Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

BBC 1 8pm Lost Land of the Jaguar

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #31
    That yellow spider they found on that boat looked soo cool!. so sad that thats the last of the series. i hope someone goes back and does another series ontop of that mountain.

    Comment


    • #32
      I missed it this week due to football training. Does it go straight on the i player or do I need to wait until tomorrow?
      www.flickr.com/photos/craigmackay/sets

      My Collection: - Support captive breeding







      Comment


      • #33
        I wish the beeb would make more programmes like it and not so much flippin rubbish!!!!!
        spider woman at Wilkinsons

        Comment


        • #34
          I decided to stop being so lazy and find out, hehe.

          Hers the link for anyone that missed it:

          Justine Evans searches for giant anteater. George and Gordon struggle up a jungle river.
          www.flickr.com/photos/craigmackay/sets

          My Collection: - Support captive breeding







          Comment


          • #35
            wish the series had been longer, i bet there's a lot more interesting footage. And that harpy eagle... oh i fell in love it was magnificent.

            The anaconda was an awesome site too. shame it was so covered you couldn't get a real sense of its size.
            My Collection: - Support captive breeding




            Comment


            • #36
              This yellow spider??



              The show was great! People who haven't seen any, I advice you to watch the last episode at least!
              Li'l' Ice Cube the Brachypelma Smithi!!! (As of 13/05/08 !!) But, I'm still gonna refer to it as Ice Cube!
              Pyro the Brachypelma Auratum!!!!!!!!!!

              Many, many thanks Louise!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

              Comment


              • #37
                fascinating program indeed!
                i also loved the harpy eagle and anaconda. was great to see fearless giant otter, too.
                and the two species of large rodent!
                seems that climb up the cliff was worth while too...great sights.

                the president of Guyana seems very cool...it is a shame that the "decision" as it were rests with our government!
                sad to say, i bet it stops there...
                Returning violence for violence multiplies violence, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars... Hate cannot drive out hate: only love can do that.
                -Martin Luther King Jr.

                <-Black Metal Contra Mundum->
                My Collection: - Support captive breeding

                Comment


                • #38
                  OMG!!! Did someone say HARPY EAGLE!!!

                  Those birds are badass!! I saw one on Nat Geo Wild, tank a three toed sloth of a vine!!! And then pop its skull withits five inch rear talon!!!!

                  I also looked on the net, there was a huge eagle from New Zealand the Haast's Eagle used to nail prey slightly smaller than an EMU!!!! Pity its been extinct since 1400 odds. Why couldn't there have been more people like us back then DAMN IT!!!! I'm clicking the iplayer link rite now!!
                  2xB.vagans, B.smithi, 2x L.parahybana, L.polycuspulatus, G.aureostriata, C.fasciatum, B.albopilosum, B.boehmei, P.pulcher, H.maculata, C.crawshayi, L.violaceopes, C.cyanopubescens, 3xP.irminia, 2xP.murinus RCF, 2xP.cambridgei, C.fimbriatus, C.schioedtei, A.pupurea, A.azuraklassi, A.versicolor, H.lividum, P.reduncus.

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    A friend of mine used too have a harpy eagle
                    My Collection: - Support captive breeding

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Originally posted by michaelmckinney View Post
                      OMG!!! Did someone say HARPY EAGLE!!!

                      Those birds are badass!! I saw one on Nat Geo Wild, tank a three toed sloth of a vine!!! And then pop its skull withits five inch rear talon!!!!
                      I have flown a few birds of prey and I feel very sad to think I will never get to fly a Harpy eagle. They must be the most awesome bird on the planet! I'll get a Gos for my lad and me when he's older

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Seriously Kirk,

                        Good stuff mate, I'm fascinated by all creatures great and small. I know people big into reptiles and spiders but when I start talking about programmes I've watched about humboldt squid or falcons they say nah that stuff bores me, and I just don't see how!!

                        I remember watching something about a peregrine falcon, divebombs a pigeon at 400 KPH!!! without taking it's eye off the prize, now how can someone say thats not cool, come on like!!!!

                        Michael..
                        2xB.vagans, B.smithi, 2x L.parahybana, L.polycuspulatus, G.aureostriata, C.fasciatum, B.albopilosum, B.boehmei, P.pulcher, H.maculata, C.crawshayi, L.violaceopes, C.cyanopubescens, 3xP.irminia, 2xP.murinus RCF, 2xP.cambridgei, C.fimbriatus, C.schioedtei, A.pupurea, A.azuraklassi, A.versicolor, H.lividum, P.reduncus.

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          Originally posted by michaelmckinney View Post
                          Seriously Kirk,

                          Good stuff mate, I'm fascinated by all creatures great and small. I know people big into reptiles and spiders but when I start talking about programmes I've watched about humboldt squid or falcons they say nah that stuff bores me, and I just don't see how!!

                          I remember watching something about a peregrine falcon, divebombs a pigeon at 400 KPH!!! without taking it's eye off the prize, now how can someone say thats not cool, come on like!!!!

                          Michael..
                          Yep that sounds like me too, I love all nature and animals and how everything interacts together, I should have been a zoologist.

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            my dad bought me a lot of the books that accompanied tv nature documentary's, and there are tonnes more facts in the books than they show on the TV. I love the weird and wonderful world of animals!.. and inverts
                            My Collection: - Support captive breeding




                            Comment


                            • #44
                              Originally posted by Lisa Baines View Post
                              my dad bought me a lot of the books that accompanied tv nature documentary's, and there are tonnes more facts in the books than they show on the TV. I love the weird and wonderful world of animals!.. and inverts
                              I have a funny little book called BUGS, 500 pages of interesting facts, some good some not so good eg. Butterflies practice two kinds of mimicry - Batesian and Mullerian. In Batesian mimicry a harmless species mimics a toxic species. In Mullerian mimicry two equally toxic species mimic each other for mutual benefit. (Quite interesting I thought) And then there's this about hoverflies - Hoverflies are fast movers (honestly)They are usually seen hovering motionless in the air! I think they must have been running low on interesting facts on hoverflies, although I do still quite like the book.

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                Funny you should say about Zoology Kirk,

                                At the moment I'm doing an HND in biological sciences, and hopefully will start my Zoology degree next September, so some day you might see a programme featuring me LOL!!

                                Something along the lines of; "Lost Land of the Harpy Eagle" LOL!!!!

                                I can dream, can't I!!

                                Michael..
                                2xB.vagans, B.smithi, 2x L.parahybana, L.polycuspulatus, G.aureostriata, C.fasciatum, B.albopilosum, B.boehmei, P.pulcher, H.maculata, C.crawshayi, L.violaceopes, C.cyanopubescens, 3xP.irminia, 2xP.murinus RCF, 2xP.cambridgei, C.fimbriatus, C.schioedtei, A.pupurea, A.azuraklassi, A.versicolor, H.lividum, P.reduncus.

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X