101 – Day of the Dead: A Mexican Celebration

101 – Day of the Dead: A Mexican Celebration


Many Native American groups in pre-Conquest Mexico celebrated one day each year when their deceased ancestors would return to visit them—El Día de los Muertos. This ancient tradition has become the state of Oaxaca’s most important celebration. Parades, home altars, and gaily-decorated graves welcome back the dead. The custom has...
102 – In the Mouth of the Amazon

102 – In the Mouth of the Amazon


The Brazilian city of Belem at the mouth of the Amazon is a showcase of products from the great river basin. Now the famed açai berry is expanding Belem’s reputation. Reclusive river people, called ribeirinhos harvest the berries by climbing the tall palms where they grow and rush the produce...
103 – The Pride of Guatemala: Tikal of the Mayas

103 – The Pride of Guatemala: Tikal of the Mayas


Over two thousand years ago Mayas undertook construction of a city deep within the jungles of the Petén region of Guatemala. For over a thousand years the city of Tikal dominated the countryside and the region with its towering temples, affluent society, and hosts of scientists, engineers, and craftsmen. Host...
104 – The Working Coast of British Columbia

104 – The Working Coast of British Columbia


The Georgia Straits of coastal British Columbia, Canada are dotted with hundreds of islands. This is lumber and fishing county nearly free of roads. One cargo ship delivers heavy equipment and supplies to remote camps, and takes on passengers to view the wild beauty of the straits and inlets, with...
105 – Brazil: The Diamond Range

105 – Brazil: The Diamond Range


Far inland from the tropical beaches of Brazil’s Bahia state lies an ancient escarpment that juts up into Bahia’s vast interior. Host David Yetman takes us on a tour of the Chapada Diamantina, once a rich source of diamonds, now an increasingly popular recreational region. The sheer cliffs and steep...
106 – Peru: A Train to the Clouds

106 – Peru: A Train to the Clouds


Once each month a train departs the coastal mega city of Lima, Peru, bound for the highlands. Along the way the railroad passes through numerous tunnels and over trestles, crowning out at nearly 16,000 feet elevation. Host Dave Yetman hops on the train to arrive at its destination, the indigenous...
107 – Hawaii’s Big Island: The Volcanos’ Gifts

107 – Hawaii’s Big Island: The Volcanos’ Gifts


The Hawaiian Islands owe their existence to a volcanic hotspot, whose spewings over millions of years have created the archipelago. Host David Yetman climbs over old and new lava flows to observe new lands emerging from the ocean. At night manta rays flock to the newly created seafloor of the...
108 – Chiloé and Chilotes: Proud Islanders Of Chile

108 – Chiloé and Chilotes: Proud Islanders Of Chile


Chiloé is the second largest island in South America and just one island of an archipelago of southern Chile. Chilotes, as the residents are known, consider themselves a people apart, a proud mixture of indigenous and Hispanic origins. Host Dave Yetman joins Chilotes who demonstrate the traditions of food, towns,...
109 – The Cry for Mexican Independence

109 – The Cry for Mexican Independence


On September 16 each year, Mexicans from all parts of the Republic flock to the small city of Dolores Hidalgo, Guanajuato to commemorate the “Grito,” the call for independence from Spain. The grito’s originator, the popular but unconventional priest Miguel Hidalgo, issued the call in 1810 from the steps of...
110 – Peru: People of the Altiplano

110 – Peru: People of the Altiplano


Indians outnumber non-Indians in the Peruvian highlands. Many of them, in cities such as Ayacucho, Huancavelica, and Huancayo and hosts of villages continue to farm and produce handicrafts much as their ancestors did hundreds of years ago. Now they use cell phones and the Internet, but their native dress and...

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