• Port of Corpus Christi - Ken Britton on Natural Resources
    Nov 1 2025

    Brune interviews Port of Corpus Christi Authority's Kent Britton. The discussion revolves around the largest planned seawater desalination plant in the U.S. They also talk about the amounts of oil and natural gas that are shipped out of Corpus Christi daily. One ship going to the Netherlands can power 1million homes in Europe for one month. Approximately one such ship leaves Corpus every day. The conversation also leans towards the future of desalination in South Texas. While frack water and desal discharge has historically been discarded down reinjection wells, there is the strong likelihood that it will soon be treated and re-used as freshwater - and that this is congruent with the way major municipality's water is treated and recycled in the practice commonly known as "toilet to tap".

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    28 mins
  • Sheriff Jim Wilson & Shane Jahn Cowboy Action Club
    Oct 30 2025
    To prove that The Lost Rider isn't a nerd stuck on environmental technology, we take a side-step and visit with two of our favorite gun writers. Brune met Sheriff Jim Wilson shortly after the first organized cowboy action club in Texas held their annual "Trailhead" event at the Brune Land & Cattle Co. Also, on today's broadcast is Shane Jahn. Both Wilson and Jahn live in Alpine, Texas. The bulk of their gun writing focuses on the old thumb busters and Winchester rifles. Today's interview is in the spirit of saying "howdy" to friends.
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    29 mins
  • Texas A&M with Dr. Ty Wardell
    Oct 25 2025

    In this insightful episode of The Lost Rider Podcast (and its broadcast version, News from the Camp House), host Herman Brune visits Texas A&M University to sit down with Dr. Ty Wardell, assistant professor in the Rangeland, Wildlife, and Fisheries Management Department.

    Wardell shares his fascinating journey from growing up in a ranching and rodeo family on the Lake Traverse Reservation in South Dakota to earning his Ph.D. at Kansas State University and ultimately joining the faculty at A&M. His path includes years on the professional rodeo circuit, studying bighorn sheep in the Black Hills, and researching carnivore dynamics on the Great Plains.

    The discussion explores the concept of Indigenous Knowledge — the accumulated wisdom of native peoples passed down through generations — and how it contributes to modern conservation and wildlife management. Wardell explains how traditional ecological perspectives can inform contemporary research, comparing a farmer’s lifelong understanding of his land to ancestral stewardship of native territories.

    In the second half, the conversation shifts to Wardell’s award-winning teaching methods, including his hands-on fox squirrel tracking project on the A&M campus. Students capture and collar squirrels to study their behavior and habitat use, gaining real-world wildlife research experience. Wardell also discusses his lab’s broader research across Texas — from studying axis and white-tailed deer interactions to the impact of the border wall on wildlife migration.

    The episode closes with reflections on mentorship, the importance of fieldwork, and the shared goal of cultivating a new generation of wildlife stewards and scientists.

    🎙️ Key Themes:

    • Indigenous ecological wisdom and modern science

    • Wildlife field research and student engagement

    • Conservation education at Texas A&M

    • Bighorn sheep restoration and carnivore ecology

    • The intersection of culture, land, and stewardship

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    29 mins
  • Brune Asks Some "Water Questions"
    Oct 30 2025

    Water questions is a commentary from Brune. It showcases that lifelong "conservationists" in state agencies have the answers to questions that plague concerned citizens and NGO's. There is nothing new about water process technologies. When discussing water desalination: Water treatment for super saturated saline discharges was practiced in Texas, in the 1980's, during the creation of the strategic oil reserves. Likewise, major municipalities enjoy the recycling commonly known as "toilet to tap". So - why is the public unaware of the technologies that sustain the modern lifestyle? Why don't the lifelong agency "conservationists" serve the needs of providing public information? Why must we suffer the teeth-gnashing and hair-pulling caused by either the lack of information, or by false information? Is the public relegated into woeful ignorance purposefully by state agencies? Why?

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    29 mins
  • ScrewWorms Discussion w/Texas State Farm Bureau Director Greg Buenger
    Oct 11 2025
    Brune interviews Texas State Farm Bureau Director Greg Buenger about screwworms. Many Texans don't savvy the damage caused by the possible infestation. Brune's own experience was treating calves and collecting larvae in 1967. It's a daily chore that turns into a career. The mechanisms to battle the scourge was dismantled when the '67 eradication program pushed the flies below Panama. However, Mexico stopped their program and screwworms have been reported within 70 miles of the Rio Grande. The U.S. government has sent U.S. dollars for Mexico to reinstitute their program and facilities, and is building facilities in Texas. The concern is whether the fly sterilization labs are operable before Texas suffers an infestation. It would devastate the cattle industry, as well as, Texas wildlife.
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    29 mins
  • Herman Visits with Texas Outdoor Partners President John Shepard
    Oct 4 2025

    Brune visits with Texas Outdoor Partners President John Shepard. They discuss the past session of the Texas Legislature, the system in which TOP operates, and the possible reemerging of the Sportsman's Caucus in Texas. Another topic of discussion was the Texas Parks and Wildlife budget.

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    26 mins
  • Darren Amundson & the FishDonkey Mobile Fishing App
    Oct 30 2025

    In a rare step away from environmental technology issues Brune interviews Darren Amundson. Amundson is the inventor of fishdonkey. It's an app that allows catch and release fishing tournaments without ever killing a fish and eliminates any chance to cheat the judges. The interview takes place at the Associated Great Lakes Outdoor Writers Conference in Eau Claire, Wisconsin.

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    30 mins
  • Shane Mahoney on the North American Wildlife Conservation Model
    Oct 30 2025
    Shane Mahoney joins us from Labrador, Newfoundland. He is the leading worldwide expert on the North American Wildlife Conservation Model. Shane clears up the history concerning the model, and brings to light the fact that the actual name wasn't devised until the early to mid 1990's. He agrees that the model existed in function prior to that time, and that the 1937 Wildlife Reclamation Act put teeth into the model with financial mechanisms - but the words/name "North American Wildlife Conservation Model" were not uttered until the 90's. He agrees that giving the model its name has made teaching its functions much more simple and digestible.
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    29 mins