Sat, Oct 13, 2012
After speeding high off the ground down a zipline in the treetops of Liffey Forest, Tasmania, Brandon sets Kayne his next mission - to find a tiger snake in the wild. Kayne and Brandon both admit this mission scares them but they head off through the honeycomb tunnels of Mole Creek Caves. The boys learn about the dreaming story of the tiger snake from Hank Norton, an Indigenous consultant, and a tiger snake skin is burnt as a blessing to the Dreamtime. Next stop on their journey is a secret snake lab where they meet herpetologist Ian Norton and his team. Ian takes them to the Wesley Vale marshland outside of Launceston to tag a tiger snake, but first they accompany him on a snake emergency...
Fri, Nov 2, 2012
Walking in the scorching heat through the heart of the Central Desert outside of Alice Springs, Brandon gives Kayne his next challenge - prepare a bush tucker feast to serve the Elders in the remote Aboriginal community of Papunya. The feast must include honey ants which Kayne has dug four feet underground to find.
Fri, Oct 5, 2012
Kayne soon discovers that riding a remote-control skateboard in the South Australian bush is the easiest part of his first mission as Brandon has set him a nerve-racking challenge - to go diving with Great White sharks! And as sharks are attracted to noise, Kayne has to beat box while under water to lure one in. Will Kayne complete the mission or will he chicken out?
Fri, Oct 26, 2012
Deep inside Kakadu National Park, NT, local rangers are keen to monitor a rogue saltwater crocodile - the deadliest reptile on the planet! Brandon reckons Kayne could help them out and enlists his mate to help lure a giant croc into a cage, anaesthetise it and then attach a satellite tag to the back of its neck. In this jaw-droppingly scary mission, will Kayne rise to the challenge and get up close and personal with this deadly reptile?
Sat, Oct 27, 2012
Brandon and Kayne travel to Seal Rocks, off the northern coast of NSW, where Brandon gives Kayne his next mission - to swim with Grey Nurse Sharks and take a photo of one. Seal Rocks is renowned for having one of the last colonies of endangered Grey Nurse Sharks - there's only about 400 left in the wild.