Épisodes

  • BONUS: Trout Spawning at Mountain Pond
    Jun 1 2026
    On a blustery November day, we stumbled upon brook-trout spawning in Mountain Pond.
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    4 min
  • Episode 5: Julia Daly and Rachel Hovel of University of Maine Farmington at Mountain Pond
    Jun 1 2026
    Episode 4 takes us west to Mountain Pond in Rangely to get out on the lake with Julia Daly and Rachel Hovel, professors at University of Maine Farmington. In 2007, Julia got a wild idea to put a temperature buoy in Tumbledown Pond, and now nearly twenty years later, Julia and Rachel have continuous temperature and ice monitoring data across 9 ponds. We learn about how Julia’s background in geology and Rachel’s ecology background come together to form research questions and study design. They also tell us about how they are mentoring the next generation of scientists to think about lakes and ponds as sentinels of change.
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    1 h et 5 min
  • Episode 4: Sarah Nelson of Appalachian Mountain Club
    Jun 1 2026
    In episode 4, we travel north to talk with Sarah Nelson, Director of Research at the Appalachian Mountain Club, who has played a key role in keeping Maine mountain pond research rolling and relevant for over 15 years. Sarah tells us about mountain pond sampling from a helicopter as a graduate student and we learn about how acid rain and climate change impact pond ecosystems.
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    1 h et 11 min
  • Episode 3: The Founders of Maine Mountain Pond Research
    Jun 1 2026
    Join us for a conversation with Matt Scott, Linda Bacon, and Steve Kahl, the founders of the High-Elevation Lake Monitoring Project. From this oral history of Maine mountain pond research, we learn about why they started this project that pioneered long-term monitoring in remote areas and how they made a lasting impact on lake science and stewardship across the state.
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    1 h et 10 min
  • Episode 2: Hawk Metheny of Appalachian Trail Conservancy at Speck Pond
    Jun 1 2026
    Join us on a bluebird September day as we hike up to 3,685 feet to meet Hawk
    Metheny at the highest pond in Maine- Speck Pond. Hawk is the Vice President of Trail
    Management at the Appalachian trail Conservancy that has been working Speck Pond
    for over thirty years. We talk to Hawk about his approach to maintaining the balance
    between quality recreational experiences while protecting natural resources. He
    answers important questions, like why the backcountry infrastructure at Speck Pond is
    better for maintaining water quality than primitive, dispersed camping and what it means
    to find solitude at a mountain pond that sees thousands of visitors a year. Hawk talks
    about his personal connection to Speck Pond and the transformation of people who visit
    Speck as a hiker and leave the pond as a steward. Hawk leaves us with an abundant,
    forward looking vision for inclusive, public access to the mountains and protecting
    freshwater resources through forest conservation and Indigenous stewardship.
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    50 min
  • Episode 1: Introducing High Water: Stories of Maine's Mountain Ponds
    Jun 1 2026
    Welcome to High Water: Stories of Maine's Mountain Ponds, a four-part podcast series about Maine's mountain-top gems and the people who have studied and stewarded them for decades. In this introductory episode, meet your hosts, Amanda Gavin and Bryan Wentzell, and get a preview of the stories ahead.
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    5 min