Treehuggers International

San Bernardino National Forest Association

Ohio native Sarah Miggins did a summer internship in Lake Tahoe, and on a whim visited the San Bernardino Mountains on her way home. They stopped her in her tracks. Today, Sarah is the Executive Director of the San Bernardino National Forest Association, one of the leading forest associations in the nation. She talks about her work with the Big Bear Discovery Center and the Children’s Forest, as well as hiking the high country of the San Bernardino range and making the mountains her home.

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Peg Reiter and the Legacy of Jerry Schad

A special conversation with Peg Reiter, Jerry Schad’s widow, about their hikes, explorations, and all too brief time together, along with Peg’s involvement with Jerry’s final book, 50 Best Short Hikes San Diego. Peg Reiter came to play an instrumental role in the completion of the book, and after consulting with the team at Wilderness Press, Treehuggers International producer and host Tommy Hough felt the best way to feature the book and Jerry’s lasting legacy, was to welcome Peg onto the program.

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Carbon Nation Director Peter Byck

The importance isn’t whether you believe global warming, says Carbon Nation director Peter Byck, but what kind of solutions everyone can agree upon and move forward with to make the planet a cleaner and more energy efficient place. Taking an honest, often humorous look at global warming and the long-term effects of fossil fuel use, Carbon Nation features success stories of private citizens, communities and organizations moving forward with alternative energy applications.

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Losing A Friend: Jerry Schad, 1949 – 2011

A hiker, outdoorsman, astronomer and lifelong Californian, Jerry Schad was the author of 16 books, including Afoot and Afield In San Diego, considered the definitive publication of San Diego County hikes and trails. He was also the author of Orange and Los Angeles county editions of Afoot and Afield, a regional “best of,” and books on bicycling and trail running. Jerry also authored the Roam-A-Rama column in the San Diego Reader, which ran for 18 years until he brought it to a close earlier this year.

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Amy Gulick and Salmon In the Trees

The Tongass National Forest in southeast Alaska is the official designation for the largest surviving component of original Pacific temperate rainforest left in North America. For two years, writer and photographer Amy Gulick paddled and trekked among bears, islands and salmon streams to document the Tongass in it’s primeval, natural state. The result is her award-winning book and photographic journey through the natural heritage and indigenous culture of the Tongass in Salmon In the Trees.

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Restoring Gettysburg Battlefield

The Battle of Gettysburg in July 1863 was the turning point in the Civil War, but the battle’s legacy extends beyond military history, as Gettysburg National Military Park today preserves 4,000 acres of the battlefield and adjoining areas. Preservation of the Gettysburg battlefield began shortly after the battle ended, with a portion of East Cemetery Hill developed by the War Department into Gettysburg National Cemetery, where President Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address four months after the battle at the cemetery’s dedication.

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A Century of Conservation At Muir Woods

Redwoods have a special place in western conservation culture. Along with being the tallest trees in the world, Redwoods are also some of the world’s most rot-resistant trees, and by virtue of their bark, size, and ecosystem, Redwoods are amazingly fire-resistant. Other than man, or the occasional well-placed windstorm, Redwoods have no natural enemies, and can thrive for hundreds if not thousands of years. Growing along a thin coastal band from Big Sur to the Oregon border, Redwoods once covered two million acres of the Northern California coast.

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Fireworks Over La Jolla Cove

Environmental attorney Marco Gonzalez is the co-founder of the Coast Law Group and the Executive Director of CERF, the Coastal Environmental Rights Foundation, and has been in the vanguard in the fight against fireworks displays over the beaches at La Jolla Cove. Mr. Gonzalez and his team have also been active in pointing out the willingness of elected officials, and even the pubic, to turn a blind eye to blatant violations of state and federal clean water and clean air laws.

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