{1}{1}25.000 {1658}{1741}The pounding surf|of the great southern ocean {1743}{1811}beating on the rocks of South Georgia. {1813}{1894}Few creatures, you might think,|could survive it. {1896}{1990}But Macaroni penguins|are desperate to get ashore. {2377}{2449}Their flippers are of little help out of water. {2451}{2529}All they have to give them|a grip on these slippery rocks {2531}{2598}are small claws on their feet. {3032}{3090}Now, at the end of summer, {3092}{3156}life is becoming increasingly difficult {3158}{3258}for these Macaroni penguins|struggling to feed their chicks, {3260}{3350}that are almost fully grown|and have massive appetites. {3352}{3452}With the approach of autumn,|the weather will worsen. {3454}{3564}Massive depressions rush around|the fringes of the Antarctic continent, {3566}{3675}creating huge gales|with gusts of over 100 miles an hour {3677}{3736}and lash the sea into a frenzy. {3740}{3836}Before long, the temperatures|will drop to below freezing {3838}{3915}and then all the wildlife|of Antartica will be engaged {3917}{3997}in a desperate race to complete breeding {3999}{4062}before the ice closes everything down. {4195}{4292}In the deep south, the sea|has stayed frozen all summer. {4294}{4377}Penguins here|face an even greater challenge, {4381}{4463}for this is where the door closes first. {4465}{4602}Here at Cape Royds,|I'm 1,400 miles closer to the pole, {4604}{4646}and this Adelie colony {4648}{4763}is the most southerly nesting group|of any penguins anywhere. {4765}{4832}The summer here is very short indeed {4834}{4940}and these penguins have to breed|very swiftly to be successful. {4942}{5013}They're well ahead|of the Macaronis up in the north {5017}{5098}and the chicks are already losing their down. {5147}{5262}Beneath the woolly coat lies|the waterproof layer of feathers {5264}{5332}that will protect them in the icy southern seas. {5525}{5625}The season is so short|that things have to move fast. {5627}{5682}0ver a mere two weeks, {5684}{5744}the jam-packed colony virtually empties {5746}{5842}as the newly-feathered young|follow their parents to the sea {5844}{5900}to make their first encounter with water. {6234}{6298}And their first swim will not be easy. {6304}{6418}The bay is filled with surging,|sharp-edged brash ice. {6465}{6535}Even getting down to the water poses problems. {6646}{6751}Soon the edge of the sea|is thronged by apprehensive youngsters, {6755}{6849}nervously waiting|for someone to take the plunge. {6948}{7007}The brash is so thick and extensive {7009}{7059}that, on its seaward side, {7063}{7153}adults returning with food|for their chicks can't get through. {7448}{7492}They turn back. {7693}{7763}The hungry youngsters|now have little alternative. {7765}{7824}They have to get to sea to feed. {8015}{8114}In fact, it's easier for them to cross|the brash than for their parents. {8116}{8168}Being significantly lighter and more buoyant, {8172}{8264}they can skitter across the surface|of the broken ice. {8531}{8604}But moving so slowly and so clumsily {8606}{8664}puts them in real danger. {8750}{8797}(PANICKED CHIRPING) {8955}{9003}A leopard seal. {9295}{9388}The majority of the chicks|make it to open water, {9390}{9434}where they are a little safer. {9436}{9496}The leopard seal stays with its victim. {10885}{10992}This game of cat and mouse|goes on for 20 minutes. {10994}{11090}Like so many other|large predators on land and sea, {11092}{11211}the leopard seal seems to feel|no urgency to complete its kill. {11310}{11362}At last, the penguin is dead. {11438}{11540}Now the process|of stripping off its flesh begins. {12321}{12410}The carcass drifts down to the sea floor. {12412}{12456}But it won't be wasted. {12891}{12964}A nemeteme worm, a metre long. {12966}{13049}It has detected the taste of penguin flesh {13051}{13101}drifting through the cold water. {13365}{13413}Another scavenger arrives - {13415}{13490}a giant isopod, 10 centimetres long, {13492}{13565}the equivalent of crabs in warmer waters. {13780}{13899}The isopod strips off the meat|with its hooked legs and strong jaws. {13903}{14019}The worm just turns its stomach|inside out and envelops the food. {14078}{14135}Within hours, the carcass is covered {14139}{14225}by a writhing tangle of worms. {14307}{14376}Within days, there is nothing left {14378}{14426}but bare bones. {14505}{14586}The first snows of winter have fallen. {14638}{14702}The last chicks to hatch are doomed. {14704}{14756}Their parents have to abandon them {14758}{14801}before they are fully grown. {14803}{14899}The adults must go to sea|to build up their strength {14901}{15049}before returning to the colony for one|last ordeal before winter - the moult. {15051}{15153}All penguins need a new coat|of feathers for the winter, {15155}{15212}which means shedding the old one. {15214}{15263}So colonies right around the continent {15267}{15332}fill with shed feathers. {15470}{15518}0n Deception Island, {15520}{15620}Chinstrap penguins|stand silent and motionless. {15759}{15801}0nly a month ago, {15803}{15864}these steep slopes of volcanic ash {15866}{15994}were noisy with the squawks|of 80,000 pairs of them coming and going {15996}{16038}and caring for their chicks. {16055}{16130}Now they have little energy to spare. {16142}{16277}They can't go to sea with their coats|in this condition, so they can't feed. {16415}{16484}For three weeks, they stand fasting, {16488}{16547}losing half their body weight, {16549}{16638}but at the end they will have|warm, watertight coats {16640}{16696}and be ready for the icy blasts of winter. {16706}{16762}(RAGING WIND) {16875}{16963}By the end of March, most of them have left, {16965}{17047}and the remainder are on the move,|making their way {17049}{17130}across the emptying slopes back to the sea. {17704}{17799}Escape to the north, to open seas, {17801}{17918}is the driving force -|to move where the food should be. {17920}{17987}But the obstacles are formidable. {18596}{18668}At minus 1.9 degrees centigrade, {18670}{18730}the sea begins to freeze. {18741}{18852}A slight swell on the surface|produces "pancake" ice. {18986}{19031}In the frigid air, {19033}{19120}the ice above water grows into crystals. {19138}{19232}The early explorers|called these fantastic shapes {19236}{19286}"ice flowers". {19497}{19562}As it gets colder and colder, {19566}{19608}the ice thickens. {19610}{19713}0n the coast, it freezes fast|to the margins of the land. {19756}{19870}Farther out, the pack ice|consolidates into sea ice. {19922}{20002}The belt of ice surrounding|the continent widens, {20004}{20070}advancing north two miles a day {20072}{20127}and driving life before it. {20189}{20284}But the ice front has not yet|reached all the islands {20286}{20365}and there are still some that|can provide a refuge for wildlife {20367}{20412}well into autumn. {20630}{20669}Here on South Georgia, {20671}{20752}we are on the northern edge of Antarctica. {20754}{20847}You can be fairly sure that|the sea here won't freeze over. {20849}{20916}0nly once or twice a century does it do so. {20918}{21026}This floating ice has all fallen|from the glacier behind me. {21028}{21161}But although at 54 degrees south|we are as far away from the South Pole {21163}{21213}as Britain is from the North, {21215}{21332}the immense ice cap of Antarctica|still dominates the climate. {21392}{21472}Glaciers cover over half the island. {21474}{21523}They blanket many of the peaks, {21525}{21615}the tallest of which are 2,700 metres high, {21617}{21712}and in some places they run|right down into the sea. {21714}{21786}During the winter, the temperature falls {21788}{21847}to minus 10 degrees at the coast, {21849}{21898}so the need for animals|to complete their breeding {21902}{21948}in the short summer season {21950}{22002}is still very intense. {22080}{22148}Two million fur seals come here to breed, {22150}{22195}and, at the end of summer, {22197}{22300}the beaches are thronged|with young pups and their mothers. {22369}{22454}The pups suckle for four months,|until late March. {22456}{22506}That's longer than the fur seals {22508}{22558}that live in the warmer waters further north. {22560}{22644}It's a measure of how strong|young animals have to be {22646}{22696}if they are to survive down here. {22882}{22976}A pup, to get all the milk that is its due, {22978}{23026}has to recognise its mother's call {23028}{23081}when she returns from feeding at sea {23083}{23134}and is ready to provide a feed. {23138}{23207}(L0UD HIGH- PITCHED CALL) {23609}{23667}Three months earlier,|this shore was a battlefield {23669}{23760}as the bulls fought for the right|to dominate this stretch of beach, {23762}{23807}and all the females on it. {23809}{23891}Now the mating has finished|and the bulls have gone to sea. {23893}{23936}0nly the pups are left, {23938}{23999}testing their strength with mock fights. {25278}{25327}Many of these youngsters {25331}{25405}will not survive their first year. {25407}{25464}The weaker ones will not get enough food. {25466}{25508}There will be accidents. {25510}{25547}There will be orphans. {25556}{25612}By the end of the breeding season, {25616}{25678}corpses lie scattered over the beach, {25680}{25759}food for skuas and giant petrels. {26143}{26207}(L0UD SCREECHING) {26503}{26585}The petrels, with their great hooked beaks, {26587}{26678}are usually the first to rip open a carcass. {26736}{26814}They are Antarctica's equivalent|of Africa's vultures. {26816}{26894}Their huge wings are two metres across. {26896}{26969}But, unlike vultures,|they don't just scavenge. {26971}{27046}They will tackle young penguins|and small sea birds {27048}{27092}while they are still alive. {27857}{27913}The whalers in the old days {27915}{27959}used to call them "gluttons". {27961}{28010}It's easy to see why. {28012}{28123}And their dirtiness gave them|another nickname too - "stinkers". {28173}{28257}Surprisingly, there are ducks|at this feast, too. {28259}{28324}These are the South Georgia pintails. {28326}{28361}Alone among ducks, {28363}{28424}they have acquired a regular taste for meat. {29389}{29454}An elephant seal wallow. {29456}{29522}This is an all-female gathering. {29524}{29580}They clearly like one another's company, {29582}{29638}for they congregate in great assemblies. {29640}{29736}But they can on occasion|get irritated with one another. {29875}{29935}(L0W GR0WLING) {30012}{30080}Like the penguins, they went to sea {30082}{30119}after rearing their young, {30121}{30208}fed intensively to put on the weight|they lost during breeding, {30210}{30280}and now they have come back|in order to moult. {30384}{30451}Large chunks of skin and hair {30453}{30492}peel off their bodies, {30494}{30555}and it seems to make them very tetchy. {30624}{30701}It takes a month for them to grow new coats. {30703}{30808}Then, as the temperatures fall still lower|and winter closes in, {30810}{30882}they will return to the place|where they are most at home - {30884}{30931}the sea. {31046}{31139}Grey-headed albatross|also nest on South Georgia, {31141}{31193}but they stay a little longer. {31291}{31354}The waters are still ice-free, {31356}{31409}so they can catch food for their young {31411}{31457}well into autumn. {31937}{32002}An adult bird caring for its chick {32007}{32086}may travel 600 miles or more to find food, {32088}{32142}which it brings back in its crop. {32448}{32535}That was a squid, and very nice, too. {32597}{32687}Above the grey-heads,|another kind of albatross - {32689}{32747}the largest sea bird in the world, {32749}{32799}with a three metre wing-span - {32801}{32849}the wandering albatross. {32881}{32939}It nests a little further inland {32941}{33035}on South Georgia's meadows|and ridges of tussock grass. {33216}{33279}In marked contrast to the other birds, {33281}{33368}that have almost finished their|breeding and are preparing to leave, {33370}{33453}this wandering albatross|has come to start a courtship {33455}{33518}that may take two or three years. {33556}{33611}(SCREECHING) {33827}{33924}These young birds|have spent the first three years {33926}{33974}of their adult life at sea. {33976}{34043}Now they've returned|to the colony where they were reared {34045}{34099}and are starting to look for a partner. {34101}{34213}They do this by taking part|in dancing parties. {34912}{34966}Young unmated birds {34968}{35017}court like this for several years {35019}{35081}before they decide|who their partners shall be {35083}{35150}and together start work on a nest mound. {35499}{35607}But as the winter sets in|and its icy door closes, {35609}{35690}the young albatross too have to return to sea. {36493}{36591}The sea won't freeze|here around South Georgia, {36593}{36678}but as the sun moves north|and the days darken, {36680}{36760}the temperature of the ocean falls lower still {36762}{36848}and life in the water|becomes increasingly scarce. {36850}{36924}The huge shoals of krill disperse {36928}{37035}and for the seabirds, food becomes|more and more difficult to find. {37278}{37409}By April, winter storms are beginning|to sweep across the Antarctic. {38052}{38151}The winds rise to above 100 miles an hour. {38153}{38259}The temperature|falls to 70 degrees below zero. {38359}{38447}And then the sea freezes. {38449}{38508}The door has shut. {38559}{38677}Throughout the winter, the ice|continues to advance northwards. {38679}{38720}The area it covers {38722}{38833}increases at the rate|of 40,000 square miles every day. {38835}{38883}Before the winter is over, {38885}{38971}it will have almost doubled|the size of the continent. {39767}{39834}Now, at the end of autumn, {39836}{39936}practically all the wildlife|has escaped to the north. {39938}{40040}The whales have gone to find|warmer waters in which to breed. {40042}{40110}The seals, albatrosses|and most of the penguins {40112}{40158}have also gone out to sea, {40160}{40240}though no one as yet is sure exactly where. {40242}{40305}But there is one truly remarkable creature {40307}{40402}that seems to turn all|these rules upside-down - {40404}{40438}the Emperor penguin. {40485}{40538}Largest of all the penguins, {40540}{40610}the Emperor stands over a metre high {40612}{40684}and weighs on average 33 kilos. {40688}{40761}Most creatures are forced|by the worsening weather {40763}{40826}to retreat north to warmer latitudes, {40828}{40899}but the Emperors are gathering|at the ice edge {40901}{40963}to start travelling into the deep south, {40965}{41033}where they will mate and rear their young. {42141}{42222}Now the Emperors start their long march - {42224}{42274}maybe tens of miles - {42276}{42359}to reach their traditional|nesting site on the sea ice. {42361}{42454}In the next programme, we'll follow them {42456}{42574}and see, with temperatures|dropping to minus 70 centigrade, {42576}{42690}how life in the freezer|faces the ultimate challenge - {42692}{42734}the Antarctic winter.