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Connor Walsh

coffee-flavoured-tea

A daily Society, Culture and Travel podcast
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coffee-flavoured-tea

Connor Walsh

coffee-flavoured-tea

Episodes
coffee-flavoured-tea

Connor Walsh

coffee-flavoured-tea

A daily Society, Culture and Travel podcast
Good podcast? Give it some love!
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Episodes of coffee-flavoured-tea

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Counting Manx Shearwaters on Skomer Island, Wales, in June 2018. An episode of Conservation Sound by Connor Walsh. Tweet @ConnorWalsh. This is a podcast but much of it will...
I started getting emails at the day job about World Curlew Day. It had a lovely logo. Curlews have such a distinctive call, the potential for a podcast...
Hello. Remember this thing? I sort of do, and here is an episode. Indonesian conservationist Sasha tells me about gibbons (Sasha has a longer name but this audio...
A supermarket in China recently ran a promotion whereby spending about €77 in one shopping trip could bag you an electric vehicle (EV) for a month.The advertisement atop the little city EV reads:Spend RMB 588 in the Jiefang Erlu branch of W
Sir Roger Moore passed away today. He was the fifth person I interviewed, when I was 24, in 2004. I had just started producing and presenting Voices from...
In 2015 I wrote two blog posts for the zoos run by the Whitely Wildlife Conservation Trust. One on joining Paignton Zoo as a Presenter, and another as a volunteer at Living Coasts to mark World Listening Day.A new experience here was having my
From late 2015 until August 2016 I worked on a Master’s thesis about historical Chinese documents and the world’s rarest ape, the Hainan gibbon. My project supervisor was Dr Samuel Turvey, author of a terrific book about people trying (or not)
Quite spontaneously I’ve started making YouTube videos about beaches and marine litter. They started as spur-of-the-moment reactions, all recorded in Wexford, on my phone. For the third video I planned it in advance and used my better camera, a
You’re the world’s leading conservation group. A big oil company, with a big spill not far behind, is offering you £10,000,000 for conservation. Do you take the money?...
Conservation Sound episode… Hiatus.  After five episodes over the summer, I’m putting Conservation Sound on hold. The workload was a bit too much for me by myself, alongside...
Episode four of Conservation Sound explores how conservationists use sound in biosphere reserves. Our guest is Leah Barclay, the musician and sound artist behind Biosphere Soundscapes.
Cheryl Tipp is Curator of Wildlife and Environmental Sounds at the British Library. She talks about the conservation applications of sound, and the availability of sounds in the...
Episode B of Conservation Sound is all about Sarah Blunt, Senior Producer at the BBC’s Natural History Unit in Bristol. She talks about the importance of knowing your...
Antoine Bertin decided to explore England’s forests through sound, in collaboration with a fox. Why? And How? This is Conservation Sound, Episode A. Hear the result in full...
Update: in November 2015 I let this little project run free and take off by itself, I hope fully fledged and ready for more wandering!—@TheAudioFeature is a little social media project I’ve started for 2015. The idea is inspired by @BioTweeps
Here’s a guided night tour through a big nature reserve on the outskirts of Wellington, New Zealand. It’s now called Zealandia. It has a massive predator-proof fence, to...
Back in 2002 I graduated from SOAS, University of London. My favourite classes were Classical Chinese. In the year that followed I aspired to continue with graduate studies of the classical pharmacopeia, pre-modern Chinese texts about medicinal
Shortwave broadcasting is almost as old as the radio medium itself. It is a chunk of radio spectrum where signals travel long distances – a region, continent, or the world, can be covered with a single transmitter. The space available means it
Ah, the radio voice. It’s difficult, isn’t it? Because on the one hand, we’ve all fallen for it. Broadcasters, sound artists, we all believe in willingly giving in to a beautiful sound. But, let’s be honest, that belief gets lost in the pile of
In early May I found an interesting piece of audio on a MiniDisc, and set about making a piece with open feedback during the process. As the found sound itself was in Mandarin I made a subtitled version, posted it on Vimeo, and asked for feedba
Economics, politics, sport – there are more Chinese names popping up in your scripts than anytime (since, I guess, the 2008 Olympics. Sorry this guide is six years late).Some of the bigs ones, most broadcasters are achieving ‘good enough’; for
There hasn’t been much time to go out specifically to record recently, so when I chucked a handheld recorder in my bag before heading out this morning, it was just good practice. I even brought headphones and told myself I’d use them.Out on th
A practical and purely text-based post this time, simply because it’s been so long since my last!In that time, I’ve written a piece about Prix Europa 2013 for Earrelevant. Shorter text and links have as ever been popping up on the Coffeeflavou
The foghorn requiem was performed on 23 June 2013 on a cliff top in northeast England. The full write-up and essential links from Robin Thefog is here – Robin and I met before the event then each went about our own recordings. Here’s my edit, 1
Another of my nature sound walk thingies, this time in the dune and polder nature reserve at Knokke, the northernmost town on Belgium’s coast.
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