Wonders of the Monsoon (2014) s01e01 Episode Script

Waiting for the Rains

The monsoon the greatest weather system on Earth.
The giver of life and the destroyer.
Shaping magical lands from the Himalayas to Australia.
Its impact felt by giants the exquisite and the bizarre.
Where spectacular nature meets the planet's most vibrant cultures.
Our story begins when all of life is waiting.
It's a time when wildlife is pushed to extremes.
A time when ancient cultures anxiously await the great rains to deliver the wonders of the Monsoon.
Across a vast area of the globe, from India to Australia life is dominated by an immense weather system.
The monsoon.
Throughout the year unimaginable quantities of water are moved about this swathe of our planet in rhythms sometimes unpredictable and mysterious.
The monsoon delivers deluge and with it the miracle of rejuvenation.
But the monsoon can also bring drought.
Such extremes test the endurance of every creature and every body.
We begin our journey in the far southern extreme of the monsoon world.
It's the dry season in northern Australia.
It's been six long months without rain.
But there is an escape from this dry and thirsty land.
The Roper River.
Fed by underground springs, it flows throughout the year.
A vital refuge for a small mammal with an intense dislike for the sun.
The little red flying fox.
These bats are waiting for monsoon rains but now it's reached 38 degrees Celsius.
Just a few degrees more and they will die.
Squabbles break out for shade.
They are dehydrating.
Three hundred thousand bats are desperate for water.
Only the Roper River can save them.
By soaking their chests they can collect a little water to lick off back at the roost.
But this is probably the most dangerous thing they'll ever do.
Australian freshwater crocodiles.
Warmed by the summer heat, they are at their most alert.
A crocodile's jaws snap shut in the blink of an eye.
The bats' reactions must be quicker.
They must choose a spot and run the gauntlet.
The survivors will brave the river every day until the monsoon rains break.
Which must be soon.
Australian aboriginals call this time of the year Gunumeleng, 'the pre-monsoon'.
It's a tense, menacing time that can last for weeks and which brings an unexpected danger.
Dry lightning.
The spark that ignites the fire devil.
This raging tornado of fire can grow to more than a hundred metres high.
It incinerates everything in its path.
At its core, the temperature can reach over one thousand degrees.
From all around, air is sucked into the furnace feeding the flames before being blasted high into the sky.
It's by a similar process of heat rising that right now the monsoon winds are being drawn towards Australia.
But on a scale that's continental.
The entire landmass is now a vast hotplate.
It heats the air above, causing it to rise.
This sucks in more air from all around.
These are the monsoon winds.
And as they hit Australia's coast, great storms begin to build.
As the humid air hits the heated land, it's thrust upwards rapidly cooling, condensing and forming clouds taller than the world's highest mountains.
Giant cumulonimbus.
The biggest and most powerful clouds on the planet.
Inside, vast electric charges build on a monumental scale.
The energy released from just a single storm cell can be equivalent to an exploding atom bomb.
They can let fly over one thousand lightning strikes an hour.
With every discharge the air around explodes at over twenty-five thousand degrees four times hotter than the surface of the sun.
At last the flying foxes are free.
No longer tied to the crocodiles' river they can now return to their nomadic life and disperse across the outback.
For the next few months one of the biggest weather systems on Earth sits over northern Australia transforming the land and stirring dragons.
A frill-necked lizard.
He's endured the dry season heat and lack of food by drifting in and out of a state of suspended animation.
But the monsoon rains have triggered a bounty.
This is his chance.
He must cram a year of life into these few short months.
But he's not the only predator the monsoon wakes.
The black-headed python has a taste for lizards.
His frill is a bluff to look big and ferocious.
But if that doesn't work, he's off.
He sprints so fast that his upper body lifts off.
At speeds of up to ten miles an hour, no snake is going to catch him.
This is a lizard that lives life in the fast lane at least while the southern monsoon is overhead.
A thousand miles to the north, on a remote and tiny island the rains have triggered another extraordinary emergence.
One of the greatest wonders of the Monsoon.
Across the island the forest floor is erupting.
Over forty million burrows are opening up.
The red crabs of Christmas Island.
For most of the year they hid below ground, feeding on rotting leaves.
But now, with the monsoon and rising humidity, they begin to march.
It's time to spawn.
The forest is a colossal assault course.
And the neighbours are indignant at the sudden swarm.
A nesting booby is best avoided.
But the crabs face a more insidious danger.
Suffocation.
Crabs, even land crabs, breathe with gills that must remain moist.
They can only attempt this journey when the monsoon brings damp air.
But every time the clouds part, water evaporates and it becomes increasingly difficult to breathe.
But that's not the end of their troubles.
Monster-size robber crabs.
Their legs span up to a metre across.
And with little competition, they have become the top predator.
But no matter how many they kill, they won't dent red crab numbers.
There are just too many of them.
The island's entire population, over forty five million of them are on the march.
Journey's end.
It's more than two weeks since these crabs left the darkness of their burrows.
And this is why they've come so far.
Tonight, when the tide is at its highest billions of red crab eggs will be released into the sea.
Mission complete, they'll all return to their forest burrows before the island dries out once more.
It's only down to the moisture brought by the monsoon that these crabs can make their incredible journey.
While the colossal weather system revives Australia and its neighbouring islands further to the north, it's making life surprisingly difficult.
Monsoon winds draw moist air away creating a dry season in one of the most unexpected places.
South East Asia's equatorial islands.
With daily rainfall for most of the year this is one of the warmest and wettest regions in the world.
The annual rainfall for some islands can be as much as six metres but even here, it's seasonal.
While Australia is having downpours the island of Sumatra has only the lightest showers.
It's perfect weather for a baby orang-utan to practise a useful skill.
Making a leaf umbrella.
During the wet season it will be an essential accessory.
He hasn't quite perfected it yet.
But that's fine, he has time.
Even so, the dry season creates a problem for mum.
She has to find food for both of them but during the dry season fewer trees fruit and they're usually great distances apart.
She must take her son on a long and difficult journey through the treetops.
Their search will cover many miles of canopy and she can't afford to get it wrong.
But she has a plan.
She knows exactly where to head.
She holds a mental map of almost a thousand hectares of rainforest.
But also, quite remarkably she has a diary of exactly which trees are fruiting, and when.
She times her journey through the forest precisely.
A fig tree she knows well.
Its fruit perfectly ripe, just as she knew it would be.
Her memory map is vital for surviving lean times and now she's passing that knowledge on to her son.
He'll spend up to ten years with mum piecing together his own map and diary.
It will be her legacy and his survival kit.
When the monsoon rains return, fruit will be widely available again.
But there are rogue years when the monsoon is so weak that it fails to bring rain.
Yet what sounds like a disaster is crucial for the survival of a key forest species.
Dipterocarp trees, some up to seventy metres tall and as the forest dries out, something magical happens.
They all flower and fruit at the same time.
Which means all their winged seeds ripen then drop together.
Each tree sheds as many as twenty million seeds so there are billions carpeting the forest floor.
Though triggered by the unpredictable failure of the monsoon the reason for this spectacle is the trees' greatest foe.
A tiny weevil, less than the width of a matchstick.
This is a voracious seed predator but because the trees have not fruited for several years the weevil population has starved and has been kept in check.
By fruiting, now as one the remaining weevils are swamped by a glut of food.
Guaranteeing that many of the seeds will survive and germinate.
The trees have used a rare failed monsoon as a cue to outwit their number one enemy.
But there was once a time when the monsoon cycles mysteriously changed and weakened for almost a century.
In the forests of Cambodia lie the remains of a once thriving city.
The temple of Angkor Wat.
Nearly one thousand years ago, Angkor was the pre-industrial world's greatest city.
Built on the bounty of the monsoon.
Superb engineers constructed vast reservoirs to collect monsoon waters used for irrigation and pushing food production to the maximum.
At its peak, over a million people lived in Angkor but then the monsoon weakened causing a cycle of severe droughts that lasted nearly a hundred years.
Drought brought famine, and an end to wealth and prosperity.
Angkor's population collapsed.
The Kingdom fell, its buildings consumed by the forest.
Its people had created a system that relied totally on the monsoon.
Too fragile to survive such drastic change.
Today, over half the world's population are dependent on its fickle nature.
Each year in India people's hopes focus on whether the rains will come to them.
An explosion of colour welcomes Spring as rainbow play-fights take to the streets in the joyous celebration of Holi.
It marks the end of the dry winter and anticipates what all hope is soon to come.
In Mathura Temple, in northern India, families gather in a centuries old tradition.
It honours a symbolic victory of the future over the past and good over evil.
And for this they call on the monsoon.
Water is coloured with the spring flowers of the forest.
Symbolic of the monsoon rains it washes away the dust of the dry season and the old year.
This is a rebirth for everyone.
But underlying the colour and good humour is something far more serious.
Economic success and even a family's very survival depends on the rains coming.
What controls their future lies over the northern border of their huge country.
The Himalayas, the highest peaks on Earth.
And beyond, the Great Tibetan Plateau.
This is the other driver of the monsoon, even more powerful than Australia.
As the plateau heats up in spring, hot air rises drawing in monsoon winds from thousands of miles away from far beyond the southern tip of India.
The winds pull at the surface of the Indian Ocean creating currents so powerful that even the waters of the deep sea turn to follow bringing great changes beneath the waves.
In the Maldives Archipelago, an unusual gathering takes place triggered by the pull from the distant Tibetan Plateau.
A giant manta ray, almost four metres across.
They're normally solitary Wanderers but now many arrive together in one small, shallow bay.
They're here for a feast.
Mantas feed on microscopic plankton, relatively scarce in the tropics but the monsoon winds pull up cold nutrient-rich water from the depths thick with plankton, trapping it for just a few hours in the confines of this bay.
Remarkably, the mantas know when to be here, almost to the minute.
Just how they know is still a mystery.
For a fleeting moment, it's the greatest gathering of giant mantas in the world and all brought about by the winds blowing towards the Tibetan plateau.
After just a few hours, the plankton disperses and conditions won't be as good again until next year.
Above the waves, through the monsoon season the winds hold steady and strong heading towards India.
It's April in Kanha, northern India, and the forest wakes to a new summer day.
Soon it will be unbearably hot.
But there's a sure sign that change is coming.
According to local folklore the peacock's call means the monsoon is just weeks away.
Right now, his one desire is a partner.
But peahens aren't so easily impressed.
If only he could mate now his eggs would hatch just in time for the monsoon.
The hormones are clearly clouding his judgement.
By mid-morning, it's just too hot for such flamboyance.
The forest is drying out, toughest perhaps for the chital deer.
The ground is parched and food out of reach for even the tallest stage.
But they've learned that right now it pays to hang out with fellow forest dwellers hanuman langur monkeys.
Mahua trees produce their strangely fleshy flowers before the rains just when the animals most need them.
There's enough that the monkeys can take their fill and leave the rest.
Sticking with the langurs means the chital can keep their strength but there's also security in their combined numbers.
A tiger mother with two rapidly growing cubs.
They're bouncing with energy.
Not even the heat of the day stops their play.
Despite the invitation, their mother is more intent on keeping cool than joining in.
Experience tells her it's only going to get hotter.
Right across India, temperatures are soaring.
It's June and the monsoon should be here by now.
Roads must be repaired before the expected floods.
But will they come? The city waits.
Traders monitor the market.
When rains delay, food prices rocket.
The impact of a failed monsoon will ripple across the entire world.
With the monsoon already late and the stakes so high it calls for desperate measures.
In a sacred ceremony called upon only when fears of failure are greatest holy Brahmins give voice to ancient Vedic texts that are learned by heart.
They call on Varuna, the god of water.
This centuries-old ritual beseeches Varuna to deliver India from drought.
Prayers to bring the life-giving monsoon.
But will he answer? Outside, it's getting tougher by the hour.
On northern Indian saltpans, the rains are now two weeks late and for one family the situation is becoming critical.
New foals have been born in a herd of Asian wild ass their birth timed to coincide with the usual arrival of the monsoon.
All around new grass should be growing but the frazzled ground offers nothing.
A mother struggles to provide her youngster with enough milk.
And now there's danger coming from within the herd.
Rain or not, the stallion has one thing on his mind.
He can't delay.
Breed now and next year's foals will arrive on schedule in time for a normal monsoon and its fresh grass.
Right now the mares have barely enough energy to care for this year's foals let alone carry another.
They'll resist, but there's nowhere else to go.
The herd must endure the rising tensions and wait.
In Kanha, even the cubs are subdued.
Yet despite the heat, the delayed rains have given their mother a distinct advantage.
In the forest, the chital are tied to the last muddy waterholes.
The dry vegetation means that she is perfectly camouflaged.
But chital have a keen sense of smell.
Langurs warn the rest of the herd.
She has brought down a large stag more than two days food for her cubs.
The late monsoon has been good to the tiger family.
But prey will be much harder to catch when the rains eventually come.
And there's a sign that they're finally here.
India has endured months of drought.
Could the long wait be over? Come the deluge, the land will be green again.
But the monsoon can bring both welcome relief and complete devastation.
The only certainty is that all of life here is about to change.
Across the series the team's ambition was to film monsoon storms in all their glory.
Some of the world's biggest and most powerful thunderstorms occur in Northern Australia.
This where the team joined one man who understands the ambition more than anyone.
Murray Fredericks.
Ex-commando and world renowned photographic artist.
For him, capturing the perfect storm is about more than just the weather.
It can't just be a shot of the storm it's got to be great landscape as well.
It's got to be the whole image and getting that quickly in somewhere where you've never been before because storm 's taking you somewhere you've never been before, is a real challenge.
The team are monitoring about four hundred thousand square miles an area four times bigger than the UK.
Typically storms need hot ground and high humidity to power them.
Professional storm chaser, Jacci Ingham, is helping the team to narrow the search area and safely get close to a storm.
So we 're just trying to anticipate theoretically what we think's going to happen today based on what we just know from the models.
Humidity is rising six hundred miles to the west.
It's a good sign.
But even with the help of radar the search area is still vast.
The chances of us now saying 'the storm is going to happen there' is 1%, you know? So I think if we go it's there, there, there, there, and we just know that's where we barrel on to.
Because we always want to be ahead of it so it's coming towards us.
To film a storm they need to find one that's accessible.
So the thing about Australia is, the roads just go on for ever and ever.
And this is apparently a highway.
To cope with the rough roads they're using specially adapted long-range vehicles.
It's a long day's drive but eventually Jacci's predictions pay off.
We've just driven right into the rain curtain.
It seems this is it.
This is the real thing.
It's thunder, It's lightning, the road's flooded I can barely see out of the window and we 're just driving further and further into the storm Wow, did you see that? That lightning just hit almost, just off the side of the road.
Here, a single storm can dump as much as 12 billion tonnes of water.
I can hear the lightning over there so that's the centre of the storm is rumbling there and if we can get in front of the storm, where the light's hitting it we could get some nice shots.
In front on the left hand side, guys, there 's a nice hill there.
Looking good.
Out of the rain, the team head to a high point where they can capture the storm's final stages.
But to capture a single 10-second time-lapse they need the camera to run, free of water on the lens for at least 10 minutes.
The team need to leave the cameras running until the last possible moment before the storm is on top of them.
Let's go! Oh, I've got to get the other camera too, that was good.
An encouraging start to the shoot, a spectacular curtain of rain.
What they need next is lightning.
The land here is now wet and cold but further west it's still hot and humid with storms looking likely.
It's another one thousand miles and time is against them.
We're trying to get into this more arid country but this is as far as we go, there's no way round this river.
So what do we do now? We turn around and go back and hope we've got enough fuel.
By the time they catch up with the storm, it's dark.
Whoo ho! It's absolutely going nuts.
That sky 's alive.
Oh! It's a great light show.
But for the perfect shot, Murray needs just enough daylight to illuminate the landscape.
I hope this carries on.
To get ahead and ready for storms tomorrow, they're pushing even further west.
The journey eventually brings them to the spectacular landscape of the Kimberleys.
The humidity and temperature have been building here for days.
We've got one straight ahead, keep coming guys.
I mean that's just stunning.
OK.
- That's all.
A thunderhead is forming.
The bigger it grows, the more static electricity builds up and the more chance of lightning.
There 's a shot as tight as we can get through to that mountain range through the saddle there between those two hills.
Because the lightning keeps coming down at exactly the same point.
Whoo! Whoo ho! - Look at that! That was amazing.
Holy! I'm feeling a little bit scared right now, what do you think? Never show fear to a storm.
Whoa! Ha, never seen anything like that.
It couldn't have actually worked out better and it's a beautiful shot, good day, really lucky.
Stunning.
These images helped to tell the story of the monsoon's arrival in Australia.
For the monsoon team though, this was just the beginning.
Next time Deluge.
Flood.
The monsoon at its most extreme.
Those that survive must now grasp the opportunity to prosper from life-giving waters.
January 2017
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