Israel and Jon take some time out to announce some very important updates concerning current happenings and the future of the podcast. This is MUST HEAR INFO for everyone who regularly listens to the podcast! As always, thanks for all of your support and we appreciate you all!
Dec 12, 2023•34 min•Season 5Ep. 37
Recorded in early September, 2018 by John Goodell. On February 5th, 2019 Tom passed away at the age of 91. This episode was originally published, in part, on the Northwest Nature Matters podcast. Now, Goodell has provided us with the rest of the audio that was never shared. Featuring international falconry icon Tom Cade, founder of The Peregrine Fund. With additional commentary by Kent Carnie, founder of The Archives of Falconry.
Feb 14, 2022•2 hr 24 min•Season 4Ep. 4
Kent Carnie, 91 years old. His age is a big part of what makes this episode so special as it gives us a rare glimpse into early American falconry, and a career in falconry beginning before most listening to this episode were even born. Kent is to thank for the world-renowned Archives of Falconry, and in this episode Kent takes us through his life’s story, and the story of the Archives.
Feb 11, 2022•1 hr 45 min•Season 4Ep. 3
When we consider falconry, we think of great adventures pursuing wild game with trained birds of prey. But we also think of its rich history, we think of conservation, the arts, biology, and so many other facets of a sport that encompasses but also transcends the mere act of chasing quarry… And in this episode, John Goodell brings us through his career as a biologist, conservationist, falconer, museum curator, and now Curator for the Archives of Falconry… So much of everything we love as falcone...
Feb 06, 2022•1 hr 31 min•Season 4Ep. 2
Al Ross, warmly known as "Mr. Merlin" amongst his peers, has long been a pioneer in the sport of falconry. Growing up without the knowledge or access to information later falconers would enjoy, he discovered and learned much of what he's now recognized for developing, almost entirely from studying the raptors in the wild themselves. From being the first to make a game hawk out of a Harris's Hawk, to "outer-mewing" Merlins season after season, to showing the world new things that these capable li...
Jun 13, 2021•1 hr 32 min•Season 3Ep. 7
Howling winds buffet us as Jeremy Kessler and I hunker over my podcasting equipment at the table in Steve Jones' customized school bus. In this episode, we learn about Jeremy Kessler. At the time of recording, Jeremy is flying a cast of falcons… and brings a very interesting perspective into this episode. Despite the most careful planning and preparation, falconry often spirals into a chaotic sport. Many of us spend our days doing everything we can to avoid chaos, to ensure everything goes off w...
Feb 05, 2021•1 hr 5 min•Season 3Ep. 3
Each year, a hardy group of falconers tow their campers and teepees far into the remote southwestern Wyoming desert, where they situate them around Steve Jones' customized school bus. In this episode, we learn about Steve Jones, widely known for his American Falconry Magazine. From his falconry origins, to the beginning of their annual grouse camp tradition, flying casts of falcons, and so much more!
Jan 08, 2021•1 hr 13 min•Season 3Ep. 1
If you know Gary, you know how he wants the spotlight anywhere but on him… But with such a wide-ranging reputation, it was only a matter of time before we would catch him on his trips to Wyoming to hawk Sage Grouse. Between hawking, working his Setter “Hope”, fishing for trout, arrowhead hunting, or competing with Steve at a thousand games of cornhole, pinning him down was no small task. Boberg is widely known, and loved. Decades of hard hawking alongside his California peers and his positive, g...
Oct 10, 2020•1 hr 8 min•Season 2Ep. 13
Pinning Dave Marshall down proved to be no small feat. But with the request being heard so many times, I persisted. “We want to know the story of Marshall!” Being the premier designer and manufacturer of a falconer’s most important, aye, crucial kit, Marshall Radio is a titan in the falconry world. To them is owed not just the salvation of many a falconry bird, but more so the newfound joy that GPS has brought to falconers around the globe, as we can watch and marvel at our bird’s prowess, with ...
Jul 15, 2020•1 hr 19 min•Season 2Ep. 10
How do you pay your respects to someone who drastically impacted the course of your life? Inspiring you to pursue your own journey of discovery, along the same lines of passion this person set? We’re not sure, but in this episode, Israel Matson pays his respects to William “Bill” Davis, the first falconer he watched practice the art, and a true giant of a human. So we look at a short glimpse into the man who Bill was, as well as at his favorite form of falconry, pursuing squirrels with Red-Taile...
Mar 03, 2020•55 min•Season 2Ep. 8
Practicing falconry for over 20 years in Germany and Spain, Björn Eilers joins us to share a glimpse into the world of high flying, hard hitting gamehawks in his corners of Europe. This episode covers everything from Björn’s early days in falconry, to his pinnacle moments, to his ambitions for the future, with a little dose of history and day to day European falconry mixed in. Steve Chindgren, longtime friend of Björn, recommended and arranged this episode, and the timing was impeccable. In the ...
Feb 25, 2020•1 hr 6 min•Season 2Ep. 7
Hub Quade, you’ve heard the name, you’ve seen the world-class sculptures, you’ve heard the legends of what passage prairies, peregrines, and gyrfalcons are capable of, now with the Falconry Told Podcast, you get to know the man himself. I titled this episode, “Natural Falconry” though I don’t provide a definition for this term… It’s just the way I began to describe my experience out hawking with Hub Quade with Steve Chindgren and Bjorn Eilers in Wyoming. I dare say, and believe those who know th...
Feb 11, 2020•1 hr 11 min•Season 2Ep. 5
Very few falconers don’t know what a Steve Tait hood looks like. The product of decades of honing a skillset and design, Tait is internationally renowned in the falconry community for his obsession with fitment. A good, proper, and beautiful hood, must fit well above all else. But Tait is so much more than a hoodmaker, he’s an artist in so many mediums, give him a canvas and you’ll get a drop-dead gorgeous piece, give him clay and he’ll do the same. A falconer from way back, he’s also earned a n...
Feb 04, 2020•1 hr 12 min•Season 2Ep. 4
Frank Taylor has become somewhat of an American falconry icon for his decades of work trapping and banding raptors on the North Shore. Hailing from Minnesota, Frank’s contributions to the sport of falconry and to the study of birds of prey and their migration patterns has earned him the respect of falconers everywhere. Episode 33 of the Falconry Told Podcast dives into Frank’s falconry origins, the development of his career and touching once again on the subject of art in falconry, see some of h...
Jan 29, 2020•59 min•Season 2Ep. 3
Dr. Pat Redig is known and respected by falconers and raptor enthusiasts pretty much everywhere. He’s widely recognized for his central role in bringing about the dawn of modern bird-of-prey medicine and veterinary practice… We look back at what steered a young wildlife lover into the direction of falconry and avian veterinary pioneering, and as you can imagine, it has to do with inadequacies in the field concerning raptor healthcare that left an impression on him. We’re all thankful for that, b...
Jan 15, 2020•53 min•Season 2Ep. 1
Second generation falconry in California, a young boy who’s heart and mind were chosen by a hawk circling above, and the relationships only falconry can forge. Eloy Carlin, widely known for his finesse in duck-hawking, joins us for this installment of the Falconry Told Podcast to talk childhood falconry, how the falconry landscape has changed over the years—resulting in his move to New Mexico where he continues to fly his falcons on ducks—and so much more. I have to admit this episode is touchin...
Dec 26, 2019•53 min•Season 1Ep. 29
Joining us from the Land Down Under is Peter Nolan, a face now familiar in the United States for his annual visits, especially to NAFA meets, and his extended stint of living here. Falconry is not allowed in Australia, and we spend much of our time exploring how Peter gets his fix. Of course, that’s after I learned falconry is illegal in Australia, and we discussed why… We look at Peter’s falconry story from his early days as a rehabber to his time living in the US, how he ended up as the Kangar...
Dec 09, 2019•54 min•Season 1Ep. 27
Greg Thomas is a familiar face in the circles of falconry, his regular attendance at NAFA meets has spanned decades. This is where many of us met him, and doubtless, where many of you probably will in the future. Greg’s a natural storyteller, and his recollections of his adventures over his long career make this a spectacularly interesting episode. Known far and wide for his experience and enthusiasm for Red-Tailed Hawks, Greg discusses his early roots to his first kill (at a competitive NAFA me...
Dec 04, 2019•1 hr 16 min•Season 1Ep. 26
Based in New York where he flies multiple long-wings primarily on duck, Anatoly Tokar originally hails from Ukraine, where his falconry story begins. Falconry in post-Soviet Ukraine was interesting, if not challenging. Limited to no access to any established falconry culture or literary works, two World Wars had left Anatoly and other Ukrainians with little choice but to figure out falconry on their own... No small task. From exercising his birds atop the downtown high-rise where he lived, to fl...
Nov 12, 2019•1 hr 6 min•Season 1Ep. 24
Join us for the immersive storytelling of Manu Carrasco, a larger-than-life artist whose work takes direct inspiration from falconry but more-so nature in general, where he spends his time amongst the big cats of the world, his first love and passion. This episode comes on the tail of Manny’s recent trip back to Africa, a continent he just can’t seem to get enough of, specifically this time he was exploring the Maasai Mara together with his organization Expedition Art . In this episode we explor...
Oct 31, 2019•1 hr 31 min•Season 1Ep. 22
Diving headfirst out of an airplane with no experience, flying airplanes himself as a pilot, orchestrating falconry hunts at the airport by communicating with the control tower via radio, this guy is a FLIGHT FANATIC. Rob Summers of Oklahoma joins Israel Matson for this episode of the Falconry Told Podcast, and boy is this an interesting episode.
Oct 21, 2019•1 hr 15 min•Season 1Ep. 20
Caleb Stroh joins Israel Matson and Zane Muhlestein for this episode of the Falconry Told Podcast. A Utah native, Caleb’s story has been about hunting from a young age, when he’d go for elk hunts in the rugged Uinta wilderness with his dad, eventually discovering Forest Grouse and then pretty much every conceivable type of Upland Game hunting. Watching a hillside for elk and deer wasn’t enough, but eventually even the challenges of hunting Snowcock, Ptarmigan, Chukkar, etc., wasn’t that satisfyi...
Oct 21, 2019•50 min•Season 1Ep. 18
Rob Palmer joins Israel Matson & Steve Chindgren on this episode of the Falconry Told Podcast. Meet one of the most well-known and respected photographers in the falconry community, but also in the wildlife photography community at large. This episode dives into his falconry story, how he followed his passion for photography through some of the greater challenges in his life, and so much more!
Oct 21, 2019•1 hr 3 min•Season 1Ep. 16
Tim Jessell, the popular Oklahoma based falconer & illustrator behind Marshall Radio's larger than life new mural, joins us for this episode of the Falconry Told Podcast. Hosted by Israel Matson, this episode takes a look at Tim’s falconry beginnings, as well as how falconry has inspired and shaped his career as an illustrator. There’s something about falconry that inspires so many falconers to pick up a pencil and draw, sculpt beautiful sculptures, and so many other artistic mediums of expr...
Oct 21, 2019•1 hr 1 min•Season 1Ep. 14
Hosted by Israel Matson for The Falconry Fund, Inc. Doug Pineo joins us for the next installment of the Falconry Fund Podcast. Carter Wilford of the Falconry Fund joins as co-host on this episode, as we learn about Pineo's falconry beginnings, his world-renowned falconry gear, his work serving NAFA, and why he believes the Falconry Fund is of vital importance to the future of the art he's dedicated his life and career to.
Sep 23, 2019•44 min•Season 1Ep. 11
Hosted by Israel Matson for The Falconry Fund, Inc. Lauren McGough joins us for the next installment of the Falconry Fund Podcast. Lauren's falconry career drew early fame after her adventures hawking foxes with Golden Eagles in Mongolia caught the attention of many. Since then, she has dedicated the entirety of her career to these magnificent birds of prey, hunting jackrabbits in the wide open spaces of the United States when she's not exploring other falconry abroad, such as her most recent ad...
Sep 23, 2019•56 min•Season 1Ep. 10
Jamaica Smith joins us for an especially epic episode of the Falconry Fund Podcast: Talking horseback hawking in Arizona, defining experiences with Harry McElroy, slope-soar hawking cottontails with a Ferruginous Hawk, and applying falconry techniques to Golden Eagle rehabbing. This one is action packed!
Sep 23, 2019•1 hr 8 min•Season 1Ep. 8
A roundtable discussion on the topic of "Why the Falconry Fund" with Carter Wilford of the Falconry Fund, Sheldon Nicolle - President of NAFA, Martin Geleynse - VP of NAFA, James Maynard - NAFA Legal Counsel, and a segment with Ralph Rogers of the Falconry Fund.
Aug 26, 2019•54 min•Season 1Ep. 6
Falconry as we know it is a relatively new thing. Tom Smylie entered the American falconry scene as it was just decades old, and the landscape for the sport was literally Wild West. There were no regulations, no rules, hardly any clubs or organizations, and all of this had to be made up as these falconry pioneers went along. Tom donated the first two pairs of breeding Peregrines to the cause of saving the species from extinction by DDT. He was also there at the founding of the North American Fal...
Aug 26, 2019•51 min•Season 1Ep. 5
Squirrel hawking, Merlins in the Southeast, finding and getting access to hunting land where public lands are scarce, and monitoring loads of falcons in the remote Nevada Desert!? Episode 4 of the Falconry Told Podcast has it all! Nick Yashko is relatively new to the sport of falconry, 22 years old with 3 seasons under his belt, but he’s already experienced his fair share of adventure and his perspective is great to have this early on in our podcast season. Enjoy!
Aug 26, 2019•1 hr 9 min•Season 1Ep. 4