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The Best Outdoor Podcasts of All Time

Fifteen classics of the genre that share campfire tales, athlete interviews, and the occasional Bigfoot search

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(Photo: Petra Zeiler)

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Blame Serial(I do), but podcasting has changed the way a lot of us hear and tell stories. Audio that you can take anywhere is intimate in a way that almost no other media is, and there are more quality shows than ever doing just that, from big sweeping mysteries to drilled-down interviews. The outdoor world is no different. These are all the best podcasts about nature, public lands, and adventure—the ones that have held up to the ebb and flow of the podcasting trend, that teach us something new about the outdoor worldand the people in it.

Dirtbag Diaries

This is the OG of outdoor-storytelling podcasts. Fitz Cahall started the in 2007 as a digital representation of campfire tales about backcountry adventures. More than a decade later, that’s included river trips gone wrong, treks on endangered land, and finding clarity on solo horse-packing adventures. The outdoors can inspire all kinds of feelings, and Dirtbag Diaries has covered an astounding amount of them.

She Explores

In 2014, Gale Straub started telling stories of women outside to amplify the voices of people who weren’t being heard. Ever since, she’s been asking incisive, thoughtful questions about diversity, bodies, and unspoken challenges in the outdoors—and has turned into a community and connection point.

Bundyville

In this 2017 seven-part series, Leah Sotille takes a balanced look at the with federal land managersand itsultimately fatal occupation of Oregon’sMalheur National Wildlife Refuge. In the process, she illuminates the complicated history and charged future of public-land management in the American West. And it’sback with seven more episodes as of July 15.

Wild Thing

Why is it so hard to prove that Bigfoot exists… or doesn’t? After discovering a relative who was obsessed with just that, Laura Krantz asking Sasquatch experts and hunters about the myth of the woods. In the process, she stumbles onto some surprisingly deep questions about why we want to believe in the unknown, especially in a world where you can answer almost any question by asking the internet.

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describes itself as “a show about the natural world and how we use it.” Host Sam Evans-Brown and the folks at New Hampshire Public Radio cover that in all sorts of surprising and delightful ways, including the validity of ghosts, the challenges of storm chasing, and the importance of being outdoorsy while online dating.

Enormocast

Are climbers the nerdiest of outdoor nerds? That point is (only a little) debatable, but is a safe space to dork out about hand jams, the home lives of dirtbags, and all kindsof other topics. Host Chris Kalous goes down a wormhole with your favorite climbers’favorite climbers,like Adam Ondra and Alex Honnold’s mom,and the results are insidery and gossipy in the best sense.

The Firn Line

Just kidding, climbers aren’t the nerdiest of outdoor nerds—mountaineers are the ultimate dorks. In , Evan Phillips talks about why people are drawn to the brutal beauty of high peaksand what they give up to get there. Through interviews with people like Conrad Anker and the late David Lama, he looks at obsession, creativity, and risk.

30 for 30

Like the in-depth ESPN documentaries that gave way to this spin-off series, goes deep into the untold backstories of sports. We particularly love “On Thin Ice,” an episode about the first all-female attempt at the North Pole, and “Yankees Suck,” about the eponymous, scandalous T-shirts of Red Sox fandom (so, not adventure sports, but a masterful piece of storytelling), both from season one.

The Powell Movement

The comedy world has Marc Maron as bombastic, . We have Mike Powell, a former action-sports athlete manager who’s a lovable loudmouth. He also has a talent for asking tricky questions to luminaries, like mountain biker Casey Brown, skier Glen Plake, and skater John Cardiel.

Ultrarunner

One of the best things about podcasting is that it self-sorts the audience, giving the host agency to outline the minutiae of a sport or pastime. (Apparently people listen to hours of talk about the NBA draft?)Nowhere is that clearer than on the , which covers the nutrition, gear, racing, and athletes of ultrarunning in hyperspecific detail.

The Tim Ferriss Show

We’ll be there when life hackingis canceled, but until then, Tim Ferriss will continue to be the . He’s gotten as famousas he is because he’s not scared to ask people who are the best at things—LeBron James, for instance—weird, probing questions about how they got to be as good as they are.

The First 40 Miles

It’s been off-line since the end of 2018, but is a long-standing resource for anyone who wants to get into backpacking (or really any kind of hiking). It’s full of tips, stories, and secrets that are never pedantic and always surprising, from inspiration for backcountry pizza parties,to ideas onhow to fight posthike ennui,to flat-out basics like how to pack your bag.

The Habitat

What is the wilderness, really? And how do we survive when we’re in confined, stressful environments? Those were questions that NASA was asking when itput six volunteers on a remote Hawaiian island. And the fallout might feel familiar if you’ve been trapped in a bad backcountry situation before.

Safety Third

Podcasts often succeed on the charisma and chemistry of their hosts. certainly does. The show pings between Elizabeth Nakano’s straight-faced sarcasm and Paddy O’Connell’s gigglesduring interviews with people like fishing-boat captain McKenna Peterson and Aspen’s vice presidentof sustainability, Auden Schendler. It’s a funny, not-too-earnest platform to get into the reasons why those people have shaped their lives around adventureand what they ultimately learn from it.

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We may be biased, but we can’t help including this one—theϳԹ Podcast isright up our alley in every way. Listen if you’re looking for variety of topics—on any given week, we’ll be talking about the brain benefits of nature, investigating the science behindsnake venom, or imagining in excruciating narrative detail what it would be like to get attacked by a relentless swarm of bees.

Lead photo: Getty Images/REDA&CO/Peter Dazeley/Art by Petra Zeiler

Lead Photo: Petra Zeiler

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