![into the wilderness shark into the wilderness shark](https://blog.nwf.org/wp-content/blogs.dir/11/files/2019/07/shark-leighton-lum_Blog.png)
He also abseiled to the bottom of the Kaiteur Falls in Guyana to the soaked wonderland below. In ‘Lost Land of the Jaguar’ he made the first ascent of Mount Upuigma in Venezuela, slept on the vertical cliff face and found unknown species of animals on the summit. Next, Steve joined the Natural History Unit’s fledgling expedition team, making the first ascent of a jungle peak and dropping into a vast sinkhole in the Mulu mountains in ‘Expedition Borneo’.
![into the wilderness shark into the wilderness shark](https://pics.me.me/and-jesus-did-then-transfigure-into-the-form-of-a-12034738.png)
The following three years were awash with wildlife highlights sharing a beach with 75,000 nesting olive ridley turtles, having a baby mountain gorilla take him by the hand and having a red-eyed tree frog leap into his face. In 2003, Steve moved to the BBC’s Natural History Unit, where he took his place on the long running children’s wildlife programme ‘The Really Wild Show’. Before that, he was ‘Adventurer in Residence’ at the National Geographic Channel. He has had his own season of programmes on Eden television channel alongside legends David Attenborough and Bruce Parry. Steve is one of the busiest presenters on television, mainly working for the BBC’s Natural History Unit.
#Into the wilderness shark series
Steve has circumnavigated the globe time and again, venturing into the Sinai desert, completing the Israeli paratroopers selection course, catching anacondas, vipers and cobras and (perhaps the best job ever) making “The Ten Great Dives of the World”, for the long-running series ‘Earthpulse’. Whilst living in the jungle he wrangled snakes and ended up in a Colombian jail (through no fault of his own)! National Geographic Channel International bought the resultant video and Steve was taken on as ‘Adventurer in Residence’, producing, filming and presenting adventure and natural history programmes. Over the following years Steve wrote for the Indonesian Rough Guides and during his travels became conversant in the local language, drank blood with uncontacted tribes, nearly got caught in fatal crossfire in riots in East Timor, came nose to nose with Komodo Dragons and attempted to walk solo across Irian Jaya (a woeful failure)!Īrmed with an idea for a television series, Steve headed out to Colombia.
![into the wilderness shark into the wilderness shark](https://www.nps.gov/zion/planyourvisit/images/Canyoneering-Pine-Creek1.jpeg)
Growing up, he counted the animals that lived around him as his best pals – from the asthmatic donkey to the grass snakes in the manure heap!Īfter leaving Exeter University with a degree in English and Theatre Studies, Steve studied martial arts in Japan attaining his black belt. Steve has been passionate about the wild world ever since he could crawl.