Reefs, Ruins, and Revivals: Belize's Melting Pot
Belize has a decidedly different history and culture from the rest of Central America. English is the first language of this small nation, reflecting the its British ancestry, yet Belize retains deep historic connections among its many residents of Maya ancestry, and is proud of its strong African roots among the Garifuna people. Belize also has world-class archaeological sites, vast tracts of intact rain forest, and some of the world's richest marine treasures.
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Yakima: The Quest for Hops
The explosion of craft beer brewing across the United States has created a widespread interest in the process of beer making. A beer festival in Tucson, Arizona, leads us to some local brewers and sends us on a quest to the origin of what makes beer different-hops. Nearly all our hops are cultivated around Yakima, Washington where we follow the annual harvest. We sample as many products of hop production as possible.
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Panama's Wild West
An hour or so distant from Panama's burgeoning capital and its great canal, a broad peninsula juts into the Pacific Ocean. The Azuero Peninsula is home to traditions, landscapes, and people different from those of the capital and its suburbs. Residents of Azuero celebrate what sets them off from the rest of Panama. And they are huge fans of baseball.
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Argentina's Route 40: From the Steppes to the Lakes
Argentines maintain that Patagonia begins at the Río Colorado in the Province of Neuquen. Traveling south, we cross that river on Ruta 40-Route Forty-in a volcanic landscape amidst a vast desert, the majestic peaks of the Andes always present on our right. Within the slopes of the Andes are myriad lakes and towns constructed by European immigrants-and expatriates, but never far from the arid, windswept steppes of Patagonia. More secluded are the Mapuches-Indians who resisted the European onslaught and today struggle to retain their culture. In Patagonia, all roads lead to San Carlos Bariloche, the crown jewel of Ruta 40, a Swiss-type resort on the shores of the great Lake Nahuel-Huapi. On a sailboat we travel westward, passing from desert scrub on the shoreline to the lush rainforests and snows of the Andes.
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Heart of the Wilderness: Wyoming's Wind River Range
The Wind River Range in western Wyoming is the state's largest mountain range, nearly one hundred miles from north to south. With dozens of massive peaks, it is also home to the wildest country in the lower 48 states. Much of it is protected in wilderness, which we commemorate on the 50th anniversary of the passage of the Wilderness Act of 1964. On arriving, we visit ancient foothill sites where Shoshone Indians left examples of their art, historic locations of Indian battles, and scars of mines and ghost towns before plunging deep into the wilds of the Wind Rivers-on foot.
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From Vaquejada to Jangada: Into Rural Ceará, Brazil
A small state in Brazil's dry northeast, Ceará is home to a variety of traditions not found in the rest of the vast country. The inland bush, called the sertão, is home to cowboys and an odd rodeo, while the coast supports fishermen whose wooden boats are little changed over the last several centuries. Ceará is home to Brazil's most important religious shrine, its last lace-weavers, and a startling array of tropical fruit.
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Bogota to the Amazon: A Trip Across Colombia
From the urban capital city of Bogota and its famous Ciclovía dedicated to bicycles, this sprawling nation offers a unexpected variety of cultures and urban landscapes. We hop from the mountains to the extreme southern tip of the country to see wildlife and to visit indigenous villages of the people who live in the heart of the Amazon jungle.
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Gift of the Andes: Mendoza, Argentina, and Its Wines
Argentina's nostalgic Ruta 40-Route Forty-passes along the base of the Cordillera of the Andes from the extreme north to the southernmost road in the nation. On its way Ruta 40 meets the famed wine capital of Mendoza, whose dedication to Malbec wine is recent, but whose wine production dates to colonial times. We linger in vineyards and bodegas, sampling the varieties of Malbec and Argentine food. Farther south Ruta 40 penetrates the northern reaches of Patagonia, a windswept desert bordered on the west by the incomparable Andes, and massive pre-Andean volcanoes.
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Coffee and Culture in Oaxaca
The state of Oaxaca is Indian country, and its landscapes the most diverse of any Mexican state. Host David Yetman samples food in a traditional Zapotec market in the high valleys, navigates among crocodiles in mangrove swamps on the coast, and joins in the harvesting, drying and roasting of coffee in the cloud forest.
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Favelas & Samba - Brazil
The shanty towns for which Río de Janeiro is famous (or notorious) play a pivotal role in the city's cultural history. Favelas, as they are known, rise precipitously from near the ocean far up the hillsides. Often bereft of minimal municipal services, they are home to a rich cultural life, their own social organization, and along the way in their history, have provided the artistic and dramatic talent for Brazil's most important international artistic contribution, Carnaval in Río. We visit favelas and speak with residents there.
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American Wilderness

American Wilderness

In this documentary, the wilds of Baja California, Mexico, Oregon, British Columbia and Alaska are shown as big gamer hunter Arthur R. Dubs tracks horned sheep and a polar bear in the North American wilderness, along the way seeing wild stallions, frolicking bear cubs, herds of elk and mule deer. Between adventures, Dubs, who is described in the film as a "bachelor father," is shown rafting and boating with his three daughters on the Rogue River near his home in Southern Oregon, an area that inspired many of the popular stories by American novelist Zane Grey. The first part of the film follows Dubs and his colleagues on four hunting trips to remote areas of the continent. Abiding by a code of conduct and ethical hunting standards developed for sportsmen by The Boone and Crockett Club, Dubs sets out to fulfill his lifelong dream of collecting trophy heads of four subspecies of sheep found on the North American continent: the Desert Sheep of western United States and Mexico; the Big Horn of British Columbia and Alberta, Canada and the Northern U.S.; Stone's Sheep of the Rocky Mountains; and the Dall's Sheep, found in the Yukon and in Alaska. The film documents Dubs's activities over seven years and on four separate trips as he pursues his prey, showing the dangers he and his colleagues surmount and the sights of animals and natural beauty they encounter. Dubs succeeds in his goal of shooting animals of record-breaking size, while being careful to select only mature animals near the end of their life, killing them quickly and saving them from a slow and painful death caused by other animals or weather. After each trip, the animal is measured by game officials, according to Boone and Crockett Club procedures, and compared with the specimens of other hunters over the years in order to determine its score and rank. Having placed the trophy heads of the four sheep on his wall, Dubs goes on other hunts. In the Great Sandy Desert of southeast Oregon, Dubs and his colleagues see antelope, stallions and bald eagles. They fish in a beaver pond, tell yarns around the campfire and one of his colleagues shoots a four-point trophy buck. Upon returning home, after reading about a thirteen-foot high bear that has been terrorizing Eskimo villages, Dubs makes arrangements for a new hunt. He and his friends fly to Anchorage and from there take a small craft flown by a bush pilot past Mount McKinley, where they fly into a snowstorm. Needing a place to refuel, they land near the cabin of Tex, a hospitable refugee from Berkeley, California, who is creating for himself a simpler life, living alone with his wolf companion, Luke. After refueling, Dub and his partners follow a tributary of the Yukon River to Point Hope, Alaska, located one hundred miles north of the Arctic Circle. There the natives are undeterred by a blizzard, but are concerned about the mutilation of one of their huskies by the huge bear known to them as the "White Fury." When the weather clears, Dubs and his friends search for the bear by plane, and then land near the remains of one of its kills. After covering the plane to keep the oil from freezing, they set out by foot. A seal killed by the bear marks his recent location. After spotting the bear they must take fast action, because the animal, which can move at great speed, is heading toward them. An avalanche breaks the ice around them, putting them in great jeopardy of being swallowed up into the ground. With three shots, Dubs kills the animal and he and his companions work quickly to strip his skin and take his head, as his full body is too heavy to take back to the village. They return to the village, two and a half hours away, just as the sun sets. That evening, the Eskimo women prepare the bear's hide and head to be shipped. Although they cannot be sure that this bear is the legendary one, it is the largest they have ever seen, and the village holds a great victory celebration in their traditional style. Upon returning to the United States, the animal is measured and declared to be the world's largest bear, which the newspapers report. The head is sent around the world and displayed at various events. The film ends with the hope that these stories will encourage other expeditions into the American wilderness.

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