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Schedule

The Cheetah Orphans
Sunday Nov 22 at 8:00 PM
WGBH 2

The Cheetah Orphans
Sunday Nov 22 at 8:00 PM
WGBH HD

The Cheetah Orphans
Sunday Nov 22 at 11:00 PM
'GBH Kids

The Cheetah Orphans
Monday Nov 23 at 12:00 AM
WGBH 2

The Cheetah Orphans
Monday Nov 23 at 12:00 AM
WGBH 44

The Cheetah Orphans
Monday Nov 23 at 12:00 AM
WGBH HD

Where to watch

Nature

For more than a quarter-century, Nature has brought the beauty and wonder of the natural world into American homes, in the process becoming the benchmark of natural history programs on American television.

Recognizing Nature's vast potential as a learning resource, PBS offers educational materials free of charge to every elementary and middle school teacher in America. These include a Teacher’s Guide, classroom poster, DVD of select Nature episodes, and take-home activities. A Nature comic book for children ages 10 to 12, also free, is distributed through retail outlets, education centers, and museums nationwide, including the American Museum of Natural History.

Nature website

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Richard Joseph 10.25
What a tragic end to a beautiful story. Its time to jettison the BLM and to prosecute its political cronies.

Fellowship of the Whales
Premierres Nov. 15


In Hawaii, where new land is born as volcanic rock, another birth takes place. A baby humpback enters the world and joins the 3,000 or more whales that congregate in the warm waters off Hawaii each winter to mate and give birth. This is the story of her first year of life. Over twelve months she will learn many skills from her mother, and eventually they will make the several-thousand-mile journey together to Alaska's southeast coast.

 

Humpbacks travel between Hawaii and Alaska every year, guided by their internal compass. The krill-rich waters of Alaska's Alexander Archipelago are the whales' summer feeding grounds, an environment very different from the calving grounds they have left behind in Hawaii. Here, more than the water temperature changes, the behavior of the whales changes, as well. While fiercely competitive in the breeding season in Hawaii, fighting for mates and protecting young, the opposite is true in Alaska. Whales cooperate, working in teams to gather food in the most efficient way possible. When the summer ends and the food is gone, mother and baby will head back to Hawaii again.

 

The young humpback calf has only a year to learn the subtleties of whale society before she is left by her mother to continue her education on her own, learning from observation and experience. It's an incredible journey between two strikingly different environments that reveals the true complexity of the fellowship of the whales.


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Kilauea: Mountain of Fire

Hawaii, forged in fire, shaken by seismic upheavals, and pounded by the sea, is a fabulous paradox of nature.

 

The Hawaiian chain of islands, made up of six main islands plus two smaller ones, stretches for more than 1,500 miles through the heart of the Pacific Ocean. It is a place of idyllic beauty. But it is also a land of volcanic fury, raging mountaintop blizzards, dangerous rockslides, monster waves, and even tsunamis.

 

Kilauea, on the Big Island of Hawaii, provides the most dramatic display of volcanic power. The volcano’s newest cone, Pu`u `O`o regularly spews molten rock and its steady flow of lava in the past two decades has added more than 500 acres to the island.

 

High above the sea at nearly 14,000 feet is Mauna Kea, which rises above 40 percent of the Earth’s atmosphere, making for ideal stargazing. The summit of Mauna Kea is usually barren and dry, but in the winter the crest experiences blizzards with winds that whip up to 70 miles an hour.

 

When a blizzard rages on Mauna Kea, chances are good that down at sea level, it’s pouring. Torrential storms are common and can be very destructive. On Oahu, one community found itself in peril after tons of rock rolled down from the hills above. A veil of steel mesh was used to contain the hillside. It will keep the rocks in check for now, but erosion is an inevitable part of the natural order.

 

On the north shore of Maui waves that originate as far away as Siberia sometimes rise to as much as 70 feet as they break here, earning both the waves and the beach the nickname “Jaws.” Monster waves like these are seen rarely, but lifeguards are vigilant in their efforts to spot them because they can swallow a person in an instant. Still, surfers come from all over the world for a single ride on these shores that may last less than half a minute.

 

Far deadlier than the waves at Jaws are tsunamis. These fast-moving walls of water are triggered by earthquakes or landslides and have killed more people in Hawaii than any other natural disasters.


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A Mystery in Alaska

An examination of the decline in sea lions.

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Andes: The Dragon's Back

An exploration of South America's Andes.

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Animals Behaving Worse

Woes that arise when humans encroach on animals' habitats.

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Arctic Bears

What the future may hold for polar bears.

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Black Mamba

The black mamba snake, native to Swaziland, is examined.

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Born Wild: The First Day of Life

A look at baby animals in their first days.

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Clever Monkeys

A look at monkeys and their sophisticated societies.

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Cloud: Challenge of the Stallions

An update on Cloud, the wild stallion.

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Crash: A Tale of Two Species

The horseshoe crab and the red-knot shorebird.

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Crime Scene Creatures

How plants and wildlife are used to solve crimes.

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Eagles of Mull

The wildlife on the Scottish isle of Mull is highlighted.

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Encountering Sea Monsters

The underwater world of octopuses and squid is explored.

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Fellowship of the Whales

The first year in the life of a humpback whale.

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Frogs: The Thin Green Line

The extinction threat faced by frogs.

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Holy Cow

A look at cows' effect on human culture.

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Horse and Rider

Relationships between horses and their riders are examined.

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Is That Skunk?

The intriguing world of skunks is explored.

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Killers in Eden

A relationship between whalers and orcas.

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Life in Death Valley

Life in Death Valley is explored.

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Murder in the Troop

The story of twin baboons in Africa.

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Raptor Force

Raptors such as the peregrine falcon, golden eagle.

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Rhinoceros

Daniel Stern narrates a look at rhinoceroses.

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Sharkland

The shark-filled waters off the coast of southern Africa.

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Silence of the Bees

Season 26 opens with a report on the disappearing honeybee.

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Superfish

The world of billfish (marlins, sailfish and swordfish).

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Supersize Crocs

A search for giant crocodiles (over 20 feet) in Australia.

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The Cheetah Orphans

Two orphaned cheetah cubs are raised.

Sunday  November 22  8:00 PM  WGBH 2

Sunday  November 22  8:00 PM  WGBH HD

Sunday  November 22  8:00 PM 

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The Desert Lions

The resurgent lion population of the Namib Desert.

Sunday  November 29  11:00 PM  'GBH Kids

Monday  November 30  12:00 AM  WGBH 44

Monday  November 30  12:00 AM 

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The Good, the Bad and the Grizzly

Yellowstone's restored grizzly-bear population.

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The Gorilla King

A fascinating profile of a 33-year-old silverback gorilla.

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The Loneliest Animals

Efforts to preserve endangered species are examined.

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The Queen of Trees

Kenya's sycamore fig tree and the tiny fig wasp.

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The Vanishing Lions

A look at the challenges facing Africa's lions.

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Underdogs

Dogs rescued from animal shelters are taught new skills.

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Victorial Falls

Victoria Falls, the world's largest waterfall, is seen.

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Violent Hawaii

"Violent Hawaii" offers a panorama of nature in action.

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Voyage of the Lonely Turtle

A loggerhead turtle swims from Mexico to Japan to lay eggs.

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