For the first time ever, BBC Earth will be streaming live from the Big Cats 24/7 camp in Botswana.
Fans will have the unique opportunity to ask questions to the on-screen talent directly from the BBC Studios Natural History Units' production shoot.
The event is scheduled to take place at 2pm (BST) on 29 September when BBC Earth will be streaming live from camp in the Okavango Delta Botswana exclusively to the BBC Earth YouTube channel.
The live stream will feature four of the BBC’s on-screen camera operators including, Anna Dimitriadis, Gordon Buchanan, Brad Bestelink and Sets Nthomiwa who are currently there filming series two of Big Cats 24/7. They will be ready to answer natural history enthusiasts’ questions during the live session.
Get your questions in!
On Wednesday 18 September at 2pm (BST) the BBC Earth Instagram page will open to fans to pre-submit their questions ahead of the live stream on 29 September. During the event, the team on the ground will be ready to answer questions from natural history enthusiasts live from the camp.
Catch up with the first series
The first series of Big Cats 24/7 is currently available to view on BBC iPlayer and PBS in the US, where an elite camera team follow a group of African big cats, day and night, for six months. Filmed using the very latest technology, Big Cats 24/7 gives viewers an unprecedented insight into the lives of the lions, leopards and cheetahs of Botswana’s awe-inspiring Okavango Delta – a place described as one of Africa’s last great natural sanctuaries.