The Amazon boasts the world’s greatest variety of wildlife, but no one had ever seen anything quite like this.
Gliding
through the dense, waterlogged vegetation was a 20ft long, 18 ½ st
green anaconda — one of the world’s most terrifying creatures.
Moving
tentatively towards it was a man on his hands and knees pretending to
be a wild boar — clad head to toe in a black armoured suit slathered in
pig’s blood.
Paul Rosolie was on a terrifying mission: to be eaten alive by the biggest and mightiest snake on Earth.
The
27-year-old wildlife presenter and his ten-strong team had spent 60
days struggling up to the headwaters of the world’s largest river,
battling electric eels, floods and poachers.
Finally, they’d found a snake that might be big enough to swallow Rosolie whole as the cameras rolled.
Tomorrow
night in America, the Discovery Channel will broadcast the result of
his experiment in its show Eaten Alive, despite protests from
conservationists on both sides of the Atlantic. The documentary — to be
aired in the UK on Friday — will follow his stomach-churning quest into
the very belly of the beast.
The
channel has refused to say exactly what ensued after the snake wrapped
Rosolie in its coils. But he has explained what drove him to such
extremes of apparent lunacy — and told of his fear as he realised the
snake had accepted his invitation to subject him to one of the natural
world’s most lingering deaths.
‘I
wanted to do something to grab people’s attention to the plight of the
disappearing rainforests, something completely crazy,’ he told me this
week. ‘Everything else has been tried.’ Whether his idea will ignite a
debate about saving the forests or just terrify people even more about
snakes remains to be seen
Rosolie,
who has written the well-received book Mother of God about exploring
the region, says anacondas are misunderstood. He describes the species
as a predator at the top of the food chain, with no natural foes except
human beings — who wrongly see the snakes as a threat.
They
are in fact shy creatures, but they can be deadly when roused. Reaching
up to 30ft in length and 39 st, they live in or around water and are
far thicker than the pythons of Africa and Asia.
They
are not venomous but boast powerful jaws attached by elastic ligaments.
Rosolie had already been bitten by one anaconda and seized by another —
it took five people to pry it off him, by which time it had broken one
of his ribs.
The naturalist donned a crush-proof suit for the stunt which has been criticised by animal rights groups
His
bid to be eaten and, of course, rescued before perishing, was filmed
last spring but the documentary took two years to prepare. Its makers’
main task was to ensure Rosolie didn’t end up like the snake’s usual
meals: crushed until he was asphyxiated.
Anacondas
will bite their prey, such as wild pigs, with teeth that curve
backwards — preventing the animal from breaking away. Then they’ll pull
it into water if they can, wrapping it in coils that crush its bones to
make swallowing it easier.
The
power of a giant anaconda (they are always female, the males are much
smaller) is awe-inspiring. The force of constriction is equal to having a
nine-ton bus on your chest, according to Rosolie. Happily, they rarely
encounter people. But they will go after any prey that they can subdue
and swallow.
I let it constrict me and just thought: "Eat me, eat me!"
‘An anaconda can stretch to three times its own girth, so a 20ft snake would easily encompass my shoulders,’ says Rosolie.
For
his experiment, he needed a lightweight but super-strong carbon-fibre
suit to protect him from being crushed. One was created by a team of
engineers, who used a 3D scan of his body to make sure it fit his 5ft
9in frame closely.
It
was also streamlined so he’d be less likely to damage the snake’s
insides, and — crucially for Rosolie — its material would resist the
anaconda’s digestive fluids.
The
sealed suit was finished with built-in cameras and a radio mic so he
could communicate with his watching team. Doctors also made him swallow a
capsule that would transmit his vital signs in case he was unable — or
unwilling — to signal he was in trouble.
‘They
knew I’m the type who’ll say “I’m fine, I’m fine…” until I’m dead,’
says Rosolie. ‘We had to make sure I didn’t get crushed, but the suit
took care of that. But if I was eaten, we were worried what would happen
to my breathing system because I could have suffocated very quickly.’
His
face mask was connected to a crush-proof hose that trailed behind him,
leading to an three-hour oxygen supply. Another hose removed the air he
exhaled so it wouldn’t leak into the snake’s stomach and kill it. Next,
the team had to find a suitable snake.
They eventually encountered a
vast beast in the dense foliage of the Peruvian Amazon. Then they had to
ensure that it ate him.
Pig
blood was slathered on the suit to make it smell more like prey. But
Rosolie says: ‘I had to provoke a defence response from the snake and
turn it into a predator. I got down on all fours to make contact with it
and simply let it bite me.’
The 27-year-old would not reveal the result of the experiment but said he has not yet fully recovered
Snakes almost always eat their prey headfirst so it goes down more smoothly. Rosolie was no exception.
‘She
nailed me right in the face, and the last thing I remember was her
mouth open wide, straight in my face, and everything went black,’ he
tells me. ‘I went limp and let it constrict. All the while I was just
thinking: “Eat, eat, eat!” ’
He
describes the crushing feeling of the constriction as like being caught
under a powerful wave. Incredibly, it lasted for more than an hour.
‘She
wrapped around me and I felt my suit cracking and my arms ripping out
of their sockets,’ he says. ‘It was absolutely terrifying.’
My armoured suit cracked under the pressure
Enveloped
in the snake’s coils, he couldn’t see anything but he was able to radio
back to his team to say he was alive. They had agreed that once he was
in past his waist, they would pull him out before it became too
difficult to extract him without damaging either him or the snake.
There
were doctors and vets on hand, he says, and his wife Gowri, who’s also a
naturalist, was watching too. ‘She was keeping everybody else relaxed,
saying: “Paul will be fine.” ’
She
wasn’t entirely correct, though. Rosolie will not reveal until the
programme airs how much of him was actually swallowed — but he says the
snake ‘beat the s***’ out of him and came off a lot better from the
encounter than he did. Months later, he is still not entirely recovered.
He
has no problems about people calling his escapade a stunt, saying: ‘The
whole idea is to shock people.’ But he hadn’t expected the volume of
hate mail and even death threats he’s attracted from animal-rights
campaigners around the world.
The
campaign group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA)
judged from early reports of the experiment that the snake was
‘tormented and suffered for the sake of ratings’. The anaconda would
have expended valuable energy in swallowing Rosolie and then
regurgitating him, it argued.
And
Dr Ian Stephen of the British Herpetological Society, which covers the
study of reptiles and amphibians, was ‘horrified’ by the project. ‘It
demonstrates a complete disregard for animal welfare of the highest
degree,’ he said. ‘It would have been stressed beyond belief.’
If it’s any comfort to his critics, so, surely, was Rosolie.
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