Showing posts with label National Geographic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Geographic. Show all posts

Saturday, 16 November 2013

TIGER TENSION


                            
a stalking tigress - tension indeed © Mike Richards
“Tiger, tiger, burning bright” … one of the most powerful predators in the world. Beautiful but deadly, elusive and endangered, a few still survive “in the forests of the night”.


a tiger's roar makes your heart leap © Mike Richards

Tigers are one of the most desirable creatures in the natural world so I was keen to film these magnificent big cats, to show them hunting, the cubs playing and the beauty of their forest home, most of which would have to be filmed from elephant back with a twenty foot tripod. We got charged by Lakshmi when filming her cubs ; she certainly got our attention. The elephant wasn’t happy either!


big aren't they - this one was killed by an even bigger male
stars of the show - two of our three cubs
Our film was made for the BBC and National Geographic and is set in Kanha National Park in central India. Ace cameraman Chip Houseman and I decided to tell the story of just one tigress and her struggles to raise her three cubs in this dangerous [for tigers] world. We called her Lakshmi, after the ‘Goddess of Fortune’ and hoped her name would prove prophetic.

Lakshmi resting in the shade © Tom Mangelsen
It certainly was for Chip and I, for the film won us a BAFTA for cinematography, the ultimate accolade … and if you wish to see this film, it will be showing in the second half of a fund raising film show I am giving on behalf of the Dorset Wildlife Trust. I’ll be telling a few stories about the filming and some of them might even be true … and answering any questions you may have.
as good as it gets - awards are always earned by team effort

'the eyes have it' © Tom Mangelsen
All funds raised will go towards the habitat creation and enhancement being carried out by the DWT on our lovely local river, the Allen.
It might only be thirteen miles long but it is a jewel flowing through the Dorset countryside and through Wimborne on it’s way to the River Stour.

the River Allen - a jewel in Dorset's crown
The Allen is a chalk stream, one of only 160 in the world and one of the best examples, for it is a stronghold for the white clawed crayfish and still supports a small population of water voles, both seriously endangered species.

source of the river, water so clear it's invisible
brown trout thrive
grayling to record size
The crystal clear nutrient rich water provides food and a home for an impressive sixteen species of fish, most notably proper native brown trout and seriously big grayling, the river having once provided the rod caught record at 3.10 to our ex.postman and friend, Owen Wentworth. Lots of big roach and dace come up the clear stream from the Stour to spawn on the clean gravel in April and two years ago I saw a roach that had my eyes out on stalks ; it must have been close to three pounds.

sixteen species in all, including big roach
filming but wishing I was catching
I have made a film about this lovely river for the Dorset Wildlife Trust in the hope of raising the profile of this important waterway and showing people the hidden treasures below the surface. ‘Out of sight, out of mind’ is an appropriate saying when it comes to our fish life and the film certainly succeeds in making folk sit up and take notice.

perch in the mill pools
I am in the process of updating it to include some of the hard work being carried out by the Trust to enhance habitat for the white clawed crayfish, water voles and fish life … and the river certainly needs all the help it can get. In October the flow was 50% down on the seasonal norm and some of it had dried up … and with 8,200 new houses planned for this area in the next few years, I wonder where all the water is coming from?! Add to that the substantial amounts of water required for ‘fracking’ and the future seems bleak … but it doesn’t have to be if we keep fighting for our gem of a chalk stream.

plenty of kingfishers adorn the chalk stream
So please come along to the show and support the work of the Trust before it’s too late. DWT staff will be there to answer questions and I’ll be on hand to add my bit too. I held a fund raiser like this in May and we filled the place, the 300+ folk raising sufficient funds to enable more habitat enhancement to be carried out this Autumn.

The film is called “Liquid Gold” … ‘we can live without gold, we die without water’! Tickets can be bought from the Allendale Centre in Wimborne where the films will be shown, also from DWT HQ.

ALLENDALE CENTRE, WIMBORNE – 01202/887247
DORSET WILDLIFE TRUST – 01305/264620

Friday 29th November – 19.00 for 19.30 start. Tickets £10 or £5 for children – all proceeds go to the River Allen Project …details on the DWT website.

Monday, 29 April 2013

LIVING ON THE EDGE


                  
            “If you’re not living on the edge, you’re taking up too much space”

searching at dawn doesn't get any better © Laurie Campbell
This is a creed that I admire, written by Tim Smit, inspirer for the restoration of the ‘Lost Gardens of Heligan’ in Cornwall … and isn’t it wonderful that spring has finally arrived, the leaves of our trees unfurling and our shrubs in glorious flower.

camellias worthy of Heligan

view from our office window - nice!

camellias, magnolias and amelanchier - spring is here at last
I love our garden, despite the fact that looking after it stops me going fishing … but I make no apologies for writing this promotion for our charity film show on Friday because without an audience we won’t be able to achieve all the restoration of our local River Allen that the Dorset Wildlife Trust plan for the next few years.

such a beautiful big cat © Laurie Campbell
I guess in a career spanning over fifty years in which I’ve made more than sixty wildlife films there are going to be one or two special favourites and ‘Puma – Lion of the Andes’ certainly counts as one of them. It also fits the title ‘living on the edge’ for trying to film pumas in the wild was considered an impossible task. However, I promised National Geographic that I would at least return with a film about a beautiful place and here’s a collection of happy snaps friend Laurie Campbell and I took during our time there. Laurie was there for just six weeks, I was there on and off for over two years … but enough words … we hope you enjoy the pics … and if you do, please come along to watch the film on Friday 3rdMay, at 19.00 for 19.30 at the Allendale Centre in Wimborne, Dorset.

condor country © Laurie Campbell
We will also be showing a little film about the river Allen … and much to the relief of Nat.Geo. we did film pumas … in fact, I was paid the ultimate compliment at the UK’s International Film Festival, ‘Wildscreen’ when out of about 650 films the puma film not only won the award for ‘Best Adventure Film’ but better still, the 700 or so delegates from around the world chose it their ‘Best of Festival’. We hope you can make it to the show.
condors look big even in these mountains © Laurie Campbell



remains of puma kills provide a feast © Laurie Campbell
Guanacos, South American camels and progenitor of the llama are the pumas favourite prey. Weighing 250lbs. they are formidable prey and take some killing.
young guanacos - puma snacks © Laurie Campbell

scraps provide food for Chilean foxes © Laurie Campbell

the camp pet and unlike our puma, habituated to food © Laurie Campbell

cheese and dog biscuits were top of the menu
a beautiful place to live © Laurie Campbell
surprisingly comfortable, even for months on end
filming at night made the hairs stand on end © Laurie Campbell
she had big teeth © Laurie Campbell

do these cave paintings show an ancient farmer being stalked by a puma?
looking for trouble © Hugh Miles

spitting mad - rivalry for the ladies gets violent © Laurie Campbell
great friend since childhood and farmer of guanaco, Robin Pratt shared a memorable return visit for my 60th birthday 
the lakes provided wonderful brown trout fishing © Hugh Miles and all those below

a splendid fish ... and it made a change from tined tuna
fierce winds were a frequent hazard - I got blown over a couple of times

wind off the glacier created amazing skies


southern beech - smashed by storms
a magical place to work
the largest ice cap in South America was close by
thermal underwear winters
at least I could see where she was heading
spring arrives with a glorious splash of colour

carpets of flowers for guanaco to feast on © Laurie Campbell
torrent ducks thrived in the fast water
huemul - thought to be the rarest deer in the world

large magellanic woodpeckers certainly shift some timber

hip replacement country © Laurie Campbell
© Laurie Campbell  and below
but it was worth it
what a place for me to take pictures and make a film! © Hugh Miles

The show will end with an auction for this wonderful photograph of my star cat, Penny the puma, kindly donated by friend Laurie Campbell. Please don't come with short arms and deep pockets! The river needs all the help it can get.
when she looked at me like this I wondered what she was thinking and hoped it wasn't 'dinner'! © Laurie Campbell