11. Amazon Rainforest is now a desert. Sad and heartbreaking news. 💔 I hope that the person reading this, do care for the future of our Earth - Our HOME. #PrayforAmazonas
amazon forest is in two weeks of fire. My heart is crying right now... Prayer is the only thing i can contribute, feeling sorry to those hundreds and thousands of species in there😭... we are so irresponsible human😔
My first visit to the Peruvian Amazon in the early 1990's lead to 35 more visit and year long stays. It's alluring, hypnotic, perhaps magic and always humbling. We humans are far from the top of the food chain. If you go respect it and it's people, remember you are in their reality and enjoy the refreshing differences.
The amazon rainforest is an home to an array of plants over 40,000 to be more precise and you'll be surprise to know that a number of common house plants originate
Call for the United Nations! Calling all the compassionate leaders and presidents of other countries! Please take an actions for this! Stop the devastation! Lets save the Amazon Rainforest.. Lets save the nature! Lets save the Earth! Lets pray and spread this matter! 🙏🙏🙏
The devastation of the Amazon is a myth that the foreign media spreads, we are one of the countries with the most preserved vegetation. Northern and European leaders should look at their own country and see how much preservation remains, this issue has already been debated within the UN
I've had the privilege of being in the Amazon in Ecuador, Peru, and Brazil, and it is like nothing else on earth. I think the reasons that "civilized" people find it so difficult is the unrelenting humidity, rain, and mud. If we accepted these things like the native tribes and wore no clothes we wouldn't be concerned to keep ourselves dry and clean. As it is, we have rubber boots and Goretex cloth and hats with bug nets hanging down and we slather ourselves with repellent and wear rain ponchos and stay inside the comfortable lodges and sit at the bar during afternoon thunderstorms. We watch videos of the Amazon and worry about bullet ants and jaguars and poison frogs and piranhas and anacondas, and think that the jungle must be an impenetrable maze of vines that requires a machete to go a few feet. In reality, the forest floor is usually wide open (little light gets down there), I have seen an occasional bullet ant while walking on a trail, I've seen a poison dart frog in Costa Rica, I've seen jaguars from a boat in the Pantanal south of the Amazon, and I've eaten a piranha. I've seen a small anaconda in the Pantanal. But I've seen Harpy Eagles, army ants, and wonders unimaginable in the Amazon. And I've been wet and muddy and sweaty.
I feel bad for the person who named the bullet ant. Think about what they have gone through...its pretty unlucky when you have enough life experience to be able to liken a pain to "that time I got shot" I mean now they have experienced that pain twice..I'm not judging but have you considered golf as a past time?. It had to have been Indiana Jones. Or Lara Croft.
British accent. How do you find listening to this accent as a non-native English speaker? I am Australian (known for having a rough, 'vulgar' English accent) and I find it a little difficult to follow as a narrator voice - on account of the accent and pitch of her tone.