An animal’s best friend

Dr. Ted Vlahos treats everything from cancer to fractures, neonates and toothaches. He takes x-rays, performs arthroscopic surgery and designs prosthetics to replace limbs that have been amputated. Every so often he even does embryo transfers. Dr. Vlahos is a modern-day country doctor through and through … especially since his patients usually have four legs rather than two. Since 1997, Dr. Vlahos and his team have given animals – mostly horses – access to pretty much the same type and level of medical care available to humans. 

While horses used to be shot if they broke their leg, Dr. Vlahos has proven that doesn’t have to be the case. Take Lakota, who had a problem in the lower part of his front leg that was bullet-worthy if anything was. But Dr. Vlahos went with A(mputation) before B(ullet). Lakota was very much alive, not to mention up and walking around, on a new custom prosthetic leg, only a few hours after Dr. Vlahos amputated his lower leg. Dr. Vlahos is one of the few animal surgeons who does prosthetics and the Sheridan Equine Center is a pioneer in the field. In less extreme cases, Dr. Vlahos can also fix broken bones with plain pins and screws. Even these are revolutionary when applied to horses though.

Wyoming Chronicle will be interviewing Dr. Vlahos in late March and the episode is scheduled to run mid-April. Not that I’m lacking in questions to ask him, but I’d love to hear what you’d ask Dr. Vlahos if you had the chance. I can tell you now though that the answer to whether he can bring one of his patients into the taping is, “no.” It’s already difficult enough for us to find suitable places to tape when we’re on the road. If we needed one that was horse friendly, I fear we’d be out in a field. And that’s just not a good idea in Wyoming in March. Sorry.

– Dina

 

“I vaguely remember hearing Anne and Pete at the Hootenanny years ago; I totally remember them playing at a friend’s wedding three years ago and doing a cover of a Prince song for the recessional. It was the coolest thing I had ever heard, and not only because it was so unexpected. I tried to get them to do that during this interview, but they were understandably more into doing the folk-sy, bluegrass-y stuff that won them the Prairie Home Companion Sing-off. You’ll have to take my word for it that they can do Prince better than Prince can do Prince.”

“As someone who is as tone deaf as a tree — my 3rd grade choir teacher actually encouraged me to lip sync — I’m completely in awe of the way Pete and Anne use their voices. I haven’t seen any footage of this episode yet; I hope it isn’t too obvious that I was dumbstruck for several seconds after they finished each of their songs.”

And a little anecdote: I was playing phone tag and trading emails with the Sibleys for at least three months before we figured out there was actually a date when 1) they’d be in town — their tour schedule this fall was crazy and 2) the crew could come over from Riverton. I think it was worth the wait.

 

I’m guessing I’m not the only person in the state who ventured away from the reach of Wyoming PBS over the Thanksgiving Holiday.  Or so I thought I was away from the reach of Wyoming PBS. But, sitting by the fire with my computer in the home of my brother’s in-laws in Connecticut, I (very) happily discovered Wyoming PBS puts Wyoming Chronicle on its site almost immediately after it airs on television Friday night. I didn’t have to wait to see my interview with Grand Teton Superintendent Mary Gibson Scott after all. (In case you missed it, you can find it, as well as all of the other episodes that have already aired this season, at: http://www.wyomingpbs.org/programming/wyomingchronicle/video/episode108.php.)

Did I really ask Superintendent Scott what her favorite animal is?

As Executive Producer Geoff O’Gara points out at the conclusion of my interview, the only question Superintendent Scott dodged was the one about her favorite spot in the park. Geoff goes on to ask you — the viewers — to reveal your favorite spots in Grand Teton, Yellowstone, and Devil’s Tower. Heck, if you’ve got a favorite peak or valley in the Cloud Peak Wilderness I’d love to hear that too. I know that a place doesn’t have to be a national park or monument to be beautiful, especially not in this state. No one seems to have chimed in yet. Perhaps you’re waiting for me to get the ball rolling:

In Grand Teton, I love the moment when hiking up the trail to Garnet Canyon you finally turn west into the canyon itself (this happens a little more than three miles in) and are suddenly face-to-face with the Park’s biggest peaks. They come at you seemingly out of nowhere. One moment you’re in the trees and the next you’re staring at the Black Dike ripping up through the middle of the Middle Teton.

In Yellowstone, I love ice skating at Mammoth in the winter. I lived in Wyoming for over a decade before I knew there was even a rink there. They even let you use rental skates for free. There’s no cost to use the rink either. And then of course, hot chocolate and coffee and sweet treats are only a few steps away in the beautiful Mammoth Hot Springs Hotel.

At Devils Tower, well, I hate to admit I’ve yet to make it to the top of the tower. This wouldn’t be that horrible an admission if I weren’t a climber, but I am. And a climber in Wyoming who hasn’t yet done at least the Durrance Route on the Tower can’t really call themselves a climber.  I console myself with the sorry state of my climbing career with the best burger in the state: at the bar next to the town park in Hulett. Their margaritas are pretty amazing too. Hmmm, perhaps these margaritas and burgers are the reasons I’ve yet to make it to the top of Devils Tower.

So there are my favorites. I’m ready to hear yours. Feel free to tell me your favorite animal too.

Many years ago when public television was just a pup, I was one of a small team of people who helped build WGBH/Boston into one of the country’s premier PBS producing stations.

After retirement, I decided to come west. I’d been here as a visitor, but I’d never really flipped the buffalo chip over to see what was beneath it.

I discovered a vast and inspiring place here, and I quickly found a way to live my childhood dream by becoming a seasonal park ranger in Yellowstone’s remote and beautiful northeast corner. Suddenly, my encore career was off and running as I became a boots-on-the-ground ranger with an “office” of 2.23 million acres.

Between my seasonal stints as a ranger, I have become determined to learn more about the west. That’s why I have now joined the team at WYOMING CHRONICLE. It is a unique opportunity to dig into what makes the west so special, and to bring such people into focus on your home television.

I’ve already interviewed two such interesting and inspiring people and have been blown away by what they each have done. My fellow hosts and I will soon be interviewing more.

Please introduce us to people you know — people who are making a positive difference to Wyoming and to the west. Because, when all is said and done, public television is a two-way proposition that depends squarely on its viewers for almost everything that it does.

 

INTERVIEWING JOHN SIMMS

I was plenty excited that I was going to be talking with world-class fisherman, veteran ski-patrolman, river guide, inventor, and direct-metal sculptor John Simms on WYOMING CHRONICLE.

Before dawn one morning, John and I climbed into my truck and drove together on slick roads to the Wyoming PBS studios in Riverton. John had cracked a couple of ribs recently – the eighth or ninth time he has done that – so he was a bit sore. “They heal up by themselves,” he said, shrugging it off. Clearly, a cracked rib or two wasn’t going to slow Simms down now any more than it had when he was leading people into the back country, roaring down fall lines, or safely through some of the fastest water in our state.

As we sipped our coffees and talked as the Wyoming landscape changed, I realized that there was no way that we could cram all the inspiring and interesting stuff that John has done into a half-hour interview. But as the cameras rolled, he touched on a lot of it.. It was amazing, inspiring stuff. Wait ‘till you see it.

What an honor to talk with John Simms on WYOMING CHRONICLE. As my fellow hosts and I fan out across Wyoming, we look forward to meeting and talking with others of you, too. People who will inspire you. Just as John Simms inspired me.

Our interview airs next Friday, November 20 at 7:30 pm.

 

Chronicle broke some new ground this week – an interactive interview with Sen. Mike Enzi with a satellite linking our studio in Riverton to the Senate press gallery in Washington, D.C. It adds just a little more tension – and tension, I’ve found, is generally GOOD in interviews, especially with experienced politicians – and gives us a great opportunity to bring viewers up-to-the-moment news from the Nation’s Capitol.

The subject of the interview, health care, brings some tensions of its own. Enzi was famously one of the Gang of Six, a bipartisan group trying to forge a compromise on health care reform in the Senate Finance Committee. Though Enzi has a very conservative rating as a Senator, he is known for working across the aisle, and he kept his attacks on Democrats to a minimum in our interview. But he has taken some heat at Wyoming town hall meetings for his cross-the-aisle work, particularly from voters who oppose the “public option” health plan, which opponents fear signals a federal government takeover of health care. In the end, he voiced opposition to the bill that finally emerged from the Finance Committee bill, which he said was rushed out under artificial deadlines.

There are some surprises in the interview – check out what Enzi now says about the “public option” – and a minimal amount of political rhetoric.

 

Economics for All!

It’s still a few days away, but I’m already excited for this Friday’s Wyoming Chronicle.  It’s my TV debut. More interesting to pretty much everyone but my parents — hi mom and dad! — though, is the person I’m interviewing: Dr. Rob Godby, chair of UW’s Department of Economics and Finance.  An interesting economist? Yes. I swear. And I’ve got pretty high standards. My senior year of college, I interned at the Federal Reserve Bank in Chicago. To reward me for tracking down some hard-to-find paper about the surge in productivity in the Albanian goat milk market after farms installed TV in barns (or something similar), my mentor gave me an opportunity no other intern had. He let me attend a talk given by none other then Alan Greenspan, Fed Chairman at the time. And what did I do? While sitting second row center? I fell asleep. 

Dr. Godby not only kept me awake, but actually explained the current recession — especially why it has affected Wyoming differently than the rest of the country — in ways I could understand. I hope you find him as interesting as I did.

– Dina Mishev

Donuts

Spent much of yesterday afternoon taping the first of what will be numerous Wyoming Chronicle “donuts” – one of those terms that makes me realize that despite years of working for Wyoming PBS, I’m still befuddled at times by the world and lingo of TV.

A donut in this case is the hosting segment that surrounds the interview at the heart of each Chronicle, opening and closing. We tape interviews in bunches – down in Cheyenne, we did four interviews in two days – and then air them once a week, but we add an introduction (by me) that gives a more immediate spin to the subject.

Our first show, for example, is about the swine flu epidemic, a topic that gets a new spin every day. Laurie Farkas interviewed Wyoming’s Chief Health Office, Brent Sharrard, and now we have to keep the subject current. We do that by commenting in the “donut” on the latest count of infections in the state, and by adding a new website “flu.gov” to the information here on the website that accompanies the show.

So the work doesn’t end with Laurie’s interview – in a way, the work of Jennifer Amend and Tom Fischer, who runs the website, has just begun.

We taped several more hosting segments yesterday, because director Thompson Coles had the studio ready, and we figured if the situation changes, we can re-do that segment. But some of these shows don’t have to air instantly – they’re “everygreen”.
Or so we thought. I decided yesterday to go ahead and tape the “donut” for a show that won’t air until the end of October – Dina Mishev’s interview about the BLM’s wild horse roundup and auction – because it was a ‘soft’ piece not tied to a news event.
Then, moments before I turned off my computer, in comes a press release from the U.S. Department of Interior: Secretary Ken Salazar is proposing a new program for wild horses that would set up horse preserves in the Midwest, because the public isn’t adopting enough horses to keep the western range healthy. Rewrite, rewrite…and tape!

Now we’ll have to hope Salazar doesn’t change his plans before the end of the October, or we’ll be dragging back into the studio to re-do the donut. At that point, I suppose, it would be glazed.