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All Things Natural with Ed Kanze

English, Nature/Natural sciences, 1 season, 40 episodes, 3 hours, 6 minutes
About
Into the brew of "All Things Natural" naturalist and writer Ed Kanze throws in a kitchen sink's worth of topical matter. One week he might write about how your beloved pet dog is really a wolf (the DNA doesn't lie), and the next contemplate the sex lives of trees or the lonely life of the bobcat. He writes the pieces not just for nature lovers, but also with the idea of attracting even those readers and listeners who wouldn't touch an American toad, slime mold, or magnificent bear dropping with a ten-foot pole. Sometimes the humor in "All Things Natural" is overt. Sometimes it's subtle. Either way, it's always there to enliven the proceedings.
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The Marten Chronicles

In the beginning I saw neither hide nor hair of the animal known as the American marten. Then I found a suspicious dropping, and then I glimpsed the animal in a video in my own backyard. Still, it took years to set eyes on my first wild marten. Hear here my chronicle.
6/4/20154 minutes, 3 seconds
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Say G'day To Songbirds

Human music may well have been inspired by the music of birds. But where did birds get the idea? Recent research findings suggest that songbirds, also known as perching birds or passerines, trace their ancestry to the land of kangaroos.
5/28/20155 minutes, 2 seconds
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A Stranger On The Lawn

Life brings its humbling moments. For me, a leader of bird walks, one came recently when a sparrow turned up, and I had no idea what kind it was. What to do? I confessed my ignorance and invited my companions to peer through binoculars and join me in solving the mystery at hand.
5/22/20154 minutes, 55 seconds
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When Butterflies Fly Free

Spring brings the eyes a feast of color, and after a long, black-and-white winter, they're hungry for it. Some of the finest color of the season comes to us on the wings of butterflies. Listen and meet the mourning cloak, the comma, and the spring azure.
5/18/20153 minutes, 41 seconds
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The Day I Got A Black Eye From A Blue Crab

Have you ever injured yourself by accident, felt stupid afterward, and found yourself the brunt of jokes? I have. My story involves a crowd of kids and a very large and menacing blue crab. Hear it here.
5/8/20155 minutes, 1 second
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Bugged By Caddisflies

Believe it or not, there are common insects that build armor around themselves like turtles grow shells. As larvae they live in streams, ponds, and lakes and are known as caddisflies.
5/8/20154 minutes, 4 seconds
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Bluebirds Shop Around

Build a bird house for bluebirds and they will come, or not, depending on intangibles known only to the birds. In our yard in the Adirondacks we've created a virtual country club for bluebirds, yet still the birds tend to come, survey the real estate, and move on. Why? Listen and join me in wondering why.
4/24/20154 minutes, 15 seconds
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The Bursting of the Buds

In the Adirondacks and throughout most of eastern North America, we know spring has arrived when the red maple buds pop. Did you know that some red maples are girls and some are boys, and that you can tell the two apart from a car speeding along the highway? Here hear the details.
4/17/20154 minutes, 51 seconds
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The Marsupial Habit

Riddle: What makes a marsupial a marsupial? Hint: it has little or nothing to do whether the animal has a marsupium, or pouch, for carrying its young. In fact, two mammals that have pouches for carrying young are not considered marsupials. Confused? Listen and join in on the confusion.
4/10/20154 minutes, 8 seconds
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Buck Tooth, Pride of The Beavers

'All Things Natural' Celebrates 100th Episode! Listen here as Mr. Buck Tooth, "Rodent of the Year," accepts his honor at a meeting of the American Association of Gnawing Rodents.
4/3/20155 minutes, 32 seconds
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Mite Versus Right

Pets bring us joy and the pleasures of companionship. And sometimes they bring us pain. Listen to a horror story of a house---my house---invaded by hordes of hungry mites.
3/25/20155 minutes, 14 seconds
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Geography Of A Bird

Start looking at birds, and you have to master a whole new vocabulary of lingo. Pretty soon you'll be talking about wingbars, eye-lines, eye-rings, throat patches, rump patches, and if you're a real voyeur, crissums. To know birds, you have to get your mind around the details.
3/20/20154 minutes, 12 seconds
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An Ornithologist Shaken, Not Stirred

Before there was James Bond OO7 the secret agent and ladies' man, there was James Bond the distinguished ornithologist and expert on birds of the West Indians. The real Bond met the creator of the fictional Bond on the island of Jamaica, and the rest is ornithological and cinematic history.
3/12/20153 minutes, 57 seconds
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Great Snowy Owl

Everybody knows the bird, but most us have never seen it in the flesh: the great white owl of northern North America and Eurasia known as the snowy. Snowy owls used to be cigar salesman. Today, they gain appreciation as the most striking and massive of American owls.
3/9/20154 minutes, 29 seconds
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Penguins of the Southern Oceans

You don't have to be crazy to believe in the existence of Little People. They exist. We call them penguins. Join me in reminiscing about wild penguins I have known.
2/26/20155 minutes, 3 seconds
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Mink May Stink, But They're Fun To Watch

If you have the privilege of getting close to a mink, it'll stink. But don't let the smell scare you off. These fierce, wide-ranging members of the weasel tribe offer fine entertainment to those who watch them.
2/19/20153 minutes, 45 seconds
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From Dirt Comes Healing

If the history of medical science can teach us one thing, it's this. Don't underestimate dirt. From ordinary backyard soil and composted compost have some of the world's most useful wonder-drugs. Tuberculosis, a world-wide plague that killed and tormented untold millions, proved no match for the chemical weapons produced by a widespread microbe in plain old ordinary dirt.
2/12/20154 minutes, 35 seconds
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Animal Attitudes, It Takes All Kinds

We may be all cut from the same cloth, yet every one of us is one of a kind. The same holds for wild animals. In a given family of wild owls, robins, or raccoons, no two individuals share the same personality. Vive le difference!
2/6/20154 minutes, 16 seconds
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The Strange Case of the Ice Flows Cargo

Men are often drawn to women by their eyes. So it was with me as I was getting to know my wife, Debbie. In this case, there was more to it than just the color and depth I found in her luminous blue orbs. It also was what they saw.
1/30/20155 minutes, 37 seconds
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A Winter Walk, And Home Again

On a cold winter day, I go out, then come in. Between the start and finish lie ninety brisk minutes of exercise and illumination. Join me!
1/23/20154 minutes, 26 seconds
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What's It All About, Algae?

Meet Corinne Parnapy, a real live phycologist. She studies that slimy stuff, green or brown or red, that we call algae. Is it interesting? Listen and judge for yourself.
1/16/20154 minutes, 58 seconds
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Trees, Shrubs, and What Ails Them

Bacteria do it. Viruses do it. Even pesky little fungi do it. Make plants and people sick, that is. Listen to how it goes for plants.
1/16/20154 minutes, 53 seconds
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The Little Drummer Boy

Do you hear what I hear? It's late on a cold winter night. Snow lies softly over the ground, and the red stuff in the thermometer is plunging.
12/23/20144 minutes, 25 seconds
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Bringing Up Babies

I've raised baby possums, raccoons, skunks, robins, starlings, and great-horned owls. Which are the most cuddly and fun to be around? The answer may surprise you.
12/22/20144 minutes, 50 seconds
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Living With Bears

If there are bruins in the neighborhood, trouble may be brewin'. Listen and learn how to avoid it.
12/17/20145 minutes, 45 seconds
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Ladies And Gentlemen, The Rolling Stones!

They rock and roll them. We're talking about those boulders we all see in the woods. Geologists call them "erratics."
12/12/20143 minutes, 53 seconds
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Making Cannibal Jello

The gelatin that goes into Jello and similar products comes from sanitized, pulverized, boiled animal hooves. Animal hooves are largely made of keratin.
12/4/20144 minutes, 55 seconds
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An Owl And A Pussycat

It was all over in a thump, a hiss, and a flash of feathers. What was going on? Join me as I try to solve a life-and-death drama staged one morning at our bird feeder.
11/26/20144 minutes, 14 seconds
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Oh, What A Beautiful Morning

I've been singing that Rodgers and Hammerstein lyric on bright, cheery mornings ever since I performed the song on stage in the second grade. But I ask myself: what makes a beautiful morning beautiful?
11/21/20144 minutes, 46 seconds
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The Incredible, Edible Guinea Pig

Meet the two newest members of my household: Silky and Bandit, and pair of guinea pigs.
11/13/20144 minutes, 44 seconds
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The Trees Of Our Forests

We measure babies by length, not height. The blue whale is the world's longest animal, or at least the longest one with a backbone. What's the longest tree?
11/7/20144 minutes, 38 seconds
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Swings of The Pendulum

The balance of nature? Bah humbug. There isn't any, the late ecologist William Drury asserted. In nature, the steady state is constant change. Listen as I contemplate the biological pendulum that for most things swings from abundance to scarcity and back again.
10/31/20145 minutes, 15 seconds
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The One, The Tuatara

Of all the unique, curious creature in the world, none is curiouser than the reptile known as the tuatara. It lives only in New Zealand. It is neither crocodile nor turtle nor snake nor lizard.
10/23/20145 minutes, 17 seconds
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Perpetually Seeking Salamanders

We all have our passions and compulsions. One of mine is hunting for salamanders. When I catch them, I let them go. The fun isn't in the possessing, it's in the chase. Will you join me?
10/23/20144 minutes, 37 seconds
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Poignant End of Summer

First one at a time, then later by the truckload, leaves turn color. At first they signal the coming end of summer, then the arrival of fall, then turn our forests into one vast Jackson Pollack painting.
10/10/20144 minutes, 49 seconds
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The Thrill of Being There

While I watch nature videos with pleasure, especially if they're narrated by David Attenborough, and while I enjoy a stroll through a zoo now and again, it's always been clear to me that there's nothing more satisfying and fun
10/1/20145 minutes, 2 seconds
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Iron Eaters Near And Far

Weird living things you may never have heard of live deep in the oceans and in hot pools at Yellowstone. They live in your intestines and toilet tank, too. You gotta love them, for without them, we'd be nowhere.
9/25/20144 minutes, 18 seconds
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Great Things Happen at Dusk

When nights yields to day and day succumbs to darkness, wild beasts come out to fly and prowl. Scientists call them crepuscular. Listen and meet dusk specialists here.
9/18/20144 minutes, 9 seconds
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The Poignant End of Summer

According to the calendar, one day it's summer and the next it's fall. Nature marks the change of the season a little differently.
9/12/20144 minutes, 45 seconds
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Home On The Range With Ants And Aphids

I'd forgive anyone for thinking I was pulling a leg when telling them that some ants round up aphids on plant stems and tend them like dairy farmers care for cows.
9/5/20145 minutes, 11 seconds