Vintage crosscuts that were made between 1880 and 1930 are often the tool of choice for trail workers who maintain the country’s roughly 112 million acres of protected land. That’s ahead of chain saws and newly made crosscuts. And the reason this old tool has stuck around so long -- even in an age when there’s a newer, better gadget coming out every year -- it goes way beyond the physical saw itself. The rise, fall, and unexpected second life of the crosscut saw is also the story of how America created the very concept of wilderness.
The Wilderness Tool
581- It's Howdy Doody Time!
579 BONUS- Towers of Silence: Vulture Conservation
580- Mr Yuk
579- Towers of Silence
The Power Broker: Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
578- Anything's Pastable: Eat Sauté Love
577- The Society of Ambiance Makers and Elegant Persons
576- Chambre de Bonne
Roman Mars Describes Athens GA As It Is
575- Autism Pleasantville
574- The Monster Under the Sink
The Power Broker #03: David Sims
573- Toyetic
572- WARNING: This Podcast Contains Chemicals Known to the State of California to Cause Cancer or Other Reproductive Harm
Roman Mars Describes Santa Fe As It Is
438- The Real Book [rebroadcast]
Significant Others: A Sneak Peek at the Woman Behind Benedict Arnold’s Betrayal
571- You Are What You Watch
The Power Broker #02: Jamelle Bouie
570- The White Castle System of Eating Houses
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Gastropod
The Atlas Obscura Podcast
Freakonomics Radio
Anne of Avonlea
Great Expectations
The Indicator from Planet Money
Planet Money