Recent News

First Longtail release of the year
Friday, June 01, 2018

In the early morning of Monday, 28th May, Roma Hayward, Animal Care and Quarantine Officer, released our first rehabilitated longtail of the season.


Plein Air Society paints on Trunk Island
Friday, June 01, 2018

After meeting Dr. Ian Walker at a Bermuda Tourism Authority event, Rhona Emmerson was able to arrange for her group of artists - the Plein Air Society - to take a trip out to Trunk Island for a morning of painting on Sunday, 22nd April.


MSA students hold Toad-ally Terrific event
Thursday, May 24, 2018

Pupils from a convent school are helping Bermuda’s struggling toad population.


Video: Bridget The Sea Turtle’s Rehabilitation
Saturday, May 19, 2018

The Bermuda Tourism Authority has released a video highlighting the successful rehabilitation of a sea turtle named ‘Bridget’, with the video also providing tips on how to help if you find an injured turtle.


Endangered predators may lead to erosion of reefs
Thursday, May 17, 2018

Major marine predators including groupers and snappers are endangered, a scientist has warned.



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Latest News

All the latest updates and news from the Bermuda Aquarium, Museum, and Zoo, one of Bermuda's leading visitor attractions!

Ocean Vet team to share adventures
Bermuda Sun
Friday, April 11, 2014

Sara Lagan, Sub-editor/writer
Friday, April 11, 2014 7:55 AM

The Ocean Vet crew will be sharing the underwater adventures filming their upcoming international series, at a public lecture on Monday.

Dr Neil Burnie will join local filmmakers Choy Aming and Andrew Kirkpatrick as well as gassProductions’ Andrew Smith and Dan Radford at the Bermuda Underwater Exploration Institute from 7:30pm.

The first lecture last night sold out within a day.

The team will share up close and personal footage of their encounters with a group of humpback whales, outline their journey ahead and host a substantial Q&A afterwards.

The crew plans to shoot 11 episodes for the Ocean Vet series, each focussing on different ocean species, while the 12th will be a ?diary on the making of the series.

BS_140411_1a.jpg
Close encounter: A whale takes a close path near an Ocean
Vet camerman. *Photo supplied by Gassproductions

 

Aming told the Bermuda Sun that after weeks of difficult weather and a scarcity of whale encounters — last Saturday they finally  struck gold: “The weather has really put us through some paces (this season). 

“We were seeing whales every time we went out but we were chipping away very lightly. 

“I’ve been doing this for 15 years and I had to keep reassuring the team that we would get something good.

“When you have a 10-hour day on the water getting beat up and you only get one minute of footage, even the most enthusiastic person will get a little disheartened.

“It certainly created some drama on the screen and between ourselves.

BS_140411_1b.jpg
The star of the show Ocean Vet Dr Neil Burnie waves to the
cameras during a day out filming on the water.

*Photo supplied by Gassproductions

“But finally we went out on Saturday — it was the calmest day we had yet — and we found a big group of whales. They just turned on and we had about three incredible hours in the water with them and about four and a half hours with them in total. 

“In 15 years of filming and swimming with whales, this is definitely one of the best days we’ve ever had — certainly in the top three. There were about six or seven — it was pretty awesome.

‘Friendlies’

“There were two in particular, we called them ‘friendlies’, who would let me and Neil (Burnie) get within ten feet of them probably on about five ?different occasions.”

Choy says that with five cameras filming the spectacle from above and below the water’s surface, the team captured top class HD footage.

The other episodes will focus on tiger sharks, Galapagos sharks, six gill sharks, sharks at night, lionfish, the black grouper (rockfish), Sargassum and pelagic creatures, turtles and eagle rays, and the final episode will be a diary charting highlights of the series and how they operated as a crew.

Aming added: “We have just started — we have only shot the majority of the first episode plus there has been a bunch of intro pieces shot around the aquarium. 

“We are only into the third week of shooting out of five months.

“Hopefully, if people get hooked on the series and watch the first 11, then they will be interested in seeing the diary of us packed in a little boat with cameras and how we actually did it all.”

The Ocean Vet series has been pre-sold to distributor Cineflix, who will be selling it to an international network on completion. 

They still don’t know which network it will be shown on or how many but previous gassProductions have previously distributed for the likes of Rod and Rucksack (Discovery), American Pickers (History Channel) and Property Brothers (WNetwork). 

The Ocean Vet lecture and Q&A takes place at the Bermuda Underwater Exploration Institute on Monday, April 14. Call 294-0204 to book. Tickets are $20 for members or $25 for non members.