A show about relationships with the land
There are many ways to listen to the show: Listen live on CFRU 93.3 fm broadcasting from the University of Guelph Mondays at 6pm EST or listen to the podcast via Spotify, Apple, or just follow the rss feed.
Ep. 222 : Red Mulberry Recovery Program with Sean Fox
A couple of days after my recent interview discussing Mulberries with Matt Soltys, the Arboretum at the University of Guelph shared a couple of posts on instagram about the Red Mulberry Recovery Program where researchers are looking into how to identify, propagate, and eventually distribute Red Mulberries to their partners. They are also trying educating the public on how the White or Asian Mulberries can be detrimental to conservation of the Red Mulberries. Immediately I wrote to them to try and set up and interview.
Gratefully Sean Fox, senior research associate at the Arb, took the the time to get into the complexity and nuance of dynamic movements of species and how we can take actions towards conservation of a species which is endemically endangered.
Dr. Katie Clow on Black-legged Ticks and Lyme Disease (from the archives)
Last week I was getting ready for bed when I found a Black-legged Tick with their head embedded in my back. I got a little bit anxious, but immediately went for my phone to take some photos. My partner removed helped me remove the tick and I didn’t feel too anxious about it after that. Last week we found a number of ticks around town, or heard co-workers found some, or were visiting some spots where I had encountered ticks in the past. Today when I got home from teaching a class, I saw a massively engorged tick on my cat while she was laying about in the backyard.
All of these recent sightings or memories have got me thinking about ticks, so I wanted to rebroadcast this episode from 2020. I bet a lot of the information is still very relevant, so listen up, get stoked on how cool ticks are, and continue to check yourself.
Ep. 186 : Squirrel Life Project with Elizabeth Porter
Birdwatching is obviously a thing as birds are everywhere, loud, demonstrate interesting behaviours, and they are often brightly coloured. Squirrels too are everywhere, loud, and demonstrate interesting behaviours. They aren’t brightly coloured, but their brindled, black, red, brown, grey, or even white in the case of some albino individuals at Trinity Bellwoods downtown Toronto, are still a joy to observe. So why not take up Squirrelwatching?
Elizabeth Porter is the project coordinator for the Squirrel Life project which is developing an app to collect community sourced observations of Squirrels and their varied, interesting and often comical behaviour and then enables future researchers to access the shared collected data for their research. It’s a project with many aims including getting folks outside to observe wild life close to home while encouraging a closer look at varied Squirrel behviours which are happening all around, all the time. Along the way, Elizabeth is looking at how to communicate scientific research and findings with broad diverse communities. A great goal.
Ep. 184 : Nature Guelph
Nature Guelph was established in 1966 and since then has been promoting connection with the lands in and around the city I now call home. I have been attending their events for years, always drawn in by their knowledgeable speakers and presenters and great community. It has been a hub for naturalists in Guelph and I have been so lucky to get to know the broader community of humans and non-humans through their efforts.
Ep. 151 : Nokom’s House
Dr. Kim Anderson, Dr. Sheri Longboat and Dr. Brittany Luby are the driving force behind Nokom’s House, a new lab in development at the University of Guelph. Together with a community of elders they are establishing an indigenous learning, sharing, teaching space which will be using relational pedagogies, community research, and land-based learning to make home for cultural recovery, inter-generational training, and the creation of indigenous futurities.
On the show we hear why there is a need for Nokom’s House within the academic setting, what the cultural architecture of safety can look like for marginalized students, the roles of women, especially older women, have within indigineous communities, and also why there needs to be spaces specifically for indigineous people on the University of Guelph campus, within the city of Guelph, and further afield.
Ep. 133: Dr. Katie Clow on Black-legged Ticks and Lyme Disease
Dr. Katie Clow is an assistant professor at the Ontario Veterinary College, and Vet by training, and expert in zoonotic epidemiology. Today we talk about ticks and tick borne diseases such as Lyme disease. You may need to take notes for this one as Katie has a lot to share.
Other platforms where you can listen to the show :
As well as : Breaker : Overcast : Pocket casts : RadioPublic