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Saturday, October 21, 2023

Autumnwatch presenters share spectacular animal highlights and behind the scenes stories from new series specials for The One Show


 

The Autumnwatch group will unite with The One Show toward the finish of October to deliver a progression of three short movies and live connection ups on the spot, to bring crowds their much-cherished nature fix.

Getting back to screens on Tuesday 24, Wednesday 25 and Thursday 26 October, the nature series will exhibit a season rich with variety and lively movement.

In films uniquely went for The One Show, Chris Packham, Michaela Strachan and Gillian Burke will be on the spot the nation over, catching a portion of the staggering way of behaving and occasional changes of English untamed life.

Chris Packham



What's the most terrific natural life scene you've caught in your Autumnwatch exceptional?

The red deer trench in fall is breathtaking. Huge thundering warm blooded animals secured in battle, swaggering in the fog. It's the best show in the forest, base, energizing, including.

You caught the rutting season in this series of Autumnwatch. For what reason is the New Woods in Hampshire so exceptional for red deer?

The New Woods has a disengaged populace of enormous and solid Red Deer and we get to see them in their genuine territory timberland, not out on a fruitless slope. Among the trees they look and sound grand.

Gillian Burke

Creature ways of behaving are frequently eccentric - are there any which have stood apart for you while shooting your extraordinary?

We frequently contemplate what to pay special attention to with regards to untamed life, however tuning in out for untamed life can be truly, while perhaps not more, exceptional. On this shoot we were in the estate forest of Kielder Backwoods where the tree thickness implied a restricted view, and a large part of the untamed life high over our heads in the treetops. As we trusted that sunset and the owls will wake up, a group of crossbills passing above was a fabulous, ethereal sound.

How would you contrast catching nighttime creatures with daytime?

Recording nighttime creatures resembles a visit to the 'inverse reality' where nighttime creatures move about quiet while we, then again, are all the way hopelessly lost without the assistance of warm imaging and infrared cameras.

Moving toward brownish owl region must be finished on their conditions - unobtrusively and, once ready, standing frozen in place in obscurity to let the woodland settle and become accustomed to our presence. We were honored with a crisp evening where, In obscurity Sky Hold of Kielder Backwoods, a large number of pin-pricks of star light glimmering through the treetops was the main light we could see. Hearing the hoot and yell of the owls slicing through the backwoods air took the experience to a higher level.

Iolo Williams

RSPB Arne in Dorset has been a key recording area for the series. Why is this region so unique?

I've known Arne for a long time and it truly is an exceptional spot since it's so unique to anything I'd track down in mid Ribs. The range of species on one save makes the spot truly thrilling and you can track down everything from the goliath pontoon bug, smooth snake, Dartford Songbirds to sand reptiles across the board region. The variety of environments also creates the spot interesting and you can detect untamed life among the waterfront heaths, forests, tidal ponds and salt swamps.

Are there any breathtaking live untamed life minutes?

This spring our live cameras found a nightjar eating its own chick at Arne, something that has never been recorded. From time to time we record something progressive on The Watches and that second truly stood apart to me!

Michaela Strachan

Fall denotes a unique time in nature's schedule - is there a most loved untamed life second you have figured out how to catch?

One of my untouched most loved English untamed life encounters was a scene we shot in late Fall late-fall when we were in Arne in 2017. It occurred close to Poole Harbor in Studland and it was a Starling murmuration. We were inconceivably fortunate to see it as it was whenever it first had been seen there beginning around 1986/87 and from that point forward, obviously, it has been truly unusual. In any case, that evening, it was a really noteworthy presentation.

The nightfall was shocking and gave the most beautiful scenery to the exceptional airborne artful dance of thousands of starlings whirling and dipping up above, making uncommon examples overhead prior to channeling down into their colder time of year perch site in the reeds. The sight and sound was completely gorgeous.

You caught the biggest settlement of horseshoe bats in the UK. Is Devon home to some other intriguing natural life?

All things considered, a starling murmuration is a very decent beginning! You ought to have the option to find one in Devon, the Exe Reedbeds merit looking at as well as over Burgh Island. Do a touch of exploration however as they truly do change from one year to another and at times just beginning around November. In any case, on the off chance that you've never seen one, I'd truly suggest it. Harvest time is when red deer stags are in full flaunting mode and the red deer groove is generally worth an excursion to the fields.

Watching the show unfurl, to see which amazing stag will win his array of mistresses of hinds and merit the option to mate, is similarly essentially as energizing as the Rugby World Cup and certainly more invigorating than the cricket World Cup! Take a camera as you ought to get some wonderful photograph potential open doors with a touch of persistence and clearly regard for not upsetting or getting excessively close. In the event that you're searching for adorable, make a beeline for a portion of the protected sea shores and bays where dim seals are pupping, similar to Lundy Island or Ilfracombe Harbor. The puppies are exceptionally delicate to unsettling influence, so once more, clearly maintain a decent separation.

Go on an outing to the flowing mud pads at the Exe Estuary to see large number of wildfowl and waders. Our shores are a focal point for birds relocating from additional north to overwinter here and feed up on the wealth of food tracked down in mud pads. Take your optics and a bird book and attempt to recognize various species. It's an extraordinary season to go for a stroll in the heathlands and partake in the stunning purple and yellow shades of the heather and gorse and obviously an organisms introduction to the forest is generally a harvest time treat.

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