Listen "The Waters"
Episode Synopsis
We have a lot to do with what happens to rainwater from the time it hits the ground, to the time we drink it. And our small efforts can add up over time to prevent catastrophe. Kathy Gee has great advice for us: don’t live downhill from someone else, and start a rain garden. And: Along Appalachian streams, people grew up watching the hellbenders swim around and fight beneath the surface. Now, their grandchildren have hardly ever seen the two-foot long salamanders, affectionately called snot dogs. Bill Hopkins says that what’s happening to the snot dogs’ water also has an impact on our livelihood.
Later in the show: Water is a vehicle for social and political inequality all over the world. But Claire Payton says that the issue is front and center in Port-Au-Prince, Haiti. Plus: Abbey Carrico says that fictional representations of water help us make sense of life and death.
Later in the show: Water is a vehicle for social and political inequality all over the world. But Claire Payton says that the issue is front and center in Port-Au-Prince, Haiti. Plus: Abbey Carrico says that fictional representations of water help us make sense of life and death.
More episodes of the podcast With Good Reason
Appalachia’s Edible Landscape
17/10/2025
Saving Endangered Species
09/10/2025
I'm Just a Girl
01/10/2025
Nurse!
26/09/2025
Jackpot!
18/09/2025
Lafayette's Return
11/09/2025
REPLAY: Melting Futures
04/09/2025
Corn Tortillas and Harvest-Your-Own Oysters
28/08/2025
Education for Everyone
21/08/2025
Barbie's Plastic World
14/08/2025
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.