Clarisse arnhold biography of rory

  • His wife, Clarisse “Sissy” Arnhold, died in 2013.
  • Lion, leopard and cheetah parents attempt to co-exist and raise their cubs on the shores of Botswana's Gomoti River.
  • Major support for NATURE is provided by The Arnhold Family in memory of Henry and Clarisse Arnhold, The Fairweather Foundation, Sue and Edgar Wachenheim III.
  • Dear Piping Plover Friends,

    I hope you are having a joyous holiday season. If you live in the area, please be sure not to miss Gloucester’s Lobster Trap Tree. It’s extra magnificent this year, with 400 traps to honor Gloucester’s 400th anniversary. The tree is fancifully decorated with hundreds of buoys grabb painted by local kids. Very generously, the traps for the tree were permanently given to the community by Jim Knott, CEO of Riverdale Mills, with the labor for making the traps donated by Brooks Trap Mill. Every year the tree is built by David Brooks, Shawn Henry and a fantastic group of local volunteers.

    The clip is of a young Plover chick and his Dad. inom love watching the little ones pop up from the warming wings of an adult. You never know what direction they are going to zoom off to but often enough, they stretch their tiny developing winglets and give a yawn after emerging from thermo-snuggling.

    This is just one of hundreds of clips from our forthcomin

  • clarisse arnhold biography of rory
  • Animals with Cameras | Episode 1

    ♪♪ [ Cheetah purring ] ♪♪ BUCHANAN: As a wildlife cameraman, I have traveled the world trying to capture life's most intimate and dramatic moments.

    ♪♪ But wouldn't it be incredible if we could see the world from an animal's point of view?

    [ Cheetah purring ] Well, in this series, that is exactly what we're gonna do, with the help of the animals themselves.

    They're gonna be the ones that are doing filming.

    They're going to take us to places that a cameraman like me simply cannot go and reveal a side of their lives like we have never seen before.

    ♪♪ ♪♪ Working with scientists, we're going to design cameras small enough to take us into their hidden world.

    [ Meerkat chattering ] Wow.

    This is their footage... MELDRUM: Oh, yeah.

    BUCHANAN: Oh, wow.

    ...their story, and we're going to see it through their eyes.

    ♪♪ [ gepard purring ] ♪♪ ♪♪ In this program, we'll see what our cameras can reveal about thr

    Grizzly Country

    [water splashing] - [George] The first thing that strikes you as the bear first enters your visual field is the awesome size of the animal.

    [serene music] - [Hiker] Make a lot of noise, clap your hands.

    - [Jeff] The bear was dragging me off the trail and pulling me by my elbows with his mouth.

    - [Stan] Actually, I think they're much overrated as being such a vicious animal.

    [serene music] - [Announcer] Nature is made possible by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and by viewers like you.

    [serene music] - For many people, the grizzly is the strongest symbol of what's wild and free, where the grizzly lives so does the wilderness.

    A century ago, grizzlies roamed over a large part of the United States, from the coast of California, across the Great Plains to the forests of the Eastern mountains.

    But today in the lower 48, its range is confined to the high plateau of Yellowstone and the deep mountains of Glacier National Park.

    Only in Alaska does