Reclaiming the Night Participant Profile – Bill Wren

I was already on my way down to Texas as Bill Wren and I were hammering out details for not only where to meet, but also if he was even interested in participating. As I was cruising down a remote New Mexico highway, he asked me about my expectations for the film and what I was hoping to accomplish. After an enjoyable conversation learning a bit about each other, he decided that he was happy to participate in an interview. The timing, however, was developing into an issue.

I was driving down in the middle of the week, expecting to meet him in West Texas at his work place of the McDonald Observatory. – Read more

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Arizona Trail Hike Sponsor Profile – Kate’s Real Food

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If there’s only one energy bar that I could have in addition to Cricket Bars on the Arizona Trail, it would be Grizzly Bars. Unlike most other energy bars on the market, they don’t have that protein powder taste that I find in other bars. Instead, the peanut butter and dark chocolate infused Grizzly Bar actually tastes like real peanut butter and real dark chocolate. In fact I like the taste so much, I’ve even been known to eat them for dessert just so I can get my chocolate fix.

Prior to finding Kate’s Bars, I had been a Clif Bar junkie, mainly because I wanted good ingredients in my system in a portable snack I could bring on the trail and at the time, they were the only thing on the market that I could find that fit that criteria. After a few years of living in Jackson Hole, I noticed a new(er) bar popping up in the energy bar section. Promoting organic ingredients and chocolate while also being from a local business, I had no reason not to give it a try. I was instantly hooked and in a short time had decided that Kate’s Real Food bars were my new favorite backcountry snack.

I’m excited and overjoyed that we’ll have Kate’s Bars to enjoy along our epic journey through Arizona. They’ll be greatly needed and devoured appropriately.


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Arizona Trail Hike Sponsor Profile – Chapul

Chapul Cricket Bars

Pat seemed nice enough, but there was no way I was going to eat insects, nor was I interested in his reasons to do so. I assumed his TEDxJacksonHole talk was just going to be the cliche of trying something new.

Preparing for my own TEDxJacksonHole talk, I met Pat for the second time at the dress rehearsal. I’m willing to give anyone a chance, so I listened to his rehearsal with skeptical ears. It turns out that his talk wasn’t just about eating insects and trying something new (at least new to the U.S., the rest of the world eats insects all the time). The talk went into great detail about why the Colorado River doesn’t flow to the Sea of Cortez anymore, an angle I wasn’t expecting. He made compelling arguments about our habitual consumption and why our freshwater is in grave danger if we don’t start making changes in what we eat, namely, insects.

Why insects? Many people hear about the importance of saving water by taking shorter showers, not flushing as much, etc. While it’s certainly a worthwhile effort, this only accounts for about 5% of the water used from the Colorado River. Agriculture actually consumes about 80% of the river before it ever even reaches Mexico, leaving it bone dry where there used to be lush wetlands in a fragile desert environment. Most of this is for cattle, an animal that evolved in Europe where water is much more readily available. As a result, they drink significantly more water than the arid southwest was ever meant to provide. In fact, a single hamburger requires a staggering 634 gallons of water, the full cow needing as much as 11,000 gallons of water! And for some reason we have these animals grazing all over the desert southwest. In addition, cattle consume significantly more grass than bison, the latter being our native meat source.

Water Conservation Diagram

Source: Chapul.com

This is where insects come in. For a beef cow, 100 gallons of water will yield a meager six grams of protein. From the same amount of water, crickets will yield 71 grams! They’re not only healthier for humans, but healthier for the land, both public and private. Pat recognized this and created a company called Chapul to produce them into something he knew people would (literally) eat up: energy bars.

Obviously nobody wants to eat an energy bar that has legs and antennae poking out of it, so Pat and his team grind the crickets down to a very fine flour. The result is an extremely nutritious bar that tastes amazing and is helping the Colorado River once again reach the ocean. I became a huge fan of the bars right away and was ecstatic when Pat agreed to help us out on our thru-hike of the Arizona Trail, which made Chapul an official sponsor.

For more information and detailed data, head over to the Chapul website, or watch Pat’s talk below.


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Crowd-Sourcing Campaign and Future Plans

Grand Canyon Shrouded in Fog

Though the documentary is still in its filming phase, I have a number of plans for the film coming up in the near future.

In just a couple of weeks, my girlfriend and I will be thru-hiking the Arizona Trail. We also plan on making some kind of film about the hike, but that won’t come until after the light pollution documentary is completed. The hike itself has been a dream of mine for years, so I’m very eager to get going! But then, so has creating a feature-length film.

I’m preparing some shorts from the interviews to introduce you to the different people that will be introduced in the film that I will be posting during rest days while hiking the trail. – Read more

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