Mouse studio, 2105 Marconi Avenue on The Hill in St. Louis! Retail hours there are coming soon. Music: Clavinova, performed live at KDHX by Messy Jiverson THANKS to Anna Holland, Earthworms engineer Related Earthworms Conversations: Urban Buds with flower farmers Mimo Davis and Miranda Duschack (February 2015) | |||
| BEARS! | 10 Jul 2018 | 00:51:22 | |
Missourians, meet our native neighbor: Ursus americanus. And meet Laura Conlee, Furbearer Biologist and Resource Scientist with the MO Department of Conservation, a true appreciator of bears.
Photos from MDC Black Bear Research Cam - 2017 Black bears (who can be brown, ruddy and even sort of blonde) have always roamed the Show-Me State (OK, maybe only after Mastodons), but by the early 1900s their numbers had dived. Introduction of bears from northern populations through an Arkansas Game & Fish program in the 1950s and '60s reinvigorated the Missouri Ozarks with vital black bear roles in healthy forest ecosystems. By 2010, it was time to count MO bears. The MDC Bear Project now annually evaluates black bear reproduction and survival. Note: the bears in these field work-up photos are FINE! Laura Conlee and her skilled team are taking great care with the animals they're handling.
This research collaboration - among specialists in wildlife and habitat biology, landowner relations, public education and more - is tracking multiple factors to better understand and support the animals. Bear data is one element of a new MDC Research Website, created to share this agency's expert knowledge with colleagues and with all of us! Going out hiking or camping into bear territory? Or if you're concerned about recent bear reports near our metro area borders, become BEAR AWARE with important advice from MDC advocates for healthy populations of humans AND bears! Music: Hunter's Permit, performed live at KDHX by Mr. Sun | |||
| Population: Issues, Education, Action, Soap Operas | 03 Jul 2018 | 00:43:29 | |
7.6 billion and growing. Human beings on Earth, that is. But talking Population in enviro-circles is not the topic at top of mind. More like on edge of biases. This year PMC celebrates 20 Years of this innovative, globally-partnered service. Joe Bish, PMC Director of Issue Advocacy, returns to Earthworms with a report on how this important work is going.
#RidiculousRight?! is PMC's awareness campaign for World Population Day 2018. The international focus for WPD this year is Family Planning is a Human Right. Throughout July, this hashtag will circulate ridiculous policies and investments contrasted with the value of family planning action and education. Chime in! Music: Big Piney Blues, performed live at KDHX by Brian Curran
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| LIME Time - Dockless Bikeshare Greens Up St. Louis Streets | 26 Jun 2018 | 00:33:29 | |
Plans and discussions rolled around our town for years. How could we make Bike-Sharing services feasible here in The Lou?
In April, 2018 - just in time for Earth Day! - the cycle-access techno-breakthrough that is Limebike sped past barriers, onto our streets. Today, that first neon fleet of 1,500 Limebikes has multiplied. These Global Cooling Devices and humans of all kinds are moving each other around STL, safely and sustainably, at public attractions and in our city neighborhoods. David Woronets, Lime Operations Manager, details how Lime is peddling Smart Mobility with great success, and how St. Louis is leading the pack of U.S. Lime markets. Down the road? Lime electric scooters - and more! Music: Deep Gap, performed live at KDHX by Marisa Anderson THANKS to Anna Holland, Earthworms engineer More Earthworms Conversational Cruises: Great Rivers Greenway St Louis Bike Routes (April 2015) RideFinders: Carpooling Made E-Z (May 2018)
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| Urban Environments, STL Style! | 12 Jun 2018 | 00:46:07 | |
Brothers Jeff and Randy Vines are turning 40 (local-speak sez Farty). Their upbeat, Ham-on-Wry style - and their business STL-Style - helps power the ultra-diverse, collaborative renewal of their city 'hood, Cherokee Street.
These sons of STL suburbia, who went into advertising, know how to put their love of City into action. Their choice of digs on Cherokee, in South St. Louis, is a perfect place to invest their prodigious love-work resources. And to hawk the "St. Louis inspired apparel, merch and curiosities" that deck their corner store. This conversation is a valentine to City of St. Louis life, from these uber-articulate bros and City-dweller Earthworms host Jean Ponzi. New bedazzle on Vines' place is the eye-popping swirly-hue giant mural by daughter-father artist team Liza Fishbone and Robert Fishbone. A Fartieth BD present to themselves gifts big beauty to their City too! More Art-Related Earthworms: Enviro-Cartoonist Joe Mohr (November 2015) Joan Lipkin: Theater Takes On Climate Change (October 2017) Filmmaker Caitlin Zera: From The Pipeline (January 2016) Chalk Riot: Woman-Powered Street Art (May 2018) Music: Cherokee Nights, performed live at KDHX by Messy Jiverson THANKS to Anna Holland, engineering Earthworms | |||
| Bin There, Do THIS! Recycling Update: What, Why, How & How NOT | 06 Jun 2018 | 00:50:40 | |
When a material (like paper) or a container (like a bottle or a can) has served its original purpose and still has useful life remaining, that material will remain in use as ingredients in recycled-content products - if you put it in your recycling bin. But not everything should go in that bin. This conversation sorts through - literally! - what can and cannot be recycled, and why it's important not to use that Blue Bin as a catch-all for stuff you WISH could continue to be useful, if somebody else does something with it. Coming up June 30, 2018: the second Recycling Extravaganza collection this year for hard-to-recycle stuff. Check it out - and remember to ONLY bring what will be accepted! Got Sustainable Living questions? Missouri Botanical Garden's Green Resources Answer Service will give you any possible reuse and recycling options for other stuff - plus advice on more, FREE! Music: Washboard Suzie, performed live at KDHX by Zydeco Crawdaddies THANKS to Earthworms engineer, Ms. Anna Holland. Related Earthworms Conversations: Life Without Plastic? (January 2018 and Barge-Based Trash Basher Chad Pregracke (March 2017)
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| Nature, Design and Health with David Kamp | 01 Nov 2023 | 00:46:01 | |
Related Earthworms Conversations: Forest Bathing, Richard Louv
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| Chalk Art - Street Art - Woman-Powered Art R!OT | 30 May 2018 | 00:50:53 | |
Artists Chelsea Ritter-Soronen and Liza Fishbone are so down with taking art to the streets. Literally. On the pavement.
From their home bases in Napa, St. Louis and Austin they meet up in cities everywhere to transform our concrete jungles into vivid works that draw you in. Literally! ChalkRiot's mastery of anamorphic visuals, done in ephemerally dusty chalk or persistent paint, create a riot of art that celebrates special events, delivers a message, and grounds Art-Girl Power in stunning, funny, intentional ways. ChalkRiot work vividly explores themes of Love, Technology, the Environment, Women-Strong, Aliens, Pink Bunnies, Justice and more.
Newest project Pavement Portals is ChalkRiot's ground-busting foray into Augmented Reality: your phone or tablet view of three fantastic Fortune Telling Machines jumps off floor canvas into scintillating, bubbly life. Look for a St. Louis media buzz around this work to amp up in other cities soon! Photo credits: RJ Hartbeck Basil Tsimoyanis, Art St. Louis Music: Jingle Bells, performed live at KDHX by CivilTonesTHANKS to Anna Holland for Audio-Girl Powering Earthworms. Related Earthworms Conversations: Artists Take on Plastic Pollution and Invasive Bush Honeysuckle (March 2018) | |||
| Get Around Greener in a Carpool - with RideFinders | 22 May 2018 | 00:35:42 | |
What stops you from considering a Carpool? Have to know someone who lives near you, who works where you do? Have to do it every day or it doesn't count? How can you get home in an emergency if you don't have your own car?
RideFinders is supported by federal highway funds designated to help clean up St. Louis air by reducing the ratio of cars to persons traveling around our regional "Airshed." Services include FREE membership for companies, universities and other organizations with many possible RideFinders participants, FREE sign-ups for these individuals, FREE taxi service up to 4 times per year as a Guaranteed Ride Home, and FREE workplace presentations about how easy and beneficial Carpooling is. Consider Carpooling (or joining a Vanpool) for any number of days of your weekly commute. And encourage your employer - or campus Office of Student Affairs - to join and promote RideFinders options. Special for this summer's Air Quality season: add a new person to your current carpool, or start a new carpool and you'll be entered to win memberships, free passes and other summer-fun goodies in the RideFinders Museum Mania Carpool Challenge. In a Carpool or Vanpool the benefits will add up way faster than the miles, as you Get Around Greener! P.S. Informally carpooling counts too! Make it a habit for workplace meetings and social events. Music: Lime House Blues, performed live at KDHX by legendary Del McCoury
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| Earth Day - History of a "Genius" Event with Dr. Adam Rome | 15 May 2018 | 00:40:39 | |
On April 22, 1970, a conservative senator from Wisconsin led a diverse, national circle of organizers is bringing public attention to environmental issues of the day. Earth Day has since become the largest civic event on the planet its events strives to protect.
Dr. Adam Rome, Professor of History at SUNY Buffalo, has made a passionate study of this worldwide phenomenon. He shares insights from his 2013 book, "The Genius of Earth Day: How a 1970 Teach-In Unexpectedly Made the First Green Generation." Earthworms host Jean Ponzi swaps Earth Day bits with Dr. Rome from her experience as coordinator of the 20th annual Earth Day Festival in 1990, that helped launch today's vibrant St. Louis Green culture. Adam Rome will be in St. Louis on May 24 to give the capstone presentation in the 2018 Environmental History Speaker Series. This is a free talk at 7 pm at the Missouri History Museum in Forest Park. Music: Modern Andy Down - performed live at KDHX Thanks to Anna Holland, Earthworms engineer, and to Stephen Hanpeter, Sappington Concord Historical Society.
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| Missouri River: Two Birds, a Fish, Legal Stuff, Some Good News & Much MO | 01 May 2018 | 00:54:35 | |
Once one of the wildest rivers of North America, some now call it the Missouri Canal. It has been dammed, dredged, cursed as it flooded, pinched between levees, straightened - and yet humans from many walks of life are dedicated to helping this river survive, and even maybe re-wild it a little bit.
Thomas Ball talks with Earthworms host Jean Ponzi as an individual engaged in the Missouri River Recovery Implementation Committee (he says "Mister RIC"). He's also active in the Sierra Club's Missouri River work Sierra Club originally filed to get the Pallid Sturgeon, a prehistoric MO River fish protected by the Endangered Species Act.
He brings to our attention two bills moving through Congress that would prohibit citizens from doing this for future threatened species: HB 2134 and SB 935. River lovers: consider action here. Ball has taken countless humans - youth and adults - out on this river, and on other outdoor adventures. He loves nature, loves the big rivers, and persists in working with his fellow humans to right our actions that have crippled natural forces like the MO, actions which ultimately endanger us. He persists through knowledge, science, collaboration - and that big love. Music: Big Piney Blues, performed live at KDHX by Brian Curran Related Earthworms Conversations: Water Issues: Meddling, Muddling, Advocacy (Dec 2017) Cooperation for Water Security (Oct 2017) Invest in Infrastructure, Nature's and Ours (April 2017) Barge-Based Trash-Basher Chad Pregracke (May 2017)
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| Texas Tales from "A Thirsty Land" with Seamus McGraw | 24 Apr 2018 | 00:32:16 | |
Subtitle of the new book by Seamus McGraw is Making of the American Water Crisis. McGraw turns his curiosity and storytelling skills to focus on Texas, where he says every aspect of water use, issues, needs and potentials are in play.
From a state he says is more like an Empire, where multiple desert climates overlay multiple aquifers, where water use planning and water rights laws still work in a form of frontier justice - what can we learn about how diverse interests might cooperate to equitably manage what all parties need? Water is life, but can people work out ways to share it?
Left Bank Books, STL's premier independent bookseller, will host Seamus McDaniel on May 1 for a reading and book-signing. A Thirsty Land (2018) comes from University of Texas Press. Music: Cadillac Desert performed live at KDHX by William Tyler THANKS to Dan Waterman and Andy Coco, engineering this edition of Earthworms. Related Earthworms Conversations: Water Issues - Meddling, Muddling, Advocacy (Dec 2017) Mississippi River Infrastructure Investment Plan (April 2017)
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| Carl Pope: Creating a Climate of Hope | 17 Apr 2018 | 00:34:02 | |
The 2016 book Climate of Hope conveys a broad, powerfully encouraging view from a longtime environmental champion, Carl Pope - former Sierra Club national Director - and his co-author Michael Bloomberg, philanthropist and former Mayor of New York.
This report on civic, economic, business and cultural alliances proclaims what Pope calls "Bottom-Up Climate Progress" even as U.S. federal leadership rolls back climate protections. Pope's perspective aims to foster citizen engagement and especially locally-based actions to boost clean energy and curb climate disrupting emissions from many sources. Music: Cadillac Desert, performed live at KDHX by William Tyler THANKS to Dan Waterman and Andy Coco. engineering for Earthworms Related Earthworms Conversations: Project DRAWDOWN (March 2018) Dr. Peter Raven, Science advisor to Papal Academy and Climate Encyclical (June 2015) David and the Giant Mailbox: Climate Conversations (December 2015) | |||
| Earth Day! Earth Day! Hear All About It! | 03 Apr 2018 | 00:33:26 | |
Caring for our planet is fun when St. Louis Earth Day's intrepid crew leads the action!
On April 21-22 the 29th annual Earth Day Festival will fill the sunny, leafy environs around The Muny in our town's Forest Park with learning, music, food, people-watching and you-can-do options for all ages. Free and fabulous, this event is one of the largest Earth Day festivals on the planet!
The non-profit hosts of this Green gala also coordinate waste-reducing services year-round, from Recycling Extravaganza's annual spring-cleaning support to Recycling On The Go teams that bring food waste composting, single-stream recycling and public education to festivals of all kinds. Check out volunteer opportunities with St. Louis Earth Day - they are rewarding, impactful and always well organized! Music: Extremist Stomp, performed live at KDHX by Pokey LaFarge and Ryan Spearman | |||
| Two Challenges - Worth Taking! | 24 Mar 2018 | 00:39:03 | |
With Earth Day coming up, we are challenged by a lot of "you can do." Individual efforts matter, but how much? Earthworms endorses two challenges that WILL have an impact, in our lives and for our planet. The DRAWDOWN Eco-Challenge, running nationally April 4-25, builds on ten years of eco-challenge experience from Northwest Earth institute to engage individual actions. Multiplying impacts, this 2018 challenge correlates our actions to the measures mapped, measured and prioritized by Project DRAWDOWN for collective capacity to pull climate-changing carbon out of Earth's atmosphere. Lacy Cagle, Director of Learning for NWEI, shares these potentials with Earthworms host Jean Ponzi.
Then from April 27-30, residents of the St. Louis region - and 65 other cities around the WORLD - can contribute to understanding about local biodiversity by participating in the City Nature Challenge, as described by Earthworms guest Sheila Voss, VP of Education at the Missouri Botanical Garden .
Using the (totally terrific!) app iNaturalist, humans of all ages can log observations of plants and critters as communities "compete" to gather intel about local biodiversity. In St. Louis, observations logged during City Nature Challenge days will establish a baseline of biodiversity data crucial to address regional nature-preservation goals. In Earthworms' opinion, these are two Challenges WORTH TAKING! Music: Rearview performed live at KDHX by Belle Star THANKS to Anna Holland, ace Earthworms engineer Learning Green: Northwest Earth Institute (October 2017)
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| Artist Takes: on Plastic Pollution and Invasive Bush Honeysuckle | 20 Mar 2018 | 00:33:35 | |
When Artists address environmental issues, people see/hear them in new ways. Art may fire us into action, more than mere info ever can.
Jenny Kettler co-curated and has pieces in a group gallery show, Plastic Nation - The Trashing of America, on view through April 7 at Stone Spiral Gallery in Maplewood, MO. Photographs, multi-media works, ceramics and prints navigate the plastic tide we are awash in, with the message that we can reduce our use of this polluting stuff. This show opened March 10; a Closing Reception on April 7 from 2-4 pm will feature Artist Talks at 2:30 pm. Dale Dufer is bringing "suit" against one of our region's most destructive yet popular invasive plants. The Trial of Bush Honeysuckle comes to the historic Old Courthouse in downtown St. Louis on Wednesday, April 4 at 1 pm. With a real Judge, real Environmental Lawyers and Expert Witnesses, this educational trial seeks justice for damages to the Biodiversity of our Native Plants. Man vs Bush should be a landmark case, whatever the outcome. Open to the public. These Artists want us to look deeply into problems we have created on our planet - with a sense of humor to encourage us toward turnarounds. Music: Mr. Sun, performed live at KDHX by Hunter's Permit Related Earthworms Conversations: Life Without Plastic? (January 2018) Fashion Through an Artists Eye: Bush Honeysuckle to Meat (April 2016) Permaculture Goes Beyond the War on Invasive Species (March 2016) Invasive Bush Honeysuckle: SWEEP It! (March 2016) | |||
| Photographer Neeta Satam - Documenting Himalayan Climate Change | 12 Mar 2018 | 00:34:18 | |
"Global warming is changing the Himalayas faster than any other region of the world, outside the polar caps," says documentary photographer Neeta Satam.
She has made three working treks to the isolated village of Kumik, in the Zanskar valley of Kashmir, where village life, family relations and culture is endangered as climatic shifts remove water from a people who've lived in balance in this region for thousands of years. "Where should we go?" is one of many stories Satam relates through her perceptions as an environmental scientist, and now through her mastery with a camera lens. Satam's compassion, insight and courage illuminate her work, as she strives to make the world aware of impacts of Climate Change on human beings in places being hardest hit. THANKS to Prof. William Allen, University of Missouri, for making the connection to Earthworms for this interview. Music: Dirty Slide, performed live at KDHX by Brian Curran | |||
| Road Kill - yes, not kidding folks, sez Don Corrigan | 12 Oct 2023 | 00:37:53 | |
St. Louis journalist Don Corrigan storms the American Popular Culture Association with his books exploring way more than journalistic topics - like ROAD KILL.
Corrigan's book American Roadkill: Animal Victims of our Busy Highways is in the great animal rights tradition of Joseph Grinnell of the 1920s, who was alarmed at the animal carnage on America's new highways. Corrigan tells the squashed sad tales, and shares some positives: • The Saint Louis Zoo enlisting “citizen scientists” to identify high casualty frog and turtle crossings. • St. Louis Kinship Circle raising awareness of road accidents with pets and how to avoid such heartbreaking meet-ups with cars. • Sierra Clubs of the southeast, championing endangered pumas. • Possum Pouch Pickers, down south, rescuing baby possums from marsupial mothers mashed on roadways. Don Corrigan is Editor Emeritus of the Webster-Kirkwood Times, a weekly newspaper for St. Louis suburban communities. THANKS to Andy Heaslet, Earthworms audio engineer, and to KDHX production pundit Jon Valley. Related Earthworms Conversations: Richard Louv: Our Wild Calling (Dec 2019) Don Corrigent on SQUIRRELS (July 2019)
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| DRAWDOWN: Solutions to Reverse Global Warming | 07 Mar 2018 | 00:46:57 | |
Humans are pumping CO2 (and other heat-trapping gases) into Earth's atmosphere, causing whopping changes to our climate, aka global warming. Project DRAWDOWN says (and documents with data) that actions currently in use can, if combined and ramped up, literally draw down over-concentrations of these gases into Earth systems (like soil, trees, oceans) designed to contain them. And reverse global warming.
Chad Frischmann, VP and Research Director for Project DRAWDOWN, worked with multi-disciplinary professionals who have researched the potentials of measures ranging from increasing renewable energy generation to people eating plant-based diets to educating girls - and more. Erika Boeing, now based in St. Louis, is one of the DRAWDOWN Research Fellows and her company, Accelerate Wind, is developing technology to boost wind energy production. The entire project is summarized in a 2017 book that immediately hit the New York Times Bestseller list. A St. Louis talk on March 13 will spotlight four Missouri enterprises implementing measures defined by DRAWDOWN, including Ms. Boeing's work, and will describe the audience to Project DRAWDOWN. With plenty of work needed, this project is seeding optimism in what world leaders and scientists call the moral issue of our time. Music: Cadillac Desert, performed live at KDHX by William Tyler THANKS to Anna Holland, engineering for Earthworms | |||
| Zero Waste Fish Fry - Holy Redeemer is Hooked on Green! | 28 Feb 2018 | 00:31:51 | |
For any Catholic parish, a Fish Fry cooks up fun and some revenue during the season of Lent. At Holy Redeemer in the St. Louis suburb of Webster Groves, a portion of that green potential is being invested in Green education-by-example, led by two Moms.
Jamie Hasemeier, Earthworms guest (pictured right, photo by Dave Leuking), came to "Holy" with strong personal environmental values. She wants to contribute in every way to a healthy world for her four children - and for her fellow humans everywhere. When Jamie teamed with fellow Mom Lisa Reed, who runs the church's annual Fish Fry, she worked through several cycles of Lent to cook sustainability into those events. Students educate guests about low-waste eating as they direct diners to correctly recycle and compost. Results of these efforts included less than 2 bags of landfill trash from each of 2017's Fish Fry evenings - that each served over 750. Green efforts continue growing! Features in the St. Louis Review, an archdiocesan publication, and the St. Louis Green Dining Alliance blog helped boost attendance in 2017, when these dinners went Compostable. Trays going into yellow Compost bins are not Styrofoam - they are plastics made from plants. Other parishes are acting on the Holy Redeemer Green example, set by Mothers who love Earth - and act on their faith. Music: Rearview, performed live at KDHX by Belle Star THANKS to Anna Holland, Earthworms skillful, tasteful engineer Related Earthworms Conversations: Laudato Si, understanding Care for Our Common Home, with Franciscan Sisters of Our Lady of Perpetual Help (January 2016) Dr. Peter Raven, science advisor to Pope Francis' Climate Change encyclical (June 2015) | |||
| Fungus Farming for Food & Fun from McCully Heritage Project | 14 Feb 2018 | 00:35:45 | |
Illinois tourism writers call it a "best-kept secret." Visitors review it as a great place to camp, hike and learn some things. Director (and Earthworms guest) Michelle Berg Vogel says its a working farm and an environmental education place. And in March, a Fungus Farm!
McCully Heritage Project, located in Kampsville, IL, is a nature haven at the Illinois-Mississippi Rivers' confluence. Its 940 acres are mainly forested, with native trees and plenty of native wildlife. Native - and visiting - humans thrive there too. On Saturday March 3, folks who fancy gardening can learn an Agroforestry skill: growing mushrooms on logs. Green oak logs, innoculated with mushroom spawn, sprout Shitakes, and softwood logs support the growth of Oyster mushrooms. Both delicious, nutritious - and easy to produce. Fun with fungus, anyone?
Music: Redwing, performed live at KDHX by Currykorn THANKS to Jon Valley, engineering this Earthworms edition | |||