Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Man Allows Himself To Be Swallowed Alive By Anaconda

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Dec, 2014 10:46 AM
    In a shocking act, an American naturalist allowed himself to be swallowed alive by an anaconda in the Amazon forest.
     
    American naturalist Paul Rosolie filmed himself getting eaten by an anaconda for a highly-anticipated television event to be aired this Sunday on Discovery Channel.
     
    Rosolie is a naturalist, author, and award-winning wildlife filmmaker who has specialised in the western Amazon for nearly a decade.
     
    This past summer, Rosolie donned a special suit to let a 25-foot snake, weighing over 400 pounds, eat him in a dangerous performance, the Daily Mail reported.
     
    "I didn’t want to stress the snake much. I wanted to make sure that the suit was smooth and wasn’t going to hurt the snake," Rosolie said. 
     
     
    "I really wasn’t scared. We tested this suit and worked on this with experts so we knew I was going to be safe," Rosolie said.
     
    "I wanted to do something that would absolutely shock people." 
     
    Rosolie, a New Jersey native, spent 60 days hiking through a rain forest in Peru with a team of about a dozen people searching for the right anaconda to take part in the stunt.
     
    In the process, the team also started the first scientific study of anacondas in the wild, taking down the weight, length and sex of each snake they came across.
     
    It took 12 people fighting in water above their heads to catch the 25-foot 400-500 pound anaconda. 
     
    Herpetologists were on site to make sure the snake was in good health throughout its short captivity.
     
    In order to attract the snake's attention, Rosolie doused himself in pig's blood and imitated movements of the anaconda's typical prey. The snakes usually hunt wild pigs, deer, capybaras and caiman.
     
     
    "Experiencing that kind of power was worth everything, because it was just amazing," he said. 
     
    The event, to be aired Sunday, will be promoting a fundraiser to raise money to save the snake's habitat. 

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Kids understand familiar voices better

    Kids understand familiar voices better
    "This study shows that children were able to integrate knowledge of what a person sounds like and use this to their advantage," said study author Susannah...

    Kids understand familiar voices better

    Post a 'sick selfie' to get office leave!

    Post a 'sick selfie' to get office leave!
    "Showing off a hangover and to prove illness to friends or co-workers emerged as the most common reasons for uploading a...

    Post a 'sick selfie' to get office leave!

    Break-ups can shoo away your Twitter followers

    Break-ups can shoo away your Twitter followers
    They tracked these users from November 2013 to April 2014, filtered the data and arrived at a group of 661 pairs, who had been in...

    Break-ups can shoo away your Twitter followers

    Miracles Do Happen: Man presumed dead is alive

    Miracles Do Happen: Man presumed dead is alive
    In a rare incident, a man presumed killed by Ebola in Liberia regained consciousness when he was lifted into a body bag by a burial team, it was reported Sunday....

    Miracles Do Happen: Man presumed dead is alive

    In pain? You are likelier to spot pain-related words more often

    In pain? You are likelier to spot pain-related words more often
    If you are suffering from chronic pain, there are chances that you would pay more attention to words like ache, agony, distress and pain than to non-pain...

    In pain? You are likelier to spot pain-related words more often

    Modesty holding women back at work: Study

    Modesty holding women back at work: Study
    Do you find yourself holding back in conversations and hiding your true credentials? Ladies, it's time to make a change and banish the barriers and be...

    Modesty holding women back at work: Study