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Open Country
BBC Radio 4
443 episodes
1 month ago

Countryside magazine featuring the people and wildlife that shape the landscape of the British Isles

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Nature
Society & Culture,
Science
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All content for Open Country is the property of BBC Radio 4 and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.

Countryside magazine featuring the people and wildlife that shape the landscape of the British Isles

Show more...
Nature
Society & Culture,
Science
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts112/v4/21/9e/a7/219ea7a9-3e85-4501-f39a-4ba20cfcba60/mza_12934166212214773266.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Wild and Windy Fylde
Open Country
24 minutes
2 months ago
Wild and Windy Fylde

The Fylde peninsula stands between Morecombe Bay, the Bowland Hills and the Irish Sea. Its position means that it's a very windy spot. Windmills have been a feature of the area for hundreds of years, built to grind grain and drain marshy areas in order to turn them into agricultural land. At one point there were over thirty-five windmills on the Fylde coast. Rendered obsolete by the arrival of new technologies – first steam, then electricity - only a few are still standing today. In this programme, Martha Kearney visits one of the last remaining windmills, Little Marton in Blackpool. Built in 1838, it inspired the author Charles Allen Clarke to write 'Windmill Land', documenting the windmills of rural Lancashire. Martha is shown around the mill by the author's grand-daughter, who explains its significance.

Martha travels inland to discover how some of the impacts of the previous generations' decisions about landscape management are being reversed. Where land was once drained, in some places it is now being "re-wetted". She visits Winmarleigh carbon farm where Lancashire Wildlife Trust is running a project to restore peatland which was damaged in the past by drainage, involving planting 150,000 plugs of sphagnum moss. She learns how that's done, and meets the scientist who's monitoring the effect this has on greenhouse gas emissions.

Back on the coast again at Lytham St Annes, Martha finds out about the role the wind has to play in 21st century activities in the area, where sports like kite-surfing and land-yachting are growing in popularity. She meets a man whose father set up the local land-yachting club, and who - now in his 80s - is still going strong in the sport.

Producer: Emma Campbell Assistant producer: Jo Peacey

Open Country

Countryside magazine featuring the people and wildlife that shape the landscape of the British Isles