I love watching Stewart in his expeditions, he's such a great story teller. Also, I hope you can run a reprint of some of your books because some of them have become astronomically priced right now. I'm hoping to complete all.
Watching the latter part of the video, with the mosquitoes swarming the camera made me want to run away shaking my arms around my head... bloody mosquitoes!! Spectacular film, and I hope the field of plant discovery, conservation, and study continues to expand! I'm quite interested in furthering the study into orchids and carnivorous plants myself, having spent much of my childhood living right next to the Copenhagen Botanical Garden, with a sizable collection of amazing plants. Once, a botanist who had taken a liking to the curious 10 year-old me took me into a tunnel under the 200 year-old "palm house" (the oldest still-standing "large" greenhouse in the world) to show me their restricted plant laboratories. They have lots of tissue cultures of rare plants they distribute between botanical gardens for plant preservation purposes, and even had some huge specimens of rare nepenthes, cephalotus and heliamphora growing in bog trays under gigantic lights and humidifiers. Pursuing botany is something I have taken to with pride, curiosity, and excitement!
I'm now fascinated by Pitcher & Carnivorous Plants. The presenter just earned a new Subscriber to the channel. Power & Respect from Melbourne Australia ✌
I Just discovered your channel and I have to say, your expeditions and documentation is absolutely amazing! I already have a Big monstera deliosa and quite a few Different birds nest ferns and I started to Get interested in carnivorous Plants as wel recently. Your video's have really Made my Love for (exotic) Plants, Nature and exploring even greater. Thx!
Awesome rare Nepenthe footage and well presented expedition. This is the only footage available of this species and excellent photography to compliment.
as a native who is fortunate enough to be able to study in the US, I respect this man! 4 years hasn’t been home, can’t wait to go back and wildin’ again 😎
Thanks to share your videos and your encouraged for this expedition and thanks to the team we love your excellent comments about nepenthes rediscovery s .jasen and Lidia.
Congratulations guys for your determination to find back this species, with a very entertaining/interesting video. Never been to see south-east Asian pitcher plants, but visited their cousins on Morne Seychellois: N. pervillei (Seychelles main island of Mahé). And in Madagascar on Pic Saint Louis and strangely, at sea level, in the sea spray of Lokaro & Evatra: N. madagascariensis. Would love to join an orchid/pitcher expedition to Borneo & NG (I'll check Redfern)
Stewart, how do you travel to such exotic locations?? I plan on visiting New Guinea someday and would like to know how you planned your trips and arranged for guides.
@@williamfullofwood7421 mostly poaching living plants ends the species. If you take 5 seeds the population wouldn’t be as impacted as cutting the stems like what they do with Clipeata. I don’t condone poaching and poachers need to gtfo
I'm a carnivorous plant expert And I found a new species of sundew I call is Drosera ukalambanensis The reason for the name is it was found in the ukaklumba drakensberg In South Africa I first thought it was a drosera natalensis but the I discovered the the leaf form was odd and in the spring it went blue red and purple
I keep thinking about how nice it would have been to have access to a helicopter, to rappel down (and climb back on) into the jungle on the mountain ranges. It would save an enormous amount of time I think. Was it not possible to get a helicopter in any of these expeditions? Or was it just because you would miss the opportunity to trek the forest on the way to the Nepenthes?
I just meant to get to and from the difficult-to-access peaks. Remember: a helicopter can hover as close as you want to a point of interest. So you could skim the treeline in search of the upper pitchers of highland species for example, then disembark over a clearing like the ones Stewart Mcpherson encountered at the top of the mountain to get a closer look. But I guess this would have ruined the challenge that he was seeking when he climbed from the base the "old fashioned" way. Now on his expedition to the Tepuis of Venezuela, he had no choice but to use a helicopter to get to the tops of those plateaus. He talks about it in the video on this channel titled " Stewart McPherson - RHS Talk 6th May 2014" . That was awesome!
The Dutch are native to the Netherlands. They share a common culture and speak the Dutch language. Dutch people and their descendants are found in migrant communities worldwide, notably in Aruba, Suriname, Guyana, Curaçao, Argentina, Brazil, and Canada.
If that tribe's traditions change due to encroaching modernity, all the better, because it's pretty vile that they mutilate their women in that fashion - I'd try to document it for posterity, then try to convince them to knock that shit off. That aside, beautiful Nepenthes always make a worthwhile visit.
+Pogue Mahone Certain practices that are needlessly damaging to people should be bound to change, and in fact should have never existed in the first place as it bears no advantages and involves many inherit dangers to their livelihoods. Nepenthes are spectacular, and I hope the study expands in the future :P
We're thinking individuals, can see that it's objectively retarded and vile, and therefore are perfectly within our rights to judge it and claim it should change. I'm not one for postmodernism or moral relativism - their practice is backwards, barbaric, and that's exactly why they're fucked while we're putting satellites in space.
Though I take back the part of judging keep in mind that one of the hardest things to understand is other cultures than our own. As we do not know the context we should not try and claim it our right to change. In the end we don't need to agree on this.
"poor things"??? you are talking about an indigenous human population... consider your language and attitude towards indigenous peoples - they are so much more than "poor things"
You're not explaining the context. He said "poor things" jokingly in reference to the locals being excited about seeing who arrived in the planes only to find "plant crazed botanists" and not a more interesting group of people. He didn't mean it in a condescending way, but more as a way to poke fun at the group of researchers.
Rezvan, the wowser, didn't understand the sense in which the expression was used; this common English construction expresses sympathy (the narrator imagines the villagers disappointed to be visited by mere botanists). You ten idiots who applauded rezvan's ignorant bleating, you should have watched the video. 'Consider your language', definitely.
This man is a great storyteller.
Botany became interesting to me as a result. This is my third video
Fantastic documentary. His passion for carnivorous plants and exploration is infectious!
this channel made me somehow obsessed about pitcher plants
same! everything in the videos is so clear and interesting. I don't have none yet, but I'll buy my first one soon!
@Foreign Fishing indeed they are! good luck:)
I love watching Stewart in his expeditions, he's such a great story teller. Also, I hope you can run a reprint of some of your books because some of them have become astronomically priced right now. I'm hoping to complete all.
Watching the latter part of the video, with the mosquitoes swarming the camera made me want to run away shaking my arms around my head... bloody mosquitoes!!
Spectacular film, and I hope the field of plant discovery, conservation, and study continues to expand! I'm quite interested in furthering the study into orchids and carnivorous plants myself, having spent much of my childhood living right next to the Copenhagen Botanical Garden, with a sizable collection of amazing plants.
Once, a botanist who had taken a liking to the curious 10 year-old me took me into a tunnel under the 200 year-old "palm house" (the oldest still-standing "large" greenhouse in the world) to show me their restricted plant laboratories. They have lots of tissue cultures of rare plants they distribute between botanical gardens for plant preservation purposes, and even had some huge specimens of rare nepenthes, cephalotus and heliamphora growing in bog trays under gigantic lights and humidifiers.
Pursuing botany is something I have taken to with pride, curiosity, and excitement!
Haitaka123 cooool
What an amazingly interesting video and brilliantly presented!, great stuff!!!!!
I'm now fascinated by Pitcher & Carnivorous Plants.
The presenter just earned a new Subscriber to the channel.
Power & Respect from Melbourne Australia ✌
Knowledge + passion... Hats off
Nepenthes, a word I learned today, and somehow love. Pitcher plants are so cool. And this channel is incredible.
So are you joining the nepenthes freak club? The admission is free, but the cost is every available inch of possible space being taken by plants.
Amazing. my favorite new channel.
Such a lovely documentary! Very well done!
I Just discovered your channel and I have to say, your expeditions and documentation is absolutely amazing! I already have a Big monstera deliosa and quite a few Different birds nest ferns and I started to Get interested in carnivorous Plants as wel recently. Your video's have really Made my Love for (exotic) Plants, Nature and exploring even greater. Thx!
Awesome rare Nepenthe footage and well presented expedition. This is the only footage available of this species and excellent photography to compliment.
love to watch these shows,,thanks ,,i love plants ,,specially orchids
as a native who is fortunate enough to be able to study in the US, I respect this man!
4 years hasn’t been home, can’t wait to go back and wildin’ again 😎
What a great video. Well done work and Stewart McPherson you are amazing ...Thank you for such an effort
Thanks to share your videos and your encouraged for this expedition and thanks to the team we love your excellent comments about nepenthes rediscovery s .jasen and Lidia.
Thank you so much for downloading this marvelously inspiring video.
Very enjoyable. Thanks so much for sharing!
This is amazing, so glad to have met you. Your expeditions are amazing!!!!!!
thanks bro to promoting our island
Awesome documentary! Searching for Nepenthes in the Asian jungle is a dream of mine. Thanks for making the film.
Incredible doco, amazing photography. Thank you.
Narrator: "these ant plants are very old"
Natives "CHOOOOOP CHOP CHOP!"
Yeah, it's quite unfortunate...
I love your documentaries!!!
Awesome trip!
amazing man! keep going!
Just Beautiful!!
Congratulations guys for your determination to find back this species, with a very entertaining/interesting video. Never been to see south-east Asian pitcher plants, but visited their cousins on Morne Seychellois: N. pervillei (Seychelles main island of Mahé). And in Madagascar on Pic Saint Louis and strangely, at sea level, in the sea spray of Lokaro & Evatra: N. madagascariensis.
Would love to join an orchid/pitcher expedition to Borneo & NG (I'll check Redfern)
Stewart, how do you travel to such exotic locations?? I plan on visiting New Guinea someday and would like to know how you planned your trips and arranged for guides.
The guide’s expressions when they’re holding the plants looks exactly like my wife’s expression whenever I show her a new exotic plant I have bought😆
How can I look after pitcher plant in hot weather and precaution should I take
wow is very cool
I remember when my friend did presentation about 𝘕𝘦𝘱𝘦𝘯𝘵𝘩𝘦𝘴 𝘫𝘢𝘮𝘣𝘢𝘯 in front of class few years ago.
"Jamban" means water closet in Indonesia :-)
i'd be smuggling pitcher seed pods :P love those plants!
And that’s how plants become extinct in the wild.
@@williamfullofwood7421 mostly poaching living plants ends the species. If you take 5 seeds the population wouldn’t be as impacted as cutting the stems like what they do with Clipeata. I don’t condone poaching and poachers need to gtfo
Thank u
This is so cool. I want to do this. This would be my dream job.
is that at the point they described the glowing night bird, the glowing ptyerisor?
congratulations!
Spoiler Alert
love the music at the end of the video !!! ;)
Brilliant man 😇🌈🦋
I'm a carnivorous plant expert
And I found a new species of sundew I call is Drosera ukalambanensis
The reason for the name is it was found in the ukaklumba drakensberg
In South Africa
I first thought it was a drosera natalensis but the I discovered the the leaf form was odd and in the spring it went blue red and purple
MartinDube Productions Congratulations. I find a Drosera sp in Central Brasil region, but I can't to now identify.
Love your vids...
SPECTACULAR
clip này sẽ cho các bé nhiều thông tin bổ ích lắm đấy nha!
My 1st trip into these mountains was in 1989 !
How can you discover a valley if people are already living there?
wow I would love to live there
You could use google earth to check the altitude of the ridge before going there
Oh wow. A myrmecodia shoutout? Baller!
Nepenthes Pina colada
Bugs gettin' caught in the raiiin
2 people watched this video upside down :)
Jordz Van 6299 now 5
9 crack smokers stumbled by randomly pushing buttons......
Das 3 famílias de plantas insetívoras, a Nepenthes foi a única que eu consegui cultivar dentro do meu apartamento.
❤❤❤❤😍😍😍😍😍
New Guinea or Papua? that's Indonesia Bro...
Papua New Guinea and West Papua are One Island Idiot
to me it crocodile tasted of chicken and texture of fish so other way round?! How?
interesting video, thanks. Patronizing guide though.
Local people eat expensive price plants which sale at the house plant
market as their launch meal (lol).
I keep thinking about how nice it would have been to have access to a helicopter, to rappel down (and climb back on) into the jungle on the mountain ranges. It would save an enormous amount of time I think. Was it not possible to get a helicopter in any of these expeditions? Or was it just because you would miss the opportunity to trek the forest on the way to the Nepenthes?
Ethan Shankar that you are gifted with eagle eyes doesn't mean that the rest of the human population can spot Nephentes from a helicopter;)
I just meant to get to and from the difficult-to-access peaks. Remember: a helicopter can hover as close as you want to a point of interest. So you could skim the treeline in search of the upper pitchers of highland species for example, then disembark over a clearing like the ones Stewart Mcpherson encountered at the top of the mountain to get a closer look. But I guess this would have ruined the challenge that he was seeking when he climbed from the base the "old fashioned" way. Now on his expedition to the Tepuis of Venezuela, he had no choice but to use a helicopter to get to the tops of those plateaus. He talks about it in the video on this channel titled " Stewart McPherson - RHS Talk 6th May 2014" . That was awesome!
Because botanists don't have any money, and helicopter fuel is $$$pendy.
The Dutch are native to the Netherlands. They share a common culture and speak the Dutch language.
Dutch people and their descendants are found in migrant communities worldwide, notably in Aruba, Suriname, Guyana, Curaçao, Argentina, Brazil, and Canada.
carnivorus
Plants
How is botany boring? Botanists may save our planet oneday...
If that tribe's traditions change due to encroaching modernity, all the better, because it's pretty vile that they mutilate their women in that fashion - I'd try to document it for posterity, then try to convince them to knock that shit off. That aside, beautiful Nepenthes always make a worthwhile visit.
+Pogue Mahone
Certain practices that are needlessly damaging to people should be bound to change, and in fact should have never existed in the first place as it bears no advantages and involves many inherit dangers to their livelihoods.
Nepenthes are spectacular, and I hope the study expands in the future :P
the mayans had the right idea when the cut that out.
David Laughlin I agree it's pretty vile. But who are we to judge and claim it should change.
We're thinking individuals, can see that it's objectively retarded and
vile, and therefore are perfectly within our rights to judge it and
claim it should change. I'm not one for postmodernism or moral
relativism - their practice is backwards, barbaric, and that's exactly
why they're fucked while we're putting satellites in space.
Though I take back the part of judging keep in mind that one of the hardest things to understand is other cultures than our own. As we do not know the context we should not try and claim it our right to change. In the end we don't need to agree on this.
It’s West Papua not New Guinea. You may as well call it Iceland.
நைட் ரஜன்சத்துகுறைவுதாவரம்
Not cool😡
"poor things"??? you are talking about an indigenous human population... consider your language and attitude towards indigenous peoples - they are so much more than "poor things"
rezvan have you never heard someone say ''oh, you poor thing'' before? When did he treat the indigenous people like scum?
You're not explaining the context. He said "poor things" jokingly in reference to the locals being excited about seeing who arrived in the planes only to find "plant crazed botanists" and not a more interesting group of people. He didn't mean it in a condescending way, but more as a way to poke fun at the group of researchers.
Poor thing, you obviously missed the meaning in which he conveyed his message... consider your language and attitude towards a narrator.
Triggered
Rezvan, the wowser, didn't understand the sense in which the expression was used; this common English construction expresses sympathy (the narrator imagines the villagers disappointed to be visited by mere botanists). You ten idiots who applauded rezvan's ignorant bleating, you should have watched the video. 'Consider your language', definitely.
carnivorus
kauan Feliciano ?
Plants