KOREA +1
THAILAND -1
12.00 am
Carter's W.A.R.
"Ivan joins the foremost anti-poaching team in Mozambique to bring down one particular group of poachers who have been killing local elephants for their ivory."
1.00 am
The Most Dangerous Ways to School
"Torrential rain and more than 4000 meters above sea level are not the only challenges that nature has placed on the dangerous school route of the youngest inhabitants of the village Kumpur. The children of this tiny folk (tribe) in the mountains of the Nepal province Bagmati, must walk for over 2 hours through paths that are at times only 40 cm wide and drop over 500 meters into the deep. Also twice a day they have to cross the dangerous river Trishuli on their way to school with a ramshackle ropeway. It is a brutal march and they walk it every day just to obtain a tiny iota of education. Risky, spectacular and sometimes just simply beautiful.""
2.00 am
River Hunters
"This time on River Hunters we go in search of evidence of the clashing Scottish clans embroiled in the civil war that raged across the British Isles in the 17th Century. Fights between the Royalists supporting the King and the Covenanters wanting more power for church and state."
3.00 am
The Bomb Listener
"Humans have been in conflict with the marine environment for generations. It is no different in Malaysia’s Tun Sakaran Marine Park, off the eastern coast of Semporna, Sabah. Its coral reefs at the centre of marine biodiversity are at risk from a devastating crime wave - destructive fishing using homemade bombs. Although illegal, fish bombing is widely practiced around the Pacific and East Africa. Century-old coral reefs, home to fish and other marine life are reduced to rubble in seconds. Fish bombings happen without warning and often when no one is around. Some days there are none, others two or three together. There is no set pattern. Even if park rangers were to act, they have no idea where the crime is taking place due to how vast the marine sanctuary is. Catching the culprits has proven almost impossible.... But there is strong hope. An international team is out to turn wildlife tracking technology into a ground-breaking bomb detection system that will pinpoint the exact location of the crime as it is unfolding. We follow Malaysian field officer Jamie Ng and Sabah Parks enforcement ranger Abdul Hafiz Matlah as they try to outsmart the fish bombers with the help of British marine biologist Dr Elizabeth Wood from the Marine Conservation Society UK and passive acoustic monitoring system specialists at the University of St Andrews, Scotland to tackle a problem that has run rampant for over half a century. Will the bomb listener be the ultimate tool to catch the fish bombers in the act?"
4.00 am
Growing Wild
"Toddlers, Teenagers and Tears. Chris cajoles some pigs on a farm in New South Wales, tries to make friends with some four-year-olds in Ipoh, then heads into a nature reserve in Chiang Mai to get schooled on how to make pancakes. And back in Singapore, he challenges a bunch of 13 year-old boys to set up their own aquaponics farm in school. From toddlers to tweens and even teenagers, Chris is determined to bring out the urban farmer in them!"
5.00 am
Growing Wild
"Exotic mushrooms, silky seaweed and…..crickets! It’s a brave new world of urban farming in Asia and Chris is all in. A new wave of micro farms shows how companies and individuals alike are putting their own spin on sustainable farming and for Chris, this means becoming a cricket farmer for the first time. But is Singapore ready for some future food, grown right here in our backyards? Chris puts this idea to the test and trades his farmer hat for a chef’s apron. He opens a pop-up stall at the farmers market, but there’s a catch."
6.00 am
Carter's W.A.R.
"Ivan joins the foremost anti-poaching team in Mozambique to bring down one particular group of poachers who have been killing local elephants for their ivory."
7.00 am
The Most Dangerous Ways to School
"Torrential rain and more than 4000 meters above sea level are not the only challenges that nature has placed on the dangerous school route of the youngest inhabitants of the village Kumpur. The children of this tiny folk (tribe) in the mountains of the Nepal province Bagmati, must walk for over 2 hours through paths that are at times only 40 cm wide and drop over 500 meters into the deep. Also twice a day they have to cross the dangerous river Trishuli on their way to school with a ramshackle ropeway. It is a brutal march and they walk it every day just to obtain a tiny iota of education. Risky, spectacular and sometimes just simply beautiful.""
8.00 am
River Hunters
"This time on River Hunters we go in search of evidence of the clashing Scottish clans embroiled in the civil war that raged across the British Isles in the 17th Century. Fights between the Royalists supporting the King and the Covenanters wanting more power for church and state."
9.00 am
The Bomb Listener
"Humans have been in conflict with the marine environment for generations. It is no different in Malaysia’s Tun Sakaran Marine Park, off the eastern coast of Semporna, Sabah. Its coral reefs at the centre of marine biodiversity are at risk from a devastating crime wave - destructive fishing using homemade bombs. Although illegal, fish bombing is widely practiced around the Pacific and East Africa. Century-old coral reefs, home to fish and other marine life are reduced to rubble in seconds. Fish bombings happen without warning and often when no one is around. Some days there are none, others two or three together. There is no set pattern. Even if park rangers were to act, they have no idea where the crime is taking place due to how vast the marine sanctuary is. Catching the culprits has proven almost impossible.... But there is strong hope. An international team is out to turn wildlife tracking technology into a ground-breaking bomb detection system that will pinpoint the exact location of the crime as it is unfolding. We follow Malaysian field officer Jamie Ng and Sabah Parks enforcement ranger Abdul Hafiz Matlah as they try to outsmart the fish bombers with the help of British marine biologist Dr Elizabeth Wood from the Marine Conservation Society UK and passive acoustic monitoring system specialists at the University of St Andrews, Scotland to tackle a problem that has run rampant for over half a century. Will the bomb listener be the ultimate tool to catch the fish bombers in the act?"
10.00 am
Growing Wild
"Toddlers, Teenagers and Tears. Chris cajoles some pigs on a farm in New South Wales, tries to make friends with some four-year-olds in Ipoh, then heads into a nature reserve in Chiang Mai to get schooled on how to make pancakes. And back in Singapore, he challenges a bunch of 13 year-old boys to set up their own aquaponics farm in school. From toddlers to tweens and even teenagers, Chris is determined to bring out the urban farmer in them!"
11.00 am
Growing Wild
"Exotic mushrooms, silky seaweed and…..crickets! It’s a brave new world of urban farming in Asia and Chris is all in. A new wave of micro farms shows how companies and individuals alike are putting their own spin on sustainable farming and for Chris, this means becoming a cricket farmer for the first time. But is Singapore ready for some future food, grown right here in our backyards? Chris puts this idea to the test and trades his farmer hat for a chef’s apron. He opens a pop-up stall at the farmers market, but there’s a catch."
12.00 pm
Carter's W.A.R.
"Ivan joins the foremost anti-poaching team in Mozambique to bring down one particular group of poachers who have been killing local elephants for their ivory."
1.00 pm
The Most Dangerous Ways to School
"Torrential rain and more than 4000 meters above sea level are not the only challenges that nature has placed on the dangerous school route of the youngest inhabitants of the village Kumpur. The children of this tiny folk (tribe) in the mountains of the Nepal province Bagmati, must walk for over 2 hours through paths that are at times only 40 cm wide and drop over 500 meters into the deep. Also twice a day they have to cross the dangerous river Trishuli on their way to school with a ramshackle ropeway. It is a brutal march and they walk it every day just to obtain a tiny iota of education. Risky, spectacular and sometimes just simply beautiful.""
2.00 pm
River Hunters
"This time on River Hunters we go in search of evidence of the clashing Scottish clans embroiled in the civil war that raged across the British Isles in the 17th Century. Fights between the Royalists supporting the King and the Covenanters wanting more power for church and state."
3.00 pm
The Bomb Listener
"Humans have been in conflict with the marine environment for generations. It is no different in Malaysia’s Tun Sakaran Marine Park, off the eastern coast of Semporna, Sabah. Its coral reefs at the centre of marine biodiversity are at risk from a devastating crime wave - destructive fishing using homemade bombs. Although illegal, fish bombing is widely practiced around the Pacific and East Africa. Century-old coral reefs, home to fish and other marine life are reduced to rubble in seconds. Fish bombings happen without warning and often when no one is around. Some days there are none, others two or three together. There is no set pattern. Even if park rangers were to act, they have no idea where the crime is taking place due to how vast the marine sanctuary is. Catching the culprits has proven almost impossible.... But there is strong hope. An international team is out to turn wildlife tracking technology into a ground-breaking bomb detection system that will pinpoint the exact location of the crime as it is unfolding. We follow Malaysian field officer Jamie Ng and Sabah Parks enforcement ranger Abdul Hafiz Matlah as they try to outsmart the fish bombers with the help of British marine biologist Dr Elizabeth Wood from the Marine Conservation Society UK and passive acoustic monitoring system specialists at the University of St Andrews, Scotland to tackle a problem that has run rampant for over half a century. Will the bomb listener be the ultimate tool to catch the fish bombers in the act?"
4.00 pm
Growing Wild
"Toddlers, Teenagers and Tears. Chris cajoles some pigs on a farm in New South Wales, tries to make friends with some four-year-olds in Ipoh, then heads into a nature reserve in Chiang Mai to get schooled on how to make pancakes. And back in Singapore, he challenges a bunch of 13 year-old boys to set up their own aquaponics farm in school. From toddlers to tweens and even teenagers, Chris is determined to bring out the urban farmer in them!"
5.00 pm
Growing Wild
"Exotic mushrooms, silky seaweed and…..crickets! It’s a brave new world of urban farming in Asia and Chris is all in. A new wave of micro farms shows how companies and individuals alike are putting their own spin on sustainable farming and for Chris, this means becoming a cricket farmer for the first time. But is Singapore ready for some future food, grown right here in our backyards? Chris puts this idea to the test and trades his farmer hat for a chef’s apron. He opens a pop-up stall at the farmers market, but there’s a catch."
6.00 pm
Croc College
"The students learn about life and death on the farm as baby crocodiles hatch in their hands and they have to kill an adult. Repeated fumbling in roping practice leaves John livid with everyone and Lyn’s frustration with diminutive Renee reaches boiling point."
6.30 pm
Croc College
"Renee catches a croc three times her size but Ryan is struggling. John takes Renee and Ryan on an overnight trip where they must share a motel room with crocodiles and the chance to go to Kakadu is on everyone’s mind."
7.00 pm
Coral Sea Dreaming
"Coral Sea Dreaming enters into the very heart of life - and death - on a coral reef. The film follows a story that spans 500 million years and stars some of the most exotic and wondrous marine creatures on earth. Coral is the planets greatest natural architect, and coral reefs boast the highest biodiversity of any ecosystem. We meet thousands of reef inhabitants, from ancient turtles to feeding sharks, adorable pygmy seahorses and savage sea slugs, witness a manta ray ballet and courting octopus. Specialized state-of-the-art High Definition technology captures these lives with unprecedented intimacy, illustrating elaborate courtship displays, mating rituals, feeding frenzies, intense nighttime predation, cannibalism and chemical warfare. Filmed over 2000 dives on coral reef ecosystems; The Great Barrier Reef, Ningaloo Reef, Papua New Guinea and at the Coral Sea; Coral Sea Dreaming is a celebration of reefs now under threat of ocean acidification and climate change. There is much to be done to safeguard these precious ecosystems for future generations. And very little time to do it."
8.00 pm
Gold Fever
"Tom investigates 100+ year old records of his Pinelog claim for sketches from the California Gold Rush days, which serves as a treasure map, providing clues as to what may still be buried there."
9.00 pm
Growing Wild
"Exotic mushrooms, silky seaweed and…..crickets! It’s a brave new world of urban farming in Asia and Chris is all in. A new wave of micro farms shows how companies and individuals alike are putting their own spin on sustainable farming and for Chris, this means becoming a cricket farmer for the first time. But is Singapore ready for some future food, grown right here in our backyards? Chris puts this idea to the test and trades his farmer hat for a chef’s apron. He opens a pop-up stall at the farmers market, but there’s a catch."
10.00 pm
Hollywood Weapons
"Give me some sugar, baby! Terry travels through time where he will test the cult favorite Army of Darkness. Terry not only gets to test several scenes, but also gets a sit down with the legendary Bruce Campbell."
10.30 pm
Hollywood Weapons
"Terry gets to annoy Larry with his impersonation of William Wallace from Braveheart. He not only gets to wield Sir Wallace's sword, but also convinces Larry to build him a trebuchet."
11.00 pm
Beauty and the Reef
"This is a crucial documentary told by those who have lived and breathed every facet of this reef and been the advocates long before people understood the changes.. The vision of 10,000 dives through the producer half of these on the Great Barrier reef to provide the avenue of understanding of change. The knowledge of one of the worlds leading marine biologist who has spent his life in the water and advised governments on upcoming changes is world class.. Lin Sutherland has published hundreds of article on the marine environment, has been a photographer, videographer and passionate advocate who has always understood the journey of the Great barrier reef, few people have the insight into this ecosystem like her. This will be a film of a lifetime."

