2020
September
03
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

September 03, 2020
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Eva Botkin-Kowacki
Science, environment, and technology writer

This summer, Jessica McKenzie and her boyfriend set off on a backpacking trip with a different kind of scenery: New York City. Skyscrapers supplanted mountains, a gushing hotel shower replaced waterfalls, and a polluted federal Superfund site revealed some urban wildlife to the pair. 

Facing travel restrictions due to the pandemic, adventures this year have been put on hold for many people. But some have found innovative ways to adapt. 

“I wondered,” Ms. McKenzie, a journalist, writes for Backpacker.com, “what would happen if I took to heart the advice to recreate right in my backyard?”

The trek she designed traversed all five boroughs of New York entirely on foot, save for the ferry to Staten Island. During the couple’s nearly 40-mile, two-day hike, they met another backpacker stymied by the pandemic: a man who had been set to walk the famous Camino de Santiago in Spain. In place of his original plan, he was walking the streets of Queens with a backpack full of books. (I highly recommend reading Ms. McKenzie’s own account of her adventure on Backpacker.com.)

Not everyone’s city adventures have been so grand. Many city dwellers have been exploring new parks or discovering other nooks and crannies in their neighborhoods that they never knew existed. In general, we’re just slowing down and noticing little things more. As wanderlust has struck this year, it’s also drawn out a creativity in many backyard adventurers.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Ann Hermes/Staff
Trump supporter Joanne King (l.) speaks to Lamar Whitfield of the NoMore Foundation out of Chicago about their opposing political views as President Donald Trump visits Kenosha, Wisconsin, on September 1, 2020.

Patterns

Tracing global connections
Fred Weir
An unrecognizable ruin just ten years ago, the palace of Stepanovskoye-Volosovo, seat of the princely Kurakin family, is now completely restored to its former magnificence, thanks to the efforts of Sergei Vasiliev, a Russian investment banker who was inspired by efforts in the West to revitalize old estates and open them to the public.
Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
Moviegoers sit socially distanced at the AMC South Bay Center 12 theater during a special screening of director Christopher Nolan's sci-fi thriller "Tenet" on Aug. 31, 2020, in Boston. The cinema is requiring masks and only selling a small percentage of seats in each auditorium.

The Monitor's View

Reuters
The COVID Tracker Ireland app used for contact tracing the spread of coronavirus disease is displayed on a mobile phone.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Lisi Niesner/Reuters
Alpinists make their way across a glacier on the Italian side of Mont Blanc massif in Courmayeur, Italy, Sept. 3, 2020. Mont Blanc is considered the birthplace of modern mountaineering.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte and Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow. We have a delightful tale of adventure amid the pandemic, via an RV named Maybell.

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2020
September
03
Thursday
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