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Great Smoky Mountains National Park Podcasts
Subscribe to
our Smokies podcast and receive new audio resources
as they go online. Or bookmark this
page and use it to download just the
material you want. To subscribe, click
the iTunes button or enter one of the following
URLs in your RSS reader:
http://smokiesinformation.org/podcast/gsma_podcast.xml
http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/
viewPodcast?id=201971665
Want information on black bears or some laughs? Planning
a trip to the Smokies? Check out the information below.
New! Hear Professor Wayne Van Devender of Appalachian State University in Boone, NC, as he makes frog noises. He learned to make the sounds to call frogs so he could capture them to study. Also, you will laugh when you hear him try to teach the Bushwhacker and friends to make strange noises.
Bullfrog
Click here.
Chorus Frog (Sound Made with a Plastic Pocket Comb)
Click here.
Chorus Frog (Sound Made by Dr. Van Devender)
Click here.
Gopher Frog
Click here.
Green Frog
Click here.
Tink Frog
Click here.
Narrowmouth Toad
Click here.
Poison Dart Frog
Click here.
Sheep Frog
Click here.
Spring Peepers
Click here.
Toad
Click here.
Wood Frog
Click here.
Tiny Frogs Making Big Noises
Click here.
Sounds Frogs Make Underwater
Click here.
Different Species of Frogs Can't Hear Each Other
Click here.
Frogs are Attracted to Truck Noises....Uh Oh
Click here.
Clicking Sounds of African Bushman Language
Click here.
Bushman Clicking Sound Lesson for Bushwhacker
Click here.
Bear Blooper # 3: Skydiving Cub.
Click here for #23.
There's a Bear in My Apple Tree!
Click here for #22.
Bear Blooper # 2: What To Do If a Bear Wakes Up in Your Office.
Click here for #21.
Bear Blooper # 1: Who's That in My Rear View Mirror?
Click here for #20.
Bear # 75, the Most Famous Bear in the Smokies.
Click here for #19.
A Famous Bear Escapade Inside a Dumpster.
Click here for #18.
How Bears Learn to Get Into Dumpsters.
Click here for #17.
How Bears Learn to Break Into Cars.
Click here for #16.
Why Bears Follow People, Part 2.
Click here for #15.
Why Bears Follow People, Part 1.
Click here for #14.
How To Decide Whether a Bear is Being Defensive or Aggressive.
Click here for #13.
What To Do If You Encounter a Bear on a Hiking Trail.
Click here for #12.
What To Do If You Encounter a Bear in the Front Country, Part 2.
Click here for #11.
What To Do If You Encounter a Bear in the Front Country, Part 1.
Click here for #10.
Don't Run or Climb a Tree to Escape a Bear!
Click here for #9.
What To Do If You See a Bear on Private Property.
Click here for #8.
What To Do If You See a Bear at a Park Cabin.
Click here for #7.
How Close Can You Safely Get to a Bear?
Click here for #6.
Evaluating the 3 Kinds of Feeding Behavior of Smokies Black Bears.
Click here for #5.
How Bears Lose Their Fear of Humans.
Click here for #4.
The Natural History of the Black Bear.
Click here for #3.
The Density of Bears in the Smokies in Proximity to the Density of Tourists in the Smokies.
Click here for #2.
Introduction to Great Smoky Mountains National Park Supervisory Wildlife Biologist, Kim Delozier.
Click here for #1.
The Post Hole Digger, a story from your Webmaster's new bestselling memoir, Heart in the Right Place
Falling and Crawling to Record Bird Calls
More Tough Days Chasing Birds
AT: Thru-Hiking or Through Hiking
Mental Toughness on the AT
Relativity Bushwhacker
Bird Brain Bushwhacker
Audio
Driving Tours Planning
to visit the Great Smoky Mountains?
Download these audio driving tours
so you won't miss a thing as you
travel some of the more popular
roads in the park.
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Mysteries
from the Mountains
Some
things just can't be explained.
Listen to these true tales from
the Appalachians, taken from
books available in our bookstore.
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A
Cabin On Fire
A mountain man has the habit
of waking up in the night to
discover he is writing prophetic
poetry. From The Granny
Curse & Other Ghosts and
Legends From East Tennessee
by Randy Russell and Janet Barnett.
Read by Don G. Campbell and
Carey Jones.
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Rachel
An
elderly mountain woman has a
vision just before her death,
revealing facts about her past.
From Ghosts & Haunts
from the Appalachian Foothills
by James V. Burchill & others.
Read by Joey Heath.
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Snowy
Footprints A
lost boy's life is saved when
a rescuer follows mysterious
footprints that lead him to
the child. From The Granny
Curse & Other Ghosts &
Legends from East Tennessee
by Randy Russell & Janet
Barnett. Read by Carey Jones.
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Songs
& Stories by Doug Elliott
Whether he's
singing about catfish, pontificating
on possums, or extolling the virtues
of dandelions, Doug Elliott will take
you on an unforgettable tour of Appalachian
back country.
He
performs a lively collection of tales,
legends, folklore, and outrageous
personal narratives. He flavors them
with regional dialect, lively harmonica
riffs, and fact that's stranger than
fiction.
-
Blackberry
Boogie
Try
to solve an old Appalachian folk
riddle, enjoy a story, and hear
a charming ditty.
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Catfish
Enjoy
an amusing song about catfish
and assorted other animals.
For
more about Doug Elliott, visit www.DougElliott.com.
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