About this episode
This week marks the Centennial of the National Parks Service. So we headed to Bar Harbor, Maine — right next to Acadia National Park — to talk about the parks with James Kaiser, who has been writing about the parks and spending a whole bunch of his time in them for years. James is the author of best-selling guides to national parks, including exceptional guidebooks to Acadia, Yosemite, Joshua Tree, and Grand Canyon. TOPICS & TIMES: The history of the parks & Abraham Lincoln’s role and their unprecedented nature (3:55) Grand Canyon National Park, and its wild, contested past (5:50) What’s the difference between National Forests, National Parks, and National Monuments? (9:08) What are the biggest problems facing the parks? (16:43) Why do the national parks matter? At their best, what do they do? (24:50) Why do people do such stupid things when they go to national parks? (28:15) How optimistic or pessimistic are you about the future of the parks? (31:30) James’ background, and how he got into creating guide books (36:45) The history of Acadia National Park and what makes it unique (38:22) Joshua Tree National Park (46:25) Yosemite: James’ recommendation for where to go when it’s crowded; the history of climbing there, etc. (53:00) What's the most famous park you haven't visited? Which do you most want to visit? (58:12) Why James wrote a guidebook to Costa Rica, the history of their parks, and why it was the most difficult of his books to write (1:00:02) How do you go about building & updating a guidebook? And what makes a guidebook good or bad? (1:10:15) Back to Acadia: James’ best recommendation for where to go in Acadia to escape the crowds on the busiest days (1:18:25) Random Questions for James, including: "Allen's Coffee-Flavored Brandy — What the ???" (1:23:26) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.