BBC Natural World – Wild Cuba A Caribbean Journey (2020)

BBC Natural World – Wild Cuba: A Caribbean Journey (2020)
English | Documentary | Size: 1.92 GB


Colin Stafford-Johnson journeys through one of the most bewitching islands in the world, featuring the wildlife and wild places that make it so special.

BBC Natural World – Mississippi Tales of the Last River Rat (2004)

BBC Natural World – Mississippi: Tales of the Last River Rat (2004)
English | Size: 1.14 GB
Category: Tutorial


A portrait of the wildlife and landscape of the Mississippi River seen through the eyes of ‘River Rat’ Kenny Salwey, a legendary hunter, trapper and author who lives off the land and shares his watery haunts with beavers, snapping turtles, sturgeons, pelicans and eagles.

BBC Natural World – Africa’s Dragon Mountains (2010)

BBC Natural World – Africa’s Dragon Mountains (2010)
English | Size: 1.22 GB
Category: Documentary


An intimate portrait of the spectacular Drakensberg – ‘dragon mountains’ – of South Africa, following giant antelope, bone-cracking vultures and raucous baboons as they struggle to survive in a land of extremes.

BBC Natural World – The Monkey-Eating Eagle of the Orinoco (2010)

BBC Natural World – The Monkey-Eating Eagle of the Orinoco (2010)
English | Size: 1.33 GB
Category: Tutorial


The harpy eagle is the most powerful bird of prey in the world, plucking monkeys from the branches of the jungle canopy. Rare and elusive, they are seldom seen, but with the discovery of a harpy nest in the remote Orinoco rainforest of Venezuela, wildlife film-maker Fergus Beeley has a unique opportunity to follow the life of a chick from birth to adulthood.

BBC Natural World – Nature’s Wildest Weapons Horns, Tusks and Antlers (2017)

BBC Natural World – Nature’s Wildest Weapons: Horns, Tusks and Antlers (2017)
English | Size: 1.09 GB
Category: Tutorial


The animal kingdom possesses a fearsome arsenal – a variety of extreme weapons used in epic battles to gore, stab, crush and batter. But are they more than just instruments of deadly force? For Professor Doug Emlen, it has been his lifetime’s ambition to discover the secrets of nature’s arms races, what triggers them and what they can teach us about the most formidable weapons on earth – our own.