エピソード

  • Kyle Elmore - Tin Stacks, Popping Milks, and Houston Eats
    2025/11/14

    Send us a text

    Episode 4: Kyle Elmore – Tin Stacks, Popping Milks, and Houston Eats

    Kyle Elmore, better known as PopMilk Herping, has become one of the most recognizable names in Texas field herping — equal parts meticulous, ethical, and deeply passionate about the craft. In this episode, we dig into what it means to truly know your landscape, and how stacking tin becomes both an art and a responsibility.

    We talk about Kyle’s background in Texas and what drew him so deeply into the herping scene here, his philosophy on being an ethical field herper, and how South Texas continues to excite even seasoned locals. We also get into the herps that still elude him, the thrill of tricolor snakes, and Houston’s world-class food scene.

    It’s a grounded, funny, and thoughtful conversation that captures the spirit of Wood Fired Herping — where dirt roads, cold drinks, and good company come together in the name of snakes, stories, and shared passion.

    🎧 Listen now wherever you get your podcasts — and then let us know: what’s your herping ritual?

    Follow the show:
    Instagram — @woodfiredherping

    Photography IG — @z_e_herping

    Facebook — Wood Fired Herping Podcast group

    Website — woodfiredherping.com

    Youtube — @woodfiredherping

    Share the show, leave a review, and keep the fire burning.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    1 時間 16 分
  • Robert Hansen – Field Guides, Herp Review, and Cooking Alpine Trout
    2025/10/21

    Send us a text

    Robert Hansen has worn a lot of hats in the herp world — editor, author, educator, field naturalist, and lifelong advocate for science communication. For years he served as Editor-in-Chief of Herpetological Review, shaping the way our community shares its discoveries, and is now one of the creators of the recent, amazing, field guide, California Amphibians and Reptiles, co-authored with Jackson Shedd - and there's a new, bigger, even more ambitious field guide on the way!

    In this episode, we talk about the art and science of making field guides truly usable; from design and detail to accessibility, even down to color choices for range maps and why they're more important than you realize. We dive into the changing face of herpetology, the importance of clear communication, and how decades in education shaped Bob’s approach to both writing and educating.

    We also explore his long-running study of elevation transects in the Eastern Sierra and what long-term data can teach us that short studies can't, his philosophy on photographing herps, and his work on a near-future book that goes beyond California, and captures the Western US and Canada. And of course, it wouldn’t be Wood Fired Herping without a little food, this time, in between gas station hot dogs and Mexican street food, it’s brook trout, cooked on the banks of a creek in the mountains of Eastern California, with rice-a-roni and a surprise bottle of wine.

    Whether you’re an old-school field herper, a new enthusiast, or someone who just loves the intersection of science and storytelling, this one’s a warm and grounded conversation about legacy, curiosity, and what keeps us going back into the field.

    🎧 Listen, share, and pass it along to a friend who’s ever lost a night to maps, headlights, and mountain roads.

    Follow the show:
    Instagram — @woodfiredherping

    Photography IG — @z_e_herping

    Facebook — Wood Fired Herping Podcast group

    Website — woodfiredherping.com

    Follow the show:
    Instagram — @woodfiredherping

    Photography IG — @z_e_herping

    Facebook — Wood Fired Herping Podcast group

    Website — woodfiredherping.com

    Share the show, leave a review, and keep the fire burning.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    1 時間 2 分
  • Marisa Ishimatsu — Herp Photography, AI, and Melted M&M’s
    2025/09/29

    Send us a text

    Marisa Ishimatsu is a photographer, herper, and educator whose images define how many of us see California’s reptiles and amphibians. Her work has shaped field guides, articles, and conservation efforts — and in this episode, we dig into what it means to capture herps honestly, ethically, and beautifully.

    In no particular order, we cover, amongst much else:

    • Federally endangered San Francisco Gartersnakes
    • The role of photography in science and education (and Emily Taylor’s field guides)
    • Traveling and herping across the globe
    • Inclusivity in the herp community and why it matters
    • Ethics of herp photography, and letting photos tell deeper stories
    • Food, culture, and yes… how melted M&M’s fit into all of this

    This conversation goes wide and deep, and it’s exactly what I hoped for when I brought Wood Fired Herping back: stories, ideas, laughs, and depth.

    🎧 Listen in, share it with a friend, and keep the fire burning.

    Follow the show:
    Instagram — @woodfiredherping

    Photography IG — @z_e_herping

    Facebook — Wood Fired Herping Podcast group

    Website — woodfiredherping.com

    Youtube — @woodfiredherping

    Share the show, leave a review, and keep the fire burning.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    1 時間 14 分
  • Snakes, Stories, and Starting Again
    2025/08/30

    Send us a text

    Wood Fired Herping is back.
    In this relaunch episode, host Zeev explores what herping means today; from snakes and field ethics to food, conservation, and the culture that ties it all together. Whether you’re into reptiles, amphibians, road cruising, or just love stories from the field, this is where science, storytelling, and community intersect.

    But this isn’t just a checklist of topics, it’s a fire.
    A second fire sparked from ashes you thought were cold. A fire that lives in desert nights where headlights carve the dark, in monsoon storms that break the heat, in the smell of smoke and steaks after a slow night. It lives in the laughter, the mistakes, the patience of waiting for the snake that may never come.

    This episode is about what Wood Fired Herping stands for now:
    a space where food, field stories, and conservation aren’t separate threads but the same woven fabric; a space where humor can sit next to truth, and ethics emerge from the choices we make in the dirt, not from rules handed down.

    If you’ve been here since the beginning, welcome back.
    If you’re pulling up a chair for the first time, welcome to the fire.

    Follow the show:
    Instagram — @woodfiredherping

    Photography IG — @z_e_herping

    Facebook — Wood Fired Herping Podcast group

    Website — woodfiredherping.com

    Youtube — @woodfiredherping

    Share the show, leave a review, and keep the fire burning.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    12 分
  • Schechter Natural History - Part 2
    2022/08/12

    Send us a text

    In this second part of our conversation with Greg Schechter of Schechter Natural History, we talk about his excellent field guide app, his youtube channel, and cook up a delicious Middle Eastern egg dish.

    Recipe – “Shakshuka”

    Ingredients –

    · 6-8 roma tomatoes

    · 18-20 cloves garlic

    · One yellow onion

    · Red Pepper flakes

    · 1 Red Bell pepper (optional)

    · 6 eggs

    · Smallest can of tomato paste (4-6oz)

    · Oregano

    · EVOO

    · Parmesan or any other harder, grateable cheese.

    · Parsley, Cilantro or Chives for garnish

    · Salt and pepper

    · Foil

    · Hand grater or microplane

    Optional sides/additions –

    · Grilled bread from our Avocado Toast recipe

    · Corn tortillas

    · Grilled steak from our first recipe

    Chop tomatoes and onion. Slice garlic cloves into thin slices. Cut the bell pepper in a small dice if using.
    Heat olive oil until shimmering in cast iron skillet on a medium heat part of the fire.
    Add onions, garlic, chili flakes and bell pepper if using.
    Sweat out till onions just start to caramelize and garlic goes golden brown. Add the can of tomato paste and stir in. Add another drizzle of olive oil, add a pinch of oregano and toss. Add chopped tomatoes with a few spoons of water and a generous pinch of salt. Toss to combine everything, and start cooking it down, stirring occasionally until the tomatoes break down and puree and take on a sauce like consistency.

    Make 6 little “wells”, or depressions, in the tomatoes, and crack eggs into them. Season with salt and pepper.

    Remove from heat and cover with aluminum foil. Tuck the foil around the pan to make a seal.
    Return to the fire over a cooler part of the fire, and let cook 10-15 minutes, till egg whites are set, and yolks are at your desired consistency.

    Remove from heat, and grate the cheese over the whole thing, letting it start to soften and melt.

    Serve directly from the pan, eating with toast, tortillas or on its own.

    Schechter natural history on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/SchechterNaturalHistory
    Field apps: https://schechterguides.com/
    @schechterguides on instagram

    Follow the show:
    Instagram — @woodfiredherping

    Photography IG — @z_e_herping

    Facebook — Wood Fired Herping Podcast group

    Website — woodfiredherping.com

    Youtube — @woodfiredherping

    Share the show, leave a review, and keep the fire burning.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    54 分
  • Schechter Natural History - Part 1
    2022/08/05

    Send us a text

    Today we welcome another guest to the podcast! This friend of ours has been on a whole array of adventures with us, all over Southern California. We’re going to talk to him about some of those adventures, some adventures of his own, and his work with his field guide app and YouTube channel.
    It’s going to be a good time, so let’s get into it!

    We had way too much fun talking to Greg Schechter to keep it to one episode, so we're splitting it in to two parts!

    This part will focus on our discussion about herping, as well as the trips we've taken, both together and solo!

    Keep an eye out for Part 2, which will feature our recipe (a wonderful Mediterranean egg dish) , a great breakdown of some craft beers, and pairing them with food, as well as some in depth behind-the-scenes of Greg's work with his Field Guide app and his YouTube channel!
    Subscribe now, and until next time, Hop in the car, let's go!

    Follow the show:
    Instagram — @woodfiredherping

    Photography IG — @z_e_herping

    Facebook — Wood Fired Herping Podcast group

    Website — woodfiredherping.com

    Youtube — @woodfiredherping

    Share the show, leave a review, and keep the fire burning.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    58 分
  • Herping Southern California - an overview
    2022/06/10

    Send us a text

    Today we’re broadening our focus from any one particular trip or place, and taking a look at the region we do most of our herping and exploring in; Southern California.
    We’re going to take a look at the incredibly diverse habitats that make up SoCal, some of the coolest herps we have to offer, the beautiful, vast nature to explore, and of course, we’re going to feature just about the most typically Millennial, California recipe we could come up with.

    When we started talking about doing this episode, we actually scrapped the idea a few times before resurrecting it. The thought of trying to tackle something as monumental as “Herping Southern California” was daunting. So, we’re going to barely scratch the surface. We could start a whole new podcast, and dedicate every episode to the subject, and 2-300 episodes later, we still wouldn’t be finished talking about herping in Socal, so we’re not going to even TRY to be comprehensive. This episode is just a couple of Socal natives, talking about what we love to do best. If we overlook, forget, ignore, or otherwise miss something, don’t worry, we’ll get to it in an episode soon.

    One of the coolest things about southern California, is you can herp year-round. There is never a month where you can’t hit the field and find cool shit. Change up your targets, your methods, and your destinations, and you’re all set. In fact, this year I’m trying to document snakes every month of the year. I started on January 26th with a small little Southern Pacific Rattlesnake, and quickly followed up with a baby speckled rattlesnake in the beginning of February. Every month since has been crammed full of some awesome herping, all over the southern half of the state. I’ve been in 10 counties, in mountains, deserts, coastal valleys, and everything in between. And none of it more than an hour or two from home. That’s what’s so damn cool about SoCal.

    Smashed avocado on grilled sourdough

    • Four avocados, ripe.
    • One lemon
    • Extra Virgin Olive oil (EVOO)
    • Salt
    • Pepper
    • Fennel pollen (optional)
    • Sourdough loaf – rustic, country, fresh baked, etc
      Toppings – optional
    • Cherry tomatoes – halved
    • Arugula
    • Fried eggs
    • Smoked salmon
    • Pomegranate and sunflower seeds
    • Anything else you want!

    Slice bread into thick, half/one inch slices. Drizzle with evoo. Set aside.
    Slice open avocados, cut into large chunks and add to bowl.
    Zest whole lemon, and squeeze half a lemon over it.
    Add 4 TBSP evoo, more to taste at the end.
    Large, generous pinch of salt and pepper. Fennel pollen if using.
    Mix with large spoon, it's much slower but gets better results by emulsifying the mixture, until at desired consistency. I usually prefer chunky, but however you like it.
    Grill bread, 30-45 seconds each side at a time to avoid charring, on grill grate set over open flames. Grill till you get to your desired level of toastiness.
    Spread avocado mixture over the bread, generously, about a quarter/half inch thick.
    Top with desired toppings, a drizzle of evoo, salt if needed.

    Enjoy!

    Follow the show:
    Instagram — @woodfiredherping

    Photography IG — @z_e_herping

    Facebook — Wood Fired Herping Podcast group

    Website — woodfiredherping.com

    Youtube — @woodfiredherping

    Share the show, leave a review, and keep the fire burning.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    1 時間 8 分
  • Rosy Boas, Wildlife Rehabbing, and Ethical Herping with Danny Arthur
    2022/05/23

    Send us a text

    Rosy Boas, Wildlife Rehabbing, and Ethical Herping with Danny Arthur

    On today’s episode, we’re doing something a little different. Rather than talk about a trip we took, we’re going to be focusing a little deeper on a specific species. We’ll talk a little bit about finding them, about why we think they’re pretty neat, and hopefully convince you they’re pretty neat too! We’re also excited to be welcoming our first guest on the show! We’re going to have a good time, and as always, some good food, so stick around.

    Wood fired burgers on Brioche

    • · 1 lb ground beef
    • · 4 brioche buns
    • · Head of iceberg
    • · 1 heirloom tomato
    • · Pickle chips
    • · Onion (optional)
    • · Salt and pepper
    • · Oil
    • · Butter
    • · Sliced cheese of choice – American, swiss, cheddar or provolone.

    Spicy "spread" aioli

    • · Half a cup mayo
    • · 4 oz of ketchup
    • · Sriracha to taste
    • · 1 tsp honey
    • · Pickle relish (optional)
    • · Minced Chives (optional)

    Divide the ground beef into four equal parts. Shape each part first into a ball, then by pressing with the fingers of one hand against the palm of the other hand, start pressing the balls into patty shapes, about half an inch thick. Set aside.

    Make the aioli – In a bowl, combine mayo, ketchup, honey and sriracha to taste. Add relish and shaved chives if using. Mix, taste, adjust as needed.

    Heat cast iron over the fire till medium hot. Cut brioche in half. Add a small knob of butter to pan, let melt and froth. Add buns cut side down, in batches if necessary, till cut sides are golden brown. Remove and set aside. Wipe out pan.

    Heat cast iron further, till smoking. Season the patties with salt and pepper on one side. Add to pan and press down with hand or spatula hard. Sear on first side for one and a half minutes. Flip burgers, and add another knob of butter to pan. Lay the slice of cheese over the patty. Tilt pan so butter runs around all patties. Cook an additional minute, then remove and let rest for three-four minutes.

    Assemble burgers – spread aioli on bottom half. Place burger patty on top. Add iceberg, slices of heirloom tomato, pickle chips. Finish with top half of bun (spread with more aioli, optionally). With a sharp knife, cut in half and serve.

    Serve with fruit, chips, or any other sides desired.

    Follow the show:
    Instagram — @woodfiredherping

    Photography IG — @z_e_herping

    Facebook — Wood Fired Herping Podcast group

    Website — woodfiredherping.com

    Youtube — @woodfiredherping

    Share the show, leave a review, and keep the fire burning.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    1 時間 26 分