Emergence Magazine Podcast

Emergence Magazine
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Apr 7, 2026 • 52min

Wildflower Beauty and the Search for Home – by David George Haskell

David George Haskell, biologist and lyrical nature writer, narrates intimate stories of four wildflowers around his Atlanta home. He explores rock-pool snorkelwort, columbine shifts from moths to hummingbirds, transplanted daffodils and their cultural meanings, and spring beauty’s tiny bee partnerships. The conversation traces seasonal rhythms, pollinator changes, and how close observation grounds us in shifting landscapes.
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Mar 31, 2026 • 35min

Making Light: An Invitation… – by Kerri ní Dochartaigh

Kerri ní Dochartaigh, an Irish author known for evocative writing about place, grief, and our ties to the natural world. She revisits childhood in Derry and explores holding light and darkness together. She describes Celtic Bealtaine rituals, tender domestic moments amid wider suffering, and how making light can be an act of care and world-making.
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Mar 24, 2026 • 1h 5min

A Thousand Ways to Live Within the Seasons — A Conversation with David G. Haskell, Dara McAnulty, and Emmanuel Vaughan-Lee

Dara McAnulty, naturalist and writer from Northern Ireland who senses seasonal belonging. David G. Haskell, biologist and lyrical nature writer linking science and sense. They discuss how our senses shape seasonal experience. They name wildflowers, pollinators, cultural symbols like daffodils and pumpkin spice, and how attention, loss, and inequality alter how people live within the seasons.
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Mar 17, 2026 • 34min

Summer Light: A Failed Essay in Four Parts – Jake Skeets

This week, Diné poet Jake Skeets brings us into the rising dust, big sky, and bent light of summers on the Navajo Nation, and explores how the body is not separate from the seasons, rather one of the many terrains upon which they play out. Now living amid excessive heat warnings, sandstorms, and wildfire haze that test his love of the summer, Jake asks how such extremes will reshape our intimate and ancestral relationship with the seasons.Read the essay. Discover our latest print edition, Volume 6: Seasons.Image Credit: Evelyn Dragan / Connected Archives
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Mar 10, 2026 • 1h 8min

On the Road with Thomas Merton – Fred Bahnson

Fred Bahnson, essayist and author who retraces Thomas Merton’s pilgrimage, reads and reflects on Merton’s 1968 journey. He visits redwood cathedrals and desert hermitages. He explores solitude, monastic rhythm, pilgrimage versus conquest, and how landscape shapes contemplative life.
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Mar 3, 2026 • 33min

The Springing Time – Melanie Challenger

Can we learn from more-than-human beings how to bring our bodies into a more direct conversation with the seasons? In this week’s story, bioethics and history researcher Melanie Challenger explores how our culture insulates us from experiencing seasonal signals in the natural world, ultimately impeding our ability to respond to ecological change. Examining how animals and plants translate important shifts in the land into meaningful activity, Melanie reflects on what it would take for humans to reawaken the same attunement to the changes, great and small, unfolding around us.Read the essay.Discover our latest print edition, Volume 6: Seasons.Photo credit: Credit: Alex Strohl / Verb Photo
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Feb 24, 2026 • 20min

Echoic Memory – CMarie Fuhrman

This week, author and poet CMarie Fuhrman listens to the forest speak its old stories through the roll of thunder, the river emptied of salmon, and the howl of wolves in Idaho’s remote Frank Church Wilderness. In these sounds and silences, she remembers the people and knowledge that colonial history has tried to erase. Recognizing herself as a “person of ground,” she contemplates the past as something that we can call forth into the present, and memory as moving in the opposite direction of prayer—down into the Earth.Read the story.Discover our latest print edition, Volume 6: Seasons.Photo by Luca Werner
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Feb 17, 2026 • 23min

A Hollow Bone – Terry Tempest Williams

In a season of loss, how does absence offer a greater understanding of presence? This week, Terry Tempest Williams brings us into her love affair with Utah’s Great Salt Lake, a place that nourishes twelve million migrating birds, bison herds, and deep-rooted human communities, and which is now in retreat. Contemplating how we might be in service to this dying lake, Terry summons us to be present with the losses in the landscape.Read the story.Discover our latest print edition, Volume 6: Seasons.Photo by Christina Seely
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Feb 10, 2026 • 34min

Tortoise Station – Lydia Millet

Depicting a distant age in which river guardians, mothmen, and condor trackers strive to protect a dying world, novelist Lydia Millet asks whether we can navigate species loss not through visions of saviors, but through patient devotion to what might yet emerge through care. Amid extreme temperatures and invasive insects, this short story follows a team of caretakers who track, feed, and hatch the clutches of “the old ones”—ancient desert tortoises nearing extinction.Read the story.Discover our latest print edition, Volume 6: Seasons.Credit: Daniel Farò / Connected Archives
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Feb 3, 2026 • 28min

Memory of Winter – Zoë Schlanger

For plants, the moment of spring emergence is the gamble of their lives, says journalist Zoë Schlanger. They rely on a convergence of genetic instructions from within and environmental cues from without to know when it is time to bring new life into the world. But what happens when seasonal markers and a plant’s molecular memory, shaped by generations of winters, no longer agree? Seeing this increasing tension between timelines reflected in her own journey toward parenthood, Zoë asks how we can steward a world where the fragile conversations between biological clocks are being rewritten.Read the essay.Discover our latest print edition, Volume 6: Seasons.Photo by Sam Laughlin.

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