{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/99a2ee25-3c13-5b2e-8d2d-569c575f9bc5/6a34e96c4a2a3be0f40975a8?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Episode 227: Declan Burley, The Long Game ","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/611ee40606c05e4f77f40f4b/1781852241360-0f1070c6-fc11-4f72-ab45-8efaff54538c.jpeg?height=200","description":"<p>Episode 227 of The Adventure Podcast features wildlife camera operator and television presenter, Declan Burley. Declan grew up in Luton, dyslexic and working on building sites. Nobody around him went into the arts and no one really knew what a wildlife camera operator was. In this episode, Declan talks to Matt about the long road to where he is now: three months in the Amazon at 23 that changed everything, years of being flat broke, and a cancer diagnosis in his late twenties. He explains what camera trapping actually involves, and what it was like to work across six critically endangered species for The Wild Ones, from snare-riddled jungle in Malaysia to mine-field leopards on the Armenia-Azerbaijan border. They also cover the class divide in British wildlife television, what slowing down teaches you about the natural world, and whether conservation storytelling can actually change anything - or whether it's just preaching to the converted.</p><p><br></p><p>For extra insights from the worlds of adventure, exploration and the natural world, you can find The Adventure Podcast+ community on Substack. You can also follow along and join in on Instagram @‌theadventurepodcast.</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Chapter Breakdown</strong>﻿</p><p>0:00-06:15: Growing up in Luton, building sites, dyslexia, and why becoming a wildlife camera operator wasn't something anyone around him had ever done or suggested.</p><p>06:15-14:13: Class, access and the 8% statistic.</p><p>14:13-26:36: Three months in the Amazon at 23, learning to move slowly, borderline trench foot, and why that trip settled everything.</p><p>26:36-34:48: Declan talks about receiving a cancer diagnosis in his late twenties, and how camera trapping became his specialist skill and calling card.</p><p>34:48-42:00: What camera trapping actually is.</p><p>42:00-50:18: The Wild Ones - six critically endangered species, six countries, and what Declan saw on the ground.</p><p>50:18-58:00: Whether conservation storytelling can actually change anything, the three choices when faced with environmental despair, and why commissioners need the audience to keep watching.</p><p>58:00-1:00:00: What scares him, what brings him hope, and why he puts animals and humans on exactly the same level.</p>","author_name":"Coldhouse Collective"}