

Looking Back and Moving Forward Special
Season 40 Episode 1 | 43m 28sVideo has Closed Captions
Outdoor Idaho looks back on its legacy and looks forward to the future.
For 40 years Outdoor Idaho has been bringing beauty, nature, science and wonder into your living room. It’s time to look back on the legacy and look forward to the future. In this special celebration broadcast we’ll find out how Outdoor Idaho came to be, who made it the masterpiece that it is today and what we’re doing to ensure Idaho’s outdoor stories continue to be told.
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Outdoor Idaho is a local public television program presented by IdahoPTV
Major Funding by the Laura Moore Cunningham Foundation. Additional Funding by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and the Friends of Idaho Public Television.

Looking Back and Moving Forward Special
Season 40 Episode 1 | 43m 28sVideo has Closed Captions
For 40 years Outdoor Idaho has been bringing beauty, nature, science and wonder into your living room. It’s time to look back on the legacy and look forward to the future. In this special celebration broadcast we’ll find out how Outdoor Idaho came to be, who made it the masterpiece that it is today and what we’re doing to ensure Idaho’s outdoor stories continue to be told.
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
How to Watch Outdoor Idaho
Outdoor Idaho is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, and Vizio.

Outdoor Idaho on YouTube
Can't get enough Outdoor Idaho? Neither can we. Subscribe to the Outdoor Idaho YouTube channel for even more great content. You'll find full episodes, sneak peeks, behind-the-scenes footage, and exclusive content you won't find anywhere else. Subscribe today!Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipMore from This Collection
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From preschool to Ph.D., some Idahoans learn that they learn best in the outdoors. (56m 46s)
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Outdoor Idaho takes a deep dive into the impact Idaho’s western white pine tree has had on society. (56m 46s)
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We examine some of the changes in Idaho in the past 30 years. (56m 53s)
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Outdoor Idaho brings you up close and personal to this exciting sport. (56m 46s)
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Outdoor Idaho seeks out some of our state’s majestic agricultural icons. (56m 46s)
In the Shadow of the Bitterroots
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“In the Shadow of the Bitterroots” will tell the stories of the Bitterroot Mountain range. (56m 46s)
Eyes of the Forest: Idaho's Fire Lookouts Special
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We examine the history and current uses of Forest Fire Lookouts throughout Idaho. (56m 47s)
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Join Outdoor Idaho as we dig into what it truly means to live and work in “Spud Country.” (56m 47s)
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Outdoor Idaho goes “Off the Beaten Path” to find places of wonder and delight. (56m 53s)
Joy Ride: Bicycling in Idaho Special
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Idahoans are finding joy using bicycles to get from one beautiful place to another. (56m 46s)
Idaho Geology, A Convergence of Wonders
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The evidence is everywhere; astonishing things have happened to a place we call Idaho. (56m 47s)
Salmon River Lodges And Legacies Special
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Journey by raft and jetboat down Main Salmon River to rustic lodges and other landmarks. (56m 47s)
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipMUSIC Funding for Outdoor Idaho is made possible By the Laura Moore Cunningham Foundation, committed to fulfilling the Moore and Bettis family legacy of building the great state of Idaho, by the Friends of Idaho Public Television, by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and by the Idaho Public Television Endowment.
WATER SOUNDS AND MUSIC BEN YSURSA, FORMER IDAHO SEC.
OF STATE: Mother Nature did a heck of a job in Idaho, and I think outdoor Idaho captures that.
It shows the Gem State, the Idaho that I know and don't know, a lot of things I don't know about Idaho, you watch Outdoor Idaho to see it.
And I really appreciate the quality of the programing and the fact that, I don't know, we always say they're the top Public TV station in the nation.
I think it was especially a source of comfort during the pandemic.
And somebody else said it, and I will reiterate it, it was comfort food for the soul.
FORREST BURGER: Volunteers have always been key to our success.
People like Judy Austin, who has spent countless hours of her time doing research for us.
And all the while admitting she's not exactly the outdoorsy outdoorsy type.
JUDY AUSTIN, RETIRED HISTORIAN/EDITOR: I don't hike.
I don't camp.
I don't do any of that stuff.
I walk around the neighborhood with our dog.
Outdoor Idaho has has brought outdoor Idaho into our house, lower case outdoor Idaho into our house, beautiful areas that I will never see.
FORREST: We've also relied heavily on environmental experts, politicians, outdoor enthusiasts, as well as federal and state employees to tell our stories.
Leo Hennessy has helped us on several Outdoor Idaho episodes.
Oh, not bad, Come on in.
LEO HENNESSEY, FORMER ID NON-MOTORIZED TRAILS COORD.
: Well, some of them were a long time ago, and I came to Idaho in 1989 as the Non-Motorized Trails Coordinator for the state of Idaho and I wanted to mountain bike Hells Canyon.
I heard about this deep canyon.
And so we went down there and we found out that the Public TV was doing a show on it.
And I met Bruce.
He said, you want hey, do you want to ride in our jet boat?
We're going to go the full length of the canyon.
So, what we could do is we could ride a section of the trail and then we'd get to the end.
And then we could jetboat back.
But we didn't know that he expected us to pay.
And basically, we didn't have any money, and finally he relented and said, Yeah, we'll pay.
So that was my first experience with Public TV.
FORREST Luckily for us, Leo didn't hold a grudge.
In fact, he ended up catching the Outdoor Idaho bug.
LEO I'm just amazed at what your crew can do.
And the cameraman is one that really amazed me.
We'd be carrying, you know, up to maybe 75 pounds, just us with pack rafts or backpacks.
And then they had the camera.
I do remember offering to carry equipment and I was told very politely no, because this is a very valuable camera, and if it drops we're going to be in trouble.
So, I basically did not carry anything unless I was asked, but I offered all the time.
JAY KRAJIC Boy, this is fun.
MUSIC This is the benchmark.
MUSIC JUDY: Idaho Public Television is accessible to just about everyone in this state.
This really is Idaho's public television station, not Boise's, Idaho's.
I also think that's one of the reasons why Outdoor Idaho is a valuable program, because it does cover the whole state in its subject matter.
And one of the best things about the program is the people who are interviewed for it.
Take John Freemuth as a example.
And I'm sorry, he's not still here to be involved in this program, I might add.
But John's expertise about the outdoors when he would be interviewed by Bruce for any one of a number of programs, He's the person who has shown up on most programs over the time.
It was as if you were sitting in John's classroom.
JOHN FREEMUTH:There's sort of, I think, political solutions to difficult issues.
SHERI FREEMUTH, JOHNS WIFE: John loved Idaho, but before that he loved public lands and the West.
He studied government in college, and then he kind of brought those things together in his mind.
And this just turned out to be a great place for him, because public lands is a huge issue in Idaho.
GREG HAHN, FORMER IDAHOPTV PRODUCER: You know, he knew everything about the state, but he never sort of sounded like he was just sort of preaching at you, right?
He was interested in what you needed to know and how you needed it delivered to you, I guess, in a way that would really benefit, and which is why I think he was so perfect for a show like Outdoor Idaho.
CONGRESSMAN MIKE SIMPSON Change is coming.
Are we going to take advantage of it?
Are we going to design our future or are we're going to have it imposed on us?
GREG You know, Idaho's been divided forever along different lines right?
I mean, northern Idaho and southern Idaho have been at odds since the beginning.
You know, as a journalist, you're used to people coming out and being wary of why are you there?
You know, and, you know, what are you guys up to?
And I really think that outdoor Idaho is one of those unifying forces in Idaho.
And I saw it.
I've seen it around the state.
I've seen it when I drive up in an Idaho Public Television marked SUV.
I can't tell you how many people I've talked to over the years who have, you know, recognized me from Public Television or whatever and said, you know the Outdoor Idaho shows taught me how to go on vacation.
MUSIC SHERI Outdoor Idaho is absolutely an asset to all of us who live here in Idaho.
If we didn't have it, I don't know what would fill that void exactly, because the outdoors is what most Idahoans have in common.
It speaks to that, you know, Boise in who hasn't had a chance to get out further than the Boise River.
But it also speaks to the hunters and the fishermen who, you know, routinely spend their October's in the woods.
It also speaks to people who, its their livelihood is working for the Forest Service, their livelihood is working for the BLM.
They want to hear what outdoor Idaho has to say.
So, yeah, I think it brings the state together.
BEN To see the world of politics and what's going on around us and the fact that people cannot anymore agree to disagree.
And yet turn on Outdoor Idaho and you see this splendor and you don't see a lot of controversy going on between people.
It's man kibitzing with nature.
And I think it's a good, again, comfort food for the soul.
I don't want to overplay that, but it is.
These mountains draw you home?
I mean, there's other mountains, but not like these.
Not in my mind.
BRUCE REICHERT, LONGTIME HOST, OUTDOOR IDAHO: Somewhere there's a photo taken, maybe 50 years ago, that shows me and my buddies getting ready to hike into the Sawtooths.
The folks would say, "We'll pick you up in a week."
I don't think it's an exaggeration to say this is where I fell in love with Idaho.
Some things never change.
Of course, some things do.
People will often ask me if I'm a native of Idaho.
I tell them, "No, I came to this state with my pants on."
I came when I was about 10 years old from Minot, North Dakota.
And people in Idaho who complain about the cold know nothing about cold until they've spent a winter in Minot, North Dakota.
Our family arrived in Idaho in, I think, 1960, 1961.
Our family took to the state immediately.
We had a father who loved to travel.
I remember as a kid, we went down from Dixie to the Salmon River to see Buckskin Bill.
I still remember my mom yelling at my dad as we stuck rocks under the wheels of the truck so that we wouldn't fall off the cliff.
But we made it down there and it was pretty amazing.
And it made me realize that there's a lot more to Idaho than just the towns and cities, that there's a whole culture of people that live in that backcountry, who are real characters.
I lived in Boise with my folks for a couple of years and then I went off to high school, to seminary, and studied to be a Catholic priest.
As proof that someone in your life can make a big difference, Sister Mary Theodora was my seventh and eighth grade teacher at Sacred Heart School in Boise.
And she was convinced that I needed to be molded and shaped in a Catholic seminary.
I said, sure.
So I spent my high school days at Mount Angel Seminary in Oregon.
I'm sure I broke Sister Mary Theodora's heart, but I realized that the priesthood was not for me.
So I went on to college at the University of Oregon.
Then I moved back to Idaho and to Idaho City, this wild west town.
One of the first towns in the state, created by a gold rush.
There I became the editor of the Idaho World.
I taught school for a while.
I ran the newspaper and I began building my house.
Oh, and I tended bar at O'Leary's Saloon in Idaho City.
I had a lot of energy back then.
I was doing all those things pretty much at the same time, and that's kind of how I got into television.
I went down to Idaho Public Television and I said, "I'll give you my summer free."
So I started working on a show called Idaho Reports.
Doug Copsey, who was the host for Outdoor Idaho, decided to do something else and I said, "I think I could do this."
They needed somebody.
I was cheap.
The price was right.
And I've often joked that between my years in the Catholic seminary and my year tending bar at O'Leary's Saloon, that I was prepared to be the host and producer of Outdoor Idaho.
Idaho City allowed me to do all these different things and to build my cabin.
This is my place.
This is where my soul is.
And I've always felt good about that.
Welcome to my humble abode, my little cabin in the woods.
My goal was to make this unlike anything anyone else ever did.
And to heat with a woodstove, because I like to cut trees.
That meant not dividing the place up into little rooms.
And so about the only division is the one between the kitchen and the bathroom.
Upstairs is an open loft where the bedroom is.
So it's a real basic cabin.
I really didn't have a lot of money then.
I just had a lot of energy.
And so pretty much everything in here is from the forest.
And that's why I was able to build it.
REICHERT: What I think is amazing about this place: the floor.
This is from a big ponderosa pine up by Trinity Lake.
The beams are about 27 feet long.
They're about like that.
That in itself makes this place unique.
The vertical logs are another interesting part of this cabin.
They all came from a blowdown, up by Trapper Flap.
I got my chainsaw, cut them into 10-foot lengths and hauled them back here.
These beams were a leftover part of the floor, and I cut them up.
And then I had a little axe.
And whenever I wasn't watching a football game, I just take the axe and I'd beat on this and try to give it that old-timey look.
As you can see, there's a lot of stained glass.
I learned to do stained glass because in some ways it was cheaper than buying actual double-pane windows, which I've since put in after I got a little money.
And I made this for my mom for Mother's Day.
And when she passed away, I put it in this cabin.
It seems to fit.
When I look at it, I think of her and I think of the mistakes I made in this.
But, you know, it provides some light.
And what more do you need from a lamp?
I think the beauty of the cabin may be in all the little details that over the years I've done while watching pro football games on Sunday, or maybe it's pouring rain outside and I decide to figure out something to do in the cabin.
And that's kind of how I built this.
There wasn't a plan of attack in my brain when I started out.
It was more moments of inspiration that made me think, "Huh, yeah, that might work."
I suppose there's some similarity between this cabin and some of the Outdoor Idaho shows we've done.
You come up with a germ of an idea and you don't know much else until you really get into it and study it and think about it.
And then serendipity plays a big role, not only in building this cabin, but also in building Outdoor Idaho shows.
And you hope when it's all done that people enjoy it.
When I look at some of the older episodes, what I tend to think of is here's this young man, wet behind the ears, learning about a state, growing, and doing it in front of thousands of people.
And so there's always been a bit of humility when I look at Outdoor Idaho, because it's a learning experience for me.
If I haven't learned something new while working on a show, then that just means I haven't delved deep enough.
I do realize that I have had a dream job for some 40 years.
I still remember former Governor Phil Batt coming up to me and saying, "Reichert, you got the best damn job in the state."
And he was right.
I probably did.
And our goal was always to tell Idaho stories.
And I think the show was more than just a TV show to a lot of people.
For one thing, they got to meet their neighbors and they got to see what the rest of the state was like.
And it was one of the very few things, I truly believe, that could unite our fractious, politically complex state.
Everybody could love some part of the show.
Everybody could feel good about their state.
And it's not that we didn't cover politically difficult topics.
We certainly did.
Whether that was wildfire or wolves or water or public lands.
I mean, we were willing to tackle some pretty tough issues.
Probably the most difficult public affairs show was a show we did on wolves.
The show won every award we entered in, including an Emmy and first place awards and an Edward Murrow and all that.
But I think that was one of the hardest shows, because I knew that no matter how you approach that, there were going to be sparks flying.
REICHERT: After 40 years, it's hard to go back and pull out what you think were the shows that really mattered to you.
But one that comes to mind is a show that we did called 50 Years of Wilderness.
We took the time to go into each of those wilderness areas in the state and try to pull something out that made them special, made them different from the other wilderness areas.
And we kind of went to bat for this concept of wilderness.
It's the most restrictive land use management that's out there.
It made folks realize what outdoor Idaho's willing to go to bat for, and that's one of them.
When our Salmon Reckoning show aired, a former Fish and Game commissioner wrote to me and said, "You folks have done a lot of beautiful shows over the years, but maybe none as important as your salmon show."
And I would like to think that that show has or will make a difference in the fight to keep salmon strong and healthy in the state of Idaho.
Another show that comes to mind is the Idaho Headwaters.
Idaho's Headwaters took us into some places where we would never have gone otherwise.
I remember going on the back of a mule for 20 miles, looking for the headwaters of the Selway.
Thanks to an outfitter, we found it under a rock.
A long ways away from civilization.
We also hiked into the Sawtooths to find the headwaters of the Boise River, and that was a journey of almost 20 miles to get into Spangle Lakes.
That's one of the things that Outdoor Idaho has always been willing to do, to go the extra mile.
It is a hard one to give up.
I'm going to miss working on the show.
I'm going to enjoy watching my colleagues take it from here.
I think it is a trust that belongs to the entire state.
That is one of the few things that really can connect a state like Idaho, which is so fractious and Outdoor Idaho does that.
Well, I don't have any kids, but I do think in many ways Outdoor Idaho is in my blood.
It's a part of me, as much as any child is a part of any other family.
And certainly the people I work with, their friendship is important to me.
It's one of the things that has sustained me over the years, and I'm very proud to have called them my friends and colleagues.
LAUREN MELINK: There's something about beautiful imagery like this that makes your heart sing.
It's a visual symphony and it was captured by Outdoor Idaho videographer Jay Krajic.
For the past 16 years Jay has hiked hundreds of miles, rafted white water rivers, ridden horseback and climbed mountains - all in order to document the grandeur of Idaho, and the people who call this state home.
JAY KRAJIC, VIDEOGRAPHER, OUTDOOR IDAHO: So, I got a degree in still photography and through the course of graduating and trying to figure out what I wanted to do in life somebody mentioned if I ever wanted to get into television and when they did that the little light bulb went off and I was off, running.
And that's what I was going to do for the rest of my life.
MELINK: Watching Jay work, you can see there's a real sense of joy and devotion.
In the field, he's on the go non-stop.
Literally.
Moving his tripod from here to there and back to here again - waking at dawn for sunrise and staying up late for sunset.
KRAJIC: I had this passion for documenting things.
I can document things a lot better with video than still photography.
After working in the news business for 20 years, the thought of coming to work at a job where I can go hang out in the wilds of this very wild state and capture it, that was pretty appealing to me.
We have canyons in the south, beautiful, beautiful deep rugged canyons.
We have more mountains than I've ever seen before.
And rivers, nobody has rivers like Idaho, they're beautiful.
Yeah, it's such a beautiful state.
MELINK: But trust us when we tell you, capturing the majesty of this state isn't always easy!
Shooting video for outdoor Idaho means roughing it, with long hours, bad weather and lots and lots of driving!
KRAJIC: We camp a lot.
We sleep in tents.
We sleep on the ground.
I mean you're kind of self-contained when we go on some of these backcountry shoots.
You've got to have a water filter, you got to have a stove, you got to have fuel, you got to have food, you have to have rain gear.
KRAJIC: We have to do a lot of driving to get to places.
We cover the whole state, so you have to drive and drive and drive.
Yeah, we've driven a lot of roads.
We've driven a lot of highways and we've driven a lot of dirt roads and I've gotten a lot of flat tires.
But there are so many variables that will get in your way and really make things a challenge.
Jay: You done?
Bill Manny: Yep..is it stinging?
Jay: Ahh, a little bit.
Not bad, not bad.
MELINK: For example, shooting video while white water rafting.
KRAJIC: Rafting has been a big part of a lot of shoots and there was that one fateful trip down the Owyhee where I fell out of the boat.
That was fun.
And then the Middle Fork where we got stuck on a rock.
That's some fun video.
We got stuck on about three rocks in about 20 minutes.
And so, there's lots of adventure in different modes of transportation.
We did a show on headwaters, and we were on horseback, what 40 miles back to the headwaters of the Snake River in the far remote reaches of eastern Yellowstone.
Then we did the Selway River and that was about 25 miles on a mule, yeah those were pretty extreme trips.
MELINK: Plus, there's just a lot of walking, uphill, downhill, through streams, over rocks, across ridges, every type of walking you can imagine, Jay has done it with a video camera in hand.
KRAJIC: There's a lot of hiking involved.
You got to hike a mile, maybe two miles maybe 20 miles like we did a couple weeks ago.
MELINK: Being the mountain goat that he is, jay has scrambled up peaks all over the state, Castle Peak in the White Clouds, Ryan in the Boulders, Trapper in the Bitterroots and all nine of the 12-thousand-foot peaks.
KRAJIC: Something about the people who work for this show.
They like to climb peaks.
What is that?
I think I've climbed 20 peaks just working for Outdoor Idaho.
And I would get stressed out before every one of those hikes because you have to really push your body to get up to a 12,000-foot peak from elevation 5,000 feet.
But you got to make sure the gear works, and you got to make sure you work, and you have all the stuff you need to take care of yourself and do the job.
It's a big reward to finally make it to the top and see you have the video that you need to make a segment in the show.
Bill Manny: You're on top of the world.
Jay: For the last time.
MELINK: if you ask Jay about any part of Idaho, most likely he'll be able to tell you how to get there, when to go there and what to see there.
KRAJIC: I mean it's my job to go out and find all these places to go to and then capture it with a video camera.
I feel like I've documented just about every corner of this beautiful state and told a lot of different stories.
MELINK: From the Bruneau River in the south to the Seven Devils in the west, Upper Priest Lake in the north and Tetons in the east.
KRAJIC: We had a wonderful time at Upper Priest Lake, we got dropped off by boat, they went up the thoroughfare and got dropped off for a night.
That was such a cool trip, because we had clouds, we had rainbows, we had rain, we had sun, we had everything that anybody would ever imagine to get video of.
MELINK: We Idahoans, we're truly lucky that Jay has documented this for us to see.
He's preserved nearly two decades of sights and sounds.
Jay has left a visual legacy for all to enjoy.
KRAJIC: There's a lot to remember about this job.
There's been some really amazing adventures.
I couldn't ask for anything better than to just go out and shoot video of what I love to shoot video of.
Yeah, just get lost with my video camera, it doesn't get any better than that.
Jay: Boy this is fun.
LAUREN MELINK, PRODUCER, OUTDOOR IDAHO: I'm Lauren Melink, I'm the lead producer at Outdoor Idaho and when I think about the value of Outdoor Idaho I think about the potential that we have as storytellers to help people across the state of Idaho care about the outdoors.
And that includes, kids, SMITH DENNIS, SIX-YEAR-OLD, EVERWILD FOREST SCHOOL: And I like the outside because I've had a wasp on my hand, a jumping spider in my hand and another wasp on my leg.
I'm just I'm just like, okay.
Okay.
It's just a bug.
It's not going to bite me, but if I just freak out, I will get bitten.
teacher: Ahh perfect!
Where's your paper?
There it is.
BILL MANNY, IDHAO PUBLIC TELEVISION: I'm Bill Manny, executive producer at Idaho Public Television and what I love about Outdoor Idaho and what I love about the outdoors in Idaho is the power it has to bring people together, urban and rural, newcomer and old timer.
You know, you can't be an Idahoan and not love the outdoors and Outdoor Idaho brings the outdoors to every Idahoan.
JARED TALLEY, PROFESSOR OF ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES: No one has the answer, but we're all working towards the same goal, healthy environments, healthy communities, and here in Idaho, right?
So we have to work together.
Outdoor Idaho showing all those other sides in the stories is exactly what's needed to foster that, you know, not only collaboration, but solutions to the big problems we face is to hear the other, [How many people, in here, let's show the hands are against this National Monument?)
Listen to them and understand their story.
Um, whether or not we agree with it.
Just understand it.
And when we just hear each other's stories and start saying, yeah, actually that, that matters to me too.
I just never really realized it because I never heard it in that way, that's when things move forward.
RUTH BROWN, IDAHO PUBLIC TELEVISION: My name is Ruth Brown and I'm a producer and writer for Idaho Public Television.
And when I think future of the outdoors --- I think about kids and what we should teach them moving forward, we're lucky to live in a place like Idaho and we want to sustain that as long as possible.
MIKAILA ROGERS, FOUR-YEAR-OLD: Cause' we get to play a lot and climb trees.
We get to see roly polys and lady bugs.
HALLIE KNOX, TEACHER, EVERWILD FOREST SCHOOL: They're burrowing their feet in the sand.
They're climbing up trees and noticing their hands get sticky.
Earlier we had a moth, they were capturing holding them moth.
They were touching slugs.
They're washing their sandy feet off in the water when they notice it's uncomfortable, they're smelling leaves.
They're just exploring their environment in a really cool way.
CARTER WHITTINGTON, FIVE-YEAR OLD, EVERWILD FOREST SCHOOL: Oh yeah, I also like about the winter is that I can eat snow and we can make an igloo.
PAT METZLER, IDAHO PUBLIC TELEVISION: I'm Pat Metzler, I'm the director, videographer, editor and I've been working on Outdoor Idaho for 33 years now and it is a lot of fun watching kids learn about Idaho and the special places that we have and we have the ability to bring those places to people, to educate them about the history, the importance, those type of things, so hopefully when they're in charge we can have those places preserved.
T.R.
BROOKS, ASST.
PROF. OF PSYCHOLOGY: A show like Outdoor Idaho where you kind of go in depth and talk about the issues surrounding a place and its history and its natural history.
I think would instill a sense of respect for the land and responsibility.
Educating people about how to use it while preserving it and conserving it (now just pull it out really quickly so it doesn't bind on the saw there) Brooks: is a winning strategy.
I think that's the role a show like Outdoor Idaho can fill.
FORREST BURGER, IDAHO PUBLIC TELEVISION: Hi my name is Forrest Burger, I'm a producer, director for Idaho Public Television.
The future of the outdoors is going to be dependent on our children, they're the new shepherds of the land so to speak, at Outdoor Idaho our role is to teach them so that they can succeed.
CAYDEN PRIMAVERA, FOURTH-GRADER, EVERWILD FOREST SCHOOL: When I learn outside, I learn something new that my brain puts in knowledge in me every day.
Like I learn something new, but every day and like the river over there, I learned something new about it today.
I learned there's like bugs in the river.
KNOX: If they are growing up and their fondest memories, their most powerful memories, the memories where they most felt themselves and free and right were in this outdoor environment, I think it is natural that we will have a generation kind of rise up that is deeply and authentically passionate about the outdoors.
Not just because they think they should be, or they've been told the environment matters, but what does that even mean?
They're going to really care about nature.
They're going to know nature.
PAXTON RUSCIN, FIVE-YEAR-OLD, EVERWILD FOREST SCHOOL: I like stacking rocks.
I like climbing trees.
I like catching minnows.
I like catching bullfrogs.
um...I like digging.
I like looking for worms.
AARON KUNZ, IDAHO PUBLIC TELEVISION: I'm Aaron Kunz, the production manager here at Idaho Public Television for the last 11 years.
So what is Outdoor Idaho to me, it's 30 minutes of zen.
(bird call) Being out in nature, enjoying the outdoors.
What Outdoor Idaho brings is education, you get to learn about things, being inspired and every once in a while it brings that sense of awe.
BROOKS: Nature is important for our mental health and for our physical health.
And it's beneficial in almost any dose and in almost any form, it's not all equally beneficial.
It's great if you can get out on a multiday backpacking trip, but failing that if you just can sit outside on your porch for 15 minutes, open a window, or turn on Outdoor Idaho and, watch an episode, the research says that even watching a nature show can provide many of the benefits that we get from being in nature.
PRIMAVERA: Plus every day it doesn't matter if you did dirty, it matters if you have fun.
TALLEY: Scientists know things that you know about the very specifics of how the environment works, that a lot of people don't.
But it turns out that people working on the land, whether they be ranchers or loggers or even miners, they know a lot of things about how the land works, that scientists don't.
And that I think is maybe the most critical component of education, is helping us develop our own perspectives by listening to others instead of, just trying to figure that out on our own.
Nature, and the environment around us provides us a sense of wonder and awe that almost nothing else in our life does.
And that's, I think what people care about protecting.
But we also want to be able for our kids to go have the same sense of wonder and experience that we've had in the outdoors that could very well be lost if we don't take care of it.
It's that preserving that sense of wonder alongside the utility.
A hikers wonder, the snowmobiles wonder, the bird watchers wonder, the ranchers wonder, they're all the same sort of wonder and they enact it differently and we can absolutely work together and keep enjoying the things we, we enjoy with some humility and a little bit of good old fashioned working together.
ARVEN RICHEY, STUDENT I don't touch spiders, but I do catch, roly poly's and try to bring them home.
VOICE OF LAUREN MELINK: You bring 'em home.
Where do you put 'em to bring 'em home?
RICHEY: I'll just let them crawl all over the place in the house.
DENNIS: So inside you like play video games and then just like you set your mind on video games, but if you play outside, you're actually learning something and video games you're only learning controls and video games.
But if you're outside, you're learning about animals and bugs and all sorts of things.
CAMDEN PATRIE: My name is Camden Patrie.
I am ten years old, and I live in Ketchum, Idaho.
And I'm at the confluence of the Big Wood River and Warm Springs Creek.
And Outdoor Idaho inspired me to climb all of Idaho's 12,000-foot mountains in one summer, and in less than two years, I was on top of my final one.
DAVID PETERMAN: Hello.
We're David and Mary Peterman.
We've been supporters of Idaho Public TV since 1980.
MARY PETERMAN: And we've always loved Outdoor Idaho.
Every time we watch it, we learn something new about the flora, the fauna, birds, geology, how the culture relates to the environment.
It's just always so interesting.
DAVID PETERMAN: Yeah, what's particularly unusual about Outdoor Idaho is it's not just that it's visually stunning, but, uh, they do such a good job in telling us how the outdoors relates to the community and actually the government and how it impacts us all.
So, we're strong, strong supporters of Idaho Public TV and Outdoor Idaho.
BRADY FULLER: Hi there.
My name is Brady Fuller.
I am from Boise, Idaho, and I love Outdoor Idaho because it is a program that reflects the very best of who we are as a state.
I always say the best thing about Idaho is the people who call it home.
And the second-best thing is the backyard that we all get to share and enjoy.
And I think Outdoor Idaho does an incredible job of bringing these two things together in a way that really allows people of all abilities to get to enjoy the very best of our state.
You know, they were with me when I broke my leg on Borah in 2018, and they were with me, and I redeemed myself in 2020.
And whether it's a hike in the future or it's me enjoying one of their programs from the comfort of my living room, I truly look forward to all of the adventures to come with Outdoor Idaho.
WAYNE FULLER: I am Wayne Fuller.
I'm sitting at our family's cabin in the Sawtooth Mountains.
We have raised five children and seven grandchildren, bringing them to this cabin to explore and look at the outdoors and the Sawtooths.
We love Idaho, Outdoor Idaho because of the fact that it promotes usage of the outdoors with good stewardship and good conservation.
So, 40 years of good ideas and education is being celebrated, and we hope that you have 40 more or 100 more.
Thank you, Outdoor Idaho.
MARGARET FULLER: I'm Margaret Fuller, and I've been hiking in the Sawtooths since 1957.
And I love to watch Outdoor Idaho because the programs make me feel I am going to these remote and most beautiful places.
RANDAL STOKER: Hello there.
We're Randall and Carol Stoker, co-owners of Mountain Valley Farmstead, artisan sheep cheese in Carmen, Idaho.
We love Idaho and we love Idaho outdoors and Outdoor Idaho has a special way of capturing that what's best about Idaho is that it's always found in the outdoors, on the farms, the ranches, in the forests, on the rivers, in the mountains.
That's where Idaho really shines.
And we love Outdoor Idaho for that.
CAROL STOKER: We love everything about the beauty of Idaho.
There's so much beauty to behold, and the people at Outdoor Idaho know how to capture it just perfectly and put it on the screen so that we can all enjoy it.
RANDAL: Thank you Outdoor Idaho.
CAROL: Thank you Outdoor Idaho.
THIJS WOLFE: Hi, my name's Thijs.
CODY WOLFE: And my name is Cody.
Why I like Outdoor Idaho is because it inspires a lot of outdoors sports.
THIJS: I love Outdoor Idaho because it shows you all the outdoor things we can do in this wonderful state.
Presentation of Outdoor Idaho is made possible through the generous support of the Laura Moore Cunningham Foundation, committed to fulfilling the Moore and Bettis family legacy of building the great state of Idaho, by the Friends of Idaho Public Television, by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and by the Idaho Public Television Endowment.
To find more information about these shows visit us at idahoptv.org
Video has Closed Captions
Bruce Reichert looks back on his youth spent in Idaho’s wilderness. (1m 4s)
Preview of "Looking Back and Moving Forward"
We are “Looking Back and Moving Forward,” in this 40th anniversary celebration show. (31s)
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipOutdoor Idaho is a local public television program presented by IdahoPTV
Major Funding by the Laura Moore Cunningham Foundation. Additional Funding by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and the Friends of Idaho Public Television.