Lone Wolf: Walking 1,000 Miles in a Wolf's Footsteps with Adam Weymouth cover art

Lone Wolf: Walking 1,000 Miles in a Wolf's Footsteps with Adam Weymouth

Lone Wolf: Walking 1,000 Miles in a Wolf's Footsteps with Adam Weymouth

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Award-winning travel writer Adam Weymouth joins Chris to talk about Lone Wolf, his account of retracing the epic 1,000-mile journey of Slavc — a gray wolf who walked from Slovenia, across the Alps, into Italy in 2011. It's a story about rewilding, politics, folklore, and an unlikely wolf love story.

Key Takeaways

  • Europe's carnivores are quietly returning. There are now more wolves in Europe than in the continental US, and more bears in Europe than lions in Africa. Every mainland European country has wolves — and they came back on their own, not through reintroduction.
  • Slavc's journey was remarkable for its success, not just its distance. He walked ~1,000 miles (possibly 3,000 with detours), then against staggering odds met a lone female wolf, "Juliet." Their descendants — 42 pups, 17 packs — repopulated the Eastern Italian Alps.
  • Wolves are extraordinarily hard to track. Researcher Hubert Potočnik boils his equipment, buries it over winter, and works in two pairs of gloves — because if one wolf sees a packmate trapped, the whole pack becomes uncatchable.
  • The wolf is one of the world's longest-running culture wars. Weymouth met farmers whose livelihoods are genuinely threatened; far-right parties have weaponized the issue. After a wolf ate EU Commission President von der Leyen's pony, the wolf's protected status was downgraded.
  • Werewolf trials were real. A lesser-known twin to the witch trials, mostly targeting men — scapegoating outsiders and vagrants, often under torture.
  • We embraced the dog but never forgave the wolf — despite them being nearly the same animal, separated only ~20,000 years ago. Far more people are killed by domestic dogs than wolves.
  • Slow travel builds genuine human connection. Walking and canoeing let Weymouth meet people on equal terms and represent even opposing views fairly — the real purpose of travel writing.
  • The book is really about change and fear of it — climate, migration, dying industries — and the wolf as a model of meeting crisis with movement and resilience.

Chapters

  • 00:00 A Chance Meeting of Wolves
  • 00:43 Intro & Welcome
  • 03:27 Meet Adam Weymouth
  • 08:18 Walking to Istanbul
  • 17:05 The Yukon, Salmon & Indigenous Alaska
  • 28:42 Tracking Slavc: Why Wolves Are So Hard to Catch
  • 30:38 Retracing the Lone Wolf Walk Across Europe
  • 36:27 Farmers, Politics & the Wolf Culture War
  • 42:19 Werewolf Trials & Folklore
  • 49:57 Slavc & Juliet: A Wolf Love Story
  • 1:05 Change, Climate & the Wolf's Return
  • 1:07 Quickfire Questions & Closing Traditions

Links & Mentions

  • Book: Lone Wolf by Adam Weymouth (also available on audiobook)
  • Website: adamweymouth.com — articles and links to buy the books
  • Charity shoutout: Io Non Ho Paura del Lupo ("I'm not scared of the wolf") — working with Italian farmers to shift cultural perceptions of the wolf
  • Call to adventure: Donkey trekking in the Pyrenees for families

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The Adventure Diaries Podcast also covers a broad spectrum OF topics withIN the fields of Adventure, Exploration, Micro-adventure, Survival, Mental Resilience, Conservation, Scotland, Hiking, Solo Travel, Cycling, Nature, Storytelling, Mountaineering

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