Ghosts of the Forest

You might be surprised, but in the forests of Madagascar lives one of the loudest mammals on the planet! This is an audio experience you have to hear for yourselves!

Wildebeest Migration

Millions of wildebeest roam the Serengeti every year. But did you know, thousands can die in one day... in one spot? We were there!

Then There were None!

Great BIG Nature traveled to the remote Selkirk Mountains in British Columbia Canada to document the end of the Southern Most herd of Caribou in the world. This is Must watch stuff!

Featured Discovery Stories

We traveled over 2 KM, in absolute dark, through an underground river full of bats, eels and blind fish to find one of the rarest Crocs in the world.
You might be surprised, but in the forests of Madagascar lives one of the loudest mammals on the planet! This is an audio experience you have to hear for yourselves!
In Southern Alberta, Canada, there is a piece of nature that is the very last of it's kind - less than one percent remains... and these folks are trying to save it!

Great BIG Nature takes you on a journey exploring the importance of the natural experience, the effects on health and personal well being, and the basic need to stay connected with the very substance that makes us human.

Get out and “Discover” nature!

Nature Notes

Educate, Motivate… Inspire! We believe education is critical to engage our youth to the importance of nature. That’s why we created these short format videos for the younger viewer.

Madagascar is home to as much unique plant life as it is wildlife… in fact some trees look like they’re from another planet altogether. Legend has it that when these were first placed on earth, they kept walking away… so the gods flipped them over and planted them upside down.
Elephants are amazing. They’re massive, they’re smart, they communicate, and their trunks are the coolest tools in the animal kingdom.
Some people think hippos are related to horses, probably because their name, in Greek, means “horse of the river.” Truth is, their closest relatives are ocean dwellers… whales and dolphins.
Polar Bears average an astounding 5,500 miles per year. That’s the equivalent of walking from Anchorage, Alaska, all the way down to Mexico City!
When this big boy changes colour it’s not just for camouflage. Chameleons change colour mainly to communicate. They use the ultimate body language to indicate mood, to establish territory, or to signal aggression or mating behaviour.
This master of disguise is the leaf-tail gecko. Their incredible camouflage makes them very effective nocturnal hunters; it’s even more amazing in daylight, when they rest and blend into the woodwork – literally.

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