Environment
Outdoors writer Shawn Perich on the state of the Arrowhead's moose
-Buck spoke Oct. 7 with outdoors writer and Northern Wilds Editor Shawn Perich about the state of the moose population in northeastern Minnesota, and possible factors involved in the decline.
Pagami Creek Fire Update -Saturday, Oct. 8
-The Pagami Creek Fire remains at 92,682 acres and is 71% contained. Aircraft were able to keep the fire’s forward progress in check on Friday.
Dr. Gerald Niemi of NRRI on fire's effect on birds and animals
-Buck spoke Sept. 30 with Dr. Gerald Niemi of the Natural Resources Research Institute in Duluth about what happens to birds and animals during and after a large fire like the Pagami Creek fire.
Wildersmith September 30
-It’s official now, Dagwagin (fall) in the north woods. After weeks of anticipation, the glorious season of color is what it is!
Points North: Conservation or Convenience?
-Are you going duck hunting this weekend? The Sept. 27 opening date, a week earlier than the traditional first Saturday in October, is intended to give hunters more opportunities to kill ducks.
Wildersmith September 23
-Truly, east is east and west is west as old Sol kisses summer goodbye. “Fire & Ice” over the past week has been a prelude to our northland equinox.
Forest disturbance expert Lee Frelich discusses effect of fire on the boreal forest
-Ann Possis spoke Sept. 16 with Lee Frelich, director of the Center for Forest Ecology at the U of MN, about likely effects of the Pagami Creek Fire on the BWCAW forest.
Northern Sky: Mars, Beehive Cluster & Full Moon Legends
-Deane Morrison is a science writer at the University of Minnesota. She writes the monthly Minnesota Starwatch column.
Meet Ann Raiho & Natalie Warren, first women to paddle from Minneapolis to Hudson Bay
-Ann Possis and Matthew Brown welcomed Ann Raiho and Natalie Warren of the Hudson Bay Bound Expedition to the studio Sept. 9. They just became the first women to paddle from Minneapolis to Hudson Bay, re-creating the journey made by Eric Sevareid and Walter Port, and documented in the classic book "Canoeing with the Cree."