David Attenborough is coming!

Haha, for some reason I can't imagine it taking that sort of turn. I'm towards the back of the lower section though so if it does go off I can join in.

What are you on about?

[ame=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nosebleed_section]Nosebleed section - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia[/ame]
 
Wow, do I feel sheepish. I've seen The Hilltop Hoods and I always thought it meant the standing spots right at the front because you keep getting hit in the face...I guess I'm not then :)
 
It's not what you know, Nanoboy.......

Actually, that's a stupid statement, because I only know the people I know because of what I know. You know?

:p

Hix

I just came out of a private talk with Sir David! Yeah, now I understand what you mean. :D
 
How fantastic was it? I was in awe the whole time. I guess I expected him to be both entertaining and educational at the same time but he brought it to a whole new level. Even Ray Martin did his part superbly without interjecting too often but keeping the story flowing. It was seriously better than any concert or theatre that I've been to.

I think I should thank you again, Nanoboy, for the ticket help :)
 
How fantastic was it? I was in awe the whole time. I guess I expected him to be both entertaining and educational at the same time but he brought it to a whole new level. Even Ray Martin did his part superbly without interjecting too often but keeping the story flowing. It was seriously better than any concert or theatre that I've been to.

I think I should thank you again, Nanoboy, for the ticket help :)

Not a problem.

I am looking forward to the talk tomorrow in Melbourne. Today I managed to get in to a private talk he did at the Melbourne Zoo. :D If you had replied to the thread yesterday, I would have casually mentioned that you should head to the zoo to catch a glimpse of him. I will post pics later.
 
Not a problem.

I am looking forward to the talk tomorrow in Melbourne. Today I managed to get in to a private talk he did at the Melbourne Zoo. :D If you had replied to the thread yesterday, I would have casually mentioned that you should head to the zoo to catch a glimpse of him. I will post pics later.

He mentioned that he was going to the zoo last night but of all the Fridays it could have been it clashed with a mid-term test and three hours of pracs.

How was the talk today?
 
this is relevant to the thread I think:
David Attenborough meets Lord Howe Island stick insect
17 August 2012

It was in the warm butterfly enclosure at Melbourne Zoo that David Attenborough finally met the Lord Howe Island stick insect.

Despite a packed schedule, the renowned British naturalist went out of his way to meet the prehistoric-looking creature, allowing it to walk over his hands.

A fan of stick insects since childhood, Sir David said the Lord Howe Island Stick Insect's story was remarkable.

Its remote island home, 600 kilometres east of Port Macquarie on New South Wales' mid-north coast, was rat free until the trading ship SS Makambo wrecked in 1918.

The arrival of the rodents was thought to mark the end of the stick insect's existence. For more than 80 years it was believed extinct.

However it was rediscovered on Ball's Pyramid in 2001, a rat-free volcanic outcrop 23 kilometres off Lord Howe Island.

In 2003, conservationists brought two breeding pairs of Lord Howe Island stick insects back to Melbourne Zoo, where researchers set about establishing a captive breeding program.

Sir David praised Zoos Victoria researchers working on the Lord Howe Island Stick Insect captive breeding program for discovering how to breed the creature.

"It's a remarkable achievement by this institution that they can discover how to breed them and bring them back."

There are thousands now in captivity, but just 40 remain in the wild.

"I hope that they go on living on Lord Howe Island forever. That's where they evolved. That's where they belong," he said.

However he said the rats needed to be removed from the island before the insects were reintroduced, otherwise all the good work would be wasted. And it was a task easier said than done.

"Conservationists have been working to eradicate rats on a number of oceanic islands and you think you've done it and then you go back and see a rat dropping," he said. "It's a complicated business."

The federal and NSW governments are funding rat eradication programs on Lord Howe Island, which is a World Heritage site. It is hoped the insects can start to be returned to their island home by 2015.
 
He mentioned that he was going to the zoo last night but of all the Fridays it could have been it clashed with a mid-term test and three hours of pracs.

How was the talk today?

Awesome!

The guy is a legend. You can't help but hang on to every single word he says. He took 3 questions from the audience as well, but he did not sign any stuff. He entered and exited like a rock star, and left everyone in awe.
 
What a fantastic show at the Regent Theatre last night!

The attached photo gives you an idea of how the show was executed.

The show reminded me of an intimate fireside chat with Sir David, leather chairs and all. Host, Ray Martin, although playing the role of an interviewer, came across more like David's friend (albeit with a clipboard, and without a pint), and often times the conversation veered slightly off course - which was a fantastic bonus.

In the photo, you will be able to see a huge screen; this screen was used to project videos from David's 60 year career. Videos shown included footage from his early 'Zoo Quest' days, to more modern, iconic series like 'Life on Earth', to a future series on plants, to his most memorable experience with the mountain gorillas.

We were also treated to some bloopers, with David sliding in the snow, to being chased by an elephant seal, to him being half-naked in Solomon Island traditional garb. David also shared wonderful stories that were so vivid, that you really did not need to see a video to imagine it. For example, he set the scene for his gorilla encounter, and awed us with his account of the baby gorillas undoing his shoes - only to be told by his cameramen that they did not record it because they did not want to waste film! :D

David has such a wonderful sense of humour, that the laughs just kept coming. He spoke for about two and a half hours, and his energy and presence was overpowering. Having said that, he steered clear of sounding self-righteous, in that although he mentioned our exploding population and Australia's carbon tax, he did not comment on contraception or his take on domestic politics.

He took 5 questions from the audience that were more or less drawn out of a hat - some of which were dumb ("Do you think using social media to post pics of animals is a good thing, given that a person could discover a new species?" [He asked the person to rephrase the question because he did not understand.]), to some really good ones ("What is your view on the anthropomorphising of animals?"). He even brought a 10-year old boy to demo a new app they are working on to showcase plants.

The cost of the tickets, I thought, were exorbitant (~$250 to sit near the front) and I wasn't the happiest camper originally. However, had I known how amazing and memorable the show was going to be, I would have gladly maxed out my credit card for a ticket. On the topic of cost, I was a bit surprised that they did not mention that "a portion of the box office receipts will be donated to xyz conservation fund". I cannot imagine that an 86-year old man would be too interested in money for himself.

Given the man's age, this was probably a once in a lifetime opportunity, and it is something that no one in the audience would ever forget. The world will be a poorer planet when he leaves us.
 

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Here are a few pics from the talk that Sir David did at the Melbourne Zoo, as promised.
 

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is picture number two like that game on "Whose Line Is It Anyway?" where the person can't see what's behind them but has to narrate the scene :D
 
I wish people wouldnt post on this thread...Its making me need to go to a book signing he is giving near me on Thursday, even if funds are tight! :eek::p
 
"Drawn from paradise: the discovery, art and natural history of the birds of paradise."
 
I was very lucky to meet him at the signing for "The Trials of Life" book in 1990 in Newcastle upon tyne The Q went around the block and I had arrived early!
After an age in the cold (nearly December) I stood before him, due to the volume he only signed his name but after all the years of watching him I wanted a word! I told him my mother had hoped I would turnout like him or Gerry Durrell, "what do you do" he asked I'm a gardener I replied, "ah i could write a book on botany, but not on Gardening" you write it Sir David, and I'll buy it! he laughed. It was after this meeting that the "private life of plants" was produced............that's all I'm saying.:cool: though I doubt I gave him the idea i asssume it was already in the pipe line.
My partner later got the" Private life of plants" signed for me by simply walking in of the street in Manchester one day, no Que nothing, I wish I had been with him, the chat I missed out on.:(
I saw him again at Gerry Durrell's memorial service at the national history museum in London on what was my 34th birthday but i didn't get to speak.
Dean
 
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