There was also a shock to me on Tanger Island, in the Chesapeake Bay, with James “Ooker” Eskridge, the community’s mayor. On paper, this man and I don’t have much to say to each other. He was in the most Trump voting district in America by some measures, and he’s very, very, very conservative. But I had the luxury of spending real time, feeling his energy, and experiencing his hospitality. I have heard that his house is disappearing due to the rising sea level and climate change. He won’t quite call it climate change, but he recognizes that the water is rising and wants to do something about it. He wants sea walls and federal money spent to save his city. We were on the coast of his island and saw tombstones in the water. You can show climate change data, watch an Al Gore presentation, and watch the temperature rise. But then you can wade through a graveyard. Hearing him describe having to dig up his ancestor in his backyard, he talked emotionally about it. It made it real. I didn’t expect to have that experience at all. I didn’t expect to be with someone seemingly so different from me.
Climate change comes up a lot in the show. Was that your intention?
Making a show about the outdoors is making a show about climate change. We can’t get around the subject. At each location, I witnessed the effects of climate change: Death Valley’s drought and lack of water beyond expectations; the firefighting training for those forest firefighters; in Idaho, the smoke from western fires and the low levels of the river, and the high temperatures of the river. In Minnesota, one of our segments with the Abaz family, the farming family, tried to grow climate-resistant trees that could tolerate higher temperatures because the forest we were standing in would disappear. And so, what kind of new forest can we create instead of just mourning that? They develop through basic biology to harden the woods, so their children have trees too. When we were in Duluth, Minne, We could barely breathe. Minnesota now has massive fires. We couldn’t see Lake Superior. I had to wear an N95 mask because it burned inside when we weren’t shooting.
Everywhere we went, we had a climate story. Sometimes it was more of a focal point of who we were talking to and the story; other times, it just affected how we could make the show.
What do you hope people can learn from this show?
I want people to see the outdoors as a place where we can experience interfaces between the wide range of differences that make up this country. Everyone should be able to see themselves on the show – we have different time zones, ecologies, ages, body shapes, and abilities. I hope we have reflected the nation’s diversity, both in its natural and human states. I want this show to be a mirror for everyone.
The indigenous people I spoke to have a culture where they are part of nature instead of apart from nature. We have to relearn that. That was a big takeaway, especially as the climate gets more volatile in the coming decades. That way, we all need to stay connected. This is not just something to use. It’s something to belong to.