Aerial Journeys | Looking at the British landscape from the air
CHANNEL | BBC 2
FIRST BROADCAST | 23 January 1987
DURATION | 29 minutes 20 seconds
FIRSTBROADCAST
1987
The hardy aviators follow a series of markers from Kilnsey in the Yorkshire Dales eastwards to Flamborough Head in Humberside, flying over some magnificent countryside, getting lost, battling hailstones and looking forward to a pint when it's all over.
The microlight is defined as any one or two-seat aircraft whose weight does not exceed 450kgs. The earliest microlights were simply hang-gliders equipped with a small, two-stroke engine but, as the sport evolved, advances in engine technology made even round-the-world flights possible.
Aerial photographers discuss their work from the early 1900s onwards.
News report on the first live television filming from the air.
Raymond Baxter reports on the South Coast Air Race.
The BBC makes its second attempt to broadcast live from the air.
The first episode of a groundbreaking series on Britain as viewed from the air.
Aerial views of mankind's various modes of transport through the ages.
What were the implications for a countryside under constant threat of development?
Britain's seaside life, viewed from the air.
'Tomorrow's World' explores the scientific feat of aerial photo mapping.
An aerial journey from a lighthouse in the South West to the north of the Shetland Isles.
Take a journey over land and through time with this film of Wales shot entirely from the air.
John Noakes meets members of the Red Arrows.
Britain's ancient past is discovered from the air.
A natural history programme on Ice Age Britain.
Britain's coastline as you've never seen it before.

Six intrepid teams race their microlights across the roof of England.
Janet Ellis takes to the skies as she trains for a freefall parachute jump.
Reflections of a mountaineer while climbing in the Lake District.
A 'Radio Times' draft and article about the BBC's first live broadcast from an aeroplane.
The Head of Television Programmes criticises 'Operation Pegasus'.
Cecil McGivern finds further fault with 'Operation Pegasus'.
Helicopter filming causes problems for John Betjeman and chaos ensues at Longleat.
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