Lex Fridman Podcast - #369 – Paul Rosolie: Amazon Jungle, Uncontacted Tribes, Anacondas, and Ayahuasca
Episode Date: April 4, 2023Paul Rosolie is a conservationist, explorer, author, filmmaker, real life Tarzan, and founder of Junglekeepers which today protects over 50,000 acres of threatened habitat. Please support this podcast... by checking out our sponsors: - Eight Sleep: https://www.eightsleep.com/lex to get special savings - BetterHelp: https://betterhelp.com/lex to get 10% off - Athletic Greens: https://athleticgreens.com/lex to get 1 month of fish oil EPISODE LINKS: Paul's Instagram: https://instagram.com/paulrosolie Paul's Twitter: https://twitter.com/PaulRosolie Junglekeepers: https://www.junglekeepers.com VETPAW: https://vetpaw.org PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (06:09) - Amazon rainforest (17:24) - Discovery of the Amazon (22:00) - Werner Herzog (28:06) - Jane Goodall (41:55) - Anacondas (1:05:44) - Eaten Alive (1:18:08) - Joe Rogan (1:26:28) - Surviving in the Amazon (1:53:39) - Uncontacted tribes in the Amazon (2:03:34) - Surrounded by black caiman crocodiles (2:21:11) - Graham Hancock and ancient civilizations (2:26:43) - Aliens (2:56:44) - Climate change (3:01:55) - Jordan Peterson (3:19:17) - Hunting (3:26:33) - Ayahuasca (3:35:00) - Meaning of life
Transcript
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The following is a conversation with Paul Rosley, a conservationist, explorer, author,
filmmaker, and real-life Tarzan.
Since for much of the past 17 years, Paul has lived deep in the Amazon rainforest, protecting
endangered species, and trees, from poachers, loggers, and foreign nations funding them.
He is the founder of Jungle Keepers, which today protects over 50,000 acres of threatened habitat.
And Paul is one of the most incredible human beings I've ever met.
I hope to travel with him in the Amazon Jungle one day, because in his eyes I saw a truth
that can only be discovered directly by spending time among the immensity and power of nature
at its purest.
And now a quick few second mention of the sponsor. Check them out in the description. It's
the best way to support this podcast. We got 8 Sleep for Naps, Better Help for Mental
Health and Athletic Greens for a great nutritional basis for your health. Choose wise name my friends. Also, if you want to work
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This episode is brought to you by Aith Eight Sleep and it's new pod 3 mattress.
There's few things I enjoy in life more than a great power nap. I take a sip of coffee,
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It's a way to let the storm pass.
I just took a nap before this, and you perhaps can tell in my voice
The energy of a thousand butterflies. I don't know why I chose butterflies, but I did. I don't know why I chose a thousand
But it's a distributed system with emergent behavior. I'm sure although the flocking behavior
I'm aware of is mostly for birds. I wonder if butterflies flock.
They seem more independent. They seem too beautiful to flock. Does beauty prevent you from cooperating?
Is there a threshold beyond which you're too beautiful to cooperate with others?
And the definition of beauty, of course, is species dependent. Unless we're talking about butterflies,
in which case they're just beautiful, beautiful to other species as well, at least to humans.
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an app, some feeling pretty good, but this last year, and I just tweeted about this,
it's been really rough, I had some really low points. It's probably not the right place
to talk about such low points here, as I sit alone in a dark hotel room all the lights off
because you know how hotel rooms are there's no overhead lights it's just a
lamp and nobody knows how to turn that lamp on so it's mostly darkness with
the little hints of light from a lamp that's just around the corner.
And here I sit alone with a microphone, talking about things.
What is this life exactly?
Anyway, sometimes those little environments, those little moments can catch you off guard.
And the darkness that's in our past comes to the surface.
And it can break you.
It's good to bring it to the surface often,
so it doesn't break you.
And that's where I think talking to all this helps.
I think talk therapy with the professional helps.
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And now dear friends, here's Paul Rosley.
In 2006, at 18 years old, you fled New York and traveled to the Amazon. This started a journey that I think lasted this day.
Tell me about this first leap.
What in your heart pulled you towards the Amazon jungle? From the time I was, you know, three years old, I'd say, you know,
I was dinosaurs, wildlife, documentary,
steaver, when you name it.
And like, when my parents said, you know, nature versus nurture,
they nurtured my nature.
I was always just drawn to streams, forests.
I wanted to go explore where the little creek led.
I wanted to see the turtles and the snakes.
And so I was a kid that hated school, did not get along with school.
I was dyslexic and didn't know it undiagnosed.
I didn't read until I was like 10 years old, like way behind.
And so for me, the forest was safety.
Like I remember one time in first grade, they had you doing those, you know,
those multiplication sheets that was pure hell for me.
And so I actually got so upset that I couldn't do it
that I ran out, the classroom ran out the door
and went to the nearest woods and I stayed there
because that was safe.
And so for me, once I got to the point where I was like,
high school isn't working out,
I had incredibly supported parents that were like,
look, just get out, take your GED,
get out of high school after 10th grade,
you gotta go to college,
but like start doing something you love.
And so I saved up and bought a ticket to the Amazon and met some indigenous guys.
And the second I walked in that forest, it was like, it's like the first scene in Jurassic
Park when they see the dinosaurs and they go, this is it.
I walked in there and just, I looked at those giant trees.
I saw leaf cutter ants in real life and I just went oh
It was like the movie just started, you know, that was when that was when like I came online
Can you put it into words? What is it about that place that felt like home?
What was it that drew you what aspect of nature the streams the water the
The forest the jungle the animals what would drew you?
water, the forest, the jungle, the animals, what drew you?
Ah, it's just, it's always been in my blood. I mean, for any forest, I mean, whether it's, you know, upstate New York
or India or Borneo, but the Amazon, it's, it's all of that turned up
to this level where everything is superlatively diverse.
You know, you have more plants and animals than anywhere else on earth,
not just now, but in the entire fossil record.
It's the Andy's Amazon interface. That's terrestrially that's where it is.
That's the greatest library of life that has ever existed.
And so you're so stimulated, you're so overwhelmed with color and diversity and beauty,
and this overwhelming sense of natural majesty of these thousand-year-old trees,
and half the life is up in the canopy of those
trees. We don't even have access to it. There's stuff without names walking around on those branches,
and it's like it just takes you somewhere. And so going there, it was like, the guys I met just
opened the door and they were like, you know, how far do you want to go down the rabbit hole? How much
of this do you want to see? You mentioned Steve Irwin. You list a bunch of heroes.
He's one of them.
And he said that when you're unsure about a decision, you ask yourself, uh, W-W-S-D,
what would Steve do?
Why is that such a good heuristic for life?
What would Steve do?
He's a human being that like everything we saw from Steve Irwin was positive.
Everything was with a smile on his face. If he was getting bitten by a reticulated python, he was smiling. If he was, you
know, getting destroyed in the news for feeding a crocodile with his son too close, he was trying
to explain to people why it's okay and why we have to love these animals and everything
was about love, everything was about, you know, wildlife and protecting. And to me,
a person like that, that where you only see positive things,
that's a role model.
And it's just like an endless curiosity
and hunger to explore this world of nature.
Yeah, and an insatiable madness for wildlife.
I mean, the guy was just so much fun.
I gotta, if it's okay,
read to you a few of your own words.
You open the book, Mother of God, with the passage that I think beautifully paints a scene.
Before he died, Santiago de Rán told me a secret.
It was late at night in a palm-thatched hut on the bank of the Temple Potta River, deep
in the southwestern corner of the Amazon basin.
Besides the mud oven, two wild boar heads
sizzling sizzled in a cradle of embers, their protruding tusks curling,
ecstatic agony as they cooked. The smell of burning,
sacropia wood, and cinched flesh filled the air.
Wohen basket containing monkey skulls hung from the rafters, where stars speak through
the gaps in the thatching?
A pair of chickens huddled in the corner, conversing softly.
We sat facing each other on sturdy benches, across a table, huned from a single cross-section
of some massive tree, now nearly consumed by termites.
The song of a million insects and frogs filled
the night. Santiago cigarette trembled in the age fingers as he leaned close over the candle light
to describe a place hidden in the jungle. That line, the songs of a million insects and frogs
filled the night for some reason hit me. What's it like sitting there conversing among so many living creatures all around you?
Every night in the jungle, you live in constant awareness of that out there in the darkness
are literally millions of heartbeats around you.
We exist in this domesticated, paved world most of the time.
But when you go out there past the roads and the telephone poles and the hospitals and you make it out into earth, just wild earth.
And there's no, there's not, it's not like this is a national park.
There's no rescue helicopter waiting to come get you.
You are out there and you're surrounded at night by, I mean, there are snakes and jaguars and frogs
and insects and all this stuff just crawling through the swamps and through the trees and through
the branches and we put on headlamps and go out into the night and just absolutely fall to our
knees with wonder of the things that we see. It's absolutely incredible. And most of it doesn't make
sounds like the insects do. The insects do, the frogs do, you have some of the nightbirds making sounds, but a lot of
it, everything has evolved to be silent and visible.
I mean, everything there is on the list, like there's another line in Mother of God where
I say, like life is just like a temporary moment of stasis and like the churning, recycling
deathmarch that is the Amazon.
It's been called the greatest natural battlefield on Earth. I mean, in any square acre, that is the Amazon. Like, it's been called the greatest natural battlefield
on Earth.
I mean, in any square acre, there's more stuff
eating other things than anywhere else.
And you go through a swamp in the Amazon,
and there's like this tarantulas floating on the water,
this frogs in the trees, there's tadpoles hanging
from leaves waiting to drop into the water.
There's fish waiting to eat them.
There's birds and the trees you're sitting.
You literally are surrounded by so many things that your brain can't process it.
It's just overwhelming life.
Churning death march.
Some of the creatures are waiting and some of them are being a bit more proactive about
it.
What do you make of that
churning deathmarch that the modem murder that's happening all around you at all scales?
What is that you know we we dramatized wars and the millions of people that were lost in World War 2
Some of them tortured some of them dying with a gun in hand some of them tortured, some of them dying with a gun in hand, some of them civilians, but it's just millions of people.
What about the billions and billions and billions of organisms that are just being murdered
all around you?
Does that change a view of nature of life here?
I've always kind of wondered like that.
Like when you see like a, you know,
a wildebeest taken down by lions
and eaten from behind while it's alive
and it makes you question God, you know,
you go, how could, how could they let this happen?
In the Amazon, I find personally
that these natural processes make up almost a religion that it reminds you
how temporary we are, that the botflies that are trying to get into your skin and the mosquitoes
that are trying to suck your blood.
When you sweat, you literally can hold out your arm and watch the condensation come off
of your skin and rise up into the canopy and join the clouds and rain back down in the afternoon and then you drink the river and start it all over again.
And it's like it's flowing through you. So the Amazon reminds me that that there's a lot that we don't understand.
And so when it comes to that overwhelming and collective murder as Werner Herzog put it.
And so when it comes to that overwhelming and collective murder as Werner Herzog put it, it's just part of the show.
It's part of the freak show of the Amazonian night.
So you, you, in certain moments able to feel one with a mosquito that's trying to kill
you slowly.
And one with the mosquito is a stretch.
Is it always the enemy?
What I mean is like you're part of the machine there, right?
Yeah, and it's like fair play.
It's like fair play.
So like we have bullet ants and like, you know,
you get nailed by a bullet ant and you just go.
Yeah, well done.
Well done.
Today's over.
I'm going back to bed and I'm taking a pilot Tylenol.
Do you think in that sense, when you're out there,
are you a part of nature or are you separate from
nature? Is man a part of nature a separate? I think that's what's so refreshing about it. Is that
out there you truly are? And so whether we're bringing researchers or film crews or whether we're
just out there ourselves on an expedition, you truly are a part of nature. And so one of the things
that my team and I started doing when I became friends with these guys, you know, this is a family of indigenous people from the community
of Infierre, no, and they took me in. And as we got close, they started saying, you know,
you can come with us on our like annual hunting trip. And I went, okay, and it's four
guys in a boat. And you don't want to get your clothes wet. So we're all in like our
boxers in a canoe
with a motor going out past the places that have names and you're out in the middle of the jungle
and the thing is like when your motor breaks you are so quickly reminded of the inherent truths
like the things that nobody can argue with and we live in such a human world
where everything is debatable, religion and politics and perspectives on everything and then you
get down to this point where it's like if we don't figure something out the river is going to rise
and take the boat, that's the truth and nobody going to like argue with that and it's like to me
there's a beauty in that truth because then all of us are united there in that truth
against like the natural facts around us.
And so to me, that's a state where I feel very, very at home.
And the Amazon is more efficient than most places
on earth that swallowing you up.
Oh God, yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
So just a link on that because you're spoken about Francisco de Aralana.
Use this explorer in 1541 and 42 that sailed the length of the Amazon.
Yeah.
Probably one of the first.
And there's just a few things that should probably read.
I should probably find a good book on him because the guy seems like a gangster.
Yes.
Some great books on him.
So he sailed, he led the expedition that sailed all the way from one end to the other.
There's like a rebuilding of a ship, which is insanity.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So because it speaks to the thing, it's like nobody's going to come and rescue you.
No.
You have to.
If your boat dies, you got to have to rebuild it.
Yeah, so they came down the Andes, entered in the headwaters of the Amazon, constructed some sort of
raft boat craft something and made it down the entire Amazon basin. Of course, his stories are the ones that
led to the Amazon being called the Amazon because he reported tribes of women. He reported these large cities
places where the tribes lived on farms of river turtles
that they corraled and they lived off of that protein.
And then when they came out to the mouth of the Amazon,
if I remember it correctly,
that just through navigation and the stars,
they were able to calculate where the way was back to Spain
and make a boat see worthy enough to bring them home.
Incredible.
Absolutely.
Do people like that inspire you your own journey?
What gives you kind of strength that in these harshness of times and harshness of conditions,
you can persevere? Yeah, I mean, you look at the stories of people that are so, you know,
these stories of people that have overcome incredible suffering like that or like, you know,
what shackled and did or something like that. And so like when you're, you know, what Shackleton did or something like that.
And so like when you're, you know, I've been, you know,
your tent gets washed away.
You go to sleep and the river rises 20 feet
and washes away your tent and you crawl out
and all you have is a machete and a headlamp,
literally no bag, no food, no nothing.
And you go, wow, the next six days before I reach it back
to a town is going to be just pure hell.
I'm going to be sleeping on the ground covered in ants,
destroyed by mosquitoes. And then it becomes, you know, am I in any capacity,
any percentage as tough and resilient as the people that I've read about that have made
it through things far worse than this. And then that's the game you play.
We'll go through your head when all you got is the headlamp on the machete. So are you thinking at all?
Like I've gotten a chance to interact quite a lot with Elon Musk and he constantly puts out fires
having to run several companies. There's never a kind of
whiny deliberation about issues. You just always
once that forward how to solve, right? This is the situation, how do you solve it?
Or do you also have a kind of self motivating,
almost egotistical, like I'm a bad motherfucker.
I can handle anything, almost like trying to fake it
until you make it kind of thing.
Yeah, there was a little bit of that.
You're Mercedes, you know, I got a sword.
There may have been a little bit of that when I was like 14, 15 years old,
I'd have a hunting knife in my dog and I'd go out into the woods like the cat skills
and survive for a weekend. My rule was one match. You get one match and you've got to make
shelter. And then I'd bring a steak and make a fire and stuff. And at that point, there
may be with some ego, but in the Amazon, you get stripped down so completely that you, it's like that thing,
like we watch the atheism leave everyone's body when they think they're about to die.
It's like when you find yourself staring up at the Amazon at night and you go, there
is no hope of getting out of here. I mean, I was once lost in a swamp where it took me days
to get out of there. And there was, there was moments where I just said, this is, you know, this is clearly it. There's
no ego there. There's just hope. You start realizing what you believe in and praying that
you'll be okay and then trying to try and to summon whatever you know about how to survive.
And that's it. And so it's it's actually again it's kind of it's
kind of a blissful state if you can walk that line between like adventure and tragedy and sort
of keep yourself right at that very very fine line without going over. Ever fear of death? Fear ever
fear? Um terror. No, I don't want to die. I want to I want to you know I love the people in my life
and there's a lot of things I want to do. But every time I've been, every time I've been certain that I'm going to die, it's been, I've been very, very calm.
Very calm and just sort of like, okay, well, if this is how the movie goes and this is how it goes.
Almost accepting. Yeah. Which is, which is reassuring.
You mentioned Herzog just to venture down this road of death and fear and so on.
There's been a few madmen like you in this world.
He's documented a couple of them.
What lessons do you draw from grizzly men or into the wild?
Those kinds of stories.
Were you ever afraid that you would be one of those stories?
Oh yeah, I actually think that it's in Mother of God where I said, I almost
into the wilded myself. Like I went out there and really I got so lost and so
destroyed that I said, this is this is going to be the next one. You know, this is
going to be the next story of some idiot kid from New York who went to the Amazon
thinking he was Percy Fawcett and then vanished. Because if you if you do vanish
out there, your body's going to be
consumed in a matter of days, like two. If we see an animal dead on a trail, you got dung beetles
and fly larvae and vultures, and there's a whole pecking order. You know, you get the black
vultures, the yellow vultures, the king vulture, they all come in. That thing is picked clean in a
couple of days. What would be the creature that eats most of you in that situation?
Probably the vultures.
Probably the vultures and the maggots.
It's really quick.
It's really, really quick.
Like even as far as you can't leave food out,
if you have a piece of chicken,
you say, I'll eat it in the morning,
you leave it out, you can't do that.
It's not good by morning.
Grizzamette, for example,
because that's a beautiful story.
It's both comical and genius and especially the way Herzog tells it. Well, first, do you like the way
you told the story? Do you like Herzog? I do. I love Herzog and I love his documentary, The
Birdon of Dreams, which is in the Amazon, not very far from where I work. And the sheer madness
that you see this man undergoing of just trying to recreate, hauling
a boat over a mountain is wild.
And the extras that he hired to play the natives are, I think they're much againga tribesmen.
And they just look like all the guys that I hang out with.
And it's like, they're doing all this stuff
in the jungle that months and months and months
and you can just see him deteriorating with madness
because the jungle, you know, your boat,
you know how many times I've tied up a boat
to the side of the river, this just happened like a year and a half ago.
I tied up through COVID, I pretty much just lived in the jungle
for a while.
And there was nobody there and there was no support.
And I tied up my boat and the rain is just hammering hammering like like like the universe is trying to rip the earth
and half. The rain is just going. And the river is rising. And I tied up the boat. But
then you go to sleep and you got to wake up every two hours to go check the boat. And
the boat is thrashing back and forth. And so all night, every two hours, I'd wake up barefoot
in driving rain like, you know, golf ball raindrops and just go down,
check the boat.
And then by morning I was like, I fell asleep, woke up, checked the boat, and then I was like,
I'm just going to go make coffee.
I was so done.
I was so like at the end of my rope every time bailing the boat out and stuff.
And then we got 15 minutes of heavy rain that filled the boat, sank it.
So now I'm stuck up every with no boat.
And it's like that type of thing where it's like no matter how hard you try, the jungles
just like, listen, you're nothing.
You are nothing.
And so it's that constant reminder.
So Herzog really threw himself into that, in that film.
And it's brilliant to watch.
What do you think you meant by the line that you include in your book?
It's a land that God, if he exists, has created an anger.
Set in German accent. Yeah. Overwhelming and collective murder.
So that's what I say, you didn't really appreciate the beauty of the murder.
I think he appreciated it, but to him, it was very dark.
I think he saw the darkness in it, and that's there.
It sure is.
As soon as you do Iowaska, that door opens
and you see the darkness, because that brings you
right into the jungle, like the heart of it.
But I think that for him, it is, I think that darkness
is something that he embraces and that he loves.
There's another film of his, and I don't know if this is accurate,
but my memory has it, that there's a penguin,
and I think it's in Antarctica,
and the penguin's going in the wrong direction,
away from the ocean.
And I feel like he goes on this monologue
about how he's just had enough.
Yeah.
This one penguin is just marching towards, you know.
Yeah, well, his, I, because I remember that clip from that documentary.
And what Werner says is that the penguin is deranged.
Yes.
He's lost his mind.
And I took offense to that.
Yeah.
Because maybe that's a brave explorer.
Like, how do you know there's not some a lot more going on?
Like, it could be a love story. Those penguins
get super attached. Maybe his mate was over there and here you go find her. Like, you
know, it's a lost mate. And he last time he saw her was going in that direction.
Exactly. So this is like the great explorer. They we assume animals are like the average
of the bell curve. Like every animal we interact with is just the average. But there's
special ones just like the special humans. Yeah. That we interact with is just the average, but there's special ones, just like there's special humans.
Yeah.
That could be a special penguin.
It could have been.
And I had the same thought where I was like, I was like, he's, I found it beautiful how
he interpreted it.
What I took away from that was I found that, Warner Herzog's monologue there was brilliantly
dark and also comedic, but maybe irrelevant biologically speaking towards tangoans, which
happens a lot with animals.
I find like, there's so many times where I'll find people be like, do you think that animals
can show compassion?
And you hear like a bunch of people that have never left the pavement talking about like,
wow, this one animal helped another animal.
It's like, it's like, go ask Jane Goodall if animals can show compassion.
Go talk to anybody that works on a daily basis with animals. helped another ant. It's like, at Go-A-S, Jane Goodall, animals can show compassion.
Go talk to anybody that works on a daily basis with animals.
And so, to me, there's always a little bit of frustration in hearing people pleasantly
surprised that animals aren't just automatonns of just what's the word like like programmed, you know, nothingness.
First of all, what have you learned about life from Jane Goodauk? She spoke highly of your book
and you listress as one of the mentors, but what kind of wisdom about animals do you draw from her?
The wisdom from Jane is so diverse. It's I mean, she, first of all, she's someone that,
you know, the work that she did at the time, she did it was so incredible because I mean she first of all she's someone that you know the work that she did at the time she did it was
So incredible because I mean she she was out there at a very young age doing that field work
She was naming her subjects which everyone said you shouldn't do she broke every rule
She broke every rule she was assigning and everyone said you know you're anthropomorphizing these animals by saying that they're doing this and that and
She she was like no they're they're they're interacting they're showing love they're doing this and that. And she was like, no, they're interacting.
They're showing love, they're showing compassion, they're showing hate, they're showing fear.
And she broke straight through all of those things. And it paid off in dividends for
her. Do you see the animals as having all those human-like emotions of anger, of compassion,
of longing, of loneliness, of longing, of loneliness,
from what you've seen, especially with mammals,
for different species out there.
Do they have all that?
It depends on the animal.
If you're talking on the scale of a cockroach
to an elephant, it's like a lot of these things,
and I wonder about this stuff all the time.
I'll have a praying mantis on my hand
and just go, what is going through your mind?
Or you'll see a spider make a complex decision and go,
I'm going to make my web there.
And you go, how are you doing this?
Because he made a calculation there.
It's smart.
I was in the jungle not that long ago, and I was walking,
and all of a sudden this dove comes flying through the jungle
right up to my face, lands on a branch, right here, right next to me.
I look at the dove, dove looks at me,
and she's like, hey, and she's clearly like panting.
And I'm like, why are you so close?
This is weird.
And she's like, I know.
And then an ornate hawk eagle flies up 10 feet away,
looks at both of us and just like scowls
and like sticks up its head feathers
and then just like flies off.
And the dove was like sweet thanks
and then flew in the other direction.
And it was like, dude, you just used me to save your life.
Yeah, the dove knew.
See, this is what,
because there's, you know, there's Mike Tyson,
and there's Albert Einstein.
Yeah.
And sometimes I wonder when I look at different creatures,
even insects, like, is this Mike Tyson or is this Einstein?
Yeah.
Like, because one, or other kinds of person, like, is this a New Yorker?
Or is this a Midwesterner? Or is this like San Francisco barista of the insects? Like,
there's all kinds of personalities. You never know. So you can't like project, like, if you run
into a bear and it's very angry, it could be just the asshole New Yorker. Yeah, sure. Yeah, sure.
That's the supposed to be what he's saying about New Yorkers, man.
Exactly.
Point wall made.
So speaking about communicating with a dove,
you first met the crew in the Amazon.
You talk about JJ as somebody who communicates with animals.
What do you think JJ is able to see and hear
and feel that others don't, that he's able to communicate with the animals?
When I say this is the most skilled jungle man I've ever seen and I know so many guys in the region,
he has libraries of information in his cranium that we cannot fathom. It's just stunning.
I have seen him use medicinal plants to cure things that Western doctors couldn't cure.
I've seen him navigate in such a way that he's not using the stars.
He's not using any discernible, it's like when elephants, sometimes you'll watch a
herd of elephants and they'll be like, yo, let's go.
We're going this way and you'll see them sort of communicate, but there's no audible
sound. They'll just decide that they're going this way. And you'll see them sort of communicate, but there's no audible sound.
They'll just decide that they're going that
when they all do it.
JJ has this way in the jungle of, you know, he'll stop
and he'll go, wait, and you go, what is it?
And he goes, there's a herd of peckery coming.
And I'm like, where?
But based on what?
Yeah, you know, and he's like, just wait, you'll see.
And he'll sit there. You know, it he's like, just wait, you'll see. And he'll sit there.
You know, it's just experience.
It's incredible experience.
It's growing up barefoot in the Amazon.
And the gift is that he can speak fluent English.
And so when I bring tourists and scientists
or news reporters down there, he can communicate with them.
He's actually good on camera
because he doesn't care about cameras
And like you know, for instance we were we were we were walking up a stream a few months ago And I went hey look Jaguar tracks and he went and I was like what Jaguar tracks and he's like no look look harder and I was like
The toes are deeper than the back and he was like, uh-huh and where are they?
And I was like by the water and he was like, uh-huh, and where are they? And I was like, by the water. And I was like, the Jaguar was drinking.
It was leaning to drink and he was like,
that's right, he's like, now look behind you.
I look behind me.
And there's scat.
There's a big log of Jaguar shit sitting there
and it's got butterflies all over it.
Fresh?
Pretty fresh.
And then there's another one that's less fresh.
And so he's teaching me as he does,
he's going, look at this.
Look at this.
Is that one as fresh as this one?
No.
And then he goes, now look up.
Look up.
There's three vultures above us.
The kill is near us.
The Jaguar has been coming multiple times
to the river to drink as it's feasting on whatever it killed.
And he's going, it's within 30 feet of us right now.
And it's like, I'm like, oh look,
impression's in the sand.
He's like, I just drew 19 conclusions from that.
It's like watching Sherlock Holmes at work.
It's just-
Constructing the crime scene.
Incredible.
Does that apply also to be able to communicate
with the actual animals,
like read into their body movements directly
into their, whatever that dove was saying to you,
to be able to understand?
Or is that all just kind of taken in the complex structure
of the crime scene of the interactions
of the different animals of the environment, so on?
Like, what is that that you're able to communicate
with another creature?
That he was able to communicate with another creature?
He knows the intention of pose, he knows the habits,
he knows the perspective.
When he talks about animals,
he'll talk about each species as if it's
a person. So he'll say oh the the Jaguar she never likes to let you see her. And so he'll come back
from the jungle and he'll go oh I was watching monkeys in this I this Jaguar was also watching the
monkeys but I was being so quiet she didn't see me and then when she see me she feels so embarrassed
and she go and he'll tell you this story Like as if he had this interaction with like his neighbor and
You know and he'll be like oh the Puka Kunga it never does that you won't see it do that
And so one time one time he caught a fish and I I was such a big fish
It was a big beautiful pseudo-platti stoma this tiger catfish
There's amazing old fish and they're all excited to eat it
And I felt so bad watching this thing gasp on the sand
and I went, you know what, we don't need this.
This is for fun, I threw it back.
Oh, no.
And then I took my hand and I went,
and I made like drag marks,
like so I could say, oh, it snuck back in the water.
And so he walks up, he looks at it
and he was like, I hate you.
And I went, what, no, I said, I mean, must have,
it must have just, he went, that's not what happens.
He goes, it goes like this when it got,
he knew the track of a fish and I was like, I, yeah.
I was like, all right, JJ, I'm sorry,
I'll catch you another fish.
So stepping back to that way,
you open mother of God.
Yeah.
Who was Santiago de Ran?
And what secret did you tell you?
JJ's father was, at some point, who was Santiago de Ran and what secret did you tell you? JJ's father was, uh, at some point he was a policeman.
At some point when he was a teenager, he was working on the boats that before
this little gold mining city of Puerto Maldonado, uh, grew the only way to get
supplies in was to take canoes up the Tembo Pada River up to the next state,
which is Puno and and where the mules would come down from the mountains with supplies, and then he'd pilot the boats down,
but they didn't have motors at that time, so he would be pulling the boat.
So he became this physically terrifying man, and I met him in when he was in his 80s,
and he was still living out in the jungle by himself, and I mean, he's seen an anaconda eat a taper, which is the, you
know, a cow-sized mammal in the Amazon. He'd seen uncontacted tribes face to face. He
once killed an 11-foot electric eel, opened the back of the thing's neck, removed the
nerve that he says was the source of the electric, then he cut his forearm, placed that nerve
into his forearm, wrapped it with a dead toad and claimed that it would give him strength through the rest of his life,
and continued to be a jungle badass until the day he quietly leaned back at a barbecue and ceased to be alive.
The man was incredible, but the secret that he told us was that if you want to find big anacondas, if you want to see
the Yakumama, he was like, you have to go to the Bawayo, the place of Bolas, the place
that we came to call the floating forest.
And so he sent us there and it became like this pilgrimage.
And the Amazon, a lot of the creation myths are based around the anaconda coming down
from the heavens and carving the rivers across the jungle.
And if you look at the rivers, it looks like that.
It looks like the path of an Anaconda crawling through the jungle, it's even the right color.
And so from the reference to the tribes of women, the Amazons to the Anaconda mother, everything
in the Amazon is very feminine based.
Even the trees, the largest trees in the jungle,
the mother of the forest, the mud that I did at a cell,
is the K-pop tree, and it's just this monster tree,
these beautiful ancient trees.
And that was the beginning of the transition
that we made from me being like, I hate school,
I wanna go on adventures.
You know, Jane Goodall got to do all this amazing stuff.
I'm just a kid stuck here to eventually becoming something that had to do with where my identity
became the jungle, where my life became the jungle. The secret that he told us opened that door.
Because when we started working with these giant snakes, it started getting attention.
It started getting people to go, what are you doing? And it started allowing me to have experiences that solidified and nailed down
the fact that this wasn't just like a weekend retreat. This was something that I was born to do.
And gave you more and more motivation to go into these uncharted territory of the
Yakumama, which just to step back, what nations that we're talking about here is some geography.
What are we talking about?
Where is this?
So I'm in Peru.
Yeah, we're in Peru.
So which is a South American nation?
Peru is a South American nation.
Brazil has 60% of the Amazon, which is unfortunate
because anything that happens politically in Brazil
has a massive impact on the Amazon.
Peru has the Western Amazon,
and Ecuador has a little bit of the Western Amazon.
And the Western Amazon is where the Andes mountains,
the Cloud Forests, which is a mega-biodevirus biome, falls into
the Western Amazon lowlands.
And so you have these, the meeting of these two incredible biomes.
And that's what makes this like superlative, incredible, glowing moment of life on Earth.
So yeah, we're in Peru in the Madre de Dios, which is the Mother of God, which I always
thought was such a beautiful, you know, the jungle is the mother of God, which I always thought was such a beautiful,
the jungle is the source of all life.
And so we were with the S.A.A.A.A.A. people,
and they belonged to a community that's called in Fierno,
which was given by the missionaries,
who when they tried to go bring these people,
Jesus got so many arrows shot at them,
they just called it hell.
And so Santiago Durán helped unite these tribes that were sort of scattered
through the jungle and get them status, government recognized status as indigenous people.
So he was sort of a hero, he was sort of a legend for a lot of the stuff he'd done out
barefoot with just like a rifle and a machete in the jungle. He had 19 children. And
the last one, I think the 20th child
that he adopted was a refugee from the shining path
that floated down the river and he just took him in.
And this is just a guy that was,
everything he did, when he died the whole region showed up.
It was, he was somebody.
So just the fact that I know him gives me street credit.
The fact that I knew him, I can go,
like, oh, I knew Santiago and people would know. I'm like, yeah, yeah. So you have to get
integrated to the culture, to the place, to the me in every single way, which is, which is tough for
you for the being from, from New York. Yeah. Yeah. It could have been tough, but it was, I took to it,
you know, the jungle. They, they were very, you know, J.J. is teaching me about medicines and we were
doing bird surveys and, you know, taking data on McCaw populations. And J.J. was just like,
you really want to, like, he goes, you got to sleep. And I was like, I only have a few weeks
here. I don't know if I'm ever going to come back. I'm never going to sleep. So we'd be out
every night looking for all the wildlife we could. I wanted to take photos. I wanted to see things.
And, and then, you know, the exchange came with that he was like,
I'm terrified of snakes.
And I said, I'll always work with snakes.
I said, I'll teach you how to handle snakes.
And then we just had this little exchange.
And then when I left, after my first time back in 2006,
I said, how can I help?
And they were like, look, we're out here trying
to protect this little island of
forest that is going to be bulldozed.
And the more people that you can bring, the more knowledge and the more awareness that
you can bring to this, it'll help.
And so really at that age, at 18 years old, I sort of started dabbling with the idea
of that I could be part of helping these people to protect this place that I loved.
And of course, at that time, that idea seemed like too large of a dream or too large of a challenge
to that I could actually impact it. So what was the journey of looking for these giant snakes
of looking for anacondas. What are anacondas?
Anaconda is the largest snake on earth.
So you have articulated pythons in Southeast Asia.
They're actually longer.
But anacondas are these massive boas
that give live birth and unlike a lot of other species.
So anaconda starts off a little two-foot anaconda,
just a little thicker than your finger, a little baby. And they're food for cane toads, herons, crocodiles,
what do you name it? They're pretty harmless, defenseless. But as they grow, they're eating
the fish, they're eating the crocs, and then they grow a little more, and they're eating
things like capybara, and they're eating larger prey. And then at the end of their life a female anaconda you're talking about a 25 30 foot
300 400 pounds snake with a head bigger than a football and these things
That means that they impact the entire ecosystem which is very unique moves up the food chain to become basically a
Neaplex predator. Yeah,. The apex predator of the rivers.
And so that's how interesting.
Just eating your way up to food.
Eating your way up to food.
Eating your way up to food, Jane.
If you can survive.
And like they, you know, they're constantly at war with everything else.
But, you know, so I showed up in the Amazon.
I was like, so where are the Anaconda's at?
And they were like, oh no, no, no, it's not like that.
They're like, it's you, you have to find these things.
They're, they're subterranean.
They're living in the special swamps. They're subterranean. They're living in the special swamps. People
kill them. And so we went to the floating forest after we'd come back from an expedition.
We'd called like a 12 foot anaconda. And it's now it's become like this like classic
photo of me and JJ with this anaconda over our shoulders. And we were like, we, you
know, we 12 days out in the jungle on a hunting trip and we came back and we showed his dad and
Santiago looked at us and he was like, that's the smallest anacondit dive I've ever seen. He's like, you guys are pathetic
12 foot and he was like, look, you go to the go. He was like, go. He's like, I'm giving you permission. Go to the boy
You'll go to the floating forest and so we went to this place and we reached there at night and it was me
JJ and one of his brothers and his brother took one look at it
and was like, I'm out, and he'd started walking back.
And me and JJ get to the edge of this thing,
and this is our friendship, it's both this two idiots
pushing each other farther and farther.
And like, I like put a foot on the ground,
and it all shook.
And the stars are reflecting on the ground,
and what we realize is that it's a lake
with floating grass on top of it.
And there's islands of grass floating on this lake,
very life of pie, and the tops of trees
are coming out of the surface of the water.
And so we start walking across this,
and JJ's gone, these are big anacondas,
and I'm going JJ, that's a two foot wide smooth path sneaking through the grass. And it's an anacondas. And I'm going JJ. That's a two foot wide smooth path
sneaking through the grass.
It's an anaconda that big.
Yeah.
He was going, shh, they're listening.
I said, they don't have ears.
You go tell listening.
And it's like, we're walking and we're walking.
And then it's like, maybe it's like 1am or something.
And it was just like one of those moments
where we saw it at the same time and we're standing by the tail.
And the snake was so big that I mean this must have been a 25 foot anaconda dead asleep with a with a probably a 16 foot anaconda like sprawl the crosshair and they're laying in the starlight and we're floating on top of a lake standing there in the middle of the Amazon and J.J.
Just I just I could feel the blood drain out of his face and
as like a however old I was you know, maybe 20 years old. I just said if I if we could
somehow
Show people this will be on the front cover in National Geographic and we can protect all the jungle that we want and so
I tried to catch it. So I jumped on the snake, and the only measurement I have of this animal is that when I wrapped
my arms around it, I couldn't touch my fingers.
And so I was, you know, my feet were dragging, and to her credit, this anaconda did not turn
around and eat me, because her head was, you know, this year.
And she went, and she reached the edge of the grass island
and she starts plunging into the dark.
And so I'm watching the stars vibrate
as this anaconda is going
and I had to make the choice of either going head first
down into the black, which no thank you,
or stopping and just keeping my hand on this thing
as it raced by me and I just felt the scales
and the muscle and the power go by
and then eventually taper down to the tail
until it slipped away into the darkness
and I was laying there just panting.
And then I turned around and went,
JJ, what the fuck?
Where were you man?
He was just like completely white circuits blown
and I had to go then like,
I don't like take care of him.
I was like, are you okay?
And he was like, no. you know, he just couldn't. And so we came back with that. And then
after that, we were like, okay, we really clearly the parameters of reality that we thought were
possible are just a tiny fraction of what's out there. Like we, we now, that sort of recalibrated us.
We were like, okay, we're rubbing up against things that are bigger than we thought were ever possible. And so we were like, okay, now we need to concentrate on this.
So how dangerous is that creature to humans? To humans, not at all. I mean, my,
one, our cooks father-in-law was eaten by an anaconda, but like, you know, then again,
like, you see that. story sometimes it happens it happens
I mean come on every now and then somebody gets stung by a bee and dies like you know it's it once in a while it happens
But you got to have a really big anaconda really hungry and like
Anybody that works in the wild. I mean just you know if you you walk up to a crocodile even a giant Nile crocodile
You walk up to the most of the time,
they're gonna run into the water.
They don't want confrontation.
They hunt in their way on their terms sneaky.
You're not gonna see him.
And so with an anaconda, it's like, yeah,
I mean, the guy who got eaten,
like if you're drunk and you go to the edge of the water
and you go for midnight swim by yourself
in an Amazonian lake, I mean, whose fault is that?
But if you jump on an icon and try to,
yeah, try to hold on, then you're safe.
Apparently, I mean, I think at this point,
the research we've done, I think I've handled
or caught over 80 Anacondas in the field,
and not one of them has bitten me.
They always choose flight over fight.
They're like, just leave me alone, let me go.
I'm just gonna crawl under this thing. They're not an aggressive animal. I mean, no snake.
No, I actually like, I kind of like, the only time I get particular was like, you know,
the words is like, people go, that's an aggressive, black mombas are aggressive. And I go, no,
snake is aggressive. A rattlesnake is going to rattle to say, hey, back up. The cobra is
going to stand up and show you its hood.
And people go, oh, he's being aggressive.
No, he's not being aggressive.
He's going, don't step on me.
Don't make me do this.
They're actually being very peaceful.
That's the way I look at it.
Because if there was a Cobra in the corner of this room
right now, he would crawl under the curtain
and we'd never see him again.
Yeah, it's like Jenga's con before conquering the Villagis
who was offered for them to join the army doesn't need to be like this
Yeah, join us. Yeah, nobody gets destroyed if you want to be proud and fight for your country
then
We're gonna do a lot of you
Exactly, okay, so how do you catch actually?
Let's the back because there is
In part you are a bit of a snake whisperer.
So what is it that others don't understand that you do about snakes?
What's maybe a misconception?
Or what, what is, what have you learned from the language you speak that snakes understand?
I don't know. It's just, it's an animal that has, has many times in my life, I've been responsible for
helping.
Um, the, you know, I started catching snakes when I was very young.
I'd watched you were going to go out and catch a garter snake or a black rat snake in
New York and, um, and then I had a rule.
I said, I have to catch a hundred non-venomous snakes before I'm allowed to handle a venomous
snake.
If I ever need to handle a venomous snake and then, you know, it's on a trail one time,
I think in Haramon State Park and some guy, you know, like some big hero he tells us,
you know, he's like, back up.
I'm going to get this and he like picks up a stick and he like goes to like assault this
poor copperhead that's sitting on the trail.
And so like at like 16 years old, I had to go and like shoulder this guy out of the way
and I like got the thing by the tail and used a stick to very gently just put it off the
trail.
Copperhead was not going to do anything to him, but he wanted to, you know, beat his chest
and show his wife that he was tough.
But then in India, you know, I've lived in India for five years at this point in and out,
periodically.
And and snakes are always getting into people's kitchens.
One time we had a King Cobra
get into someone's kitchen, an 11 foot snake,
like a monster, like a god of a snake.
This thing stood up, you know,
it would stand up and be able to look at you over the table.
And this terrifying monster thing,
giant gorilla dog thing,
like we caught it with one of the local snake catchers,
and we brought it out and he goes,
you know, I wonder why it was in the kitchen. Yeah, looking for food and they go, no, they eat snakes,
King cobra, Opeo Fagus Hannah, they eat snakes. And he goes, she's thirsty. And so we got a bottle
of water and we got footage of this and we, she's standing up, she's going, don't make me kill you,
don't make me kill you, you're scaringaring me right now I don't want to kill you.
We took the bottle of water we poured it on her nose and she started she started drinking.
You can see you can see her just drinking and the snake just took the long drink
drink a whole water bottle and then said thank you so much and crawled off.
And it's like to me the fact that people are scared of snakes, they have symbolic hatred of snakes.
Someone's evil and sneaky, we call them a snake.
And to me, it's like, when I take volunteers or researchers
or students out into the jungle,
and we find an emerald tree boa,
or an Amazon tree boa, or a vine snake,
and it's like, it's one of the few animals
that you can't really catch a bird
and show it to people.
You're going to scare the bird,
its feathers are going to come out.
You might give it a heart attack.
Snakes, you can lift up a snake.
You know, if there's a snake in the room right now,
I could lift it up and say,
Lex, here, this is how you hold it.
And we can interact calmly with this thing
and then put it back on its branch and then it'll go.
And I've seen what that does to people.
I've seen how the wonder in their eyes.
And so to me, snakes have always been this incredible link to teach people about wildlife, about nature.
Because they have naturally a lot of fear towards this creature and to realize that the
fear is not justified, is not grounded, or is not as deeply grounded in reality. Of
course, there's always New Yorker snakes, right? There's always going to be an asshole snake
here and there
coming for me man
Okay, so back to me on the con. How do you catch it and like what?
How do you hand it because it's such a
25 foot or even 12 foot giant snakes? How do you?
How do you deal with this creature? How do you interact with them? We had to learn how to do that,
because one of the first ones we caught that I would say,
maybe like a 16 footer, which is no joke of a snake,
a girth of a basketball, let's say.
We're on the canoe, and this is the early days.
Now we're at a whole different level,
but this is back when we were barefoot and shirtless,
and just guys in the Amazon, and JJ is like, you know, I just listened to him.
He'd be like, get off the boat.
You come from the top, we're gonna come from the bottom.
So, okay, I just did as I was told.
I came in, the snake is all curled up, dead asleep.
She's got some butterflies on her eyes,
trying to get salt and stuff.
And all of a sudden I see the tongue,
so, so, I'm like, she's awake.
And I'm like, guys, guys, guys, guys, she's, and they're paying attention to not crashing
the boat to getting over there.
And we're all trying to run.
Snake starts going into the water.
So I run ahead, grab this snake, get her by the head.
So you got her by the head, you think, okay, she can't get me.
We got her right behind the head.
And it's about this thick, the neck.
What's that feel like, Scythe interrupt?
Like grabbing this thing with a giant head. It's exciting, it's amazing. thick, the neck. What's that feel like, side tune to rub? Like grabbing this thing with a giant head.
It's exciting, it's amazing.
It's scary.
Yeah, it's scary.
How hard is it to hold?
It's not that hard to hold.
The scary part is the moment of, it's like,
if you've ever done like a cliff dive or something,
it's that moment where you go, do it, do it, the time.
Like do it, and if your body's going, do not do that.
And then you're like, I gotta do it.
And you do it.
Because you can't just gently flirt with it.
You have to grab the toe.
No.
And it's like, it's like crossing the street
when there's a bus coming.
It's like, you hesitate.
It's more dangerous.
So you just, you go for it.
And I got her.
And I was like, I got her.
And then a coil goes over my wrists.
And all of a sudden, my wrists slap together.
And you feel this squeeze that can crush the bones out
of an animal bigger than me.
And the next coil comes very quickly over my neck. And now I'm on my knees with my arms tied.
If I wanted to let go of the snake, I couldn't. And my shoulders are coming together. And my collar
bone is about to break. And I tried to yell for Jay-Jay and all that came out was, there's nothing.
And so that's what they do to their prey. So I attacked, as far as the snake knows, I attacked.
She doesn't know that I just want to measure her. You, you started
off as the big spoon, but then the snake became the big spoon.
Very much became the big spoon. And I was, I would say I was 15 seconds away from having
my entire ribcage collapsed. And then JJ showed up and grabbed the tail and just started unwrapping
this thing. And then we got, but now we have a system. Now we know like, you know, I'm
always, I've done, I've gotten more head catches than anybody. So I'm usually
point guy and you know, you get, you're the, you're the, the first, the, the point guy. I'm the,
okay. The, the, the, taking the big risky. Yes. First up. Yes. Although the, it could be argued
that there's a similarly large risk for the tail guy because the anaconda's defense is to take a giant projectile
Shit, and so the person that gets the tail is gonna smell like anaconda for like at least a week. Yeah, so it's the least pleasant
You're taking the most dangerous one there
They have the least pleasant job. This is fascinating
But what's really fascinating though is that because they're the apex predator
They're they're eating the fish they're eating the they're eating everything, and everything in this riparian ecosystem
is absorbing the mercury that's coming off the gold mining in the region.
And so anaconda can be indicative for us of how is mercury moving through this ecosystem.
And this is a region where we've lost hundreds of thousands of acres to artisanal gold mining
where they use mercury to bind the gold.
They cut the forest, burn the forest, and then they run water through the sand, and the sand particles have bits of gold in it, not chunks,
but just little almost microscopic flecks of gold. And then they use the mercury to bind that, and then they burn off the mercury,
and that vapor goes up into the clouds, so just like everything else, it's all connected down there,
and then rains down into the rivers,
and so the people in the region
are having birth defects from the amount of mercury
that's in the water.
So we were starting at one point
when we were doing most of our anachonda research,
we were learning things like these animals
actually aren't just ambush predators,
which is what most of the literature would tell you
is that anachon is our ambush predators.
No, they actually go hunting.
They'll go find clalix and salt deposits in their weight there.
They'll actually pursue animals.
And we were trying to take tissue samples to find out if anacondas could be used to study
how mercury is moving through the ecosystem.
So that was really, it became, can we use these animals not only as ambassadors for wildlife
because everybody wants to see the anacondas, but also, you know, what can we learn from studying this
very, very little understodate apex predator?
And one of the things you can learn is how mercury moves through the ecosystem, which can
damage the ecosystem in all kinds of different ways.
Yeah, it's brutal, man.
The goal mining that's happening down there is, it's funny because we've been hearing a lot recently about the cobalt mines in Africa. And it's like where we are in
the Amazon, we were down there with ABC news. I want to say like a year and a half ago
with my friend Matt Gutman, who's the chief correspondent for ABC. And he wanted to see
the Amazon fires. He wanted to see some Amazon fires he wanted to see some wildlife he wanted
to see the areas that we're protecting and then he goes I want to see the gold mining
areas and and I'd never gotten in so deep but we we met these Russian got you can't go
with the proving they will kill you like our lawyers father was was assassinated for standing
up to the gold miners. There was two Russian guys though who had a legal mining concession
somehow way out past the machine gun guarded
limit of the pump us, which is where they do all this gold
mining. And we got in there and took footage of the desert that
is forming in what used to be the headwaters of the Amazon
rainforest. And it's like, there is a massive global scale
ecological crime happening down there that you can see from space
From this unregulated gold mining and the cops can't go there because they will be murdered. It's completely lawless
What's the machine gun limit exactly?
It's the border of this area that they call the pumpus, which is where the rain forest has been cut and completely destroyed and it looks like Mars. It's just sand
and
inside of this area are
gold miners and we, you know, we tried to get in there to film years ago and there's just
a lot of guys with machine guns who don't let that happen. And what the Russian guys had
access somehow. They'd come down with a bit of money and they had a new system. Yeah.
And actually what was interesting is while I was in there, they're very friendly and really, really too friendly gold miners. And they, one of them while I was there, he,
you know, he kind of tapped me on the shoulder. He was like, you know, look at those guys.
He was like, those guys over there. He goes, I just heard them say your name.
And he goes, that's not a good thing. He goes, they know exactly who you are.
And he goes, I wouldn't keep posting to Instagram
about gold mining in the Amazon.
And I was like, okay, and thanks for the warning.
And then, you know, in June,
somebody pulled up beside me on a motorcycle
and I got a more stern warning.
But.
But they pay attention to the flow of information
because they don't want the world to find out.
Oh, the last thing they want is to be shut down.
But the gold miners are notorious for
you know, just whacking people and throwing them in a pile of, you know, gold mining leftovers.
It's really like the Peruvian government has to get the military to go after them.
Like the work we've done with gold miners, converting them into conservationists has all been like,
I mean, I've seen the Peruvian Navy come down and
literally blow up gold mining barges and you know, it's a war. It's a war being fought in the Amazon.
So it's possible to convert them into conservationists. What's that process like?
We, or is that like, uh, you say that in jest? No, I say that in an absolute sincerity. We went up river
up the Malanowski river several years ago and and I think it was 2018, and everyone everyone was like, you are going to die.
You will be shot and killed.
The reason we were able to do it with relative safety was that the gold miner that we were
going with was the brother-in-law of one of my closest friends down there, our expedition chef and one of the directors of Jungle Keepers.
And they said, look, you can go, just keep a low profile. And so I went up with a photographer and we spent a week there and
dead animals everywhere, deforestation everywhere. I mean, the things that we saw were so horrible. And we're living with these gold miners that are, you know, they're getting their gold, they're burning off the mercury. I watched the guy smoking a cigarette, burning the mercury off
of his gold with the vapor going straight into his face with his child right there. I mean,
unbelievable negligence of just sanity, just, and then towards the end of the week, the
Peruvian Navy comes down the river and everyone starts scrambling
and I was like, I'm just gonna sit here with my hands up
because, you know, and they didn't even stop.
They found the gold mining barge.
They have a floating thing in the river
that just plums the bottom of the river,
just sucks all the sediment up.
And they stopped and they strapped a bunch of explosives
to this motor and good lord,
the sound of this explosion and there was just hot metal
raining down all over the place and then they just went.
A bunch of guys in fatigues and they just kind of like looked
at us like, peace.
And I sat there with this gold miner and I went,
now what?
And he went, well, now I gotta go get a new motor.
And I went, why don't you just do something else?
And he goes, what else is there?
And I went, look what we do.
And I sat there with my phone and I was like, see this? These are pretty tourists. And we feed them
food. And we show them tarantulas and macaws and he looked at this and he went, wow, he
goes, you, he goes, that looks like so much fun. And I went, it is so much fun. I said,
we show people, we bring students to the jungle. He goes, so you're saying, if I build you
a lodge, you'll bring people,
I said, yeah. And I came back a year later and he sat there with a chainsaw, a hand saw,
and some nails. And he cut down like 17 palm trees and he built an ecotourism lodge.
So you give them another channel of survival, making money. And that's what we've been doing
through jungle keepers for loggers and for all kinds of extractors. It's just saying, look,
what do you make? You make $15 a day destroying the ancient trees of
the jungle. What if we paid you $35 a day to have a uniform and a
job and health insurance and security? And you just protect it and
use all of the jungle knowledge you've gained as a logger to protect
this place.
Who are the loggers trying to to destroy the Amazon?
Can you say a little bit more about it?
Is that as a threat to the Amazon rainforest?
A lot of them are really close friends of mine. They're
They're people that need to make a living and they're jungle people who
They're people that need to make a living and they're jungle people who, you know, the rainforests are very challenging, especially the Amazon is a very challenging environment. So you have these
people who they have a chainsaw, they have a job opportunity, they go out and they cut the trees
and a lot of these guys grew up fishing, they grew up in the jungle, they know how to do it.
And so for them, it's a way to like, they also love it. So this is the thing, these are outdoorsmen. These are guys that love the jungle.
And so they, you know, in the 90s,
we had the Mahogany boom, where they went out
after the Mahogany, and you can almost
can't find a Mahogany tree in the jungle anymore.
And if you wanna talk about like carbon sequestration
and the rainforest, the ancient hardwoods
hold like 60% of the carbon of the whole rainforest.
They have an outsized disproportionate mass from that ancient density of the wood.
And so these loggers go out and they cut the wood that's most valuable and then they
bring it back to town and they sell it and then people like us buy it and put it on
our kitchen floors.
And so the thing is, when I got to the Amazon, it was,
you know, loggers of the bad guys.
And if you talk to a lot of like the PhDs that I worked with
down there were always very at odds with the miners, at odds with
the loggers. And then I'd be with JJ and JJ would sit down and
he'd be like, hey, let's pour a drink. Oh, they have my
satos. Let's all sit down and like, we'd all be chilling and
throwing them back with a bunch of loggers and
And then those the opportunity through not vilifying these people came to be like, oh these are
These are these guys are great, you know, and then of course out in the wild every now and then something will happen
You'll see somebody's boat flipped over and you go you go help them out and then that creates a certain type of kinship
So they're ultimately people who love,
who love the same thing you love.
Often, yeah.
Even if they don't love it,
they're people that aren't necessarily looking to destroy it.
I've met loggers who have looked at trees there
about to cut and gone, ah, this is a shame.
Started up, you know, they're just like,
this is where the paycheck comes from.
Let's come back briefly to anaconda's
Can you tell me
This whole situation with discoveries eating alive. There's some drama and controversy around that can you explain that whole saga with discovery with
With your whole effort maybe outside of even the drama, the initial thing, which I know feel you're sufficiently
insane to actually do of being eaten by an aconda.
Is that actually possible to survive something like that?
I mean, if anaconda swallows you while you're wearing
the suit that they made, maybe, but that was in hindsight,
whether that was the result of, look,
I go to the jungle and you start seeing these beautiful places, these incredible species, you start developing a relationship with these animals. And then you watch it get destroyed every year, we watch it burn, every year places are are crucial to my soul. I have seen
leveled and turned to ash and at some point we started going
Someone has to do something about this
And you look to your right and you look to your left and there is no one because it's the middle of the Amazon
and the rainforests have been being destroyed since the 70s. It's a cliche
and the rainforests have been being destroyed since the 70s. It's a cliche.
And so we started trying to do something about it.
And so I started putting a little bit more emphasis on publicity,
a little bit more emphasis on getting the message out there.
And so I started trying to see how what was going to work.
You know, you just start firing shots in the dark and seeing,
and you know, JJ's going, you have to help us do something.
And I'm going, okay, you know, JJ's going, you have to help us do something, and I'm going,
okay, you know, and so from 18 years old,
now I'm 23 years old, and all of a sudden,
this place isn't far into me anymore, it's home.
And so when you're trying to think of all the different ways
you can bring attention to this place
that you care about, that's being destroyed.
Yeah, you're standing next to a boulder of progress, of destruction, and it's about to roll
onto the forest and just destroy it and snuff out all that life, and no one's there to
do anything about it.
And so you go, is there any way that I could put myself in front of this boulder and
hold it back?
And you're talking about, you know, the global economic reality.
It's just a massive, it's systemic.
So what's the most dramatic possible thing I could do?
Exactly.
So when you find yourself flown to LA as a 23 year old dude and you're sitting there
with some guy who's like spinning a pan and got his feet up on the desk and going,
what can you show us down there?
And you go, I could show you the biggest anacondas
in the world and we could talk about mercury
and bioaccumulation and we could show people
how these animals are misunderstood.
And we go on a big expedition and we could be the coolest
show ever and he goes, yeah, not good enough.
And you go, okay.
And so that cycled through a bunch of times.
And someone at some point,
one of those meetings said, you know,
what if we show people that Anaconda
really can eat humans?
And I went, how is that a good show?
You want me to feed someone to Anaconda?
And I said, I mean, and I kind of joked like,
what if, you know, I said,
the only way that's feasible is if you like,
make a suit with a breathing apparatus
and let the snake eat you and then come back out safely
and make sure you don't hurt the snake.
They're like, kid, you're on.
And I was like, oh, shit.
So I should mention a small tangent.
I think I mentioned to you offline due to travel troubles.
So I traveled to the totally wrong part of the United States.
I'm my way to Boston.
And on my way to Boston, I did a conversation with Mr.
Beast, Jimmy. And I got in chance to hang out with him for the day. And one of the things
we did is have a lengthy brainstorm session with this team, or I was observing it.
Sure.
But it was interesting because he's probably way better at that conversation
That you had with the with the guy in LA. Yeah, then the guy in LA obviously because he's made
He's revolutionizing entertainment and he's also doing philanthropy
Yeah, yeah, which he's trying to figure out how to help the world with that kind of stuff
So I would love to actually I'll send him a message to see what his thoughts just brainstorm. He's so strong at this. Yeah. Literally take
the situation you're facing. Yeah. Here's the place that I really care about is being
born down, is being destroyed. What's the sexy video? Yeah. How do you get, how do you
get people to watch something that's, you know, we all change a channel when they show
us the kids in Africa with the swollen stomachs. Nobody wants to see it.'s, you know, we all change a channel when they show us the kids in Africa
with the swollen stomachs. Nobody wants to see it. And it's like, with the rain forest, like, we know,
we know, we know. And I'm going, I could give data all day long. I could show photos of burning
forest. And so I was looking for what would do it. And so the eating a live thing without spending
too much time on a, on a massive misstep was I agreed to do it. They paid me
at the time more money than I had made before, which I very much needed because nobody pays
you to be a conservationist. So I was a very poor 23 year old. It was like, yes, I would
love that please. And I thought, you know, what, this is the start of a TV career. We got
shafted so bad. I mean, they used somehow they changed our voices.
They changed the things we said.
They changed the message of the film.
There was one point where we had caught a 19-foot snake
and I was holding her head and I said,
this is such a beautiful animal.
The queen of the Amazon.
This is such a great moment for me.
I kissed her on the head.
I said, she's made so many babies.
Look at the scars.
I was talking about just the poetry of this incredible dragon. And then the producer goes, yeah, yeah,
that's great. Listen, if that was to bite you, what would happen? And I was like, oh, well, if it
bit you, you know, you'd bleed out because it would last a rate down to the, that's what they put
in the film. And so day of they didn't show me the film until the night before I went on Matt Lauer's show and I said I am not endorsing this film
And they had called it expedition on the call sheet. They called it expedition EA expedition Amazon
All of a sudden they changed it to eat in the life and I went wait guys wait wait wait
I said you're gonna make people think that it actually happened not that we're attempting it and
They and I say I'm not and then they called me and they said, you better, you're going on live TV tomorrow. They said, you let us know what level of control
we need to show for you, right? And it was very threatening phone call. And so I had to
go out and smile for the cameras and endorse something that was a train wreck. And the
scientific community was like, you're an idiot. We don't want to ever see you again. I
lost a lot of opportunities. Peter came, which which, you know, PETA, whatever. But PETA came out. People were like, you, you,
you were trying to hurt a snake, which I would never do. And then the American public was like,
you know, you said you were going to get eaten by a snake, and you didn't. And so everyone was
pissed. I basically had to exile myself to India for like six months. And just, I mean, I had death
threats coming through all my messages. It was like People were furious with me. What gave you strength to that?
How difficult was that psychologically?
Just everything you care about, being completely flipped upside down?
I've spent so much time on the ground with the local people learning from the wildlife.
It's such a devout and important thing to me.
And it got turned into a side show.
It got turned into a joke. And then not just a joke And it got turned into a side show. It got turned into a joke.
And then not just a joke, it got turned into that I'm somehow bad to animals. You know,
I'm irresponsible scientifically. Jimmy Kimmel told me to have sex with a hippo as my next stunt.
Like it was like, it got really ugly. And it misfired so bad. And when you hear these like motivational speakers talk about, you know,
you just got to keep trying.
And sometimes you're going to fail hard.
It was like that one I got hit in the head with a baseball bat.
That one was tough.
And at the time I was like, I'm fine.
And I was like, I'm going to go away for a while.
You know, and I learned a lot though.
Like at this point, I'm still glad I did it because
man did I learn a lot about what a room full of people that you don't know who could look
you in the eye and shake your hand and say, trust us.
Oh boy.
Do you have on a human level of resentment towards discovery, towards the people involved?
Were you able to figure them?
I don't care.
It literally, that's what they do.
They literally put out a documentary saying that mermaids were real.
It's my minute, wait a minute, they're not.
Listen.
No.
I said, I'm not even touching that one.
It's true.
It is true.
There is a documentary where they duke a bunch of scientists who are like oceanographers
and they like showed them ancient footage of, you know, mariners saying that seals were
murmurs, who cares?
It's, I was young, I got brought to Hollywood and I got spit out the other side.
And that's on me.
That's not their fault.
You know, there's that, you know, there's that parable about the frog who gives the scorpion
a ride across the water. And then at the end, he says, I'll give you a ride, just don't, does that parable about the frog who gives the scorpion a ride across the water?
And then at the end, he says,
I'll give you a ride, just don't sting me.
And they get to the other side and the scorpion stings him.
And the frog goes, why did you do that?
And the scorpion goes, I'm a scorpion.
That's, it's not their fault.
It's in my nature, but now that you've become
much more well-known and much more successful,
what you do, you have a platform.
Can you return to those people and use it the machine to get more and more
attention? Is that something you work on? Or do you prefer to work completely
outside? I think that most of the success that we've had now in protecting the
rainforest and and and it's the levels that we've reached are so far, I think, back to those barefoot days
of catching snakes with JJ on the boat.
And now the massive ecological reserve we have
and the team of Rangers and the converted loggers
and all of that is because of the ability
to communicate and to show people,
but that's all been through social media.
And so I'm open to the fact, you know,
if somebody came and gave a sort of like,
Bordanian pass where they said,
look, you can be yourself, you can swear, you can fart,
you can smoke, you can do whatever you want to do,
go out there and show us the real thing I would love to.
But now I know how those contracts need to be.
I need to have right to refusal and they can't change them.
And so I'd almost rather just do it like the way I think like Mr. Beast does stuff where
it's like you just, you get a crew guys and some seed money and go film the episodes and
put it out exactly.
I mean, a committee never helped real art be better.
It has to come from the source of inspiration.
So you get, I think, you know, you get JJ and a crew of people with a guy in Africa that
I'm working with right now do an elephant conservation and like
But you got to show real. I mean look that's why that's why I mean look that's why Joe Rogan is is important right now
That's why you're important right now. It's because it's not being filtered through
this ridiculous system of
polishing it and dumbing it down. Yeah, that's why Joe has been an inspiration.
You don't need a crew of a bunch of people.
You don't need a crew period.
You don't need to just one or two other people.
And that's it.
In my case, you don't need anybody.
I've been doing this by requirement.
I just need to be by myself.
There's a few other folks now that are helpful to editing
and so on, but it's just they make life more awesome as opposed to a boss that's a creative director.
Somebody told me actually I was visiting L.A. I think it was an L.A.
They were saying that now for all intimate scenes and Hollywood movies, there's an intimacy director.
So when there's two people having sex, there's a third person
that ensures that unfilm. So it's not real, but there's still intimacy. There's a third person
that ensures that like everyone is comfortable. And the actors say that this like always ruins
the chemistry of the scene. Yeah. And so it's a Hollywood thing. I understand that it's creepy.
I so understand. Thanks, Harvey Weinz. It's usually I think comes from the director pushing
things too hard. If you just leave it to the actors, they know their boundaries, they
control their own boundaries. So the intimacy director is more for like the director pushing
thing. You know, there's one or her. I understand the logic. Let's make sure that we don't have anything happen here that shouldn't be happening.
I get it, but yeah.
But no, I think that authenticity is the greatest currency.
And I think that in order for me to tell the stories that I can tell,
like, what changed the game for me was, I want to tell you this story.
So in 2019, the Amazon fire started popping off and we had just gone to film, like a month
earlier, we'd filmed like a small documentary and they'd been following me as if I was on
a, as if I was on a solo, which you know, we did the best we could.
I, I lived on my own.
But we, as we were driving, we passed a spot
where the flames were 70 feet tall.
The forest was being destroyed.
And I went out there with my phone,
which overheated in like two minutes
and said, you can't use it.
But for a second, I was out there in the flames,
picking up animals and throwing them off.
So I was trying to just get them cooled off.
I was trying to get snakes out of there.
Everything was the birds are flying,
and I fucking lost it. I was red-eyed, I was crying, and I was going, this is happening every
fucking day. I was screaming, and it's the first time that I've done that, because I've seen the
burning so many times, and I just lost it that day. And I don't know what made me pull out my phone,
because usually in those intense moments, I say, forget the documentation. This is real life. We
got stuff to do, and I'm doing. I'm not documenting. And then a month moments, I say forget the documentation. This is real life.
We got stuff to do and I'm doing.
I'm not documenting.
And then a month later, I'm home and I'm in New York
and all of a sudden I see these articles,
like, you know, the Amazon's burning worse this year
than it was last year and blah, blah, blah.
And I was like, this, you know, fucking,
and I threw it up on Instagram like eight o'clock at night.
And I'd never, like, I'd never cursed on Instagram.
I don't know, you know, why?
I just, Denver did.
And I, my phone was on 100%.
And I put on top of the refrigerator and I went to bed.
I woke up in the morning and my phone was on the floor
on 2% and it was ringing off the hook.
And it was like the news.
And they were like, are you the guy that posted that viral
video about the Amazon?
And I was like, what?
And that was the start.
That's where it broke.
And that's where we went from barefoot in the Amazon to,
all of a sudden, I was talking head for three weeks
and going around on all these news stations.
And all of a sudden, I was like the spokesperson
for the Amazon and JJ's calling me.
And he was like, go, go, go, go, go.
Like get us, get us that support.
And it was just,
so communicating with people and bringing them into that reality and whether it's, you
know, rhino poaching and elephant poaching or the Amazon being destroyed. It's like to
me, it's like being able to, to, to take people into that is, is something that I would love
to do. Yeah. And you do it directly with authenticity and
years to grant. People should definitely follow your Instagram. I think I think
Rogan follows your Instagram too. Well, the end of that story actually kind of
involves him because yeah, because I went to all these news outlets and I was
living in green rooms and traveling around and I was all strung out and I hadn't
seen anybody I actually know in a few weeks, which was starting to get to me.
And I finally got home and I went to like a family party and everyone was like, dude, you've been, it's been crazy. And
I was like, yep. And then I left and my cousin Michael calls me and he's screaming. And I'm
going, what, what, what, what? And he goes, Joe Rogan just shared it. Joe Rogan, you
shared it. And everyone was losing their shit. And it was so amazing. And it was like,
yeah, that's when it really took off. And what happened as a result of all of this is that a Canadian entrepreneur,
who started light speed, reached out.
And several months later, after COVID, after that boom,
I'd been in the game for maybe 13 years or something.
I had no money, no savings, no job, no nothing.
And after that great publicity thing, nothing happened.
The waves came and everything got real exciting.
Everybody reached out and they said,
we care so much.
Nothing happened though.
You know, we can run into battle,
but if we don't have arrows in the quiver, what can we do?
And I actually, I made a phone call to my friend Mosin
right at the start of COVID and I was going through divorce
and I was broke and I said said I'm gonna get a job. I said I give up. So this
is stupid. I said the ecotourism business is done jungle keepers is dried up.
We're done and then this guy dax to sell a call me on the phone and said listen I'm
in what what do we got to do and so if if the analogy was me and JJ and a few other people
trying to hold this boulder back
from just destroying the rainforest,
all of a sudden, DAX comes in like a Titan
and just puts his arm out and just goes, I'm gonna help.
And he gave us the funding to start actually developing
a Ranger program, to start actually bringing
loggers to be protectors of the forest,
to be supporting smaller conservation things.
And now we're protecting 50,000 acres of rainforest.
We're protecting entire streams and ecosystems that I love
and we're soon gonna double that.
And it's like this whole thing.
So, yeah, the communication of these things is crucial
and I actually think it's incredible
that social media has played such a big role in it.
Well, I mean, just because I know Joe well
and I love him so much, I definitely think
you should do his podcast,
but also just be friends with him, I think you guys.
Yeah.
He's one, you know, not the meme,
but he's one with nature.
And I'm much more with the, I'm one
while I do appreciate and love nature. I also love
Technology and robots and so on so we're
And that meme type of way we're very very different but well, he either way at some point
Make sure you tell the guy thank you because it definitely really helped push us over that that limit where
You know, if enough people see it,
you get someone like Dax who says, I can help, and I have the resources to help. And that changed
our whole lives. He's everything. Back to the jungle. You had a bunch of interactions with Jaggers.
He's still alive. Like what? Man, dude, Jags, Jags aren't the Jags.
I'll tell you this, Jags are not the danger.
The falling trees are the danger.
I'll tell you some elephant stories,
and then you'll wonder why I'm still alive.
But Jags, I've just one, you know,
so JJ started and Santiago, his dad started challenging me
to do solos.
Go out alone into the wild style.
You know, I'd have a hammock, a headlamp,
three days worth of food, some fish hooks, some machete. That's it. And so like one of the stories
that happened early on was I was out there and it was raining and I was lost. And
this is how we test your jungle knowledge. Can you survive out there? Do you know how to find
food? Have you listened to the things that we taught you? And there was one night that I was in a hammock and a jaguar came up
and I was asleep when it happened and she came up right next to my head and she was
and I could hear her smelling me. And then my first instinct was to turn on my headlamp and just the sound of my arm moving against the material and
she just, like she just, right here, I could feel her breath and I just lay there in the
dark.
And that's one of those moments where you go, you really learn a lot about yourself.
Because I wasn't scared.
I felt like I understood the intentions of the cat.
If she was hunting, I'd already be dead.
She was curious.
And I was lost, and I didn't know if I was ever gonna
get out of that jungle, but what she did was
energize me, because it was an experience like
the giant Anaconda where I said, this is so wild,
that it's so almost cinematically outside the realm of what I thought my life
could be like, that it made me like, wait, because the previous day I was lost, tired,
confused, kind of devastated tale between my legs.
After that, I was like, man, you've been waiting for this your whole life.
Go get it.
And I like woke up and I was like, I am going to navigate even though I've been in this
swamp for three days, I'm going to find my way out of this swamp. And she just
breathed fire into me where it was like, it was like, if that's possible, if I could be
six inches away from a jaguar's face, then I got that energy from her.
So you're able to start to really hear and feel the jungle around you. Yeah. That was
a sign that you know what you're doing. It. That was a sign.
You know what you're doing.
I felt like it really felt like a sign.
I really did.
How do you survive in a solo?
A solo hike through the jungle?
What are the different components?
What are the different dangers?
He said, you had a hammock, you had some food.
What kind of food by the way we're talking about?
Not stuff that won't go bad.
You can't really start a fire in the Amazon.
Like, I'm a good, I mean, I camp all over the place.
I'm a wilderness guide.
Starting a fire in the Amazon is futile.
In fact, a lot of survival manuals will tell you,
don't do it.
Because if you're really lost, it'll break your spirit.
You're not going to be able to do it.
That's dark.
Yeah, they're like, don't even try it.
But you can still get hyperthermated from it. If you get wet and you lay out in the jungle, you can, you know, you can still, don't even try it. But you can still get hypothermia from it.
If you get wet and you lay out in the jungle,
you can still, exposure can still get you.
So you want fire.
I even, in the beginning, I used to bring like ramen noodles,
which is, which is, the nutritionally is irrelevant.
And so I started bringing like nuts
and then supplementing that with fish,
which forced me to become a very good fisherman.
And now, of course, JJ knows that he, like, they can cut certain roots and they
bash it up and they put it in the stream and the fish just float to the top and they take
with them.
So, like, he's got, like, he's got all the cheat codes.
Whereas, like, I'm sitting there with a hook and then he's like, he'll go, now find bait
and I go bait.
And the most competitive ecosystem on earth, good luck finding a worm.
You can't do it.
What does JJ do? He takes the machete, looks at his foot, cuts a slug of callus off of his
heel because he's got this thick rhino skin. He puts that on the hook, catches a six-inch fish,
chops it in half, puts it on a bigger hook and in 15 minutes, he's got a four-foot giant catfish
that could feed a family of 16, and he's happy.
I'm sitting there, and I'm like, I'm gonna try to like stick a beetle on a fishing hook,
and like, you know, you have just a line in a hook, or is there a rod to?
Just a line in a hook, and then you just chop a rod and tie it to the, you know, you
just chop a little sapling.
So are you still able to start a fire, or no?
I like for the food that I bring to not be fire dependent.
Sure.
And so if I have some nuts, I can shove in a few enough calories
to get me through the night or leave a fishing line out.
And there'll be something there in the morning.
But yes, I can start a fire.
But a lot of times what I'll do is I'll bring a flask
and not with alcohol, but with diesel.
And so you have a tunicand,
and you put the diesel in the diesel,
and the diesel with the local guys do.
Everything I do, I'm sure this is gonna be
someone listening to this, isn't it?
Like, how could you do that?
And it's like, yeah.
This is what we do down there, sorry.
It's a tunicand, you pour a little bit of diesel in it,
it burns slow, you light it, and you put your sticks,
you make your pyramid over that,
and eventually that will burn through the moisture.
And finally, a very reluctant little fire enough to burn, you know,
to make yourself like a cup of tea or to pour that into the noodles, something, something,
or you just need a fish raw. The how important is it to stay dry? Is it basically impossible?
It's impossible to stay dry. You're wet all the time. You're wet all the time. What does
that mean? That means infections are more efficient. Yeah. So, yeah, I don't know if you saw the picture in my book where I have the yellow spots.
Yeah. So, yeah, there's a picture with your entire face consumed with yellow spots is basically,
I guess, that's MRSA. Yep. Oh, boy. So, how did that happen? What was the infection like?
And how crazy are you for letting that infection stay in you for a prolonged period of time without treating it?
Or you had no choice?
No, I did have a choice. I was 19 years old and I was taking care of a giant antiter that was orphaned.
And this is like my dream animal.
And she was mine.
And my job was to teach her the jungle and
So when I started like noticing that I had an infection and that I was I had I think I'd dangate the time too
I went back to town
Probably picked up Merse in the hospital where I got tested
Came back into the jungle and then got progressively sicker and sicker and white weaker and weaker as I was two weeks three weeks in the jungle
And then it got to the point where my vision went black and white and I passed out one day and and I don't know why but at the time
I had shaved that day and
When I woke up the next morning I couldn't open my eyes because the the pus had come out of my eyes
Yeah
And out of my the pores and my face all those little micro cuts and the pillow was to my face, and I was stuck up river with no help at 19 years old.
And also when you see that picture,
you can imagine that I assumed that my life was over,
because I didn't know what it was.
And I also didn't assume that,
or at the very least, I figured I'd be disfigured
the rest of my life.
I didn't think there was any getting better from that.
And so I remember sitting by the side of the river,
praying that a boat would come by, but
it was the rainy season.
And there aren't going to be any boats because the river is psychotic.
And so it was a long time before I got back to town.
And I didn't want to leave the anteater, but it became like I was like, I realized I was
dying.
And then I finally got a boat with some loggers, a death boat, just loaded with these guys who had gone
into the jungle and shot everything they could
and taken all the babies and they were gonna go sell them.
So it was like baby monkeys and two cans and birds and cages
and pieces of crocodiles and anaconda skins
and jaguar skins rolled up.
And it was just like, I was just laying there
with all these dead animals in the boat
with all the flies on my face and
Got back to the hotel called my mother said please book me a flight out like today like today And then I sat on the plane and somebody somebody sat next to me on the plane and I had a hood on and I do
And I do remember that in my in the haze at this point I was having trouble staying conscious
But I do remember that she like looked over like trying to see what was sitting next to her and then she got up and never came back.
And when I got to immigration in New York, you know, the cop, what he like takes my passport
and he goes, yeah, he goes, so what are you doing in Peru?
He's looking down and he goes, yeah, and he like holds up the passport, looks at the passport,
looks at my face, he goes, bo buddy.
What the fuck?
And I said, no, that's what I was like, I'm trying to get home to go to the hospital. And he goes, bo, buddy. What the fuck? And I said, no, that's what. He was like, I'm trying to get home to go to the hospital.
And he goes, he stamps it.
He goes, go, go, go, go, go, go, bless, God bless.
He was like, oh shit.
And then they put me in the room in the hospital
with like the hazmat suits and they didn't know what it was.
And I spent like five days on IV antibiotics
with like four different things running through my veins.
And the doctors are like, don't let it go that close.
They're like, you went real close on that one.
Yeah, that's what that picture,
I mean, people should check out the books
just to see the picture.
Because I imagine you just laying there,
unable to see, have a fever probably.
So you're like half hallucinating.
Yep.
And there's no, there's no both, there's no, no way out.
There's no help coming.
Plus there is this creature who you've become a parent of. Yeah. That you love. Yeah.
Boy, that's a dark place to be as a 19-year-old. I mean, most people will never,
will never be in a place like that. Like, where did you find strength in that, in that place?
I don't know. I just remember writing like a goodbye letter to my parents because I said
if I die out here, it was really dark.
It was terrifying.
It really felt like it was the end.
And I was writing, you know, if you find me out here, I'm sorry.
And all that type of stuff.
And it was, you know, I don't know about strength.
There was no strength.
It was just like move forward.
And at some point it was like, if you'll take me down river, take me down river, you know.
You just got lucky with the loggers, with the death boat.
Yeah, they found you.
Well, how did the infection start, by the way?
I don't know.
I really don't know.
I mean, we always have some sort of little shit,
but the thing is now, JJ taught me
that there's like three different trees
that can cure infections.
I didn't notice at the time,
and I didn't know the cheat codes.
Now, there's, there's,
if you have a small infection, you can use sanghari de de de de is Phycus and Sipaida, and you can use that.
And that will completely heal.
That will murder.
It's like crocodile blood.
It will murder infections.
So like, forget neosporin.
That's a joke.
These are heavy chemical compounds running through these trees, and they know all about
them.
And so, whatever it is.
And now, at this point, that's no longer an issue.
Like, because we know how to handle it, which is at that time.
If JJ had been there, I would have been fine.
Well, learn the hard way.
So these are open wounds,
and then there's creatures that start living in them.
It's basically what is it?
Well, that's separate.
That's botflies.
Yeah, there's a creature that unfortunately,
very, very, very unfortunately,
likes to make its home inside the flesh of mammals.
Yeah.
And so the flies attach their eggs to mosquitoes. likes to make its home inside the flesh of mammals. Yeah.
And so the flies attach their eggs to mosquitoes.
The mosquitoes go and seek out warm blooded animals.
The eggs, microscopic eggs fall into your skin
and then begin to grow.
And sooner or later you feel a twitch.
And it's a worm living inside of you
that's like vertical down in you and it's eating you.
And at first it's not a problem.
But when they get to about as thick as that pen's it's eating you. And at first it's not a problem but when they get to
about as thick as that pen, it starts to hurt because you got a hole in you and they have a little
breathing tube that comes up and they breathe and they go back in and then they eat and they come
back up to breathe and you have a you have a friend living in you. And it's had one of those.
I've had lots of those. It's tough to take them out. They have hooks.
lots of those. It's tough to take them out. They have hooks.
How do you? Do you have to?
I love the joke. So how do you take it out to come?
100% you got to you got to put an irritant. So like a lot of times,
what we'll do down there is someone will take a massive drag of a cigarette and then they'll spit the power like exhale and get some of the some of the
tar which also shows you how much tar you get out of a cigarette and then with a knife you put that right over the hole
and then you slap some Vaseline or something on top of it so they can't breathe and eventually over the course of a few hours
they'll come up enough looking for air and then you got to grab with the tweezer and try not to rip them
because then you're going to get an infection and you got a squeeze from the, it's a whole ceremony
when people have botflies we're all like oh it's botfly time let's go and then like JJ will squeeze
he's got like pliers for thumbs yeah he can like take a piece of your neck and you think he's
going to break your skin he'll just squeeze until this thing comes out and you don't want to
you don't want to get an open wound right there and yeah yeah you don't want to, you don't want to.
Because there's an open wound right there.
Yeah, you don't want to bathe for a day or two
after until that closes
because otherwise you're going to have like
water sloshing around in like a little pocket
of your, kind of gross.
And that water might have other organisms.
Water in your skin tends to, yeah.
I mean, the jungle water's clean.
We drink it like I drink the water,
fresh out of the stream.
Oh, that's interesting. Well, it's just a giant filtration system.
All those roots, the whole jungle is constantly purifying everything.
People might be thinking about that with the jungle, there's insects probably all over
you all the time.
It's not as bad as you think.
I've been to Finland, Lapland in the summer, and the mosquitoes are horrendous, like devastating.
The Amazon, in our area, if you're sitting in a hammock,
reading a book out, our research stations
don't have walls or anything, you're good for about
one mosquito every half hour, which really is not a lot,
I mean, it's worse than New Jersey, like,
it's really not that bad.
Tell me a little more about the little baby antiter, Lulu.
Lulu.
They, they, you've, who you've rescued and had to sadly leave behind.
Yeah, I just was always fascinated with giant antiters.
Are there, you know, German shepherd-sized thing with Wolverine claws and these giant
pop-eye forearms and they, they excavate ant and termite mounds and they have this long tongue.
And their babies right on their back for the first six months of their lives.
And so they actually have this incredibly intimate relationship with their young.
And it just so happened that this animal that I was wildly fascinated with, there was
an orphan on the river.
And JJ was like, you love these things.
And I was like, yeah.
And so he went and he was like, hey, my friend, you should,
he got, he got me the, the baby.
And we were like, we're gonna rewild her.
And so I spent like weeks and weeks and weeks just like,
with this thing on my back, crawling through the jungle,
teaching her to find ants, giving her milk,
falling asleep with her on my chest.
And their, their tongue is like 11 inches long at that age.
And so she, when she wanted me to wake up,
she'd fired up my nose it would come out my mouth.
And she'd, and then if I tried to get her off me quick,
she'd stick the claws in.
And you know, I'm all my clothes.
I have like, I've old like, you know,
now they're like, you know, like museum pieces
that with Ripsen them from, from Lulu's claws.
Just able to also communicate emotion and feeling,
you know, like, she needed it.
She needed it.
So if this animal didn't have the physical touch,
if I didn't hold her all day long,
she'd throw tantrums.
She'd go shred something,
she'd go pull down the curtain,
she'd go ruin the woods,
she'd start literally having
a traumatic response to not having intimacy,
which was shocking.
Because again, on the scale of a cockroach to an elephant,
you go, I didn't know that scale of a cockroach to an elephant, you go,
I didn't know that giant ant eaters had such intense emotions, like, but she did.
And we, you know, and also taking care of her forced me to explore the jungle from the perspective of an animal.
So I got to, like, be an animal.
And so there's only a few times in your life, in my life, where I've gotten to do that, you know, one was with her another time was living with the herd of elephants,
where I had to walk with them through the forest and like see how they interacted
completely natural. And it's different. It's very different. And you realize like,
just like a person's public persona when they're
out on the street in Manhattan is going to be very different than when you're on the couch with
them on a Tuesday night. And with wild animals, it's very much like that. You know, like if we see
you see a bobcat on a trail and it's going to look at you and glare at you and then go off and it's
like, yeah, but what's it like when it's in the den and it's playing with its cubs? Yeah.
So that when it's looking at you, that's like the Instagram post
it's making the actual.
It's a lot of things.
Yeah.
So you've, besides Amazon, you spend a lot of time in India.
Can you tell me what you learned hanging out
with a herd of elephants?
Well, what do people not understand about elephants?
That's beautiful to you. That's interesting to you.
First of all, I think that elephants should have government representation as a subset of society.
Like, actually, they...
They have intelligence?
They are so intelligent.
And when you look at an elephant, so there's this question that keeps coming up,
are we smart enough to know how smart animals are?
Can we interpret the intelligence that we're seeing? And I've lived with a
semi-wild herd of elephants in India for a while, and some of the things that I saw
like changed how I view reality, to be honest with you, because, you know, you watch a matriarch
of an elephant herd walk up to someone that none of us
knew was pregnant and her trunk goes to a stomach and then she calls all the other ones over and
they're interested in this little human that they know that there's something in there and they're
all conversing about it and you go whoa. Or that every morning we'd wake up and the elephants
didn't want the stream water, they didn't want the lake water, they wanted puddles, they wanted the water from our well.
We had like a stone well, you know, like a traditional.
And every morning we had like run out of bed because all the elephants were going to
come and they were going to rip the bucket off and destroy everything, but they wanted
that nice cold, clean water.
And so it was like caring for elephants that were wild, there was sometimes getting shot
at by farmers because if they went to
try and rob some bananas. So these are sort of like the Lincoln elephants that were half wild in the
forest department was thinking about, you know, getting rid of them, which whatever that meant.
And I made really good friends with this one elephant and his name was Dharma. And Dharma had the
had the this stuff doesn't this, it's hard to write the book
I'm writing right now because none of it sounds real.
He grew up around people because he was a tuskless male.
So he couldn't hang out with the females because he was a grown up male.
And he couldn't hang out with the males, the bulls because he couldn't defend himself
when they rough housed and everything.
So, Dharma would be like wandering around the forest, not knowing who to hang out with.
And so, like, there was one night,
there was a tiger calling.
And we just heard, you could hear it,
echoing over the hills.
And what does Dharma do?
2 a.m. we hear Dharma show up.
And he's the same thing.
He starts throwing a tantrum.
He starts pulling shit over.
He starts, it takes a chair, throws it.
We had bananas in the truck. Dharma walks up to the truck, it's like a Jeep. He walks up to the chair, throws it. We had bananas in the truck.
Dorma walks up to the truck, it's like a Jeep.
He walks up to the Jeep, smells it, he looks at me.
And he's like, you're gonna get out of bed,
I'm like, no, I'm not gonna get out of bed.
I was like, Dorma, you're a grown S elephant.
The tiger does this thing again,
and he's like, I need bananas to feel better.
Yeah.
Pushes the truck up on two wheels.
Oh wow.
Looks at me.
Is this how you want it to be?
And so I'm up, I'm up.
And I go and I'm like, please, please, please, please,
don't make me run in the rough in his face.
And he's like, he puts it down.
It's like, all right, well then, then hit me.
I didn't do it, so he lifts it up again.
And so in the end, there was no way for me
to outsmart the elephant.
He wins.
There was nothing I could do.
And so a lot of my job was taking him out into the
forest and, you know, spending a little bit of time with him. I have this beautiful, one time I
set up the tripod and I went and I was just, I was just journaling. And he would come and he would
just like play with my hair. And he'd be like, hey, what's up? You know, and he just, he wanted
someone to, to interact with on an emotional level. And when you think about elephants in terms of the fact
that people go, oh, they use medication to induce labor.
It's like, yeah, that's not that surprising.
They hold the bones of the dead.
It's like, yeah, they have the best smell
of pretty much any animal.
That's also not surprising.
They probably know exactly who that was, that bone.
But they can navigate to water holes
and communicate in ways that we cannot
really figure out.
And so when you hear about people measuring elephant intelligence, you'll hear about scientists
being like, oh, we gave it a bucket with a hole in it and then it had like a key and there
was a rope and you're like, bro, this is all human stuff.
Can you go walking with them for three weeks in the wild and watch how they deal with the problems that they encounter in the forest?
And so elephants have become, especially recently with the work that I've been doing in Africa with Betpaw, I've just become so fascinated with elephants.
And, you know, the African elephant population right now is down at 2% of what it was a few hundred
years ago.
We're really putting them on the brink of, you know, there's some elephants that are being
born tuskless because we've poaching has taken down the great tuskers to the point where
now it's actually beneficial for some elephants and not have tusks because they won't have
humans. But that's like we've created deformed elephants.
And so now I'm very concerned with issues of elephants.
And tusks are fundamental to the interaction between elephants?
Absolutely.
I mean, with males compete with each other, but also elephants use their tusks.
You know, like they'll break a branch and they'll be like, this is a good branch.
I'm going to eat the hell out of this.
And they'll like hang it on their tusk. And they'll like grab a bunch of other stuff. They'll like a branch and they'll be like, this is a good branch. I'm gonna eat the hell out of this and they'll like hang it on their tusk.
And they'll like grab a bunch of all this stuff.
They'll like hold it, you know,
ripping a tree up out of the ground.
I just watched it two weeks ago
as watching an elephant.
He got down on his knees and stuck his tusk
into the ground and like leveraged up.
He like, Archimedes to this root out of the ground
and then was like, that's a sweet root.
Now when he left, I went and I tasted the root and it was like sweet ginger and I was like I have no idea what this is
But he knew it was good. Do they use tusks for sexual selection like to impress the ladies or no?
It's certainly involved in how who who has mating rights? Oh who wins and who wins
I mean if you got the big tusks and there are elephants out there like the mammoth big tuskers that have
Tusks down to the ground like huge and when you see them
It's like seeing something unique on earth unique in history because right at a point where we might lose those
there are only a few of them left and
Then they're so prized by hunters. Yeah, it's interesting because I I forget what the actual conclusion on that is
Because there's some studies of the use of the value of
beauty in evolution, like birds, and peacocks and so on, that there's no actual value to it,
but it plays a role in sexual selection, meaning value, like it's much easier to understand
competition, like a tusk helps you defeat the competitors. It's a tool.
But I bet you there's a component to the tusk
where the ladies go.
Goddamn, it's a nightmare.
It's a nightmare.
Like there's a visual, beautiful component.
Maybe not.
But what if beauty, though, as we're defining it,
though, is symmetry and the absence of yellow spots
on your face and healthy looking hair.
And so I think to us beauty is sexually appealing traits
that look good to meet with.
And so that 19 year old with Marissa,
everybody in the world who is quite left on that.
Yeah.
At least, actually, I have a lot to do in the universe.
OK.
What do you mean speaking of elephant intelligence
is something I think and work quite a bit on
as with artificial intelligence,
is what the philosophical question that comes up
is what is intelligence?
What is intelligent?
Humans, homo sapiens are often
thought to be highly intelligent.
That's the reason they stand out. In your understanding
of different species like the elephant, what stands out to about humans, or are they
just another animal with different kinds of intelligence?
Well, we're certainly unique because we have altered the entire planet.
Yeah. You know, that the term the Anthropocene, I mean, it's like we've literally created a
geological layer of us. Whereas other animals don't and going back to elephants, it's like
they also engineer their environment. If you're in a forest, like if you drop me in a forest
on Earth, I could tell you in two seconds, if there's elephants there, because this twisted branches and excavated Earth, and
they're constantly gardening. But I mean, look at us. I mean, there's, we're clearly unique in nature,
which makes me not understand the anti-human sentiment that so much of environmentalism has about like, you know, like we're bad, we're damned, we ruin everything.
And it's like, I've seen the worst, I've seen the burning Amazon, and I'm still like, I love being able to share ideas with you and travel to places, and face time my family when I'm not around them. It's like I celebrate a lot of what makes us human.
And it's almost like reality is this crazy video game. And it's like if we could just figure out the right keys, we can pretty much do anything we can think of. And it's like, I mean poetry, art,
I mean, you know, I'm the biggest animal lover in the world, but we are different.
Animal lover in the world, but we are we are we are different
We really are. Yeah the ability to puzzle solve create tools
I think it's the coolest invention humans have come up with is a fire with the most impactful
I feel like fires fire. I feel like fires kind of a gimmie. I feel like the, they didn't really invent it. They probably,
like the wheel, flying.
I mean, flying.
I mean, think of,
think of you could go back in time to someone that never flew.
Yeah.
You know, a, a, a,
an Egyptian king,
a George Washington,
you know, and be like,
you can fly.
I mean, this is just,
just on my way here.
Yeah.
And I fly way too much, but I was looking out the window at
the clouds and going, this is unbelievably spectacular.
It's just stunning.
You know, as a kid, you look at a cloudy day and you go, this is the world is like this
today.
And then you get in a plane and you fly above the clouds and it's sunny up there and you
go, oh, it just, it changes your perspective. It's like when people go to the moon and they come back and they tell above the clouds and it's sunny up there and you go, oh, it just, it changes
your perspective.
It's like when people go to the moon and they come back and they tell you the pale blue
dot, you know, just, I say, I say flying.
I think the ability to fly.
I mean, the fact that I could, I could get on a plane and be in India in, you know, 22
hours is shocking.
And in terms of its usefulness, I would argue that's not in the top five, but in terms of its ability to inspire.
Yeah.
There's somebody I forgot who told me this idea that there's something about the atmosphere or atmosphere that allows you to look up and see the stars.
Like if we didn't have that, human civilization would not have happened. Meaning like being able to look
up and see something out there would fill our like something that allows you to look up versus
just look down to like first looking at your local environment. Be able to like wander and see
holy shit. There's a big world out there. I don't know anything. If you're able to look up and see, holy shit, there's a big world out there, and I don't know anything.
If you're able to look up and see that,
that kind of humility combined with the ability
to dream about exploring,
maybe it just inspires exploration.
It's kind of an interesting thought,
given how inspiring, for example,
the extra upgraded super cool version of flying, which
is flying to other planets.
I mean, there's going to be hopefully, it's possible, this century, a child born, not
not this century, maybe this century, a child born on another planet that looks up and looks back at Earth and has to be educated
by his or her parents that like there's another place.
There's another place where life is way easier.
Oh God, it's so easy.
This water everywhere.
Yeah, exactly.
People go playing about Earth man.
Earth is really, really, really good.
It's really, really good here.
Water everywhere.
I hate it.
Oh man, I wouldn't even leave.
Given like right now, like if somebody said, like,
oh, you could like, you could go to the moon.
I'd be like, no, I'm good.
If I died in space, I'd be so pissed.
I love it here.
Yeah, but you're still, there's a longing to explore for you.
There's a longing to explore, but I really think I'm such a, like, my longing to explore
is like river streams, oceans, jungles, like, to me.
Yeah, I would watch the hell out of the live stream of Elon touching down on Mars.
Like, I'd be like, this is incredible.
It's an amazing that I get to be around to see this.
I'm staying where I'll be right here.
Yeah, but it's good that the human spirit pushes us
to this amazing.
That was possible.
And it does that for you.
What, just out there are questions
that what's the most dangerous animal in the Amazon,
would you say mammal?
Let's go at mammal.
Dangerous mammal.
Like dangerous in terms of you walking around doing the solo hike.
I'm going to disappoint everybody with this, but it's it's humans.
It's nothing.
There's no, if I'm out in the Amazon, there's nothing that's going to attack me.
You know, in India, you might have, you might have an old leopard or a tiger that's going to attack me. You know, in India, you might have,
you might have an old leopard or a tiger
that's missing a tooth that decides your prey,
or you might have an angry elephant that's in must,
that just decides to flatten you.
In the Amazon, you're not,
this real, Jaguar won't even let you see them.
And there's really nothing else.
One of my friends, brilliant scientist friend of mine, Pat got attacked by a rabbit
Osalot once, but that's like a diesel house cat just having a fit, you know, it's wasn't the worst thing in the world
Just the assholes
Okay, them okay, what in terms of humans you said
That the tribes some of them uncontacted, can be exceptionally dangerous.
What's your experience with them?
What should people learn?
Is it such a fascinating part of life here on Earth
that there's tribes that don't have much or any contact
with the quote unquote civilized world?
Most of the people that I meet
don't actually really understand how isolated these people
are or how weird it is that we're sitting here and that we have iPhones and airplanes and
all this stuff and these people are living naked in the forest at this moment.
And so the thing though, I also was recently somebody said, somebody said, there's like paleolithic tribes
and it's like, no, no, just by default, they're modern tribes living now.
They just happen to be living out in the jungle.
And there's a huge debate about, do we try and contact them and bring them in?
And there's two camps of people on this who they said it was the trauma of the rubber boom
that sent them out that far into the forest and made
them terrified of the outside world.
And so that's also what made them so hyper-violent.
I mean, there's one of the guys we work with on our team, Victor was, I think it was 2004.
He's coming down river and he had a load of Mahogany wood.
And he's piloting this boat.
And he sent two people, a husband and wife, a head to go start cooking breakfast on the beach
so they could put a little kitchenette thing down
and put the propane.
He sent them ahead.
As he's going nice and slow with the barge,
coming down the river.
They go ahead, reach the beach, they get out,
he starts cutting some cane to start
put making a fire
Tribe comes out No warning they just start screaming they start shooting arrows
The man instantly gets an arrow through the leg and it pins his legs so he can't run
He tells his wife go save yourself and she does she jumps in the water this arrows falling around her
Two and as she's floating down the river she looks back and the last thing she sees is these guys getting to her husband and beginning to rip him apart.
As Victor comes down the river, this is a guy we work with every day, he comes down the
river and sees his friend disemboweled, opened up, dissected, his parts are all over the
beach, the beach is red, and they only found out what happened because they found her later on holding onto a stick in the river and they
were like, what happened?
And she was like, they just attacked.
They don't want people on their land.
On the sort of the underground WhatsApp chain of the Amazon, they, a few in August, like
this was not internationally known.
Some loggers went up and tried to steal a few trees from where the tribes were, and then
everybody sent the pictures of what the loggers looked like after a few days, because the
tribes porcupined them with arrows.
They were laying there on the ground, which is arrows sticking out of their bodies.
And then eventually the authorities came out and looked, and there was just these white
bodies.
I'll show you the pictures later.
There's just these white puffy bodies with like the skulls sticking out.
And it was like, you don't mess with these tribes.
I wonder what are the, what's the mythology around that they construct around who these
outsiders are?
Are they gods?
Are they demons?
Are they humans?
What, who are they?
Who are we to them?
Well, you, you got to go back to the rubber boom. The rubber barons went down there and at the
start of the industrial revolution, the only way to get rubber was to mine it from the
trees that are out in the forest. And so the only way to do that, because you can't make
a rubber plantation in the jungle. The rubber, when it's in plantation form, when it's
a monoculture, I guess this leaf blight and it all dies.
Henry Ford tried it, didn't work.
And so what they did was they sent these people down who just whipped, burned, enslaved,
raped, impillaged the people.
It's one of the worst periods in human suffering that I've ever read about.
One missionary said they were killing the locals the way you or I would kill a mosquito.
They just went nuts. and so they sent them
out and they would come back with rubber and this would go to fuel the industrial revolution
for hoses and gaskets and tires and all this stuff that suddenly we needed.
And it was during that time that these gangs of foreigners would go into the jungle to
enslave the natives that these uncontacted tribes went back into the jungle and said, not us.
And they have six foot bows and seven foot arrows with bamboo tips.
They make the bamboo tips into razor blades.
And so when those things fly, actually one of my r Rangers, one of the jungle keepers team, was present
when the tribes had come out onto the river.
And he tried to help them because they're nomadic and they live out there.
So there's an element of like brother, like, you know, they're trying to be like, you
don't need to be like this.
Like we're friendly.
So they sent a canoe across the river with bananas.
And so he's up to his waist in the river and the tribes are right across the river and they shot. And he sees
the arrow coming right at his head. And as he moved to the side, it hit him at the temple
and sliced him back towards the ear, opening him to the skull. He's fine. But let me tell
you something, when he goes and gets a crew cut, it's most badass goal. The star you've ever seen, man. So he always keeps it real short on that
side. But, but even if he tried to help them, they're not necessarily friendly.
It's a tough, that's a tough lesson. Yeah. I suppose they have a point. They have a point
and protecting them is a default of, you know, now that we're
protecting all this ecosystems and all these other indigenous communities, it's like we all sort
of live with this knowledge that their their monos, the brothers are out there and that's the way
they want to keep it. And so we just have to be respectful of like you don't camp on certain beaches
at certain times of the year because we know that they might be there. You really have to be careful
about that. Have you yourself interacted with them? My interaction with them came on a solo where I pushed it a
little bit too far. And I was planning to do a three-week, this was like the big one. And I got
dropped off by poachers up a river, and I went past the point where they were like names. They were
I said, what what what tributary are we on? And they were like tributary.
And I was like, okay.
And I said, leave me here.
And I remember the guy being like,
are you committing suicide?
And he didn't understand that.
I was like, no, I have a backpack and I have like food
and I'm gonna like take videos and I have a tripod.
And I was like, we're cool here.
And they looked at me like they were like, goodbye.
And I was like, all right.
And I went up this river. And again, like you just, you learn these things like, you
know, it was only when I'd been alone for a week that you realize you're, I guess that's
saying they're like, oh, you're, you're born alone and you die alone.
It's like, no, you're not.
You're born into a room full of people usually at the very least your mother's there for
everybody.
And so you've been around people probably, if you're a normal person,
every single day of your life, you've seen dozens, if not hundreds of people. And all of a sudden,
you realize what a social creature we are. Because on day six, it gets weird. For me, it got weird.
I know those people that can do it longer. So what does that mean? Like longing for contact? Like, lonely?
Longing for contact, the distortion of reality
in the sense that like, you know, you wake up
and there's no one there and you start to, you know,
you're going up a river.
So I would keep, I kept looking back down
river and almost thinking of my life as something,
it was almost like I had already died
and I had gone to somewhere else.
And I was looking back on that life as like something that I had experienced.
And then there came this panic of what if it's gone or like what if World War three broke
out?
And I just don't know about it.
My family in New York is vaporized and something just you just you're your your your
actually your ability to comprehend and interpret reality kind of requires other people.
It's not just that you're lonely.
You need that contact to actually just perceive the world,
make sense of it, all of that.
So you start basically hallucinating.
I've started kind of a...
I started feeling very uncomfortable.
It doesn't help also that like Santiago told me these stories
where he's like, if you hear Capuchin's sounding quite monkeys, if you hear capuchon monkeys sounding not quite like
capuchons, he goes, it's the tribe and they're coming to get you. And then the guy who was shot,
Ignacio, they showed me videos where we saw them on the beach and they're communicating in monkey
calls. They're using it as codes that we don't understand them,
even though we don't speak their language.
But they're using animal calls.
And so every night you go to sleep and then you go,
did that tin of moose sound off?
And you're like, shit.
And it's really hard to fall asleep.
And then one night I messed up and I left a fish.
I cleaned this fish.
I ate this huge fish.
I just ate it to my face.
You're putting out marathon levels of energy every day.
Goggins would love solos.
This is awesome.
You eat the fish raw.
This one I actually cooked it,
but the skeleton was laying there,
right outside my tent, stupid.
And then the middle of the night I wake up,
and I just could tell there was something there.
You almost don't wanna look.
It's like when you're kid at the basement door
and you're like, is there a ghost?
I was like, I like unzip the tent and I like open it up.
And there's like 27 black came in outside of my tent,
all looking at me like this.
And like some of their heads are this big
and they're like, there's fish there.
Can we have it?
And I'm like, holy shit.
And like, you know, I was like, do I,
I kind of like had to like scoots the tent back and like move back
and let them have their fish.
And there was a host of crocodiles outside of my tent.
Yeah.
But no, so then there was,
how many?
Like 27 maybe.
There's a lot.
Big ones, small ones, medium size one, every type.
They were all there.
And their eyes glow in the night.
You know, you shine a light at animals
and they have a tape at them, lucid them.
And so their eye shine comes back at you. If you shine a headlamp at a jaguar or a frog
or almost every animal has a tapetum. So he's a crock. There's a whole lot of them.
Yeah, I thought can we go back to the part of the conversation where you said the jungle is not
dangerous, the humans are the most dangerous. Well, did they eat me? No. Why didn't they eat you?
They wanted the fish.
Is there some way of you interacting with them
that shows that you're not a social harm?
I don't believe so.
I'm sure there's someone out there
that thinks they can talk to Crocs, but.
Because there's a story of you grabbing a crock by the tail.
Yes. What did you learn from that?
Learned to not always listen to JJ.
So JJ was testing you to see how stupid it was.
How do you hold the crocodile exactly?
You have to get him by the head, like in Anaconda like this.
And so, so you're one of the world experts
that grabbing creatures by the head.
I wouldn't say world expert, but I've done a lot of it.
I also have, you see the head, there's like kind of a ball
there.
That's where a crocodile tooth went in that side
and like came out that side of my mouth.
That was a really good chomp.
And the watch I was wearing at the time saved me because that, like that.
Just real fast, just chomp, just like somebody took a sledgehammer, you put your hand on
the table and I just, ah, really hurt.
It shouldn't have been doing that.
How did that come up?
Because I caught a crock that was too big.
So usually when we catch little Cayman in the streams
and we measure them to monitor the populations,
you get it by the neck,
and then I tuck the tail under my arm,
and I hold it, and you're talking about a little,
you know, four foot crock, nothing.
And I, this one I dove into a swamp,
and I caught like a six foot,
spectacle Cayman, and her head was big, and I had it by the neck, and I realized I couldn't foot, spectacle came and her head was big
and I had it by the neck and I was like,
I couldn't get her tail under my arm
because her tail was all the way back there
and she started thrashing.
And it was like probably crock number 375 that I'd caught
and I just got a little cocky and I said,
oh, I just grabbed her by a leg as I got this
and she just came back and tagged me and I went,
okay, gonna go back to being safe.
Just a link around it.
Is it one of the bigger predators in the Amazon?
And is it going to, are they going extinct?
Black came in.
Black came in, I believe they were critically endangered for a while because for a while
the fashion industry loved their skin.
It's soft and it's black.
They're bouncing back a little bit now.
Like most animals, if you leave them alone, they'll be fine.
Crocs have been through how many millions and millions of years on Earth before us.
That's even the joke with the joke, but that's the grim reality of tiger conservation. There was a hundred thousand tigers in 1900.
Now, this 4,000 tigers left on Earth.
It's not rocket science.
All you have to do is not bulldoze their forest
and allow there to be some deer and tigers will be fine.
That's it.
It's so simple and that's like sometimes
where I feel like I have the dumbest job in the world
I'm like guys, please stop killing the things that keep us alive
The Amazon regulates our global climate produces medicine is home to indigenous people. It's beautiful
Rainforests only cover 3% of the planet's landmass like it's not that much to ask
If you leave their home untouched, they'll figure out how to have sex and multiply. Except for
pandas, apparently, because pandas, you have to convince.
Yeah. Humphax, humpbacks, they went down to, they went from 130,000 down to, I think, about
8,000 at wailing times. And then when we banned wailing, since that time, where I think we're
back up to over 100 hundred thousand humpback whales
They've bounced back. It's a success story. We're not gonna lose them
Okay, so you're in on the solo
With the crocs looking at you. See this is why you get it this you know, I would have lost
We would have been no that's pretty epic with the fish. That was your mistake. That was my mistake
I don't understand how you're still alive.
I mean, it's really inspired.
When you come, I'm gonna show you.
You told me you're coming or you're in a 100% coming.
But you know, you should.
If there's any place, I mean,
sort of a grim joke, but if there's any way to die, that's a good one. I'm being honest.
It's a cool one. It's a pretty cool one.
It'll become part of the.
Part of it. Yeah. I mean, there's, I'm not even like joking. There's a, there's a
oneness to the whole thing. Every, all the stories, just reading your work, looking
at your work, it seems like you are part of this machine that is nature, this incredible machine.
Like we all die.
And we're all part of this big thing.
That humans do have the capability to also construct narratives and stories and myths and tell them to each other,
and share them with each other, and have more sophisticated ways,
therefore to communicate love to each other, but them with each other and have more sophisticated ways therefore to
communicate love to each other.
But animals do as well.
They communicate love, maybe more simply, maybe more honestly.
Anyway, so you were the crocs and the fish.
Yeah, so I messed up, I left the fish out, crock showed up at some extent.
But in the end, it was fine.
I backed off, they had their way with the fish
and then they all started biting each other. It was fun to watch. Is that a general search interrupt?
Is that a general rule you want to not leave? Yeah, just like if you're camping in the northeast,
you don't leave like you do a bear bag or a bear canister. You don't want to invite the wild animals.
I really did mess up. I kind of was just like, you know, whatever. I do this every now and then I get a little too cavalier. And the ocean has almost taken me down for
that a few times. But yeah, so the crocs, and then you keep going for a few days. And
my plan was to get to a point where I reached the end of the tributary. And this had a very, you know, again, for me, this is like a pilgrimage. This
is like, this is like me going into the heart of the, the very center and soul and essence
of everything that I am fascinated with, like as close to God as you can get, because
you're leaving every type of security, every human relationship, you're also pushing all your chips in.
And so it's, every step I took further up,
I've got weirder and weirder and more intense.
And every day and every moment it changed.
And I brought pictures at the time,
there's no way to keep a phone charged.
I didn't have like a power bank or anything.
I brought pictures from home.
I brought a, I brought a National Geographic magazine, something just to, you know, and
there came a day right when I was getting to the end, like to the point where the river
was so shallow that it was just a trickle and I was walking on the rocks and the andes
mountains were in front of me and I was like reaching the rocks and the Andy's mountains were in front of me and I was like reaching the
the place and the music was swelling and then
all of a sudden I saw smoke around the next bend
and I I
Like my spine is reacting right now as I talk about it because I I knew
I knew what I was gonna see because I knew that it was impossible for loggers to be out there
There's no motor that could take you the boat would have run a ground miles ago, and so I went...
And this is the other idiot thing. It's like just turn around.
Yeah.
Just do it. I'm that kid though when you see like a wet paint sign like I walk by and I touch the wall.
Yep.
And so I went around the bend
And so I went around the bend and I see a few naked people on the beach and they see me. And we're like a good distance apart.
It's there on the other side of the river.
But you know, arrow in hand, bow in hand, the intention of pose.
They're looking at me.
They're clearly conversing.
And that moment lasted for a long moment where I said,
this is the part of the story where they are going to rip me apart. They dissect me to see what I
mean, every other story in the region that we've heard, that's the ending of it. If you're along with these people, it's not going to go well.
And I have nothing to defend myself with.
And I just, I turned and I ran for like three hours and I got in the river and I swam
for a while and all my food got wet.
I mean, everything, I just, you know, all sorts of stuff.
Just ran for dear life.
And my get out plan, the thing after I crossed the mountains and came down
into the next tributary was I had a pack raft. It's a tiny little inflatable raft, good enough to
handle rapids. And I inflated the pack raft once the river was like six inches deep, I inflated
the pack raft and I went and I went for the rest of that day into the night. I went into the point
that my headlamp died and I was just floating,
floating in a raft down the Amazon and hitting into things and I was like, I'm going to pop this
raft. I got out of the raft, set up my tent and I was like, I need some sleep. I was freaking out.
I hadn't had food and hours and hours and hours. As soon as I fell asleep, my asshole brain comes up
with the dream of that I hear voices. They're right outside the tent.
I just, you know, sleeping was worse than being awake.
So I woke up, got back in the tent, and then at one point it was really cool,
because one of those, one of the same black came and that had come for the fish
as I'm going down wherever he came right up next to me and the two of us were going.
And he was just like motoring down wherever this giant, like 16-foot crocodile.
He just like came
up to me and like looked at me as I was going and it was funny because I wasn't scared to him.
I was scared of them. And yeah, it took me like a week to get back to town. And again, the things
you learn in these moments, the appreciation for your parents, the what a hug feels like.
for your parents, what a hug feels like when you are faced with pretty much certainty that you're not going to get those things again, whether it's from Merseau or on contact with tribes or,
you know, I find that it brings you this new joy for life where you...
Just being that close to death.
Yeah, you go,
you go, my God, this is all miracle. It's sad because they're human just like you. Actually,
how different are they? Like if you were forced to interact for a week together where they
can't, they're not allowed to kill you. Like, not allowed to kill me. What, what they, how fun they're mostly different, are they?
Do you think?
I don't think that's different.
I think they're like any other Amazonian natives.
They're tall.
They seem to have tall genetics.
And there's places, you know, again, there's what is known
and then there's what we know down there.
Like there's one community where, I don't know know whether it was a bad rainstorm or something, but
some kid from the uncontacted tribes did end up in a village.
He learned Spanish, or he learned whatever dialect they speak in that village.
He's told us a little bit about what life was like with them, but they're just people.
They're just people.
They have their own culture. They know about medicines that we don't know about.
They definitely have hunting practices
that we don't understand.
They can hit a spider monkey out of a 160 foot tree
with a bamboo arrow.
We can't do that.
I mean, they are incredible hunters
and also like living naked in the jungle
with the butterflies and the mosquitoes.
I don't know how they do it.
Like sometimes at night, and again,
we don't have night vision,
whereas almost every other animal does.
And sometimes we'll be sitting on our,
at the research station at night,
and we'll be just drinking and looking out
and at the, we'll scare each other.
We'll go, you know, and realize if they were out there
right now, they could be looking at us.
And it's like, the truth is,
is that when it's dark out there, they can't see.
It's not easy to start a fire with matches in a lighter and gasoline.
They do it with friction.
They have some, some beads on survival that we could really learn from.
Not to mention that then you have people that believe that they're actually the guardians
of the extinct giant ground sloth and what they're doing is, you know, living out there
because they're protecting a secret population of previously extinct megafauna. But there's
all kinds, I mean, it's like you go into the crypto world so quick. I've heard so many
people be like, but then again, you have to be humble at how little we know about that world,
about the world of life. Like you said, there's so much of life in the Amazon that we don't
creature with no names. We could go out on a night walk right now and I could show you something
that you know, you I've done it. You you you pick up a bug and you go, that doesn't look right.
you pick up a bug and you go, that doesn't look right. That's not right. He's got three heads.
And then you send it to the greatest expert on that genus of insects and they go, look,
I got no idea. And you're talking to a world expert. And it's like, that's it.
And 50% of the life is up in the canopy. And so we started climbing the trees,
like rock climbing, like what Alex Honol does.
Like, well, like I'll climb up 50 feet
and then I'll put a safety.
Like I'm basically trad climbing
and then I'll climb up another 50 feet
and I'll have JJ belaying me from below
and then I'll be like, oh look a snake.
I'm like, JJ, pay attention.
To get up there and the branches are as thick as this table.
So you can like walk around freely. It's
like total avatars when they're in the floating islands. You can go run around if that's what
you want to do. Permilia adds orchids, cactuses because up there it's against the sun, so it's
a different environment up there. Oh wow. Yeah. Interesting. And then you start seeing lizards
and snakes and birds and things that aren't down on the ground.
And so how many scientists have actually gotten to really spend time up there and really inventory the life.
And that's why when you hear about you like it, it's like a taxonomical discussion of how many species there are on earth.
They're like between, you know, 10 and 30 million. And it's like, well, that's a big, it's a big swing.
What about stuff on the ground? Do you mention some insects? What are bulletins? That's like, well, that's a big swing. It's a big swing.
What about stuff on the ground? Do you mention some insects?
What are our bullet ants?
So, supposed to be the most painful bite in the world.
You've been bitten by one?
Seven or eight times, yeah.
What does it feel like?
Okay, so the first time that we ever did bullet ants,
JJ said, you know, okay, this is what we're gonna do.
He goes, you know, it's bullet ant roulette.
We're gonna get a bullet ant,
me and be like, like chopsticks,
you like pick up this bullet ant and the big,
the big and they're tough, like,
it, he goes, we're gonna put our forearms together
and we're gonna drop the bullet ant
and clamp our forearms together and just rub.
And whoever, whoever it takes, it takes.
Of course, JJ did not get stung and I did.
And it hurts every bit as much as they say it hurts.
It really let me have it.
And then I was like hitting my arm against the table
to try and like kill it or get it off,
but it was holding on and just like really injecting the venom.
And yeah, really letting you have it.
And then it travels up and it goes into your lymph nodes
and into your here and you get a headache. And I think the brilliant thing about the venom of a bulletin
is that it makes you feel like this feeling of alarm. It makes you feel like something's wrong.
You don't just go, oh, this hurts. It's like a beast thing. You go, oh, this really hurts on my hand.
It's like, no, no, no, your whole nervous system is freaking out.
And you start sweating and then you get cold and then you're tired and then you get a little
blurry vision.
And it's like, that's actually that bad.
I mean, now after six or seven, I get bitten and I'm like, kind of okay.
So it's a full body, full mind experience.
It's a full body, full mind experience.
But then there's places in the Amazon where they you know stick their hand in a glove with like
70 of them right and I think Steve
I did that which I would I just don't understand how you could do that without going into complete anaphylactic shock and dying because one
really sucks
Well, just like just like we said with animals and with humans there's a different kind of
Difficult Steve was definitely especially unique the first of his species.
On the point of on on contact with tribes, it's interesting to think about
what kind of civilizations have there been.
This is something that you've talked about a little bit.
Graham Hancock has written about
ancient civilizations,
sort of challenging the conventional,
the mainstream thinking about the civilizations
that have been there in the Amazon.
Can you steal man and criticize the idea,
so the pro and the con of the idea
that there have been advanced ancient civilizations
in the Amazon?
Like how much do we know?
What are the possibilities of what's in the Amazon?
In this past.
So like when Orianna went down,
the Amazon, the reports were that there was
great civilizations in the Amazon.
And then, you know, a few hundred years later, when people got to actually check up on
this stuff, it was all gone.
And so was that because of disease that we wiped out all these civilizations and these
communities of people, potentially, probably, was he just wrong?
Probably not.
This is a guy that navigated by the stars back to Spain after building his own boat,
like, yeah. Or did he, you know, or the stars back to Spain after building his own boat like yeah
Or did he you know or was he trying to just I don't know I don't know, but
they're clearly
Is a long history of complex civilizations in the Amazon 100% there's no one that can deny that
the thing that I
Reacted to was that I've
heard videos I've seen moments and podcasts where the narrative
becomes not, there's more ancient civilization information in the Amazon than we previously
thought.
True statement.
We're discovering with LIDAR, and this is what Graham Hancock is talking about, that
we're discovering constantly, that there's more civilizations than we thought in various
places. discovering constantly that there's there is more civilizations than we thought in various places the place where I take
Offense is where
They start to say that the Amazon there's actually articles that are titled this that the Amazon is a man-made
Garden
Which is not true. So the actual which I think is a really different idea, that the
the entire ecosystem, everything we've been talking about, all the species, all the forestry
and the different, just life, life, one of the most diverse ecosystems on earth is initially
created by humans. It's ridiculous. Well, it's not first of all.
It's unlikely, but it's not ridiculous. So we can't...
Wow. There's no ridiculous in science.
No!
But the complexity of life is very difficult to engineer.
As you... the more you study about biological systems and so on,
it's very difficult
to create the kind of things that nature is able to do. That said, I don't know if you've
heard, but the entire earth, the world has gone through pandemic recently. And if, and everybody
said, of course, it's natural origins, viruses mutate all the time. And nevertheless, it seems more and more
likely than this particular case. It was an artificial origin leaked from a lab. So humans
are able to create stuff, at least modern technological, genetic engineering made gold
and retrievers.
Come on. You can't be that nice and that good looking.
It used to be a wolf.
But so that bothers you because it allows you to think that we don't need to preserve
the Amazon, we can always engineer it.
Yeah, exactly.
Then just this is just to me, that's a slippery slope.
Like I totally, it's so quick from a fan of expeditions
to find ecological ruins and to learn more
about the ancient civilizations,
to which I don't think is what he's putting out
is that then sort of like news articles,
which I think they're trying to bait you,
where they're going, was the Amazon man made?
And it's like, yeah, you know,
because then you get,
you're gonna get a Brazilian president to go see,
see what they said, it's man made. So we might as well continue to engineer it and manage it and it's like
there's such complex
systems and interactions and such a such a giant web of life there that
At least in my opinion
is clearly one of the most
authentically natural things.
And again, are there things that we've engineered?
Did the uncontacted tribes, sometimes they have banana plants
that they've stolen, and we can see it from the air,
that they have banana plants.
We've made banana plants.
That's engineered by us.
We know for a fact.
So, agricultural engineering.
Agricultural engineering and stuff like that,
but suggesting that the Amazon basin, you
know, it's just a weird way to think about it.
I've just heard people dismiss the protection of the Amazon based on the fact that they're
like, oh, well, if people made it and it's such a giant leap from zero to 100, you know,
is there slash and burn that the ancient civilizations
did, of course?
Are there areas that were affected by people, of course?
I just get worried when we start talking about
it was a man-made thing.
Here you loud and clear on that.
And I personally think that's completely separate
from wondering about what the ancient civilization
have been able to accomplish.
Oh, sure.
It's almost really sad because if all the humans
are not dying now, how long does it take
before all signs of humans ever existing disappear?
Ooh, for the most part, from an alien perspective.
How, what timeline are we talking about?
I mean, like, there's like a hundred thousand years,
like, it could be less, it could be less.
It could be like a few thousand,
because a hundred thousand is complete destruction.
A hundred thousand is like nothing.
But then it could be in just a few hundred years,
it starts becoming, you're gonna,
the government of the alien civilization is gonna have to
pay quite a bit of money to do the research
to find, because they're going to find other life first, to find the dolphins and the fish and so on,
they're going to find the trees, maybe the trees are the interesting thing. Sure.
The buildings are not that interesting. The crumbles. But there must be examples of cities that have
been left unattended for a few decades and like how quickly the plants push up through the
street and everything starts to get broken down.
If you really look, you'll be like, oh, there's some interesting geometry here for the
buildings and so on, but most of the things, either stuff, all the stuff of the past 100
years, the airplanes, all that, all the technologies, all the paperwork, all the hard drives,
this, they're all the technologies, all of the paperwork that all the hard drives, that's through all the information.
I wanna actually know how long it takes
like a 747 to like biodegrade.
Like how like if you just leave it there,
sitting on the runway, society stops.
Yeah.
How long does it take for that thing to disappear?
Like that's a weird thing.
Lately versus to a point where it's on the identity
of the Bible might be different, but.
Sure.
I mean, the point I'm trying to say here is, as you've brilliantly put, the Amazon churns.
Yeah.
Oh yeah.
And the fact that I wonder throughout this history, what are the peaks of the awesomeness?
How many banana, how many agricultural, Einstein's of bananas were there, the creating
different kinds of ideas, different kinds of geometry, different kinds of tools.
Well, yeah, look what the Incas did.
I mean, the Incas, you know, Machu Picchu.
I mean, when they found, when Hiram Bigam found Machu Picchu, it was covered in jungle,
you could hardly see it.
And I mean, the stonework they did, much like what the Egyptians did with the pyramids, a lot of it, we don't really understand how they did it. If you come to
the jungle, you got to go to Machu Picchu because it's not far from there. And I usually,
like, I'm the person like, I won't, I don't usually go see like the, you know, like I've
never been to see the Taj Mahal after living in India for five years, like I'm just not.
But when you look up and you see Machu Picchu, you go, either they were communicating with the gods there, or these people were
so smart that they knew that anybody they brought, they were going to impress. They, they've
built something there. But when you look up at that mountain, you go, whoa, with those
giant stones, the beauty of it, you know, it's it, it's just stunning to imagine that there was this culture
of people that could achieve this.
And so through the Amazon,
I mean, that's sort of up in the Andes,
but there's all kinds of stuff in the Amazon.
There are places where they say there's
pure mints beneath the canopy that we just don't know about.
I mean, it's endless. pyramids beneath the canopy that we just don't know about.
I mean, it's endless. If you had billions of dollars, trillions of dollars,
what would be the efforts in the Amazon
for both conservation and for exploration?
All right, well, first let's get tied together.
Yeah, exactly.
First arrest the deforestation,
so we don't have an ecological crisis on our hands.
We don't want to keep losing species, losing indigenous cultures, losing the climate stabilizing
services that the Amazon provides as a whole. Stop that. That's my first mission. Next, then we can play.
And then it's like, let's go find, I mean, I've flown over the Amazon and assessment. It's like you see things where you go, we have to go see what that is.
You know, weird lakes or shapes in the jungle that don't make sense that are strange.
And like, so even at that level, you can see weirdness.
You can see different signs of possible awesomeness.
The jungle is so weird.
And here's the other thing, is it most,
till like the region I've been working on,
you see where the researchers go.
The certain biological stations,
the certain places where like,
oh, like this university has a relationship with this,
this for the university, this is this.
So everybody goes to the same few study sites.
And then they walk on the same trails
and they have the same guides.
When you fly in a sess assessment and you fly a few hours away from all that and you
see a tiny little tributary and then you fly for 40 minutes over unbroken
green just wild before you reach another tributary. Even if somebody could
survive going up that tributary had the expeditionary expertise and the ability
to survive getting shot at by arrows if they could get up that tributary.
Now cut perpendicular into the jungle, which I don't do on the solos.
You can't, you can never do, never leave the river, but you tell me that in that span
of 70 miles between tiny tributaries at the edge of the world. No one's been there.
None of us have been there.
You know, maybe somebody 10,000 years ago was there,
but we don't know what populations of things are there.
We don't know what ruins are there.
And so there's so much undiscovered stuff in the Amazon
that is just waiting, just waiting.
What is the process of exploring that?
So how does money get converted towards exploration?
Is there safe ways of doing that?
There's places where we found out about things that have to be explored,
but where you come up with, well, how do we do this without getting shot?
And not only without getting shot, but also without endangering them too. Because how stupid are we if we if we go in there to people
that are living in the jungle not bothering us and we go and search ourselves
into there because we're curious about some rocks. That's that doesn't seem
fair for the loss of life. And so like, yeah, that's that's something that we're
working on. And like one thing, of course, is like lidar and stuff,
but eventually, eventually, at the end of everything,
it comes down to boots on the ground.
As somebody who has to ask that very question about
how to deal with uncontacted tribes there,
they're going to kill you.
But you also don't want to disturb their environment.
If you were an intelligent alien civilization, oh boy, and you came about Earth.
How would you interact with it? Can you put yourself in the mind of an alien civilization?
Because there seems to be some parallels here. It is actually right. It's like my own
cosm of. We're very aggressive human civilization is very aggressive. So if we, we're easily,
we get threatened easily. Yeah. For stupid reasons, because we start, like,
American military probably thinks it's like the Chinese or the Russians. If we see any kind of
flying objects, they get very on edge. I don't know. I mean, because, you know, part of it is like,
you just want to ask, like, that it is like, you just want to ask,
like that's the thing, I just want to ask questions.
Yeah, but you don't know the same language.
Yeah, you're going to get a first of all.
You send a boat of bananas.
You send a boat of bananas, you get shot.
I mean, picture if aliens landed in New York,
how long would it take for one of them to get shot?
It would be minutes.
If you matter a minute.
Yeah, that's because it's New York.
Any everywhere else? Look where we are right now. That's true. Maybe you were worse here. If you matter a minute, yeah, that's because it's New York. Everywhere else.
Look where we are right now.
That's true.
Maybe you were worse here.
Yeah.
It makes me really, it makes me wonder what is the right way to interact with intelligent
life to snob like our own.
I hope I dream of in our lifetime we would interact with
Possibly life on Mars or on one of the moons of Jupiter Saturn and like how do you interact with that thing?
Well, there's very technical biological and chemical
Processes but also if there's any kind of intelligence, how do you try to communicate with that intelligence? Yes, so we're not talking about like a cockroach, we're talking about like something that's clearly like
doing things, making things.
Or cockroach possibly.
How do you know the difference in a cockroach?
Like how do you know, we were just talking
just like a hell of a...
Yeah.
We don't know, we don't know.
We have...
Just like a race of like, philosopher cockroaches
to chillin' on the rocks.
Well here on Earth, we kind of,
there seems to be a strong correlation
between size and intelligence.
Like, yes.
It seems like the bigger things, the bigger nervous systems and brains, and so they're usually
smarter, but that doesn't...
I think it's brain, it's the ratio, brain to body, because you have like, crows that are
up among the most intelligent, and it's like the size of the brain to the size of the body.
But there also could be kinds of intelligence
that would work completely.
Oh, I did.
We're not appreciating.
Maybe cockroaches.
It's the right the longest.
They're talking shit about us right now.
It's dumb humans.
I like to.
They got.
These rocks are so great.
Couple of hundred years.
Exactly.
Did you ever hear that Kurt Vonnegut
where the two space travelers get lost?
This really impacted me as a kid because my dad was an English teacher, so he's always
quoting Dostoevsky and Kurt Vonnegut.
And there's this two space travelers get like crash landed in a cave.
And on the walls of the cave are the harmoniums.
And there's these kite-shaped animals and they feed off the vibrations of the cave.
And that's all they do.
They don't hurt each other, they just do that.
And so for like two years, these travelers are stuck, and they're trying to fix their ship,
and one of them starts playing music for the harmoniums.
And the harmoniums love him for the music, and they all come around him,
and he plays this music for him, and finally they fix the ship.
And the one guy is like, all right,
let's get out of here.
And the other guy is like, you know what, I'm staying.
He goes, I found a place where I can do good.
I'm not hurting anybody and they love me.
I'm staying right here.
Yeah, this whole ambition thing got going on.
Always try to build a bigger, bigger thing. That might not be the ultimate conclusion
of a happy existence as a civilization. That's one of the possibilities why we haven't
met the aliens yet at scale. It's because once you get good enough at technology, you
realize that happiness lies in a peaceful coexistence.
It's possible.
So, where do you stand on like aliens now?
Like there's a lot coming out about the pilots and the things people have been seeing.
And again, like I kind of come in and out of this stuff, like I'll be in the jungle for
three months, I miss a lot.
So like update me.
Like, are we being contacted right now?
Like, of course, nobody knows. I miss a lot, so like update me. Or are we being contacted right now?
Of course, nobody knows, but I tend to believe my intuition
says that there's aliens everywhere,
that even our galaxy, that's a bigger leap,
but I believe our galaxy has probably billions,
hundreds of millions of planets with life on it, like bacteria, type of
isher.
And I believe there is, I don't know, thousands of alien intelligence, intelligence
civilizations that exist or have existed.
The problem is there's a lot of time and it's very difficult to contact each other. So to achieve a kind of
civilization that's able to actually send out enough signal or radiate enough
energy, what we would notice, I think that's really tough. That said, statistically
speaking, it seems like that should have been possible inside our galaxy or maybe nearby. And so I suspect that once an
alien civilization is just many orders of magnitude smarter than us humans, the way it would contact us
is going to be very difficult for us humans to understand. We're very ego-centric. We want
the message to be sent as like in English versus, you know, I think consciousness itself,
emotion, thoughts could be like fingertips, could be words in the story that aliens are telling us.
Or things that are just like a low dimensional projection of a much higher dimensional message
that's being set by aliens.
And it may be our striving to create technology, to create the kind of sensor that's actually
able to hear some of the message.
Maybe that's what AI is trying to do.
So I think that bridging that barrier of communication between us and cockroaches,
I think that's the biggest challenge.
Interesting.
Like the messages are all around us. They're here.
I suspect the alien messages are here. The aliens are here. We're just too dumb to see it.
So, first of all, the imagining planets where there are,
like just picturing like a silent planet,
but just like a planet of alternate life forms.
You know, maybe it's not something that we can communicate
and have a conversation with, but just like a planet of like butterflies and centipedes and weird, you know, unfortunately, bacteria is for billions of years.
It was bacteria. It's single-celled prokaryotes and eukaryotes, but they're not they're boring,
animal animals of some sort in an environment of some sort. Imagine that would just be such an interesting,
beautiful, amazing thing, and I'm sure they're out. Now that I'm, yeah.
The kind of viruses they got going on.
But they could also not be biologically based. There could be different chemistry,
so you have to be humble to that too. Sure.
But then, you know, depends on the day, like, I think you caught me on that
day today, an optimistic one. Sometimes I think we're all we, this is all there is because you
start, you ask that question and deferment paradox like, why aren't they here? You can't imagine
an advanced analyst's civilization that would not be explored, because we're explorers.
Imagine an advanced health civilization that would not be explored. Explore explorers.
Why is that depressing to you, that the idea that, that, let's just say you found out
right now that there isn't anything else.
Let's just say that for, for example, say that the earth is the earth and the universe
is the universe and it's sort of like the backdrop of a video game.
And it's just what's out there.
Would that be tremendously depressing to you? I think it's exciting for an engineer. It's probably exciting for an explorer, but I would equate that to you're going out hiking for three days
with one match. It kind of terrifies me that we only got one match. Really? Yeah. Really? Yeah.
All you got is one match.
This, no, no, no, hold on a second.
Hold on a second.
Wait, wait, wait a minute.
You're going out.
There's no more matches.
But this is the only match you got.
You know, we're going to extinguish the planet.
Like there's not, as far as we know, there's no meteor coming.
I'm saying like, do you live in a, so I'm saying is that, is your worry
then that we need to have a backup plan?
Yeah.
Really?
Well, there has,
so like, what if we do,
what if we do mess it up so bad that we can't live here anymore?
Well, there's different ways to mess it up.
There's, there's ways to mess it up
to make life really difficult.
Some of the things.
And that max type of thing. But there's nuclear war. Yes.
With further and further advancement of technology that can destroy all of our, it just feels like
that's going to be exponentially growing. Yes. It's going to get worse. And that it's a, I'm very
optimistic, but it's a heck of a Russian word we're playing.
Okay, so I'm still curious about your intention, though, or where your passion for this comes
from.
Or maybe it's both, but is it the need to have a backup plan for humans, which is admirable
for your intense love of humanity and our consciousness
and love and art and everything. Or is it also just that the raw fascination of imagining
what's out there? Because the way you said that about like, oh, you caught me on a positive
day where I think there was something in there that made me think that you need there to
be. Yeah, there's... I think I'm the kind of person that sees beauty and everything, but to me,
a universe full of diverse life is more beautiful than one where it's just humans. It's just
the Earth life. Interesting. There's
more beauty. I mean, I'm not ego-tistical about the awesome of the humans. I like if humans
are not the smartest in our galaxy, or not even close to being the smartest. And that to
me is, I don't know, that to me is exciting about the
possibility of what the universe can create.
Yes, I'm with you on that, that it's wildly exciting to, like, if we found, even if it
was just a distant inkling, that we found out that there is a planet that has life, there's
no communication coming from it, but we know for a fact there's stuff going on there. It would just change how we think about our entire reality.
We know now. And it could be, to me, I guess the little inkling of a thing that is depressing,
if all there is is earth and humans destroy it, then we're the coolest thing that the universe has ever created.
It's over.
I'm interested to have this conversation.
I'm really I'm really I'm saying like I would be interested to bring you to the jungle.
Yeah.
And and this I like now I'm also wondering I'm wondering like what what your wilderness
experience is because I feel like for me, I'm so earth-centric to the point where I'm like,
we differ in that, for me, this is like, it's a curiosity.
I feel wonder and I feel it's fun to talk about,
like what's at the edge of space.
There's the conundrums of space time,
but I'm so, to me, I'm like,
what if the aliens are watching us or what if the aliens aren't watching us?
But what if the challenge here is we've been put on on earth as the most
intellectually complex of these creatures and and we're being observed to see how we manage it.
And it's like we haven't made a good job of managing each other.
You know before We haven't made a good job of managing each other. Before, Oriana went down the Amazon, I mean, they showed up and just sacked the Incas.
I mean, we do our history, I mean, we don't have to tell you, you just got back.
But I just sometimes I wonder, you know, what the, is there a grand narrative with what
we're doing to wildlife?
Because it's like, we have all these other species and we're struggling even here in this conversation
to sort of quantify like, you know, and I think that most people don't think outside of the human
framework. You know what I mean? Like just driving around for me, living outside of the jungle,
even just for a few weeks, I get, you don't, you don't even think about the fact that there's
other species around us. We really don't day think about the fact that there's other species around
us. We really don't day to day. You look at TV and you listen to the radio and it's not
very consequential to the average person living in a city that there are these islands covered
in walruses and that there's rainforests filled with birds and frogs and all these things happening and that you know the salmon are contributing to our fresh water and
And that that life is literally given to us and made possible by these ecological systems to me
That's where like the whole you know essence of my existence comes from and so like
Yeah, thank you for that reminder because you're basically saying like the alien civilizations you dream about are here on earth
Those those those worlds are here
For me. Yeah. Yeah. Now I agree with you. I think I agree with you. I think that's actually the way I
Think most of the time though. You know, I think I'm on mushrooms all the time
I think I'm on mushrooms all the time, genetically somehow, because when I go out in nature, it's just the beauty, even of nothing, you talk about the Amazon. Man, just basics of nature.
Fill me with awe.
The other thing that fills me with awe is our own mind, like the biology of these things firing, basically, not our own mind like the biology of these things firing basically are not our own mind but biology
of any living organisms because it's like an ecosystem. These cells came together they somehow
function they will they delegate they mostly operate in a local way but they first of all it's
just like you said with the anaconda you start out as a tiny snake and you become giant.
When you're tiny snake, you're prey for everything.
When you're a giant snake, you're a predator
or you're prey to no one.
And like just that whole process,
same starting with a single embryo, single cells, human
and through the embryogenic process,
constructing this giant human that's able to have limbs move about the world, think about things,
write books and so on. Just to say that that is incredibly beautiful and all of that is here on
Earth, yes. And so actually I was being sort of poetic about aliens and so on. I think I can
spend 99.99% in terms of filling my mind with awe and beauty just looking down here on Earth.
For sure, I agree with you.
Yeah, and they shouldn't cancel out.
I think it's beautiful that there's people that are fascinated and obsessed with looking
out into space and that will travel there.
To me, the idea of, I mean, I have a little piece of media right at home that I hold and it does
amazing things to my mind because I'm like, everything I've ever touched is from this earth.
And I'm holding this thing that's been places that we can't even think about.
And it blows my mind and I love it. But when it comes to like intelligence, I think it's like,
I'm so concerned with the fact that we're at this moment in history.
And it's interesting to me that, you know, we had the internet and now that with the emergence
of AI and more and more, I feel like we are starting to resemble like an ant colony where
there's more and more connection and there's more and more interaction globally between everybody.
In the next 10 years, we're going to have to decide, are we going to let our ocean ecosystems
just collapse? Are we going to just take that 3% of rain forest and just
let them log the shit out of it until it's gone? And it's like, we're going to be in a
very different reality then. Then it's going to be a very dystopian future. Or can we
keep the good things about earth, transcend that, realize that we have these incredible alien
species around us that are animals
that we grew up with, that we wouldn't be here without, that we owe something to.
And I feel like at that stage, then the outward look becomes something else.
It's almost like we've proven that if aliens came up to us, that's when I'd feel good.
Aliens would come up to us and they said, you know, there's Louis has the thing where he
goes, God comes back and he goes, what did you do? He goes to pull the bears are brown. He's like,
I left food for you. It's like, if the aliens came and were like, you know, and they interviewed the
elephants and they said, how are you feeling? And the elephants would be like, listen,
fuck these little primates. You know what they've done to us? And it's like, I mean, you know,
I've seen people break an elephant. I've seen, I've seen it all done to us? And it's like, I mean, you know, I've seen
people break an elephant, I've seen, I've seen, I've seen it all with that stuff. And it's
like, if anybody was to ask them, they'd be screaming. And so like, to me, it's just, you
know, I have trouble, it's a trouble looking out into space. I have trouble looking out
into normal life as a human, because I'm so concerned with trying to make sure that they're okay because not enough
people are doing that.
The interesting thing about all the development with AI and just that we're living more and
more of our life online, I think we're actually learning what's missing when it's online. Like, I think people realize that online interaction is shallow, but we're just learning that
that's a reality. Yeah. That we need that human connection. And I think there's going to be the
swing back to like, sadly, AI systems of the future might be able to live fulfilling lives online,
but us humans have to have a deep connection with
Earth. And like with each other, physical connection, I think there's going to be a phase
somewhere in the century where we go back to deep physical connection. And there'll be
a digital world that we visit that would be separate. And that's the, you have a discussion
with that with Twitter, with Instagram, with all these social networks that they don't, they seem to be dividing us. They seem to not be
bringing happiness. And you have to try to figure out like, okay, so how do we use them in a way
that does connect us, does educate us, grow our knowledge base, but also keeps our lives
fulfilling in a deep human way
that we're for good and for bad genetically designed.
They can't overcome, but we can't escape.
These meat vehicles.
Yeah, but to me that's so reassuring.
Yeah.
It's like we all have those friends that are like,
we gotta live forever.
And it's like, I don't know, man, do you?
Yeah.
I don't know.
Is it that bad that this is how it works, like that we don't understand it?
Yeah.
That's often from the tech sector, the discussions about immortality and so on.
I think that's somehow trying to escape the beauty of this earth, for sure, that there's
something to do for right to look at.
Yeah. And I, I, I, perhaps like you, I'm worried about the unintended negative consequences
of trying to escape the way things are on this earth because this is an incredible mechanism.
How many times in the past has new technology come out that people have hailed as, you know,
blasphemy or it's not going to work or it goes against nature. And now, well, heart transplants are pretty cool. You
know, and you could say what you want about like television and like, oh, it's, you know,
it's it rots your brain. It's like, yeah, but also how many times have you sat in a room
full of people being entertained and all laughing and interacting and eating popcorn
because of the television is there? It's not one or the other. And so I feel like with AI, we'll learn our way through it.
You know, there's like with the legad robots,
especially and humanoid also.
So anything on legs, four legs of two legs.
I remember the first time I interacted with a legad robot,
I saw a magic there.
Like, that this too can have consciousness.
This too can have this life like quality that a human being loves about other human beings
about other living creatures.
Now while I'm still, I grew up in a place with no internet,
in a time with no internet.
So I still like biological dogs better.
I noticed the magic in robotic dogs.
And it makes me wonder.
The way, the same way we were just talking by aliens
looking up, it makes you wonder about other aliens civilizations.. Now, the deep love is for dogs, for other
humans. But there's still this wonder.
I struggle with that. Like you said, the whatever's going on in here, the idea and there's
so much talk about the fact, like at what point does an artificially intelligent robot become something
that has, and it's like, I get very uncomfortable with that. It makes me, I don't know how to
handle the things because I don't know enough about it probably, but it's like, I don't know
to how to handle like, I don't know how to handle it. Nobody knows anything about it because
it's really, everything is terrifying here because it could be as simple as consciousness
It's easy to fake
So what if you live in a in a world 10 to 20 years from now where
Your toaster there's a bunch of robots in your room
that are faking consciousness
And then you fall in love with them and you have a deep connection with them and then you actually have a deeper connection with your toaster than you do with any
romantic human partner you've ever had and you start to I was upset about the dogs
I was like this robot doesn't take a shit on the floor
It's like you just you just took it way worse. Yeah, yeah, and then you know, and then they they start to
I don't know if you've seen AI porn,
but it gets pretty intense.
Like fully AI porn, like they're fake people.
Take people that can, uh, things I've missed in the jungle.
Yeah, things.
Boy, do I have a lot to show you or not, not show you, not show you.
Let me ask you about a touchy topic, climate change.
What's the effect of climate change on the Amazon?
Maybe species diversity.
What is something that people should think about?
Because there's different views on, on I think most people believe that climate
change is human-caused and that it's happening but there is different perspectives on the degree
of damage that it's going to do over the next several decades and what our response should be as a society.
So it would be amazing to hear your perspective on it in small slices of
your experience or in large.
To me, there's no denying the fact that we are experiencing changes.
I think anybody that that doesn't agree with that hasn't been outside in the
last 20 years,
or has an interviewed old farmers who will tell you that it changed or you know, it's that I think a lot of us can agree with that. Where I deviate is that I am not a climate
scientist. I am I am not qualified. And so I just like everybody else I'm listening.
And what happens to me is I see that the,
someone like Santiago de la J.J. father
will tell me it's totally different than it was
when I was a kid.
The seasons have changed and moved and like,
in New York when I was a kid,
like we used to get like white Christmas,
like we used to get snow.
We don't, I was in shorts,
like I came off the plane right before coming here and I was in like shorts for a second.
Like I was like, this is a different reality,
but my ability,
could my or my, my interpretation of climate change,
you know, I feel like it's just as dumb as those people
that go like, you know, it's really cold.
I thought they said it was getting warmer.
It's like, it's a very rudimentary thing.
And so as a, as a someone that's fighting for the preservation of biodiversity, I don't feel like I'm
any more qualified than the average person to, I can only provide anecdotal evidence of the stuff
I've seen. What I do do, though, and I always make a stronger lineation here is that I
Can speak to the fact that I've been places where the ocean fisheries have to been depleted and the local fishermen can tell you and the scientists can tell you
There's no more fish here. I've been to the places where the rainforest line is being pushed back in Borneo And it's getting smaller and smaller and smaller and I've been in the Amazon and I've walked through the killing fields and through the fires
and I've burnt my lungs on it.
And I'm a big believer personally
in instead of trying to take on all of it.
I've tried very hard in my life to pick one thing.
And to me that one thing is protecting as many wild heartbeats as I
can because they're under constant fire. And so climate change, there's so much arguing over it.
And like you said, the degree to which we affect it and how do you, you don't even mean like I like
to have provable data points, like I can show you tropical deforestation.
I can show you the decline in tigers over the last 100 years.
I can't prove, you know what I mean?
Like I can't answer that question.
I don't think if I've probably you can better than I can.
No, I think one of the criticism I'd love to get your opinion on is one
of the criticisms that somebody like Jordan Peterson provides.
Yeah.
Is that the climate is
such a complex system.
There's so many variables that making conclusive statements about what's going to happen with
a quote unquote climate in the next 10, 20, 50 years is a nearly impossible task. Therefore, as he would say, as people like Bjorn Lomburg would say,
the kind of fear-mongering that is done, saying we should spend humongous amounts of money
to change the trajectory of everything we're doing in terms of energy,
in terms of infrastructure and so on, in terms of how we allocate money is not
justified because predicting is very difficult.
Instead it's better exactly what you're saying which is focusing on local problem, local
saying we need to protect the Amazon.
What are the things that attack in the Amazon this year in the next five years, how can we stop the deforestation?
How can we stop different things?
And then humans are exceptionally good
at coming up with solutions for that, especially when you put money behind it,
you put attention to it, and that's the way we solve all the different problems
that are projected for the climate change in its
worst case scenarios to be realized on the surface.
So that's kind of the case he would make.
And I should also mention that one of the reasons I was fortunate enough to discover your
work is first a friend mentioned that I should definitely talk to you.
And I googled you and I saw that
somebody recommended that Jordan Peterson absolutely must talk to you on his
podcast. Wow. I think there's like a Reddit post.
Right. Thank you for Reddit poster. That's that's great. I was like, oh, interesting.
And then I looked and Jordan hasn't yet. I thought it's my goal is for you to
talk to to to Rogan and to Jordan Peterson for different reasons,
but for the same reason, they get connected to a human being that deeply cares about the
Earth.
And I think that's probably the right lens through which to look at the effects of climate
change in terms of focusing on the different things that are threatening the diversity of
species in this most magical
place on earth, which is the Amazon, but also, as you would talk about with elephants and
tigers in India, and focusing on how to solve those problems.
I don't know if there's any comment you want to make on folks like Jordan Peterson, who
are sort of raising questions about how much do we really understand about the climate?
At first of all, I'm such a Jordan Peterson Peterson fan and I think the guy is heroic for a number
of reasons.
And I find his use of language and his use of theology and the message that he puts out
wonderful.
I cringe a little bit when he says, I feel like, and I might not even be accurate on
this, but I cringe a little bit when I feel like he dismisses
that there is an ecological emergency happening right now.
Now, I'm not talking about climate change specifically,
but I've heard him say, you know, environmentalists upset me
and he goes, well, what do you mean by the environment?
Everything, and it sort of seems to outrage him.
And it's, and I kind of agree with him there,
because so are you telling me that we
need to halt our global process and and and and progress and economies and everything I don't know
I don't know and so so to me um I don't that doesn't bother me because he's exploring
what the hell are these people talking about when When you say, I personally have friends and students
and people filling my inboxes. I have young kids telling me that they've become vegan
and they ride a bicycle and sometimes they don't watch TV because it uses electricity.
I mean, they're just becoming so terrified of that they're killing the earth. And so it's this
Doomsday anti-human sentimentist thing that we're evil. It. And so it's this Doomsday Anti-Human Sentimentist thing
that we're evil.
It's almost like a new religion about your evil.
And so to me, it almost makes me in a totally different camp
where like climate change and the right left politics.
And I consider to family, I consider Thanksgiving dinner
and listen to the climate thing go back and forth. And I'm like, I'm to family, consider Thanksgiving dinner and listen to listen to the climate thing
go back and forth. And I'm like, I'm not even I'm not even here. And that might actually
annoy some people in the environmental field that might feel betrayed by me saying that,
but I don't care. My job and it's not just the Amazon. And that's one note I wanted to
make is that my career has has taken place largely in the Amazon and also in Amazon. And that's one that I wanted to make is that my career has taken place
largely in the Amazon and also in India and now a lot in Africa. But it's not even just
these exotic places either. It's people realizing that the salmon runs in Canada and the butterfly
gardens in our backyard is that it's biodiversity everywhere. And I strongly feel like, the idea of jungle keepers,
the idea of stewards of nature.
And so for me, my job, my one thing,
and I try to tell this to these kids that message me
and that my inboxes are full of this, where they go,
the climate is burning and elephants are in decline
and tigers and this, and that,
my guys, look, first of all, calm down, first of all, like go outside,
go get laid, do something, have fun.
Next, pick something that you can affect.
And it doesn't have to be with the environment.
Do something good on earth.
Go help somebody that needs food.
Go help your elderly neighbor, whatever it is, practice, practice with being effective at one thing at a time. And so for me, like I said, from those early days
of sitting there with JJ on the side of a river and going, someone has to
protect this, my concern is that we've lost 70% of the wildlife on this planet
in the last 50 years. That's a huge problem. Wildlife maintain the ecosystems.
And so I have a very clear cut, very definable,
very measurable, and provable thing
that I'm fighting against.
And it's a very, to me, it's a very like small-ask.
Don't cut down the 3% of the world
that has 50% of the biodiversity in it.
Maybe let's keep some wild tigers for future generations
and because tigers have their own inherent right to exist here
That's my thing in terms of when we get to you know, I get attacked for you know, you should be a vegan
Okay
You show you you have me roll into a village in the Amazon when they offer me spider monkey and you tell me that I should be a vegan
And you you see how much they respect you and you tell them that you're a vegan.
But no, so for someone like Peterson, I think it's actually good that he's, first of all,
telling everyone to make their damn beds and exploring it through a different lens.
You know, he's coming at it from a totally different thing and saying, you know, are we just
being alarmists here? Are we, what, I mean, again, imagine if, you know,
that imagine if there isn't a problem and they're making one out of it
and all the implications that that could have for progress,
it's like, so I think what he's doing is perfectly reasonable.
There is a podcast though where he's, he's,
there's a great one though, where he's,
he's discussing animal intelligence.
And I could really see that, that, you know, the human psyche and theology and religion is so much his world that the, really, the idea of animals
being intelligent was novel and it was, and it was fascinating.
Yeah, that's why I was in love with the two years of talk.
Just I don't know.
And I hope that I'm not out of line here, but he is so focused on the human mind.
That I think he forgets that there's other life out there.
There's this whole machine of intelligence, of like kind of intelligence out there.
whole machine of intelligence of like kind of intelligence out there. The entire trillions of species tiny and big just moving everywhere.
And we're actually part of it. So like to look at a human psychology as
distinct from that is missing at least some of the picture. Some of the picture.
I do believe though I would agree with him
on that humans are unique.
Human psychology is unique.
We just are.
But I also, he's in such an interesting place
because usually you have environmentalists
who are like nature, nature, nature,
and then it's very anti-human.
And then you have the other side.
And it's like, he's on this path where he's starting
to explore what those diverse intelligences mean.
And that to me is really amazing
because I love hearing what he'll do with that.
And I think also on top of that,
I think if you're aware of nature,
deeply aware of nature,
he gives you another perspective
on the evolutionary history of humans. If you're aware of nature, deeply aware of nature, it gives you another perspective on
the evolutionary history of humans.
It's one thing to be an evolutionary biologist and kind of study it from a philosophical
perspective, and it's the other to really, I think, experience it and deeply know it
to see, I don't know, the fact that we came from fish should really be cognizant of that. That's something else.
That's like, I don't know, to realize that we're part of a computing machine that created
intelligence. We're part of the thing that started bacteria and is now creating AI.
And I don't know, Dunkin' Donendo, I don't know what else is impressive.
The other great human achievement is the other great you.
I was thinking, well, what's interesting about Boston?
But I feel like we keep we keep scratching up against this thing in this conversation that
that it's so easy.
50 I think something like 50 or more percent of the humans on this planet live in cities.
And I think it's so easy for people to forget that we share this planet with so
many other things. And I think that that sort of, that we're in a way, we're almost like
ecological orphans and that we've left the things that actually make us feel at home.
And that's a bit of a stretch because I don't know if everybody feels that way. But for me, I mean, professionally as an expedition
guide, when I take people into nature, I see what happens to them. And they leave
going, I mean, it doesn't have to be the Amazon. It can be, you know, upstate
New York. But it's like if you do it the right way, if you remove the fear of,
you know, breaking an ankle, seeing a snake, being bitten by a mosquito, all that stuff,
if you can get people to a peaceful moment
and you're fly fishing, a lot of times they'll take that moment
and they'll talk about the rest of their life.
If they don't live in that, those of us
who spend our lives doing that, but for a reason,
because it's the only place we feel sane.
And you are kind enough to suggest that we might travel together for a time at some point
If we do that if we journey together, what where would you recommend we should go?
So what I would want to show you is
Is sort of I'd want to take you to church. I'd want to take you to
Take you to take you to see the giant trees, take you to meet the old the old gods.
Really. There's places when you walk in off the river that are so deep in the far that
we, you know, and again, this is now we we do this. We have the boats. We have the Rangers.
We protect this ecological corridor now. And so it would be taking you to meet some
of those loggers that that we converted. It would be taking you to meet some of those loggers that we converted.
It would be taking you, we'd have to go to the floating forest, meet some of the trees
that I love the most, go piranha fishing.
And like really just spend my ideal trip for you would be to spend five days of, you
know, airplane mode phone
Completely living out comfortable. I'm not saying I don't want to you know I don't want to torture you. I'm saying go and live comfortably on an expedition in the Amazon
And that means a few days at this research station
Maybe go up river three days and camp up here just on the edge of where the
Uncontactors are and then come back and then see the jungle keeper station
But along the way, seeing all the special sacred places, it would be almost like saying,
like, let's go see, you know, all the treasures of Italy.
It's like, this is one of the most beautiful things on earth.
And, and I've had the incredible, almost unbelievable fortune to be responsible for protecting
it.
And, and I don't, you know, I think it's a privilege
to be able to share that with people.
To be able to witness what this earth has created.
Just, it's been just a gift just even to follow your Instagram.
The window you create on this part of the world.
It's just really beautiful.
I do wanna ask on that,
it may be it's like behind the scenes a little bit,
but how do you keep the equipment dry?
Like how do you, how hard is bringing equipment
to the cameras?
You're an incredible filmmaker and photographer,
so how do you make it work?
I don't know, it's not that hard.
We, we, it's not that bad.
It's what?
It is what.
The new iPhones are waterproof.
And if they don't get, I'm telling you dude,
it's been such a weapon, it's been awesome.
If you drop it in the river,
my one thing is you gotta have a tether
because I drop it all the time.
And so I'll be hanging off a boat, and I'll be trying to take a video, and I'll be like, here we are in the river, my one thing is you got to have a tether because I drop it all the time. And so I'll be hanging off a boat and I'll be trying to take a video and I'll be like,
here we are in the Amazon, you can see the lung and funk.
That's the biggest thing. But the we shoot on cannons and I don't know, it's worked out,
it's not that bad.
Oh really, so you can keep the equipment dry.
I keep the equipment dry and I actually don't, a lot of people put their shit in silica at night
and like keep it dry and then they take it out.
And I find that when you do that, the temperature change creates moisture inside the camera.
So what I do is I never do that.
I just keep my cameras in my backpack with a zipper.
So they're more or less exposed to the elements.
And so it sort of always has a little bit of equilibrium. And that's it.
I mean, I shoot on some pretty fancy equipment sometimes and it's great. But I mean, the
awesome thing though now is that like with a cell phone, I mean, like, I like put my phone down
on the ground a few weeks ago and let this rhino walk up to it and stuff. And it's like, you can
get video footage that you can literally put on Netflix.
Like it's just like, it's getting really exciting.
And that's where like, right, where I deviate
from the nature people that are like,
we need to go back and live in cabins.
I'm like, dude, this is awesome.
And I love taking slow-mo.
Like, like, no way.
It makes you re-appreciate, but just by yourself,
just re-appreciate over and over and over.
And then you can also share it with the world.
Well, that's the thing is sharing it with people. There's nothing better than like
teaching a kid to catch a fish, you know, and like, and like in a way
Instagram has allowed us to do that where it's like I can have this crazy-ass moment
that is so unique and then put it up for people to see, you know, or, I mean, I remember one of the most recent things
that got people, you never know what's gonna get people excited.
I literally just like, there was like, you know,
3000 butterflies on the beach and they were like,
black, red and blue.
Beautiful butterflies and I just like,
pend the phone across it and then like,
jumped in the river and swam away.
And like, threw that up on Instagram and people went berserk.
They're like, this is the most amazing thing
and like, four different accounts reached out to try't berserk. They're like, this is the most amazing thing. They're like four different accounts
to reach out to try and share it.
And I was like, butterflies.
They're everywhere.
This is 4,000 species of butterfly in the Amazon.
Like, but sharing that with people is beautiful.
It's how do you find the thing to shoot?
How do you, how do you come up with the butterflies?
How do you notice the thing that's beautiful
and say, I'm gonna wait a minute.
Like pause, this is beautiful.
Let me take a picture of this.
Because sometimes you might get used to the beauty, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, or like sometimes simple crazy things,
like leaf cutter ants.
Yeah.
They're just walking by.
It becomes pedestrian.
It's like, well, I mean, just like when you're,
you know, you're living at the elephant camp
and it's like, the elephant comes out and he starts like trash in the water bucket.
We're like, we just stop.
We're trying to watch picky blinders here.
Just leave us alone.
It becomes normal after a while.
But no, in the jungle, I don't, I don't, that's never a struggle for me because as a photographer,
it's like whenever my eye hits on something, I went, I've never seen that's never a struggle for me because as a photographer, it's like whenever my eye
hits on something, I've never seen that many
of those butterflies, all the same species together.
And like this, oh yeah, I'm trying to get this one thing
that the butterflies do is in the dry season,
the salt deposits, you'll get like three or four,
maybe five thousand butterflies all coming onto this one area
of sand because there'll be like some leaching,
there'll be some salt deposit there or something.
And they'll all be wings flat against the ground
with their perboscis on the sand.
And if you go walk near them, they will vortex up.
And you have a rainbow vortex of butterflies
and you can like go run through that.
And it's surreal. And I want to, what I want to do is get the shot vortex of butterflies and you can like go run through that.
And it's surreal. And I want to, what I want to do is get the shot where I,
I guess leave the phone recording in slow-mo facing up
and leave it there for an hour,
let the butterflies come in and settle
and then disturb them.
So I get the bottom of the vortex of the bug.
I'm like, these are the ways I think where I'm like,
how can I show people the absolute mind blowing,
you know, perfection.
What do you think?
I mean, that's what I have.
You know, I'm sure that somebody else could do it with,
you know, a red and nail it,
but it's like, that's what I have in the jungle
because I have to travel light and I, you know.
Yeah, I think that really, that works.
I have the same thing when I travel in Ukraine.
The equipment was just the suit, there is that suitcase over there with a foam
Yeah, and you just shove it full of equipment and you can you can you can go to war zone. It doesn't matter
Yeah, doesn't like I it has to do with the you're talking about like with the
Like protecting your camera or not it feels like the more you protect stuff the more is gonna get it
It feels like the more you protect stuff, the more it's going to get it. Damage.
Yeah, like so like see like my cameras, they're all missing.
This is like, this is amazing to me.
So all my cameras are missing the, they all, you can see the metal
through the paint.
Nice.
So all this.
And so like, they're all, because I'm constantly like, I like slide in and like take a picture
and like, they're banged up.
But these, they're good, they're good machines. I think they get tough over time if you put them
to the moon.
It's like it's like muscles.
It's like David Goggins cameras.
If you gotta, you gotta make them suffer every day.
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right, what's your view on hunting?
So you really hate poachers.
I really hate poachers.
How do they operate?
Who are they?
What are they up to. How do they operate? Who are they? What do they up to?
What do they do?
Poachers to me are the people that are going in
and annihilating wildlife for profit
without any, you know, the people that are going in
and machine gunning an elephant to take its tusks.
Yeah.
The people that are sneaking into protected areas
in Africa and shooting rhinos so that they can cut off their horns before the animals even dead while its baby is beside it.
So, and there's a difference between a poacher and a hunter. Is a hunter. I work with an organization called Vettpaul in Africa and they use United
States veterans who have come back, post 9-11 veterans who have come back from the war
and have these skills. And they've been using these guys to protect the last black rhinos,
white rhinos, elephants. And so we've, I've gotten to see this play out on a private reserve
in Africa where these incredible
people have decided to protect zebras, wildebeests, all types of Impala, giraffes, several
herds of elephants, white rhinos, black rhinos.
All of this stuff is protected.
And what's interesting is it's a hunting preserve.
And so it's been very interesting and challenging, sharing my work there
with the public because, for instance, I went to a very high profile photographer recently
and I said, you have to get over here and see this. It's amazing what these people have
done. It's this reserve called Buffalo Cloof and they've, you know, there's rescued families
of elephants and they have, you can see a black rhino every day if you want. So this is only critically endangered. And it's because of the work that Vetpa does
protecting these animals from poachers. But what people don't understand is that hunting
happens all the time on the reserve, not for the elephants and the rhinos. Those are
special, and they will never be hunted there. But things like an Impala, things like an Inyala, a Will to Beast, a Zebra, there aren't
as many predators as there used to be.
So if you leave those animals, unhunted, without the wolf to chase the herd, to thin off
the ones that are old and dying or sick, well then you just have animals that are old and dying
and sick walking around suffering.
And so on and reserves like this, they hunt
and they take the old ones and they use the funding
from hunting.
No one's gonna pay you $30,000 to take a picture of a buffalo,
but they'll pay you $30,000 to hunt a buffalo.
And so these reserves responsibly and ethically on foot
can go hunting and manage. And again, if they were hunting rhinos or if they're hunting elephants, I'd be out in
a second.
They're hunting non-indanger species.
They're hunting non-indanger species, hunting game species.
And the difference is that a poacher is going to, so those are responsible hunters that
are ecologists and conservationists, whereas a poacher is someone that will come
in and kill recklessly and murder an animal for no reason for a part to sell.
I would love to travel together actually.
So let's, we'll talk offline.
I would love to make that happen if you allow me.
I'm 100% serious, man.
I've tremendous respect for your work and I've been watching you since the beginning.
I would love to serious, man. I've tremendous respect for your work and I've been watching you since the beginning. I would love to do that together.
I've been, I've talked to Joe quite a bit about it.
I really love the idea of eating the meat that I've hunted.
It's mostly what I eat as meat, not for dietary.
I don't have any weird constraints on my diet and so on.
I just really enjoy eating meat. It's really good. And there is a part of me that's bothered by
factory farming. Yes, sure. That it's very easily accessible meat, but there's something deeply
wrong with it. Part of the reason I love fishing and eating the fish that I catch, it just seems to be
more ethical but also a more intimate deep connection, honest connection with nature.
You get to see the killing of the food that you're consuming versus removing that from
the picture, not even thinking about it, not thinking about that this came from the meat.
And, um, yeah, I love the idea that you kill, I killed one animal and I eat the animal
basically for the whole year.
Yeah.
And ethically slaughtered animal, whether it's a fish or a deer or whatever else, to me,
that's, oh God, I'm going to, I'm going to use the wrong religious term here, but I feel like I want to use the word sacrament.
But it's like there's a deeply profound ritual.
And honestly, if you teach a kid to grow a vegetable, you show a kid how to grow a carrot.
And the miracle of like, wait, I put a... this thing just grew in there, it just appeared
because there was sunlight.
And it's like, yeah, to me, yes, when you feel that fish tug on the line, to me, it
does something that awakens a deep primal something, the satisfaction.
And then when you eat that, you feel good.
And so I think the other thing,
like sort of functionally speaking,
is that aside from the fact that I think
it's one of the original,
we were so disconnected, like we should be hunting.
We should be gathering, walking more.
I mean, look at like what we discuss now,
like people are like, oh, you gotta get your steps in
for the day, and it's like that never used to be a problem.
You know, people like, well, should should we be eating animals? And it's like, what do you think
we do here on earth? Like, I'm not sure how you got so confused. But Walmart did it to you. Like,
I don't know, like what I living where I've lived and I mean, from 18 to 35, I feel like I've grown up, I've lived more outside than I have inside.
And it's just to me like showing people these things,
I can see this miraculous wonder in their eyes
when they realize that they can reach out
into the world and interact with something.
And so when I hear these like frantic people talking about,
you know, whether or not it's right, it's like,
no, of course it is.
Not again, factory farming is awful, but I try to stay, I try and walk the line. I'm worried
about wild animals. I'm worried about wild ecosystems. The other thing that's sort of important
about hunting is that if, if people's livelihoods depend on salmon and elk and ocean fisheries. Well, then they'll
fight to protect it naturally because it's part of their life. And it's if everybody's
going to Burger King and everybody's getting chicken wrapped in plastic, they forget the
fissure there because they're too busy watching sitcoms. And so then when the inter when the
conglomerate comes in and builds a dam, nobody really cares.
And then you just end up with a few hippies and signs standing next to the river and it becomes silly.
So we forget the meaning. You mentioned that
ayahuasca reveals the boy. No, boy. Oh, no. The Darkness that's there in the in the jungle
There's beauty but there's darkness. So what is it that I ask her?
What is the heart of darkness? Fuck it opens the heart of darkness right up
I'm gonna show you a picture of them of our shaman and then I'm gonna ask if you want to do I Alaska here
Not here in that sense. It can only be done in the jungle.
Anybody that tells you,
I've heard people be like,
oh, I did ayahuasca in Brooklyn last week,
and I'm like, no, you didn't.
I actually told that to my native friends,
I went, hey, guess what?
I said a bunch of green goes,
keep thinking they're doing ayahuasca in Brooklyn,
and they were like howling laughing.
They're like, you can't do it outside the jungle.
And I was like, exactly.
I've never done ayahu a Alaska with lots of,
I've done or eaten whatever mushrooms.
Sure.
It's a wonderful experience.
I think it's wonderful.
But I wasca, oh man, yeah, see I had done mushrooms.
I thought I was like, okay.
And I, yeah, I was like, I got this.
I had my notebook.
I was like, I'm gonna journal a little bit, you know.
But you quickly, I quickly, quickly realized how out of my depth I was and
how unprepared I was for what was happening because you sit in a circle with these native
guys and there's one, you know, he's got the feathers and he's old and he's got a face
like the map of the world and he's he's smoking his fat old tobacco thing and he calls you forward and you kneel before him and you're
gone, is it too late to back up?
And everyone's, you know, there's one candle and he blows smoke over the cup and he hands
it to you and you're like, again, it's these things that you can't argue with, it's these
facts.
So you're like, as soon as this goes down, I'm gone.
I know it. And as a moment in my down, I'm gone. I know it.
And as a moment in my life that I have to either embarrass
myself in front of everybody or I'm going forward with this
and, and then I went and sat.
You're sitting in the dark and it's, again,
so we're on a platform with a palm-thatched roof
and the jungle is all around you.
So all those million, tens of millions of frogs and insects are,
and I'm like, all right, cool.
And I remember I like, you know, I tried to like light a cigarette or something,
and I went, oh, that's not gonna happen.
You know, and then I put my hands on the floor, and like, my experience,
I mean, like, we've done mushrooms, you know,, it's like it's interesting, it's introspective.
No, this was like somebody unzipped the universe.
I, you know, I spent a lot of, without boring people with it, I spent a lot of time in,
in, in like, unconstructed dream space, like floating between nebulous, like there was
a long period where there was no physical shape where I lived without a name.
And like, so it's like, it's like you get brought so deep down,
so elementally lost in the universe where like I truly felt like I was
experiencing moving through places like like that, like that, like that,
asteroid that I have. Like it's, it's like a piece of,
your piece is something detached from the earth. And so I got back from it and
had an interesting new appreciation for life. I strongly suggest that people just do mushrooms
like a normal person. Unless you're ready. So it was really intense. It was really intense. But to
be fair, the shaman who did it was like the old school guy.
Yeah.
And he was, he was getting up there in years
and he had forgotten and overboiled the brew.
Yeah.
And so we came back and I was like four in the morning
and I had, you know, all this crazy shit.
I'd been on journeys and years down there.
And so when I came back and I had like hands,
I started crying.
I started absolutely weeping.
Gratitude.
Gratitude that I was alive.
I was gonna get to see my people again. I was like, I'm going to have to see my parents again. I'm going to get to
talk. I kind of thought you might have been gone. I was gone. I was gone. I was a dimly conscious
something floating in dark space and spent what felt like years down there. And so when I really
did feel like being reborn, which I was like cheap trick, like, yeah, you, but no, the way it moves you through the jungle, the way the jungle moves through
your skin, there are moments of absolute majesty and incredible discovery that happened along the way
and on the way up, the jungle brings you up and the shaman brings you up and you get to move through the forest in a way that
it's almost like you're inhabiting the consciousness of animals
very very very like I didn't think that Holiness and Agendix could do this to a to a brain, you know
mushrooms are like oh I can I feel like I can feel music like the cool you know you guys want to watch
March the penguins This is transformative.
Like what?
Did that change you?
I don't know.
I think it definitely, it definitely, I almost feel like it showed me the thing that I
was scared the most of.
And it's that it was like that it's all just cold, dark, nothing.
It like brought me to like the basement of the universe.
And I felt like the point of that was to come
back to this place where there's all this life and light and love and all this amazing stuff
that we experience on a day-to-day basis and don't take for granted. Just like almost dying,
this was fully dying. The great part is that usually it's not that intense.
This guy had overboiled the brew.
He'd also, I saw the vine afterwards.
Most ayahuasca vines are like as thick as your arm.
This one was like as thick as a garbage can.
It was like the oldest ayahuasca vine you can imagine.
And at like four in the morning,
I crawled over to my friend Chris,
who's a tough New York City firefighter.
We were like holding each other,
just like weeping, just like thank God we're back. And then we had to go looking
for the shaman. Where the hell is this guy? He's gone. We found him in the morning and
he was laying in the stream naked like ET at the end when he's like laying like in the
yeah, he kicked his own ass with that brew and he retired after that. Oh shit. So we really got got like, we, the somebody turned the dial all the way up on us.
And so we got, we got blasted.
So it's not supposed to be that bad.
But I think you're somebody who's fearless and sort of diving into those kinds of places.
I think I also retire from Iowaska.
I could be fearless with other things, but I think I'm good.
It sounds kind of, um me personally, kind of exciting.
Well, I think that you have a severely fearless aspect to you. I mean, you're, when you come
up with something that intrigues you, like if somebody told you right now that you could
go physically into deep space, I feel like you would do it.
Yeah, I do.
Yeah, if go tomorrow is yeah.
Right.
And some of it is, I don't even know if you have that.
Some of that is more goggins like, I want to see where my mind breaks by pushing it to tough places. There's a curiosity of exploring the mind,
the limits of the mind. I feel like you're not a cold plunge. That's like you're not coming
back. Right. Right. And that's okay. No, I have, I do, I have, I'm with you on that.
I love seeing my limits. I absolutely love seeing my limits.
I love getting my ass kicked.
I love being shown how insignificant I am,
but when it comes to something like that,
where you gotta push your chips in,
it's gotta be something for me.
It's gotta be a hill that I believe in before I die on it.
And it's like, to me, the promise of exploring space
isn't enough, but even just the way, I mean, you said,
you're like, I'm going to Ukraine.
Here I go.
You know, there's a certain dedication to curiosity at any expense.
And I think that that is something that maybe we share in very in different directions.
Something tells me with those crocodiles outside, I would have gotten eaten.
Something tells me there's something trying to preserve you in this world. I'm not sure exactly what that is.
Somehow you keep surviving. What do you think is the meaning of this whole thing?
Why are we here?
Like, do you ever ask yourself for that question? I feel like that's every day. I feel like I'm someone that lives with that a lot.
And I think that I think that it actually takes me away from the human world a little bit.
I feel like I've always been a little bit apart. Because I think that other people do
you know mushrooms and they go, wow, I really made me think about
how amazing it is here.
I feel like on a daily basis, I find myself wrong.
I can't believe that any of this is possible.
And that goes from how delicious something tastes to being able to talk to someone in your family
or have a full, as times where I'm in the Amazon and I miss home and I even just face
timing with someone, I go, this is possible.
Like people were rubbing sticks together trying to survive saber tooth tigers not that long
ago and I'm over there like, yo mom, look at this, it's wild.
Like I'm in a constant state of all. And so, I actually hope that this is a testing ground,
and whether it's aliens or God or whatever it is,
that this is something crucially important.
That would be nice, because it feels like it is.
Yeah, I hope that too, that the universe almost created us to see what's possible, and
that I'd like to believe that beauty and good is possible.
And those are the things that make me say that it's impossible for it to just mean nothing.
And just like you said, there could be life forms that we can't even understand.
I'm very open to the idea that there's meanings that we have no idea about.
The few things I know are the things that I love and some of the things that I love
are being
pushed to extinction, so I try to protect them.
But that's my mission.
But I'm saying, in terms of what are we doing here?
I'm just always amazed at the simplest things.
We can sit here doing this exchanging. Yeah Using our imagination to fill in the gaps exchanging feelings experiences images
Yeah, it fills you with awe and every once in a while you get a little glimpse of something like a deeper meaning that might be there
You know, you don't you don't really know what it is, but you get a glimpse every now and then keep searching
And then it's over before you know it Paul
Hopefully for you
You got many more years. It was dark man. You're an important important and a beautiful man
Well, thank you so much for talking today. Thank you for being who you are for everything you're doing
I hope to see you again soon many times and maybe one day soon in the jungle. I hope that happens. Thank you Lex
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Paul Rosley.
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now, let me leave you with some words from Jane Goodall.
If we kill off the wild, then we're killing off a part of our souls.
Thank you for listening and hope to see you next time. you