Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Young Penguins took 50-feet leap!

For the first time ever, a camera has captured the breathtaking moment when hundreds of emperor penguin chicks took a daring leap from a towering ice cliff into the ocean below. Wildlife filmmaker Bertie Gregory documented this remarkable event in Antarctica, where young penguins gathered at the edge of a 15-meter (about 50-foot) ice platform, preparing for their first dive into the sea. Huddled together like a group of nervous teenagers, they hesitated, waiting to see who would be the first to make the plunge. Once one penguin leapt, the rest followed in a dramatic cascade. Typically, emperor penguin chicks take their first swim at around six months old, usually by sliding gently into the water or jumping from a small one-meter ledge. However, in this rare and astonishing footage captured by National Geographic Explorer Bertie Gregory, nearly 700 chicks found themselves in a precarious situation, forced to leap from a much higher 10-foot cliff in search of food.

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