Extra question- these are Bwindi gorillas- so are they more like Mountain or Eastern Lowlands in appearance?
I'm a bit surprised by this reaction from you nanoboy, especially with your choice of wording such as "them marauding through my camp". There was no marauding going on, it was all very civilized indeed. The Bwindi gorillas are habituated troops and are quite used to tourists. The only difference is that on this occasion the troop came to the people instead of the people going to the troop. The only threat to tourists on gorilla watching tours has historically only been from actual guerillas.nanoboy said:Am I the only one who saw the movie 'Congo' and read Michael Crichton's novel of the same name.
Who on this forum is more of an 'animal encounter nut' than me? But Jesus, this is scary stuff! Many keepers in zoos across the world don't get into gorilla enclosures for their (i.e. the keeper's) safety. Surely having a group of WILD gorillas march through your camp and pick your hair must be extremely dangerous. If the guy got scared and spooked the silverback and he smashed his face in or something, well, gorillas would have reclaimed their 'King Kong' reputation.
Cool video, but man oh man, scary stuff. Don't get me wrong - this is high on my bucket list to do, and a work colleague is living my dream and doing this right now in Africa - but to me there is a huge difference between us observing them at a distance in their home, and them marauding through my camp on their terms.
(p.s. I have seen Congo, so that's at least two of us)
I like playing "spot the New Zealand plant" in movies like that. The jungles always contain NZ flax and/or cabbage trees....DavidBrown said:That's three of us. It was genuinely one of the worst movies that I have ever seen.