Surviving against the Odds
In some natural wonders, people push themselves to the limit to survive. Survival requires skill, ingenuity and bravery.
In some of the world's most spectacular natural wonders, people push themselves to the limit in order to survive. For the people who call these extraordinary places home, survival requires skill, ingenuity and bravery.
In Brazil, the Kamayura people of the Xingu Indigenous Park believe they must appease the spirits if they are to remain in good health. Fail to make the spirit happy, and ill health could follow. At one key festival, an offering is made to a 'bird spirit'. The villagers must dance to please him. The longer and harder the dance, the happier the spirit will be. To make the festival a success, it is down to Perri and his family to organise a massive fishing expedition. The villagers must catch basketloads of fish to sustain the warrior in their hours of dancing. But catching the fish means venturing into the nearby lake, also home to caiman, electric eels and piranha.
In Ethiopia, belief in a higher power leads villagers in the Tigray region to climb a huge, vertiginous mountainside to reach their church. They believe it's vital and beneficial for their children to be baptised here, despite the obvious dangers. Just 40 days after giving birth, Ngisti must climb 400 metres to have her new son Dawit baptised.
Laos is one of the most fertile places on earth. Despite this, life is dangerous for the rice farmers in this beautiful country. During the Vietnam War, the United States dropped an estimated 270 million bombs on this small country and approximately 80 million of them failed to explode, remaining in the ground to this day. Every year, 300 people are killed or injured by them. A group of bomb-disposal experts, led by 35-year-old Lumngen, clear fields for a new school. It is painstaking work, and a job that comes with obvious risks.
In the North Atlantic, between Scotland, Iceland and Norway, lie the Faroe Islands. Once a year, islanders on one island, Skuvoy, scale the sheer-sided cliffs to obtain a traditional delicacy, fulmar eggs. The birds nest hundreds of feet up the cliffs, and islanders reach them using traditional climbing equipment, including woollen slippers and harnesses. It's a death-defying feat, all for the sake of a traditional delicacy.
In Switzerland, millions of people come to the Alps every year, and take risks for nothing more than pleasure. The hikers, climbers and skiers who come here are drawn by the mountains, but many of them are injured or killed in the pursuit of fun. The programme joins the Zermatt air rescue team on their helicopters as they patrol the area and attempt to save lives.
Last on
More episodes
Previous
Next
You are at the last episode
Clips
-
Faroe Islanders collect Fulmar eggs from high cliffs
Duration: 01:25
-
Ethiopia’s mountain climbers
Duration: 02:04
-
Fishing Festival
Duration: 01:44
Music Played
-
DJ Kappa
Intro: Hra Sa Zacina
-
Giles Lamb
Caged
-
Ludwig Hirsch
Engerl
-
Berk and The Virtual Band
Change
Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Series Producer | Jobim Sampson |
Director | Russell Leven |
Executive Producer | Jane Aldous |
Broadcasts
- Wed 7 Mar 2018 21:00
- Sun 11 Mar 2018 17:05Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ One except Wales & Wales HD
- Thu 22 Mar 2018 08:00
- Wed 19 Sep 2018 23:40Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ One except Northern Ireland & Northern Ireland HD
- Thu 20 Sep 2018 00:35Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ One Northern Ireland & Northern Ireland HD only
- Sun 24 Feb 2019 16:00
- Sat 11 Jul 2020 20:00
- Sun 12 Jul 2020 02:30
- Tue 28 Jun 2022 19:00
- Wed 29 Jun 2022 01:30
- Thu 27 Jul 2023 15:45Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ Two except Scotland