About
2025 Program
Blog
Mail Drops
Route
Photo of the Day
Campsites of the West
Waters in the West
People
Students
Faculty and Staff
Student Work
2025 Western Relations
2025 Podcasts
2024 Western Relations
2022 Epiphany Readings
2022 Podcasts
2022 Species Project
2021 Podcasts
2021 Epiphany Readings
2018 Podcasts
2018 Epiphany Readings
2016 Podcasts
2016 Epiphany Readings
2014 Epiphany Readings
2012 Video Projects
2012 Epiphany Readings
Past Programs
Alumni
Contact

Semester in the West

About
2025 Program
Blog
Mail Drops
Route
Photo of the Day
Campsites of the West
Waters in the West
People
Students
Faculty and Staff
Student Work
2025 Western Relations
2025 Podcasts
2024 Western Relations
2022 Epiphany Readings
2022 Podcasts
2022 Species Project
2021 Podcasts
2021 Epiphany Readings
2018 Podcasts
2018 Epiphany Readings
2016 Podcasts
2016 Epiphany Readings
2014 Epiphany Readings
2012 Video Projects
2012 Epiphany Readings
Past Programs
Alumni
Contact
Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

A Wildlife Biologist's Fiery Climate Confrontation

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

When the feeling of helplessness to stop climate change struck him, US Forest Service biologist Kent Woodruff passionately set out against all odds to save his community and the earth.

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Groundwater Guardians

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Hear Nicole Horseherder and Marshall Johnson, founders of the Navajo organization "Beautiful Water Speaks," tell their story of groundwater loss and coal mining on the Black Mesa in Northern Arizona.

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

The Generation Talk

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Who is to blame for the problems climate change poses to the world? Who is responsible to fix them?

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Community-Based Restoration, on the Pupfish Scale

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

The discovery of a supposedly extinct fish in Death Valley has led to the restoration of more than just wetlands. 

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

When a River Runs Dry

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Hear the story of the Colorado River, told through the eyes of the Cucapa tribe of Northern New Mexico, longtime residents of its formerly lush delta.

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

National Forest Playgrounds are Work Places, Too

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Public lands logging can benefit environmentalists, rural communities, and the forests, too. 

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Forests, Cows, and Collaboration

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

For those hoping to reduce the damage caused by cattle grazing on Western public land, there are several paths of action: do you work from outside or inside the system? Do you take a hard line or try to compromise? Listen to two stories of people who have had to make these choices.

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Private Lands Conservation

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016
Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Arid Oceans

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Legislative and economic incentives pushing solar energy onto public lands damage the very places they were designed to protect

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Rocks and Rattlers

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

A story of a Forest Service struggle to balance habitat health with the demands of public lands recreation.

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Who Owns the Black Hills?

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

An examination of the ongoing Black Hills land claim dispute between the United States and the Sioux Nation.

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Water Isn't Always for Fighting Over

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

New Mexican farmer and writer, Stanley Crawford, walks through a collaborative water rights system that shapes the landscape and his community within it.

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Keep It In the Ground

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Why do some communities embrace innovation while others cling to the past?

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Science and Activism: Mary O'Brien

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Science and passion are equally important ingredients to becoming a successful activist.

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Life Doesn't End Here

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

A story of perseverance, told from the mud flats of the Colorado River Delta.

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

The Power of Story

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Stories can help us care about complex issues, but can also lead us astray. 

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

The Truth About Public Lands Ranching

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

As environmental pressures increase, ranchers and conservationists consider the struggles surrounding public lands grazing. Generations after its inception, does ranching still belong on public lands?

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

A Lethal Take on Conservation

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Sometimes to save a species, we must take an individual.

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Save the Confluence

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Navajo activists in Arizona fight to preserve sacred space from the specter of development: a proposed tramway into the Grand Canyon.

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

Life and Loss In a Diminishing Land

Semester in the West
December 1, 2016

What does it mean to lose the places we hold dear? Land in the American West faces a barrage of political, climatic, and economic pressures.  Hear the stories of grief and hope from those who call this region home.

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Since 2008, Semester in the West students have been conducting interviews along their journeys, and have created this podcast series as their final comprehensive project at the end of the semester. Enjoy!

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Semester in the West | Whitman College | 345 Boyer Avenue | Walla Walla, WA 99362