Emmy Award Winning PBS Series!-- Cloud: Wild Stallion Of the Rockies-- Cloud is a wild horse of a different color - almost pure white. And his regal bearing and feisty personality make him stand out all the more. From the day of his birth in the Rockies, he so enthralled Ginger Kathrens that she began to follow his story, filming him and his fellow wild horses of the Arrowhead Mountains over the course of seven years. But in the highly competitive 'culture' of wild horses, was Cloud capable of becoming the great band stallion she expected? This first of two films documents that challenges he faces on the way to maturity. He is captured in a government round-up and released without his family, and battles with other stallions to win a family of his own. This remarkable program sheds light on the rarely seen complexities of wild horse society, especially its strong need for family in an unpredictable world.--Cloud's Legacy: The Wild Stallion Returns-- Is there a beautiful new Cloud on the horizon? In this second film, Ginger Katherens unreels the next two years of her Cloud chronicles. Cloud is now a band stallion, with a family to care for. A new chapter of his life begins. Now he is a father, with two sons. The one he will raise is not of his blood. The other is Cloud's spitting image, but will never know him as a father. Yet Cloud's legacy is more than the passage of his genes, from father to son. He will also pass on all he has learned in the mountains to become a band stallion. His adopted son will profit from cloud's skills as a protector, leader and caretaker. And that may one day count for more than blood. But will the family survive the hazards of their environment - drought, storms, lightning, fire? You won't rest until you've seen the ending of this poignantly powerful tale of nature at its wildest.-- Cloud's Legacy: The Wild Stallion Returns-- In this second film, Ginger Kathrens unreels the next two years of her Cloud chronicles. Cloud is now a band stallion, with a family to care for. Cloud's legacy is more than a passage of his genes-he will also pass on all he has learned in the mountains. But can the family survive the hazards of their environment-drought, storms, lightening, and fire?