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Seven Worlds, One Planet is a new nature documentary presented by Sir David Attenborough.

The documentary looks at wildlife in each of the world鈥檚 seven continents and took almost 1800 filming days in 41 countries to complete. That got us thinking: it can鈥檛 be that hard to film a nature documentary, can it?

Well, filming wild animals isn鈥檛 exactly a walk in the park, especially when you add in challenging weather conditions, difficult terrain and the odd piece of equipment breakage. The production crew need a lot of patience and go to great lengths to get the perfect shot.

Here are some of the times when the filming of Seven Worlds, One Planet didn鈥檛 quite go to plan, and some of the creative tricks the team used.

The master of disguise

Filming a nature documentary means getting close to wild animals without scaring them away, and sometimes that means thinking outside the box.

This was the case when the crew were filming with pelicans in the Danube Delta of Romania, the home to the largest colony of pelicans outside of Africa, so getting close was going to need some creative thinking.

One of the camera operators was the master of disguise when he swam in the Danube with a fake swan on his back. We don鈥檛 know if the pelicans fell for it, but it was worth a try nonetheless.

A man and a woman wearing camouflage onesies on a similar looking mountainous background.
Image caption,
The crew鈥檚 onesies seemed to blend into the background a little too well

Using a disguise to fool a pelican is one thing, but using a disguise to fool a team member sitting right next to you is a different level. Two of the crew wore camouflage onesies to get close to a musk ox in Norway. Not only did they deceive the ox, their outfits blended into the surroundings so well that they were sitting right next to each other and didn鈥檛 even realise.

Bad timing and equipment failure

The team spent seven weeks in Antarctica searching for an aggregation of fin whales - that's basically lots of whales coming together. On the one day it happened, the crew found that their helicopter was broken and unusable.

They used a drone to capture around 100 fin whales, arguably the largest great whale aggregation ever shot. Their bad luck got worse when they nearly lost all the footage as the drone malfunctioned. The camera operator had to crash it into the ship to save the memory card. Just shows that even with the best plan possible, things can still go wrong.

Dedication to get the perfect shot

Picture this: you鈥檝e found the perfect place to film a female alpha dingo, you set up the camera and start recording, life is good.

Then imagine the one place you decided to film happened to be on top of an ants nest. This was the unfortunate case for one of the team who was being bitten by ants, who found their way inside his clothes.

Picture on left is close in of man wearing thermal long johns wiping ants off, second is from further away of the same man.
Image caption,
Location director Theo had to take drastic measures to try and get the ants off him

In a desperate attempt to stay quiet and not disturb the dingo, he stripped down to his underwear in the Australian wilderness whilst trying not to scream. It seems that dedication and persistence can pay off, but maybe it鈥檚 best to always check your surroundings. Lesson learnt.

Friendly manatees

Animals can sometimes be a bit curious when it comes to film crews with their cameras, as the production crew found out.

Underwater shot of a manatee next to a scuba diver.
Image caption,
It鈥檚 more difficult to film manatees when they are giving you a cuddle

The crew were filming underwater with some friendly manatees in North America. They tried hard to keep their distance from the mammals also known as 鈥榮ea cows鈥 but the manatees were having none of it - they rolled around with the crew and even hugged one of the camera operators.

Music-loving animals

Your dog might bark when its favourite song comes on the telly or your bird might chatter when it hears the radio, but what songs do wild aquatic animals like?

Underwater shot of three belugas looking at the camera.
Image caption,
These belugas seemed to enjoy the catchy theme tune of Jurassic Park

The crew say that polar bears and belugas are a fan of the theme song to Jurassic Park and the tune to some Adele songs. Who doesn鈥檛? They are classics. The crew hummed a few different tunes to attract the animals in North America and found success with these catchy tracks. As it turns out, they weren鈥檛 the biggest fans of the UK鈥檚 national anthem God Save the Queen.

Bears can be destructive

If you鈥檙e going to be hauling lots of filming equipment around a cold, rocky mountain at 4000 m (13000 ft) high, then it better be worth it. Unfortunately for the production team, on one occasion, it wasn鈥檛.

Two pictures, left is a man on a ladder fixing a camera to a tree. The second is a close up picture of a bear approaching the camera.
Image caption,
The crew set up camera traps, only for them to be messed with by the bears. One of the culprits was caught on camera

The team carried kit through the Andes mountain range and set up camera traps to capture Andean bears on film over the next few days and nights. The plan sounds good in theory, but when the team returned, they found that the bears had messed around with the cameras and one was thrown down a hill. It seems like the destructive bears outsmarted them on this occasion - maybe they were camera shy?

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