Podcast appearances and mentions of Conrad Anker

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Best podcasts about Conrad Anker

Latest podcast episodes about Conrad Anker

First Ascent Podcast
Conrad Anker: Exploring Legacy, Loss & Livelihood in Climbing

First Ascent Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2025 70:59


Few people have amassed a more impressive resume in the outdoors than climber, mountaineer, and author Conrad Anker. Just read his Wikipedia page, for starters! Included in Conrad's accolades are two summits of Everest under his belt (including one where he found George Mallory's body), a prolific list of first ascents around the globe, and a 26 year history as the lead of the North Face Climbing Team. Today, Conrad shares stories, insights and wisdom from almost a half century of climbing. You'll hear about: His experience at the center of the sport climbing boom in the 80s and 90sConrad's approach to bolting and how it has changed through the decadesHow Conrad has dealt with the grief of losing beloved climbing partnersThe psychology of risk The incredible legacy and history of route names Our responsibilities toward the environment and culture as climbersHow professional climbing has changed since the beginning of his career Check out more about Conrad's incredible career at www.conradanker.com Join us over on the First Ascent Patreon. For $5, $7 or $10 a month, you'll get access to wide ranging bonus content from greats like Mark Hudon, Scott Stevenson and many more. Plus you'll get a Discord chat, exclusive beta, route info, and more. Check it out here:  https://www.patreon.com/FirstAscentPodcastDo you have a listener question or a topic idea? Let us know at @firstascentpod on Instagram! Jay can be found at @jayknower. Disclaimer: The information expressed in this episode is for entertainment purposes only, and is not intended as, nor should it be interpreted as, informational or instructional.

Uphill Athlete Podcast
Voice of the Mountains: Season One Recap

Uphill Athlete Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2025 61:17


In this Season recap of Voice of the Mountains, Alyssa Clark joins Steve House and Jamie Lyko to reflect on the most powerful moments, surprises, and key takeaways from their conversations with the world's top mountain athletes. The episode revisits deep discussions on the resilience, mentorship, leadership, and mental challenges that come with high-risk endeavors. Guests like Lydia Bradey, Ed Viesturs, and Conrad Anker shared personal stories of triumph, loss, and personal growth, highlighting the emotional depth of mountain sports. Steve, Alyssa and Jamie reflect on the importance of pushing boundaries in interviews, drawing out raw and authentic insights from his guests. Wrapping up with a fun round of superlatives, the team discusses the future of the podcast and invites listeners to share their thoughts on where to take the future conversations of Voice of the Mountains.If you'd like to learn more, visit uphillathlete.com or write to us at coach@uphillathlete.com

Afford Anything
Lessons from High-Stakes Decisions, with Polina Marinova Pompliano

Afford Anything

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2024 64:45


#567: What happens when an astronaut goes blind during a spacewalk? For Chris Hadfield, this wasn't a hypothetical scenario. While working outside the International Space Station, cleaning solution from his helmet visor spread into both eyes, leaving him completely blind in the vacuum of space. His response? Stay calm and methodically evaluate options. He could call Houston. He could have a crew member rescue him. He could try to cry to flush out his eyes - though that's tricky in zero gravity. This story opens our conversation with Polina Marinova Pompliano, former Fortune Magazine reporter and author of the new book "Hidden Genius." Through her interviews with high-performers across fields — from astronauts to investors to extreme athletes — she uncovers patterns in how people handle uncertainty and build resilience. Take trust, for example. Reid Hoffman's formula is simple: Trust = Consistency + Time. It's not enough to show up sporadically when it's convenient. Trust builds through meeting deadlines, following through on commitments, and maintaining clear communication — even during challenges. Reliable consistency compounds over time, much like interest in an investment account. Or consider Charlie Munger's approach to beliefs. Rather than defending positions "to the death," he argues you should only claim to believe something if you can argue the opposition's viewpoint better than they can. This forces you to genuinely understand different perspectives rather than just reflexively disagreeing. The conversation explores how people navigate major setbacks, from Conrad Anker surviving an avalanche that killed his climbing partners to Polina's own experience of quitting Fortune magazine right before COVID hit. A key theme emerges: resilience isn't about avoiding difficulty, but about training yourself to handle it through small daily practices. Former Navy SEAL David Goggins calls this "callusing the mind." By deliberately doing one uncomfortable thing each day - whether that's running in the rain or having a difficult conversation - you build your capacity to handle larger challenges. The goal isn't to become superhuman, but to expand your comfort zone step by step. Other topics include: - How immigrant experiences shape risk perception - The shift from institutional to individual trust in media - Reframing "failure" as redirection - Building competence as an antidote to fear - Finding signal in the noise of information overload Enjoy the conversation! For more information, visit the show notes at https://affordanything.com/episode567 Resources: James Clear Episode 156: https://affordanything.com/156-how-to-build-incredible-habits-with-james-clear/ Annie Duke Episode 281: https://affordanything.com/281-the-art-of-decision-making-with-annie-duke/ Annie Duke Episode 424: https://affordanything.com/424-the-power-of-knowing-when-to-walk-away-with-annie-duke/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Uphill Athlete Podcast
Voice of the Mountains: Our True Selves with guest Conrad Anker

Uphill Athlete Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2024 64:23


Voice of the Mountains host Steve House welcomes renowned climber Conrad Anker on to the podcast. They discuss Conrad's journey in mountaineering, his philosophy, and his leadership within the climbing community. They reflect on lessons learned in their own early climbing experiences, noting how climbing became a way to understand themselves and build resilience.Conrad emphasizes the motivations behind mountaineering, contrasting reward-seeking with purpose-driven pursuits. He describes his path from climbing as a youth in the Sierra Nevada to his extensive expeditions across the world. They discuss the importance of trust and connection between climbing partners, as well as the responsibilities and ethical considerations in leadership, especially within the climbing community.Conrad also shares insights into his work with the Khumbu Climbing Center (KCC) in Nepal, which provides education and training to Sherpa climbers. The conversation highlights Conrad's belief in silent leadership, leading by example, supporting others, and focusing on collective success rather than personal accolades.The two legends of climbing reflect on legacy, risk, loss, and the impact of experiencing grief in the climbing world. Tune in for an episode full of wisdom and empathy we can all learn from.

Choses à Savoir SCIENCES
A qui appartient la chaussure qui vient d'être retrouvée sur l'Everest ?

Choses à Savoir SCIENCES

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2024 2:09


Qui a vraiment atteint le premier l'Everest ? Est-ce bien sir Edmund Hillary, arrivé sur le toit du monde le 29 mai 1953 ? Ou plutôt les alpinistes George Mallory et Sandy Irvine, partis, en 1924, à l'assaut de la fameuse montagne ? Certes, le vainqueur officiel demeure bien le Britannique Hillary. Mais, depuis un siècle, on se demande si ses devanciers, qui ont été aperçus, pour la dernière fois, le 8 juin 1924, n'auraient pas fini par atteindre leur but. Certains indices montrent en tous cas qu'ils n'en étaient pas très loin. Ainsi, en 1999, l'alpiniste américain Conrad Anker a découvert, à plus de 8 200 mètres d'altitude, le corps momifié de George Mallory. La découverte d'une chaussure appartenant à Irvine Une autre découverte fait la une de l'actualité. Elle est le fait d'une équipe du National Geographic, qui vient de trouver, sous la face nord de l'Everest, une chaussure qui a aussitôt attiré l'attention des alpinistes. En effet, une chaussette y était insérée. En l'examinant, ils ont aperçu une étiquette encore visible, sur laquelle était inscrit "A.C. Irvine". Ce qui pourrait correspondre au nom de l'équipier de George Mallory. Il se prénommait en effet Andrew, "Sandy" n'étant qu'un surnom. Par ailleurs, les restes d'un pied humain ont été retrouvés dans la chaussure. Comme des membres de la famille d'Irvine ont proposé de fournir des échantillons d'ADN, il devrait être possible d'établir que ces ossements étaient bien ceux de Sandy Irvine. Mais cela ne prouverait pas pour autant que les deux alpinistes avaient bien atteint le sommet de l'Everest. Pour cela, il faudrait retrouver l'appareil photo emporté par Irvine. S'il s'était bien hissé sur le toit du monde, il avait certainement dû immortaliser cet exploit. D'autres objets ayant appartenu aux deux alpinistes ont bien été découverts, comme un piolet ou une bouteille d'oxygène, mais l'appareil photo demeure introuvable. Quoi qu'il en soit, de nombreux alpinistes sont persuadés que Mallory et Irvine sont bien parvenus au sommet de l'Everest et qu'ils auraient trouvé la mort au retour. Un jour prochain, une autre expédition en trouvera peut-être la preuve décisive. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

Ice Ice Beta
Leading From Behind the Scenes with Doug Heinrich

Ice Ice Beta

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2024 85:36


The Duffel Shuffle Podcast
Will Cockrell: Everest Inc.

The Duffel Shuffle Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2024 91:51 Transcription Available


Sam and Adrian are joined by author Will Cockrell to discuss his new book titled "Everest Inc." Will, who has covered the Mt Everest climbing season as a journalist for nearly 2 decades, chronicles the development of an industry that, each spring, becomes a focal point of the outdoor media.Everest Inc.: The Renegades and Rogues Who Built an Industry at the Top of the WorldFeaturing original interviews with mountain guides and climbers—including Jimmy Chin and Conrad Anker—this vivid and authoritative adventure history chronicles one of the least likely industries on guided climbing on Mount Everest.Anyone who has read Jon Krakauer's Into Thin Air or has seen a recent photo of climbers standing in line to get to the top of Everest may think they have the mountain pretty well figured out. It's an extreme landscape where bad weather and incredible altitude can occasionally kill, but more so an overcrowded, trashed-out recreation destination where rich clients pad their egos—and social media feeds—while exploiting local Sherpas.There's some truth to these clichés, but they're a sliver of the story. Unlike any book to date, Everest, Inc. gets to the heart of the mountain through the definitive story of its greatest the Himalayan guiding industry. It all began in the 1980s with a few boot-strapping entrepreneurs who paired raw courage and naked ambition with a new style of expedition planning. Many of them are still living and climbing today, and as a result of their astonishing success, ninety percent of the people now on Everest are clients or employees of guided expeditions.Studded with quotes from original interviews with more than a hundred western and Sherpa climbers, clients, writers, filmmakers, and even a Hollywood actor, Everest, Inc. foregrounds the voices of the people who have made the mountain what it is today. And while there is plenty of high-altitude drama in unpacking the last forty years of Everest tragedy and triumph, it ultimately transcends stereotypes and tells the uplifting counternarrative of the army of journeymen and women who have made people's dreams come true, and of the Nepalis who are pushing the industry into the future.

Armchair Explorer
Best of Explorer: The Abode of the Gods: Ascending Mt. Meru with Climbing Legend Conrad Anker

Armchair Explorer

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2024 37:17


Conrad Anker is renowned throughout the world as one of the greatest living mountaineers. Follow him to the Himalayan peaks of northern India to climb the ‘Shark's Fin' of Mt. Meru, a sheer 1,500-foot wall of blank granite, one the hardest, most dangerous and beautiful routes on the planet.  For 30 years the best mountaineers in the world had attempted to climb Mt. Meru and for 30 years one-by-one they were spit off. It was thought that perhaps no one would ever reach its summit. Sacred to four religions, Mt. Meru is known as the abode of the gods. Perhaps it wasn't meant to be climbed. Perhaps it was impossible. But impossible is a word that Conrad doesn't understand. This is the story of that climb. This is the story of the adventure of his life. But it's more than that too. Coming up as a young climber, Conrad was mentored by a man called Mugs Stump, another legend of his day. For Mugs, Mt. Meru represented the pinnacle of mountaineering. Climbing it would be the greatest achievement of his career. Conrad and him made a promise, they vowed that no matter what they would one day reach the top together.  But, tragically, Mugs died before his dream could be realised. After that, climbing Mt. Meru became more than just a mountain or Conrad, it became an obsession. It became the culmination of his life's work. He put a team together, Jimmy Chin – the renowned mountaineer and filmmaker – and a young climber called Renan Ozturk. Together, they travelled to northern India and began the long journey to the summit.  This is a story about what it takes to achieve the impossible. This, is the story of Mt. Meru. Highlights:    Follow the world's best climbers pitch-by-pitch up the hardest climb on the planet. -Hear what it's like to survive for 17 days in a ‘Sea of Gravity', as Conrad calls it, 1000s feet of extreme exposure pulling you down into all sides. -Discover what it takes to survive one of the worst Himalayan storms in 50 years, trapped in a portaledge thousands of feet above the ground, with avalanches raining down all around you -Climb the House of Cards, one of the most dangerous pitches in mountaineering -Hear the wisdom and inspiration that Conrad has learnt from a life in the mountains.The documentary of this climb is called Meru, shot and directed by another legend Jimmy Chin. You can rent it on Amazon, You Tube and elsewhere. You can also follow Conrad on Instagram/Twitter @conrad_anker and on Facebook @conradankerofficial. His website is simply www.conradanker.com  If you enjoy this episode, please check out some of the conservation projects, which Conrad is involved with and support them if you can: www.himalayan-foundation.org and www.alexlowe.org Thanks to Wondrium for sponsoring this episode. Wondrium is the new name for The Great Courses Plus, now expanded with more content: documentaries, world-cinema, tv shows and lots of new courses. You can check it all out for free for one month by heading over to www.wondrium.com/armchair Follow @armchairexplorer podcast on Instagram and Facebook or head over to www.armchair-explorer.com to find more background information on this episode Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The Powell Movement Action Sports Podcast
TPM Episode 385: Outside Festival

The Powell Movement Action Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 62:25


Outside Festival is a first-year event in Denver aimed at bringing the outdoor industry, the consumers, the brands and the athletes together. I'm hearing this called the intersection of SBSW and CES for the outdoor industry. Outside has swung for the fences a lot over the years, and I travel to Colorado to see if the event lives up to the massive expectations. Along the way, I connect with Pat Milbery, Colter Hinchliffe, Shaun White, Robin Thurston, Jess Kimura, Julian Carr, Luis Benitez, Conrad Anker, and many more. It's behind the scenes look at the first great Outside Festival. Outside Festival Show Notes: 3:00: Day 1 Intro 6:30: Robin Thurston   10:00: Jess Kimura 14:00: Day 2 intro 15:00: Pat Milbery 17:00: Colter Hinchliffe 19:00:   Liquid Force: Since 95, Liquid Force has outperformed the competition and turned a sport into a lifestyle. Use the code POWELL15 for 15% off LF orders at LiquidForce.com Stanley:  The leader in keeping things hot and cold Best Day Brewing:  All of the flavor of your favorite IPA or Kolsch, without the alcohol, the calories and sugar. 23:00: Shaun White 27:00: Conrad Anker 30:00: Caroline Gleich 34:00: Amie Engerbretson 37:00: Luis Benitez  41:00: Peter Glenn Ski and Sports:  Over 60 years of getting you out there.   Elan Skis:  Over 75 years of innovation that makes you better. Outdoor Research: The best test in the Pacific Northwest 45:00: Greg Stump 48:00: Julian Carr 50:00: Mike Arzt 53:00: Conor Hall 56:00: Robin Thurston 59:00: Chris Jerard   Photo art: Outside Festival Newsroom

Beyond The Horizon
ICYMI: The Incredible Story Of Conrad Anker And Alex Lowe

Beyond The Horizon

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2024 26:42


Conrad Anker and Alex Lowe were best friends and climbing partners. Alex Lowe, who was called the mutant because of his high level of ability in the mountains, was a married man and father of three. Conrad Anker was engaged but he had no children. Neither of them or their families could ever imagine what the future would hold for them after a fateful trip to Tibet changed everything.(commercial at 13:31)to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.the-sun.com/news/4498648/alex-lowe-death-conrad-anker/

On Thin Ice
Can We Save Everest From Pollution and Melting Ice?

On Thin Ice

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2024 46:48


Mount Everest, the world's highest mountain, faces an environmental crisis, giving us a preview of the devastating effects of climate change. While the ice on its glaciers is melting at a record pace, increasing the risk of floods and other disasters, mass tourism has brought garbage and other pollution issues for local populations.Climbers Conrad Anker and Dawa Steven Sherpa have worked together in the Everest Valley. Today, they are both taking action. In this episode of On Thin Ice, they discuss how climbers and local communities can work together to protect the mountain and its people from climate threats.Conrad is one of the most iconic alpinists of the past three decades, and he has witnessed the dramatic transformations brought by climate change to mountain environments everywhere; he is now working with local communities and experienced Sherpa mountaineers to help make ice climbing safer in the region, as the glaciers become more unpredictable. Dawa, a board member of the Bally Peak Outlook Foundation, is a famed mountaineer, serial entrepreneur and climate advocate, representing a new generation of Nepalis who are trying to develop a sustainable tourism industry–one that respects local traditions as well as the mountains they live off. Dawa has worked relentlessly to develop programs such as “Carry me back”, one of the key projects supported by the foundation, to reduce pollution and other negative impacts of tourism in the Everest Valley.How can the local Sherpa communities handle the tons of trash left behind by tourism? How can climbers mitigate the risks of glacier collapses and avalanches? These are some of the vital questions they address on the mountain on a daily basis, as they look for answers that could also help other alpinists around the world.  On Thin Ice is produced in partnership with the Bally Peak Outlook Foundation.Head to ballypeakoutlook.org/  to learn more about the foundation, which is on a mission to safeguard the world's fragile mountain habitats from the adverse effects of global warming and excessive tourism. Production credits: Original Music: Nadir CassimEditorial advisor: Dave VetterGraphic Design: Guillaume OryVideo editing: Iceworm teamWould you like to suggest guests and projects that we should cover? Do you have feedback or questions? Email paolo@iceworm.media

The North American Friends Movie Club

Brent, Nate, and Kate climb into the new month with the 2017 documentary film The Dawn Wall featuring:Tommy Caldwell, Kevin Jorgeson, John Branch, Beth Rodden, Lynn Hill, Alex Honnold, Conrad Anker, Brett Lowell, Josh Lowell, Peter Mortimer. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Storia dell'alpinismo.
Dean Potter e gli Stonemonkeys

Storia dell'alpinismo.

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 5, 2024 19:50


Dean Potter, il leader carismatico degli Stone Monkes, è stata una figura misteriosa (si sa pochissimo della sua infanzia e della sua adolescenza; non ci sono libri su di lui), affascinante ed imprescindibile: con la sua morte (avvenuta nel 2015) si chiude l'epoca della fondazione della storia dell'arrampicata americana - che prosegue poi con tantissimi altri grandi (Tommy Caldwell, Alex Honnold, Jimmy Chin, Mark Synnot, Conrad Anker, Cedar Wright, Ivo Ninov) ma saranno il nuovo capitolo dell'arrampicata americana, quello attuale.

All About Everest Podcast
2024 Books and Documentaries about Everest and the Spring Season

All About Everest Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2024 27:12


I added another book to the 1996 Everest disaster book list that I missed in the last episode. Today's episode is about the one book and two documentaries about Mt. Everest coming out in 2024. I also discuss what to expect for the overall 2024 season and hopefully, it will be uneventful. It's been 100 years since George Mallory and Andrew "Sandy" Irvine attempted and died on Everest in 1924. It's been 25 years since Conrad Anker and his team discovered George Mallory's body in 1999. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pauline-reynolds-nuttall/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pauline-reynolds-nuttall/support

The HIMALI Podcast
Episode 2: Conrad Anker, Mingma G Sherpa, and Pasang Tendi Sherpa talk about the development and progression of Himalayan High-Altitude Mountaineering

The HIMALI Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2023 55:01


In this Episode, Conrad Anker, Mingma G, and Pasang Tendi Sherpa talk about the development of high altitude mountaineering in the Himalayas, the importance of proper training and experience, and upcoming mountaineering goals.  About the Guests: Mingma G Sherpa is a HIMALI athlete and the owner of guiding company “Imagine Nepal”. He was apart of the historically winter K2 first ascent and he also opened the "Rolwaling diversion" to the main summit of Manaslu in 2021. Mingma is planning to become one of the very few people in the world to climb all 14 x 8,000m peaks without supplemental O2.  Conrad Anker is a North Face athlete that has a long and rich history within the Himalayan Mountaineering scene. Conrad is probably most well-known for his breakout film ‘Meru' and is a veteran of the sport in all disciplines. Philanthropically, he works on a variety of initiatives, including work with the Khumbu Climbing Center & the Nepali climbing community.  Pasang Tendi Sherpa is a HIMALI athlete, an Instructor at the Khumbu Climbing Center, and is developing his own guiding company “Camp 2 Summit”. He has multiple 8000'er summits including Annapurna I, Everest, and Lhotse.  Links:  www.himali.com  www.imagine-nepal.com  www.alexlowe.org/projects/kcc/

ON AIR
#365 - Conrad Anker

ON AIR

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2023 95:16


Conrad Anker is an American rock climber, mountaineer, and author, who has successfully summited Mt. Everest 3 times, and has done other ascents and expeditions, as well as visited Antarctica 12 times. He is the Vice President of Alex Lowe Charitable Foundation. This episode shares all the twists and turns of his life. Don't miss it! One for the mountains!

Terra Incognita: The Adventure Podcast
Episode 153: From The Archives - Conrad Anker

Terra Incognita: The Adventure Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 66:17


At the point at which this episode is published, Matt is on an expedition in Alaska directing a film for National Geographic. Instead of taking a break from weekly releases, we thought we'd share some of his favourite episodes from early on in the life of the podcast.Episode 153 of The Adventure Podcast is From The Archives, and was originally released in April 2019. It features one of the world's most accomplished mountaineers, Conrad Anker. When Matt first decided to start a podcast, he wrote five names down on a piece of paper as ‘end game' guests, and Conrad was the first to be ticked off. There is much to be said about Conrad, but he is perhaps best known for his truly epic ascent of Meru with Jimmy Chin and Renan Ozturk. Only two days before recording this episode, three of Conrad's friends and mentees were tragically killed in an avalanche in the Canadian Rockies. In this episode, Conrad reflects honestly, openly and at points heartbreakingly, on a life in the mountains which provides him with untold joy and a sense of identity, whilst also struggling with survivor guilt and the death of friends that has happened ‘far too many times'.Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/the-adventure-podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Outside Podcast
When Yvon Chouinard Invites You to Go Surfing

Outside Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2023 29:56


You say yes, of course. But what about those other wild opportunities that you're not so sure about? In this episode, we talk to athletes and adventurers about how accepting an invitation led them to life-changing experiences. Jimmy Chin was an unknown dirtbag climber when Chouinard welcomed him into his California home and then took him surfing at a legendary break. Conrad Anker was an up-and-coming alpinist when he got a chance to represent the U.S. in a competition in Kyrgyzstan. Timmy O'Neill was an emerging mountain athlete when he was asked to join an expedition that would conduct cataract surgeries in a remote area of Ethiopia. What they and our other guests all agree on: they wouldn't be who they are today if they hadn't dared to go for it. This episode of the Outside Podcast is brought to you by Vans, makers of the ultimate summer shoe, the Vans UltraRange. With max cushioning for all-day wear, precision support for easy movement, and breathable mesh to keep you cool, the new UltraRange Neo VR3 is ultrafitted for ultra comfort. Learn more here.

The Powell Movement Action Sports Podcast
TPM Episode 330: Wiley Miller, Pro Skier, Commercial Pilot

The Powell Movement Action Sports Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2023 85:42


wileymiller ‘s ski career trajectory is so different from most people on the podcast. There was no competing early and often for Wiley. He earned his spot in ski movies by showing up at a film shoot. Then, Wiley was nominated for and won big awards early on, and parlayed that into a 20-year career of ski movies. While I wish it were all roses in this one, Wiley shares about his Mom's battle against ALS, the ups and downs of sponsorship, owning brands, and more…And these days, while Wiley is still shredding on a pro level, he's also a commercial pilot, and we get a great Nipsey Hustle story out of him during Inappropriate Questions.  Wiley Miller Show Notes: 3:00:  Elliot Bernhagen story, Billings, MT, Red Lodge, his parents are athletes, and his Mom's battle with ALS 14:00:  Stem Cell treatment in Mexico, building jumps with his brother, no park skiing in Montana, Camp of Champions, and his brother being the better skier 22:00:  Rollerblade:  They invented inline skating and make the best skates on the planet. Best Day Brewing:  All of the flavor of your favorite IPA or Kolsch, without the alcohol, the calories and sugar Elan Skis:  Over 75 years of innovation that makes you better. 25:00:  University of Calgary, New Zealand, paying the bills, Utah, and shooting for Photo Play    32:00:  Nominated for a Powder Award, sponsorships and getting ownerships of Saga and 4FRNT, and Level 1 41:30:  Stanley:  Get 30% off sitewide with the code drinkfast Peter Glenn Ski and Sports:  Over 60 years of getting you out there  High Cascade Snowboard Camp:  The legendary snowboard camp 44:30:  Level 1 Realtime, Best Male Performance at IF3, X Games Real Snow, TGR, Chris Collins, and Conrad Anker 51:00:  “The Connection to Gravity” Movie, not being able to say no when filming, Cold Rush, pioneering the Nosebutter 7 on skis, and close calls happen when he's overconfident, and it happened a couple of weeks ago 61:00:  The bad side of sponsorship, the Saga saga, the 4FRNT sale, his new sponsors, and Rory Bushfield  85:00: Inappropriate Questions with Chris Logan and an Anonymous Source  

Wild Ideas Worth Living Presented by REI
The Wisdom of Expeditions with Conrad Anker

Wild Ideas Worth Living Presented by REI

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2023 29:38


Conrad Anker is a legendary mountaineer and one of the most prolific explorers alive today. He has successfully ascended and completed dozens of major mountain expeditions, including summiting Mount Everest three times. In today's episode, Conrad shares with us the wisdom gained along the way. Connect with Conrad: WebsiteInstagram Resources: Listen to Wild Ideas Worth Living episode with Max Learn more about Max Lowe's film, TornCheck out REI's Re/Supply program

Beyond The Horizon
A Look Back: The Story Of Conrad Anker And Alex Lowe

Beyond The Horizon

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2022 26:30


Conrad Anker and Alex Lowe were best friends and climbing partners. Alex Lowe, who was called the mutant because of his high level of ability in the mountains, was a married man and father of three. Conrad Anker was engaged but he had no children. Neither of them or their families could ever imagine what the future would hold for them after a fateful trip to Tibet changed everything. (commercial at 10:30) to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.com source:https://www.the-sun.com/news/4498648/alex-lowe-death-conrad-anker/

NÅ ER DET ALVOR
Mathias Ekornås | Bestigingen Av Cholatse 6440 Moh, Boksing, Oslo 7 Summits, Stint, Møte Med Conrad Anker, 71 Grader Nord, Dundas

NÅ ER DET ALVOR

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2022 118:34


Mathias Ekornås har bakgrunn som løytnant i forsvaret og jobber til daglig med sikkerhetsoppdrag for Flyktningehjelpen i inn- og utland. Når han ikke hjelper andre er han som oftest å finne på en padleekspedisjon i Costa Rica, solo tur på ski på Svalbard, bestiger fjell i Chile, Kenya, Russland, Nepal eller Norge. Han er også én av fire gründere av Dundas Explorer – et selskap som arrangerer lav- og høyterskelturer for kunder i Norge og blant annet Himalaya.  Oslo 7 SummitsMathias kom på min radar for et par år siden da han dukket opp i FriFlyt og andre medier etter at han hadde virtuelt besteget Acancagua 6961 moh i et tre(!!!) i Torshovparken. Greia hans er at han skal bestige alle kontinentenes høyeste fjell i nærområdet. Han gjorde f.eks. Denali opp/ned bakken ved Hønselovisa, han besteg Kilimanjaro på karantenehotell på en krakk, og nå satser han på å bestige fastlands-Australias høyeste fjell, Mount Kosciuzko 2228 moh, hjemmefra med pull-ups. Patreon og NEDA RadioEr du gira på mer innhold som dette? Kanskje du er fan av terreng/fjell/ultra-løping? Da foreslår jeg at du joiner NEDA's Patreon. Da får du nemlig tilgang til flere hundre episoder a la dette som ikke er tilgjengelig på Spotify og iTunes. I tillegg får du tilgang til NEDA's egen podcast-app NEDA Radio, og du får en haug med rabattkoder til din neste ekspedisjon eller ultraløp. Enjoy!//HKSupport the show

Your Daily Writing Habit
Your Daily Writing Habit - Episode 1295: If I Can Do X, You Can Do X Too

Your Daily Writing Habit

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2022 6:43


“The summit is what drives us, but the climb itself is what matters.” -Conrad Anker. This week's Mindset Monday message is about taking chances way outside your comfort zone! Mentioned in today's episode: http://www.powerofthecurve.com/ https://christine-ink.com/word-count-as-a-hypothetical-metric/ Join the author conversation in Ink Authors: https://www.facebook.com/groups/inkauthors/ Learn more about YDWH and catch up on old episodes: www.yourdailywritinghabit.com Learn more about me, “Christine Ink,” and how I support authors: https://christine-ink.com/ 5 Things To Know Before Hiring a Book Coach: https://christine-ink.com/book-coaching-2/

Traverse
2 - Conrad Anker: Renowned Alpinist and Rock Climber

Traverse

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2022 53:40


With countless first ascents to his name, Conrad Anker is one of the world's most renowned alpinists. From Antarctica and multiple Everest summits to exploratory expeditions across the Himalayas, Conrad has set the bar for mountaineering over the last 30 years. In this episode, Chris and Charles catch up with Conrad and hit on everything from what it's like growing up in Yosemite to embracing adventure into the later stages of life.

Highlander Podcast
Conrad Anker | Climbing Legend | History of Gear Series

Highlander Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2022 70:41


Climbing legend Conrad Anker speaks at the Outdoor Recreation Archive Kamp Kit Exhibit opening at Utah State University. Anker talks about the history of the outdoor industry, the evolution of gear, and the challenges of a changing climate for product designers. Conrad Anker Website https://www.conradanker.com/ MEDIA: Utah State Today https://www.usu.edu/today/story/renowned-climber-conrad-anker-talks-mountaineering-product-design-climate-change Utah Statesman https://usustatesman.com/guest-column-special-collections-opdd-help-students-meet-their-heroes/ Herald Journal https://www.hjnews.com/news/local/rock-climbing-legend-conrad-anker-visits-utah-state-university/article_bd458fdc-2b2b-11ed-a7bc-d314600f4101.html Watch these conversations on YouTube! https://bit.ly/33SVb2O Listen to these conversations on the Highlander Podcast. https://opdd.usu.edu/podcast The Highlander Podcast is sponsored by the Outdoor Product Design & Development program at Utah State University, a four year, undergraduate degree training the next generation of product creators for the sports and outdoor industries. Learn more at opdd.usu.edu or follow the program on LinkedIn or Instagram. https://www.instagram.com/usuoutdoorproduct/ https://www.linkedin.com/company/opdd  

Out of Bounds Podcast
Snowbound Speaker Series: Mountaineering Legend, Conrad Anker

Out of Bounds Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2022 54:46


See Conrad Anker speak live at Snowbound Expo 2022. November 18th-20th in Boston! Use Promo code “OUTOF” for 50% off tickets at www.SnowboundExpo.com   The Pursuit – E80 – Conrad Anker is an outdoor industry legend, we talk about being true to yourself, Instagram influencers, dogs, loss, and being human.  [...] The post Snowbound Speaker Series: Mountaineering Legend, Conrad Anker appeared first on Out Of Collective.

Up North Rocks
Episode 2 - Northern Ontario Climbing Legend Shaun Parent

Up North Rocks

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2022 77:06


In this episode, I sit down with Shaun Parent. Shaun has been climbing (and more often developing) rock and ice climbs in Northern Ontario since the '80s. He is the OG in Northern Ontario climbing. In his time, Shaun has put up thousands of routes. Yes, that's right, thousands. Odds are, basically any Thunder Bay climber has climbed on Shauns routes (and more than likely cursed him for his old school sandbaggery). I should also note that when I visited Shaun to do this interview, he sent me home with a big bag of bolts for use in development in the Thunder Bay area - those bolts have now been whacked into new moderates at The Outbreak Wall and Lost Falls.The interview is rather long, since there were so many things I wanted to ask Shaun about, from climbing with Conrad Anker in Kama Bay to putting up first ascents on massive alpine faces in Peru – but I highly recommend you hang on until the end – the gems just keep coming.If you want to get in touch with Shaun, you can find him on Instagram @superiorexploration, on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/northofsuperior.climbingcompany or through his website https://www.superior-exploration.caAlso, check out some neat articles about Shaun at:https://canadiangeographic.ca/articles/the-man-who-brought-ice-climbing-to-northern-ontario/https://www.thestar.com/life/travel/2009/01/08/a_superior_location_toscale_the_heights.htmlhttps://www.ontarioclimbing.com/News/Superior-Exploration/https://www.sootoday.com/bold/shaun-wants-to-show-you-his-favourite-ice-climbs-8-photos-1880387https://www.lakesuperior.com/lifestyle/recreation/216parent/

Because It's There
Andy Politz and The Missing Climber: The Discovery of George Mallory on Everest

Because It's There

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2022 16:15 Transcription Available


The question I'm asked most about the discovery of George Mallory is WHAT WAS IT LIKE TO LOOK INTO HIS FACE? DID YOU TAKE A PHOTO? Amazing right, can you imagine that I'm the only living person to have looked into the face of British mountaineering icon George Mallory? It's a responsibility I don't take lightly…..BUT FIRST…if you want the inside scoop on all things about the Mystery of Mallory and Irvine and Mount Everest, be sure to SUBSCRIBE, CLICK LIKE AND COMMENT.And, for my members…at .99 per month….I upload photos and information and engage in conversations only for them, members only kind of stuff.After the discovery of George Leigh Mallory at nearly 27,000 feet or 8,200 meters on the north face of Mount Everest on May 1, 1999, the five searchers who reached the body that day covered him up as best as they could. (I was the sixth searcher, but turned back because of faulty 02 apparatus.) Our climbing team descended back down to base camp for an extended rest…and, a HUGE Base Camp party….. During that time the discovery has gone out to the world. Mountainzone released a photo taken by Dave Hahn of Mallory's exposed back and tattered clothes….the story is on the cover of The New York Times within a week, Conrad Anker's picture is right next to George Mallory's photograph, with the map on Everest in a spread in the New York Times.Six of us went back up to Camp 5 on May 12th to be in position for a search and summit bid, with the idea that TWO OF US would launch a search for Sandy Irvine while four would go tackle the Second Step and the summit.  However, because of snow cover from the weather, the call was made that instead of a search for Andrew Irvine  there would be a return to the site of George Mallory - with a metal detector. At Camp 5, at about 26,000 feet, or 7,925 meters, we were slammed by a terrific three day long Himalayam storm…it was impossible to even stand up outside of the tents.May 16th dawned blue and calm….and so up we went….In this segment I ask Andy Politz about his experience on 16 May 1999, where we went together to the site of George Mallory. 

Beyond The Horizon
A Look Back: Conrad Anker and Alex Lowe

Beyond The Horizon

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2022 26:31


Conrad Anker and Alex Lowe were best friends and climbing partners. Alex Lowe, who was called the mutant because of his high level of ability in the mountains, was a married man and father of three. Conrad Anker was engaged but he had no children. Neither of them or their families could ever imagine what the future would hold for them after a fateful trip to Tibet changed everything.(commercial at 12:52)to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.the-sun.com/news/4498648/alex-lowe-death-conrad-anker/

The Epstein Chronicles
A Look Back: Conrad Anker and Alex Lowe

The Epstein Chronicles

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2022 26:31


Conrad Anker and Alex Lowe were best friends and climbing partners. Alex Lowe, who was called the mutant because of his high level of ability in the mountains, was a married man and father of three. Conrad Anker was engaged but he had no children. Neither of them or their families could ever imagine what the future would hold for them after a fateful trip to Tibet changed everything.(commercial at 13:31)to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.the-sun.com/news/4498648/alex-lowe-death-conrad-anker/

Grit or Gift
Grit or Gift: Conrad Anker

Grit or Gift

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2022 42:04


American alpinist Conrad Anker is one of the world's most renowned adventurers, whose first ascent up Meru was made into an award-winning documentary film. Anker notably found George Mallory's body on Everest in 1999, and then survived the avalanche that killed his climbing partner Alex Lowe and cameraman David Bridges that same year. He recently suffered a heart attack and stepped down from his role as team leader for the North Face. We caught up with him recently at his home in Bozeman, Montana. Welcome to the show. 

Beyond The Lens
9. Conrad Anker: Legendary mountaineer on a lifetime of climbing and remembering Galen Rowell

Beyond The Lens

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2022 38:25


As one of the most prolific explorers and mountaineers, Conrad Anker has summited Mount Everest three times. In 1999, Anker discovered the body of George Mallory, one of the two British climbers who died attempting to climb Everest in 1924, helping to shed more light on one of mountaineering's most famous mysteries. He has made many notable first ascents, from Alaska, through the Himalayas, to Antarctica, not only choosing the highest peaks but the most difficult ones. In this conversation, Conrad shares how climbing helps him feel more connected to other people through cooperation and sharing the same goals. He looks back on some of his most significant climbs including the Kichatna Spire in 1987 and discovering George Mallory's body on Mount Everest in 1999, explaining how this was a humbling experience for him. Together, Conrad and Richard remember photographer Galen Rowell, and Conrad shares some of his favourite memories. Finally, he touches upon the dangers of climbing and expresses the importance of having different experiences, as it is those moments that make life sweet.To find out more about Conrad visit www.conradanker.com

Beyond The Horizon
The Conrad Anker and Alex Lowe Story (4/21/22)

Beyond The Horizon

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2022 26:42


Conrad Anker and Alex Lowe were best friends and climbing partners. Alex Lowe, who was called the mutant because of his high level of ability in the mountains, was a married man and father of three. Conrad Anker was engaged but he had no children. Neither of them or their families could ever imagine what the future would hold for them after a fateful trip to Tibet changed everything.(commercial at 13:31)to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.the-sun.com/news/4498648/alex-lowe-death-conrad-anker/

The Epstein Chronicles
The Conrad Anker and Alex Lowe Story (4/21/22)

The Epstein Chronicles

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2022 26:42


Conrad Anker and Alex Lowe were best friends and climbing partners. Alex Lowe, who was called the mutant because of his high level of ability in the mountains, was a married man and father of three. Conrad Anker was engaged but he had no children. Neither of them or their families could ever imagine what the future would hold for them after a fateful trip to Tibet changed everything.(commercial at 13:31)to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comsource:https://www.the-sun.com/news/4498648/alex-lowe-death-conrad-anker/

Hot Drinks - Stories From The Field
Brady Robinson and Ed Roberson: NOLS - Instructor & Student Share Different Perspectives on the Same Story

Hot Drinks - Stories From The Field

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2022 86:53


Brady Robinson Brady began working in outdoor education in the mid-'90s at a boy's camp in the Poconos of Pennsylvania. He went on to work with Outward Bound for over a decade, spent some time guiding, and instructed with NOLS for a few years. After leaving fieldwork, he has primarily worked in conservation as the Executive Director of the Access Fund for ten years and has positions with Tompkins Conservation and the Conservation Alliance. Brady is a gifted climber. Before having a family, he spent many years chasing bold rock and alpine first ascents in Patagonia,  Pakistan and other far-flung mountain ranges. Many of his partners were some of the most elite professional climbers, including Conrad Anker, Steph Davis, and Oscar-winning filmmaker Jimmy Chin. These days Brady is taking a few months off to focus on being a dad, working through life transitions, reading, taking online courses, and reflecting on what he wants to give to his kids, himself, and the world in the next chapter of his career.Ed RobersonEd currently serves as Conservation Director at Palmer Land Conservancy, regional land and water conservation organization in Colorado. He is also the founder of Mountain & Prairie, a podcast/blog that has been recognized by groups including the Aspen Institute, High Country News, Montana Governor's Office, and more.  Ed was a student with NOLS during a 1999 Semester in the Pacific Northwest, in which Brady was one of his instructors for the backpacking and mountaineering section. He has stayed in touch with Brady over the years. Ed currently lives in Colorado Springs with his wife and two daughters.  

Finding Mastery
Conrad Anker: Life Lessons from Death, Risk, and Mother Nature

Finding Mastery

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2022 96:06 Very Popular


This week's conversation is with Conrad Anker, an absolute legend who has been pushing the limits of mountaineering for the last 30 years, evolving into one of America's best alpinists. At age 56, Conrad's resume continues to grow, having notched the long-awaited first ascent of the Meru Shark's Fin in India with partners Jimmy Chin and Renan Ozturk in 2011, which led to the Sundance-winning documentary, Meru. Conrad has climbed Everest three times, including a 2012 trip with National Geographic to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the first American ascent of the mountain. Though true alpine routes have been his forte, his résumé also includes big wall first ascents on El Capitan and first free ascents in Zion National Park. In 1997 alone, he completed first ascents in Antarctica, Pakistan's Karakorum and on Yosemite's El Capitan.So Conrad operates in high consequence environments, places where the luxury of a mistake is often not afforded. Like so many explorers of nature and human nature, he doesn't consider himself a risk-taker, but someone who works in high risk environments. It's a forcing function, like none other than I know – to get to the truth and the purity of thought and action. It forces best judgment, and the rewards and consequences of such. And because of that, he's come to have a deep relationship with life - with people and mother nature – his experience, with experience.I hope that for all of us – to know oneself, others, to know mother nature – and to have a meaningful relationship with experience. To be able to work well with feelings, emotions, thoughts and the unfolding world outside of you. Mark his movie right now - you'll definitely want to watch it – it's called “Torn” (available on Disney+).----Please support our partners!We're able to keep growing and creating content for YOU because of their support. We believe in their mission and would appreciate you supporting them in return!!To take advantage of deals from our partners, head to http://www.findingmastery.net/partners where you'll find all discount links and codes mentioned in the podcast.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

NÅ ER DET ALVOR
DJ Granite feat. Conrad Anker - Intense Mountains

NÅ ER DET ALVOR

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2022 8:42


This is an audio experiment created by using quotes from Conrad Anker recorded in episode 161 and pairing them with CC Licenced ambient sounds and noises from various SoundCloud artists. There is no financial incentive behind this. It's strictly an art/procrastination project by @hanserino. Ripped noises:Krakenkraft - Andromeda Blossoming Vent Tube Chacaltaya Le vent souffle fort dans le desert de sel d'Atacama//HKSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/nedaproject)

SUPA – Stand Up Pedal Action
S1E35 - Cory Sutela – Part 1

SUPA – Stand Up Pedal Action

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2022 60:20


Who do you know who starts life in Canada, goes to Cambridge, attends Burning Man a few times, lived in the basement of a factory in Germany for a while and once ended up at a KISS concert with Conrad Anker? If you guessed Cory Sutela, you would be right. In this first half of our two-parter with Cory, we talk about where he came from and how life landed him in Colorado Springs in his role at Medicine Wheel Trail Advocates. Find out more about SUPA (and get some socks!) on our website, on Instagram or on Facebook.

Repod-It!
Repod-It! 2021 Highlight Reel

Repod-It!

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2021 26:12


We are thrilled to bring you guys the highlight reel for 2021! In this episode, we go back and listen to a couple of our favorite moments from the Repod-It! podcast this year. We revisit our conversations with Conrad Anker, Kelli Jones, Mason Gravley, Carrie Hoffman, and Steven Reinhold. Please check out our feed if you want to listen to any of their full length episodes!

The RunOut Podcast
RunOut #74: Max Lowe and his new film TORN

The RunOut Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2021 51:18


Alex Lowe was considered one of the best climbers in the world in the 1990s. His feats in the mountains were as legendary as his infectious stoke for getting out and loving life on the edge every minute of every day. In October 1999, he and the cameraman David Bridges were killed in an avalanche on Shishipangma in Tibet. Their third partner, Conrad Anker, however, was miraculously spared the same fate and ended up surviving the avalanche. Alex left behind a wife, Jenni, and three young boys: Max, Sam, and Isaac. In the wake of Alex's death, Conrad, racked by survivor's guilt, stepped into the role of dad for the Lowe boys, and he ended up falling in love with and marrying Jenni. Today, Max Lowe has become a renowned National Geographic photographer and filmmaker. His new film, TORN, explores his family's complex relationships in the wake of father's death. The film is a haunting and unsparing look at how death can tear a family apart, and what it takes to heal. Next, our favorite lyricist and climbing trainer Kris Hampton treats us to a final bit. Show Notes Watch the trailer for TORN Find a screening for TORN near you. Power Company Climbing

Repod-It!
GEAR STORIES: Conrad Anker, The North Face

Repod-It!

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2021 5:37


Today, we revisit my favorite episode and interview that we have conducted on Repod-It to hear from Conrad Anker. Conrad tells us about not only his favorite piece of gear that he uses nowadays, but also tells us about some special pieces of used gear that he had when he was younger, and just getting into the outdoors. If you want to hear more from Conrad, our full interview with him will be linked here.

Terra Incognita: The Adventure Podcast
Episode 081: Conrad Anker, The Four Stages of Life

Terra Incognita: The Adventure Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2021 84:26


Episode 081 of The Adventure Podcast features one of the world's elite alpinists, Conrad Anker. Some of Conrad's achievements in the world of mountaineering include summiting Everest without the aid of supplemental oxygen, a first ascent of Meru's “shark fin” route, numerous Antarctica expeditions, and multiple ascents of El Capitan in Yosemite National Park. He's much more than just a climber though, he's an activist, a mentor and a family man.In this episode, host Matt Pycroft hands the stage over to Conrad to discuss topics and issues important to him. What ensues is a meaningful, rather thought-provoking conversation between two friends touching on everything from long-debated topics like footfall on Everest to mentorship to living up to people's expectations. They talk about the accessibility of the mountains, how mountaineering has changed over the years, and reflect on the stages of life. It's Conrad Anker as you've never heard him before...Listen for tales from a legend, an insight into the inner workings of the world of mountaineering and Conrad's views on the world.Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/the-adventure-podcast. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Body Breaking Free
19. What is Truly Important / Jennifer Lowe-Anker

Body Breaking Free

Play Episode Play 30 sec Highlight Listen Later Oct 13, 2021 67:10


Jennifer Lowe-Anker, artist and author of the book "Forget Me Not", shares her story and insights on the podcast today. In the episode, we explore the relationship we have with the environment around us, and the environment we have with our own body. We dive into Jennifer's story of losing her husband Alex Lowe, and out of grief and loss, found love with Conrad Anker. We talk about Jennifer's story, her book, and the beautiful insights she has into nature, life, and connection. Jennifer offers us such an amazing gift of perspective, and what's truly important when it comes to the precious moments of this life. "The in-between parts, is the part we have that we can do something with. And if we're brave enough and courageous enough to love someone, and to forgive them for all of their imperfections, and be open hearted to their love for us, then, we can live life with a lot of joy" ~Jennifer Lowe-AnkerMore episode details, check out the shownotes: BODY BREAKING FREE - EPISODE SHOWNOTES: https://katiekaygraham.com/blog/19Don't forget to Rate and Review the Podcast. Share this episode to a friend, let it be seen to others, so that we can all lead a body breaking free life!!! FEEDBACK FORM: I want to hear from you. Yes, YOU! This feedback form will take 3-5 minutes. Your feedback is invaluable!Katie Kay, Please send to my email: Email Me Feedback Form LinkI've got time right now!  Feedback Form LinkMEDITATION FREEBIE **If you want to receive the free meditation for "Days I Don't Feel My Best", make sure to enter your email in the feedback form:)BODY BREAKING FREE - INSTAGRAM: @katiekaygrahamJENNI CONTACT: Jennifer Lowe-Anker Instagram: @jenniloweankerREFERENCES:Book: Forget Me Not, Jennifer Lowe-AnkerDocumentary: TORN Documentary National GeographicAlex Lowe Charitable Foundation: Website

The Wildcast
Wildcast EP40: Conrad Anker -Exploring the boundaries of human experience

The Wildcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2021 59:26


Conrad Anker -Exploring the boundaries of human experience "the danger of climbing mountains is part of what makes it a powerful and enriching experience." He writes in an article for National Geographic. Throughout his life he has pushed the boundaries of enriching this human experience by doing some of the most arduous and often almost impossible expeditions to the big mountains of this planet. Among his many accolades are establishing new routes and first ascents in Pakistan, Alaska, Antarctica, and Patagonia he is most well known for finding the body of George Mallory (who famously said 'Because its there')and more recently as the main protagonist in the Oscar winning documentary Meru which chronicles the mountain that became his obsession taking 2 expeditions in 2008 and 2011 to finally climb what was considered then an unclimbable 1,500-foot blade of granite in India's Garhwal Himalaya range. As a young mountaineer, some of my first memories of the outdoor world were picking up issues of National Geographic and reading about the expeditions he and Alex Lowe were doing in Antarctica and Patagonia, feats which at the time already seemed superhuman. Watching his life from afar from behind the pages of Outside Magazine or National Geographic he was a legend in my circles but then getting to meet him you are reminded of the humanity of our heroes that at the end of the day the things they treasure are the same as you -family, friends, and the shared human experience. These days while slowing down from big expeditions Conrad lends his platform for advocacies and people close to his heart. Bringing diversity and racial justice to the outdoors and most importantly working to reverse global climate change. During the interview I asked him how he wanted to be remembered and he said: Conrad Anker -A good man. It is my great pleasure and honor to share this conversation with Conrad Anker with all you listeners of the Wildcast Podcast. You can find Conrad Anker on the following: Instagram: @Conrad_anker Web: https://www.conradanker.com/ This episode of the Wildcast is presented by Atlas: Web: atlascommune.com/discount/WILDCAST IG: www.instagram.com/atlascommune/ A company that makes transitioning to a sustainable lifestyle easy for anyone. The Wildcast is produced by JP Alipio Co Produced and Sound Design: Tomonari Nakayama SUPPORT THE WILDCAST BY BUYING US A COFFEE: buymeacoffee.com/Wildcast Conrad's Portrait was shot by Jan Vincent Kleine

Repod-It!
Interview with Conrad Anker, The North Face

Repod-It!

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2021 27:32


We are extremely stoked to interview Conrad Anker on today's podcast. Conrad talks with us about how he got his start in the outdoors, when he realized it was more than just something fun for him to do with his family, as well as some of the risks associated with outdoor activities and how to assess and evaluate those risks. Check out and follow along Conrad's adventures on Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/conrad_anker/?hl=en

The Outlook Podcast Archive
The mountain between us

The Outlook Podcast Archive

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2021 26:28


In the 1990s, Alex Lowe and Conrad Anker were earning reputations as some of the best mountain climbers in the world. Jenni, Alex's wife, was a constant support. But after a fateful expedition on a mountain in Tibet, these three lives would become connected in a way they couldn't even imagine. This story was first broadcast on 5th May 2018. A new documentary about the family's story, directed by Alex's son Max Lowe, is called Torn. Get in touch: outlook@bbc.com Presenter: Saskia Edwards Producer: Katy Davis Photo: Ice climber scales a glacier Credit: Sandra Behne / Bongarts / Getty Images

Baby Got Backstory
BGBS 070: Gregg Treinish | Adventure Scientists | Moving at a Human Pace

Baby Got Backstory

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2021 49:02


BGBS 070: Gregg Treinish | Adventure Scientists | Moving at a Human PaceGregg founded Adventure Scientists in 2011 with a strong passion for both scientific discovery and exploration. National Geographic named Gregg an Adventurer of the Year in 2008 when he and a friend completed a 7,800-mile trek along the spine of the Andes Mountain Range. He was included on the Christian Science Monitor's 30 under 30 list in 2012, and the following year became a National Geographic Emerging Explorer for his work with Adventure Scientists. In 2013, he was named a Backpacker Magazine “hero”, in 2015, a Draper Richards Kaplan Entrepreneur and one of Men's Journal's “50 Most Adventurous Men.” In 2017, he was named an Ashoka Fellow and in 2018 one of the Grist 50 “Fixers.” Gregg was named a Young Global Leader by the World Economic Forum in 2020 and is a member of their Global Futures Council on Sustainable Tourism. Gregg holds a biology degree from Montana State University and a sociology degree from CU-Boulder. He thru-hiked the Appalachian Trail in 2004. In this episode, you'll learn…The creativity, optimism, and persistence required of expeditions translate very well into entrepreneurship and keeping a business profitable over time. Adventure is pursuing passion and pushing your personal boundaries in the outdoors. Quotes[31:05] Adventure is pursuing passion in the outdoors. It's certainly outdoor sport based, but that can be hiking for some people and just adventuring into a place you haven't been before to look at birds, or it can be climbing peaks and skiing down. It's pursuing your own boundaries in the outdoors. [41:08] The cool thing about expeditions for me is not like this, “Ooh, adrenaline-seeking.” That's not my type of Expedition. It's persistence, it's creativity, it's problem-solving. It's “you're in this sh!tty situation, how you can get yourself out?” And it's avoiding those situations to begin with. I think that is exactly what running a business is. [44:09] We've had a tremendous impact on a number of different fields, from antibiotic resistance to microplastics, to improving crop yields, to helping to restore and preserve species that are extirpated from ecosystems. And it's been amazing what we've been able to accomplish in 10 short years, and I'm so proud of the impacts that we've already had. But I'm always thinking about how we do that on a bigger scale, and how we make sure that the data we've collected and the data we will collect are going to have as much impact on as many lives, human and otherwise as possible. ResourcesWebsite: www.adventurescientists.org LinkedIn: Gregg Treinish Instagram: @adventurescientists Facebook: Adventure Scientists Have a Brand Problem? We can help.Book your no-obligation, 15-minute Wildstory Brand Clarity Call now. Learn about our Brand Audit and Strategy process Identify if you need a new logo or just a refresh Determine if your business has a branding problem See examples of our work and get relevant case studies See if branding is holding your business back and can help you get to the next level Book Your FREE Brand Clarity Call Podcast TranscriptGregg Treinish 0:02 So we got a call. Three weeks after we gave that presentation in a parking lot. It's in Salt Lake City at a hotel that since burned down the city Creek in and they were like, can you be in Washington and a month or whatever it was there like Why? And he said if you've been selected as adventure of the Year by natgeo, and we went there and Andy skorpa had gotten it the year before. So he was on stage presenting and talking about it, you know, his year of adventure the year and then looked at us and just said, this will change your life. And I had no idea what he meant that but it did. Marc Gutman 0:45 podcasting from Boulder, Colorado, this is the baby got backstory podcast, we dive into the story behind the story of today's most inspiring storytellers, creators and entrepreneurs. I like to think back stories and I cannot lie. I am your host, Marc Gutman. What if you could help scientists cure cancer, or develop medicines that save lives? Or find answers to some of our biggest crises that face us today? All while doing what you love doing anyway. I'm Marc Gutman, and on today's episode of Baby got backstory, we are talking about adventure in science, and how one adventure brings the two to work together to collect data at scale. And before we get into this episode, I want you to live at scale to adventure and truly feel alive. And that all starts by heading over to Apple podcasts or Spotify and giving us a five star review and rating. By this point in our lives. We all know that algorithms rule the world. And as such apple and Spotify use these ratings as part of the algorithm that determines ratings on their charts. But look, we're humans, not robots. So go show that algo that the humans are in control, and rate this podcast. Thank you for your reviews. I do appreciate it. Today's guest is Greg rhenish, founder and CEO of adventure scientists. And as you'll hear, Greg founded adventure scientists in 2011, with a strong passion for both scientific discovery and exploration of helping scientists solve the world's problems wasn't enough. National Geographic named Greg and adventure of the Year in 2008 when he and a friend completed a 7800 mile trek along the spine of the Andes mountain range. He was included on the Christian Science monitors 30 under 30 list in 2012, and the following year became a national geographic emerging Explorer for his work with adventure scientists. In 2013. He was named a backpacker magazine hero in 2015 at Draper Richards, Kaplan entrepreneur, and one of men journals 50 most adventurous men. In 2017, he was named in a shoka fellow, and in 2018, one of the grist 50 fixers. Greg was named a Young Global Leader by the World Economic Forum in 2020. And as a member of their global futures Council on sustainable tourism. Oh, yeah. And he hiked the Appalachian Trail in 2004. And this is his story. I am here with Greg trennis, the founder and CEO of adventure scientist, Greg, welcome to the show. Hey, thanks so much for having me. Yeah. So Greg, let's just get right into it. Like what is adventure sciences? sounds really cool. But like, what is it? Yeah, we're Gregg Treinish 3:57 a nonprofit organization. We're based in Bozeman, Montana. And the idea here is that we want to be the world's greatest field data collectors at scale. So we look for opportunities where we can amplify and accelerate scientists impact and getting them to solutions for the environment. So examples of that are everything from we're creating genetic and chemical reference libraries for trees, so that they can be used by law enforcement to compare seizures or shipments that they think were illegally sourced with the standing trees across a range of species. So you can use genetics to actually compare wood with trees, and it's being used for all kinds of things. And we collected the largest data set on earth for microplastics. We've collected plant life up at 20,000 feet on Mount Everest, which 22,000 feet which was the highest known plant life on Earth, that is being used to inoculate crops and improve crop yields around the world. So we look for these projects where there's a solution tied to it, where data can unlock some solution. And we deploy volunteers from the onshore community to go and get those data. Marc Gutman 5:15 Yeah, and this is the part that I think is really interesting. And I want to make really clear to our listeners is that there are there are these projects where scientists and please correct me if I get this wrong, because I want to, I want to make sure that I put it in, in simple terms, but there's these projects where scientists are like, hey, it would be really cool to grab this plant life from Everest, but there's no way that I can get up there, or I'm not going there. Or it's restrictive, restrictive. And then there's all these adventurers who are like, I'm going to Everest, or I'm going into the Amazon, or I'm going down to Antarctica. And what you're really doing is matching these two parties so that adventurers can help out in this collection of scientific data, wherever they're going. I mean, do I have that right? Is that the what this this is all about? Gregg Treinish 6:00 Yeah, it is, it's a lot more detailed and nuanced than that we've spent a ton of time building these projects and designing them. That's something that is so essential for success of the volunteers as they're out there. But yeah, at the end of the day, there's this army of people who love the outdoors are traveling around the world and have the skill set that can be really useful. And we find them we give them the mission, we train them, and then we deploy them. Marc Gutman 6:29 That is an adventure myself, I mean, I can't think of anything greater than having a purpose behind, you know, beyond just the achievement of whatever we do. And we like to get out and, and, and hit our goals, to have a purpose and to be helping other other scientists and potentially furthering humankind. Gregg Treinish 6:47 That's exactly right. And it's the same for me when I was that on my expeditions. And the reason I started this organization is because of that. It will I had a selfish feeling. I felt really, when I was out hiking the Appalachian Trail, which I did in 2000, for a walk the length of the Andes in 2006, through eight. And on those expeditions, I was just like, Man, I'm spending so much time and couldn't be doing something much more meaningful with this time. How can I get back to these places and really longed for a way that I can make a difference while I get after it? And and that's what adventure scientist is. Marc Gutman 7:24 Yeah, so let's talk about a little bit let's go way back to the younger egg. And have you always as a kid, have you always had a penchant for adventuring? and science or did one come before the other? Gregg Treinish 7:36 I was always fascinated by wildlife and nature, like you know, like most kids are think catching fireflies and Willy bugs and that kind of thing. My family didn't go camping. We didn't like we weren't an outdoors family at all. And it wasn't until I went on a backpacking trip when I was 16 to British Columbia to the Provincial Park, Garibaldi Provincial Park there. And that was where I really fell in love with outdoors and adventure. And it was the first trip and then you know, I did some more backpacking trips and a few things but it wasn't until the Appalachian Trail that I really had a big adventure like that. Marc Gutman 8:20 Yeah. And so you said you didn't grow up camping? What was life like for you? Where did you grow up? Gregg Treinish 8:25 I grew up in the suburbs of Cleveland, East Cleveland and a lot of mountains. No, no, we hills we I grew up skiing on a garbage dump on a covered over garments down. Marc Gutman 8:34 I did too. I grew up in Detroit. So Maui pine knob, you know, inverted trash heaps. That's how I learned to ski as well. Gregg Treinish 8:42 That's right. Ours are called Boston Mills. The coolest adventure from my kid days was those probably 10 years old and skiing at a place called Boston mills and Glen plake, at the time was on his like World Tour or North American tour trying to hit every ski resort across the US and there's this run called tiger and I skied it with Glen plake, when I was like 10, which was the coolest thing ever. And then, years later, after I had become a natgeo adventure of the year, and I met Glenn again at the Outdoor Retailer show in Salt Lake where it was back then. And he remembered me he remembered skiing with me at Boston Mills is like coolest thing ever. For me. Marc Gutman 9:27 That is the coolest thing ever. I love that. And so, you know at 10 years old, you know, skiena, Boston mills and hanging out in Cleveland, did you think that you were gonna make a life and a career out of adventure? If you wouldn't have told Gregg Treinish 9:40 me that I was gonna do that. I had to believe i'd figure out some way to do that. But I would have been surprised that I would have chosen a life of adventure and, and nature and you know, I, I think I was I love Jacques Cousteau and and Jane Goodall. I actually have named my daughter after age. Didn't get all of my son after john Muir. Their middle names anyway. But back then, like, I think I saw him on TV and I, you know, loved that they were doing good by those animals. I used to have a little statues of whales and wolves. But it wasn't like, it wasn't my. I didn't know I was gonna go into wildlife biology or conservation or adventure. It was cool to me, but it wasn't like Michael Jordan was cooler to me than Glen plake at that time. Marc Gutman 10:31 Oh, absolutely. Those were the days. And Jordan was was was a figure against the calves. And so what did you think you were gonna do? Like, what was the plan? Like you're, you know, you're in Cleveland, and you're, you're starting to get older. What do you what do you what was your plan? Yeah, we're Gregg Treinish 10:47 going way back here. I don't know. Let me think like, after I got out of the firefighter astronauts age, I probably didn't want to be an astronaut at some point for sure. I didn't used to, I realized I just said that. It wasn't like my obsession, or anything I did used to think wildlife or marine biologists were incredibly cool. And I did have a period of time when I said I'd be a marine biologist, for sure. I don't know, a lawyer, like my dad's a lawyer. Maybe I was gonna be aware. I don't know. I don't know. I think I always knew I would run my own business that I would probably start something or run something. I never really took direction. Well, which is what that's probably about. I definitely had a period of marine biologist, I think that was pretty consistent. I can't remember what those ages were. Or why even other than maybe TV shows about the ocean and thinking that was super cool. I had a big cousin who was a surfer, and maybe that was part of it. I have a big cousin who's a surfer? Maybe that was part of it. I don't know. Marc Gutman 11:58 Yeah, you know, my father's a lawyer, too, out of the Midwest. And all I got out of that was Don't be a lawyer. That's what he was told me. He was like, Don't do this. And he loved it. He was just like, there's too many lawyers and go do something. Go do something different with yourself. But so when you when you left Cleveland, when you when you when you left high school, would you go do? Yeah, Gregg Treinish 12:16 I actually got I went to Boulder. And was a junior because I had gotten kicked out of high school and started going to junior college in Cleveland when I was 16. And so I got a two year headstart and went out to Boulder as a junior and had just two and a half years there, moved up to Breckenridge from there and started being a ski instructor raft guide, live in the ski bum lifestyle for a while. And then when I went and hiked the Appalachian Trail, there wasn't this moment that I've talked about frequently, but it was halfway through. And I was pretty low. I'm just asking myself like, what the hell am I doing out here and worn down and it had rained for God knows how many street days. And I just had this one moment where I picked up a rock constructed at a tree and just started sobbing and fell down in frustration and kind of vowed a life of service in that moment. That was where I really decided that I was really fortunate growing up, you know, we weren't, we certainly weren't living in bel air or anything, but we were fine. And my dad did well, and my mom was a teacher and did well. And I just think that living a life of purpose really matters. And it was kind of that moment that helped me see that it had been building up to that, obviously. So I went and worked in wilderness therapy and worked with kids who had struggled and I was I struggled as a teenager, for sure, and was labeled an at risk youth and all kinds of things. And so I thought that would be my passion. But the more I was in the outdoors, exploring the more I I realized how much I wanted to understand what I was seeing and understand the ecology around me. But that my passion is really for representing all those creatures that don't have a voice and representing nature and wildlife and the environment. Because I think it's one of the greatest atrocities what our species is ever has done to every other species on the planet. I think every other species who were here in many cases before us have been completely disrupted by humans. And I'd really love us to find ways to live in more balance with the rest of the species on this planet. Yeah. And in getting Marc Gutman 14:36 back to that moment of frustration on the 80 what do you think triggered that? What what brought that all about? Like, where would your life been going? Gregg Treinish 14:45 Yeah, I mean, I did have the opportunity to go and spend some time in South Africa when I was a kid and I traveled a little bit and just saw poverty and saw how other people live and realize that my life is not like everybody else's in the world. And I even saw that in the Appalachians, right. Like in the southern Appalachians, man, like, they're that lifestyle is different than suburbia in Cleveland. And so I just was exposed to that. And it really struck me like, Man, I'm so lucky. The fact that I can go hiking for six months, I feel really lucky, you know, I worked my butt off to receive up enough money to be able to pay for it and, and have always had a really strong work ethic. And yet I was given such a head start at life, when I think I realized that then and, and I just felt like, as I said, selfish for being out there and not doing anything beneficial. I was maybe inspiring a few people to get off the couch. But that wasn't what I meant by living a life of purpose. And I think it was a combination of exhaustion and being out physically exhausting myself every day mentally exhausting myself. And when you hike like that, when you're on an expedition, and this is still true for me today is is 99% of what you're doing is just this mental gymnastics, you're constantly looking at relationships and interactions you've had, and it's reflective by nature, because you're you're just you're brought down to the core, right? Like, you're depleted and your and your emotional. And so it was a lot of that. And it was it was thinking about that privilege, combined with the exhaustion, I was feeling that I had a pretty low point at that moment. And decided that that what mattered to me most at that point in my life was that my life mattered, and that my life was gonna be about others. And not just myself. Marc Gutman 16:56 Yeah, and so you had some time in wilderness therapy, and I'm familiar with how that works, and what that's all about. And, you know, for people that don't know, that's where a lot of times at risk are other other kids that are working through things go. And it's in a therapy environment. So there are therapists, and it's in using kind of the, the everything, Greg just talking about getting outside really, really revealing yourself, and figuring some things out. So it's great, great programs, and you're doing that. But there comes a point where you and a friend go on a massive trek across the Andes. How does that come about? And what's what's the purpose behind that? Yeah. Gregg Treinish 17:37 So on the Appalachian Trail I just absolutely fell in love with with going at a human pace. You know, when you're on a bike, you got to get off that bike to go and talk to somebody, same thing on a horse, same same thing with really any other mode of travel. But when you're on foot, you just, you're there in the moment, right, like you're moving at the way our brains evolved to move. So something about that really captured me. And then this idea of Expedition travel like long distances, you know, the Appalachian trails Georgia domain, which is quite a large distance and the topography changes so much that the ecosystems changed so much. So, I just fell in love with that. After about two and a half years working wilderness therapy, I really wanted more of that I really wanted some more personal adventure and more introspection and, and I wanted to do it in a place where I was going to be exposed to new languages to new 20,000 feet. It wasn't and we looked all around the world, right? Like I looked at, there's a long trail in New Zealand, there's this trail of the Great Divide trail, which I'd still love to do someday up in Canada, but Marc Gutman 18:55 none of them were Gregg Treinish 18:57 as enticing as the Andes because the Andes was, again 20,000 feet, the Amazon ketua Myra, the Incan history that was there. expanish. Obviously, throughout it, the Atacama Desert really intrigued me. And it was just this. There was so much I just finished reading into thin air, which takes place in the quarter whitewash. And obviously didn't want to have that kind of experience there. But it was just this this one thing after another and then at some point, I'm sure there was just a confirmation bias taking over where that was where we had to go. And so I've researched it and we researched it and and I reached out to about 10 friends and in the end, there was just the one friend Dale who was last who is like, yeah, I'll go and it was excited to go. And yeah, we thought there would be hundreds of people doing it. We thought there would be so many and it turns Marc Gutman 19:56 out we were the first to ever do it. And how long did that Taking is that how then you were recognized as adventure of the year because you were the first to to make that Trek. Gregg Treinish 20:07 Yeah, it was 667 days or 22 months that it took us to do it straight, straight, with the exception of three weeks when I came home with typhoid fever to recover from typhoid fever. So I flew home. And then we went right back after about three weeks. And, and I had other diseases along the way that I probably should have come home for, but I did. So yeah. And then the recognition from natgeo was for that track. I don't know if it was as much because we were the first or just because how we did it, we kind of went down with no plan. And the plan was just to go to the equator and head south. And and we did, we thought we would probably have to skip the Atacama Desert, we figured out a way to do that. We again didn't know we would be the first to do it, we just kind of along the way realize that nobody else had done it. There was no information about it. There was three other guys who had done heights, the length of South America, Kyle Busch, B. We actually did it through all the Americas and then got arrested in Russia, once he crossed the Bering Strait. But he had done it on on frontcountry. Really with cart, George meegan in the 70s had done it with a card and then Ian Reeves had just finished it hiking mostly on roads and knowing known pathways. So we were the first to really do it off trail off. We were on trails as much as possible. There's aren't that many trails. And we were trying to stay as close to the spine of the Andes as we could without Marc Gutman 21:46 relying on roads. And so what what happens when your adventure of the year like what don't mean now Gregg Treinish 21:54 you get a call. So that happened because I gave a presentation in a parking lot at that Outdoor Retailer. So that I mentioned earlier for granite gear, who was a sponsor, a sponsor, they gave us some free packs. To me, that was a sponsor that I wrote like 300 letters to companies and three wrote back and I was like kotula steri pen and granite gear. So we got a call. Three weeks after we gave that presentation in a parking lot. It's in Salt Lake City at a hotel that since burned down the city Creek in and they were like, can you be in Washington in a month or whatever it was. And we're like, why? And he said, You've been selected as adventure of the Year by natgeo. And we went there and Andy skorpa had gotten it the year before. So he was on stage presenting and talking about, you know, his year of adventure the year and then looked at us and just said this will change your life. And I had no idea what he meant then, but it did. It was amazing. Marc Gutman 23:00 In what ways I mean, I'm sure you can't say all of them, but like, how did it change your life? Like, like what happened? Yeah, Gregg Treinish 23:07 right. Like I can't say all cuz I don't know, like, I don't know what my life would have been the other way right without that. But what it did is give me access to World Class explorers, it gave me a credential to be able to really have some momentum behind what I wanted to do and and my path from there. I hadn't known that I was gonna start this when I got adventure year by any means. But it gave me the, I guess the credibility to be able to start adventure scientists. And yeah, it was from deepening the relationship in that geo and being able to lead expeditions around the world to having some public awareness about what we had done, being featured in magazines and stuff like that really gave us the the, again, the opportunity to then go out and get additional sponsorship to do biological expeditions, which we started doing after that. And it just, it was just the opportunity. It was a stepping stone for sure. Marc Gutman 24:16 A common question I get all the time is Mark, can you help me with our brand? Yes, we help companies solve branding problems. And the first step would be to schedule a no obligation brand clarity call, we'll link to that in the show notes or head over to wild story comm and send us an email, we'll get you booked right away. So whether you're just getting started with a new business, or whether you've done some work and need a refresh, or whether you're a brand that's high performing and wants to stay there, we can help. After you book your brand clarity call, you'll learn about our brand audit and strategy process will identify if you need it. A new logo or just a refresh, will determine if your business has a branding problem. And you'll see examples of our work and get relevant case studies. We'll also see if branding is holding your business back, and can help you get to the next level. So what are you waiting for? Build the brand you've always dreamed of. Again, we'll link to that in the show notes, or head over to wildstorm comm and send us an email. Now back to the show. Yeah, and that's, that's a great segue. So like, what was the impetus or the inspiration or the lightbulb moment for adventure scientists, because your things are going good, right? Like why? Why why start this business? Yeah, so Gregg Treinish 25:46 I totally kill it, I think just continued doing mega expeditions and, and live that life and now would have been incredibly fun. But as I said, like, purpose was what really mattered to me and the enemies. You know, ostensibly, we're, we are trying to learn about sustainability and and we're really passionate about human sustainability. Even then, you know, we learned a lot we saw people who had been living with traditional methods of light of agriculture and and solar cookers and all kinds of things, we learned a ton there, how to treat water with just the pop bottle, throw it up on your roof, and UV light works like pretty cool. So there was some purpose there. And we had hoped to share some of the lessons we learned. I think we were in our early 20s. And, and still, like a new adventure, and a little naive as to how real change happens in the world. But anyway, on that trip, I was asking myself like what's next, and really fell even deeper into the ecology space and thought I would work with lions and learn how to save lion some way and wrote a professor Scott Creel, who's here and asked if I could come study, how to save lions with him, and came up here and started working on my second degree, which was in wildlife ecology. And started before I ever made it to Africa with Scott, I started tracking links, and Wolverines, and grizzly bears here. So I'd go out on my boss's truck and take his snowmobiles out and would park as far as we could go. And then I'd hop on my skis, and go for two or three days following Wolverine tracks and documenting their behavior and collecting DNA samples. And it was awesome. What a fun trip, or projects really. And then we were I started working on owls in California, and I worked with other species, and just really felt like I was making a difference. And using my outdoor skill set to do it. In my outdoor skill set, let's be clear, I'm not a world class climber. I'm not a I'm not really good at any sports, I just have persistence and creativity and optimism was, is so translatable to the business world and what I do now. But anyway, yeah, I was doing those things and feeling good about it. But it just occurred to me that if we could rally, others who love the outdoors and get them to do it, the impact would be so much bigger. I had also been taking biological expedition. So I've worked with some scientists. In the course of my degree, they actually used it for part of my degree and developed a protocol to put my brain in the in the headspace of a grizzly bear Wolverine and make decisions like they would make as they moved across large landscapes. And so I walked from the eastern end of Yellowstone to the western end of Idaho, which is about 600 miles and a month, and tested these least cost path analyses or predictions on how wildlife will move across the ecosystem and documented how many fences they have to cross and got a lot of information that way. And then went on to do expeditions in Mongolia tracking Wolverines. And, and I just saw that that there was this real opportunity to mobilize people who wish there was a way they could give back, we thought it would be cool to do that, at least, maybe they didn't have the same selfish feeling I did, but they thought it would be meaningful and cool to do that. And then I was doing these things as a scientist that I didn't know much about, like, take seven years of training to learn how to track hours and it didn't take seven years of training to learn how to identify Wolverine tracks. So I just knew that that possibility was there and I googled how do you start a nonprofit and reached out to Conrad Anker, who's one of the world's greatest mountaineers here in Bozeman and he said he joined my board and then it was just one thing after another with Conrad, I was able to get Celine Cousteau and john Bower master and and Ross savage who's the first person to row across all three oceans and first woman to row across the Pacific and Atlantic. And I just got these heroes of mine together and and started doing started figuring out how do you run a nonprofit? Marc Gutman 30:15 It's incredible. And, and I want to pick that up there. But as you're talking, it also really dawned on me. And you may have a different definition than most people have two words. And so I'd like you to think about, like, how do you define adventure or an adventure? And then how do you define science or scientist? Because you were just talking like, to me, a scientist is someone with a bazillion years of training and they wear a lab coat and they you know, and they do all this stuff. But clearly, you found sort of a different definition. Yeah, Gregg Treinish 30:53 so adventure. First of all, like, I think it's more traditional than than not, I don't know, Explorer is a different term and is pushing any boundary in my mind. But adventure is is pursuing passion in the outdoors. It's it's like, it's certainly outdoor sport bass, but that can be hiking for some people and just like, adventuring into a place you haven't been before to look at birds, or it can be climbing peaks and, and skiing down or whatever. Yeah, it's pursuing your own boundaries in the outdoors is my definition of adventure adventure. People who volunteer for us are everything from day hikers to World Class climbers. So it's a huge spectrum. Scientists are scientific, you know, I do think it takes training, I do think it takes method and following a scientific process. But man, there are field technicians, which is what I was a field technician that are doing real science and really important science and our volunteers are doing science and really important science. So would they call themselves scientists? No. What a lot of people allow me to call myself a scientist, absolutely not. No way. Any PhDs who are listening to this, like, I get it, you guys are scientists. I am a wannabe for sure. But it's like I hang around a lot of scientists and I've learned a lot about science and how science works. And, and it's exploration, right, it's under, it's pushing boundaries. It's looking at things with a new lens, it's looking at things with innovation and technology and entrepreneurial spirit behind it. You know, at the end of the day, I'm not really an adventure. Most I'm an adventure, but I'm not a scientist, I am an entrepreneur, I'm a community organizer. I bring people together with a common purpose and a common goal. And make sure they have the skills that they need to be successful. In order to go out and pick up animals, cats so that a Harvard Medical School can read research, I can look at them for antibiotic resistance, you don't have to be a PhD, you have to know how to identify scat. Like say this is poop, you don't even have to know whose poop it is. And you have to be trained how to properly pick it up. So you don't can't contaminate the sample. That's not rocket science. It's important, it's meaningful. It's contributing to science. But you know, so you're a citizen scientists or community scientists you're not a you're not a PhD Nobel Prize winning scientists for doing that though. Marc Gutman 33:38 No and and I wouldn't make that assertion right but the the idea that we can be additive that we can use our day hiking our adventures these things that you know, I have the same feeling I feel self for sometimes when I'm up in a helicopter going through a mountain or you know, doing whatever, it's, it's really an amazing opportunity. And, you know, a moment of confession, my 11 year old daughter and I last night we were doing a word game around poop yet it's a different word for poop. And scat was one that you know, I had that helped to stump her but to think that you know, us having this like, you know, how many words can we come up with poop? that we could go out and be additive to a harvard medical researchers project is really empowering and really amazing. So when you started this business, you googled it you got Connor at anchor, you got some other famous people to help me your board and give you some visibility. I mean, was it an immediate success? Did it take off or what happened? Gregg Treinish 34:36 Yeah, it was pretty cool. Like so that was in January or February maybe it was late January, and then by May, we have collected the highest known plant life on Earth, up to 22,000 feet and we started that got a bunch of press. And then it was like one thing after another there was people rolling across the Arctic Ocean and we met up we connected them with a researcher looking at whale olfaction and playing plankton and trying to understand how whales track points and and then we, we had projects that would just build back then it was actually the adventurers who were saying, like, I'm going here, I'm doing this, I'm going there, what do you have for me to do? And then I would find a researcher and put them together, we realized after some time that the impact, there's tough, you've got these one off expeditions, in many cases, yeah, you get some great samples for scientists. But what we do now is everything is driven by the scientists. So the scientists come to us and they say, I need samples from here, I need this many samples over this period of time. And the real value proposition is scale, they can't get the temporal or spatial scale that we can get, and certainly access to these places, too. But there's a lot of scientists, scientists go into this because they love the or these field scientists do. Science is a huge, huge category, obviously, everything from solving the pandemic to field biologist studying tree kangaroos and Papa New Guinea. But so a lot of them do have outdoor skills. But the reality is, is you can go to one peak, and you raise a ton of money and to be to be able to do that you get a grant to be able to do that. And it's $40,000 expedition and go climb one of these Himalayan peaks. And what we do is, it's like, oh, you need data from every 8000 meter peak on the planet, or in the Himalaya, you need data from everything above 6000 meters on the planet, it's just not possible any other way. And so when we flipped it and started being scientist driven, the impact really became clear and what this organization can be really started to crystallize. Marc Gutman 36:46 Yeah, and what is your sort of day to day in life? Like is the CEO and founder Are you just off on expeditions hanging out? Like just you know, hanging off a mountain being cool? Or like, what's what's your day to day? Like? Gregg Treinish 36:59 Yeah, no, I am doing that I, I try to do at least one awesome adventure every year. And and I have two small kids. So admittedly have have slacked at that a bit. I've had to do Alaska on attended packraft this year, in the Brooks Range. But those are the exception. Those are the most fun parts of my job, for sure. I raise money, I manage a team, I set vision and strategy. I work on developing new projects and finding leads working with our networks, through the World Economic Forum, or TED or National Geographic, to come up with new projects, and what's going to be the most impactful work with our donors on understanding the opportunities that their connections could provide on partnering with them to build these projects and actually get them off the ground. I spend a lot of time managing the team and dealing with the, the ups and downs of that. And yeah, and and thinking strategically about what's next what the chess pieces are, and what the moves are, that are going to help grow this organization and help it reach its potential. Marc Gutman 38:18 Yeah. And so is there anything that you didn't share? that reveals like, what's hard about this, like, what's hard about running a nonprofit that not only just a nonprofit, but that one that deals with kind of this idea of adventure in science and putting it all together? Like, what, what's hard about this thing? Gregg Treinish 38:36 Yeah, there's the kind of the basic layers of everything that any business owner or entrepreneur deals with, right? It's like, you got to sell your idea, you got to market your idea, you got to have proof of concept. You have to, you know, have good market strategy and all this. So it's those basic things for sure. I think nonprofit is not always taken as seriously in the business community. I think there's challenges with that. Yet, we have a fee for service revenue stream, too. So I've had to build out the business model on the business as well. We also have philanthropic support, which has been essential to our success. With a with a for profit, you take on investment, and you know, and that really to get it off the ground. You can't do that with a nonprofit, you can't sell equity in the company. And so you have to be profitable from day one. That that's a huge challenge. You have to be in the black every year, unless you've got a reserve fund, which we now do, but you've got to build that up and it's taken a decade to be able to even think about spending more than we make in a year. So that's a huge challenge. I think that the the competition with for profit for getting talented individuals is real. You know, by being able to take on that debt and can offer bigger salaries right away, it's hard to compete with those salaries, though, I'm really proud of what we can offer our staff now. But it's taken a long time to get there, I spent the first nine months doing this selling bumper stickers. So I would like I brought those three letter like BGN, bumper stickers to Bozeman, and nobody was selling me here. So I print off a bunch. And then I'd walk around to the people who sell bumper stickers and then say, Hey, you know, I didn't tell him this, but it was, Hey, I just bought these for 30 cents, you want them for $1. And they would sell them for $4. And it was like, that's how I had enough money to eat. So it took starting the second business to be able to do that. And I didn't pay myself until probably September of that first year. And that was eight bucks an hour. So it was it was a long slog to do that. And then I think by March, I was able to hire my first employee. So it's it's been slow incremental growth. And, you know, it's no different than adventure and expeditions to like, the cool thing about expeditions for me is not like this, like, ooh, adrenaline seeking. That's not my type of Expedition. It's its persistence, its creativity, its problem solving. It's you're in this shitty situation, how you can get yourself out. And it's avoiding those situations to begin with. I think that is exactly what running a business is. It's looking ahead and coming up with where you're headed and your route or your strategy, and it's avoiding pitfalls and trying to see around corners, and then inevitably, you're in shitty situations that you didn't foresee. And it's using creativity, optimism and persistence, navigate around those things. And keeping a clear head while you're doing it and making sure that you're looking at all options, getting advice where you can, can't always do that on expeditions, but you can sometimes, and and looking at people who have been there before you so that you're not reinventing the wheel all the time. So it translates really well. Absolutely. And you must be doing something right, because I'm doing the math correctly. Marc Gutman 42:14 Your business is coming up on 10 years, or did you just celebrate 10 years of Yeah, January Gregg Treinish 42:20 this year was our 10th anniversary, and we're using the whole year to celebrate our 10th Marc Gutman 42:25 year anniversary. Congratulations. That's an amazing accomplishment. Most businesses don't make it to like year two. So to make it 10 years is huge. So 10 years for adventure scientists, what you mentioned a big part of your, your job is thinking about the future, thinking about the future vision. What What's next? What's the future for adventure scientists? What's that look like? Yeah, we Gregg Treinish 42:47 want to be the greatest data collectors at scale on the planet. And we've got some work to make that true. We want to gain experience internationally and are exploring projects in many different fields, but in timber and, and in wildlife connectivity and in agriculture, and really helping to improve crop yields using natural nature based solutions is the field. And we're looking at how to really do that, with this organization. And what we've built here has incredible potential to accelerate impact accelerate the ability for our species to operate with less impacts with less negative impact on the planet. And I there's this line in a Bronx tale, which is great movie from God knows when in the 90s I think and Robert De Niro's in it, and he's talking to his son, and it's, there's nothing worse than wasted potential. And that's what this organization is, isn't certainly not wasted potential, but so much potential, and is just look forward to the future of us becoming a real resource for problem solvers to get there quickly, more quickly than they otherwise would. And we're not we already there. And it's important to recognize the accomplishments already. And it's important to recognize that we've had a tremendous impact on on a number of different fields, from antibiotic resistance to microplastics, to improving crop yields to helping to restore and preserve species that are extirpated from ecosystems. And it's been amazing what we've been able to accomplish in 10, short years, and I'm so proud of our impacts that we've already had. But I'm always thinking about how we do that on a bigger scale and how we make sure that the data we've collected and the data we will collect are going to have as much impact on as many lives human and otherwise as possible. Marc Gutman 44:47 Yeah. And so with that in mind, if people want to help you collect data at scale, how do they get involved? How do they learn more about adventure scientists? Gregg Treinish 44:56 Yeah, adventure. scientists.org is a great place to go where on all the social media channels on adventure scientists, as well, you know, we need a lot of people, this is a movement, and we need a lot of people working together to make it happen. It's the volunteers. Absolutely. If you like being in the outdoors, we don't always have project everywhere on Earth, we are working towards that, and hope for that to be true at some point. But we have great opportunities to use your outdoor skills to further a number of different fields. And we need money to do what we do. We need that through philanthropy and and also through projects. If you're scientists who could benefit from data collection at scale, you got to reach out to us talk to us, we also really need a lot of business acumen that like I said, we're building the fee for service revenue stream at the same time that we're learning how to market our overall mission and overall organization better, as well as marketing these projects better. So we need support like that as well. advice, and, and connections. So we welcome everybody to come and reach out through the website. And I'm Greg and adventure scientists.org. So people can email me as well. Marc Gutman 46:17 Fantastic. And we'll make sure to link to all those resources in the show notes. So it makes it really easy for people to click and be able to, to contact you and either volunteer, donate or help in other ways. So Greg, as we come to the end of our time here, I'd love you and I, we kind of touched on this, but I'd love you to think back to that that young version of yourself whose skin at eight years old and living in Cleveland, and, you know, what do you think he would say, if he saw you today? See, cool, do more. Gregg Treinish 46:51 I don't know. He'd say, that's pretty cool, man. I think he would be proud of me. You know, more importantly, I think I've got an amazing wife and two amazing kids and the organization is is great. But I think that those other things matter as much to me and, and my family, my parents are still with me. And I'm amazing. And my brothers, my little brothers just had a baby two days ago. And I'm really close with both my brothers. And I think those are the things that matters much to me as anything I've built at work, and it's just one part of a much broader picture for me. So I think he would be proud that all those things are true for me today too. Marc Gutman 47:37 And that is Greg reinisch, founder and CEO of adventure scientists. I love this idea that we as those that love the outdoors can help contribute to science by doing what we love. I want to stress that you can be an Everest mountaineer, or a day hiker or anything in between. Adventure scientist probably has a project for you. Congratulations to Greg and the entire team that adventure scientists is they celebrate their 10th anniversary this year. Here's the 10 more 10 more years of creating impact. This is truly the entrepreneurial spirit, rewriting the script and impacting our world. The big thank you to Greg trench and the team it adventure scientists. We will link to all things Greg and adventure scientists in the show notes. If you know of a guest who should appear on our show, please drop me a line that podcast@wildstorm.com our best guests like Greg come from referrals from past guests and our listeners. Well that's the show. Until next time, make sure to visit our website www.wildstorm.com where you can subscribe to the show in iTunes, Stitcher or via RSS so you'll never miss an episode. A lot big stories and I cannot lie to you other storytellers can't deny ‍

What the Helena
Ep. 12: Healthcare, Community Care, WE Care!

What the Helena

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2021 12:36


Comin' at you this week with all the usual suspects: voter suppression, student debt, threats to healthcare access, and continued attacks on trans Montanans. As we speed toward the end of the session, more and more bills are making their way to the Governor's desk. Be sure to follow us on Instagram for all the most up-to-date calls to action! Coming up: Tuesday, April 6 -- Join us and some of our partners for a virtual Public Lands Rally from 12-1pm. We'll hear short speeches from Conrad Anker (climber, mountaineer, & author), Francine Spang-Willis (board member, Absaroka Beartooth Wilderness Foundation), Rachel Schmidt (former director, Office of MT Outdoor Recreation), and Andrew Posewitz (sportsman & hunting ethics advocate). And we'll remind our legislators to protect the lands we love. If you identify as LGBTQ2S+, consider submitting art, writing, or a letter of support to our upcoming zine by April 9th. If you need to be with other trans folks right now or if you are a parent of a trans, nonbinary, or Two Spirit child and want to talk with people who understand, email paxton@mhrn.org for information about support groups facilitated by the Montana Gender Alliance. If there is other support you need and can't find, or if you have dreams for what community support could look like moving forward, contact Izzy at izzy@forwardmontana.org. Take action on the bills mentioned in this episode! NO to HB176 and SB169 NO to HB689 NO to SB100 and HB676 NO to HB481 NO to SB379

Electric Election Roadtrip Podcast
Electric Election Roadtrip EP 10: Conrad Anker

Electric Election Roadtrip Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2020 30:15


Today we are joined by professional rock climber Conrad Anker to talk about climate injustice and effectively protecting our environment. This is episode 10 of 30 on our 45 day odyssey to bring you local stories about the many environmental solutions taking place across the country in the lead up to Election Day. Subscribe via the podcast platform of your choice by searching Electric Election Roadtrip!

The Cutting Edge
Nik Berry, Eric Bissell and Conrad Anker: The Russian Tower

The Cutting Edge

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2019 51:40


In this episode we travel to the Pamir Alai mountains of Kyrgyzstan for a special two-part show. The first part features a conversation with Nik Berry and Eric Bissell, who went to Kyrgyzstan in August with Dave Allfrey and Brent Barghahn to attempt the first free ascent of a huge wall in the Ak-Su valley: the northwest face of Pik Slesova. Their route eventually went free at 5.13a, with eight pitches of 5.12 or harder. The line the Americans chose was partly along an old Russian climb (the Moroz Route), which previously had been followed in part by another American team, Conrad Anker and Alex Lowe, way back in 1995. In the second part of this episode, we chat with Anker about his climb, and how he feels about modernizing older routes for free climbing. The Cutting Edge is presented by Hilleberg the Tentmaker, with additional support for this episode from Black Diamond Equipment. This podcast is produced by the American Alpine Club.