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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Entertainment
Molly Pike

Secrets of I'm a Celebrity camp as contestants prepare to face Terror Tomb and Shaft Misery tasks

There's just days to go until the return of I'm A Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here! and a new batch of nervous celebs are preparing to head to the jungle for the first time.

New details about what will be waiting for them have now leaked — and they're in for a wild ride.

Bushtucker trials have been given scary titles like 'terror tomb', 'shaft misery' and 'Scar E Oke', reports the MailOnline .

Half the campmates will travel to the camp by jumping into the sea off a superyacht and swimming to shore in a race through potentially jellyfish infested waters.

The I'm A Celebrity 2019 line-up (ITV)
The area for the bushtucker trials (BACKGRID)

They will then travel by helicopter to a high rise building where they have to walk a plank.

The other half will get to head to camp in a much more relaxed fashion as they'll be driven in posh cars.

The Celebrity Cyclone has been pictured in the last few days, revealing that it will be back for the infamous task towards the end of the series.

The Celebrity Cyclone is back (BACKGRID)
The bridge to camp (ITV)

There is a gloomy looking black pond and a special area built especially for the bushtucker trials.

There seems to be some perks though, as the camp has a beauty salon and hot tub which might be used for rewarding campmates.

It was previously revealed how some of the I'm A Celebrity set isn't real.

The campmates often arrive by helicopter (ITV/REX/Shutterstock)

One of the most shocking discoveries was that the waterfall - where many a celeb has reinvigorated their career with a steamy bikini shower - isn't actually real.

"The waterfall, like the pool beneath it, was not part of the jungle at all, but a man-made creation," journalist Lauren Booth shockingly revealed after her stay in 2006.

She added: "Unless, of course, 'real' rainforest waterfalls get turned off between three and six every afternoon."

Then there's the small matter of the rocks that surround the jungle camp.

That same year, the late David Gest noticed that the boulders around the camp were actually hollow and appeared to have been made from papier-mache.

There's also a retractable canopy 50ft up in the air so the camp doesn't get rained on.

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