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Outside Podcast

Science of Survival: A Very Old Man for a Wolf

Outside Podcast

Outside Podcast

Sports, Wilderness

4.42.1K Ratings

🗓️ 24 April 2018

⏱️ 44 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

One day in 2005 or 2006, a young wolf in Idaho headed west. He swam across the Snake River to Oregon, which was then outside the gray wolf’s range. After he established a territory, he became the most controversial canid in the state. Dubbed OR4 by Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, he was the alpha male of the first pack to live in Oregon in more than half a century. For years, biologist Russ Morgan tracked him, collared him, counted his pups, weighed him, photographed him, and protected him. Environmentalists rejoiced. Cattle ranchers called for his death. OR4 continued making bold raids on livestock and became known for his enduring competence as a hunter, father, and survivor. But nothing lasts forever.

Transcript

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0:00.0

This episode of the Outside Podcast is brought to you by the all new Jeep Wrangler,

0:05.0

giving you the freedom to pursue adventures, like former pro-surfer John Rose.

0:10.0

Anybody who's a professional athlete, there's an arc, you know, there's a shelf life.

0:16.0

For me, I was a pro-surfer, and I was never the best, but I carved my own niche out and I did it for 13 years.

0:22.0

It was everything to me. out and I did it for 13 years.

0:22.6

It was everything to me.

0:24.2

In 2009, John went to Indonesia on a surf trip,

0:27.5

right when he got hit by a magnitude 7.6 earthquake.

0:31.2

And I became sort of a first responder by accident. One month later was Haiti.

0:36.6

The big catastrophic earthquake in January 2010. I thought I was going for two weeks. I stayed for two years.

0:43.0

So that was the inception of Waves for Water.

0:46.0

Waves for Water is an aid organization that helps provide clean water in more than 40 countries.

0:51.0

We have one sole purpose, provide access to clean drinking water for developing communities.

0:57.0

Not just developing communities, but recovering communities too.

1:01.0

For the last eight years, whenever a disaster strikes that threatens drinking water,

1:05.4

like an earthquake, tsunami, or hurricane, John and his team show up with suitcases full

1:10.2

of water filters.

1:11.8

In the first three weeks after Hurricane Maria devastated Puerto Rico,

1:15.3

he set up 3,600 filtration stations and got clean water to 100,000 people.

1:21.6

Thinking about that trajectory was so fast.

1:25.0

I mean, I bought 10 filters, my own money, went to Indonesia,

1:28.0

and three months later in Haiti, somebody offered me $40,000 to do as much as I could with that.

...

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