![]() ![]() When startled, these crawlers can instantaneously transform into snake-like creatures, puffing out the front part of their bodies to rearrange their hidden yellow, white, and black spots. Specifically, they were on the hunt for a green morph of a hawk moth caterpillar that Stice had spotted previously. Then, they took DeAndrade and his filming partner McKenzie Barney to see a hawk moth. After an hour of watching Brazilian wandering spiders, coatis, and snakes, Stice and another guide dropped off the other guests. (Related: get a behind-the-scenes look at the groundbreaking series)Īfter spending a day filming sharks, humpback whales, dolphins, manta rays, and "charismatic megafauna" in Costa Rica's Osa Peninsula for the show's upcoming second season, DeAndrade ventured out into the surrounding rainforest on a moonlight tour led by biologist Tracie " the Bug Lady" Stice. But it took a caterpillar to knock the passionate filmmaker off his feet. He lived out of a repurposed ambulance for months during filming for the first season of the wildlife series, and he's gotten within arm's reach of lions in South Africa, stalked turtle hatchlings in Florida, and had multiple close encounters with crocodiles during filming. But luckily, it was only a caterpillar.įilipe DeAndrade, a filmmaker and host of National Geographic Wild's Untamed, has seen it all. ![]() If it was a snake, it would have bitten them.
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