Wild Isles

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Wild Isles
GenreDocumentary
Narrated byDavid Attenborough
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original languageEnglish
Production
Running time58 minutes
Original release
NetworkBBC One
Release12 March (2023-03-12) –
9 April 2023 (2023-04-09)

Wild Isles is a 2023 British television

RSPB, World Wide Fund for Nature and Open University.[3][4] It was filmed over three years in 145 locations across the British Isles.[3]

The Guardian reported ahead of the series' start that a sixth episode would not be broadcast due to a fear of backlash from Conservatives and right-wing media over its themes of destruction of nature.[4] However, the BBC responded that Wild Isles was always planned as a 5-part series, and that the 'sixth episode' was a standalone feature called Saving Our Wild Isles to be released online.[5]

The series received positive reviews from critics.[6][7][8]

Episodes

No.TitleOriginal air dateU.K. viewers
(millions)
1"Our Precious Isles"12 March 2023 (2023-03-12)N/A
2"Woodland"19 March 2023 (2023-03-19)N/A
3"Grasslands"26 March 2023 (2023-03-26)N/A
4"Freshwater"2 April 2023 (2023-04-02)N/A
5"Ocean"9 April 2023 (2023-04-09)N/A

Episode 1: Our Precious Isles

This episode serves as an introduction to the series and the

Shetland Islands is home to a great variety of marine life and seabirds, including black-legged kittiwakes, northern gannets, northern fulmars, herring gulls and great skuas. In the waters around the island, a group of orca named the "27 pod" by researchers have learned to hunt common and grey seals
by following them into gullies where the seals sleep.

One reason the British Isles are so diverse is their

are shown as examples of this.

In the Cairngorms in the Scottish Highlands, temperatures can drop to minus 27 degrees Celsius in winter. Despite these freezing temperatures, golden eagles make their home here.

The

English oak trees are globally important. One oak in Blenheim Palace in Oxfordshire is 1064 years old. Oak trees provide homes for over 2300 species of animals and plants, including the white admiral, barn swallows, the coal tit and willow warblers. A female hazel dormouse climbs an oak to collect honeysuckle for her offspring, and narrowly escapes a tawny owl
.

In the woodlands, the flowering of

.

A habitat that is particularly rich in

field vole
.

On the island of Islay in the Inner Hebrides, 30,000 barnacle geese migrate. Reintroduced white-tailed eagles have learned to hunt them.

Chalk streams are one of Britain's most globally important habitats. In and around them, banded demoiselles mate, and a common kingfisher catches common minnows and brown trout.

Bass Rock in the Firth of Forth is home to the largest gannet colony in the world. The birds catch Atlantic herring and Atlantic mackerel by dive-bombing the water's surface.

In Skomer, Atlantic puffins catch lesser sand eels, which are then stolen from them by herring gulls and black-headed gulls. Lying down beside the puffins, David Attenborough reveals that hardly any of Britain's original wildlife remains, and that we must act now to preserve these creatures into the future.

Wild Isles on Location: Needles in a Haystack shows how the filming crew managed to get footage of the 27 pod of orcas hunting seals in the Shetlands.

Episode 2: Woodland

This episode looks at the woodlands of British Isles. These habitats support a great diversity of animal and plant life, yet hardly any of them still remain. Only 17% of Britain's original forest remains.

In a patch of Caledonian Pine Forest in the Cairngorms National Park in Scotland, some of the last woodland-dwelling golden eagles nest. The two chicks are brought a least weasel.

oak tree
that he has known for over 70 years, and yet the tree is likely over 700 years old.

In winter in the Forest of Dean, hazel dormice hibernate, and wild boar dig through the snow, which allows a European robin to hunt earthworms buried in the frozen ground.

In early spring,

yew trees
release their pollen into the wind in vast clouds.

In the Scottish Highlands, a male western capercaillie calls to attract females, and fights off a rival male. Capercaillie were once extinct in Britain, and are now on the brink of extinction once more.

In a deciduous broadleaf woodland near London, European red wood ants use formic acid to fight off a Eurasian jay and little owls, hunt a European hornet and a stag beetle, battle with caterpillars, and farm aphids for their honeydew.

In an ancient cemetery in

wolves and lynx
would have hunted even fully grown roe deer.

On the Knepp Estate in

, and battles with rival males, barely escaping with his life.

On the UK's west coast,

ash-black slugs
are shown.

In summer in the Caledonian Forest, the pinecones are ripe, and

Eurasian red squirrels
take advantage of this.

In the

English wasp nests before they migrate to Africa
.

Autumn begins, and the deciduous trees lose their leaves. This is the breeding season for European fallow deer.

Various

wood wide web is shown through time-lapse photography and computer-generated imagery
.

Almost half of Britain's tree cover now comes from

common barn owl hunts the starlings. This hunting behaviour, shown through a thermal imaging camera
, had never been seen before.

Attenborough ends the episode by discussing how we must protect and restore the woodlands of the British Isles.

Wild Isles on Location: Into the Canopy shows how the filming team captured footage of golden eagles in Scotland and a vast flock of starlings at their roost in Cornwall.

Episode 3: Grassland

Episode 4: Freshwater

Episode 5: Ocean

Score

The musical score was composed by George Fenton. This was the first time Fenton had composed a nature documentary score since 2011. The five soundtrack albums (one for each episode) contain the following tracks:

Episode 1: Our Precious Isles

  1. Wild Isles Introduction / Front Tiles (1:42)
  2. Orca (5:58)
  3. Geology (1:43)
  4. Birds Eye View (2:21)
  5. The Door Mouse (4:29)
  6. Bluebells (1:31)
  7. Pollenating (2:32)
  8. Lords and Ladies (2:43)
  9. Fox Cubs (2:30)
  10. Barnacle Geese (5:31)
  11. Damoiselles (4:15)
  12. Kingfisher (1:44)
  13. Gannets (3:17)
  14. The Puffins (4:04)
  15. The Message (0:44)
  16. Wild Isles Trail (0:26)
  17. Wild Isles End Credits (0:31)

Episode 2: Woodland

  1. Opening Titles (0:25)
  2. The Eagle (2:36)
  3. Woodlands (1:53)
  4. Robin's Friend (1:39)
  5. Pollen (2:16)
  6. Capercaillie (4:10)
  7. The Ants (3:55)
  8. Roe Deer (2:37)
  9. The Emperor (2:12)
  10. Strange Love (2:51)
  11. Red Squirrel (3:13)
  12. Honey Buzzard (3:39)
  13. Fallow Deer (2:49)
  14. Fungi (3:56)
  15. Starling, Pt. 1 (2:15)
  16. Starlings, Pt. 2 (2:36)
  17. Wild Isles End Credits (0:31)

Episode 3: Grassland

  1. Opening Titles (0:25)
  2. Grassland Intro (0:50)
  3. The Hares (3:21)
  4. The Macca (0:51)
  5. Lapwing Chick (2:39)
  6. The Fens (1:03)
  7. Wild Horses (1:13)
  8. Battling Horses (1:46)
  9. Avoiding The Owl (3:33)
  10. Witchcraft (4:00)
  11. Rabbits and Foxes (5:49)
  12. Invader (4:33)
  13. The Highland Fight (3:49)
  14. Adders (4:15)
  15. Han Harrier (3:53)
  16. Stags (4:54)
  17. Wild Isles End Credits (0:31)

Episode 4: Freshwater

  1. Opening Titles (0:25)
  2. Dragonfly and Introduction (2:31)
  3. River Journey (1:47)
  4. Dolphins Chase (1:16)
  5. Upstream and Leaping the Falls (3:01)
  6. Salmon Breeding (1:04)
  7. Beaver and Kits (2:38)
  8. Spidery Courtship (4:52)
  9. Bats at Night (3:33)
  10. Toads Crossing (2:20)
  11. Toadlets (2:34)
  12. Mayfly (4:21)
  13. The Shrew (3:03)
  14. Grebes (3:24)
  15. The Knots (4:13)
  16. Wild Isles End Credits (0:31)

Episode 5: Ocean

  1. Opening Titles (0:25)
  2. Marine (Opening) (3:04)
  3. The Seal Fight (3:41)
  4. Exploring the Shallows (1:23)
  5. The Seahorse (1:52)
  6. The Cuttlefish Story (6:18)
  7. Sea Slugs (2:02)
  8. Crabs en Masse (2:22)
  9. The Tides (1:14)
  10. Starfish Hunting (3:30)
  11. Otters (2:47)
  12. Protecting the Home (3:56)
  13. Exotic Creatures Basking Sharks (4:49)
  14. Skilful Hunters (3:20)
  15. Marine (Closing) (1:19)
  16. Wild Isles End Credits (0:31)

Spelling Mistakes

Some of the names of the tracks contain spelling errors, e.g. "door mouse" rather than dormouse, "pollenating" rather than pollinating, "damoiselles" rather than demoiselles, "han harrier" vs hen harrier, "macca" vs machair etc.

References

  1. ^ Cooke, Rachel (2023-03-12). "David Attenborough's Wild Isles makes me proud to be British, despite everything". New Statesman. Retrieved 2023-03-12.
  2. ^ "Wild Isles". The Webby Awards. 2022. Retrieved 30 May 2023.
  3. ^ a b "Attenborough's Wild Isles shows us our own 'spectacular' nature". BBC News. 2023-03-06. Retrieved 2023-03-13.
  4. ^
    ISSN 0261-3077
    . Retrieved 2023-03-13.
  5. ^ Mcilkenny, Stephen (2023-03-11). "Wild Isles: BBC denies episode of David Attenborough series pulled over fear of backlash - reports". The Scotsman.
  6. ^ Nicholson, Rebecca (12 March 2023). "Wild Isles review – David Attenborough's last hurrah makes for unmissable TV". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 September 2023.
  7. ^ Singh, Anita (12 March 2023). "Wild Isles, BBC One, review: Attenborough's onscreen swansong is a Great British beauty". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 15 September 2023.
  8. ^ Power, Ed (12 March 2023). "Wild Isles, BBC One, review: Attenborough's local series sits proudly along his more far-flung adventures". i. Retrieved 15 September 2023.

External links

Wild Isles at BBC Online