One Wild Ride: Yukon to Yellowstone
 
(Note from DH: Did any of you see this story on NBC tonight? Can anybody say "The Wildlands Project"? http://www.twp.org/action/ytoy/index.html When the national news starts pushing this nonsense as a great idea, you know that we are soon to be in trouble with people supporting this plan, but not understanding what this will do to end many rural lives if it is successful. This is scary stuff. Yukon to Yellowstone would be treated pretty much as Wilderness.) (Note: Consider the reporter and his priorities, immediately following the article...)
 
Premieres Sunday, March 14, 2004 at 8 p.m. ET

Lynn Donaldson / Copyright NGT&F

National Geographic Ultimate Explorer correspondent Nick Baker takes a 5,000-mile road trip from the northernmost reaches of the Yukon to Yellowstone National Park, exploring one of the greatest mountain ecosystems in the world. Baker explores this wilderness in the wake of an ambitious plan to link the parks and reserves of the northern Rockies.
 
March 8, 2004
 
 
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National Geographic Ultimate Explorer correspondent Nick Baker takes a remarkable 5,000-mile road trip along one of the greatest mountain ecosystems in the world -- the northern Rockies. Beginning in the northernmost reaches of the Yukon and ending in breathtaking parklands of Yellowstone, Baker explores the rich natural history of the region in the wake of an ambitious plan called the Y2Y Conservation Initiative. The plan aims to link the great national parks and reserves of the northern Rockies, creating a network of preserved habitats through which wildlife can roam freely.

Along the way, Baker joins the people who are helping to make the Y2Y a reality. In Canada’s Banff National Park, Baker accompanies Human-Wildlife Conflict Specialist Glen Peers as he works to maintain the careful balance between the needs of humans and animals living in and around the park. In northwest Montana, Baker lends a hand as Grizzly Bear Management Specialist Tim Manley relocates a problematic female grizzly bear that was caught feeding on the property of area residents. And in Yellowstone, Baker joins Doug Smith, a leading wildlife biologist whose controversial Yellowstone Wolf Project released imported wolves into park, reestablishing a population that had been extinct in Yellowstone since the 1930s.

Join Baker on this journey across the great northwest as he captures the essence of the area’s half-million square miles of stunning beauty and comes face-to-face with bison, caribou, bears, moose, wolves, and wolverines -- animals whose survival may depend on the successful implementation of the Y2Y plan.

 
Nick Baker
Ultimate Explorer Correspondent
MSNBC
 
October 29, 2003

Nick Baker’s original and enthusiastic approach to natural history has involved him in an array of highly successful wildlife and science programs in England and abroad. Now, the energetic biologist brings his hands-on style of storytelling to the states as one of Ultimate Explorer’s key field correspondents.

Since 1996, Baker has been a presenter on BBC’s ever-popular The Really Wild Show and recently completed a series of natural history specials for that network on subjects ranging from rhinos to rainforests. In 2001, Baker hosted BBC2’s Nick Baker’s [animal name…ie Rhinos], a special in which he attempts to get “under the skin” of animals such as grizzly bears, penguins, rattlesnakes and rhinos, examining their habits, habitats and unique behaviors. Baker has also been a presenter on BBC’s Tomorrow’s World, a cult science series that examines the science and technology of tomorrow.

 
British-born biologist Nick Baker is an enthusiastic naturalist

Baker is no stranger to National Geographic -- he was amongst presenters who launched National Geographic Channel UK.

He is also a field reporter for National Geographic Channel Explorer’s Journal, and the host and writer of Nick’s Quest, a series that takes him to exotic locations in search of rare animals.

Baker graduated from the University of Exeter in 1993 with a degree in Biological Sciences, but was a keen naturalist from an early age. He co-founded Exeter University’s national ‘Bug Club’ and was a member of the Royal Entomological Society’s Youth Development Committee.

As a field naturalist, he has been involved in research on badgers and the high brown fritillary butterfly.

He regularly tours schools with his animals to educate school children and is a vice president of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds. He also has a vice presidency at the youth wing of the Wildlife Trusts in the UK and is president of the Seahorse Trust and works for the Shark Trust, the Basking Shark Society, Bird Life International, The Field Studies Council and many others.

In addition to his work on television, Baker has written for an array of publications including BBC Wildlife Magazine, and is the author of the popular insect guide, Baker’s Bug Book. Baker also recently published “Nick Baker’s British Wildlife”, a monthly guide to the highlights in the British wildlife calendar. He is currently working on a publication entitled “The New Amateur Naturalist”, a practical manual that includes all of the tricks and techniques required to be a naturalist.

Baker is currently designing and building his own zoo in the UK that centers around presenting creepy crawlies, amphibians and reptiles in a way never seen before. The name of the zoo is ‘Weird Creatures’.

Baker currently lives on Dartmoor, a national park in Devon, England, along with a growing menagerie of small animals including spiders, scorpions, stick insects, amphibians, reptiles, butterflies and moths. Among his favorites are cane toads and a collection of hissing cockroaches. He even keeps pet leeches in the fridge at home and often feeds them by attaching them to his leg!

In addition to his hectic schedule, Baker manages to fit in competitive cycling and, as a self-taught harmonica player, percussionist and singer, he regularly performs in jazz and blues bands.

Copyright 2004 MSNBC Interactive
 
 
Exeter Urban Wildlife Group: Contact
 
Mr. Nick Baker
Horticultural Advisor
The Dovecote
Cowley
Exeter
Devon
EX5 5ER
Tel: 01392 851634
Email: bakers@turlake.f9.co.uk