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Crude Conversations

EP 168 What the wilderness teaches us with Luc Mehl

Crude Conversations

crudemag

Society & Culture

5884 Ratings

🗓️ 12 October 2025

⏱️ 100 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this one, Cody talks to Luc Mehl. He’s an adventurer, educator, and the author of “The Packraft Handbook.” He’s traveled over 10,000 miles across Alaska using only human power — by foot, ski, paddle, bike, and even ice skate. He’s traversed all of the state’s major mountain ranges, competed in more than a dozen Wilderness Classics, and has become one of the most trusted voices in wilderness risk management. But what makes Luc’s story especially compelling isn’t just the miles he’s covered, it’s how those experiences shaped his philosophy around safety, decision-making, and the responsibility we all carry in wild places. He says that it took the loss of a friend for him to wake up to the dangers of packrafting. So, over the past 10 years, he’s made a point of developing a safety culture within the packrafting community, and within the Alaska recreation community at large. Luc has shaped his entire life around the wilderness, in the miles he’s traveled and in how he approaches risk, safety, and growth. These days, it’s not about proving himself — it’s about what it means to be a good partner, to make it home safely, and to keep going year after year. He’s hesitant to call himself an explorer, knowing the deep Indigenous history of Alaska’s landscapes, and instead calls himself a visitor — someone who’s still learning. And what he’s learning now isn’t just coming from trips or new tech, but from sociology and self-help books — tools that help him slow down, stay aware, and better care for himself and the people he travels with. Because progress comes from the lessons that follow our mistakes, the moments that remind us of how awareness, humility and patience are what keep us moving forward.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to the show.

0:13.3

In this one, I talked to Luke Mel.

0:16.8

He's an adventurer, educator, and the author of the Packraf Handbook.

0:23.3

He's traveled over 10,000 miles across Alaska using only human power.

0:31.0

By foot, ski, paddle, bike, and even ice skate.

0:38.2

He's traversed all of the state's major mountain ranges,

0:42.7

competed in more than a dozen winter classics,

0:46.0

and has become one of the most trusted voices in wilderness risk management.

0:51.9

But what makes Luke's story especially compelling isn't just the miles he's

0:57.3

covered. It's how those experiences shaped his philosophy about safety, decision-making, and the

1:05.4

responsibility we all carry in wild places.

1:17.5

He says that it took the loss of a friend for him to wake up to the dangers of packrafting.

1:24.5

So over the past 10 years, he's made a point of developing a safety culture within the pack rafting community and within the Alaska recreation community at large.

1:31.7

This podcast is made possible through the generous support of the Crude Magazine Patreon

1:37.6

subscribers. If you already subscribe to the Crude Magazine Patreon, thank you. For those listeners who aren't,

1:46.1

please consider subscribing at patreon.com slash crude magazine. I want to thank everyone

1:54.9

subscribed at the company man's here. These are the people who have subscribed to the crude

2:00.4

Patreon for $50 or more.

2:02.6

Trina Doober

2:04.6

Sewer Brewing Company

2:06.6

The Grind Coffee Shop and Juno

2:09.6

Derek Adolph

...

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