Yuck: A Meditation on Joshua Trees & the Mojave Desert w/ Barret Baumgart
Wed Feb 04 2026
Join us for the second episode of our Planet People Book Club series as we explore Yuck: The Birth & Death of the Weird & Wondrous Joshua Tree, Yucca Brevifolia by author Barret Baumgart. This contemplative work uses the iconic Joshua tree as a lens to examine our relationship with the Mojave Desert and the American West. Barret shares the personal and creative journey behind this distinctive meditation on desert landscapes, pilgrimage, and the search for meaning in places often dismissed as barren. In an era when the Mojave faces unprecedented threats from climate change and when Joshua trees themselves teeter on the edge of extinction, this essential conversation challenges us to reconsider what we seek when we venture into the desert and to recognize how literature can awaken us to the profound beauty and fragility of landscapes we thought we understood.
RAY OF HOPE:
In a time when the Mojave Desert and its iconic Joshua trees face mounting pressures from climate change and human encroachment, Barret's meditation on these landscapes stands as a powerful ray of hope—demonstrating that art and literature can transform how we see and value the desert, turning what many dismiss as wasteland into a place worthy of reverence, protection, and deep contemplation.
This commitment to desert storytelling represents hope because it shows us a pathway forward: writers and artists helping us see familiar landscapes with fresh eyes, literature creating emotional connections to ecosystems that desperately need our protection, the recognition that pilgrimage and seeking are woven into our relationship with wild places, and a growing understanding that the desert is not empty but full of meaning—ensuring that future generations inherit not just protected landscapes but the cultural narratives that inspire us to care for them.
ANXIETY TO ACTION:
In an era when Joshua trees face potential extinction and desert ecosystems are rapidly transforming under climate pressure, understanding our cultural and spiritual connections to these landscapes reminds us that protecting the Mojave requires more than science alone—it demands the stories, art, and literature that help us recognize why these places matter and inspire us to fight for their survival.
Take Action:
Read books like Yuck that deepen your connection to threatened landscapes and help you see them with new eyes. Visit the Mojave Desert mindfully and experience firsthand the ecosystems described in Barret's work. Support organizations working to protect Joshua trees and desert habitats. Share desert literature and art to counter narratives that dismiss these landscapes as wastelands. Reflect on your own pilgrimages and what you seek when you venture into wild places. Engage with local book clubs or reading groups focused on environmental literature. Advocate for climate action that protects the ecosystems you've come to love through literature. Recognize that cultural connection to place is a powerful force for conservation.
GUEST & BOOK INFORMATION:
Yuck by Barret Baumgart: Purchase on website here
Follow Barret: You can follow him on Instagram here
PLANET PEOPLE SOCIAL MEDIA:
Follow Planet People on Instagram: @planet.people.pod
Subscribe to us on YouTube: @PlanetPeoplePodcast
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Join us for the second episode of our Planet People Book Club series as we explore Yuck: The Birth & Death of the Weird & Wondrous Joshua Tree, Yucca Brevifolia by author Barret Baumgart. This contemplative work uses the iconic Joshua tree as a lens to examine our relationship with the Mojave Desert and the American West. Barret shares the personal and creative journey behind this distinctive meditation on desert landscapes, pilgrimage, and the search for meaning in places often dismissed as barren. In an era when the Mojave faces unprecedented threats from climate change and when Joshua trees themselves teeter on the edge of extinction, this essential conversation challenges us to reconsider what we seek when we venture into the desert and to recognize how literature can awaken us to the profound beauty and fragility of landscapes we thought we understood. RAY OF HOPE: In a time when the Mojave Desert and its iconic Joshua trees face mounting pressures from climate change and human encroachment, Barret's meditation on these landscapes stands as a powerful ray of hope—demonstrating that art and literature can transform how we see and value the desert, turning what many dismiss as wasteland into a place worthy of reverence, protection, and deep contemplation. This commitment to desert storytelling represents hope because it shows us a pathway forward: writers and artists helping us see familiar landscapes with fresh eyes, literature creating emotional connections to ecosystems that desperately need our protection, the recognition that pilgrimage and seeking are woven into our relationship with wild places, and a growing understanding that the desert is not empty but full of meaning—ensuring that future generations inherit not just protected landscapes but the cultural narratives that inspire us to care for them. ANXIETY TO ACTION: In an era when Joshua trees face potential extinction and desert ecosystems are rapidly transforming under climate pressure, understanding our cultural and spiritual connections to these landscapes reminds us that protecting the Mojave requires more than science alone—it demands the stories, art, and literature that help us recognize why these places matter and inspire us to fight for their survival. Take Action: Read books like Yuck that deepen your connection to threatened landscapes and help you see them with new eyes. Visit the Mojave Desert mindfully and experience firsthand the ecosystems described in Barret's work. Support organizations working to protect Joshua trees and desert habitats. Share desert literature and art to counter narratives that dismiss these landscapes as wastelands. Reflect on your own pilgrimages and what you seek when you venture into wild places. Engage with local book clubs or reading groups focused on environmental literature. Advocate for climate action that protects the ecosystems you've come to love through literature. Recognize that cultural connection to place is a powerful force for conservation. GUEST & BOOK INFORMATION: Yuck by Barret Baumgart: Purchase on website here Follow Barret: You can follow him on Instagram here PLANET PEOPLE SOCIAL MEDIA: Follow Planet People on Instagram: @planet.people.pod Subscribe to us on YouTube: @PlanetPeoplePodcast