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This week on Mostly Occasionally, I catch up with wildlife biologist, TV host, and certified madman Forrest Galante.
You might know Forrest Galante from his many Discovery Channel and Animal Planet shows, starting with Naked and Afraid back in 2013, where people survive in the jungle with no clothes. Since then, he’s built a career chasing lost species, hosting Extinct or Alive, and turning the public eye toward wildlife conservation in a way that’s actually effective. He’s really damn good at it and has the scars and stories to prove it.
He just got back from Colombia, where he’s been working hands-on with the government to tackle one of the strangest ecological disasters on Earth: Pablo Escobar’s hippos. What started as a drug kingpin’s exotic pets has exploded into an invasive species crisis, with hundreds of massive, unpredictable animals wreaking havoc on the local ecosystem and neighboring communities.
We get into:
Hope you enjoy the conversation as much as I did!
Thanks for listening and subscribing to Mostly Occasionally.
↳ Email me: [email protected]
↳ Follow me on Instagram
↳ Follow me on Twitter
↳ Read more of my writing on BroBible
↳ Learn more about me on my website, brandonwenerd.com
By Brandon WenerdThis week on Mostly Occasionally, I catch up with wildlife biologist, TV host, and certified madman Forrest Galante.
You might know Forrest Galante from his many Discovery Channel and Animal Planet shows, starting with Naked and Afraid back in 2013, where people survive in the jungle with no clothes. Since then, he’s built a career chasing lost species, hosting Extinct or Alive, and turning the public eye toward wildlife conservation in a way that’s actually effective. He’s really damn good at it and has the scars and stories to prove it.
He just got back from Colombia, where he’s been working hands-on with the government to tackle one of the strangest ecological disasters on Earth: Pablo Escobar’s hippos. What started as a drug kingpin’s exotic pets has exploded into an invasive species crisis, with hundreds of massive, unpredictable animals wreaking havoc on the local ecosystem and neighboring communities.
We get into:
Hope you enjoy the conversation as much as I did!
Thanks for listening and subscribing to Mostly Occasionally.
↳ Email me: [email protected]
↳ Follow me on Instagram
↳ Follow me on Twitter
↳ Read more of my writing on BroBible
↳ Learn more about me on my website, brandonwenerd.com