Out of Eden Walk
@outofedenwalk
Nonprofit | Connecting humanity | Walking 38,000-km from Africa to South America | Led by NatGeo Explorer & Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist @PaulSalopek đŁ
ID: 590206792
https://outofedenwalk.nationalgeographic.org/the-journey/chapters/7-asian-rim/ 25-05-2012 18:21:01
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đ§”1/Hiking across #Myanmar on the Out of Eden Walk, I met a warm people who welcomed me to their villages, fields & forests. A military coup has since smeared the nation in blood. And now, the US government axed its aid. Hereâs the human toll of that policy. betterburma.org/donation
8/Many thanks to Eaint Thiri Thu & Eugene Sein for reporting among the #Myanmar refugee community in #Thailand. Better Burma To end your hand to victims of mass violence in & outside Myanmar: betterburma.org/donation Photo: Pacing off the Irrawaddy in more peaceful times.
ââI donât like this place,â announces Jang Yikweon. Weâre hiking in a pretty little valley in rural South Korea, Jang & I, traversing a storybook landscape of electric green rice paddies, cozy farming hamlets, mossy hill forests.â â Paul Salopek Read more: outofedenwalk.nationalgeographic.org/articles/2025-âŠ
NEW DISPATCH: Frogs are in trouble worldwide. 200 species have gone extinct from habitat loss, pollution & disease die-offs. In South #Korea, Jang Yikweon is studying how #frogs & humans can better coexist-in rice paddies. A journey into midnight mud. outofedenwalk.nationalgeographic.org/articles/2025-âŠ
SILENCE OF THE FROGS: South Koreaâs natural wetlands are almost goneânot at all good for frogs. Their last bastion in the country: rice fields. Zoologist Jang Yikweon is studying how frogs and humans interact in a world increasingly hostile to amphibians. outofedenwalk.nationalgeographic.org/articles/2025-âŠ
đïžâKeep Myanmar in your heart, keep it in front of your eyes. Do whatever you can to help the people of Myanmar.â â Paul Salopek Paul recently joined the Insight Myanmar Podcast Podcast. Listen to the conversation at the link below. #WhatsHappeninglnMyanmar
"He talks about frogs and to frogs all the time. He picks frogs up and holds them delicately in his palm. He worries about their fate. " Paul Salopek writes endearingly of zoologist Jang's love for a species that can no longer survive human selfishness. outofedenwalk.nationalgeographic.org/articles/2025-âŠ
And so it drops: Episode 1 of From the Marginlands, a fortnightly podcast on the environment, climate change, and all matters related, hosted by Arati Kumar-Rao and me. Our featured guest in the first episode: Paul Salopek of Out of Eden Walk đ youtu.be/I_xqxD5splo?siâŠ
A clip from our first episode of the From The Marginlands podcast, where Paul Salopek talks of our disconnect from nature:
Walking across #Kazakhstan on the Out of Eden Walk, I befriended the archeologist Andrey Astafyev. Astafyev & his family helped me plant caches of food & water across a vast & desolately beautiful grasslands called #Mangystau. Today, heâs stumbled across a âlost cityâ there. 1/