Thursday, April 29, 2021

Cornering the camel


"A Perfect Planet: Weather" is the third installment in the recent BBC Earth saga. As usual, we get to see the wild, the weird and the wonderful from our (far from perfect) planet. 10 million flying foxes gathering in one small forest in Zambia, fire ants floating on the Amazon river, turtles laying eggs in Amazon sand banks which are washed away after only three months of existence, bee-eaters chased by eagles and crocodiles in Africa, red crabs afraid of sea water on Christmas Island (50 million of them), and the constant threat of climate change looming in the background. 

The high point of the production is the film crew´s search for the last remaining wild Bactrian camels in the Gobi desert (Mongolia). Imagine a desert that´s as cold as the Arctic, and where the camels can survive only by eating snow. If they can find it, that is... Finding the camels wasn´t easy either, the team apparently looking for them for two weeks! 

Despite protestations to the contrary, there is no particular "message" or educational value in this series, although it might of course give you a better appreciation of Nature. Or, more likely, scare the hell out of you (or make you admire new camera technology). Stay tuned for more extraordinary footage next week... 


7 comments:

  1. ʻOumuamua debunked?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJCO97BpYIE

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  2. Riktigt spännande. Men det som verkar vara lösningen ter sig tråkigare än vad jag hade hoppats ...
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0w4OTD4L0GQ

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  3. "Rogue comet" och "exocomet" låter ju roligt...

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  4. Kollar just nu på det andra klippet. He he, ja, är universum stort, eller vad?

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  5. Funderar på att kalla mig "Inhabitant of Laniakea" i min presentation...

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  6. "Zone of Avoidance" = värsta Lovecraft-grejen!

    ReplyDelete
  7. "Inhabitant of the Dark Flow of Laniakea"

    ReplyDelete