Wales On Sunday

I’d be livid if someone else did the commentary

Sir David Attenborou­gh returns with Planet Earth II – and a never-seen-before treat for viewers, the presenter tells SARAH MARSHALL that he got to tick off a lifelong dream too

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ANATURAL history broadcaste­r for more than 60 years and one of the world’s most travelled men, there can’t be much Sir David Attenborou­gh hasn’t seen.

But one animal has eluded the venerated naturalist throughout his entire career – until now.

“The snow leopard,” says Sir David, slowly drawing out each syllable as if to lavish the rare and regal mountain cat with plaudits.

“Three times I wrote it into scripts, and three times I failed,” he adds.

But while filming new wildlife juggernaut Planet Earth II, the highly anticipate­d follow-up to the 2006 series, the BBC struck gold.

“They put 20 or 30 camera traps around the Himalayan mountains,” he explains, describing the mammoth 34-week shoot, spanning three years, in Ladakh’s Hemis National Park.

“Suddenly, we’d captured a sequence of this most beautiful of animals, who roams an area of one every 100 square miles – that’s all.”

The resulting footage, which features the typically solitary cats having a bloody altercatio­n (about sex, of course), portrays remarkable species behaviour never seen before by TV audiences.

“If somebody else had done the commentary, I would have been livid!” Sir David exclaims. “I’ve been trying to do this for 60 years.”

The new six-part series focuses on a different eco-system each episode (Islands, Mountains, Jungles, Deserts, Grasslands and Cities), and was filmed across an ambitious 117 locations and 40 countries.

It’s 10 years since the original Planet Earth series was made and technology has advanced enormously. Sir David admits many of the new sequences simply wouldn’t have been possible

“Since I started making natural history programmes, the human population has tripled” – Sir David Attenborou­gh

in the past.

“When I started in 1954, the limitation­s were huge,” says the man whose excitement and sprightly enthusiasm easily belie his astounding 90 years.

“Now you can film in the dark, at the bottom of the sea, in the air; you can speed things up and slow things down.”

Impressive scenes in the new series include a roller coaster ride through a Madagascan forest canopy, cameras swinging in tandem with agile Indri lemurs, and a bird’s eye view of a golden eagle swooping between Alpine peaks, filmed by a paraglider.

“Drones also opened lots of windows on this series,” says executive producer Mike Gunton, referring to scenes shot in the narrow slot canyons of Arizona.

“It’s often very difficult to get a person in them, but we flew a drone down one to get the perspectiv­e of water running through. It’s a wonderful shot.”

Far greater challenges faced the team on the remarkable Zavodovski Island, a remote, uninhabite­d volcanic land mass in the Southern Atlantic Ocean. in 1954 It took producer Elizabeth White a year to secure permission to visit the world’s largest penguin colony of more than 1.5 million chinstraps. Very few people have ever set foot on the inhospitab­le terrain – although David can count himself among them. He arrived by helicopter from an icebreaker ship back in 1980.

“What you’ve got to realise is, whenever you say, ‘Nobody’s ever done this’, he’ll say, ‘I’ve done it’,” says Mike, laughing. A lot has happened in the last decade, but as Sir David is well aware, not all changes have been positive.

Continuing a theme running through his recent production­s, conservati­on issues underpin much of Planet Earth II. “We’re poisoning the planet,” Sir David says, with an unequivoca­l solemnity that clearly weighs heavily on his shoulders. “Climate change deniers are living in a false world.”

Our voracious appetite for fossil fuels, industry and – above all – space are the root of the problem.

“Since I started making natural history programmes, the human population has tripled. They all

want places to live, schools for their kids, roads. And who’s to say no? There’s less and less space for the wild creatures.”

The potential for human and wildlife conflict is addressed in the series’ final episode, Cities. Surprising­ly, many animals appear to do well in concrete jungles – and some even thrive.

“The densest population of peregrine falcons can be found in New York,” reveals Sir David, who narrates scenes featuring the world’s fastest animal soaring past Manhattan’s iconic Empire State and Chrysler buildings.

“The skyscraper­s have become their cliffs, and they’ve got plenty of pigeons to feed on.” Episode producer Fredi Devas also refers to footage of langur monkeys living harmonious­ly alongside communitie­s in Jodhpur as evidence we can all get along. Sir David shares this optimistic outlook. “You don’t want the whole of creation coming into a city, but there are certain things you can welcome, which is a joy for them and for you. There are leopards in Mumbai hunting amidst a very dense [human] population.” Success stories are also unfurling closer to home. Fittingly, Sir David closes Planet Earth II with a scene shot on the very top of the Shard. On this occasion, though, it was an experience he could have passed up. “It was windy, smelly and not all that nice,” he confesses. “There was a lot of naked metal around.” An enduring profession­al, he filmed the scenes, which were shot from a helicopter circling 50ft away. So is there anything he wouldn’t do in the name of a nature documentar­y? “Anything’s possible with an experience­d crew,” he affirms, pausing before adding with a mischievou­s smile; “they say you just have to run faster than the polar bear. But you don’t. You have to run faster than the camera man.”

Planet Earth II begins on BBC1 tonight at 8pm

 ??  ?? Sir David Attenborou­gh says advances in technology now allow the BBC to capture moments they could only dream of when he started out
Sir David Attenborou­gh says advances in technology now allow the BBC to capture moments they could only dream of when he started out
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