Favourite Natural History Footage




The People's Countryside Environmental Debate Podcast show

Summary: <p>We like to give you an ad free experience, so be assured, that will never happen. We also like our audience to be relatively small and engaged, we’re not after numbers.</p> <p>This is our 450th episode! We ask though, what does 450 episodes really mean? Does it in itself mean anything?</p> <p>Thanks for continuing to send in questions for us to discuss. We never planned to get to 450 episodes, our aim is always just the next episode.</p> <p>So, todays question comes from Mia, in Western Australia.</p> <p>“What’s your favourite piece of natural history footage?”</p> <p>Stuart and William, your co-hosts share their favourite natural history footage. Stuart’s is David Attenborough being sat on by a Gorilla. William’s remembers seeing footage of a particular bird which could mimic any sound it heard.</p> <p>The best natural history footage gives you an understanding of that creature’s environment, and where they live. Are we too squeamish about seeing animals kill and consume another? Isn’t this just the cycle of life?</p> <p>What do you make of this discussion? Do you have a question that you'd like us to discuss? Let us know by sending an email to ⁠thepeoplescountryside@gmail.com</p> <p>This podcast's overall themes are nature, philosophy, climate, the human condition, sustainability, and social justice. </p> <p>Help us to spread the impact of the podcast by sharing this link with 5 friends ⁠https://podfollow.com/the-peoples-countryside-environmental-debate-podcast/view⁠ , support our work through Patreon ⁠https://www.patreon.com/thepeoplescountryside⁠ or just 'follow' to avoid missing any public posts. Find out all about the podcast via this one simple link: ⁠https://linktr.ee/thepeoplescountryside</p> --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thepeoplescountryside/message