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Nature documentaries and the footage they shoot

Posted on 2/22/15 at 6:01 pm
Posted by gaetti15
AK
Member since Apr 2013
13371 posts
Posted on 2/22/15 at 6:01 pm
So I'm currently watching a Nature documentary about the wildlife in the Caribbean's.

How in the hell do these guys get some of the footage for these animals?

For instance, right now they are showing the mating rituals of some jungle songbird.
This post was edited on 2/22/15 at 6:02 pm
Posted by alajones
Huntsvegas
Member since Oct 2005
34503 posts
Posted on 2/22/15 at 6:05 pm to
They sit out there for a long time. Those nature doc cameramen are some of the most dedicated in Hollywood. Watch Planet Earth and all the shite they had to go through to get five minutes of a snow leopard in Pakistan.
Posted by CocomoLSU
Inside your dome.
Member since Feb 2004
150854 posts
Posted on 2/22/15 at 6:10 pm to
Time.

Lots of it.

Planet Earth is my #1 television series of all time (BoB is #2). It's absolutely gorgeous, on top of being interesting, awesome, etc.
Posted by PowerTool
The dark side of the road
Member since Dec 2009
21208 posts
Posted on 2/22/15 at 6:11 pm to
They're basically hunters without guns. Lots of silent stalking, probably some baiting, tons of patience and state of the art technology.
Posted by Jim Rockford
Member since May 2011
98305 posts
Posted on 2/22/15 at 6:30 pm to
I went on a backpacking trip in Denali. You'd see photographers set up in the same place day after day trying to get the shot they wanted.
Posted by LeonPhelps
Member since May 2008
8185 posts
Posted on 2/22/15 at 7:25 pm to
I just recently watched the 6 or 7 part series by BBC called Frozen Planet. The episode was 45 minutes or so and then there were about 15 minutes of behind the scenes looks of how they got the footage. That 6 or 7 part series took 5 years to shoot. The had 4 separate teams in Antarctica alone. It was shot in both the Arctic and Antarctica. They got the first underseas footage of a killer whale pack hunting a seal. They had cameras on long sticks and got right next to the killer whales to stick the cameras under water to shoot. Those whales were very curious and raised out of the water within 5 feet of the guys. The whales could have snatched them and drug them under water to drown them, which is one of their hunting techniques. Another team of scuba divers was filming beneath the ice in Antarctica. They also had ridiculous resources with helicopters and submarine cameras.
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