Tigerman
Contributor
I do NOT voulenteer to try feeding it some...I wonder if anacondas would eat lion fish?
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I do NOT voulenteer to try feeding it some...I wonder if anacondas would eat lion fish?
I've seen how the "National Geographic" types work.
Step 1: capture a 23ft snake (or "rent" one from a zoo that can be "persuaded" with a nice bribe).
Step 2: put a diver in the water.
Step 3: throw said snake into the water while diver (appearing to be surprised as hell) "encounters" the snake.
Step 4: Snake tries to escape. The guy with a big hook that you don't see on the video keeps dragging the snake back into the water
Step 5: Go public with "incredible" video of snake... like it actually happened.
I've seen National Geographic making video in Egypt. It was a *course* in making underwater wildlife video. I can assure you that "chance encounters" are not part of the plan..... and neither was "reef conservation". Their "course" was like seeing a tank roll over the reef.
It has completely cured me from watching wildlife video on the TV. The most revealing thing about it would be if you turned the camera around the other way and saw what was happening behind the scenes.
R..