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Field Trip

Everglades National Park

Field Trip

The Washington Post

Society & Culture, History, Science, Nature, Places & Travel

4.6976 Ratings

🗓️ 5 July 2023

⏱️ 64 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Many people mistake the landscape of Everglades National Park for a swamp, full of mosquitos and razor-sharp sawgrass. Technically it’s a wetland, home to a stunning array of wildlife and beloved by visitors and conservationists alike. But that view of the Everglades as a treacherous and hostile place informed more than a century of efforts to tame and transform the landscape in ways that are still playing out today.


In this episode of “Field Trip,” Washington Post reporter Lillian Cunningham tells the story of how the water flow through South Florida was radically altered to make the region more habitable for people. Then, how that unintentionally disrupted one of the country’s most important ecosystems. And finally, why we’re racing to unravel those mistakes today. 


We’ll meet Jerry Lorenz, an Audubon Society scientist who’s spent more than three decades trying to protect his beloved roseate spoonbills and other species of birds.  


We’ll journey by fan boat across the marshes with Houston Cypress, a member of the Otter Clan in the Miccosukee Tribe of Indians of Florida and an advocate for Everglades restoration, and Durante Blais-Billie, an environmental and Indigenous rights advocate from the Seminole Tribe of Florida. 


We’ll learn about the legacy of environmentalist Marjory Stoneman Douglas and how groups like the National Parks Conservation Association and the Captains for Clean Water are following in her footsteps today.


And we’ll hear from Eva Velez of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers about what went wrong originally and what it now means to approach engineering “with nature.” 


We have incredible photos for this series. You can see them and find more on the National Parks here


“Field Trip” would not have been possible without the support of Washington Post subscribers. If you’re not yet a subscriber, you can unlock a special deal as a listener to this series. Your first four weeks are free when you sign up here.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

You're going to. There's a quote I keep hearing from people who live and work around Everglades National Park.

0:21.0

It goes like this, the Everglades is a test. If we pass it, we may

0:27.6

get to keep the planet.

0:31.0

That quote is bouncing around in my head as I zip across Florida Bay in a speedboat.

0:40.0

It's a clear day, blue sky, some white puppy clouds.

0:47.0

Well, this is glorious.

0:50.0

Well, you near the

1:04.8

Florida Keys. But instead of drinking margaritas at a seafood shack, I'm out on the

1:11.9

water. even better.

1:14.0

Jerry Lorenz slows the boat so we can look at a fleet of about 20 black frigate birds coasting on the wind above us.

1:27.0

Wow.

1:28.0

All these birds are that.

1:30.0

And that is

1:33.4

And that is spectacular.

1:36.6

These birds can fly for up to two months without touching down.

1:42.2

Wow.

1:43.0

Jerry's got his hair in a ponytail and a bandana tied around his head.

1:49.0

He's wearing a back brace.

1:51.0

He seems pretty relieved we're not moving anymore. It's a super calm day, but

1:56.7

even the soft bumps getting here were pretty hard on him.

1:59.9

I'm hoping to come home without a lot of pain.

2:04.4

Decades in the field here have taken a toll on his body.

...

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