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From Our Own Correspondent

From Our Home Correspondent 21/07/2019

From Our Own Correspondent

BBC

News, News Commentary

4.41.3K Ratings

🗓️ 21 July 2019

⏱️ 28 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Mishal Husain introduces dispatches from writers and journalists which reflect the range of contemporary life in the United Kingdom.

Writer and broadcaster, Ian McMillan, embarks on a high summer stroll along the bridle path that links his home with the post-industrial landscape of South Yorkshire, taking in a flattened colliery, a screaming mandrake, Peter Falk, the X19 bus to Barnsley and a magpie - or is it two? Journalist and part-time canoeist, Bob Walker, embarks on a "Three Men in a Boat"-style progress on the river Wye - which for much of its course marks the border between Wales and England. He quickly finds out that, just as in Jerome K. Jerome's time, there is often ferocious competition among the different users of the water space for access. And money often lies at the heart of the wrangling... With mental health issues finally commanding more attention at home, work and in society generally, Christine Finn returns to her home town of Deal to discover how those managing conditions are being helped by the use of allotments. Along the way, she realises that old-style denial of mental health problems had gone on much closer to home than she had previously thought. As the nation's gargantuan appetite for soft fruit reaches its apogee, John Murphy journeys to the poly-tunnels of the garden of England to learn how this demand is satisfied and how berry farmers' costs may yet force radical changes to the way strawberries, raspberries, loganberries - and all the rest - reach our tables. He also hears how the poly-tunnels can be unexpectedly romantic locations. And Ayo Akinwolere ponders how and when the relationship between fathers and sons alters, their roles invert and how well-prepared both are for the change.

Producer: Simon Coates

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

BBC Sounds.

0:02.0

Thank you for downloading from our home correspondent from BBC Radio 4.

0:06.0

I'm Michelle Hussein and this month's program has an outdoors theme about it.

0:11.0

It is the summer holiday period after all. So we've been canoeing on the

0:15.6

why which is not as peaceful a pursuit as you might think, where with a gardening group that is also

0:22.2

all about boosting mental well-being.

0:25.0

We hear about the Berry Growers of Kent and the Pickers they rely on,

0:30.0

and a right of passage as a son charts his changing relationship with his father.

0:36.0

First we journey to the Dern Valley in South Yorkshire to walk with Ian McMillan across a landscape he is known all his life. Not that it's looked the same for all that

0:46.3

time, quite the opposite, but it's where he can lose himself in the sights and sounds of

0:51.5

the past as well as the present. in the

0:54.0

sounds of the past as well as the present.

1:01.0

It's high summer in South Yorkshire and a magpie has just flapped by like a flying barcode, one for sorrow, so they say. The sky is blue and scratched with

1:06.5

vapour trails and I can hear the X-9 bus to Barnsley changing gear as it makes

1:12.1

its way along the top road.

1:14.0

I turn to my wife and say,

1:16.0

like I have on many, many occasions for the last 40 years,

1:20.0

I'm going for a stroll down the bridle,

1:22.0

and she nods, the bridle and she nods the bridle path from the top road past the big house to the place where the pit used to be

1:30.2

open main colliery finally killed off in 1993.

1:35.0

The big house, once the place where the self-styled Squire Taylor lived,

1:40.0

and now a series of self-contained apartments behind a crumbling wall at the side of the path.

...

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