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Natural Navigation: How Humans Find Direction Without GPS

Natural Navigation: How Humans Find Direction Without GPS

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Subscribe and rediscover a skill humans were never meant to lose.

In this episode of Wildly Curious, Katy Reiss and Laura Fawks Lapole explore natural navigation—the ancient human ability to find direction by reading the land, sea, sky, plants, and animals instead of relying on GPS.

Long before maps and satellites, humans navigated forests and oceans using patterns, movement, and observation. And the wild part? That ability never disappeared—we just stopped practicing it.

🌿 How plants and trees reveal direction through sunlight and wind
🕷️ Why spiders, lichens, and grazing animals act as natural indicators
🌞 How the sun, stars, and seasonal patterns guide movement on land
🌊 How Polynesian wayfinders navigated the open ocean without instruments
🧭 Why navigation isn’t about knowing where you are—but knowing how to move

From reading asymmetry in trees to feeling ocean swells beneath a canoe, this episode reframes navigation as presence, pattern recognition, and attention—not coordinates on a screen.

🎧 Whether you’re an outdoor enthusiast, birder, hiker, paddler, or just someone craving a slower, more grounded way of moving through the world, this episode will change how you look at nature forever.

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In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.