All features were produced for and broadcast on the National Geographic Channel-US

Project Puffin

On a small island in Maine, a dedicated ornithologist brings a charismatic bird back after almost a century of absence.
Newfoundland Fisheries

A moratorium on fishing for cod was supposed to help the fish recover. But the fish haven’t returned. Why?
Mudwalking

On the mud flats of the Wadden Sea, off the north coast of the Netherlands, residents and tourists practice a bizarre – and very messy – sport, called Wadlopen.
Climate Change in the Netherlands

Everyone agrees the world is warming and sea levels will rise. High countries aren’t too worried, but the Netherlands is the lowest of the low. What can its teeming millions do to survive?
Ice Age Floods

Fifteen thousand years ago, a vast lake as big as two of the Great Lakes combined covered a big chunk of the Northwestern U.S. Then, in less than a week, it blew out. It changed the face of four states, and now a park is being proposed to show off the spectacular damage it left behind.
Celtic Colours

Where do you go to find the most authentic strain of old Celtic culture? Ireland? Scotland? No. Cape Breton Island in Nova Scotia, where ancient ways are preserved and celebrated in a week-long festival of music.
Guandera Biological Station

Farmers have ruined vast tracts of tropical forest in northern Ecuador, but protecting what’s left may mean enlisting the very same farmers and teaching them practices that may also help them save themselves.
Greenland Melting?

The big ice is restless. Both fishermen and scientists have noticed that glaciers on Greenland’s edge are thinning. But the key to understanding what’s really happening here is in the biggest ice: The continental ice sheet that feeds the glaciers. A new discovery leads to new understanding.
© 2007 Mountainside Films Ltd.