Survival with Ray Mears

Survival with Ray Mears
Created by Ray Mears
Presented by Ray Mears
Country of origin United Kingdom
No. of series 1
No. of episodes 3
Production
Running time 60 minutes
Release
Original network ITV, STV, UTV
Original release Apr-May 2010
Chronology
Preceded by Ray Mears' Northern Wilderness
Followed by Wild Britain with Ray Mears
External links
Website

Survival with Ray Mears is a 3 part television series hosted by Ray Mears, as he tracks predators in their natural habitats. The series was broadcast by ITV, and was billed as the return of the Survival brand. It was followed by Wild Britain with Ray Mears.

Survival consists of three, hour-long, programmes, focusing on Mears' tracking of the world's top predators. He follows the leopard in Namibia, the bear in British Columbia, and the wolf in Central Idaho.

An underpinning theme is the threats faced by each species: in Idaho the crew arrives with only days to countdown before the wolf’s status as a protected species is lifted, and local farmers indicate their intention to begin hunting them; in British Columbia the impact of global warming on the salmon population is felt by the bear; and in Namibia the uneasy co-existence between leopards and local farmers is highlighted.

Episode 1: Leopards

In the first episode of Survival, Ray Mears arrives at the 270 square-mile Erindi Game Reserve in Namibia, a territory he describes as ‘one of nature’s richest environments’. The reserve is surrounded by farmland, and leopards that stray onto them risk being shot by farmers anxious to protect their livestock.

He aims to track his favorite predator: the leopard, an elusive big cat which Mears believes is ‘hardly understood.’

He is joined by his duo of wildlife camera men – Isaac Babcock and Shane Moore, and Natasha De Woronin, who runs the Global Leopard Project. De Woronin needs Mear’s tracking skills to help find male leopards, which have so far eluded her. They intend to fit the leopards with radio collars to help build a map of their movements across the reserve.

Episode 2: Bears

In the second episode of Survival, Mears travels to the wilderness of British Columbia’s Pacific Coast region. He aims to track grizzly and black bears, and especially the rare Kermode or Spirit bear, notable by its pure white fur. It is thought that there are only 400 alive today.

Mears touches down at the fishing outpost of Klemtu, and hires a boat to the remote Mussel Inlet. He finds tracks of grizzly bears taking part in the annual salmon run which is in full swing. Prints eventually lead him to a grizzly mother and a couple of two-year-old bear cubs. The crew encounters a massive grizzly male, at which point they carefully retreat.

Leading the team on a final search, Mears find white hairs on a bear trail near a babbling stream, evidence of the rare Spirit bear.

Episode 3: Wolves

In the final episode, Mears and his wildlife crew turn their attention to tracking wolves in the Sawtooth Mountains of Idaho. Wolves are secretive animals, which makes searching for them difficult. He has ten days to track them before they are taken off the state’s endangered species list, after which point they can be hunted.

From the town of Stanley, Mears hikes into the small valleys that drain into the Salmon River. He discovers the tracks of some elk, the principle prey for wolves, and soon finds the tracks of a wolf nearby.

The following day the team get a sighting of a small group of wolves and eventually come across an entire pack of around a dozen, following the lead of a silver-backed alpha male. A young female dies during the night, at which point Mears becomes tearful.

Worried that the rest of the pack might have suffered the same fate, Mears leads the team on an urgent search. Ultimately they make another sighting of the wolves preying on rodents. It is a relief for Mears and the whole team; providing an emotive finale to the series.

See also

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, March 23, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.