4.3 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 29 April 2024
⏱️ 27 minutes
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Primatologist Catherine Hobaiter has spent more of her adult life in the rain forests of Uganda, with family bands of chimpanzees, than she has with her own human family members. For more than 20 years now she has spent 6 months every year at a remote field station, getting up before dawn every day to observe and collect behavioural data on family bands of chimps as they wake up and go about their daily lives. What is she trying to find out, that has gripped her for so long?
It turns out that life in a chimpanzee troupe is every bit as gripping as a soap opera. But there are many more moments of beauty, revelation and the joy of discovery, as Catherine pursues her continuing, multi-decadal quest to understand what it means to be a chimpanzee.
And when Sara Dykman set out to bicycle with the monarch butterfly migration, from the mountains of central Mexico, across the USA to Canada, she didn't think about the 10,201 miles that she would cover. Coping with headwinds, heavy rain storms, and everything from dirt roads to busy highways were not the challenge for Sara though. It was seeing how little of the Monarch's only food plant, milkweed, was left for them to feed on during their amazing, multigenerational, multinational migration.
However, Sara found solace in the many conservationists and backyard butterfly gardeners she met along the way, and in the 9000 schoolchildren she gave talks to en route. The most emotional part of the journey for Sara was the last three miles - arriving successfully back at the monarch's overwintering site in Mexico.
Produced by Diane Hope.
Credits:
Monarch butterfly recordings - Robert Mackay
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0:00.0 | I'm Helena Bonkarter and this is history's secret heroes. |
0:07.0 | In this series we'll hear stories of daring secret missions and |
0:15.0 | re- |
0:17.0 | re-emptic high-ranking codebreaker |
0:18.0 | and Riemont the escape artist |
0:21.0 | interned in a German camp. |
0:23.9 | Tales of danger, dynamism and downright determination. |
0:27.8 | The new series of history's secret heroes. |
0:30.5 | Listen first on BBC Sounds. |
0:33.0 | The time when I came closest to giving up was |
0:40.0 | the time when I came closest to giving up was having to watch two chimpanzees that I knew very well and one of them killed the other one. |
0:51.0 | That was one of the hardest days in the forest. |
0:54.0 | I think if I'd have to be |
0:55.0 | I think if I'd had the next day off if I'd gotten myself thinking about it too |
1:06.7 | deeply maybe I wouldn't have gone back in. |
1:12.0 | My name is Dr. Kat Hobata and I'm a primatologist at the University of St Andrews. |
1:21.0 | I suppose the primary quest of my research is just to try and understand what |
1:30.9 | it means to be a chimpanzee, what's going on in their minds. what it is like to live life as a chimp. |
1:33.0 | What's going on in their minds? |
1:35.0 | What's it like to live life as a chimp? The beautiful Badongo rainforest which is up in northwestern Uganda has been home for most of the last 20 years now. |
1:58.4 | I spend most of the last 20 years now. I spent about six months of the year for most of that time living out in the forest and I've actually at this point in my life properly spent longer living in rainforests than I have in any other place. |
2:08.0 | Wet socks, instant coffee, rain on the tin roof. I love that sound, especially if you're cozy in bed. |
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