
Insights from recent episode analysis
Audience Interest
Podcast Focus
Publishing Consistency
Platform Reach
Insights are generated by CastFox AI using publicly available data, episode content, and proprietary models.
Most discussed topics
Brands & references
Est. Listeners
Insufficient chart data. Estimates will improve as the show charts.
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
N/A🎙 Weekly cadence·85 episodes·Last published 3mo ago - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
N/A - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
N/A
Market Insights
Platform Distribution
Reach across major podcast platforms, updated hourly
Total Followers
—
Total Plays
—
Total Reviews
—
* Data sourced directly from platform APIs and aggregated hourly across all major podcast directories.
On the show
From 10 epsHost
Recent guests
Recent episodes
71 - About the Whale Society of Edmonton
Mar 11, 2026
1h 18m 45s
70 - Parks for Tomorrow
Feb 18, 2026
41m 41s
69 - Hilary McDowall and the Kicking Horse News
Feb 4, 2026
47m 20s
Live Show March 3: About the Whale Society of Edmonton
Jan 28, 2026
1m 09s
Clock In - Shima and Elsa
Nov 10, 2025
28m 38s
Social Links & Contact
Official channels & resources
Official Website
Login
RSS Feed
Login
| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3/11/26 | ![]() 71 - About the Whale Society of Edmonton✨ | environmental activismwhale conservation+3 | Candas Jane DorseyKathryn Ivany | About the Whale Society of Edmontonthe City of Edmonton Archives+24 | CanadaAlberta+2 | Whale Society of Edmontonpublic education programs+6 | — | 1h 18m 45s | |
| 2/18/26 | ![]() 70 - Parks for Tomorrow✨ | environmentprotest+3 | — | The Taproot MiniParks for Tomorrow+11 | BanffCanada+7 | Parks for TomorrowBanff+3 | — | 41m 41s | |
| 2/4/26 | ![]() 69 - Hilary McDowall and the Kicking Horse News✨ | journalismenvironmentalism+3 | Hilary McDowall | the Kicking Horse Newsthe Calgary Herald ’s+6 | Lake LouiseAlberta+1 | World War II spiesskiing+7 | — | 47m 20s | |
| 1/28/26 | ![]() Live Show March 3: About the Whale Society of Edmonton✨ | historyeducation+3 | Candas Jane DorseyKathryn Ivany | Taproot Edmontonthe Whale Society of Edmonton+6 | EdmontonAlberta | Whale Society of Edmontonpublic education programs+3 | — | 1m 09s | |
| 11/10/25 | ![]() Clock In - Shima and Elsa✨ | artparenting+3 | Shima RobinsonElsa Robinson | Let's Find OutClock In+4 | Edmonton | EdmontonPoet Laureate+3 | Taproot Edmonton Calendar | 28m 38s | |
| 11/10/25 | ![]() Clock In - On the Line✨ | work culturehistory+3 | — | Taproot MiniBlue Dot Sessions+10 | Edmontonthe Northwest Territories | picket linegoing on strike+3 | — | 24m 18s | |
| 11/4/25 | ![]() Coming soon: Clock In - An ECAMP Podcast✨ | historyenvironment+1 | — | Clock InECAMP Podcast+2 | Alberta | environmental groupsAlberta+3 | — | 1m 33s | |
| 10/4/23 | ![]() 68 - How to Make a National Park✨ | national parkshistory+3 | Lauren MarkewiczMack Male+1 | TaprootConfederacy of Treaty Six First Nations’+1 | AlbertaEdmonton+3 | Elk Island National Parkbison abattoir+3 | — | 1h 06m 17s | |
| 9/6/23 | ![]() 67 - The Best Playground Ever✨ | playgroundschild development+3 | Laura SuskiJill Footz | Edmonton PlaygroundsVancouver Island University+8 | EdmontonNorth America | Edmonton playgroundsheritage spaces+3 | — | 1h 03m 22s | |
| 7/5/23 | ![]() 66 - Manifesting Peltigera Park✨ | conservationlichens+3 | Meghan JacklinKyla Tichkowsky | the Edmonton and Area Land Trust | Wood BuffaloAspen Beach+3 | Peltigera Parkbioindicators+3 | — | 53m 54s | |
Want analysis for the episodes below?Free for Pro Submit a request, we'll have your selected episodes analyzed within an hour. Free, at no cost to you, for Pro users. | |||||||||
| 6/7/23 | ![]() 65 - The Riverlot Revisions | Zulima Acuña noticed that some of Edmonton's old riverlots are highly developed, and some not at all. She asked us to help her learn why some of them became parks and others didn't.Zulima is a mom, teacher, and artist who has lived in Edmonton for the last ten years, and is eager to know as many stories about the land in Edmonton as her old hometown. It’s easy to take our spaces for granted: the way our roads are laid out, how big our parks are, where they are, the funny angles where some spaces meet. But Zulima’s question got us to peel back the layers a bit and see that many of the shapes and spaces we move through every day… are influenced by decisions made by land surveyors and farmers and land speculators almost a hundred and fifty years ago.We met Zulima in Emily Murphy Park (on the site of the old Riverlot #3) on a bright but smoky day. We consulted two books about local river lots to begin answering her question: Tom Monto's Old Strathcona, Edmonton's Southside Roots and Jan Olson's Scona Lives: A History of Riverlots 13, 15, & 17.Next, we spoke to two local history researchers who have looked at the overlap between the old riverlots and the map of modern-day Edmonton. Connor Thompson is a PhD candidate at the University of Alberta, focusing on Western Canadian history. He wrote an article in 2020 for the Edmonton City as Museum Project, "Edmonton’s River Lots: A Layer in Our History". Dylan Reade is a local documentary filmmaker and history researcher who has traced back many of the individual family stories and land sales on Edmonton's riverlots through archival documents and maps. | 53m 22s | ||||||
| 5/3/23 | ![]() 64 - Return of the Snow Goose Festival | Back in 2016, the very first episode of Let’s Find Out was about a festival in Tofield, a town about 45 minutes southeast of Edmonton: The Snow Goose Festival. In that episode, we set out to find out how this big festival that started in the 90’s with thousands of bird watchers coming to Tofield to admire the geese migrating through in the spring became a convoy of school bus tours run by the Edmonton Nature Club. In that episode what we found out was that the festival was centred on Beaverhill Lake, which mostly dried up a decade later, leading the organizers wind down the festival. A die-hard group of goose admirers planned those bus tours - the Snow Goose Chase - to catch them in wet farm fields instead.The first story was interesting to us because it demonstrated how quickly we can get used to big changes, and accept new normals – something called shifting baselines. Imagine our surprise and delight when we found out the festival was coming back for 2023.How is that possible? What does it mean? Is Beaverhill Lake back?In this episode, Chris took a field trip out to Tofield, because he sensed this would be kind of a good news story, of people who remembered the lake, remembered this celebration of birds, and wanted to breathe new life into it. The actual story was more complicated than we imagined. | 39m 28s | ||||||
| 4/5/23 | ![]() 63 – A Park for All Seasons | Edmonton calls itself a winter city, which partly means we’ve got a lot of wintery festivals. This episode, our producer Trevor Chow-Fraser asks: what does that mean for our parks? How are they changing to live up to the winter city ideal? Trevor started out by taking his daughter Eliot to Victoria Park to take … Continue reading 63 – A Park for All Seasons → | 57m 08s | ||||||
| 3/1/23 | ![]() 62 – About Sohan Singh Bhullar Park | Soni Dasmohapatra asks: Who is Sohan Singh Bullar? Why is there a park named after them? | 42m 40s | ||||||
| 2/1/23 | ![]() 61 – How a Park Gets a Name | Mathew Thomson asks: what’s the process for naming a park in Edmonton? We investigate: who has authority, how much do names mean, and what happens when someone goes rogue on Google Maps? | 52m 28s | ||||||
| 1/4/23 | ![]() 60 – A Beautiful Ex-Garbage Dump | Karen Unland asks: When did we stop dumping garbage into river valley spaces and start turning them into parks? In this episode, former historian laureate Shirley Lowe walks us through three stories: how the Grierson Hill dump became Louise McKinney Park, how the Strathcona dump and gravel mine became Hawrelak (aka Mayfair) Park, and how … Continue reading 60 – A Beautiful Ex-Garbage Dump → | 43m 18s | ||||||
| 12/8/22 | ![]() 59 – The Smallest Park | Shelley Jodoin-Chouinard asks what Edmonton’s smallest park is. | 52m 36s | ||||||
| 11/3/22 | ![]() 58 – The MacKinnon Ravine Mystery | Kay Rollans asks who hung two effigies from the 142nd Street Bridge amid 1965 protests against a freeway slated to be built through MacKinnon Ravine. This episode is part of our season exploring the history of parks and natural areas in Edmonton. | 1h 06m 16s | ||||||
| 10/5/22 | ![]() 57 – About Parks | Edmontonians take a lot of pride in our parks and natural areas. But how did they come to be the way they are, and how well do they make space for humans and other species? On September 29, Let’s Find Out hosted a live podcast recording at the Aviary, with short talks and activities about … Continue reading 57 – About Parks → | 1h 12m 12s | ||||||
| 5/31/22 | ![]() 56 – We Made It | As Chris wraps up year one of his history master’s degree, Chris and Trevor do one last regular check-in about the pile of essays, grantwriting, and paddling. After this episode, we’ll be back to doing another season of listener questions! Send us your questions about parks and natural areas around Edmonton. What are you curious … Continue reading 56 – We Made It → | 34m 35s | ||||||
| 3/29/22 | ![]() 55 – Making Space for Fossils | In this episode, we travel to the Burgess Shale: a set of incredible fossil beds in Yoho National Park, preserving 500-million-year-old soft-bodied sea creatures. Today, it is part of a huge World Heritage Site: it has expanded to encompass all of Yoho National Park here in BC, Jasper and Banff, Kootenay, and three BC provincial … Continue reading 55 – Making Space for Fossils → | 23m 03s | ||||||
| 2/28/22 | ![]() 54 – Roadblocks | In this episode, Chris tells Trevor about some of the comic (and cosmic) roadblocks on the road to learning about paleontology and power in Yoho National Park, and just generally the challenges facing students right now. Trevor offers some advice (and a hug). Guest co-host Eliot joins us for hot tips about the best songs … Continue reading 54 – Roadblocks → | 40m 03s | ||||||
| 1/25/22 | ![]() 53 – Right to the Source | What’s the difference between a library and an archive? Why might you want to go into one versus the other? In this episode, Chris talks about some heartbreaking and complicated diary entries he read in the City of Edmonton Archives, what it’s like getting into libraries and archives right now with Omicron, and why it … Continue reading 53 – Right to the Source → | 40m 04s | ||||||
| 12/15/21 | ![]() 52 – With Intent to Destroy a Group | This December, Dr. Andrew Woolford delivered the Western Canadian Lecture, presented by the University of Alberta’s Department of History, Classics, & Religion the 2021 Western Canadian Lecture. Dr. Woolford is a prominent scholar in Genocide Studies who has worked on the history of Indian Residential Schools in Canada. His talk was titled: “With intent to … Continue reading 52 – With Intent to Destroy a Group → | 39m 09s | ||||||
| 11/30/21 | ![]() 51 – That’s a Good Question | How do you form a good historical question? In this episode, Chris and Trevor talk about trying to do that for a very specific reason: a Canada Graduate Scholarship grant application. | 31m 13s | ||||||
Showing 25 of 85
Pitch Fit is a Pro feature
See how bookable this show is for guests, which brands already advertise, the per-episode ad value, and the best-fit guest and sponsor profile. The numbers are blurred on the free plan.
How readily this show books outside guests like you.
How proven this show is for host-read sponsorships.
For Guests
ProFor Advertisers
ProUpgrade to Pro to unlock guest cadence, sponsor categories, fit scores, and per-episode ad value for this show.






