26.10.08
Not for the faint-hearted: China's Killer Zoos
This report won the Wildscreen 2008 News award.
The judges stated that this was a report everyone should see.
Please be aware that this contains footage of a disturbing nature.
by Samantha Dixon
7.6.08
Giant panda sex secrets revealed
The giant panda's courtship and mating sequence - from boisterous beginning to noisy ending - has been filmed in the wild for what may be a TV first.
|
15.5.08
Wild China: Heart of the Dragon
Each programme looks at a different geographical area, and the Wild China team wasn't always sure what they'd find on their travels. “The sub-tropical south is a poor, and poorly researched, area, so getting precise information about what could be filmed, where and when, wasn't easy,” Chapman says. Eventually they fetched up in a remote area of Guizhou Province. “We were taken to Zhongdong cave, where it transpired we were to be lodged. Arriving as dusk fell, we were led under a wide arch beneath a huge cliff to find an entire village of 18 families housed inside the cave, including a school with six classes, plus a menagerie of cows, goats, pigs and chickens.”
Sometimes, of course, Chapman and his team had to rely solely on that vital weapon in the armoury of the natural history film-maker - infinite patience. “Red pandas are shy, rare creatures which live in dense mountain forests and spend a lot of time in the treetops. A key to our success in filming them were the Chinese scientists, who suggested we try an area, at a more accessible altitude, where they'd been spotted during the winter. But, even so, we were able to observe them only fleetingly.”
15.4.08
Wild China: Coming Soon

This is a land of unbelievable natural complexity from the glittering peaks of the Himalayas to the barren steppe, the sub-Arctic to the tropical islands, through deserts both searingly hot and mind-numbingly cold and see, in pioneering images, a dazzling array of mysterious, beautiful, wild and rare creatures.
I can't wait to see the rest of the series.
P1 - Heart of the Dragon (produced by Phil Chapman) -Sunday 11th May
an introduction to the diversity of China's natural history
P2 - Shang-ri La (produced by Kathryn Jeffs) - Sunday 18th May
Yunnan province harbours bizarre creatures such as dwarf alligators and giant salamanders
P3 - Tibet (produced by Gavin Maxwell) - Sunday 25th May
life at the extremes in the high Himalayas and on the Tibetan plateau
P4 - Beyond the Great Wall (produced by George Chan) - Sunday 1st June
The eastern part of China's vast interior is the beating heart of the country
P5 - Land of the Panda (produced by Gavin Maxwell) - Sunday 8th June
the bamboo forests and hills of central China, home to the giant panda
P6 - Tides of Change (produced by Charlotte Scott) - Sunday 15th June
wildlife along the shores of the South China Sea must share their world with 600 million people
It has been mentioned by the schedulers that the time may change to 8pm so keep an eye out in the tv guides but hopefully it will stay at 9pm.