I thought A-Levels were bad, at least I didn't have to outrun a pack of Racer Snakes the day I was born. I didn't give a shit about sea iguanas 5 mins ago, now I'm setting up a direct debit to have a bridge made over them snakes! #planetearth2 Well, I wasn't expecting to spend my Sunday night cheering on a baby Sea-going Iguana in a race against snakes. Genuinely one of the most incredible pieces of television ever. How Planet Earth IIs epic snake vs iguana scene became a symbol of hope. Oh no – there’s absolutely shitloads of the slithering little fuckers lying in wait to kill him.Īmazing footage: a hatchling sea iguana makes a run for its life to the safety of the shore, but will it escape the runner snakes? /c9zIhyed4y We filmed this sequence over a period of two years, in two trips to Galapagos of about 18 filming days each, adding up to around 400 hours of field time. Initially escaping, we then find out that it’s not just a matter of out-running *one* of the snakes for the seconds-old iguana. What follows is genuinely one of the most distressing things ever seen on Sunday night television. The epic iguana escape scene from Planet Earth II finally crossed Snoops table in Plizzanet Earth and his reaction is everything youd hope it would be. Because Snake Plissken destroyed literally all technology on the planet Earth in the final scenes of Escape From L.A. As it makes its way towards the water, the iguanalet (yes, we know that’s probably not the right word) is pursued by a racer snake. Poking its head from the sand, Attenborough tells us that its first task in life is to make it across the beach to join the grown-up marine iguanas that are waiting by the water’s edge.īut there’s a problem. La cinta, ambientada en el planeta Baab, cuenta la historia del admirado astronauta Scorch Supernova (Fraser), un héroe nacional del pueblo baabariano. There, we are introduced to a marine iguana hatchling in its first seconds of life. Haldea striatula (formerly Virginia striatula), commonly called the rough earth snake, is a species of nonvenomous natricine colubrid snake native to the Southeastern United States. The first episode of the new David Attenborough-narrated series focused on animal life on islands and, having already shown us a pygmy three-toed sloth swimming around the island of Escudo de Veraguas and a couple of Komodo dragons kicking the shit out of each other in Indonesia, the show took us to the island of Fernandina, which, contrary to popular belief, is actually one of the Galapagos Islands and nothing to do with the place they go on their dates on Take Me Out. More evidence to support this came on Sunday evening, when Planet Earth II hit our screens. Don’t be fooled by anyone who tries to tell you otherwise.
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