Archived from Monday, September 28, 2009
Paul Barnes, Editor of the documentary series "The National Parks: America's Best Idea," joins us for a live chat. Ask the award winning editor about his role in the project, as well as his extensive professional career.
Archived Chat
Beyond that the infrastructure of the parks and preservation of eco-systems in the parks needs serious funding. The whole system is woefully under-funded.
Call your Congressmen and ask them to release more funds for upkeep and for innovative programs for preservation. The Parks need your voice to protect and preserve them.
Our least favorite times are broad daylight with totally blue skies but with no clouds. As pretty as that may be sometimes, it can't compete with magic hour light.
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Audience Questions
The following questions were asked before and during the live chat.
Recent
It would've been interesting to take it to the present, and include Reagan, both Bushes and Clinton's nature policies, no?
You edited one of my favorite docs of all time,The Thin Blue Line by Errol Morris. Do you only edit for Ken or do you still work for other directors?
Dayton Duncan is understandably knowledgeable and in awe of the National Parks, but his on-camera pieces seem out of place, and better suited for a "behind-the-scenes" documentary. What prompted you to make this decision?
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Popular
In general interactive map functionality might be similar to the map I did for WCNY's “NYS Canal System Educators Guide”: http://www.pbs.org/engage/gallery/wcnys-nys-canal-system-google-map. We might show National Parks locations, border lines, custom logos (markers) with link to the Park's website, image gallery, custom logos and markers, search the map, load Park’s info by states. I think it might be very interesting project and it still possible to make it reality before September 27. If you find this idea useful and interesting please let me know. Thank you again for your work. Nikolay Gul
Due to lack of proper management of national parks in my country Nigeria,is there anything you can do to help reduce the exploitation of some animal's species.pls
September 2010 will mark the start of the 100th anniversary of the Christian Woman’s Board of Missions Jubilee tour. The goal of the tour was not only to raise money for the schools and hospitals the board supported, but to assist local churches in organizing their missionary programs. My grandmother, Florence Miller, who spoke at every jubilee, addressed 256 meetings at 158 locations ranging from the NYC Opera to the White House to the US Marshall’s house in Tucson. The Jubilees consisted of one or two large interdenominational meetings followed by meetings with individual denominations or churches. I have over 50 letters she wrote documenting her travels (over 13,000 miles by train and buggy) and even more newspaper articles from around the country.
So far, the program is excellent and thank you so much for this fantastic work, wonderful historical references, and beautiful images.
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Canyonlands
My goodness, I am so happy to hear someone else loved the Canyon lands National Park too. I loved it the first time I saw it. And that was in 1963. We also saw Arches that year and then it was called a national monument. We camped up there with two of our children in a tent. Wind storm came up and we had red dust all over everything by the time. Marjean Klotz
Canyonlands national Park
I left some thing off of my letter, we went on to Yellowstone after Arches.
Marjean Klotz
Canyonlands is Gorgeous
I visited/camped in Canyonlands also and was verrry impressed. However, as I learned all too well, rain in one Canyon, can mean 6ft of snow only miles away in the next Canyon in November.It was one of those "learn as you go" things. I still have fond memories of exploring that place. I can absolutely see why you think you were meant to retire there. It calls to you. Only by walking and hiking it though, can you get the full effect it can have on your spirit.
Thank You so much for doing this and bringing back great exploration and adventurous times of people past and present.
Two further questions
Congrats on such a well done documentary. Two further questions were brought to mind for me.
1) What important places in the US missed out on becoming national parks? I was struck by the struggle to create Smokey Mountain National Park and how many thousands were displaced in the process. I know that decades ago, there was an effort to make Lake Tahoe in the Sierra Nevada a national park, but it was too populated and developed for that to get much momentum. What other places?
2) What about re-introduction of other indigenous species back into parks where they had been eliminated? I was struck by the information on how wolves had been eliminated in so many parks, not just Yellowstone (essentially everywhere outside of Alaska). But what about other native species like grizzlies in the Sierra Nevada? Since the 1920s, the only grizzly in California is on the state flag ironically enough.
The California Zephyr
Amtrak's California Zephyr, particularly the Denver-SLC section should qualify as a National Park. For the person who may be elderly or disabled and may not be able to get around in a park, a trip on the CZ is the next best thing.
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