All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 Lady Elliot Island

    • August 25, 2017
    • National Geographic Wild

    Undoubtedly the crown jewel of the largest living structure on Earth, the Great Barrier Reef, is Lady Elliot Island, the southern-most island of the Reef chain. Here the dizzying swirls of colour, life and diversity both above and below the island, is unrivaled anywhere on the reef. It’s a Mecca for underwater life. Coral, fish, manta rays, whales and sharks all congregate here in spectacular abundance. Seabirds too thrive here on the abundant marine life on offer. Lady Elliot is the southern fortress of the entire reef system, the gateway to one of the great natural wonders of the world.

  • S01E02 Kangaroo Island

    • September 1, 2017
    • National Geographic Wild

    Kangaroo Island, off the southern coast of Australia is an ocean fortress cut off by wild seas and battered by brutal Southern Ocean winds. It’s an enchanted refuge where some of the most iconic mainland fauna have made a last stand.

  • S01E03 Christmas Island

    • September 8, 2017
    • National Geographic Wild

    Christmas Island, over a thousand kilometres northwest of Australia’s mainland, is a speck of an island that rises out of the Indian Ocean, a tiny refuge to plants and creatures found nowhere else in the world. Birds rule its skies and it’s stunning landscapes are the stage for a miracle migration of millions.

  • S01E04 Fraser Island

    • September 15, 2017
    • National Geographic Wild

    Just to the south of the Great Barrier Reef and the Tropic of Capricorn, Fraser Island lies like a sprawling lizard. Some 120 kilometers long and up to 25 kilometers wide, Fraser Island is now the largest sand island on Earth. Somehow on this nutrient poor bed of sand life has thrived. Dingoes patrol its forests in search of wallabies while white-bellied sea eagles scour the beaches from above. From the lakes to the forests and its crystal clear streams - Fraser Island is a unique mosaic of unlikely habitats that have earned it World Heritage Status.