From the savannah to suburbia – three bush boys, out of their lane.

Unfiltered. Unscripted. Unpredictable.

Available everywhere – new episodes every Tuesday

WILDLY OFF THE PATH

Three natural history filmmakers. Years spent living and working together in the bush. Now desperately trying to make sense of life outside of it.

Wildly Off Track is what happens when life in the wild collides with the real world.

Unfiltered. Unscripted. Unpredictable. Converations about filmmaking, chaos, culture shock – and everything in between. The kind of chat that should usually happen around a fire…not behind a microphone.


WILDY OFF THE LEASH

GREG HARTMAN

Zimbabwean safari guide, biologist and wildlife camera operator, Greg is known for doing his homework, reminding everyone else he has, usually moments before finding himself under attack for it.

Featured on Emmy-nominated Living With Leopards (Netflix) and Big Cats 24/7 (BBC and PBS), he brings credibility, calm… and just enough smugness to keep things lively.

REA SCHULTE TO BRINKE

Safari guide, wildlife camera operator and selfstyled ‘Head of Marketing’. Half Motswana (a native of Botswana) half German, Rea combines discipline with a talent for saying exactly what he shouldn’t.

A key member of the Big Cats 24/7 team, he’s still waiting for the recognition he’s convinced is long overdue

TRISTEN WOODWARD

Wildlife Camera Operator and fixer of problems he’s usually created. Born and raised in Botswana, Trist is far more at home in the bush than anywhere with WiFi.

Part of the team behind Emmy-nominated Our Planet II (Netflix) and frequently getting bleeped out on Big Cats 24/7, he specialises in capturing chaos — both on and off camera.



WILDLY OFF THE MARK

PRODUCER MARK

Whilst working for the BBC’s Natural History Unit, Mark had the misfortune of meeting Greg, Rea and Trist in the Okavango Delta. Realising they were about to descend on the UK, he made the questionable decision to put them behind microphones.

A Producer/Director with credits including Big Cat’s 24/7, Deadly Mission Shark and Jaguar Journals, he’s perhaps best known for getting smacked in the nuts by a rare-breed sheep on BBC’s Animal Park – arguably less painful than coordinating three unruly bush boys.  He now spends his time (fairly ineffectively) trying to keep Wildly Off Track from completely derailling.


WILDLY ON TRACK

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