The Gift of Silence

What if your adventure buddy enables an eating disorder?

Ilana Nevins and her father, Howard, finish the first day of their Rim to Rim to Rim hike in the Grand Canyon (Photo courtesy Ilana and Howard Nevins)

Season 6 | Episode 10

Ilana Nevins loved backpacking with her father. But after she was diagnosed with an eating disorder, their relationship became strained. She worried that hiking together would put her recovery at risk, because so many of her behaviors were modeled after him.

In this episode, Ilana shares the story of the difficult challenge she faced: how to prioritize her own wellbeing without wrecking her relationship with a loved one.

 

Credits

  • Story by Ilana Nevins

  • Story editing and sound design by Willow Belden

  • Production assistance from Emily Vaughn

  • Music includes works from Blue Dot Sessions

Links

Eating Disorder Resources

 
 

This episode sponsored by PeakVisor

 

Running As Medicine

How a 55-mile run brought about a life-altering diagnosis

Maria Ordovas-Montanes does a 30-mile practice run ahead of her fkt attempt on the oxford green belt way. (PHoto by Maria Ordovas-Montanes)

Season 6 | Episode 9

In May of 2022, Maria Ordovas-Montanes set out to become the fastest woman to run the Oxford Green Belt Way, a 55-mile route through the English countryside.

She had always loved running, and this was an exciting challenge. But at the event, something happened that would derail her life — and lead to a shocking discovery.

On this episode, Maria shares her story.

 

Credits

  • Story by Maria Ordovas-Montanes

  • Story editing by Willow Belden

  • Sound design by Maria Ordovas-Montanes and Willow Belden

  • Production assistance from Katie Reuther and Francesca Turauskis

  • Music includes works from Blue Dot Sessions

Links

Correction:

In this story, we introduced Maaya Hitomi as a psychologist. Maaya does have a Master’s in Psychology. However, in Canada, where Maaya lives, the term “psychologist” is reserved for people who are registered with their provincial college of psychologists, which Maaya is not.

 
 

This episode sponsored by PeakVisor

 

Silence and Sound

An exploration of three sonic landscapes

In parts of Boston, noise levels can get as loud as 70 decibels. That’s like if a vacuum cleaner was whirring constantly. (PHoto by Jeongyoon Han)

Season 6 | Episode 8

Humans are noisy. The National Park Service estimates that all of our whirring, grinding, and revving machines are doubling or even tripling global noise pollution every 30 years. 

A lot of that noise is negatively affecting wildlife and human health.

In this guest episode, the team from Outside/In takes us on an exploration of three sonic landscapes: noise, silence, and something in between.

Credits

  • This story was produced for Outside/In, a podcast where curiosity and the natural world collide. Outside/In is a production of New Hampshire Public Radio.

  • Story by Jeongyoon Han. Mixing by Jeongyoon Han and Taylor Quimby. Editing by Taylor Quimby, with help from Nate Hegyi, Jessica Hunt, and Felix Poon. Outside/In’s host is Nate Hegyi and their executive producer is Rebecca Lavoie.

  • Music includes works from Blue Dot Sessions, Edvard Greeg, and Mike Franklyn.

Links

Overcoming Imposter Syndrome

How a national park in Korea helped one woman embrace her identity

Shannon Tyo at Bukhansan National Park (photo courtesy Shannon Tyo)

Season 6 | Episode 7

Many of us have experienced imposter syndrome at some point in our lives. Often it’s at work, where we doubt our own skills and accomplishments.

But what happens when you feel like a fraud simply for being yourself?

In this episode, we travel from New York State to a national park in Korea and share how one transracial adoptee made peace with her own identity. 

 

Credits

  • Story by Katie Reuther

  • Story editing by Willow Belden

  • Sound design by Katie Reuther and Willow Belden

  • Production assistance from Maria Ordovas-Montanes

  • Music includes works from Blue Dot Sessions

Links

 
 

This episode sponsored by PeakVisor

 

Silencing the Critics

How one woman overcame her self-doubt on a geology field trip

Demetria Lynn and her niece Leila-Noor explore oceanography together. (Photo by Victoria Marin)

Season 6 | Episode 6

Demetria Lynn always wanted to be a scientist. But growing up, no one believed in her. The negative feedback was so overpowering that she stopped believing in herself.

In this episode, we follow Demetria from her elementary school classroom to a geology field trip in the desert, and explore what it took to rekindle faith in herself.

 

Credits

  • Story by Victoria Marin

  • Story editing and sound design by Willow Belden

  • Music includes works from Blue Dot Sessions

Links

 
 

This episode sponsored by PeakVisor

 

Birds of Paradise

How birds helped one woman break free from other people’s expectations

Alison Világ counts migrating water birds at Whitefish Point Bird Observatory near Paradise, Michigan. (photo by Nick Loud / The Boardman Review)

Season 6 | Episode 5

Alison Világ pays attention for a living. She counts migrating ducks at Whitefish Point Bird Observatory in Michigan. It's key to getting a pulse on different bird populations.

But for Alison, counting ducks is more than just science – it's an escape from the expectations of others.

This episode comes to us from Points North, a podcast about the land, water, and inhabitants of the Great Lakes region.

 

Credits

Links

 
 

This episode sponsored by PeakVisor

 

1,000 Hours Outdoors

What if solitude in nature isn’t calming for you?

Amber Von Schassen challenged herself to spend 1,000 hours outdoors in 2023 (Photo courtesy Amber Von Schassen)

Season 6 | Episode 4

Many of us go outside because the quiet is calming. But what if silence isn’t calming for you? What if it’s the opposite? Could you still find a way to love it?

In this episode, Florida-based producer Amber Von Schassen explores why silence in the outdoors is so unsettling for her, and shares what happened when she tried to get over her fear by spending 1,000 hours outdoors.

 

Credits

  • Story by Amber Von Schassen

  • Story editing and sound design by Willow Belden

  • Music includes works from Blue Dot Sessions and Storyblocks

Links

 
 

This episode sponsored by PeakVisor

 

The Tonic of Silence

How silence in nature impacts our mental health

Gerry Seavo James, Niki DiGaetano, Mark Sheeran, Lauren Jones, Anastasia Allison, Sanjana Sekhar, JD Reinbott, Wade Roush, Eric Biderman, Francesca Turauskis, and Diedre Wolownick

Season 6 | Episode 3

For many of us, getting outside is more than just fun; it’s how we find inner stillness.

In honor of Mental Health Awareness Month, we decided to turn the mic over to you, our community. We asked how silence in nature has been significant to your mental health.

On this episode, we’re sharing some of our favorite responses.

 

Storytelling opportunity!

Out There is co-hosting an evening of campfire stories with Common Outdoor Ground this summer, and we’re looking for storytellers.

The event will be in southeast Wyoming in June. If you’d like to tell a story, please get in touch by May 11.

 

Episode Notes

Credits

  • This episode was produced by Sheeba Joseph and Willow Belden, with assistance from Katie Reuther and Maria Ordovas-Montanes

  • Sound design by Willow Belden

  • Music from Blue Dot Sessions, Story Blocks, and the Musical Mountaineers

Guests

Links

 
 

This episode sponsored by PeakVisor

 

My Dad’s Depression

Can you lead a loved one to happiness?

Paul Barach and his father at Joshua Tree National Park (photo courtesy Paul Barach)

Season 6 | Episode 2

For Paul Barach, hiking is an antidote to depression. Is it that way for everyone?

This episode takes us from Washington State to Joshua Tree National Park and explores what happens when we try to impose our own life solutions on a loved one.

 

Credits

  • Story by Paul Barach

  • Story editing and sound design by Willow Belden

  • Special thanks to Maria Ordovas-Montanes and Wade Roush for production assistance

Links

 
 

This episode sponsored by PeakVisor

 

Rekindling the Spark

How the night sky reignited one scientist’s passion

Jesse Rivera photographs objects in space (Photo courtesy Jesse Rivera)

Season 6 | Episode 1

We’re told to follow our dreams. But often, that’s disappointing. Reality typically doesn’t measure up to what we’d imagined.

So what then? How do you reignite your passions?

On this episode, we travel from an observatory in Puerto Rico to a hillside in New Jersey, and explore how one scientist overcame the disillusionment of academia.

 

Credits

  • Story and sound design by Samia Bouzid

  • Story editing by Willow Belden

  • Special thanks to Alessondra Springmann for use of audio from Arecibo

Links

 
 

This episode sponsored by PeakVisor

 

TRAILER: Silence

Season 6 | Episode 0

Our upcoming season is all about silence. From the Grand Canyon to South Korea, we’ll travel the globe, exploring how we find stillness amidst the noise — whether literal or figurative. Here’s a sneak peak at some of the stories.

The season launches April 4, 2024.

 

Credits

  • Trailer produced by Willow Belden, with assistance from Sheeba Joseph, Maria Ordovas-Montanes, and Katie Reuther

  • Music from Storyblocks

Links

Building Self-Confidence

How a snowboarding accident helped one woman believe in herself

 
Snowboarding would be a fake-it-till-you-make-it kind of challenge: If I could act confident long enough to get me down the mountain, then I would develop actual confidence.
— Maya Kroth
 

Maya Kroth’s goal for the New Year was to bolster her self-confidence, and she decided to start by taking herself snowboarding. But things did not go according to plan.

In this episode, Maya shares her story, exploring how you can get your mojo back, even when things go very wrong.

 

Credits

Story by Maya Kroth

Story editing and sound design by Willow Belden

Music includes works from Blue Dot Sessions

Links

Support Out There

Sign up for our email newsletter

Follow Out There on Facebook and Instagram

Closing the Gender Gap

Being told you belong is important — but is it enough?

Learning new skills at the Rowdy Gowdy women’s mountain bike camp | PHoto by Cameron Way

 
If you think about sports writ large, it’s been for men, designed for men, this arena in which men can display their masculinity. ... And so women have — forever — not always been welcome in that sphere.
— Christine Yu
 

Women are often told we can do anything we want in life: ride bikes, scale cliffs, surf waves. But in some areas of outdoor recreation, the gender gap remains shockingly large.

In this episode, we visit a women’s mountain bike camp in Wyoming and explore what’s really needed to get people of all genders on equal footing.

 

Credits

Story and sound design by Willow Belden

Story editing by Forrest Wood

Production feedback from Lori Mortimer

Music includes works from StoryBlocks and Blue Dot Sessions

Links

Rowdy Gowdy Women’s Mountain Bike Camp

Support Out There

Sign up for our email newsletter

Follow Out There on Facebook and Instagram

The Flood

What if we’re scared at the wrong moments?

Flooding in University City, Missouri in 2022 | PHoto courtesy Mary Ann Gaston

 
Before my eyes, across two different states, what was ‘safe’ and ‘not safe’ became hard to distinguish.
— Marina Henke
 

This is a story about fear.

It makes sense to be scared when we’re facing danger. But what happens when disasters occur in unexpected places?

In this episode, Marina Henke takes us from a desert in Utah to a suburb in Missouri and explores how a flood changed her attitude toward risk in the backcountry.

Credits

Story and sound design by Marina Henke

Story editing by Willow Belden

Music includes works from Blue Dot Sessions

Links

Sign up for our email newsletter

Support Out There on Patreon

Follow us on Facebook and Instagram

Learning to Swim

What would be possible, if you embraced being a beginner?

Naomi Mellor (photo by Naomi Mellor)

 
I didn’t want to be ... starting from the beginning with something that seemed so simple. Swimming, to me, was like riding a bike or learning to drive. It was a rite of passage for young people, not adults.
— Naomi Mellor
 

Season 4 // Episode 7

Learning something new as an adult can be daunting, especially when it’s something that a lot of people have been doing since childhood.

On this episode, Naomi Mellor takes us from a beach in Australia to an archipelago in the UK and explores how she got past her fears and pushed herself to take a big plunge.

 

Episode Credits

Story by Naomi Mellor

Story editing and sound design by Willow Belden

Music includes works from Blue Dot Sessions and StoryBlocks

Links

Sign up for our email newsletter

Support Out There on Patreon

Follow us on Facebook and Instagram

 

This episode sponsored by

 

PeakVisor

 

Excavating Grief

How a trip to a cabin helped the healing begin

Foreground: Mykella Van COoten; Background: Cabin near Toronto (Photos courtesy Mykella Van Cooten)

 
Sometimes, the feelings that are causing us problems are buried so deep that only the stillness of the woods can show us what we are truly feeling.
— Mykella Van Cooten
 

Season 4 // Episode 6

Mykella Van Cooten was angry, and she didn’t know why. It got so bad that she began to feel unhinged.

And then, she went to a little cabin in the woods. In this episode, she tells the story of what happened. It’s a story about stopping, about letting go, and about uncovering the real feelings that are buried deep beneath the surface.

 

Episode Credits

Story by Mykella Van Cooten

Story editing and sound design by Willow Belden

Music includes works from Blue Dot Sessions

Links

Support Out There on Patreon

 

This episode sponsored by

 

PeakVisor

 

Ice Swimming

Soothing the brain by shocking the body

Photo of a frozen sea, with a hole in the ice at the end of a dock.

An “avanto” in Finland, where people go ice swimming (Photo by Landry Ayres)

 
I had found this incredible sense of peace right there in the middle of that ice hole.
— Elizabeth Whitney
 

Season 4 // Episode 5

In Finland, it’s commonplace to go swimming in the winter — outdoors.

The practice offers surprising mental-health benefits, and it isn’t just for die-hard adventurers. On this episode, we share the story of one woman who started “ice swimming” in an effort to get through a devastating grief.

 

Episode Credits

Story by Landry Ayres

Story editing and sound design by Willow Belden

Music includes works from StoryBlocks and Blue Dot Sessions

Links

Support Out There on Patreon

 

This episode sponsored by

 

PeakVisor

 

Queer in Appalachia

What if ‘home’ isn’t a place you feel welcome?

Newt Schottelkotte on their road trip through Appalachia (Photo courtesy Newt Schottelkotte)

 
When you grow up never seeing yourself in the world around you, you start to believe you simply don’t belong there.
— Newt Schottelkotte
 

Season 4 // Episode 4

As a nonbinary person, Newt Schottelkotte never felt at home in Appalachia. But then, they went on a road trip with their dad. Driving through the Blue Ridge Mountains, something started to shift.

This is a story about figuring out how to be yourself without abandoning where you’re from.

 

Episode Credits

Story by Newt Schottelkotte

Story editing and sound design by Willow Belden

Music includes works from StoryBlocks and Blue Dot Sessions

Links

Take our poll about next season’s theme

Sierra Club Panel: Diverse Perspectives in Outdoor Media

Support Out There on Patreon

 

Sponsors

PeakVisor

Rumpl

Use promo code “OUTTHERE” to get 10% off your first purchase at rumpl.com/outthere

Kula Cloth

Use promo code “OUTTHERE2023” to get 15% off your order at outtherepodcast.com/kula

Rekindling Hope

How an unexpected gift from nature quelled a deep depression

Carolyn McDonald (Photo courtesy Carolyn McDonald)

 
Make room for what you can’t imagine.
— Carolyn McDonald
 

Season 4 // Episode 3

Carolyn McDonald was struggling — hard. The depression had gotten so bad that she couldn’t see a way forward.

Then, one day, she went to the beach.

On this episode, we share the story of what happened. It’s a story about art, wonder, and finding joy at low tide.

 

Selections from TIME + TIDE: AS REVEALED BY LIGHT

by Carolyn McDonald

 

Episode Credits

Story and sound design by Willow Belden

Script editing by Corinne Ruff

Special thanks to Lori Mortimer for sound-design feedback

Music includes works from StoryBlocks and Blue Dot Sessions

Links

Buy one of Carolyn’s photos

Follow Carolyn on Instagram

Take our poll about next season’s theme

Support Out There on Patreon

 

Sponsors

PeakVisor

Rumpl

Use promo code “OUTTHERE” to get 10% off your first purchase at rumpl.com/outthere

Kula Cloth

Use promo code “OUTTHERE2023” to get 15% off your order at outtherepodcast.com/kula

Moonlight

Getting back on track when you lose your way

Stepfanie Aguilar camps at Red Rock Canyon State Park (photo courtesy stepfanie aguilar)

 
I learned something meaningful that night in the desert. I learned how important family stories can be, when you’re trying to move through this world.
— Stepfanie Aguilar
 

Season 4 // Episode 2

We’ve all had moments when we feel lost. Sometimes it’s literal — getting lost in the mountains or at sea. Sometimes it’s emotional — where we question our place in life. 

Either way, it’s unnerving. And lonely.

This story takes us from the deserts of California to the jungles of the Philippines, and explores how one young woman got back on track, when she lost her way, both literally and figuratively.

 

Credits

Story by Stepfanie Aguilar

Script editing and sound design by Willow Belden

Music includes works from Marc Merza and Blue Dot Sessions

Links

Support Out There on Patreon

 

Sponsors

 

PeakVisor

Rumpl

Use promo code “OUTTHERE” to get 10% off your first purchase at rumpl.com/outthere