#60: Colorado 14ers Initiative with Brian Sargeant

You’re looking at, it could be 12,000 – 15,000, years of soil deposition that’s being washed away or eroded by hiker footsteps and the impacts that our footsteps cause. With snowmelt and rain and how it rapidly increases erosion.

#52: Rising Hearts with Jordan Marie Whetstone

“I think anyone will have their own definition of what that means to them and I think for me and for Rising Hearts it really embodies, you know, the passion and the commitment to what you love and care about the most that truly makes it the work that’s coming from the heart.”

#51: Footprints with Dakota Jones

“Basically what we’re doing is trying to bridge this gap. We know the problems of climate change, we know the solutions, and what’s going to connect those two is community. It’s people.”

#26 Bobby Gill: Holistic management methods to save the world

Through a lot of my life, I’ve always gone against the grain. Whether that’s through skydiving or ultra-running or ditching a very comfortable federal career.”

#19 Mehgan Heaney-Grier: The ‘Imperfect Conservationist’ and former world-record free-diver saving our oceans

Far from being a voice that just points out all the things we’re doing wrong when it comes to conservation, Mehgan offers up actionable advice, like turning your car off instead of letting it idle, that couldn’t be easier to incorporate into our everyday lives.

#17 Carlee Koutnik: Deputy Director of Colorado Parks & Wildlife

Colorado Parks and Wildlife is a nationally recognized leader in conservation, outdoor recreation, and wildlife management. The agency manages 41​ state parks, more than 350 state wildlife areas, and a host of recreational programs. Reaping the benefits of their work as much as I do, I thought it’d make for a great episode to talk to someone from CPW and I was absolutely right!

#8 Sarah Schlafly: Living Mighty with cricket protein

https://open.spotify.com/episode/7LYtbbpXot616UD4k66V82?si=bh9ZfcahS5CweZ2J7BweDQ Did you know that in 2018, the average American ate roughly 200lbs of meat and that conventional beef usually requires 65 square feet of land per quarter pound to raise cattle alone? No doubt there is serious concern over food security as the effects of climate change become more and more real.  Enter myContinueContinue reading “#8 Sarah Schlafly: Living Mighty with cricket protein”