2024-09-18
Simon Reeve treks across the high mountains and treacherous ice fields of Patagonia, coming face to face with pumas and riding with gauchos.
Meet 87 year old Tim Slessor, the British adventurer plotting his last great adventure: recreating his epic 1955 expedition - 'First Overland: London to Singapore' - which a young David Attenborough commissioned for the BBC.
Ryan journeys deep into Peru along an ancient and remote footpath, where massive snow-capped mountains collide with lush tropical rain forests. The famous Salkantay Trek connects the city of Mollepata with Machu Picchu and passes Mount Salkantay, an outstanding glacier-capped summit.
Gregg Wallace visits the Lush factory in Dorset to learn how an astonishing 14 million bath bombs are produced every year. Plus, Cherry Healey learns how taking a hot bath can provide benefits.
Simon Reeve treks across the high mountains and treacherous ice fields of Patagonia, coming face to face with pumas and riding with gauchos.
Ben Fogle ventures to the lesser-known Greek island of Andros to visit Sandy, founder of a remote animal shelter perched on the slopes of the island's highest peak.
Gregg Wallace explores the Axminster factory in Devon to reveal how 46,000 square metres of carpet are produced every year.
As the urban world grows, animals are displaced from land that belonged to them. The stories of these wild outcasts are the most captivating of all.
Alexander Armstrong continues his journey around Iceland where he samples the local delicacy of rotten shark, takes a whale watching trip, plays golf at midnight, learns to ride an Icelandic horse and sings in a farmers' choir.
Discover how engineers bent two Manhattan skyscrapers and then connected them with a sky bridge 700 feet in the air, and in Greece the 10,000 square foot canopy designed to withstand hurricane winds on a building engineered to survive earthquakes.
Robson travels around the Welsh Pembrokeshire coast where he goes in search of Seabass.
As the urban world grows, animals are displaced from land that belonged to them. The stories of these wild outcasts are the most captivating of all.
Alexander Armstrong continues his journey around Iceland where he samples the local delicacy of rotten shark, takes a whale watching trip, plays golf at midnight, learns to ride an Icelandic horse and sings in a farmers' choir.
Discover how engineers bent two Manhattan skyscrapers and then connected them with a sky bridge 700 feet in the air, and in Greece the 10,000 square foot canopy designed to withstand hurricane winds on a building engineered to survive earthquakes.
Gregg Wallace explores the Axminster factory in Devon to reveal how 46,000 square metres of carpet are produced every year.
As the urban world grows, animals are displaced from land that belonged to them. The stories of these wild outcasts are the most captivating of all.
Ryan journeys deep into Peru along an ancient and remote footpath, where massive snow-capped mountains collide with lush tropical rain forests. The famous Salkantay Trek connects the city of Mollepata with Machu Picchu and passes Mount Salkantay, an outstanding glacier-capped summit.
Alexander Armstrong continues his journey around Iceland where he samples the local delicacy of rotten shark, takes a whale watching trip, plays golf at midnight, learns to ride an Icelandic horse and sings in a farmers' choir.
As the urban world grows, animals are displaced from land that belonged to them. The stories of these wild outcasts are the most captivating of all.
Discover how engineers bent two Manhattan skyscrapers and then connected them with a sky bridge 700 feet in the air, and in Greece the 10,000 square foot canopy designed to withstand hurricane winds on a building engineered to survive earthquakes.
Gregg Wallace explores the Axminster factory in Devon to reveal how 46,000 square metres of carpet are produced every year.
Ben Fogle ventures to the lesser-known Greek island of Andros to visit Sandy, founder of a remote animal shelter perched on the slopes of the island's highest peak.
As the urban world grows, animals are displaced from land that belonged to them. The stories of these wild outcasts are the most captivating of all.
Discover how engineers bent two Manhattan skyscrapers and then connected them with a sky bridge 700 feet in the air, and in Greece the 10,000 square foot canopy designed to withstand hurricane winds on a building engineered to survive earthquakes.
Alexander Armstrong continues his journey around Iceland where he samples the local delicacy of rotten shark, takes a whale watching trip, plays golf at midnight, learns to ride an Icelandic horse and sings in a farmers' choir.
Gregg Wallace explores the Axminster factory in Devon to reveal how 46,000 square metres of carpet are produced every year.