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It's a universal dream
to fly like a bird.
To soar on wings into the heavens.
But it's nothing
compared to the reality.
Experience our planet
as never before.
A bird's-eye view.
This is a journey
that will embrace the world
showing us astonishing
natural events
extreme challenges
and hard-won rewards.
This is the world on the wing.
It's spring in the Gulf of Mexico,
in the far south of North America.
Families of snow geese are
soon to begin an epic journey
across a continent.
It's a migration made by
millions upon millions of birds.
Before they leave,
individual families
join thousands of other geese
preparing for the great trek
northwards.
They become one of a crowd made
up of hundreds of other families.
But this spectacular gathering
doesn't go unnoticed.
Out of the heavens
soars America's national bird
an aerial predator
of cunning and power.
The parents warn their young, and
the message spreads like wildfire.
The bald eagle flushes the birds,
checking for signs of weakness.
The panic spreads
like a Mexican wave,
but still, among the masses,
the families stick together.
As more and more families
take to the air,
they create a snowstorm of geese
that confuses the eagle.
The massed ranks create a whiteout,
impossible to see through.
She must look for easier options.
Overwintering coots
are a far better bet.
Unlike geese,
they need a long take-off.
They are also weak fliers.
It heads back to the water
and performs a disappearing act
diving two metres
below the surface.
But the game isn't up yet.
Another coot dives,
but the water's shallow,
and the eagle's pin-sharp vision
can see him.
It's a fatal mistake.
The eagle will follow
the migrating flocks,
hoping for yet more opportunities.
It's 3,000 miles away.
They become part of a spring
migration across the continent,
one that features
millions of other birds.
Brown pelicans are one of
America's most charismatic birds.
They breed in the warm waters
of Baja California,
but travel north in search of fish.
The brown juveniles are still
learning the ways of the ocean.
Their more colourful elders
have many secrets to pass on.
The youngsters must learn the habits
of every sea creature below.
He soon discovers that some
can guide him to a meal.
Humpback whales
are the easiest to spot
they have travelled over 2,500 miles
from the Arctic to breed here.
The males announce their arrival by
slapping their five-metre long fins.
But this "breaching" is a more
spectacular way of gaining attention.
make quite a splash!
The pelican soon discovers
that these show-offs
have nothing to divulge
at this time of year.
They are too preoccupied
with each other.
Dolphins, on the other hand,
are a different proposition.
The youngsters learn that dolphins
follow schools of anchovies.
Huge pods form around
the biggest shoals.
The pelicans take their cue
to dive from the dolphins.
The deeper the fish,
the higher the birds dive.
The young pelican is perfectly
adapted for plunge attacks.
As he hits the surface,
his legs and wings thrust backwards,
forcing his bill around his prey.
His pouch gapes,
sucking in ten litres of water
as his upper bill closes the trap.
Brown pelicans leave these
pleasant, balmy seas
when fishing opportunities
arise further north.
Birds of prey arriving
from South America
have their own
appointments to keep.
Many red-tail hawks stop
for a bite to eat
at Bracken Cave in southern Texas.
High on the menu are
that have just arrived
from Mexico to breed.
It's the largest gathering
of mammals on the planet.
As the bats leave
to feed each evening,
they run the gauntlet
of the waiting hunters.
For a rookie hawk that's just
arrived, they're quite a challenge.
She has to learn how to catch them.
But she's pitched against the fastest
and most agile bats in the world.
They run rings round her.
The sheer numbers are overwhelming,
especially for a beginner.
She tries again.
Then again.
Finally, she spots a bat
that's strayed from the mass,
and flicks her back claw
to hook it.
Impressive stuff, but nothing
compared to the real top guns.
These experienced hunters
have learnt the best technique,
dive-bombing
the bats at over 100 mph.
The best can catch a bat with one
talon while still holding another.
The "best of the best"
stay for the entire summer,
but most migrating hawks simply use the
cave as a drive-through restaurant.
Like hawks, snow geese
travel along well-defined routes,
known as flyways.
The Mississippi flyway
is the most popular,
as families can drop down
any time to rest or feed.
BOAT HORN BLOWS
Youngsters stick close
to their parents
those that are
making their first
migration will still
be learning the way.
The young will only need
to make the journey once
to remember it for a lifetime.
But not all routes
are quite so easy.
Birds taking the western route
have to cross hazardous deserts,
such as the Grand Canyon.
Hawks can use the updraughts
rising from the canyon walls
to glide onwards and upwards
to more forgiving lands.
The master of these travellers
is the bald eagle.
She, too, is exquisitely sensitive
to rising air currents.
She is a slope-soarer,
adapted to exploit the uplift
created by hills and cliffs.
There is no shortage of uplift here!
Apart from the wind,
the canyon appears to offer little
for such a water-loving bird.
But the gorge was
carved out by water.
And here, the mighty
Colorado still flows.
It has sustained life in these deserts
for the last 17 million years.
It still feeds the eagles
that are travelling through.
Just 85 miles further east
lies Monument Valley.
It has no obvious attractions
for migrating birds at all.
Even so, many snow geese
taking the western route
pass over it as they travel north.
Like their Mississippi counterparts,
the adults recognise
the landscape features,
and guide their young through.
But geese needing food or water
face more of a challenge out here.
Unlike the Mississippi, the desert
offers no food or water at all.
From the goose's perspective,
this is a hard land to cross.
Geese must flap hard and fast
to stay aloft
and push onwards to the fertile
lands that lie further north.
But like the walls
of the Grand Canyon,
the huge sandstone buttresses
deflect air upwards.
It's just the help a family needs.
Migrating geese
appreciate these free rides,
using them to join
other flocks flying overhead.
On the West Coast,
pelicans are also on the move.
They must keep to a strict timetable
if they are not to miss
a great feeding event.
They say, "A wonderful bird
is the pelican,
"his bill can hold more
than his belly can".
While it's true he could swallow
five kilos of fish in one gulp,
these rays are way
out of his league.
They trawl for tiny shrimps
using their mouths as a net.
They are also known as Devil rays,
and at times they appear to display
supernatural powers.
It seems they too can fly!
Why they indulge in such weird
aerobatics is anyone's guess.
But the pelican's aerial perspective
reveals that the jumps happen
around the edge of the shoal.
Perhaps they panic the shrimps
into the mouths of the other rays.
Or maybe they're just showing off!
But the rays' aerobatics
won't delay the pelicans.
They are heading for one
of the most bizarre
natural spectacles
in North America.
The youngsters follow the adults
as they navigate
to a very special beach in
the Sea of Cortez.
They are right on time.
The tide has reached
its highest point.
The sea now reveals its prize.
An entire shoreline,
carpeted in gulf grunion.
The adult pelicans know exactly
when the grunion will arrive,
passing on this knowledge to
the youngsters travelling with them.
The grunion surf ashore,
and the females burrow backwards,
laying their eggs
in the exposed sand.
The males then coil around
to fertilise them.
They are laying their eggs out of
the reach of aquatic predators,
above the high tide mark.
Their young will hatch on the next
spring tide and return to the sea.
These fish out of water should be
a doddle for a pelican to catch.
But they're missing
the right tools for the job.
Their bills are too unwieldy
to scoop the grunion from the sand.
The pelicans are relegated
to fishing in the surf zone
as the *** goes on behind.
Not the easiest place to fish,
especially on a rough day.
But as the fish make their getaway,
the pelicans seize their chance
and go back to what they know best
plunge diving on to their prey.
The marshlands of South Carolina
are the setting
for another strange fishing story.
One that involves
a very talented pod of dolphins.
They are closely watched
by a flock of great egrets,
who have become experts
on the dolphins' behaviour.
As the dolphins manoeuvre,
the egrets shadow them,
leap-frogging
from one spot to the next.
Their cue is the moment
a dolphin pops to the surface,
checking the position
of the nearest mud bank.
The egrets are poised
and ready for action.
Then it happens.
The dolphins drive
the fish shoal ashore.
As the fish flounder,
the dolphins scoop them up.
But the egrets also pile in.
This is the only place in the world
where dolphins "strand feed" like this,
and the local birds have learnt
to make the most of it.
As the tide drops further,
the dolphins search
for more fish shoals.
Strangely, the dolphins always use
their right sides to push ashore.
Their bellies flush pink
with the excitement of it all.
The young dolphins pick up this
technique from their parents,
as do the egrets that follow them.
Many no longer fish for themselves,
and totally rely upon
the dolphins' cast-offs.
The egrets are living proof
of birds' extraordinary ability
to adapt to the opportunities
on offer.
Snow geese taking the Mississippi
route pass over Nebraska.
Here, over the last 150 years,
natural grasslands have been
transformed into America's grain belt.
From the goose's perspective,
the changes are a major improvement,
and now the snow geese
population is booming.
It is increasing
at an incredible 5% per year
as farmers grow crops that the geese
can eat on their migration.
Many of the birds
that touch down here
will have been flying continuously
for three days.
They would have travelled 800 miles,
burnt over 3,000 calories
and lost a third of their
body weight to reach here.
The first priority is to
top up their lost reserves.
But even best-laid plans
are at the mercy of the weather.
An overnight snowfall
can blanket everything.
They have no option but to move,
even on empty stomachs.
But flying burns calories,
and many of the migrating geese
are pretty much running on empty.
Any young now have to rely on their
parents' knowledge of the area
without food,
they simply won't make it.
In San Francisco Bay,
the young pelican reaches
the end of his journey.
The Golden Gate Bridge
spans waters teeming with
some of the most diverse
marine life on the planet.
Pelicans only make short migrations,
and for many,
it's the end of their journey.
In fact,
the prison island of Alcatraz
is named after the
old Spanish word for pelican.
Throughout their travels,
pelicans have learnt to find food
by watching other animals
or using their ingenuity.
But here, the going is easy.
He can either catch fish
in the bountiful waters of the bay
or scavenge on waste discarded
by fishing boats.
He can even partner
with Californian sea lions.
Like dolphins, they help
find and corral the shoals.
With plenty of food to be had,
more than 1,000 sea lions laze
around without a care in the world.
It's a carefree end
to the pelicans' journey,
but it is the beginning of another.
These are California gulls,
a bird that lives on his wits around
the harbours of the Californian coast.
But despite their
love of the seaside,
each spring they hear
the call of the wild
and all 65,000 of them
up sticks and leave.
They head 200 miles inland to a barren
salty lagoon known as Mono Lake.
Here, towers of calcium carbonate
rise from the lake surface,
creating a surreal landscape.
It makes a stark contrast to the
comforts of the gulls' usual home
along the San Francisco seafront.
Even the water is poisonous
a caustic chemical brew
of alkaline salts.
Despite its lack of amenities, the
gulls flock here in their thousands.
Each morning, they wait for an event
that happens as the day warms up.
Suddenly, the shoreline fills
with vast clouds of brine flies,
billions of them.
For the gulls,
it's a feast like no other.
As the flies gather to breed
and feed, they turn the sand black.
His technique is anything
but sophisticated
he just opens his mouth and runs.
It may look inefficient,
but each fly
contains seven calories.
He just has to catch 60 a day.
Here, the living is easy
so the gulls come here each summer
to raise their families.
Food is also top priority
for snow goose families.
When snow covers everything,
there is none to be found.
YOUNG GEESE SQUAWK
But mother geese
know exactly where to go.
In fact, thousands of snow goose
families have exactly the same idea.
The marshes of
the Platte River Basin
offer plenty of natural food,
even in bad weather.
Two million geese take refuge here
as they wait for the weather
to change for the better.
But where geese gather,
so do the eagles.
The youngsters keep close
to their parents,
hiding among the masses.
As before, the eagle's tactic
is to divide and conquer,
harassing and fragmenting the flocks
to single out the weaklings.
But healthy snow geese
are ambitious targets
and there are thousands
of other waterfowl on offer.
Mallards are certainly worth a try.
The eagle encourages others
to join the hunt.
EAGLE CRIES
They pick out any weakened
by the ordeals of the journey.
MALLARD QUACKS
With so much prey around,
the eagles can relax and socialise.
They even start to play
with their food.
Missed!
The youngster sees
if he can do better.
Anyone can have a go.
Locking talons is a popular tactic.
Tackling is allowed
and soon everyone piles in.
Even scraps are used
for passing practice.
These games are all about
establishing relationships
and perfecting combat skills.
Bald eagles are
the most social of all eagles.
By playing games,
the young birds learn
survival skills from the adults.
The sport passes the time
as all the birds wait
for the weather to change.
As the days go by,
all along Nebraska's Platte River,
there is an air of excitement.
The weather has changed
in their favour.
It's time to check out.
launch themselves into the air.
And that's just a start.
Two million birds
are soon on the move again.
Many families head on north
over the Badlands of Dakota.
The barren landscape
soon gives way to natural grassland.
The prairies stretch
for hundreds of miles
and provide grazing for
the largest land mammal in America.
The bison attract
a very different flying traveller,
cowbirds.
As the bison migrate,
the cowbirds travel with them.
Like cuckoos, they even lay
their eggs in other birds' nests,
so they never have to stop moving.
They rely on the bison
to stir up insects.
They know their every move
and when it's wisest
to keep out of the way.
A dust-bathing bison
is a force to be reckoned with
but the cowbirds risk their lives
to grab fleeing insects.
BISON SNORTS
Males fighting over females
are a frequent occupational hazard.
But the birds are experts
on bison behaviour
and know just how to dodge
the battling beasts.
The bisons' collisions
are like a car crashing at 30 mph.
Wisely, the birds
stay out of the impact zone.
These one-ton beasts
and their feathered friends
once numbered millions.
But the same landscape changes that
have helped the snow geese prosper
have given the bison and cowbirds
little space to roam.
On the East Coast, in Delaware Bay,
another animal migration takes place
just as it has done
for aeons of time.
Over one million shore birds
arrive from South America
to take part
in this extraordinary event.
They time their visit
to the highest spring tides.
It's now that thousands
of bizarre, prehistoric creatures
emerge from the ocean.
Horseshoe crabs.
Like the grunion in Mexico,
they too aim to lay their eggs
out of the reach of predatory fish.
It's a plan that worked millions
of years ago, before birds evolved
but now the secret's out
and the crabs
suffer the consequences.
Sanderlings and sandpipers are
first to gather on the strand line.
They are like kids
playing dare with the waves
as they pluck the freshly-laid eggs
from the sand.
They gorge themselves silly.
They have a journey of 2,000 miles
ahead of them.
If the sanderlings' onslaught
wasn't bad enough for the crabs,
then the ruddy turnstones arrive!
Their rather unfortunate name
actually refers
to their reddish plumage.
But turnstone is a good
description.
They really do
leave no stone unturned
as they search for eggs
missed by the manic sanderlings.
Dunlin have longer bills
and can afford to take their time.
They probe for eggs that were
successfully buried by the crabs.
In this battle for the beaches
the crabs suffer huge losses.
Hundreds upturned by the waves find
it impossible to right themselves.
But for all this carnage,
the horseshoe crabs
are great survivors.
Only a few eggs need to escape
to allow enough young to return
to the beach in future years.
The birds now head northwards,
satisfied by an egg breakfast
that will last them the journey.
Snow geese travelling up
the East Coast of America
pass one of the greatest cities
in the world.
They've covered two-thirds
of their journey
in a little more than two weeks.
New York is a busy crossroads
for travelling birds.
Over 250 migrating species
still pass through each year
even though their marshlands
have been replaced by real estate.
Although things ain't
what they used to be,
the Big Apple does give some help
to the exhausted snow geese.
The buildings act like
the buttresses of Monument Valley,
channelling wind upwards
and giving geese a much-needed boost
as they move inland.
CAR HORNS, SIRENS
Now they will continue into Canada
and onwards
to their breeding grounds.
EAGLE CRIES
Bald eagles, also heading north,
spread out across the vast forests,
never straying far from water.
EAGLE CRIES
They head for melt-water streams
and estuaries,
as this is their best chance
for a meal.
One particular event
draws eagles like no other.
It also attracts grizzly bears.
BEARS GRUN The soaring eagle gets
the first sight of what's to come
thousands of sockeye salmon
on the starting blocks
for a race up the river to breed.
The eagle bides his time
as the bears lay claim
to the best fishing spots.
Younger eagles watch from
the sidelines, anxious to learn.
BEAR GROWLS
Around 15,000 fish
create the critical mass
that fires the starting pistol.
Once one goes, they all do.
As the river fills with salmon,
the bears go wild.
But the eagles hold back.
They're happy to let the bears
do all the hard work.
The cubs are torn between stuffing
themselves or catching more.
An eagle seizes the moment.
But she must eat fast.
Mother bear doesn't like others
stealing her breakfast.
But the bears
don't just compete with eagles.
Arguments over feeding rights
keep tempers running high.
BEARS ROAR
The eagle spots another opportunity.
As she eats,
she uses her wings to hide the fish
but she has just seconds to spare.
BEAR CUB YOWLS
Finally, the bears are stuffed,
eating just the fatty skin
and leaving the rest,
much to the birds' delight.
And the eagle
finally gets to eat in peace.
It's time for the eagles to move on.
They've got
one more appointment to make.
All the snow goose families are
nearing the end of their journeys.
Some pass over Niagara Falls on the
border between the USA and Canada.
Further west,
others cross the border
and head right for
the heart of the tundra.
As the geese catch up
with the retreating snow,
they stop one last time.
But hungry bald eagles
have gathered here too,
anticipating
the snow goose's arrival.
Maybe now, they will finally get
to feed on their favourite prey,
especially as the exhausted geese
are at their most vulnerable.
The young eagle buzzes the geese.
This time he's found a sitting
duck
a youngster
weakened by her long flight.
GEESE HONK
The snow goose fights back.
She even grabs his tail.
But the eagle
puts his training into practice.
GOOSE SQUAWKS
A remarkable escape.
Or is it?
The snow goose survives
against the odds.
And the young eagle
returns to the classroom.
Like all birds,
he will never stop learning.
As the weather clears,
the geese make the final short hop
onwards to their Arctic
breeding grounds.
They have travelled 3,000 miles
to reach here.
It's only now that
the young leave their parents
to raise chicks of their own.
The bond with their mother that
guided them across North America
is now formed
with their own offspring.
They will learn from her the
many secrets known only to birds.
CHICKS SQUEAK
In the next journey
across a continent,
we will fly with vultures,
flamingos and fish eagles
as we experience
a bird's-eye view of Africa.