California Frontier Podcast By Damian Bacich Ph.D. cover art

California Frontier

California Frontier

By: Damian Bacich Ph.D.
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Prof. Damian Bacich shares the history you didn't learn in school. Each episode is a deep dive into the fascinating early history of California and the West. Listen to stories and interviews with scholars, experts, and people who are passionate about a time when California was the frontier of empire and imagination.

© 2026 The California Frontier Project
Social Sciences Travel Writing & Commentary World
Episodes
  • 090: The Mission Walker Part 2 with author Edie Littlefield Sundby
    Mar 26 2026

    In the second half of this interview with Edie Littlefield Sundby (The Mission Walker), she explains why she extended the California Mission Trail beyond San Diego and retraced the original mission route from Loreto, Baja California, to the U.S. border in 2015, after her cancer returned and she was treated with radiation.

    Guided by Harry Crosby’s maps and aided by (previous guest) Trudi Angell and local vaqueros, she walked nearly 1,000 GPS miles through roadless desert sierras with pack mules, scarce water, and minimal supplies, encountering both extraordinary hospitality on remote ranchos and increasing danger from narcos and drug routes in northern Baja.

    Edie contrasts the wild Jesuit trail with the more accessible Franciscan route in California, reflects on gratitude, trust, and spiritual pilgrimage, discusses the missions’ enduring “spirit” even in ruins, and closes with thoughts on history’s complexity and the California Mission Trail as a pilgrimage people can complete in segments.

    Purchase The Mission Walker

    Chapters

    00:00 Why Baja Matters
    01:21 Transcendence Then Relapse
    03:28 Discovering Loreto Origins
    05:20 Planning With Trudy
    06:41 Keeping It Quiet
    07:59 Jesuit Trail Realities
    09:54 Launching From Loreto
    10:25 Vaqueros And Survival
    13:23 Rancho Hospitality Story
    16:11 Living History On Ranchos
    18:07 Timing The Desert Walk
    19:23 Loreto Mission And Spirit
    21:07 Jesuit Trail Highlights
    23:04 Narcos on the Trail
    24:23 Vaquero Protection
    26:31 Respect and Trust
    28:08 Desert Hunger Lessons
    29:11 Water Survival System
    30:16 Cactus and Gear
    32:14 Shrines and Gratitude
    33:19 Finishing the Journey
    36:33 Drug Roads Reality
    37:59 History Beyond Myths
    40:31 Trust Over Fear
    41:44 California Camino Dream
    42:44 Walking in Segments
    43:52 Next Big Adventures
    44:55 Books and Farewell
    46:57 Support the Show

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    Contact:
    damian@californiafrontier.net

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    48 mins
  • 089: The Mission Walker with author Edie Littlefield Sundby Part 1
    Mar 19 2026

    Today's guest is Edie Littlefield Sundby, author of the memoir The Mission Walker, about becoming the first person to walk the full Camino Real of both Californias while living with stage four cancer.

    In Part 1, Edie recounts being initially denied treatment, finding aggressive care at Stanford, surviving extensive surgeries and chemotherapy, and using walking to purge toxicity and rebuild her body and spirit.

    She also describes her first mission journey, walking from San Diego to Sonoma in 55 days by following mission bells and a hiker’s guide, as well as the hospitality of Franciscan missions.

    Chapters:
    00:00 California Mission Trail Intro
    00:40 Meet Edie Littlefield Sun
    02:40 Stage Four Cancer Turning Point
    04:54 Walking as Medicine and Pilgrimage
    08:13 Mission Bells and First Trail Walk
    10:48 Chemo Walks and Healing Mindset
    15:56 Follow the Bells Decision
    18:14 Planning the 800 Mile Walk
    21:18 Trail Logistics and One Lung
    24:03 No Shortcuts Long Walk Lessons
    27:04 Maps Over GPS Ground Truth
    30:03 55 Days Mission to Mission
    32:50 Mindfulness Outside the Head
    34:56 Santa Susanna Pass Breakthrough
    39:29 How the Trail Defines California


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    Give a one-time donation

    Learn more about the California Frontier Project:

    • Website
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    Contact:
    damian@californiafrontier.net

    Show more Show less
    43 mins
  • 088: The Portolá Expedition and the Discovery of the San Francisco Bay
    Feb 26 2026

    In 1769, Spain feared it was about to lose the Pacific coast. Russian traders were moving south from Alaska, British naval power was rising, and Spain had no permanent settlements north of Baja California. In response, imperial officials launched a land-and-sea operation known as the Sacred Expedition — a march that would found San Diego, search for the lost harbor of Monterey, and lead a small overland party to the first recorded European sighting of San Francisco Bay.

    The Portolá Expedition (1769–1770) was the first Spanish overland exploration of coastal Alta California, organized to secure Spain’s claim against rival empires. Led by Gaspar de Portolá and supported by Fr. Junípero Serra and José de Gálvez, the expedition established San Diego, attempted to locate Monterey Bay, and instead made the first documented European discovery of San Francisco Bay. These journeys laid the foundation for Spain’s missions and presidios in California.

    0:00 -- Introduction
    0:32 — Why Spain Moved into Alta California (Manila Galleon & Empire Strategy)
    3:10 — Russian Expansion Threatens Spanish California
    6:30 — José de Gálvez’s Plan: Missions and Presidios in Alta California
    9:40 — The 1769 Portolá Expedition Begins
    13:10 — Founding San Diego: First Mission and Presidio
    16:40 — Why the Expedition Missed Monterey
    19:50 — The European “Discovery” of San Francisco Bay (1769)
    22:40 — The Return South and Near Failure
    24:30 — 1770: Founding Monterey and Securing Spanish California

    References:

    • Herbert Eugene Bolton, Fray Juan Crespi, Missionary Explorer on the Pacific Coast, 1769-1774
    • Phil Brigandi and Eric Plunkett, The Portolá Expedition in Orange County
    • Harry W. Crosby, Gateway to Alta California: The Expedition to San Diego, 1769
    • Iris Engstrand and Donald Cutter, Quest for Empire: Spanish Settlement in the Southwest
    • Iris Engstrand, “The Occupation of the Port of San Diego de Alcalá, 1769.”
    • Robert Kirsch and William S. Murphy, West of the West. Witnesses to the California Experience, 1542-1906.
    • Richard Pourade, The History of San Diego: Vol. II: The Explorers, 1492-1774.


    Send a Comment.

    Support the show

    Give a one-time donation

    Learn more about the California Frontier Project:

    • Website
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    Contact:
    damian@californiafrontier.net

    Show more Show less
    28 mins
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Most relevant
as a 9th generation Californiano decended from Carrillos, Ortegas, Argüellos, Alvisos, Founding Families which are being removed daily from our childrens history

Must listen for California history buffs!

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It’s a new discovery with each episode that piques my curiosity and invites me to explore more about the rich history of our state.

Discovering the Richness of California History

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