Dynasties (2018–…): Season 1, Episode 2 - Emperor - full transcript

Documentary following endangered species fighting for their survival. A colony of emperor penguins try to keep themselves and their chicks alive through the winter.

Autumn in Atka Bay,

Antarctica.

Just a few weeks ago,
this was open sea.

Now a new, frozen landscape is forming.

This new world appears devoid of live.

Well, almost.

An emperor penguin.

And he is not alone.

Thousands of emperors are coming
to this frozen bay.

They are here because the new ice

provides the safest place
for them to breed.



The ice will last nine months
before melting away next summer.

And they will need every day
of those nine months to raise

the next generation for this great
emperor dynasty.

But to do so, they will have to
survive the coming winter,

the coldest and the cruellest

on earth.

Emperors pair up anew every year

and although winter is fast approaching

the process of finding
the perfect partner

cannot be hurried.

New couples perform a graceful ritual

that will cement their committment
to each other.

Moving together in synchrony

is the key to creating a powerful bond.



And this bond needs to be
one of the strongest in nature.

Because the survival
of every family here

and, therefore, the survival of
this dynasty depends upon it.

A penguin is beautifully designed
for many things

but mating is not one of them.

Unfortunately, not all the penguins

have been able to find
a perfect partner.

And with time fast running out,

this female foregoes the formalities.

But this couple has already
bonded too tightly

to be split apart by an interloper.

Penguins unlucky in love

head back to spend the winter
feeding at sea,

because there's no food
out here on the ice.

The couples now face weeks of waiting

while their eggs develop.

But one pair appears
to have got ahead of schedule.

A bulge on a penguin's belly
is normally the sign

of a parent keeping
an egg warm on its feet.

But she seems to be trying to keep

a snow ball warm.

They appear to be getting
some practice for the real thing.

The days are becoming
shorter and colder.

Until finally

the sun sets for the last time
for two months.

It won't rise again until the spring.

Now they live in a twilight world,

under the bright Antarctic moon.

For this couple the long wait
for their egg is almost over.

The female senses it.

Her contractions hanve begun.

The next generation of emperors
is on its way.

Producing an egg takes
a huge amount of energy

such, that the females lose

a quarter of their body weight.

She hasn't eaten for over a month

and needs to return
to the ocean to feed.

She can't take
her precious egg with her

so she must pass it
to her partner to care for.

He has a special brood pouch

to keep it warm close to his skin.

If he doesn't get the egg
off the ice quickly, it will freeze.

Now she is free to go.

But she does seem rather
reluctant to leave.

He will now have sole responsibility
for the egg

all through the long, harsh winter.

He won't see his partner again
until the egg has hatched.

Over the next few days
every female in the colony

hurries away on the same 50-mile
march to the sea (20 km).

A freezing wind blowing in
from the heart of the continent

drives the temperature down.

To keep their eggs and themselves warm,

the males now perform

one of the most spectacular demonstrations
of cooperation in nature.

One by one,

they lock themselves into a huddle,

creating a giant incubator

made up of over
four thousand male penguins.

Each individual constantly
tries to push

into the best possible position
to keep himself

and his egg warm.

As a result, the entire huddle
is forever on the move.

Storm-force winds now drive
the temperature down

to minus 60 Celsius.

For the emperors on the outside
facing the wind,

the conditions become unbearable.

They have no choice but to break off

and try to get round
to the sheltered side.

He must get back on his feet,
but without letting go of his egg.

If he fails, the embryo inside
will rapidly freeze and die.

Once they arrive on the
sheltered side of the huddle,

they get some relief from the wind.

When the blizzard sets in here,

it rages for days on end.

Now the casualties are revealed.

Battered, starving and exhausted,

there is still no relief
for the survivors.

The storm has driven them
nearly a mile (1.6 km)

from the safest part of the ice.

It's a weary march back to
where they started from.

Now they re-form their huddle,

to be ready for the next storm.

Which will come inevitably.

Only after two months of brutal weather

Does the polar night finally
come to an end.

And with it comes a hint of warmth.

The return of the sun coincides
with the appearance

of the newest members of the colony.

I a matter of days there are
thousands of hungry mouths

all demanding food.

Their fathers haven't eaten anything
for nearly four months.

Yet they have kept back a vital reserve

penguin milk just for this moment.

But it's only enough

to keep the chick alive for a few days.

The females must return soon with food.

For some, it's already too late.

The first of the females are returning.

Fat and well-fed, more arrive

all with food for the chicks.

And not a moment too soon
for the waiting fathers.

A mother's first sight
of their young chick.

With their bond reaffirmed,
the whole family celebrates.

Now, at last, he can hand over
his precious chick to its mother.

But there are less fortunate females
here, whose chicks have died.

Yet their parenting instinct
is still strong.

The sight of a youngster being
handed over is irresistible.

More chickless females join in the melee.

The chick appears to be safe.

But it is no longer
with its true parents.

Theprospects for a kidnapped
chick are never good.

Despite their immense efforts
over the last three months,

this couple have nothing
to show for it.

For those couples
that have been successful,

it's the father's turn
to head back to sea

to get a much needed meal for himself

and to take his turn
collecting food for the chick.

The mother is now able to bond
with her new baby.

And urgently to feed it.

Its first taste of seafood.

But the times of hardship are not over.

Another storm and another white-out.

For some, this is a catastrophe.

They have tumbled
into a ravine in the ice,

with steep, slippery walls.

Chicks are now a deadly burden,

mothers carrying young
cannot grip the ice.

If she doesn't get out,
they will both die.

This mother has had to make
a terrible choice,

to save herself,
she has abandoned her chick.

One mother, at least, is not prepared
to give up on her chick.

Mother and chick are safe.

There is, occasionally,

a respite from the brutality
of Antarctica.

Clear skies, gentle winds

ans a particularly spectacular display

of the southern lights,

the aurora australis.

As the sun climbs higher every day,

it warms the ice.

Soon the emperos' frozen world

will start to melt away.

For the last few weeks,
the mother and father

have taken it in turn
to feed their offspring,

but its growing appetite will
soon force both parents

to go away fishing at the same time.

Now it's time to encourage
the month-old chicks

to stand on their own two feet.

Sometimes it takes a well-timed kick.

Now both parents can
head off to sea to go fishing.

For the first time the chicks
will have to face

the elements without
a parent to protect them.

Other adults certainly
won't look after them.

So lone chicks

gather together for comfort.

As the temperature drops

to minus 25, the chicks instinctively

create their own mini huddle,

just as their fathers do.

This is no time for a youngster
to be alone.

if they're lucky, some chicks may still

have the protection of a parent

taking a break from fishing.

But for the majority, the huddle
is their only shelter.

Even in this weather, adults must
still head back

to the sea to bring back food.

The instinct to follow adults
is still strong.

but in a blizzard that is a bad idea.

The adults' disappearance

leaves the chicks in confusion.

Lost and alone, his only hope

is that this adult is
heading back to the colony

and not away from it
across the frozen wastes.

With the last of the big storms over,

summer has arived.

The ice that has been
the penguins' home is melting.

These chicks are almost fully grown

and approaching independence.

Before they leave for the sea,
all emperors

adults and their chicks must moult.

For the youngsters, this marks
the arrival of adulthood.

Against all the odds
two thirds have survived.

But the annual disappearance
of their ice world

is a reminder that they face
an uncertain future.

Ocean temperatures are expected
to rise year on year.

This antarctic sea ice,

on which all emperor penguins rely,

may not freeze for
long enough each year

for them to complete their
extraordinary life cycle.

But as the whole colony
prepares to leave Atka Bay,

these parents have successfully raised

the next generation

in this emperors' dynasty.

To capture the extraordinary
story of emperor penguins,

the Dynasties team had to travel
to the end of the earth.

Neumayer research station will be home

to the film crew for nearly a year.

About 70 tons woth of food.

Got about 15 boxes of white cabbage.

Neumayer has everything they need.

But it's a different world outside.

It's really easy to feel
quite comfortable inside and...

this place is...

wild, really wild.

It's worth reminding
every now and again.

Inside!

The crew need five layers of clothing

before they can even
think of leaving the base.

As the final plane departs
they know that

it will be the last till winter
is over in eight months' time.

The plane just left and
that's us on our own now.

Nobody will be coming in case
something happened.

We're now all by ourselves.

When the team head out to explore
they discover

just how careful they have to be
working in this hostile world.

We've got across an enormous crack

so we're probably on an unsafe
piece of ice at the moment.

Oh my God!

Did you just hear that?

A deep crack at the edge
of the ice shelf like this

can be extremely dangerous.

Oh my word, it just goes straight down.

THis area is definitely not safe.

Incredible reminder of how...

unpredictable this place is.

It's just mind-blowing.

Six miles from the station (9.6 km),
permanent ice meets the ocean.

This is where the penguins
will soon be heading.

Once the sea is frozen,
the team will have to cross

the treacherous, newly-formes ice
to reach them.

Found a decent spot for the big guys to lower
me down onto the sea ice for the first time.

Will can act as a bit of
a safety man for me

in case something goes wrong.

These are our first three steps
onto the sea ice.

Definitely it is a bit nerve-wrecking

knowing that there's a couple of
hundred metres of water underneath us.

To find a safe route
the crew must check

the depth of the ice all the way.

Ice around 30 cm and above is stable.

This is a great moment for us.

We've finally made it to the colony.

Yes, very special.

When it's this still, and there's
this many birds in front of you,

and...

makes the place look
absolutely beautiful.

A few weeks later
the sun sets for the last time,

and Antarctica reveals
its harsher side.

We think it's probably minus 50.

The sun is somewhere below the horizon.

So won't be visible for another...

...six weeks, probably.

So this is something we're
gonna have to get used to.

It's easier said than done.

Oh, God!

Then the storms come.

A proper, proper weather now
and really, really strong winds.

The colony is just in front of us.

Sometimes it disappears
behind the snow.

It's been hovering around 100 km/h,
and since has picked up.

What these penguins are having to put
up with out there is just mind-blowing.

Finally we're coming
to the end of this storm.

There's all sorts of weird
rattling sounds and...

God honest, I don't know how this
station manages to stay standing.

Finally, the sun returns,
but the storms continue.

A break in the weather reveals
something the team had not expected.

I can hear a heck of a lot of noise
coming from just over the brow.

Oh man!

Oh, my word!

There are birds down there with chicks.

Film crews have to capture events
as they unfold

whatever their feelings.

I know it's natural, but it's...

bloody hard to watch.

We're just gonna have to obsereve them for
a bit and see exactly what's happening.

We've climbed back onto the top
because the weather

is coming in again and
we're just gonna have to pack up

and an adult wit a chick on its feet

managed to make its way up.

Amazing, he's using its beak, and
when he got to this last little leg

its wings!

Oh, man, if only the other 50
in there could do the same.

Hopefully the weather will clear again
tomorrow, we can get back down here

and fingers crossed, there will
be a few less birds in this hole.

Two days later the weather allows
the team to return to the colony.

Already the gully has claimed
more casualties.

The team decide to act.

We've given it a lot of thought.

We've decided that we're definitely
gonna dig a shallow ramp

that they will hopefully use.

It's very rare for
a film crew to intervene.

But they realise that they may
be able to save at least some

of these birds simply by
digging a few steps in the ice.

Oh, man! Will, look!

Oh, my goodness.

We were literally
just about to leave, but

the first birds are definitely making
their way up, which is brilliant.

So hopefully they'll just make
their way back to the colony

and them and their chicks'll have
a much better chance of survival

because there is no chance

that they were gonna
survive down there at all.

The crew follow the chicks
as they grow up

and after months with the emperors

their time in Antarctica is
finally coming to a close.

We're coming to the end
of the trip now.

Yeah, we've had a...

had an amazing year, and...

I'm obviously desperate to get home.

But this...

there's an odd part of me
that doesn't wanna leave.

What a privilege, eh?

Next time...

A lioness battles against the odds

to protect her family.

Can she lead them back
from the brink of disaster?