Good Nature with Megan Leslie – Details, episodes & analysis
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Good Nature with Megan Leslie
Antica Productions, WWF-Canada
Frequency: 1 episode/12d. Total Eps: 8

Recent rankings
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Apple Podcasts
🇨🇦 Canada - nature
19/06/2026#2🇨🇦 Canada - science
19/06/2026#16🇨🇦 Canada - nature
18/06/2026#1🇨🇦 Canada - science
18/06/2026#16🇨🇦 Canada - nature
17/06/2026#1🇨🇦 Canada - science
17/06/2026#16🇨🇦 Canada - nature
16/06/2026#1🇨🇦 Canada - science
16/06/2026#16🇨🇦 Canada - nature
15/06/2026#2🇨🇦 Canada - science
15/06/2026#19
Spotify
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See allRSS feed quality and score
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See allScore global : 48%
Publication history
Monthly episode publishing history over the past years.
Introducing Good Nature
lundi 23 mars 2026 • Duration 01:00
Earth Hour, coral reefs, and the power of hope with Andy Ridley
Episode 1
jeudi 26 mars 2026 • Duration 33:23
In the first episode of Good Nature, Megan sits down with Andy Ridley, the co‑founder of Earth Hour, just as the global movement marks its 20th anniversary. Andy reflects on how a simple idea — turning off the lights for one hour — sparked a worldwide expression of collective action. The conversation traces the evolution of the environmental movement over the past two decades and explores what Andy is working on now: protecting coral reefs by empowering everyday people to help monitor and restore them. From Earth Hour’s origins in Sydney Harbour to its little-known Toronto connection and eventual global ignition, this episode is a hopeful look at how creativity and shared purpose can help turn concern into action.
Megan is also joined on this episode by WWF-Canada’s resident botanist, Ryan Godfrey, who answers her call on the orca phone to tell her something good about the weeds in your garden...
To stay up-to-date on what’s going on at WWF-Canada, sign up for Living Planet News: https://wwf.ca/signup-for-living-planet-news/
To leave Megan a voice message, go to www.speakpipe.com/wwfgoodnature.
The power of Indigenous-led conservation with Ken Paul
Episode 2
jeudi 9 avril 2026 • Duration 34:12
What if the future of conservation isn’t new at all — but rooted in knowledge systems that have existed for generations?
In this episode, host Megan Leslie chats with Ken Paul, a member of Wolastoqey First Nation at Neqotkuk, in New Brunswick. Ken has spent his career advocating for First Nations, Inuit and Métis communities across Canada. In this episode, he joins us to unpack Indigenous-led conservation — what it looks like in practice and why it’s reshaping how we think about protecting land and water. Drawing on decades of experience, Ken explains Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas (IPCAs) and reflects on his own journey into advocacy. He also introduces the idea of “Two-Eyed Seeing” — a powerful framework that brings together Indigenous knowledge systems and Western science.
But first, Megan’s chatting with WWF-Canada community action specialist Kathy Nguyen, who’s here to share something good about some creative Canadians students building new habitats in their own backyard.
To stay up to date on what’s going on at WWF-Canada, sign up for Living Planet News: https://wwf.ca/signup-for-living-planet-news/
To leave Megan a voice message, go to www.speakpipe.com/wwfgoodnature.
Puffins, sea slugs and Atlantic diving with Jill Taylor
Episode 3
jeudi 23 avril 2026 • Duration 34:39
Who doesn’t love puffins?!
In this episode, host Megan Leslie sits down with science communicator Jill Taylor. Jill is a Halifax-based biologist who researches the social behaviour of Atlantic puffins. Beyond her research, Jill has built a massive online following, sharing the beauty of Atlantic ecosystems, her love of scuba diving, and (of course) plenty of puffin antics.
Jill and Megan get into the surprisingly complex world of Atlantic puffins: what makes them so distinctive, how they navigate life at sea and on land, and why scientists once believed they were actually two completely different birds. Plus, Jill recounts her adventures diving in the Atlantic and Megan discovers a new passion for sea slugs.
But first, Megan checks in with WWF-Canada’s resident botanist Ryan Godfrey to talk about why coyotes actually belong in cities.
Follow Jill on Instagram @_jill_taylor or on TikTok @jill.dives
To stay up to date on what’s going on at WWF-Canada, sign up for Living Planet News: https://wwf.ca/signup-for-living-planet-news/
To leave Megan a voice message, go to https://www.speakpipe.com/wwfgoodnature.
MP Steven Guilbeault on Canada’s new nature strategy
Episode 4
jeudi 7 mai 2026 • Duration 34:41
Canada has a new strategy for nature—but what does it actually mean on the ground?
On this episode of Good Nature, host Megan Leslie sits down with the Honourable Steven Guilbeault, MP for Laurier–Sainte-Marie in Montreal and former Minister of Environment and Climate Change. They dig into Canada’s new nature strategy, including the tension between conservation and development, what it really means for lands and waters to be “protected,” and the challenge of meeting Canada’s commitment to protect 30% of lands and waters by 2030.
But first, Megan’s checking in with WWF-Canada senior conservation scientist Jessica Currie for some good news about cooperation in forests.
Learn more about WWF-Canada’s carbon mapping project at https://wwf.ca/carbonmap/
To stay up to date on what’s going on at WWF-Canada, sign up for Living Planet News: https://wwf.ca/signup-for-living-planet-news/
To leave Megan a voice message, go to https://www.speakpipe.com/wwfgoodnature.
The case for slow birding with Dr. Joan Strassmann
Episode 5
jeudi 21 mai 2026 • Duration 30:21
What if the best way to go birding…was simply to slow down?
Today on Good Nature, host Megan Leslie chats with Dr. Joan Strassmann, author of Slow Birding: The Art and Science of Enjoying the Birds in Your Own Backyard. Megan and Joan talk about why birding is having a moment, what makes slow birding so special, and why native plants matter so much for birds. Along the way, they swap birding stories and compare a few of their favourite bird calls.
Megan also checks in with WWF-Canada soil expert Cathal Doherty to hear a truly mind-boggling story about peatland restoration.
Learn more about WWF-Canada’s re:grow project at https://regrow.wwf.ca/
To stay up to date on what’s going on at WWF-Canada, sign up for Living Planet News: https://wwf.ca/signup-for-living-planet-news/
Email us: goodnature@wwfcanada.org
Leave Megan a voice message: https://www.speakpipe.com/wwfgoodnature.
Sarah Harmer on songs, salamanders and stewardship
Episode 7
jeudi 18 juin 2026 • Duration 38:31
What does it take to fight a mining company for 20 years—and keep showing up?
On this episode of Good Nature, host Megan Leslie chats with singer-songwriter and environmental activist Sarah Harmer. Sarah has been fighting to protect the Niagara Escarpment in southern Ontario since her iconic 2005 I Love the Escarpment tour. She and Megan dig into the power of art to shift public opinion, the Jefferson salamander's surprising role in a landmark legal win, and why she believes showing up is the most important part of protecting the habitats you care about. She also reflects on her 2025 Juno Humanitarian Award and her call to fellow musicians to use their platforms for the causes that matter.
Plus, senior conservation scientist Jessica Currie calls in with a "Tell Me Something Good" about a surprisingly powerful (and often overlooked) climate hero hiding beneath Canada's coastal waters.
Film clips are from the documentary Escarpment Blues (2006), directed by Andy Keen.
To stay up to date on what’s going on at WWF-Canada, sign up for Living Planet News: https://wwf.ca/signup-for-living-planet-news/
Tell us something good, suggest a guest or ask a question by emailing us at goodnature@wwfcanada.org
Or leave Megan a voice message: https://www.speakpipe.com/wwfgoodnature
Bears, climate change, and coexistence with Gloria Dickie
Episode 6
jeudi 4 juin 2026 • Duration 31:31
Bears capture our imagination like almost no other animal. But behind that fascination is a bigger story about climate change, coexistence, and how we care for wildlife.
Today on Good Nature, host Megan Leslie sits down with Gloria Dickie, environmental journalist and author of Eight Bears: Mythic Past and Imperiled Future. Gloria shares stories from her travels reporting on all eight of the world’s bear species, from polar bears in Churchill, MB to spectacled bears in the Andes to sloth bears in India. Along the way, Gloria and Megan discuss the role of bears as ecological and cultural keystone species, why bears around the world have stopped hibernating, and what real “bear smart” communities look like.
Plus, Jessica Currie from WWF-Canada’s Science, Knowledge and Innovation team drops in to tell Megan something good about the world’s largest (and most surprising!) wildlife migration.
Check out Gloria’s work: https://www.gloriadickie.com/
Learn more about the Living Planet Report Canada: https://wwf.ca/lprc2025/
To stay up to date on what’s going on at WWF-Canada, sign up for Living Planet News: https://wwf.ca/signup-for-living-planet-news/
Tell us something good, suggest a guest or ask a question by emailing us at goodnature@wwfcanada.org
Or leave Megan a voice message:
https://www.speakpipe.com/wwfgoodnature
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