2.These Kung Fu Nuns Break Bricks With Their Bare Hands
3.It’s Called Hurling, It’s Irish and It’s the Fastest Game On Grass
4.Love Fondue? Thank the Cheese Mafia
5.Searching for Bigfoot in the Oregon Woods
6.Bread of the Earth: Baking with Lava
7.The NASA Engineer Making STEM Sing
8.Between the Devil and the Sky: Climbing Devils Tower for 45 Years
9.Russian Generals Loved Clear Cola
10.Roping With Pride in the International Gay Cowboy Association
11.How a 14-Year-Old Is Fighting Food Insecurity With Cupcakes
12.The Model Shipbuilder Carrying on Macao’s Proud Seafaring Tradition
13.So Fly: The Impossibly Acrobatic Martial Art of Tricking
14.King of the Mitzvahs
15.A Portrait of the Puppet Master as a Young Man
16.If It Looks Like a Stick and It Walks Like a Stick …
17.France’s Makhila Walking Stick Is a Symbol of Prestige
18.The Wild Parrots of Brooklyn
19.Serving Weeds at NYC’s High End Restaurants
20.Rock the Gayageum: Covering Classics With an Ancient Instrument
21.Supertree Grove: A Green Oasis in an Urban Jungle
22.Stranded on a Glacier in Iceland? Call This Number | That's Amazing
23.The Birthplace of Bauhaus
24.The Instrument That Lets You Play the (Electromagnetic) Field
25.Hidden Valley Ranch Is a Real Place
At age 11, Evan Barnard came across a vandalized Braille nature trail, one of the few places in his home state of Georgia where the visually impaired could comfortably explore the outdoors. As he began fixing up the trail and working with the Georgia Council of the Blind, Barnard promised to do whatever he could to help his new friends. A few years later, he created his own Braille trail. As he searched for other Braille trails around the world, he founded Nature for All, an online community for the visually impaired to find nature experiences near them. The website now includes over 200 Braille trails and sensory gardens from 35 countries.
13 videos | 58 min
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