4.6 • 611 Ratings
🗓️ 14 March 2021
⏱️ 27 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
We’re exploring the boundary between our world and the world of myth, mysticism, and magic. We’ll discover how some of the customs and practices from our ancient ancestors continue to influence our relationship with the natural world today.
To begin, we’re opening our ears to some of the sounds of the natural world and the inanimate objects that produce them. On a trip to Serengeti, Jahawi stumbled across rocks which, when hit by another type of rock, produced different sounds. He leads us into the world of the rocks that ‘sing’.
The Baka are one of the oldest hunter gatherer societies in the world. They’re physically and spiritually connected to the forests they inhabit. This connection runs so deep that they believe their top hunters have the ability to experience the world from another animal’s point of view.
And in South Africa she’s known as the ‘frog lady’, but Dr Jeanne Tarrant didn’t always love them. Like many others, she grew up scared of frogs. Now, however, she works tirelessly to protect them, which includes dispelling some surprising myths that continue to put the lives of these amphibians at risk.
Thank you for listening to another series of the BBC Earth podcast.
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0:00.0 | This is a podcast from BBC Studios. |
0:04.0 | A commercial subsidiary of the BBC. |
0:14.0 | It's one of those things where you're not really expecting to find anything. |
0:22.9 | Your head is very much on being in the bush and the animals. |
0:27.3 | When I saw this thing, I didn't quite realize what it was. |
0:32.2 | It was like a crystalline vibration. |
0:35.4 | Welcome to the BBC Earth podcast. Today we're exploring the boundaries between |
0:40.5 | our world and the world of myth, magic and mysticism. We're drawing on stories told by our |
0:46.7 | ancestors and discovering how some of the most ancient ideas from times and people long gone |
0:51.9 | continue to influence our relationship with the natural world today. |
0:56.4 | For our first story, we're packed into a dusty jeep |
0:59.2 | speeding across the Serengeti. |
1:01.7 | Jahawi Batole is leading a photography safari |
1:04.2 | through northern Tanzania. |
1:06.9 | He's got his eyes peeled |
1:08.2 | for any sign of movement out there |
1:10.1 | across the open grasslands, |
1:11.8 | any traces of interesting wildlife for his guests to photograph. |
1:16.0 | But one of his most amazing discoveries happened when they put the cameras down and took a break. |
1:24.5 | We stopped to have a cup of tea on this incredible outcrop and you know they're these perfect kind of round boulders |
1:33.3 | that look out over the serengeti so you climb up on top of them and you literally have a view of |
1:39.4 | kilometres around you and perfectly placed on top of it was this other rock and it was stunning. Turns out this |
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