Lex Fridman Podcast - #489 – Paul Rosolie: Uncontacted Tribes in the Amazon Jungle
Episode Date: January 13, 2026Paul Rosolie is a naturalist, explorer, author of a new book titled Junglekeeper, and is someone who has dedicated his life to protecting the Amazon rainforest. Thank you for listening ❤ Check out o...ur sponsors: https://lexfridman.com/sponsors/ep489-sc See below for timestamps, transcript, and to give feedback, submit questions, contact Lex, etc. Transcript: https://lexfridman.com/paul-rosolie-3-transcript CONTACT LEX: Feedback – give feedback to Lex: https://lexfridman.com/survey AMA – submit questions, videos or call-in: https://lexfridman.com/ama Hiring – join our team: https://lexfridman.com/hiring Other – other ways to get in touch: https://lexfridman.com/contact EPISODE LINKS: Junglekeeper (new book): https://amzn.to/4q7vpAp Paul’s Instagram: https://instagram.com/paulrosolie Junglekeepers Website: https://junglekeepers.org Paul’s Website: https://paulrosolie.com Mother of God (book): https://amzn.to/3ww2ob1 SPONSORS: To support this podcast, check out our sponsors & get discounts: Perplexity: AI-powered answer engine. Go to https://perplexity.ai/ BetterHelp: Online therapy and counseling. Go to https://betterhelp.com/lex LMNT: Zero-sugar electrolyte drink mix. Go to https://drinkLMNT.com/lex Shopify: Sell stuff online. Go to https://shopify.com/lex Fin: AI agent for customer service. Go to https://fin.ai/lex Miro: Online collaborative whiteboard platform. Go to https://miro.com/ MasterClass: Online classes from world-class experts. Go to https://masterclass.com/lexpod OUTLINE: (00:00) – Introduction (02:34) – Sponsors, Comments, and Reflections (12:00) – Uncontacted tribes in the Amazon Jungle (19:46) – Intense new encounter (42:52) – Never-before-seen footage of tribe warriors (56:08) – The mysteries of the jungle (1:10:43) – Tribe’s diet: Monkeys, turtles, and turtle eggs (1:20:19) – Jane Goodall (1:26:31) – Advice for young people (1:35:45) – Cartel, Narco-traffickers & assassination attempts (1:57:45) – Climbing the giant tree (2:08:43) – Giant anaconda (2:26:01) – Rescuing a spider monkey (2:32:05) – Dangerous animal encounters (2:42:13) – Writing, journaling, and great writer inspirations PODCAST LINKS: – Podcast Website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast – Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr – Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 – RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ – Podcast Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrAXtmErZgOdP_8GztsuKi9nrraNbKKp4 – Clips Channel: https://www.youtube.com/lexclips
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The following is a conversation with Paul Rosalie, his third time on the podcast.
Paul is a naturalist, explorer, writer, and is someone who has dedicated his life to protecting
the Amazon rainforest and celebrating the beauty of the natural world.
He has a new book, coming out in a few days, titled Jungle Keeper.
They should definitely go pre-order now.
It tells some intense stories about his time in the jungle over the past several years,
building up to a few epic recent events, including a new full-on extended encounter with
an uncontacted tribe that we discuss in this podcast. Both the book and audiobook are great. I highly
recommend it. If you would like to support Paul and his incredible team in their mission to
protect the jungle, go to junglekeepers.org. You can help with donations or by spreading the word or
checking out the gala that Paul is hosting in New York on January 22nd in a few days.
They are doing all they can to help raise funds for the mission of safeguarding
as much of the rainforest as possible, and I think it's a mission worth fighting for.
The Amazon Jungle is one of the most special and beautiful places on Earth.
As an aside, allow me to look back briefly and mention something that I've been struggling with a bit.
For context, I traveled to the Amazon rainforest with Paul,
a while back, it was an adventure of a lifetime with lots of crazy twists and turns.
We did record a podcast out there, literally in the jungle, episode 429, if you want to go check it out.
It was awesome.
And we also recorded a bunch of disparate footage of the journey, just for fun, and I would still
love to somehow put all that together into a cohesive video in case it's interesting to
someone. But I've learned just how difficult it is to organize and edit a pile of
chaotically recorded footage like that. So let's see if I can pull it off. But in any case,
this kind of raw vlog style video is something that I would love to be able to do more of
as a way to celebrate amazing human beings like Paul and others, including everyday people
who I meet on my travels. So I'll keep trying, take
learning, and I ask for your patience and support along the way.
Now, back to our regular scheduled programming.
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And now,
dear friends, here's Paul Rosley.
We've survived a challenging time out in the jungle about a year and a half ago.
And since then, your life has increasingly gotten more intense.
So you've achieved the incredible feat of saving now more than 130,000 acres of rainforest.
And the goal is that you're working towards is protecting 200,000 acres more.
And doing so while facing extreme dangerous.
from narcos, narco-traffickers, so-called cocaine mafia,
in an escalating drug war.
This is insane.
These are new developments.
Illegal loggers, as we've talked about before,
gold miners, and the incredible recent encounter
with a non-contacted tribe.
And we'll talk about all of this.
So your new book, Jungle Keeper, opens with the killing of two loggers
by the warriors of a non-contacted tribe,
the Moschapiro, in August 21st.
And then you reveal that you had your own dramatic encounter with the tribe two months later in October 2024.
So if I may, let me read the opening of the book.
Far out on the western edge of the Amazon rainforest, deep in the Peruvian jungle, a pair of loggers plunged their chainsaws into the buttressed roots of an ancient ironwood.
An iron wood, or Shua Waco, of this size is a giant among giants, an emergent sentinel that reaches heights of 160 feet towering over the rest of the canopy.
I've read that many are over a thousand years old, by the way, as an aside, and you've found ones that are 1,200 years old.
Anyway, you continue.
This particular tree has started its life as a tiny sapling in the great jungle, a story that began before.
the Spanish reached Peru, long before the United States was even a dream, at a time when Leonardo
da Vinci was still honing his talents in a faraway part of the world, through the Renaissance,
the First and Second World Wars, and the birth of our grandparents. This tree was out there
slowly charging upward, anonymous, just one pillar among the billions of others. But on this day,
in August 24, when the two loggers worked, this witness of the
the centuries came crashing down to the canopy with such cataclysmic power that it shook the earth.
And then you go on to talk about how the shaking of the earth was felt and heard by the
uncontacted tribe. So you go on to describe how these particular loggers were murdered by the
uncontacted tribe of Mashko Piro. What do we know about these warriors of the uncontacted tribe?
We know that across the Amazon basin, there's still perhaps thousands of clans of
quote-unquote uncontacted peoples, people that are living in nomadic isolation in what remains of
the intact Amazon basin and want to remain that way.
And so what happened with these loggers was that local people told them, don't go out there,
don't go into these territories.
And what happens is that people that aren't from this,
this is thing with the jungle,
people don't believe that it's as wild as the legends say.
And so when they say there's, there's, there's, there's wild people out there,
these loggers from another region go, yeah, this, you know, some story, we're fine, we'll go,
we have shotguns.
They don't realize you're dealing with a civilization of people that is still nomadic,
still uses bamboo-tipped arrows, still lives naked,
in the Amazon rainforest has knowledge of medicines that we have yet to encounter or may never discover
and that they can hit a spider monkey out of the treetops at 40 meters.
And so while you're using a chainsaw, they can sneak up and you will never know they're there.
And so when that arrow passes through your body, you'll only have a moment to realize it before you fall over.
And we're looking at something you posted on your Instagram, which are the arrows that they use,
which are bigger than you.
Yeah.
They're like six, seven feet.
Six, seven feet, more like seven feet.
And that's incredibly sharp.
They cure it over the fire,
and they have a way of sharpening at that edge of bamboo
becomes incredibly like knife sharp.
You can cut meat with it easily.
I've done it.
These arrows, look, look at that.
I mean, I'm five nine.
That's easily a seven foot arrow.
Yeah, so for people who are just listening,
this quote, arrow is really a spear.
Some people would think it was a spear,
but they're shooting this thing with a gigantic bow.
that's crazy yeah and so to be holding that look at that they even they even twist the fletching so the arrow spins in
the air they have incredible craftsmanship and then you see all the all the little string on there is
plant fibers that they've woven and then this is them yeah the warriors of the tribe the warriors of
the tribe and so the fact that we're sitting here talking on microphones and that we have airplanes
and cell phones and all the things that we have in the modern world and there's still we still live in
this age where there's right now at this moment people living out in the jungle who have been there
since before history is an incredible thing. Let me look this up on perplexity. What are the technologies
we modern humans have that the Mosch Kupira do not? It's just interesting to think about the kind
of technologies we take for granted. Energy and power, obviously all the electricity generation
and grids and batteries and solar panels and electric motors, metals and materials,
mass-produced steel, aluminum, advanced alloys, plastics, composites, glass, concord, all of those
things, tools, of course, and machinery, the infrastructure of roads and bridges and buildings,
and the weapons of war, everything but the spears and the air that they have, and the medicine
and biology. Of course, they probably have complicated medicines that they have developed for their
own that are available
within the jungle. That entire
list is no. No.
I mean, metal think you have to be able
to excavate into the earth
and forge metal.
These people don't even
as one of the local anthropologists
said to me a Peruvian anthropologist, he said
people think of them
as stone age tribes and he was like
they don't have stones.
He's like they don't know that water
they see water that they drink.
They don't know that water freezes because
they've never seen it. They don't know what the water boils because they don't have,
they don't even make clay pots. They just have their bamboo and their string. And so they're
living an incredibly simple life. So all of that, I mean, even, you know, a camera is a miracle
to them. Like, it's like, yeah, it's, it, you have to bend your mind to even understand how
how far back they are. It's like looking into thousands of years ago, like Stone Age.
Well, they hear the sounds of the chainsaws, the sounds of machinery in the distance.
Yeah. I wonder how they can possibly comprehend.
what that is. I think they view it as like a demonic, destructive force. And when I show you
the encounter that we had, we got a few takeaways. We left with more questions and answers,
but one of the things that they were able to communicate across the language barrier was,
why are you cutting down the trees? They don't like it. Yeah, that represents to them
the danger that the outside world brings, the destruction that the outside
world brings. They see us as the destroyers of worlds. So tell me about this encounter in October of
2024. So in order to tell you about that encounter, I think we need to orient people into where we're
talking about. We're talking about this river that runs through the western edge of the Amazon rainforest
that you know well now after spending time there with me. It's a high tributary of the Amazon rainforest
where, you know, you have the main river channel and then smaller and smaller and smaller and
tributaries. And the smaller you get, the less trafficked they are. And so this river has remained
wild through the centuries. And even during the 90s when there was a mahogany boom, where people
went out for mahogany trees, there's very few people going up this river. And so 20 years ago,
when I first got to the region, and people were telling me that there's uncontacted tribes out there.
It was always in the realm of something.
You know, it's like people say there's Bigfoot or don't go there.
It's haunted or something.
It's like it was like a tall tale almost.
And even the Peruvian government at the time that I went to Peru first, which was 2006, their official position was that the tribes are a myth.
There's no such thing as the tribes.
That was the official position.
And you would hear these stories of people that got shot.
You'd meet someone high upper river four days up river deep in the Amazon.
that had an arrow and you'd look at this thing and it had this, you know, mega gravity.
And so as we've created junglekeepers and now we're protecting 130,000 acres of this river,
we're protecting the plants and the animals and the ancient trees and trying to preserve
the ecosystem and counting the butterflies and conducting ecological surveys.
And what we've inadvertently found ourselves the caretakers of is the fact that these people,
in order to continue living, have to remain icily.
want to remain isolated.
That's their one mandate as a civilization,
the tribes of the of the Mashko Piro.
And so in October, we were, you know,
as junglekeepers now, we're working with the indigenous people.
What we do is we take lagers and gold miners
and make them into rangers and give them better jobs
and we try to protect the forest.
And those people who live up in the remote indigenous community,
they called us on a satellite phone,
and they said, directors,
you've been working with us and telling us you want to help us.
The tribes are coming out.
What do we do?
So even they don't really know when the tribes emerge from the deep jungle what to do?
They were terrified.
What was your thinking when you got the phone call?
When we got the phone call, it was a mix of, you know, we should keep, because we're over here,
like trying to get land concessions and doing all this important work.
And part of me was like, that can't be real, so we're going to keep our heads down.
Bigfoot is emerging from the forest.
Yeah, sure, sure.
And then, because we got the call, we hung up and we said, okay, maybe tomorrow if they're, like, still there or something.
And then it was crazy because it was, it was probably about noon.
And we had an important day of meetings.
We had a meeting with the police.
We had a meeting with the landowner.
We were trying to do all this stuff for the conservation work.
And then I got together with the core team of directors, JJ Mos and Stefan.
And we said, wait, if this is real, we have to get there, like now.
Like now, now.
And so we dropped what we were doing, canceled the meetings.
We put other people on the meetings.
We got a boat, we called Ignacio,
we called our most hardcore ranger,
who has been shot, who in 2019 was shot in the head by an arrow
and still bears the scar.
And he barely survived.
And we said, look, this is going down.
He said, I already know, because the whole river already knows.
And he said, we said, can you get us there by tomorrow morning?
And he said, look, it's a two-day journey by boat.
So no.
And we said, is there any way you can get us there?
And he went, I'll get you there.
And so we got a couple sacks of rice, a couple cans of tuna, our dry bags, our tents.
We got on a boat by 6 p.m.
And we started riding up the river through the night.
Through the night.
And so a two-day boat journey that we're trying to flex in one night.
And so I was at the front with the headlamp, with the torch.
And so the first few hours, it was clear in that comet.
Remember that comet that was going, there was that comet in the sky?
I remember looking at the comet and going, somehow, I was like, this is it.
I knew this was it.
And the first few hours was clear and the stars was out and it was beautiful.
And then it clouded over and the lightning started and then it just apocalypse downpoured.
And from midnight until 8 a.m.
It was just the front of the boat with the light.
And it was just Star Wars vision of just, you know, raindrops and galaxies and moths flying in my eye.
And people don't realize you can get hypothermia in the tropics.
But it's like as you're going at night, even if it's 80 degrees outside in the rain, in the wind at night in a lightning store.
you're freezing.
And so by, you know, 2 a.m.
I'm convulsively shivering.
And we're using the crocodile eyes,
the Cayman eyes on the side of the river as,
because it was so dark we couldn't see where we were going.
So those shine back at you.
So I was finding the Cayman eyes and then motioning
with the light to Ignacio, where to go.
And he knew how to find the channel.
We had to jump the waterfalls.
We did the two-day boat ride in one night.
Nice.
And we got there and we arrived at this community
where, and it's morning now, and the howl monkeys are calling over the jungle, and, you know,
the little naked children are all by the side, and everyone's scared.
And we get a hug from this guy, Bacho, who we know.
And they're like, come in, come in, come in, and they're like, the tribe came out yesterday that we
saw a few of them on the beach, and they're gone now.
And so we collapsed, we fell asleep, rained the whole day.
That night we went out and we looked for them, and there was this crazy moment where we're
standing on this beach, and they were, they're, they're full.
footprints were there. And the local indigenous anthropologists was standing there and we're standing
at the edge of this beach looking out into the Amazon beyond. And there's just all this wreckage.
It looked like something very Cormick McCarthy, just dark sky, iron clouds. And we're standing there,
everyone is waiting because at any moment an arrow could just fly through your neck. And there's people
holding shotguns. And the anthropologist, this little guy is standing there in the front. And he's
going, no mole. He's going brothers. There's only a few words that.
intersect between the languages and he's going,
brothers, we're here, we don't want to hurt you.
He's speaking in the Yenai language.
And he's saying, come out.
And you can tell by their footprints,
the trackers explain this to us,
you could see it was just the balls of their feet.
So right as we pulled up to the beach,
they had run.
So they were there listening to us.
And he's going, no moly.
Come out, it's okay.
Lay down your arms.
We'll lay down ours.
No moly.
Just kept saying no moly.
And nothing happened.
And we went back to the village.
We went to sleep.
We wake up the next morning.
And it's 5 a.m.
And again, we're trying to save the jungle.
We're in a race against time to get these land concessions.
And so my team, like Mosin and Stefan, JJ couldn't come because he was in town
actually signing paperwork and interviewing loggers and landowners.
And also, he didn't think that there was any chance this was going to be real
because in his entire 50-something years in the Amazon, he's never seen them.
And so we're getting ready to leave in the morning.
We had tents on the boat, and Ignacio comes up to me, and he goes, you're my director, right?
You're my boss?
And I went, yeah.
He goes, I need to talk to you like a friend.
I was like, yeah, shoot, shoot, go.
And he goes, you'd be an idiot to leave right now.
He goes, they're coming.
And so he convinced us to stay.
We pull our tents off the boat.
Stefan and Mosen go off with their cameras.
They start shooting, you know, people.
These are monkey eaters and fishermen, the community that we're in.
And everything's quiet, and I opened my laptop, and I was working.
Just writing, writing my book.
And then it happened.
Then you started hearing people screaming,
Mosch, go, mash go!
And people are screaming,
and women are lifting children
and running into the huts,
and the dogs and chickens are going nuts.
So fear.
Fear.
Fear.
Fear.
Because we should say,
kind of the obvious thing is,
as far as anyone remembers,
any encounters,
any minimal, small encounters
where these tribes have been violent.
Extremely violent.
These tribes have remained,
alive because of their violence, almost like the Spartans or the Comanches, they seem to have
adopted violence as a first response to contact.
Maybe you can correct me on this, but I read that in the late 19th century, early 20th century,
there was documentation of encounters with these tribes by the private armies of the rubber
barons, and those encounters were from the rubber barons' armies' perspective, violent.
And so maybe the lesson they learned, the uncontacted tribes, is that any interaction with the outside world is going to have to be violent because they have to defend themselves.
Yeah.
You had colonial missionaries in the 16, 1700s.
Then you had the rubber barons, the late 1800s into the 1900s, just periods of extraction and domination and cruelty.
And these tribes, their grandparents must have told them, when the outside world comes, you shoot first.
That's the only thing that's going to keep you alive.
Do you think the memory of that, those violent encounters, is defining to how they think about the world?
Yeah, because even in my lifetime there in the 20 years I've spent in the Amazon, Ignacio was shot in the head.
My friend Victor survived a violent encounter where they murdered somebody on a beach.
I mean, they've shot numerous people.
They've even shot people who were trying to help them, people.
They're trying to give them clothing and bananas.
They've just, where they call it porcupining them, where they find a body on the beach with so many arrow.
that when they fall over, all the arrows are sticking up.
And so they think, and they'll do it out of curiosity, too,
where it's like, hey, you're wearing a suit.
That's weird.
We've never seen anybody in a black and white suit.
And then get a clothing.
You know, the way Teddy Roosevelt would shoot a bird for science,
they're like, they'll just want to look at you.
And so they're operating on a different,
they don't have a moral system that we have or understand.
They're just, they're truly wild.
How does Ignacio think about them?
Because they almost killed them.
Yes.
it depends on the mood you get him in because if you ask him, one day I asked him, I said,
if you could see the people that shot you in the head, what would you say to them? And he looked
to me with that Ignacio look. And he said, I wouldn't say anything. I would kill as many of them
as I could. I said, okay. He also had a time where he was in a really remote guard station
working for the Ministry of Culture, and they showed up, and he knew that they were going to kill him.
And so he climbed up into the peak of the little structure there. And just like, you know, like a
in a car, that greenhouse effect.
In the top, at midday with the sun beating down,
he was huddled over a mattress while they were walking on the deck,
moving pots and pans and looking at our items and artifacts.
And he knew that if he was found, they'd kill him.
But if he stayed up there, he was literally frying to death.
He said he was soaking the mattress.
He could feel himself dying for two hours.
He had to stay there.
And he is constantly making this decision of, if I come out, I die.
If I stay here, I probably die.
He's like, probably dies better than definitely.
die. So he's terrified. And so as they're screaming,
Mosh, go, and everybody's running and women are lifting children, Ignacio comes and finds me,
and you can see in his eyes. You can see when somebody has that PTSD response where
he's breathing heavy. He's, he's moving behind trees. He's not, he's keeping me close to him,
and he's going, look there. He has a bow. He has a boat. And we're looking up the beach,
and there's just this clan of naked men walking down the beach with these seven foot bows,
and they're hunched over. And they're pointing at us. They're going,
at that one. They're going, look, there's a gun there, and you can see them communicating to
each other, and the butterflies are swirling off the beach, and, you know, in these moments you go,
am I, am I entering a moment that I can, is this, is this a one-way door? Is this, is this not something that,
is this an irreversible situation? Because there's an unfolding situation where they're
coming at towards us, are they going to attack? What do they want? Is there going to be, I mean,
I'm, I am soaked in chills right now, just talking about it, because I remember standing there and
going, there's no way this is real life.
It's burned into my memory, them walking down the beach and seeing them with the bows.
And of course, you know, Stefan is up there just firing off pictures and Mosin is down getting
video.
And the community that we're with, people had, you know, you hear shotgun shells loading
home and them loading it.
But they're also, they're getting ready.
And there's this one guy, this anthropologist named Rommel, who has been the only person
who has communicated with them peacefully.
he did it in 2013 where he stood on the beach and he spoke to them he knows enough of the local
dialect that overlaps with theirs that he can speak to them so as they're coming down the beach the
butterflies are flying up and we're all waiting and again shotgun you're talking you know how many
meters 30 40 meters i don't know accurate for an arrow you loose a seven foot arrow that weighs nothing
you're talking about 300 meters easy they can shoot you from across the river so ignacio was like
pulling me and he was like down he's like you go down he was like you stay behind this tree and he's like
you watch them from there he's like watch out that guy has an arrow he's like he's watching everyone
because you could see he's like this is how it happens did you think you might this might be the last
day you have on this earth are you afraid i was yeah yeah of course i was afraid um it's you're with
you're with i'm with my two best friends and a bunch of people that i work very closely with
and you're in the middle of nowhere and there's no help coming and you're with like you know
26 people and there's 50 of the tribe that you can see and you know that they're surrounding us.
There's all men on the other side of the river.
And then we had guns looking back towards the jungle because we knew we were being surrounded.
And so again, this is always the story of someone's uncle, brother, cousin tells a story
that happened and now it's happening.
And it's not happening in the shadows.
It's not happening in the middle of the night.
It's happening in broad daylight.
They're walking out onto the beach.
You know, it's like the first time they saw the dinosaurs in Jurassic Park,
you're going, uh-uh, there's no way.
And you're, you are kind of walking on the nice edge of, uh,
and it's funny you say it's the phone taking pictures,
because there's two ways to think of this situation.
This is fascinating or this is extremely dangerous.
And it's both.
It is a nice edge.
Yeah.
So you can approach you to one of the two ways.
Like, if I die, I die, I'm going to take some good pictures.
But also we're there.
That was also our mission, you know, as, as the directors,
of junglekeepers, we're working with this community to ensure that their lifestyle can continue.
And they're saying, hey, that's great. But as an indigenous community, we're dealing with
these people that come out and raid our stuff, try and steal our women, that kill our hunters.
And now they're coming out. We want you to see it. And so documenting it is part of our job.
We have to show what happened that day. And so those guys were shooting. And then, yes, very
seriously, it's actually, so Mosen's wife and I, we always joked about like, oh, if the tribe ever
comes out, like, you stand in front of him, like, you take the arrow, he has kids. And it was, you know,
that day, it was like, we were strategically positioning ourselves being like, you know, you down,
you cannot get killed. And it was, you start in those moments to go, okay, where can, where will I be
safe from arrows? Where can I run to the river if they, if they come over? And you start planning,
okay, if I jump into the river, I was going, okay, I got my bag, I have a can of tuna, I have a
flashlight, and I was like, if I jump into the river and float down and I live, I'm still
days up river. And so you start going through all these things, but. And of course, the
Moscow Piero people are thinking exactly the same thing, probably. Well, the interesting things,
they're initiating the contact, right? They are the ones coming out of the jungle and confronting
us. And fundamentally, that contact is, they're at least giving peace a chance.
It's they're trying the peaceful contact first, correct?
Or is there a violent element?
Like, what did you sense in the caution of them emerging to the beach?
Fear.
As they came out, you could see fear on them,
because the way they were hunched over,
the way they had their bows ready.
They were worried.
And so they came and, you know, Rommel is standing there
closer than any of us at the edge of, on one side of the river.
And it was like, you know, shirts versus skins.
It was two tribes looking at each other with a thousand years of civilization between them.
And we're almost going, put down your bows.
Put down your bows and we can talk.
And he's, no mole.
He kept saying no moly.
He kept saying brothers, brothers, please put down your.
So no moly means brother in a language that they might be able to understand.
Nomoli means brother in a language that they do understand.
And it seems like they refer to themselves as the no mole.
The brothers.
So potentially that's what they call themselves as the tribes, Nomole.
Exactly.
And actually, the anthropologists that we've been speaking to post this event have been explaining to us that Mosco Piro, you know, Piro is the group that they're from, these various nomadic tribes.
And Moshko basically means like wild Piro's.
And so the one thing we know they call themselves is nomoles.
So at the end of this, we might converge towards the name of this tribe being Namoly versus Moshka Piro.
The nomoles, yeah.
Seems like the most current, or at least their self-appointed identity is the brothers.
Nomole.
Anyway, there's these shredded warriors on the beach.
Yeah.
With seven-foot arrows.
And we're all standing there.
And so the first thing, again, you just think of like, you know, the peace pipe and the old stories.
And the first thing is, let's make them an offering of peace.
And so they got a canoe with no motor and we piled it with plantains.
like just full of plantains, 16 feet of endless green bananas.
And then, I mean, the balls on this guy, the anthropologist, he gets into the river,
takes the canoe and it's the dry season.
So the river is only about three, four feet deep at it's at the channel.
And so he walks this thing out.
There's one man walking in the face of all these warriors.
And he takes the boat and he pushes it towards them.
And they rush out.
And they start grabbing the bananas.
and they're not going, okay, we will unload these bananas and use them later.
They're my bananas, and you're grabbing your bananas, and they're fighting, and they're yelling,
and they're all grabbing them, and then they push the boat back, and he talks to them a little bit.
And again, it's not a perfect translation.
So he's, you know, he's saying, where have you come from?
What do you want?
Who's your leader?
He's trying to establish these things, and they're saying things, and they all sort of talk at the same time, like a flock of birds.
They're not, they don't have, it wasn't like one man speaks.
and there was no women.
The women were nowhere to be seen.
And actually at one point, as we were preparing,
I think it was while we were preparing the second canoe of bananas,
there was a moment of absolute panic.
And it happened when there was a noise behind us
and you just hear a bunch of shotgun swing behind us.
And, you know, Mosun goes down,
I go running away from the river now.
Because again, I want to see it coming if there's an attack coming.
And I'm standing, me and the,
this guy were sharing a tree as cover and he's got a shotgun and he's looking back into the forest
and peering through. And what was happening was the women of the tribe had come silent foot and they
were just pulling the yucca out of the ground and taking the banana plants and ruining the farm
completely. But they were raiding the farm behind us while the men were talking up here. So again,
were they, were they peacefully contacting us or were they like, hey, we need some food, so go make a
diversion and then take the food at the back. I mean, you're really worth.
surrounded. We were completely surrounded. So they could have murdered all of you probably. Easily.
We were outnumbered five to one at the least. Yeah. And it's probably fair to say that part of the reason
they did, maybe they wanted peace, but part of the reason is they didn't know how deep this goes. They didn't
know if you have backup. They don't know if we have backup. They also, they had questions. They were
asking, some of their questions were incredible. How do we tell the difference between
how do we know who are the good guys and the bad guys are?
Because to them, all you outsiders are the same.
So who are the ones cutting down the trees?
And those are the ones they know are the bad guys.
The big trees seem to have incredible significance to them.
They're significant to us in a different way,
but to them it's offensive on an almost religious level
to cut a big tree as if you're killing their gods.
So there's a spirituality to the trees to them?
seems like that. And so whoever's cutting them down is a source of destruction on spiritual,
existential level. Yeah. Well, how, why would you destroy our home? I think they're right.
Yeah. In a deep sense, the on-contacted tribes represent the deep jungle. And so if they're
threatened, that means the jungle, the deep jungle is threatened. Yeah. I mean, they are the
human voice of the jungle, and they're asking questions. They're also demanding,
You know, they're clapping at us, and they're waving, and they're saying, send more bananas.
And so they loaded up another boat, and they pushed another boat out.
And this time they gave them some rope.
They all had rope tied around their waists, penises tied up.
But they love rope.
And some of them were wearing rope that they had made, which is brown or reddish.
And then some of them were wearing rope that they had clearly pillaged from logging camps or the communities, because it was modern nylon paracord.
And they had this wound around their waists like a thick belt.
and they took the second boat
and that way they had some some rope
and they had some plantains on there.
So some of these guys might have been the ones
that murdered the loggers.
Could be.
From a couple months before that.
Absolutely, could be.
But what Rommel said, as he was talking to them,
he turned to us and he said, you know, this group,
he said, the other groups call me the grandfather.
He said, this group, he said, I don't know any of these.
He said, this is first contact.
He said, this is the first time this group is talking to us.
And you saw people from maybe 12,
years old to what looks like 40 something, like a banged up 40. And no really old people and no
women. So there's a particular clan. It's a particular tribe that never contacted. Is there just from
your memory interesting aspects about the way they were trying to communicate, like you said,
clapping. I think it's a, from an anthropology perspective, from a human perspective, fascinating,
how do you talk to people from an uncontacted?
tribe like this. So clapping, yelling, it's interesting to know that there's not a hierarchy where
there's a leader that represents, or is that we know for sure. Before even coming to talk to you
about this, we passed this through anthropologists and ethicists and people. And we, you know,
we said, look, is it even, can we talk about this? Because if you talk about this and you tell people
there's these uncontacted tribes, people have misconceptions. They go, they're the last free people on
earth. They're living the real life. We need to go join them. We want to see them. We want to
photograph. There's all this bad stuff that happens, and all these people want us to be left alone.
So the last thing we want to do is kill the thing we're trying to protect and tell the world,
but at the same time, they're speaking out. They're saying, stop cutting our trees, leave us alone.
And so if we're not successful in the greater jungle keeper's mission of protecting this river,
they cease to exist. And so advocating for these people requires us to have this conversation,
and requires us to have this footage, and to show the world, and then leave.
them alone. In order for any of this to make sense, I have to show you this footage. And this
has not been shown ever before. This is a world first. I mean, up until now, that's the other thing,
you know, we're sitting there this day. And, you know, the only thing you've ever seen are these
blurry images of someone's cell phone from 100 meters away of the uncontacted tribes. And we're
sitting there with, you know, 800 millimeters with a 2x teleconverter and, you know, R-5s.
And so this is, as we're looking through the farms,
anticipating the tribe coming,
I'll put a little bit of volume so you can hear it.
And then you can see this is the moment.
This is us running when they're like, they're out.
They're coming down the beach.
Oh, wow.
Oh, wow.
You see how many thousands of butterflies.
But look at the way they move.
Look at the way they point.
Look at him with his.
bow wow they're trying to figure out what they're looking at uh-huh and they didn't know
what the cameras are there so this was the guy's looking out the back so he's he's
going there's something back here you could hear the women in the farm and I'm looking
in every direction because I'm going which ways the arrow coming from because he has his
shotgun this is just like a farm shotgun even if he shot it you have to use a stick to bang
out the shell. But see as they come closer, they start laying down there. See, he's laying
down his bow and arrow. They understand. No mollay. So these are warriors. And the way they were
at first moving, I really look like they're ready for violence. And now they're all standing
and relaxed. Yeah. Smiling? Are they smiling? Smiles come at some point. I would say that
One of these guys seemed like in a leadership position.
He did most of the talking.
What's with the different hand gestures,
this holding your hand up to the face?
All of this means something.
All of this means something.
Some had red smeared on their faces.
Some had yellow.
Did you have a sense of hierarchy at all?
Like the boss?
Again, there was just these two dominant guys.
And like this guy and one other guy who looked almost like him, like his brother.
Yeah.
Wow
this is incredible Paul
you see the rope
yeah
some of that rope is
yeah I can kind of tell
who the who the bosses are
right
all right so a few of the
but see even that
as he's pointing what are you what are you pointing at
you guys are nuts
you guys are nuts
you see as though they're rushing in
there's this desperation they're hungry
They also...
Is that in the water?
Is that Rommel in the water?
In this particular video, it's a guy named Liener.
But like, see these guys, they're fighting over it.
It's not that we're all going to share it later.
It's, I get mine, you get yours.
And so what does that, what does that mean?
Yeah.
But here, they're in peaceful mode.
Now, after we'd given them,
after we'd given them several boatloads of bananas, things did calm down.
Rommel said to them, you know,
look, we've given you what we can give you.
We gave you sugar cane.
and we gave you boatloads of plantains.
And so then there came a time where things were a little more relaxed.
They were walking around.
We were at one point we had a great moment where we'd given them the plantains.
We'd given them the bananas.
And he'd said, look, that's it.
He said, we've given you what you asked for.
You asked for bananas.
We don't cut the trees here.
All of us here are not tree cutters.
We're indigenous people.
And he couldn't explain who the hell we were.
but they were like, we don't cut the trees.
We're not the loggers.
And they were like, okay.
So then at some point, you know, Ignacio went out and sort of like started, you know,
he'd go like this and they'd go like this.
And, you know, he'd like dance a little bit.
They danced a little bit.
And then there was this very human moment of just sort of joking.
So even Ignacio warmed up.
Even Ignacio warmed up.
Once he realized it didn't seem like anyone was going to die that day,
uh, things did calm down.
It was a false sense of security.
Um, here I'll show you.
There's a couple more things that are,
relevant here though.
Yeah, this is just them interacting
with the boat. This is truly incredible
man. But then they don't have
boats, they don't have stone tools, they don't
imagine if you showed them ice.
You know, they wouldn't
This is historic.
I mean, it's the
I mean, you hear
Percy Fawcett encountering the tribes.
We've heard of anecdotal
accounts of the tribes. This is the first time that
the tribes have been
filmed, we can hear their voices, that there's a documented interaction happening.
I mean, this now, look how comfortable he's getting. He's so close. They asked him for his
shirt. He gave his shirt. They asked him for his pants. He gave his pants. He was in his
underwear. You see the shirt that's over his shoulder. Ignacio took off his jungle keeper's
shirt and threw it to the anthropologist. Then the anthropologist walked it off and threw it to
them. So over the shoulder of that uncontacted naked warrior is a jungle keeper shirt with the
logo showing. So they're like their second shirt. He just upgraded that guy's status in the tribe.
He's getting me the new boss with that shirt. He's got a dope-ass polo. He didn't even have to order it.
But yeah, this isn't like the aftermath when things were calm. And then my sort of moment with this
that really stuck with me was when Rommel said to me,
he said, they're asking about you.
And I said, what are they asking?
I said, you know, me.
And he goes, yeah, they're asking about you.
And, you know, again, I'm not tall, but I'm compared to the people in the village,
I was a little bit taller in the big shoulders.
And he said, they said, you look like a warrior.
He said, could you come forward?
He said, show them that you don't mean any harm.
He said, show them your palms.
And so he pulled me up onto the beach.
And this was right before they left.
but see I hold up my hands
listen
and they sang back
they're singing
they raise their hands
I raise my hands
wow
and then
and then we were left with watching them
walk off the beach into the jungle with everything that we'd given them and they were gone and so we
went down river the next day and the community said to us okay now you understand this is real this is
terrifying you felt that fear you have a duty if you're going to protect this river to protect us
from them and to help us figure out what future they want if they want to come to us if they
want to learn farming if they whatever it is um you know that's that's fine but they're like we need
protection from you guys and then in this video in the beginning i'm sort of narrating to the camera
and walking around right as they're coming up the beach but you see this guy right there in the
blue shirt that's george and he was very friendly very confident with this he said don't be scared
they're not going to hurt us and the next day we went back to town you know
a long journey back to town and go to sleep. We wake up in the morning and we find out that
the following early morning, our friends in the community had said, okay, the tribe is gone.
We gave them all the things they wanted. We gave them sugar cane, bananas. We said,
please come back. We are welcome here anytime. And George was driving a boat and there was people
on the boat. And as they were going up river, the tribe, 200 of the tribe ran out, surrounded the
boat and they started firing arrows and everybody else could hit the deck and get under the
under the benches and hide behind bags of rice.
George was driving and he was leaning back as he's driving.
He's driving as fast as he can.
And one arrow came in just above his scapula and came out by his belly button.
And so he had that seven-foot arrow tip through him.
And so they pulled him out.
And I saw the boat afterward and there was just, you know,
horrific amounts of blood all over the boat.
And he had to be medevacked out.
And somehow he lived.
And we were able to help getting
him a helicopter, getting him evacked, all this. But again, you just go, you know, these people
came out of the jungle and they asked for bananas. We gave them bananas. And we, in every way possible,
said we mean peace. We want friendship with you. And then the next day, they attacked. What do you
think happened? Why do you think their mind turned? Or maybe this has to do with the role of violence in
their society. Maybe they, it's so integrated into how they interact with the world that they
don't even see that as a fundamental shift in the interaction. I don't know. I don't know what to make
of it. And the only thing I can think is that the way they hid the women from us, you don't know
for them maybe we're not allowed to see their women, you know, or because the one thing that we
got was that as George's boat and Southern boat were going up river, the, which is how
they live. It's not like they were doing anything wrong. These people live in a community days into
the Amazon. They were going fishing. And so they came around a bend, and I think they spooked the tribe.
The tribe might have just acted defensively and said, we don't know who this is. The motors could have
set them off. We don't know. But they shot him. And then the other thing is the thing with the
necklace. I've asked anthropologists about this, and their answer was that at this point, they said,
you know more than we do.
But that.
Yeah.
Because two of them had the exact same item around their necks.
And it seems to be a Brazil nut and then some sort of casing around the side.
And it looked like animal teeth positioned in there.
It's like, what are you carrying?
Are you carrying medicine?
Are you carrying some sort of a totem?
Are you?
But both of them, and it's not a comfortable thing to wear around your neck,
you know, grapefruit sized bigger.
Do you have a sense that that's a container or is it just like a totem?
It seems like a container.
They didn't let it get wet.
They cared for it.
The guy in this picture, so he's got this, this is a piece of tree fiber that he has it on.
And then he's gotten his hands on Brazil nut sacks, plastic sacks from one of the farms across the river.
And so they just take, they take.
And one of them got a machete and he was walking as they were leaving.
Again, during that period where it got friendly, he was leaving and he had the machete and he
He was playing with the machete and like swinging at butterflies.
And one of my friends, this guy Bacho, he goes, oh, he goes, de hum me machete.
He was like, you know, dropped the machete.
And the guy just looked at him and was like, yeah, come and get it.
You know, I was like, yeah, you cross the river and see what happens.
Do you think he figured out or they later figured out how to use a machete?
Oh, they know machete.
They understand machete.
Yeah, yeah, they do raids for machetes.
Okay.
Yeah.
They understand the power of a sharpened metal.
I mean, it's a, it's an excalibur sword to them, you know.
But yeah, that one has stuck with me because I go,
what were they carrying in there?
So what are some of the questions?
Like if you can know everything you'd want to know about them.
So maybe in the space of communication language,
that's really interesting.
You mentioned that there's all kinds of calls, animal calls.
So they're obviously to know how to fake animal calls.
Yeah, they speak in, they can use animal calls with enough complexity
that they can do basic commands.
so they can speak in cappuccin, they use Tindamukals.
Some of our rangers were upriver a few months ago.
This is long after this.
This is recently.
Just recently they were upriver and they found a trail,
a Nomoly trail, a Moshkopiro trail.
And it was Ignacio, of course.
And he made the, there's like a secret whistle they do, this mouth.
And he whistled out into the jungle.
And he was listening.
And they whistled back.
And so him and everybody on the team just ran back to the boat
and got out of there.
But it was like, at least they answered.
They didn't just shoot.
He whistled, they whistled, and they said, out.
And he got out.
But it's like, we don't know, where are the old people, do they not survive?
What are the marriage rituals?
How is reproduction handled?
There's one or two children in the Amazon that I know of who have, you know,
washed down river on a log and been rescued by communities and then raised,
and they either learn the native dialect or Spanish,
and then, of course, at some point,
somebody will go and say,
what was it like when you lived with them?
And the answer is always the same.
I forget.
They don't talk about it.
So maybe we know that they value secrecy.
I mean, when you're afraid of the outside world,
you don't.
Part of that is confidentiality.
They all sign NDAs.
There's some really good NDAs.
It's understood.
It's an interesting.
NDA you can't. There's no lawyers. There's only one way to execute the law. It's either a really
strong NDA or that it's, it is savage, that they're living out there in the jungle and that you're
eating monkeys and turtles and you're hungry for days on end. And, you know, your wife might get
stolen by another tribe. Your baby might get stolen. You know, I mean, imagine the bot flies and the,
and the things that they must put up with. It's, it's just, I mean, what we experienced in
what, three days of living out with modern camping gear and headlamps
and a sense of direction, and they're doing none of that.
You could put us out there naked, a very different story.
Yeah, the brutality of nature, Warner Herzog comes to mind, that, they have to live in that.
But there must be, there's something about the jungle that serves as a catalyst for spirituality.
So they must also have a religious component, a spiritual component,
that probably unifies them.
There must be an ideology they operate under.
There must be, and there must, there must,
there must, there must, there must have a belief system.
They probably have amazing origin stories.
It would be amazing to know what things they have accurately
and inaccurately guessed about us,
about the outside world.
I mean, they've never,
they've never heard of the country they live in,
or of World War II or any of it.
And so, seeing them come,
across the beach was surreal because it's like this aperture into history.
By the way, I mean, you do have a certain look, so you realize, like,
I'm singing to you, your face is carved in some woods somewhere,
and there's a few of them gathering around and, like, still singing about the great gringo,
the full beard and the big nose.
They probably drew this, like, he's got hair all over his face and a huge nose,
and they tell their children.
And it could be anything.
You could be like,
to the children, they say, this is the monster you should be afraid of,
or this could be the most beautiful encapsulation of the outside world.
It could be everything in between.
You don't get to control the myths.
You don't get to control the myths.
Yeah, God only knows, but I mean, it's so, so now in that 130,000 acres that we have,
we know, and this is what we're sort of, we sort of have to come out of the closet with this.
Like, we are now protecting these people.
and the only way to do that is to make sure that they're not contacted,
let alone that they don't get machine guns shot at them by the narcos
or that crazy, you know, hippie gringoes don't go down there
thinking they're going to, you know, join the coolest commune on Earth.
So how much of the land that they move about
is within the 130,000 acres of rainforests you've been able to save,
and how much of it is not, how much of it is in the,
extra 200,000 acres that you're trying to save?
Most of the rest, most of that 200,000 that we're still trying to protect is territory
that is theirs.
And in order, and in order, people always ask me, they're like, first, a lot of people ask,
how could you buy the Amazon?
They're like, that doesn't make sense.
And it's like, well, I have bad news for you.
Somebody already owns it.
And we have to buy it from them so that they don't log it.
And so these landowners are going to sell their forest to the logging companies, because
owning 10,000 acres of the Amazon
doesn't help you if you're a third generation
jungle man and now it's just something
that's up there and you live in the city
and so they're going to contract
either the narcos or the loggers or the miners
to go out there and use it and they'll get a little money
and those people when they see these people
will kill them. That's for sure.
And shotguns and machine guns in the end
will win, not to mention the germs.
So all the money you're trying to raise
and all the land that you're trying to save
it's all towards that.
Protecting the deep jungle.
So when you buy up the jungle,
you just want to let it be,
let the natural ecosystem
come back to life in the cases
when it was logged or just flourish
if it hasn't.
Again, we're talking about
the last great jungle.
I always called it the last endless forest
because this place is so incredibly remote.
And then the other question I always get
as people say, well, why is this river so important?
And for my whole career, my whole time, 20 years in the Amazon, it's been that it's massively intact forest.
Places like the ancient forest where the trees have never been cut.
So it's forest that's been growing since the dawn of time.
And thousands of species can be on a single Shihuahua tree.
And it's avatar on earth.
It's you can see the sweat come off your skin and rain down and then drink it out of the river.
And you're part of the chemical physical reality there.
And so it's one of the last places that's untouched.
This changed everything because we realized that along with the butterflies and the monkeys and the jaguars and the trees and the ecosystem,
there's also a human culture that will in the next few years cease to exist,
that will be exterminated if we don't protect them.
And when you look back at what happened to indigenous cultures all over the world over the past few centuries,
that they've been wiped out.
We collectively now, because we know this,
have a chance to undo all of the injustices that happened in the past by at least doing one right
by saying these people want one thing to just be left alone imagine if we just protected the river
and then it's not that they're this thing that's that's that's vanishing from reality but they get
to continue living that way and then if they want to come out and contact us great and if they want
to continue living like this for the next 10,000 years they can and that's and that's what we're
working with now. It's become so much more important than just, you know, we're trying to
protect the environment. It's like, no, we're trying to protect, you know, things like Yellowstone
and Yosemite and the sequoias occur nowhere else on Earth. You protect the things that are
unique and special, the crown jewels. And in both a biological way, as well as a anthropocentric way,
this has now become a river with global historic significance because
this story is going to play out in the next 18 months.
You're further and further and further,
trying to save more and more rainforests.
And the mission is clear because there's just this deep jungle
that's full of this incredible life,
and now we know with uncontacted tribes,
there's a lot of interests that don't care about the jungle
that are pushing and want to cut it down,
want to destroy it.
And the mission is pretty clear.
You just want this whole territory
to be preserved. Yeah, and that's what makes it so beautiful is that this is one of those crown jewels.
This is one of those special places on Earth where it's like a time capsule for nature,
for human culture, for biodiversity, for climate services, for everything. And then, you know,
I think people get overwhelmed with where you say, okay, we have to save the environment. We have to
save the ocean. This is one watershed. It's 300,000 acres, and we're already at 100,000.
We've shown we can do it.
The loggars are happy to turn into rangers.
People all over the world have become jungle keeper supporters.
We have several thousand people that every month give us between five and a thousand dollars,
every single month.
And that keeps the rangers going, that employs the local people.
So it's not just drawing a line and making a park and saying everybody stay out.
It's like, no, though, you have the nomoles.
You have the indigenous people.
You have a future for the indigenous people where their kids don't have to worry about
like eating monkeys. They can, they can be park rangers. And I get blowback from people right away where I say,
like, and people can even come see it through the treehouse and people go, oh, are you going to
bring tourists into the wildest place on earth? And it's like, man, look at that jungle. And it's like that
300,000 acres of that. And you're talking about on a football field, we're talking about two blades
of grass that we access so people can see it, which makes a huge difference. And so like,
the fact that we can share it with people, that people, I mean, the amount of people that
listened to, look, like, since the first time I came here and spoke to you, the amount to which
you've made it possible for us to protect this place, the amount of spider monkeys and jaguars
and giant ant eaters and those ancient millennium trees that you've made it possible to protect
is monstrous. And so, thank you, brother. It is been an honor of a lifetime to be able to
watch you. I tell us a lot of people, there's certain people, I'm glad existence.
this world because you've educated me and millions of people about the beauty of the jungle
and then how important the fight to save the jungle is so if you're listening to this you absolutely
must go please donate or post about it share it with friends junglekeepers that org you're also doing a
gala in new york at the end of january so if you can please go and donate to
help save the jungle. Yes, please do. And because our first conversation led to the first surge
where people realized what junglekeepers was. And then because we got this surge of support, then we
were able to expand our work, protect more acres. A lot of our major donors, a lot of our small-scale
donors came in because of that. So these are people that went, wait, if Lex thinks it's a good idea,
then we'll do it. Based on your trust, they came in. And so I guess also I should say, it's not
enough to speak and communicate the importance of saving the rainforest. You actually have to have
incredible people that are making it happen. And we have talked and we'll talk more about the dangers
and the complexities involved of how to navigate everything. And one of the things and the reason
I'm really excited about what you're doing is I just got to meet the team. And it just brings a smile
to my face and several of the people I know who are extremely competent, Stefan, somebody who we've talked
Well, yes, he likes to take pictures of stuff,
but primarily the thing he does incredibly well
is run everything, organize everything,
to make sure that stuff happens and happens quickly and efficiently,
all the kind of things that are required to make stuff like this happen
in the complex environment that the jungle operates
and the sometimes lawless environment.
the jungle operates in.
So the team is incredible,
which is why when you sort of connect the money,
how does the money lead to the solution of the problem?
It's the team, and the team makes it happen.
I didn't know that people like Stefan existed.
Yeah, me neither.
You know, because when I met him, I just, like,
he was a beautiful, wonderful human being.
I just, I'm, you know, again, I can use a machete to catch a fish.
Yeah.
But like his systems knowledge and his ability, I mean, his bandwidth is the size of a country.
It has its own area code.
He's, you know, just like JJ opened the door of the Amazon and gave us that local indigenous perspective.
I mean, yeah, okay, I told some stories about it, but like Stefan came in and went, okay, you guys have good ideas, but you're both jungle guys.
You're not helping each other.
And running those systems and making the website and making it possible to connect the people that care with the indigenous.
Ranger program and make sure the Rangers have shirts and cans of tuna and that there's a
person running the Rangers. And these are things that I couldn't dream of of organizing. I can't even
organize my, I can't even make my bed. You know, I can't even get that far. I mean,
caveman want fish. Caveman want fish. Watching you fish or hunt for fish with a machete.
That's one of the most awesome things I've ever seen. You're literally able to catch a fish with a machete.
Yeah. So that's what you're good at. And then Stefan's
good at everything else. Everything else.
You know, remember the most interesting man in the world, and they're like, you know,
he once had an awkward moment just to see how it felt. And it's like, Stefan's to-do list doesn't
exist because it's already done. You know, he just, it's just incredible.
Quick pause, bath and break. Oh, 100%. I'm so happy about that. Yes, sir. And we're back.
One thing I forgot to ask you is about the diet of the uncontacted tribes. You mentioned
potentially monkeys and turtle eggs.
Yeah.
So, like, what do we know about what they eat?
What's the source of protein?
Do they eat monkeys?
Oh, yeah.
Their primary sources of food, I would say, would be monkeys, turtles, turtle eggs,
and small game, like Paca, the large rodent,
that's like the size of a beagle, a capy bearer, stuff they can shoot.
They don't really fish.
And we know these things because our indigenous.
trackers and our rangers find their camps.
And so they'll find some of those little thatched structures they make on the beaches.
And we see the bones.
There'll be taper bones.
There'll be turtle shells, which seems like is their closest thing to a bowl.
The day that we interacted with them, they did find a bowl.
We saw them walking away with it in one of the farms.
And then days later, we found it destroyed.
So they didn't seem like they saw much utility in the bowl.
Hmm, that's temporary container.
So they, you know, they kill it, they make a fire.
They must be amazing at making fire.
I don't know how they do it out there.
It's very difficult because of everything is wet.
I don't know how they do it.
And I'm a really good fire starter.
And it's tough in the jungle.
It is almost impossible most of the year, because everything is wet to its core.
So you think they cook the meat?
I mean, they have to be cooking their meat from a parasite standpoint, from everything.
We know that they're cooking their meat, that we see it, that they've cooked it.
You know, there's not a lot of excess berries, things like berries and nuts and fruits,
the monkeys and the birds and the bats are getting to those first.
As soon as, I mean, that's what fruit does, right?
A tomato is green until its seeds are mature and then it turns red to advertise, eat me,
so that you eat it and then your gut transports that to somewhere else, and it gets free transportation.
In the jungle, that happens so quick that we're never getting produce.
In the book, you have a picture of a native girl on the Lesbajas having monkey for lunch.
Yes.
It looks really strange when you have a monkey kind of looks just a little bit like cannibalism because it looks like a small human.
I don't know what it is about, well, I guess I do about monkeys.
There's a human element to them in their eyes.
in the form factor, but even in the warmth they bring to the interaction.
Yeah, I was babysitting her, and she was six at the time, Dira,
and her parents went out, and we were left at camp,
and they just said, you know, keep an eye on her, make sure nothing eats her,
and I said, sure.
And she was like, hey, I want lunch.
And I said, great, well, what is there?
And she pulls out this monkey head.
And she was like, it's ready.
And she starts pulling at the ear.
And she's like, I can't get the ear.
She's like, can you help me?
So I pulled off the ear with my teeth, and then I gave it to her.
And then we just shared this monkey head back and forth.
And we're sitting there, and I took a few pictures of her as she's eating.
And I have this video where I go, what's your favorite food?
And she was like, monkey.
And I said, not cake.
And she was like monkey.
And she was like pulling its lips off.
And like you said, you see the teeth and the eyes and it's like sort of grilled in static agony.
Yeah.
And it looks like a tortured human.
And she was just enjoying it.
Let me look it up on Proplexy.
How many people in the world eat monkey?
Does it taste good?
If it was prepared right, it would taste good,
but they just throw it over the fire and then eat it.
And so, I mean, even if you took a perfectly good chicken and did that, it wouldn't taste great.
There's no reliable global count of how many people eat monkey meat,
but available data suggests many millions of people regularly or occasionally consume primate bush meat,
especially in parts of Africa and America and Asia.
I mean, she looks like that is her favorite meal.
Yeah.
It's monkey.
Yeah.
Yeah, we had a great time.
Who are we to judge?
Who are we to judge?
I mean, have a tuna sandwich or a monkey face or whatever.
She's loving it.
That's awesome.
That's a good picture.
Yeah.
Now that some time has passed when you look back at that encounter,
which I really do think is historic with the Oncoming
contact the tribe. What do you think about? What lingers with you? Honestly, I'm still processing it.
I'll still find myself just staring off, sort of remembering it or looking at the footage.
But it felt like the voice of the jungle was speaking. You know, these people are, there's that separation
between humans and nature where we go, we have to protect nature, you know? It's like the fish that,
you know, explaining what water is to a fish, we're part of it.
We depend on it.
And these are people that depend on it 100%.
And as we sit here surrounded by technology and concrete and civilization,
they're still out there right now.
And the fact that we've been trying to protect their home
without even really knowing that they were in it because they're so elusive,
it gives you perspective on where we came from and how far we've come.
You know, I look at simple things.
You board an airplane or you take a picture and you go, this is a miracle.
And I think having that perspective of having interacted with them where you go, you know,
how much work does it take to make this?
If me and you were standing in the jungle and somebody said, you have to make this.
How many years before we came up with this?
How many rubber trees and where would we get the metal and what would we use as dye
and how do we make the spring mechanism and figure out how to make it rotate?
I don't know.
And it's like they are working with the bare essentials.
And so it's an interesting reference point to start at in terms of how incredibly privileged we are.
You know, the other thing is we have written, we have so many different types of text,
and we have code, and we have language, and we have music, and we can communicate in all these different ways,
and they have spoken word.
They have oral tradition, and that's it.
And so they're they're operating the way our great, great, great, great, great time, you know, to the power of what operated and, and, and, and persisting in modern times.
And so I think for me, I come back to the world and I think it moves very fast when I see it, because I'm still stuck on, you know, whether or not me and you can drink out of that puddle.
Yeah.
You know, and thinking about that.
The big questions of life.
The big questions of life.
Yeah, I mean, you're right.
You're right from the perspective of the on-contacted tribe.
I think going from the technological world to the jungle,
you realize the majesty, the magic of the biological system
that is the jungle, that is nature.
But from their perspective, also there is a majesty and magic
to the technological world.
The human-created technological world of the pen,
and the computer and the light bulb,
that too is magical.
So sometimes we don't give enough credit to both.
The magic of the technological world,
all the incredible things humans have been able to build
and the magic of the natural world.
I mean, what we've been able to achieve,
I think you and I and people that spend
large amounts of time in the wilderness,
especially somewhere as remote and fundamental as the Western Amazon have a different perspective on it.
Because I think that when you're born in it, you don't necessarily have the framework to appreciate how far we've come.
You go, yeah, I got on the train today.
You know, I checked my phone.
I phasedime to my mom.
And you're like, this is all normal.
And it's like, we found a way to take things out of the ground and mix them together into magic devices that can do anything.
and it's mind-blowing.
There's a deep optimism to that,
and you actually write in a book,
which I really like,
I think somewhere in the beginning,
quote, given all the death and destruction I've witnessed,
it would be easy to slip into the popular anti-human narrative
that we are a plague on the planet,
and there's nothing that can be done.
But my career in conservation has given me a glimpse
into an alternate narrative.
I've met people who are proving more and more
that something can be done.
I'm talking about real heroes.
People who have dedicated their lives to redeeming the evil that is capable of being waged by the human soul.
People who are guarding the flame amidst the storm, proving every day what so many have forgotten.
There is still hope.
And that speaks against sort of the cynicism and maybe apathy and the view that humans are a destructive force in the world.
that speaks to the fact that humans with all the technological elements that we have created
can actually do a lot of good.
I wrote in my notes here a quote from the great Jane Goodall,
the greatest danger to our future is apathy.
So caring about the world, having optimism for the world,
having a hope for the world is the way to help have an impact,
save it.
But on that, I had to ask you about Jane.
She passed away on October 1st.
Some humans in this human civilization of ours can open our eyes to the beauty of the world,
and she is one of the best of them, and she's had an impact on your life.
Maybe can you speak to the impact that she's had?
I mean, when I grew up, you know, my parents, being dyslexic,
couldn't read for a very long time. And so my parents read to us every night, which was amazing
considering how hard they were working, but they'd find the time to give us, you know, an hour of
reading every night, whether it was Lord of the Rings or Sherlock Holmes or Jane Goodall. And so I grew up
with Jane being this figurehead of conservation and of adventure and sort of a living historical figure,
this legendary person. And so then one time, right around the time that I've been going to the
jungle for a few years. I got to go see Jane speak. I think it was at NYU and, you know, sitting in the
crowd, watched her completely amazed. And I had at the time my cousins had been telling me that I should
write down my stories of stories of taking care of an anteater and stories of catching anacondas.
And they're like, right, you know, these are such good stories. And so I've been writing them down.
And I just remember after the talk, you know, she did at least an hour on stage. And then
thousands of people lined up, at least hundreds of people lined up.
And she sat there, and each of those people wants a moment with this legend.
And so she used to take a picture, shake their hand.
They say, you mean so much to me.
She says, thank you.
And then they move on, and they say, we'll send you the picture.
Okay, great.
And so I got my moment.
We waited in line for a long time, and I gave her this manila envelope with two chapters
in it.
And one chapter was Lulu, the Giant Anteater for Mother of God.
and the other chapter was me, JJ, and Pico out on the river catching Anacondas and just talking about
how amazing the jungle was.
And I said, I'd love it if you could endorse my book that doesn't exist yet.
And I felt like such a loser doing that.
And I felt so stupid because I feel like everyone was probably asking something of her.
And I, you know, it's incredibly draining to talk to that many people, even if it is for a good reason.
And 48 hours later, she got back and she said, do you, you know, this is incredible.
I would love to write a recommendation for your book as soon as you find a publisher.
And what happened with that is that Jane, the way I think of it is, you know, she,
she waved her very powerful magical wand in my direction.
And she had the incredible compassion and presence to actually, I mean, you know,
to have to talking to that many people and being on the road 300 days a year and being Jane Goodall,
this living legend scientist, to actually.
do something so mundane as look at some kids writing.
And, of course, when I went to publishers, they said,
who, who said that they would endorse your book?
Because everyone had said no.
Every publisher in New York had already said no.
And then after that, Harper Collins took me on.
And they said, well, if Jane Goodall thinks it's a good idea,
then we think it's a good idea.
And it became Mother of God.
And then because of that, you know, jungle keepers,
Dax, everything else was stemmed from that.
So had Jane not been the legend that she is truly in every moment,
my whole career would never have happened,
which also means that those thousands of heartbeats and thousands of acres
and the Amazon wouldn't be protected because we never would have started jungle keepers.
And she did that not because you're special.
She did that to everybody.
Yeah.
And then just imagine the scale of the impact she's had because of that.
Yeah.
And guess what?
That you have a bit of that responsibility now as well.
there's young people that walk up to you
that way, and you have that responsibility
of seeing them, of giving them a chance,
seeing the potential in every single human being
that walks up to you.
It definitely is, I would say that Jane's,
we could do four hours on just Jane,
what she did for humanity, what she did for science,
what she did for women, what she did for wildlife,
the amount of other people that she inspired
and gave careers to,
everything she did for me,
but to me that that presence of mind when you reach that level to not be like worried about your own travel and your own schedule and busy with, you know, getting some rest and that she actually looked at it has informed how I operate.
And indeed, like you say, at this point, as strange as it is, people will stop me on the street and say, hey, I watch your videos every night with my kids and I, you know, or someone will say, you know, how do I get your job?
I've been watching you for years.
and I'd love to help conservation.
And so it's made it so that, you know,
I follow her example where it's like you stop what you're doing
and you pay attention because you don't know
that might be the next kid that's out there saving a river
or the next person that makes an innovation
that makes it possible to clean rivers or whatever it is,
whatever their dream is.
But we're, you know, Jane was in the hope business.
She always said it, you know,
that not losing hope was key to staying in the fight
and that we live at a time when, you know, that apathy is a poison peddled by the darkness.
They're trying to make you feel disoriented and apathetic and scared.
And fighting back against that and having conviction and passion and fire and hope
are the only way that we're going to fight that.
And she understood that and she spent her whole life spreading it,
guarding the flame against the storm and tipping her candle to others to light them.
I mean, she just, that was her whole thing.
What advice would you give to young people how to do that?
Those young Pauls sitting there,
I mean, your life story is just incredible in that way.
You've taken a leap into adventure, into the unknown.
What would you recommend they do?
I think the thing that I try to communicate to them,
and again, my inboxes are filled with people.
You know, I'm from Finland.
I'm from Spain.
I'm from, you know, Georgia.
People saying,
get your job, how do I get out there and do it? And it's, it really is just that. It's that you
throw yourself headfirst into adventure. And it's, you just do it. And, and I remember hearing people
say that thing, like, you know, if I can do it, you can do it. And it's like, I remember thinking how
hollow that sounds. Because I'm like, yeah, you're on a talk show or you just wrote a book and you're
going, you know, these, these titans of their industries and innovators saying like, you know,
if I could do it, anybody could do it. But now that we're protecting all this rainforest,
that I've, you know, lived with the animals and met the tribes and that it's becoming this global
movement, you know, I didn't have a PhD. You know, there's that quote that someone less qualified
than you is, is living your dream life and has your dream job right now. And I am the poster
child for that because I went there with, you know, I failed out of high school and started taking
unmetriculated college classes and going to the jungle with my friend JJ and just doing it for the
sheer love of it for years, almost a decade before anything surfaced. And the other thing is
there's not even a path. There was no path ahead of us. There was no, you know, okay, you go to school,
you get trained in this and you're going to become a this. I went there and it was like,
you're never going to be a conservation biologist because you don't have the grades. You're not,
you don't have a PhD. You don't have family money. You're not going to, you're not going to be able
to protect rainforest. So I said, all right, well, then selfishly, I just want to see it. And then I ended up
getting trained by the indigenous people. And like what happens so many times and you could use,
you know, like I think a restaurant example is the best one you could use where you might start
washing dishes, but at least you're in the restaurant, you know, and then at some point that the
manager is going to need you to help with, you know, restocking. And at some point after a few years,
you're going to be helping the new guy. And at some point after a few years, you might end up being the
manager. And at some point, you might end up being a position where you're starting your own
restaurant. It's the only way to do that. You can't just search it on a computer. You have to go
sweat and bleed and do it. And that said, especially if you fall in love with the journey that you take
on, it's full of difficult periods. I think you said somewhere that just seems to be the nature
of it, that there's going to be pain, there's going to be suffering along the way. You have a
really nice posts that I recommend people watch about just this.
when people ask for advice that the hardship, the suffering,
and I've seen how much you care.
When I've seen you just in your face,
when you see a tree being cut down or you see the fires,
there's real pain there in your heart,
and you have to carry that.
And so the post is, how honest can I be?
What do I tell these kids who message me asking,
how they can do what I do. It's not David versus Goliath. There's no sword or sling they can hold
back a dragon this big. You're going against the current of global economic entropy and human apathy.
Swimming against the current is tiring. A great way to drown. Every day we don't win, we lose,
and when we do, worlds burn. The more you know, the more it bleeds. The heartbeats all stop when
the flames come through. Constellations of species turn,
to ghosts, and we're the only one saving them,
cupped our hands around a candle in the howling darkness.
And people want to be inspired.
Keep that social media going.
Keep it up.
You're doing great.
They want to know we're winning, and we're done a lot of winning.
But not right now.
We're getting slaughtered.
We're at that part of the story.
We're almost at the end game.
We can think positively as positively as we want.
Thoughts and prayers won't stop a chainsaw,
and the motor that's carrying us against the current
towards the miraculous goal,
only when there's gasoline in it.
As soon as that stops, we drown.
We drown.
We can take the warm light from all of those who help,
and not let it bother us
that there are people who could buy planets
claim to care.
At some point, you realize what's really happening.
As a kid, you'd rather be Erigorn.
You don't want to actually carry the ring.
Not when you learn what it's going to cost,
even if you make it.
How can you?
Explain to Sam,
what you can't get on the boats.
Whatever it takes,
whatever it takes.
It's that time of year again.
Here come the flames.
Whatever it takes, it's coming.
And people should watch the video that goes along with this.
But that speaks to the pain,
the difficulty, the challenge,
the suffering involved.
when you're faced with a possibility of destruction.
And that's the other side of the sword of caring for something deeply.
Yeah, we've watched a lot of forest burn.
We've pulled a lot of animals out of the flames.
Yeah, that, I wrote that at a time where we were just getting hammered, man.
Funding wasn't coming in.
There was minors.
It was just months and months out in the jungle alone.
And, yeah, that, it's a Tom York track that we've just been listening to again.
and it was just so low.
There was then, you know, the, there was a huge new invasion
where they just, they just burned the whole side of the river
and just, you know, it's, it's never going to come back.
And it's part of the forest that I loved,
and I knew the animals there, and it's gone.
And so we have to live through that on a,
on a weekly basis, at least a day-to-day basis.
And when you take on responsibility for something,
something like this, you go to sleep thinking, yeah, if we don't do it, then worlds burn. You know,
if we don't save it, then every time you said the sadness that surrounds a happy moment,
well, it's like, how am I supposed to go to a party and talk with people about anything? Or how am I
supposed to even go to sleep when if I don't, if we don't succeed at what we're trying to do,
if we don't outrace the chainsaws and the roads, then those trees die, those millennia.
and we're the only ones out there protecting them.
And when you see that black scorched earth with nothing left,
it's just ashes on the ground.
And all the, you know, the cacophony of life is silenced.
And it's just this horrible, violent silence.
It's, it makes you sick.
And so, yeah, there's a lot of weight that comes with that.
Where we're not, we're not theoretically doing something.
We're black and white practically doing it.
So that's the other side of the advice to young people.
Oh, yeah.
It's not going to be easy.
No, I mean, when they say, how do I get your job?
It's like, well, you don't want my job.
You don't want the bot flies, and you don't want the dengue, and you don't want, you know, don't even inquire what a normal life looks like.
Like, you know, I lived out of a backpack for 20 years.
You know, how many monkey faces I had to eat because there was no other food.
like seriously
you know that just that shot
just being alone on the boat in the river
and how many days the motor didn't work
and you sleep out there and you get rained on
because you don't have any protection
and you have some leaves over your face
and then you go home and everyone's got a job
and everyone's got kids and everyone's happy
and they're like what are you doing down there
trying to save the rainforest
I'm like sure
and now we're at this point
where you know
I cared a whole lot for a whole long time
we've had rises and then we've had falls and we've had wins and then we've had failures.
And the last few years, we've had this rolling success of people finding out about our work and coming in and we start to go, wow, we've protected 130,000 acres.
We might actually be able to do this.
And so, you know, there's that, there's that moment in 300 where they show Leonidas and they say, even the king allows himself a moment of hope that this might be okay right before they get slaughtered.
Yeah.
And someone very dear to me recently said, you know, in celebration of where we've gotten to,
that if it happened in any harder of a way, it would have actually killed you.
And if it had happened in an easier way, it wouldn't have been so divine.
And that slapped me in the face because it was like, man, it has been so hard.
But look where we are.
We might actually do this.
It just has to be that way.
Speaking of which, another complexity in all of this, you write about in the afterword of the book,
about the narco traffickers that have moved into the river basin.
They're not the loggers that we've spoken about anymore.
They're growing cocoa for cocaine and they're building air strips.
So tell me how that they're...
this came to be. Like you said, the loggers, our whole life on this river, when loggers come in,
JJ and I would walk up to them and say, hey, what's up, and sit down with them and have a beer,
or share a meal and talk to them and ask who their father was and if we know them and then hire
them. And they're friendly. And they are in a way brothers, JJ. They're the same. They're the same people.
They're simple local people. They're not evil. They're just
People who I usually have a kid and a wife and they're looking for work.
And so they work with the chainsaw because it's what they know.
And they work for, you know, $30 a day, if that, in very challenging, harsh environments.
And so when we see clearings, I would always go with the drone and fly it over clearings.
We'd get some intel and then we'd go bring that to the police.
And the police, you know, jungle keepers supports the police at this point because the Peruvian government has a hard time.
with resources trying to manage Amazonia.
And there's, you know, when you're three days from civilization,
getting cops out there is not the easiest thing.
So sometimes we'll lend boats or gasoline or logistical support.
And there was a moment in March, several hours upriver from, you know, home base.
And I'm with JJ on the boat and I fly the drone.
And there's this big new clearing and I flew the drone over and we lower the drone.
And a few times I've had people come out and wave at the drone or say, like, get away.
and we're out in the middle of the river,
just sort of idling, staying in one place,
and I lower the drone, and I see these little huts,
and we're saying, okay, this is a big clearing,
I'm snapping images, snapping images.
These people are on the boat with us,
these visitors who had flown in,
and I have my local team,
and all of a sudden people come running out of the houses,
and they run straight to their boats.
And we're already above where their boat is.
So home is in downriver direction.
They get in their boats and start chasing us.
and we start driving.
And we're going at full speed.
We have a 60 horsepower.
They had a 40 and we're driving up these.
We're just doing this chase now.
And our guests who are going to be potential funders,
you know, at one point the father looked at me and he goes,
hey, this whole, you know, running from the Pirates of the Caribbean thing,
he's like, it's getting scary.
You're scaring us.
He was like, can we, can we, like, what are we doing?
He goes, when are you going to put the drone down?
And I'm flying the drone at full speed to keep up with the boat.
and I just crash landed the drone on the side of the river near a big tree.
I just said, fuck it, we'll get it later.
And I was like, this has fine.
This happens all the time.
They get mad.
They chase us.
It's no big deal.
And I smiled at him and JJ's smiling.
He goes, it's so bad.
And he's smiling.
And JJ looked at me and the smile fell off on like a mask.
And he looked at me and he was like, this is not good.
And we kept going up river.
And luckily there was a camp of police that we've worked with quite a bit.
and I went to a friend of mine
and I remember we got off the boat
I shook his hand he said what's going on
I said look down river and there's a boat
tearing up river towards us
and he did three things
he got the rest of the guys
they armed up they got on the boat with guns
they put ski masks on they got like ready for combat
they told us to get down he also said hey turn on
the sat link call for support back home
we turned our boat around
and as soon as the narcos
which we didn't even realize that these were narcos chasing us.
We thought we were looking at loggers.
When they saw the guns and they saw us face them,
they turned their boat around and they went back downriver.
So we got escorted downriver.
And I remember shaking his hand, my friend,
and saying, thank you for saving us today.
And telling the other guys they did a good job,
I said, get back up river, we'd been brought home safe.
This is hours later.
I said, good job, thank you so much.
And they went back up.
river and then that night I'm sitting at the station that you know and I get a phone call from
Stefan and he goes pick up the phone and I go on the camp in the middle of a conversation he goes
pick up the phone and my friend who I had just shook his hand a few hours ago they went back up
up river and as they were unloading their boat and washing off in the stream the narcos did a drive-by
and shotgun straight to the chest shot him in the chest and so all of that enthusiasm and were
protecting the biodiversity and this is so great. There's people from around the world.
It's like that scene in the movie where there's just a montage of success and hope and acres and
winning gunshot. And I could still feel his hand in my hand. I just shook his hand. I said,
no, you can't, you're not. I said, is he okay? He said, is he okay? He said he took a shotgun
straight to the chest. And they're like, he's dead. So, okay. And so I had to go out to dinner and not
show the guests anything and just smile and laugh and talk to them about, you know, whatever.
And keep that and keep that in, which felt very, very difficult to do.
And so what happened, as you said, the threat level escalated and we didn't know it.
The narcos had come in and started realizing that there's so much wilderness here that they can
operate and there's no police.
And then when we flew the drone, they got mad.
So we realized this
We communicated with the police
And they said oh yeah
These are these are narcos now we realize this is part of the serious
Drug Mafia
And then I had gone back with the incident that you're referring to at the end of the book
I had gone back to New York
Again to speak to donors to try and get this work to continue
And
You know how it works
We're at the station and then you go to that little logging town and then there's a road.
And so our pickup truck had come in on the road and JJ was supposed to come down, get in the
truck and drive back to the city.
JJ was on the river and went, I forgot.
I was supposed to get more stuff at the city.
He goes, you know, I'll go tomorrow.
He went back up and he sent the boat driver down and told our driver, Percy, who was waiting
with the pickup truck.
He said, JJ's not coming today.
go back and come back tomorrow.
Percy starts driving down the road, and he sees a tree across the road.
This is a single-lane road through the jungle.
There's nowhere else you can go, and men with guns come and stick the pistols in through
the open windows.
Gun against his head, they pull him out, and they go, where's JJ and the Mierda Gringo Bola
Drone?
They said, where's that shithead Gringo that flew the drone?
And if either of us had been in the car that day, they would have killed us.
And we know that because they took his wallet,
they took his phone, our driver Percy.
They thank God they didn't hurt him,
but they sent a message to us.
They said, let him know.
They said, we missed you this time, but we'll get you next time.
They said, we're going to get you.
And so when JJ called me, he called me and he was howling.
He just had the, you know, that adrenaline and that emotion of that,
it almost happened.
And so that changed everything.
And so since then we've been, you know, it's not counting butterflies and taking ecological surveys.
It's that there's a drug war being fought on our river.
And now when these roads come in, we can't just go out and meet these people anymore and go talk to them because they are actively looking to shoot us.
They know our names.
And then as if all these other things weren't enough indication, the police intercepted a phone from someone they arrested and on the phone in the WhatsApp chat.
It said, if you see JJ or the gringo, anyone in our network, please kill them.
You'll be rewarded.
So we both have a hit out on us, and life on the river has changed at the moment.
We don't.
We can't, you know, I can't just go out walking around and swimming and driving my boat.
And it's like, you have to be looking over your shoulder at all times.
And, you know, you can get as trained as you want with a pistol and sleep with it under your pillow.
But the way these people work, they'll catch you.
when you're at least expecting it.
They'll wait till you're at a cafe in town.
They'll wait till your motor doesn't work on the side of the river.
It'll just be a quick one, and they'll go.
And so that feeling on top of the weight of protecting the ecosystem
and the animals and the race to tell people about it and do all this,
it's like now we're actively being hunted when we're there.
And this is very directed at you and JJ.
Yeah.
So they really don't care about the others.
is they understand.
Are you afraid?
What's it been like living with a real fear of being murdered at any moment?
I wish I could say I handled it better than I've been handling it.
Like I wonder how people in war zones do it.
I wonder how some of my soldier friends that I have immense respect for
had did it when they were deployed because for me once this happened it was you know every phone call
now i i think did something happen to jay j you know every time i go to sleep my dreams are that i'm being shot and
it i just it just it just it really threw me it really really affected me when jj called me the
the way he was just he was just shouting i don't even remember what he was saying he was just he was just
shouting they almost got us they almost got us he was so
you know, terrified and angry and, and so yeah, it's, it's, I, there was a day not that long ago
that I was swimming in the river. And I was just in the river, you know, right in front of the
stairs at the station and a boat came around the bend. And I remember thinking, do I run? Do I go
underwater? Do I hide? Do I, what the hell do I do? I didn't have a gun near me. I didn't
have the security people who were up the stairs. It's like, you go, holy shit. And it's not the danger of,
you know, if I jump on an anaconda, it might kill me, or if I climb this, I might fall. These are
people who want to kill you. And on top of it, you have the, you know, the, when you see your,
when you see what your friend looks like after three days of floating in a river, what a body
looks like of a person you used to know, that's very viscerally terrifying because there's the
tragedy of that person lost his life who was younger than I was.
was, you know, he was like, he was a kid, he was in his 20s.
And then, yeah, it's just, it's very hard, it's very hard to do anything because you're,
I mean, like right now, my hands are sweating. It just, it affects me. And even in the daylight,
if I can go, you know, it's fine, this is part of the thing, you know, so this is the adventure.
People deal with this all over the world. You can talk yourself tough and then, and then in those
quiet moments, you know, that, that 4 a.m. thing, you wake up and you go, fuck, you know,
why am I sweating? Why, why did I just have those dreams? Why is my heart racing?
It's like you just have, it sinks its way into your subconscious, and it's just not what we signed up for, you know?
It's like we wanted to just protect this beautiful place, and this is this whole new threat.
We're not trained for this.
We're not a, you know, we're not police or military, and it's, and it's like we've now seen violence on a scale that we were very unprepared for.
And so, I mean, just two days ago, I was, you know, on my way.
to you. And my phone rang at 9 o'clock at night and it was JJ and it was like, I had a,
my heart was jackhammering. I had to pull over because I was going, what news now? You know,
did we lose another bunch of acres? Is it a new road? Did somebody die? It just, you know, it really
scatters you. And in some sense, it's a twist that you didn't ask for and it doesn't necessarily
have anything to do with the fight you're fighting, which is protecting the rainforest. But because of it
being pristine and quiet and away from civilization, it also becomes a place where you can have
air strips. It becomes lawless in a certain way because it's so far away from civilization.
Yeah. It's the only place that they can operate with impunity. There's no police out there.
And so they saw us helping the police and they went, cut the head off the snake.
Yeah. And that, you know, Chico Mendez, Doreau.
The list of people that environmental defenders that are assassinated in the Amazon every year is huge. There's endless examples of it. It's staggering. I forget the, I forget the exact numbers, but it's like every year we lose. There'll be local leaders who are trying to stop an oil company or a drug cartel and they just shoot them because they know that that one person that's able to rally that support who has that voice. If you just shoot them, usually it'll end the thing.
and then they can go back to doing whatever the hell they want.
And so right now we're working very closely with the Peruvian government.
And people assume that, you know,
a Latin American government is automatically corrupt.
But what we found is that these are really good people that want to help their citizens.
And the police have been working very hard to stop the narcos,
to protect the local indigenous people.
Because, you know, with the narcos comes human trafficking.
With a team of male narcos that are out in the woods making drugs, they want prostitutes.
And how do they get prostitutes?
They go steal girls from indigenous communities that don't know any better.
And then there's reports that the narcos have made contact with the uncontacted tribes.
And of course, they're going to shoot machine guns at them.
They're not going to have a little shotgun where it's a fair fight.
They're going to mown down.
And the uncontacted tribes are going to have no idea.
That's why I posted a video of me in the rain saying this is endgame
because there was a new road that was coming off the north of our territory above the ancient forest.
They had jumped over because we stopped it at the ancient forest.
They've gone above the ancient forest.
Now they're trying to cut down to a new area.
And so it looks like this, like that.
So there's the Trans-Amazon.
Stefan made this map, of course.
but you see the area that we're trying to protect
loosely so that we don't give away anything
the loosely the area that we are protecting
so the light green is the 130,000 acres
and then this metastasizing network of roads
just reaching out and trying to get in
and so they're trying to come in from the north
where that arrow is, they're trying to come down.
And so the police are fighting them along this
and it's a full-on drug war right now.
And so stopping that,
securing this northern boundary,
And so when I, again, just the power of what we have.
When I posted this, I asked Stefan to make, show people the road and where it's going to go.
We posted this video and said, we have to protect this 100,000 acres right now.
And all up here is uncontacted tribe territory.
And just from that one post, we got $150,000 in like 48 hours.
And we bought this concession.
We stopped that road.
But now they're up here and they're trying to come down.
So it's like, and this is the,
the thing, again, you said, you know, it's great. Yes, you get to be an adventurer and you get to
live in the jungle, sure, but it's like, there's this mission impossible thing where it's like,
you might get lucky enough to pull off your psychotic mission, you know, jump your motorcycle off
the train and parachute down and stop the bomb before it goes off. Great, how many of those do you get?
And we're having to do it every month. And if we, that's the thing, these amazing people that are
supporting the Rangers allow us to patrol and protect this, because once we have this land
protected, the interesting thing is that the police can go into any of the light green areas. If
anybody's there, just arrest them. They're on jungle keepers land. They're out. And eventually that
land will become National Park if we're successful. The problem with the land that's not is it's a gray
area. It's the middle of the Amazon. Are they allowed to be here? Do they really have cocaine? Because
they'll plant papaya for acres and a little bit of cocaine behind it. You know, they'll, they'll,
They'll put the sacks.
They're sneaky.
And so they have to build a case and it takes time.
And then the road comes in and they, you know, and in that time, then they'll knock off a police officer.
And it's like, if we were just able to get this tomorrow, the whole problem gets solved.
We could give the police two more boats, you know, and then they could do all the patrolling they need.
So the mission is clear.
The mission is very clear.
And the problem is that right now we've been playing defense and sustaining losses.
and either we need to inspire enough people
that the donor program goes through the roof
and instead of having several thousand donors,
we have, you know, 50,000 donors.
And we, again, we'll raise, what is it?
We need $20 million to save the rest of the corridor.
We'd raise $20 million overnight with enough people.
Or we need one of these people that has the resources
to come in like Batman and just go,
I want the park named after me
and I'm just going to come in and give you the 20,
million and then we do it tomorrow and then we make a documentary about how we saved a river and the
tribe and the monkeys and the but right now we're you're right now we're you know begging on the side
of the road for the for enough change to buy bullets so that we can stay alive so these knockos
there's a kind of distributed network where a bunch of them are pretending to be farmers so they're
holding onto the land and then maybe they start
planting cocaine on the land slowly and they build their strips.
Are they trying to stay under the canopy with the airstrip?
It's brilliant.
First, what they do is they subsidize the poorest people.
And they say, go up this river, turn left at the tree and just start there.
And they're like, here's a few grand.
And these people are like, I never had a few grand before.
They're like, buy gasoline, here's a chainsaw, go clear some land.
they send these people up there.
And then when they show up a year later,
and these people have made an illegal farm out in the jungle,
they go, hey, we need a safe house.
Remember that time we gave you the gasoline?
And now you live here, you're going to work for us now.
And so they're kind of a friend of the people like that.
And they have safe houses all over the jungle.
And then when the bosses come to collect what they're growing out there,
I mean, the police busted a narco operation that was in the middle,
in the middle of the jungle.
I mean, you know, hiking to the ancient forest,
It's like just daze into the jungle.
These people are going on foot with sacks and stuff.
And the way they do their air strips is you think the canopy of the rainforest is 150 feet tall, 160 feet tall.
And if you clear the interior of the landing strip, the trees are still meeting overhead.
And so you can't fly over and see down, which is the same reason we didn't know about the road that was going to the ancient forest because overhead the trees are meeting.
So you're not going to see it on satellite.
You're not going to see it from a plane.
And these pilots, these bush pilots fly.
and they'll just duck in under the canopy,
land their plane, load up,
and then they fly out.
I mean, expert pilots.
So it's impossible to detect.
It's almost impossible to detect.
We're working with people now,
you know, it's this arms race,
you know, they're going, okay,
there are drone programs.
I talked to someone that has a different type of drone,
you know, a 16-foot drone that, like,
uses the thermals to climb up
and has solar panels on the wings and flies for two weeks
at a time.
It's like a glider.
that recharges itself.
And it'll keep constant imagery.
So we'll get almost up to the moment data on disturbances in the canopy.
And it's like, well, that'll be a firsthand alert system.
But then we got to get the police out there, which, as you know, a two-day expedition by boat.
And it's the only way.
And so the local police force there may be dedicated, but putting people on a multi-day expedition
to go get shot out in the jungle is nobody's idea of a good time.
You understand?
Have you researched into this whole other world of drug trafficking, cocaine trafficking?
How big is the operation here looking at perplexity?
Multi-thousand-ton, multi-billion dollar global industry?
I mean, globally, it's a monster.
Columbia, Peru, Bolivia.
And they move north and east of the Americas, the Caribbean, the Atlantic to each major consumer markets.
Yeah, this is a machine.
fueled by a lot of money and a lot of brutality.
A number of cocaine users worldwide is about 25 million people.
Users.
Users.
So there's a market.
And when there's a market, you're going to find the way.
Quick pause, Bethenbreak.
All right, and we're back.
And me is somebody who is afraid of heights,
and I've got a chance to interact with you a bunch.
You're in some sense fearless,
and I've watched you climb a lot of trees.
You've helped me climb a tree.
And there's this wonderful part of the book
where you talk about finding the tallest tree
in the forest you knew at the time,
and that was something that you passed
and thought was impossible to climb,
and you talk about climbing.
You take us to the experience of that,
and that leads you to seeing the mystery,
River in the rain forest as the sun rises. I was wondering if you could talk to the story of that
both for at least for me, but even for you at that time, the terrifying process of climbing a tree
like that for the first time with JJ at the bottom cheering you on and what it felt like to see
the mist river. That tree, you've met that tree. She's a good one. Her base is at least as big as this
room and she's probably about a hundred and sixty something feet tall and so when you're looking at
these giant buttress roots going up which i'd been doing for 18 years at that point and i always said
man if i could just climb it and i never had the rope skills you know and i developed as a rock climber i was
working on strength and i trained for it you know it wasn't it's like most things it's not you can't
just do it you know i'd gone and climbed up you know 30 feet and gone no way you know the the the trunk
of the tree goes vertical for about 70 feet before branches even come out. So there's just this one big
vine. And JJ and I did it at, I want to say like four in the morning, really early. The howler monkeys
had just started. And you start climbing with the rope up this one vine and you have to, it's not a
technical climb, it's a strength climb. You have to gorilla up this vine and it's all back strength.
And so I did it, no shirt, no shoes, straight up, and JJ had the belay device.
And so every, like, 30 feet I would put in a piece of webbing and a carabiner.
So then you go up another 30 feet and you put a piece of webbing and a carabiner,
and you don't know what you're going to find.
And you're going up in the dark.
And so when you say it's a lot of strength that's evolved, so there's very few places to rest.
You're essentially just lifting the whole time.
So it's extremely exhausting.
Extremely exhausting.
Like, I really trained for a long time.
And there is no rest.
You have to, the only rest you get hurts, you have to, you'll have to cling to the tree and your, your feet are smeared against the bark and you're holding on with your toes, if anything, and if you fall, you know, if I put a, if you're climbing up, I mean, it's basically trad climbing. If you're climbing up and you put a safety, which is, you know, a piece of, piece of rope with a carabiner and you put my rope through that. Again, as you're doing that, it's dangerous because if you fall, you fall, then I do that and then you climb up right before you put the next one, you're going to fall double. So if you climb 30 feet, you fall. You fall. So if you climb 30 feet, you fall. You fall. You fall. So if you fall. So if you climb up. So if you climb 30 feet, you fall
60 feet. And so your head's going to smack against the side of the tree. As you're climbing,
you don't know if you're going to reach into a wasp nest or if there's going to be a venomous snake.
And there's, by the way, in those trees, a lot of those. A lot of those. And it took me over an hour
just to get to the branches the first time. And it's just, again, full exertion, everything I had.
And then you get to the branches are above you. And each of the branches is the size of a mature oak tree.
They're just, you know, these huge branches, big, big branches. It's thick as a minivan.
and you're climbing up this straight tree
that's like the World Trade Center is just huge.
And then I had to traverse around the tree on vines
and then finally I get up into the crown of this tree.
And then from there, I called down to JJ
and I just see this little speck of light, you know, 85 feet below me.
And then I climbed up to about 120 feet, which is up here.
And I sat there.
And you're doing all this still in darkness.
We're doing all this in the pre-dawn light.
And so when I got up there, now the howler monkeys are going,
and the jungle's starting to vibrate,
and you can hear the first macaws starting to chirp,
and everything's starting to turn on.
And in the east, the sun is coming over the jungle.
And so the sun, though, in the first rays,
get line of sight to the canopy of the jungle,
it starts lifting the mist off the canopy.
All of that moisture starts coming up,
and I'm sitting on this branch at 100-something feet above the ground
with dark jungle below me,
and all of a sudden I see the river,
I see the mist river I'd always heard about.
They say that there's a river above the Amazon, an invisible river,
that has more moisture in it, more water is flowing above the Amazon than is flowing in the Amazon.
And I'd heard this my whole life, and you think, like, okay, the fact that there's a molten core of the earth
or that black holes theoretically exist, it's just like one of those things, you're never going to see it.
And in this moment on this tree, as sweating and just ripped apart and bleeding,
I was sitting up there and I saw the mist river, and it was flowing over the canopy.
in the golden rays of the morning
and the macaws started taking flight
and there was monkeys below me that were looking up
and you could tell they were confused,
they were looking at me going, what is that?
And I just had this absolutely incredible moment.
I wanted to, you know, it felt like,
it felt like you're seeing God.
I wanted to share it with everyone.
You know, I felt, I felt guilty afterwards
for having had a moment like that.
But it felt like I had done this insane risk
and, you know, wrist falling out of the tree or getting strung up on the ropes.
And, of course, it's just me and JJ.
So if something goes wrong, no one's going to help you.
And being out there on that branch felt suicidal, because even then, if you fall, it's a giant swing back to the tree.
But the beauty that I saw up there was so intense that it, you know, it sucked the, it sucked the air right out of my lungs.
It, you know, I had tears in my eyes.
and I'm just watching this incredible process flow over the earth,
this legendary thing that I'd heard about that scientists described,
and now I'm seeing it with my own eyes.
It felt like the gift of the tree.
And you write,
Now in the branches of the greatest tree in the jungle,
I watched as the mist river caught the morning rays,
illuminating golden currents.
Swarling as I rushed over the canopy like a stream from heaven.
In the troughs and basins and lower areas,
the river was deep blue. But then, as it flowed up and over the taller trees, slow rapids washing
over the canopy, the mist river became ignited, electrified in the gold magnificence of the sunlight.
Scores of birds flew up in and out of the churning currents. The life and breath of the
Amazon was flowing from north to south along the basins of the Lesbians of the Lest Bajrus of the jungle.
My God. My God. I thought of ever.
everyone I loved of every creature contained in the leafy distance.
The jungle itself was like a great being, a monstrous leviathan of warm green might.
I wanted to call down to JJ and tell him to find a way up.
I wanted my mother to see it.
I wanted the world to see it.
The light filled my eyes and I found myself wiping away tears.
you know, I should take the small tangent of saying the obvious,
but the thing that needs to be said is you're a fucking great writer.
Thank you.
I mean, come on, that's, I'm just describing what happened, but...
All right.
You mentioned McCau's as part of the process of the jungle waking up.
I read that, you know, when you first started in the jungle,
that's kind of your job is studying those.
And me as a fan of monogamy and bird.
So because they're beautiful, but they're also monogamous creatures.
They scream at each other quite loudly.
What are some interesting things about them,
among which, by the way, you write how important the Ironwoods are
to their well-being, to their life?
Yeah, I mean, when I went down there, that's, like I said,
you know, for young people, if you want to get out there, go do it.
I agreed to stay at the station and do like six hours of McCormack.
recall research every morning. So you'd wake up before dawn and go sit and just stare at the side of the
river. And the macaws would show up. And like you said, they all scream and bicker at each other.
That's just how they talk. It's very, it's very, very loud and very, very harsh. But they do love
each other. They are always, you can actually hear when you walk through the forest, I know what the
sound of macaws giving affection is. They make a certain kind of sound when they're just
preening each other's feathers and taking care of each other and just another. And just,
and then there's a different call altogether when they're yelling at other macaws or saying let's go and you start to learn macaw language what have you learned about relationship and successful marriage from listening to macaws screaming at each other in nuanced different ways that you're talking about well i guess
never mind you can skip that question um it's interesting to see two animals sticking by each other's side and they're both raising a chick and at the bottom of the stairs at the station there is a macaw
nest in an ironwood.
And the relationship that you mentioned is that in the jungle, there's a limited amount of
Macaw real estate.
And those are all ancient ironwood trees, at least 500 years or more.
So they have to be, you know, thick.
Thus, again, car thickness are bigger.
And when a branch falls off, it creates a hollow and the macaws use that to reproduce.
And because there's only so many nest sites in the forest, only about 17% to 20% of the
macaw population reproduces.
in a given year. So they have a slow replacement rate. And macaws are one of the things that people
come to the jungle to see. And so along with gold mining and logging and all these extractive things,
in our region, ecotourism has been great. It's given the local people jobs as guides and cooks and
chefs and carpenters. And so macaws are a huge part of that because it's one of the last
places where you can see these flying rainbows over the canopy. You know, or when you're on a branch
from one of these trees and the macaws fly under you.
And again, that, that, the fly by, you just hear the, you hear the wind in their, in their feathers.
And they just, they'll look at you over their shoulder and they just keep going.
Just loud and they'll just keep going and then they'll join up with other macaws and they fly across the horizon and it gives you this sense like you're seeing something from, from the dinosaur times.
It's just, it just looks like wild jungle and there's nothing.
human in sight and there's just this savage canopy to the to the horizon and just these beautiful
birds flying over it's just they're just they're just magical you have this uh instagram post
with an anaconda around your neck so i mean there's a million questions maybe you can talk about
that experience but also how did you not die so as you know we've been studying the
habits of eunectes marinus for quite a while um the lowland green anaconda is the
largest, heaviest snake on earth. And I've been practicing a lot for a long time. And this is the
biggest one we've ever physically caught. This was just under 20 feet. It was 19 feet something.
And you can see she's in the middle of shedding. And the other interesting thing with her is that
she had blue eyes because she was in the middle of shedding and the scale over their eyes
turns blue right before it comes off of their head. And so I've never caught a
blue-eyed anaconda before. But if you look at the size of my head and the size of my hands,
you start to imagine that thing's head is bigger than a great dames. It's huge. And so the power on
that, when we tried to lift her to measure her, we wanted to bring her up out of the stream and
get her over to the side so you can straighten her out and measure her. And again, we're just
trying to take some simple data points and then release her. And she at one point, she just decided to
flex her body and you just see 10 people fly this way. And then she flexing the other way and 10 people
fly this way. Every time that mouth would open, she would just open the mouth and try to,
she should just reach back and she just be like, just let me do it. And you know that if she gets
purchase, once they get purchased, they just, they wrap you so quick and they'll just, they'll crush
the life out of you like you're a bag of chips. And if you ever seen a mouse and a mousetrap,
when the mousetrap goes down and the eyes come out, and when snakes, anybody that's owned snakes
and fed them mice knows this. Sometimes if they catch it right, the guts will either come out,
the back end of the front end.
So I'd imagine that the same thing will happen with a snake.
You know, it's that big.
That's bigger than, bigger than I am around.
So they have a process when you say purchase it.
They want a bite, just a hold, and then they...
Yeah.
So...
But again, she, she, she wants is to be let go.
In her, to her defense, this massive snake, her, we named her Millie for the, for the data
entry.
She just wanted to go on her way down the, down the stream.
The, the comments on this are hysterical.
You know, this is
this is the worst example of white people should I've ever seen.
I mean, Snoop Dog shared it.
One guy, one guy goes, he goes, he goes,
congratulations, you've touched enough grass.
Go back inside.
Yeah, somebody said, interesting use of free will.
Yeah, and I saw Kill Popper, 007 commented.
And maybe you can tell me if this is correct.
Anacondas are ambushed predators.
If you approach them, they will usually try to fly,
it will not register U.S. food.
There's other reasons, too.
This isn't a response of how did Paul
possibly not die from this?
There's other reasons too,
but this is the main reason.
They're pretty much apex at that size,
so their fear isn't as prominent.
He was calm, so the snake
was calm. It's insane to do
and still risky,
but he might actually be
the most qualified anaconda handler
on planet Earth. Paul
is one interesting cat
hugging emoji.
Is that accurate?
Yes. At that size,
they're apex. So they're really not thinking
about defense. They're just like, get off me.
If I was to hurt
her, like, just like if I was to like touch you
in the arm with a needle, you'd react.
If I was to do anything that hurt her,
which I'm not doing,
she would turn around and bite me to say,
go away. But they also, they don't want to bite
because their recurved teeth make it very difficult
to detach. And also
they're putting their head then at the source
of the danger. It's not a good calculation. And so these, the giants, and I've had the privilege
of interacting with four or five anacondas in the 20 to 26 foot range, and all of them have been
very leviathan-like, and they just, they don't want to move, they don't want you to, they just
want to keep going. And he's a, he's a hundred percent right on all of that stuff. I don't know,
I've caught 90, 90-something anacondas at this point. Many of them have been massive. Then there's
the one that me and JJ didn't get at the floating forest because it was bigger than,
bigger than we could tackle, bigger than my hands.
I couldn't touch fingers, but every single one of them has chosen flight over fight.
Only the little babies and the smaller males get snappy.
They'll come back at you like a normal snake, and just if you grab their tail,
they'll try and just bite you and then go.
But these big females, you know, they're like dragons.
They're like these big, legendary things that live in swamps.
And the only reason they've gotten that big is because they have a reliable prey sort,
in a secluded place away from humans,
and they've been there for decades,
just pulling things down to hell and eating them.
And, you know, oh, and the other thing, I mean, look,
I have a team with me, you know.
So there's people holding the...
Yeah, I mean, let's be real here.
I would never do this.
If I was out in the jungle by myself at night,
doing this would be suicide.
100%, because for every second, like, there that I'm going,
oh, I'm in the water and she's over my neck.
Yeah, okay.
And if JJ wasn't there,
to jump in and unwrap her, then I die.
100%.
She's continuously wrapping.
She's continuously on her back, saying,
come in here and let me arm bar you.
Let me squeeze the guts out of you.
She's just gone, let it happen.
And moving slowly.
Moving really slow with that assurance of power
where she doesn't need to try and tap you quick.
She's going to get you eventually.
Although to push back on something you just said,
having known you long enough,
Let's be honest.
You're saying I wouldn't be insane enough to do it.
I think you would be, I mean, there's a line of insanity,
and you, my friend, walked that line,
masterfully so far.
So I think there's, when you're able to sense the animal,
whether it's crocodiles, Kaman, or anacondas,
and maybe radiate a sense of calm,
I've seen you be able to go into some dangerous
from my perspective situations
and make it seem like it's not dangerous at all.
And maybe when you become one with the ecosystem,
maybe you're not a threat to it
and maybe that's why you can survive.
I haven't been able to make sense of it, really.
Look, I would say this.
In the case of elephants,
if we ever end up in Africa together,
I can get incredibly close to elephants
because I've spent enough time with them
where so far, every time I've been able to,
you know, it's always been a mock charge
and you can be one with the elephant
and learn their language enough
that you respect their boundaries
and you also show them that they're not,
like, this better be serious
because you're either going to have to kill me
or you're going to have to just turn around
and go back to eating.
And you can have that exchange with them.
And with smaller snakes,
I'll be careful and whatever else.
I can tell you with this that when you have both your hands around an Anaconda's neck,
I truly, I mean, I have been known to surprise myself with the decisions I make,
but this alone would lead to death 100%.
It's like laying down in front of an 18-wheeler with it in neutral.
It's like it's going to roll over you.
This is going to turn into Anaconda handcuffs with this thickness.
and then that is going to wrap you with this thickness.
And then six more of those are going to go around your body,
and you will get squeezed, and you will turn into goop.
And she will not, and just like that guy said,
she probably is in defense mode and not food mode,
so she'll probably just neutralize the threat,
and then go back to sleep.
I have to ask you about the floating forest,
and you write about Santiago,
once again, beautifully in the book,
of the time when she told you the stories,
and when your mind and eyes were still fresh and maybe skeptical
and more leaning towards the Western world point of view
versus the jungle point of view,
Santiago's eyes were glowing in the darkness.
He watched the orange embers spark upward
to join the celestial river of stars
that arched across the night sky,
as if the memories were written there.
He squinted, his faces wrinkled and weathered
as an old map of the world,
vast experience whispered
in the firelight, as ephemeral as the breath that spoke the words,
but powerful enough to latch on and sink down into some deep part of me.
This is Pico saying, Papa, tell me about the anaconda on the black water stream.
And he tells the story of that.
He talks about it big and having horns, and you write, once again, masterfully,
about you at that time having doubts.
It sounds like bullshit.
But now more and more of the things you've seen of the jungle
and the things you sense you have not seen yet,
all of those stories seem to be true.
The one he was referring to maybe 36 feet long, this big he shows it.
He says that the floating forest is the place you need to go, Gringo,
if you want to be liberated of your doubts and skepticism.
So tell me about the anacondas you've encountered in the floating forest.
Well, the thing he's describing there is that he's saying they found an anaconda that had horns.
And in that moment, we were all hanging out by the side of the river, and I said, that's enough.
I stood up.
I was like, come on.
I was like, there's no anaconda that has horns.
And if I've learned anything in 20 years of living with the indigenous people in the Amazon,
is that they're not wrong.
you know if they say there's a tribe of naked people with arrows out there they're right they're
right and and they know what an anaconda looks like so if he says he saw an anaconda with horns
he saw something that ain't a normal anaconda and a smaller version of this played out recently
where one of my one of the people that works at the at the tree house he came and he said i found a
snake and it was in the in the water tank and he goes and it had green
on it. I said, there's no snake that has green spikes. I said,
congratulations, you're an idiot. You know, and I made fun of them. And I said, I know all the snake
species that are here. I said, none of them have spikes. There's no snake that has spikes
coming off of it. And he said, no, it had long spikes. He said, the snake is this big and it
had spikes this long on it. I said, there's no snake with spikes. Until finally, he came and he
got me in the night. And he goes, the snake with spikes is there. And I said, well, I'll get
out of bed for that. Let's go. And I said, and I guarantee it's not going to be there.
when we get there. And we got to the water tank and I shined my flashlight down and sure is
shit, there's a snake in there and it's got thousands of green spikes coming off of it. And I could see the
snake head and then all in the spikes are coming completely perpendicular out from its body. And for a second,
I really was having this out of body experience and then the snake saw us got scared and swam at all of the
spikes collapsed onto its body and became smooth. And then I realized, snake,
had been living in the stagnant water for a while and developed algae that was growing off of it.
So when it was sitting still, all the algae would settle out.
And so if you look straight down on it, it's a water snake that has algae growing on it.
And so it does look like a snake with spikes.
He's not wrong.
Yeah.
It was.
It was a water snake.
It was some sort of helicopters.
Yeah.
But there's always an answer like that.
Amazing.
Yeah.
They're not wrong.
So when they tell you something like there was an anaconda with horns and multiple people have
seen it.
you make an expedition there.
You know, like if somebody said there's giant ground sloths in this one valley,
I wouldn't be like, they're extinct.
I'd be like, where?
You know, you start to listen.
I mean, after the tribe walked out of the forest,
you could tell me, I mean, that day, if a Tyrannosaurus rex walked out behind them,
I would have been like, makes sense.
Let's go to the floating forest.
Do you ever think about what creatures are in there?
I just had a conversation with Michael Levin at Tufts University.
He's his biologist.
who creates biological life forms in the lab,
but he also studies all kinds of weird,
what he calls unconventional intelligences on Earth.
And he speaks about that from a perspective
of just understanding the incredible intricacies
and weirdnesses of biological systems.
So, you know, the soup of organisms
that's there in the floating forest
is probably incredible.
You ever think about, like,
what kind of weirdness is there?
I mean, along with giant snakes is animals that are existing in an ecosystem that's isolated, right?
And so the tapuis, you know, like in the movie up, those Venezuelan cliff jungles where it's like those straight, like the angel falls.
And up there, you have this allopatic speciation occurring where these isolated communities are departing from whatever's down there.
And so on the floating forest, you have this very unique ecosystem where there's animals living on grassy islands.
There's animals living in the tops of palm trees.
And so in that nightmare soup that exists beneath the rafts, there's probably insects.
And I mean, I've seen lizards there that we have been unable to identify.
There's things there in that.
I mean, I can't imagine the, I don't think the decay is going to happen.
It's probably not a lot of oxygen in that water.
And so, I mean, I brought a few scientists there, and they've all just been like, this is, this is, you know.
Yeah, how did you even say that?
How did this form?
We brought hydrologists there, and they're like, how the hell did this thing form?
And then, you know, trying to study what creatures live under that is, is amazing.
But the big anacondas, it's interesting because they truly are the apex, so they're unbothered.
They're not really using their power for anything.
No, and I'm sure if I bit her, she'd turn around, kill me.
Yeah, but in a bored kind of way.
Like, it wouldn't even, it would just slowly kill you.
But I wonder if once she killed you, though, if she'd be like, you know, just like.
Just take a bite?
I mean, if she'd, I mean, bite, they swallow, right?
So, like, once she collapsed your shoulders, it's like, you know, if you killed a perfectly good hamburger and it was like in your hands dead, you'd be like, you know, maybe I'll try it.
I mean, they need the calories.
Yeah, and then take a six-month nap.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's truly incredible majestic creatures, though.
Yeah, this is, look, I love this picture.
Just like, again, not just the, just the size.
Just the, I want you one day to feel the, because they're,
and again, the wild ones are not like the cap.
The captain ones are soft from sitting in a cage their whole lives.
These guys have been flexing every day.
Yeah.
So that it's like, it's like you're hitting steel cables.
Yeah.
It's just wild.
Even if it's just being chill, you can probably get a hint of the power it's capable of, right?
The one good thing about those really big ones is that when they do strike,
it's like being in a fight with like a big fat guy.
It's like, it's like that haymaker comes from way back here and you're like, oh, good.
You're like, I'm on a duck and you get down.
Because they're like, they're like, they start accelerating.
And it's pretty easy to either get out of the way or like, you know, get it right before it hits you in the face.
Usually.
Again, if you ever mess that up, just like the haymaker from the big guy.
It's over.
Your level of knowledge and comfort with snakes is incredible.
I think they sense that.
I mean, I've just seen you with snakes.
They must sense in you the camaraderie.
You have a way of speaking to animals and about animals.
Like, there's zero danger.
From my outsider perspective, it seems like a lot of them are full of danger
if you're not communicating to them correctly.
With snakes, I think it's more of a, the highway is dangerous.
You can drive safely.
I know what I'm doing.
So I'm working with a snake that can't envenimate me and is small.
And so I can allow it to freak out.
And then if I can get it into my hands and warm it up and it goes,
oh, it's nice in here.
And of course, like you said, I'm not scared.
And so the snake is going, they are very sensitive to that.
And so he's going, okay, this isn't so bad.
You can chill them out.
But I don't think snakes have any camaraderie.
I think that whales, monkeys, elephants, I think that they can sense.
They can say, okay, this person's trying to help me get out of this net.
I'm going to relax and not kill them.
I think that then very much so, you have that dynamic.
Speaking of somebody that does have camaraderie,
there's this incredible video on your Instagram that people should go watch
where this spider monkey was drowning and you jumped in to rescue.
Sure, so we're coming downriver.
It's 7 o'clock in the morning, so I'm cold.
I'm always cold.
I'm sitting on the boat and I'm wearing my wreath.
warm, you know, I'm wearing whatever. I'm sitting on the boat. And JJ's like, look, spider monkey.
And I go, great, spider monkey in the river. Like, that's normal. And JJ's like, no, she's having
trouble. And I was like, why she having trouble? They swim all the time. And he goes, no,
he goes, you should help. And so the boat, the boat comes around. Then sure enough, what you can't
see in the video is that the river was so full that there's these little whirlpools and currents and
she was trying to get to the side. And again, all the animal righteous people are very quick to be
like, let nature take its course, you know, let the monkey drown. Or she doesn't
need help. You're interfering. Sure, sure, sure. If you were actually there, you would know something.
And that is that she did need help. And she was drowning. Her head kept going under. And so I saw that
JJ was right. And so we pull around. I took off whatever I could in the moment, jumped in with the
paddle because now here again, I trust monkeys, but I don't want her to bite me. She is going to be
scared. So I thought, instead of, there's two ways I can do this. I can grab her by the neck.
and like animal control her,
grab her by the neck and the tail
and take her out of the river,
which is going to be scary for her.
And instead, I thought,
I know spider monkey so well.
I've raised so many of them,
and when you raise them,
they curl up to your neck
and they'll, like,
if you have an orphaned spider monkey
whose mother got shot by poachers
and you're taking care of her
before we bring them to the animal rehabilitation experts,
they'll curl up on your neck
and they go,
they'll just talk to you in your ear.
And so I feel like I know a little bit of spider monkey,
a broken spider monkey.
And so I pull up next to her and I give her the paddle.
We're in this rushing river and we're moving 10 miles an hour downstream.
And I tried to give her the paddle and she smacks it away.
She was like, no, get away from me.
I don't know what you are.
And then she keeps swimming.
She goes under again.
I give her the paddle.
No.
And then she puts a hand around the paddle and that moment that you had paused on,
she looked back at me and she looked at me like, yeah, right there.
She looked back and she registered like, oh, this is a,
this is another animal with a face.
But people are just listening or you need to go watch the video.
You guys are just looking at each other and she's looking at you.
Yeah.
It's so cool.
She looked right at me, but then she went, she went, no.
She was like, whatever you are, no.
And she went to go back in the, she was like, I'd rather die in the river.
She was like, I'm so scared and I'm drowning.
And she looked at me.
She got scared and she jumped back in.
And then I lifted her up and I went, and I started talking in spider monkey.
And she just, there's it then like the next moment you see it.
she just goes, sure.
And she just, she wraps her tail.
She, her tail is around the edge of the paddle.
Yeah, yeah.
She puts her hand around it.
And then I lifted her and then I,
because I'm taller than she is, I lifted her out of the river.
And so now instead of manhandling her, like, you know,
a raccoon you're catching by the neck,
she's holding on in her spider monkey way to the paddle.
And she looks back over her shoulder.
She looks at me.
And I'm sitting there, I'm over there talking to her and spider monkey
and she looked at me and you hear her.
She goes, I can't do the sound.
makes, but she does this, this, whoa, she makes this spider monkey sound like, and she goes, fine.
And then she's looking off the front end of the paddle as she's looking at the jungle and she looks
back at me and she's like, you could just tell, she's like, I have no idea what's happening.
But she accepted the help.
And the difference is that it's because I spoke her language in this case.
And I know that that would sound, that would be one of those stories that people would nail me on
every time if it wasn't on camera.
You can see the moment that she makes direct eye contact with me and goes, okay.
And then as soon as we get to shore, she jumps off and runs off into the forest.
It's so, I mean, to me, she's watching the video.
So amazing.
Because she's looking at you, like, real, you can, you can see that there's an actual connection.
Oh, yeah.
That there's, like, communication, have, like, a social, you know, the way humans, when you're maybe saving a human being,
there's drowning or something like this.
There's that, that connection is beautiful to see, man.
And then I read a little bit that Spider Monkeys have a,
they're very intelligent, but they're especially socially intelligent.
So they have social connections with each other.
So they understand what that means.
They understand what another entity means.
So you speaking in a broken language probably is really important
and a powerful way to indicate that, wow, you're in network,
like a foreigner, but like in like.
It's like you're in a foreign country and someone goes,
Helping, helping.
And you go, okay, sure.
Like, you know, you're not robbing me.
You're helping, right?
Yeah, wow.
But no, they're incredibly, I'm telling you,
I've had orphaned spider monkeys so many times,
and they wrap their tail around your neck,
and they hug you, and you realize that that connection
that they have with their mothers,
when they hold onto them in the canopy,
you shoot, the logger shoot the mother,
and then I'm taking care of this baby.
They hold on to you, and they need that love
and that connection.
more than they need food.
If you put food or you put warmth of a body,
they'll choose the connection over the sustenance.
Yeah, they really value the touching, that connection.
Very tactile.
They're very loving.
They wrap their long spider monkey arms around each other.
They're very much like us.
They hold their babies.
When it rains, all the spider monkeys will get together,
and they'll kind of huddle up,
and they'll pull leaves down,
and they'll all huddle up together.
When it's cold out, they get close.
very cute. Yeah, that's true for a lot of, I mean, they're distant relatives, but that's true
for a lot of our relatives, uh, the apes, chimps, all of them. They have this intricate,
they're different, sometimes more violence, sometimes more loving, but social interactions.
It's cool. It's cool that way. Yeah, I mean, them, you expect it from them. They're practically us.
You know, it's, it's, to me, it's when other animals show, you know, the times that I've been on a trail
on a jaguars walked by and just been like, it's up. Keep walking. It's like, it's kind of cool of
not to eat me. Like, I appreciate it.
Has that happened to you?
Yeah, I thought somebody was walking on the trail behind me and I was doing a camera trap
and I put my finger up and I was going to go, could you walk any louder?
And I had my finger up and I'm crouched because I was doing a camera trap.
Jag walked by and he literally was just like, just like, just kicking leaves, just like having
fun, mouth open with a, uh, uh, and you just walked by and he looked at me and just went,
so never broke stride, but like dead ass eye contact with the bottom teeth out.
and that jaguar look of just like, hey.
I was like, okay.
Now I'm going to have a like full meltdown.
You start sweating.
You're like, whoa.
Because they're also so beautiful.
When you actually see a jaguar
and it's like bright yellow and the teeth
and all the muscles and it's, you know.
What do you think you communicated to the jaguar
that it didn't kill you?
No, nothing.
The jaguar was making the decisions.
I didn't do anything that saved my life.
He was just going somewhere.
and because he's the king there, he just went, eh.
Yeah, probably also not threatened.
I don't know, but I think there's something to you.
See, you're just taking for granted of the things that you're putting out into the world.
You're probably radiating calm, or not calm, but non-threat.
Not certainly non-threat.
I also smell like an animal when I'm in the jungle, right?
I'm not, I shower in the river.
I don't use deodorant or shampoo or any of that stuff.
So I don't smell, you know, you can just imagine to animals that have a smell that's like four times as good as ours, that, you know, just your deodorant, just your conditioner, just whatever other products, the detergent on your clothes smell, that we smell like Times Square.
We smell like a fire alarm to them.
You know, they're like, what is this thing?
It smells very foreign and it's scary.
Everything's scary.
Speaking of scary, the Jaguar was kind of friendly.
He was like, sup.
It's almost like he'd seen me before on the trails.
so he was like, oh, it's just you.
The one time I stood on the forest floor in India
with a wild tiger and nobody else was there,
the thing that the tiger did that was so unnerving,
and again, a tiger's back is, you know,
there's so much bigger than you think.
It's like four jaggers, they're so big.
She wouldn't look at me.
And it was terrifying because, now I'm going to do this to you.
She'd look over there, and she would look like this,
she'd look like that,
and never eye contact,
It was like, you're as important to me as a stick.
And, you know, when you see two fighters square up and it's all about the eye contact and everything,
trust me, you look through a person.
You pretend they're not even there.
That tiger insulted me on such a profound and disarming level that I never forgot.
It was just like you matter as much as a sparrow.
There's just not one of the things that I care about.
She just was looking around and,
carried on doing it.
And she was like, I'm going to walk this way.
And I was just like, holy shit, I'm going to run.
Yeah.
You know, it was just profound insignificance from this god of an animal with paws the size
of dinner plates.
And it was like, man, if she does, I don't want her to look at me because if she looks
at me, I'm going to probably.
That's the end.
Yeah, it just shows how much more powerful than she is.
That's probably the most terrifying animal on earth.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And the rocks, paper, scissors of late.
I think like polar bear and tiger got to be the most scary.
Yeah, polar bear.
Polar bear is pretty scary.
Fuck with a polar bear.
I don't think they're as fast as tigers, but I don't think you're going to go fast on the ice.
Yeah.
But I mean, like a tiger, it's like you can't outrun it.
If you climb a tree, they climb better than you.
If you get in a car, they could smash through the door.
It's like, if a tiger decides it wants you, pretty much nothing.
Even if you had a gun, even if you had like a nine millimeter, I ain't going to stop a tiger.
It wants you.
In the jungle.
Have you ever felt in danger?
So putting the humans aside, was there animals?
You've talked about that humans are really,
and we've talked about how the humans are the source of danger.
You often speak about animals as a source of beauty and wander
and elegance and grace and all these things, which they are.
But I'm sure you've felt danger.
Yeah, I mean, I'm very aware that a hornet's nest can kill you.
They'll kill you.
So the little guys.
The little guys suck.
You know, I always think like when we were going through the jungle, one machete whack, and again, people don't realize how dense it is.
You try to run.
You get hung up on vines.
You trip.
You fall onto one of those trees with the black spikes.
And then while you're laying there dealing with all that, they're just stinging you.
And your body goes into anaphylactic shock and you die instantly.
It's like you just, that can very quickly just take.
you out. You're right. I mean, the biggest, you know, you're speaking of spikes, the biggest danger is
not even the spikes. I mean, the spikes just because it creates open wounds and then that can lead
slowly to infection. So it's really that is the biggest danger. Yeah. And the Amazon, I mean,
again, I've never heard of a human directed violent jaguar in our region. They're just don't attack
people. I'd say mosquitoes are the thing that come after you. Yeah. The snakes just want to be left
alone. Even the venomous snakes.
Again, the bushmaster, I grabbed
an 11-foot bushmaster by the tail,
and he turned around, he lifted up to about
this high off the ground. And, like,
if you could translate what he said,
it was just, don't
make me do it.
It just said, you know, make my day.
See, but that's the thing. You speak snake language.
And then I put the tail down. I said, okay.
I was like, I'm scared. It's efficiently
scared. So the problem
happens when you don't know what you're doing.
So I'll give you an example. You want to
dangerous animal story, I'll give you one.
I was walking one time and I was trying to be responsible.
It always happens when I'm trying to be responsible and get into trouble.
Trying to be safe and you fall down.
I'm trying to be safe and I'm on the side of the stream and there's elephants on the other side of them in India.
There's a deep, like a 12 foot thing and then a stream and then on the other side of the elephants and I'm walking and I'm like, I'm going to sit in a tree and I'm going to enjoy these elephants.
I'm going to make notes in my book like Jane Goodall.
Then I came up against a cement wall.
and it was the back of a male elephant
and in India it's a male elephant
that's been harassed and had fire thrown at it
and God knows what else and he
and if I translate what he said
he turned around and he just went
what the fuck like he just looked at me like how dare
you and then just went
smacks apart the tree
turns around and then that elephant was trying to kill me
that was not a mock charge
I threw off my backpack zigzag through the woods
he broke apart trees
if I had a GoPro on my back to show you what I saw of,
just the shrapnel and devastation of this thing,
just bashing through trees.
And again, every bush that I encounter is a possible trip.
Every vine is a possible hang up.
And then if they get to you, he'll step on you and crush you.
And so I, like, threw myself off the edge of this cliff,
rolled down into the stream,
and the elephant got to the edge of the cliff and almost fell on me,
got to the edge of the cliff, did one of these,
and then came back down on his hind feet.
picked up a stick, threw it at me.
And the stick just smacked down next to me in the stream.
And I remember I gave him the finger because I was like, I'm alive.
Just stormed off into the jungle.
There's nothing like an elephant.
There's nothing like an elephant anywhere.
There's a, I loved, I loved the guy.
I loved listening.
I was so excited when I put on your podcast with the dinosaur guy because he was like,
when a baby is born, he was like, it learns, you know, elephant, giraffe,
T-rex.
I was like, holy shit, you know, along with like, banana.
water, sky is blue, and somehow you're like,
and these are initial things in your first few months on Earth,
these are the characters you're introduced to.
Like, how the hell did T-Rex get there?
They don't even exist anymore.
And it's like, it was so, it's just such a fun.
And I could hear you, I could hear you smiling through the mic
as I'm listening to it.
And I was like, oh, this is going to be a good one.
Yeah, I mean, the dinosaur world is, it's incredible.
But, like, the fact that you have such a predator evolve
with such a gigantic jaw.
Yeah.
So much destructive power is weird.
And then he broke my heart
because he was talking about how
the T-Rex and Stegosaurus,
he's like, all the books has them together,
and he's like, they're nowhere near each other.
They did not exist anywhere.
And I was like,
I want them to battle with each other.
Yes.
Speaking of elephants,
I feel like we'll be up to an adventure at some point.
After all this chaos is over,
you think back in the jungle,
Africa, India?
I think I would love to show,
show you a herd of truly wild elephants in the African jungle. I think that us going on,
I think going on a boat trip through the Amazon, not a hiking one, but we're going through
some really, there's areas where you can get permits to go through areas where no one's allowed
to go. They're completely protected areas. And you can just go for a week through areas where the
animals have no idea what a human is. And so you can move through it. And so it would be a little bit
more of an enjoyable experience, not a survival situation, and go with JJ and a boat and just
travel through the Amazon, hey, maybe we protect this river, and then the river's knocked from
north to south, and we just, you know, raft down with boat support, like, you know.
It's really incredible to see how it's all connected. I mean, the river, it's the thread that
connects the whole story. And so it's nice to see how it all is connected. And that's why
starting in the mountains is also really nice.
to see where it begins.
But he keeps going.
The story keeps going.
It keeps going.
We did start in the mountains.
An epic first day together.
Hopefully people get a chance to see that video.
So I've got to ask you about the writing.
I mentioned your incredible writer.
What's your writing process like for this book,
Jungle Keeper, for the Mother God,
for future books you're writing.
what are you like a Stephen King?
Do you have a drinking thing that you go to some dark places in the basement?
Do you write every single day?
Do you take little notes here and there?
Like your notebook, there's a bunch of doodles, a bunch of writing.
What's your process like?
I try to journal every day for a number of reasons.
It's accountability.
It helps me keep track of.
It's fun to see your hopes and dreams.
It's fun to record the mundane moments that we all forget.
about and that might be like cooking in the kitchen with your mother. That might be a fun walk you
had with your dog, like little things that you just, you think you're going to remember everything.
You just don't. And so I have piles of notebooks. I have just piles of piles and piles of notebooks
in my room. And when something happens, I write it down. And if a cool story happens, I will
write down, or if I find a leaf from an extinct tree, I will make a etching,
of it. But I just, as anything that happens that I find remarkable in any way, either from my own
personal memory or for writing, I'll write it down. And then, and then when I go back to it later,
A, I have a very good memory, and then B, the facts are there. And so when something happens
like you rescue a spider monkey or, or you, you know, something happens that's remarkable in life,
you get to spend time with someone that you haven't in a long time. And you, you get to spend time with someone
that you haven't in a long time and you get that feeling of like, oh, that's why I'm such
good friends with them.
Like, you know, you write these things down and then it's always there.
And so I feel like whenever I don't journal that I'm missing out on keeping my life
and my memories.
So yeah, I don't do that Stephen King quote about like, you know, amateurs wait for inspiration
and the professionals we go to work every day.
And he's like 10 pages a day, whatever it is.
I don't do that.
I write when I feel like it.
And I like to, you know, I'll start thinking of like, oh, this is a perfect way to, you know, start this scene because, because like the moment this happened, I felt so intensely.
And if we bring people in and I'll, I'll just be in a car or a boat or something and I'll start thinking about it.
And I'll go, this is, the thing is you got a carpe diem.
And I'll go, okay.
And then I'll go, okay, where did that happen again?
I go, okay, I'll go to that page.
And I'll go, okay, so what exactly that happened?
Then you get the laptop.
So it's brain to paper to laptop, always paper in between.
Well, how do you go desperate notes to the final thing?
Because you have, I mean, it's difficult to convey through words the experience, and you do that well.
So is this like, do you edit a lot?
Do you iterate?
That's where Stephen King was right, because I look at writing like sculpting.
You have to have something to sculpt.
And so when you're thinking of a story, again, a lot of people, I mean, I love, I love, I love listening to great storytellers.
And I actually love listening to bad stories, just like I like watching bad movies to see what they did wrong.
When you listen to someone that starts a story and they have you hooked from the second they start and then you like, wait, well, how did that happen?
Why was that happening?
What happened next?
And they keep you going and they drop the information perfectly.
And so every now and then you figure that out in that moment of inspiration.
So then I have my facts written down here.
And then I'll, you know, I'll do an outline on a page or something,
but then I have to get it all out of me with a pen,
then I can move to, and I'll almost close my eyes.
I'll almost just close my eyes and write the story out.
I just need to, you're making the, you're literally making your clay.
And so it's like you're, you make the shape of the thing before you.
And then editing is the giving it details.
So you do take passes like, oh, my God, yes.
I mean, dozens and dozens.
That's where writing sucks.
When you're finishing a book, and that, I'll never do that again.
So what I'm doing now is, this last book, there's so much that it covered.
And I was in the jungle, and it would be like hiking for 10 hours a day, you know,
dealing with narco traffickers, all this stuff, and then I'd have to edit at night.
And it was like, this is no way to live.
So now what I'm doing is I'm writing chapters as I feel like writing chapters.
When something amazing happens or something remarkable, I go, this is going to be its only way.
chapter. I write it, edit it, and then I send it to my sister, who's an expert editor and has
lived more in literature than most people live in real life, and she'll let me know if it's good or
bad or needs to be tweaked or moved along, whatever else. I get it, when I get it back from
her, it's marked up, and then what I'm going to do is I'm just going to put those aside.
And then the next time I want to write a book, it's not starting from scratch on 300,000 words.
It's just, here, it's ready.
Much easier.
What kind of books do you think you might write in the future?
Well, there's Mother of God, and now there's Jungle Keeper, and then I'm already working on Endgame.
Because this, I mean, there's so much that has happened.
I mean, I think I told you when you were there, but like there's a whole chap, right before you came.
Me and JJ went to the back end behind our river to this horrible part of the Amazon that's 10 times more lawless than where we are.
And instead of having no people, there are people.
And you want to talk about Amazonian no country for old men.
It's the oil companies and the missionaries and the newly contacted tribe.
There's something called, there's a people called the Nawa people.
And they're recently contacted and they've been ripped out of the forest.
And they're standing there with their little bows and arrows.
They're tiny people.
They're standing there.
The NOMoles are tall.
The Naua are small.
And we just, we saw brutality in this horrific, horrible.
It's like, it's like Sicario.
It's like just absolute lawlessness.
I remember the moment JJ looked at me and he said,
you know, and we both think of ourselves as tough, I think,
until we get in these certain situations.
And he looked at me and he went,
we're not safe.
And we looked at the people around us and we were at this like side of the river
port eight days up this river.
And you could tell that everyone that was looking at us
was making a calculation about how inconvenient it would be
to kill us at this moment and how much money.
They're like camera.
watch, clothing, backpack.
And they're like, that's a nice backpack.
And like, but you could tell they were just shopping.
And JJ and me were like, we're gonna, you know,
where are we put in the tent tonight?
I was like, we're not staying here.
And then I was like, maybe we should stay here.
I was like, I don't know what to do.
And then one of the little, one of the little Nawa people came over to JJ and
was asking for food and he made the mistake of explaining money to them.
They'd never had money before.
So he gave them a piece of money and it was like,
you know, a couple of coins.
And he was like, oh, if you just.
go over there. There's like a man that'll sell you something and then you can eat it.
And the guy was like, bow and arrow and JJ's like, no, no, no, no. Give him this and he'll give you food.
And it worked. And then JJ got sworn by like 60 of these little tribals came in and they all
bows and arrows hands out. And JJ was running with all these like half-naked people behind.
And just that whole saga right there is like, that chapter is going to be called River of the Dolphin Fuckers.
because everyone we met on the river kept telling us,
I'd say, I'd have my camera with me and I'd go,
are there dolphins here?
And they'd go, yeah, there's dolphins.
And if you fuck one, be careful, because they'll pull you under.
I went, okay, weirdo to the first guy.
Yeah.
And then we got like, you know, eight hours further up river,
met the next guy and I had my camera out and I'm like,
hey, are there any dolphins here?
And he goes, yeah, he goes, if you fuck any, be careful.
He's like, because they'll grab on and pull you under.
And I was like, what?
And then like four more people told me the same things.
I was like, okay.
Yeah, the lesson we learned in the jungle, you know, horned anacondas, believe them.
Believe them.
So apparently on that river, they were all trying to be good Samaritans and warn me about the clear and present dangers involved with amorous dolphin encounters.
So stylistically, I mean, that is a bit, Gormick McCarthy.
He would have loved it.
There are people you draw, like writers you draw inspiration from like that.
I mean, you're very close to him in terms of, like, you're very close to him in terms of
like you you like plug in every once in a while you jump around stylistically actually i do i do
it depends because because sometimes i want to sink in and flex a little bit which i don't think people
really enjoy but i enjoy it you know like talk about the you know just use all those flowery words
and make these beautiful metaphors um but what i'm finding more and more is that uh it's modern
readers aren't really looking for that they want easy read and that for my
style of storytelling people really enjoy and tend to thank me for more of an Anthony Bourdain
style where you're like, so we found ourselves on the side of this river and we knew we were in
danger. The reason we were in danger and you just start telling the story and you know what,
forget that maybe once every two pages you can throw in one of those beautiful little zingers,
but it's like no one wants to watch your flex. But also sometimes you go even more than,
I don't think Anthony Bordane did like Hemingway like minimal, like, like, word, period, word,
like that.
That's another way to flex that I really like
that you do sometimes.
It's just like less and just power
and the spacing, the silences,
the unsaid is what does the driving.
I mean, that's what's so resting about.
You read, like, for whom the belt holes.
And, you know, the air was crisp
and the water was sweet,
and the wine was good,
and the afternoon was warm.
And you're like, I know what that's like.
And these are not complicated sentences,
but when he puts them together into a paragraph,
you go, oh yeah, I want to drink wine out of leather,
you know, and lay by the side of that stream.
It sounds so beautiful.
And so sometimes, you know, I mean, just look at that,
look at that fire cracking on the horizon there.
And it's like sometimes the only way is just these simple statements, you know.
Writing's beautiful.
I love writing.
I love reading it.
Have you interacted with LLMs much?
Does it, you know, AI systems, chat GPT?
There's a bit of a scary and a sad aspect.
the fact that they can generate language extremely well.
But something is missing,
and it's very hard to put your finger on it.
My question to you is,
I can pick out with stunning accuracy.
When someone sends me a message,
and they've passed it through chat GPT,
I know.
Somehow I could tell,
and I don't know how I could tell,
but I could tell.
I don't know if that'll,
that's one of those things like,
like the images,
like we're at the point where we're,
can't tell anymore almost.
I don't know if that's going to go away or if, like you said, there's something,
like one of the things that F. Scott Fitzgerald does so much is he describes the moment of,
you know, like, he describes these incredibly human moments with such crystalline accuracy
that you go, it must have taken you a month.
You must have studied life so much to be able to, to put those, string those words together.
I think in a book he writes about someone.
screaming with such abandonment that at the highest register, her voice, like, wobbled and cracked.
And you're like, oh, my God, I know what that sounds like.
And I wonder if, if, because you can, you can say, you can say, like, you know, write,
write me the jungle book, but make it sound like Cormick McCarthy wrote it.
And it's like, it'll be like, the jungle was dark and stern and the boy was, you know, it's like,
it'll do it.
And it's amazing.
My question to you is, at least right now, what are we picking up on on something as simple as a
text message is very difficult to define. But it's important to keep thinking about it because
it's like, what makes us human? You reassured me recently because I called you and I said,
you know, I said, I said, I come out of the jungle and all anybody wants to talk about is AI and
everyone's like, it's like, it's like people are walking themselves into the matrix and asking
to be hooked. You know, it's like everyone's just obsessed with this topic. You know, and you were
like, man, you know, human art and human literature is going to be.
to actually become so valuable as this other thing happens.
And I expected the opposite answer.
I thought you were going to be like, yeah, man, this really is.
We're taken off and everything's going to change.
And you were like, man, like real artists are going to become more appreciated.
As more compelling and effective bots appear on the internet,
we're going to value that less and less, I think.
And we're going to value inhuman interaction more and more.
And so artists showing art a gallery,
versus on the internet, meeting in person.
And actually it's going to force people
to be more authentic and real and raw with each other.
That's going to be the valuable resource.
I mean, I think already, AI aside,
I think that in today's world,
I think that everyone's so, I mean, like,
movies have become so polished.
Like, there's no, like, weird, quirky stuff.
There's no risky stuff anymore.
It's all very, very curated.
I've almost stopped watching movies.
and I used to love movies.
But it's like,
it's fun when they take risks,
when they're messy,
when they're real.
Yeah, I think Hollywood,
Hollywood stars,
Hollywood movie-making process
has become less and less
and less popular.
Because of that,
so I can't wait for movies
to be reinvented.
Oh, I can't wait.
Just raw, edgy, dangerous,
all that kind of stuff.
And like all the actors we like are in TV shows
on various streaming platforms.
It's like they've all just gone home.
Like, they're not there.
I was like, I literally was like, man, I was like, I miss movies.
What happened to a movie?
I'm re-watching all the old movies that I like.
And I was, um, and I was like, where is everybody?
What are they doing?
It's like they all have a TV series on Blue Blue or something, you know.
It's like, fuck.
Yeah, I think it'll call them the raw, the dangerous, the edgy.
What we just described is almost perfect for, there's a scene in dead poet society where
Robin Williams makes them open their books.
And the first page of the poetry book is, like,
like, how do you identify a good poem? He's like, a good poem can be, and he makes a graph.
And he's like, by the subject of the poem, and then the accuracy with which is described,
and you can tell whether or not it's a good poem. And he reads this, and the whole class is sitting there bored,
and he's like, now rip that page out of your book. And they rip the page out of the book. And then
he's like, now, stand up. And he's like, now describe something. And he makes him bleed it and, like, scream it.
And it's almost exactly what we're describing right now. It's like, yeah, you can turn it into a
graph if you need to, but it's something way messier than that.
Yeah, and Robin Williams, the person is a perfect example of the complicated, beautiful human.
I miss them off, and whenever I see clips of him come up, it's just, I can't, I still, to this day, can't make sense that a person like that can take their own life.
Somebody who's brought so much joy to the world.
It scares me, man.
It scares me.
I'm scared of my own mind in that way, you know.
They could be at the top of the world.
But he had an illness.
Yeah, that's what I understand.
Dude, life is a roller coaster.
And you're living through it.
As scary as that Robin, like, you can go down the Robin Williams hole.
I'll give you this, my very close friend, my friend, Gleb, he has a story.
He was in New York City as a kid.
and he saw Robin Williams walking down the street.
And he went up to Robin Williams and he went,
oh my God, it's Robin Williams.
And Robin was like, yeah.
And he goes, can I have an autograph?
And he goes, do you have any paper?
And my friend was like, no.
He's like, I'm 11.
Like I'm 11.
And Robin Williams was like, go get some paper.
And Robin Williams' manager or somebody was with him.
And he was like, Robin, we don't have time.
We got to get up there.
And he was like, hold on.
He's like, I told the kid I'd give him a thing.
He'll be back.
And my friend, like, heard this as he's like,
please stay, please stay.
Like, you know, his whole life depended on.
this thing that he ran into like a diner, grabbed a napkin, ran back out onto the street.
It took him a few minutes.
He said Robin Williams was sitting there and he said his irate manager was there just being like,
come on, let's go.
Rodman was waited there and signed the napkin for him.
I'm like actually, actually did it with a smile and a wink and, you know.
Yeah, man, you could bring a lot of joy to the world.
Never forget that.
All those little interactions.
I love it.
I love it.
That was another one.
another one of the Jane's amazing quotes that I couldn't reproduce,
but it's, you know, just that you don't realize the degree to which the things you do each day matter,
even if it's just to the people around you.
And it's like, you are to the people around you, their entire life experience.
If they're your kids, your parents, your partner.
So, yeah, the things you do.
And if you can manage to put that extra energy,
where it's to the point where you do put a little magic on it, where it is fun,
you show up home with something that you got,
you know, play with the kids in a way that surprises them.
I had a friend, a good friend of mine.
This guy Vinny, he told me, I called him, and said,
what are you doing?
He said, oh, I have a whole plan set up.
He goes, it's supposed to be really good stars tonight.
He goes, I'm putting my kids to bed.
He goes, I'm putting my daughter to bed.
He goes, I'm going to wake her up in the middle of the night.
He goes, and I'm going to have a candle.
He goes, she's never seen.
He goes, and I'm going to take her up to the roof to go stargazing.
He's like, but I want her to sleep.
And he's like, you know, remember when you were a kid
and you wake up and it's like,
he was curating a magical experience for her to see the stars
and like, you know, like making, making warm tea and like all.
And it's like, man, you can just, you can make it so great.
Jane Goodall is the reason you met this guy.
That's right.
You've continuously spoken really highly of him.
And he gave me this book that he has recently written,
Echoes from Eden, signed it.
Yeah.
Dax, A, saved my life, and B is the example of,
what everybody wishes, you know.
Dax made an amazing company, amassed an amazing fortune,
and then said, I'm going to use it for good.
He's given a lot, a lot of resources, a lot of love,
a lot of effort to helping the Amazon rainforest
and the environment in general.
And he's one of the only guys I know who has a sexier beard than you.
He's got me beat big time.
He wrote, thank you, brother, for your love of the wild.
This book is about the heroes fighting in the front line for nature.
Together we can protect Earth's last wild places.
Speak soon, Dax.
He supported all these initiatives, and he was working.
He went to the Amazon with Jane.
He supported jungle keepers.
He supported the Sea Shepherd.
And so he really went out and said,
okay, what are the environmental projects that are doing the most good?
And where do I want to put my resources?
And it's like, everyone always whines about that.
Like, how come these guys don't?
And it's like he did.
And he got a lot done.
And then he went and visited all those projects, sea turtles and, and, and, and, and, and
Indonesian orangutans and, and working with Jane.
And so then that book is, like, sort of a state of the union on where conservation's at.
And there's a lot of knowledge about what different, how, all the different strategies.
It's so different protecting sea turtle eggs versus trying to save a river in the Amazon
versus Jane's sort of global message of hope.
And then he is a guy in there who's trying to.
save a specific part of, I think, Sumatra.
And it's like, just amazing stuff.
The Congo.
The Congo.
And then he actually took the time to go to these places and see the operations on the ground.
And you still working with them?
Yeah.
Well, that's sort of the, you know, the way it happened in my life was the one time I quit.
Conservation was right around the time COVID hit and I was going through a divorce.
And I'm like 30, some, or 32 years old.
had no job, no nothing.
JJ was, JJ's mom had COVID.
Don Ignacio, the shaman had COVID.
Pico's leg was coming off.
It was like, nothing was working.
Nobody could go anywhere.
And I called Mosin and I was like, I was like, I quit.
I was like, we're never going to go back to the jungle.
The, the loggers just went out and we're tearing down everything.
I just said, there's nothing.
I got nothing.
And I, in like this, in absolute black depression, I called him and I said, I quit.
I'm going to go get a job.
I said, I guess.
I'm just, you know, I guess I've been like Jungle Peter Pan and it's time to grow up.
And I was like really embarrassed at the time that I did that.
And then I spent like four days just laying in bed just with no idea what to do.
The only thing I can do is this.
And I had talked to Dax months earlier, told him my plan for protecting the river for making a Ranger team.
And he'd been looking over the budgets and spreadsheets and everything and saying seeing if this was real, he was still forming age of union.
and then four days after I quit, the phone rings and it's dachs.
And he goes, hey, I looked over the budget, by the way.
He goes, I'd like to make a 10-year commitment to jungle keepers.
He goes, let's go.
And, of course, he had no idea what I was going through.
And he was just like, let's go.
And it's like, going from that depressed to that inspired and that single conversation,
like, you could get the bends from that.
Yeah, and it's not just the money is that somebody believes in.
No, it's that he believes.
It's that we can.
money's, you know, that money means tuna cans and gasoline and, and being able to, like,
buy shoes, you know, it's like we, you know, we never had those things before. We're just
living in the jungle watching our bodies decay. And he was like, no, I know how to run a company.
And so I can tell what you guys need to run an organization. And he did that and then,
and then has stuck by us. And he, he came weeks ago. He came not that long ago to the Amazon.
And we, and we took him around and he just, he looked around. He went, I have
never seen people because when when he started he said you guys remind me of a startup he said
you're a mess and that was really right before stephan had come in and so now he's seeing ranger teams
and boats going up and down and we have complex systems and a donor program and all these things
are working well and we're actually making progress and we have annual reports and all this data
and he's like you know he says people have donor fatigue where they they donate money and they
don't know where it's going and he goes here he's like they can see what you can see what
what's happening. And so having someone like Dax in your corner is a good miracle, really. In the book,
it's going to sound, again, it's going to, a lot of the things that happened to me in my life sound like
bad writing. You know in the movie when they're like, they got the gun against their head and they're
on the ground and you go, they're not getting out of this one. And then like someone burst through
the door and saves them. And it's like, that just happened too many times to me. And it sounds like
bad writing, but it's, it's really good life. Since you mentioned Stefan one more time, one of
things I forgot to mention one of my happiest moments in life.
I had many of them in the jungle with you is just talking late at night after ayahuasca,
funny enough chatting with Stefan and Dan and you and giggling and just talking about life
and everything.
And Dan is the guy, I have to give a shout out to you should go follow him on Instagram,
Life with Dan.
He's an incredible wildlife photographer.
I've seen him.
He's worked quite a lot with you.
He has a love of nature, a love of the wilderness,
a love of beauty,
and is extremely good at taking pictures,
but just goes to the edges with you.
He's the only guy I've seen with the two giant cameras
be able to follow you into the darkness.
Well, Dan, first of all, that picture I showed you
where I'm in the tree,
because I told you this story about with JJ
where I climbed the giant tree,
Well, this is years later
I climbed it with Dan was there
And so he flew the drone up
And so got me in the tree
But what Dan's a really good example of is
Like you're saying, what would you say to the kids?
It's like Dan
Listened to our talk, our first podcast
Was living in Singapore
And he's like a young filmmaker
Signed himself again, just get out there
He signed himself up
To come on a Tamindu Expeditions with my company
And he showed up on a thing
and sure enough, their boat broke down.
And I was off doing jungle keeper stuff.
And someone was like, yo, their boat broke down.
So we show up and I haul their boat.
And he comes up to me.
He goes, I'm such a big fan.
He goes, I just wanted to say hi.
I said, oh, I said, well, great.
I said, hello.
I said, well, let's get you back on the river.
And then, you know, someone came up to me and they said,
he's a really good photographer.
Yeah, I said, everybody's a good photographer today.
I said, that's great, amazing.
We have Stefan and Mosin.
I said, what else do we need?
And then someone I trust was like,
hey, listen, look at his stuff.
It's not normal.
And then I watched a few of his videos and I went,
holy shit.
And I went, would you ever think of coming down for a few weeks to film?
And at the time, he was like, no way.
He was like, no way.
And he was like so amazing.
And then like, now we're bros.
And we filmed together all the time.
But he put himself in the position where he has the skill,
the insane skill.
I mean, some of his things were he's tracking shots of a,
of a white winged,
sparrow over the water where he's in the boat with an 800 millimeter lens getting these
insane shots. I mean, he's just, I've never seen a talent like him with video.
But wildlife photography and documentary filmmaking in general, it's not just about the
competence of being able to pull off a difficult shot. It's like the patience required and
like the discipline to just sit there and wait. I mean, when we went out into the jungle,
he waited.
Yeah.
No, I mean, like, even I'm looking on this page, that shot of the, of the Emerald Tree Boa there,
he got up before dawn to wait for the sideways light because he wanted to let, he had a vision
of lighting the snake from the side.
And then the Macaws coming off the Claylick, how many days at the claylic till he got the
explosion of macaws?
And I mean, I'm up in the tree and he's on the walkie-talkie.
And then it's also, your lenses are going to fog.
You have to be able to hike and do everything the, everybody else is doing.
And your job.
I mean, the dude is.
You attract a lot of incredible people
because the mission is clear
and there's just like,
there's the vibrancy and energy
to the whole thing. It's exciting.
That's why. That's why it's the best people
come to work with you, come to hang out with you.
It's become an amazing team.
I look around at the people,
and I go, how did this?
How did this happen?
But it is getting more intense and dangers and so on.
I have to ask you, the thing we've talked about,
What do you think you'll do when you're getting older?
This is pretty intense.
This is pretty insane.
Where do you see yourself years from now?
I want to protect this river.
We have to protect this river in the next year and a half
or else we'll lose the chance.
And so either I'm going to have first book,
I got to the Amazon and it was wild.
Second book, we built this amazing organization
and we got so close.
It'll be like those movies like Blow,
where it's like, for a time, it was amazing.
And then at the end,
It's not so great.
Great movie, but yeah.
Great movie, but, you know, and that's what, so, you know,
and I'm writing this story as it happens, and, you know,
end game might be written by somebody else.
Or we just got really close and then it all fell apart.
But, but we're 130,000 acres of the way.
If we make it to 300,000, I think, I'm calling it now.
I think what's going to happen is enough people are going to learn about this.
It's going to tide a wave.
We're going to make an amazing documentary
about how we protected the wildest place on earth.
And then I would love to have a few kids,
get a PhD, teach, teach other conservationists around the world
how to do this to save really wild places,
keep inspiring people, keep writing books,
keep going on expeditions.
I don't have any problems with that.
I can't do this much longer
because the pressure of wondering if it's going to be okay,
I've used all of it that I can.
My Lord of the Rings analogy of carrying the ring, it's like, you can only do that for so long.
And so I'm actually very excited to, I need to know that it's safe.
I want to know that.
I mean, that monkey that I rescued out of the river now, you know, the toucan, Lucas,
who comes back to visit us, Lulu's grand, we just saw a giant anteater, not that long ago, with Dax in the jungle.
And like, I know these animals.
And I'm responsible for protecting their home.
And it would be so amazing to bring people to the treehouse and show them this amazing.
place and put out documentaries. So I have no problem imagining a transition period. I would
like to not be, I'd like to transition out of Blood Diamond and go to more of the, you know,
the sort of the professor role after this. You mean like Indiana Jones type of professor?
Yeah. Running from the tribes. As long as it doesn't go supernatural at the end, I'll be very
happy. That always kind of let me down.
Well, thank you for giving basically everything you got towards this mission that you're doing.
And thank you for being who you are.
It's been an honor of a lifetime to be able to call you a friend and to have this conversation.
Brother, this is the third time we've spoken.
I think we'll talk at least ten more times.
And I think I speak for everybody in saying thank you and please don't die.
in trying to save the rainforest.
I have to say thank you to you because our first conversation changed everything.
It really did.
In this story, it brought so many more people onto the mission.
And I think also lifted me up because as we often acknowledge, this can weigh you down.
And I often do get weighed down.
And I lose hope myself.
And then I get lifted up.
But moments like that where someone I'm a huge fan of and who I respect so much reaches out and goes,
do you want to come to Austin and do this podcast I do?
And I respond to Lex fucking Friedman podcast.
But, you know, you've really, really changed the narrative and allowed this to be a reality.
So.
And everybody, go pre-order Jungle Keeper, the book, available everywhere.
and if you can donate on junglekeepers.org.
Now, this is an important mission,
an ultra-competent team,
and this is such a beautiful part of the world
that I really, really, really hope we protect.
So thank you for talking today,
and now let's go eat.
Thank you, brother.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Paul Rosalie.
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And once more, let me say,
thank you for everything.
Thank you for your support.
Thank you for the love.
And thank you for listening.
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