Episodes

  • Surfing the Generations
    Sep 9 2024

    This month we take a closer look at the city of Bath through the eyes of its residents. We will hear some wonderful memories shared by those who’ve grown up and spent their lives working in the city.

    The episode starts with Reconnecting Twerton, a group set up by the Bath CIty Football CLub Foundation. The group is for older residents and aims to connect older residents with each other, combating loneliness, sharing stories and having a lot of fun. Three of its members share stories about their lives. The Foundation's Health and Wellbeing officer Chris Gannon introduces us to the group

    We find time to get out and go for a walk. Nicole Daw is the Trails and Access Officer for the Cotswolds National Landscape and she’s been asked by Bathscape to make a number of films about the joys of walking. We join her with young people from the Black Familes in Education Group. Rob Mitchell is the supplementary school coordinator and he talks about why he’s chosen to take them out walking.

    The episode finishes off at the Forget-Me-Not Dementia Club down at Bath city football stadium. This is a group for older people living with dementia and we hear a couple of them in conversation with some young people from the Bath College Prince's Trust Programme .

    Mitchell Horman is in charge of the Prince's Trust team programme at Bath College and he brings the episode to a close with his views on the importance of intergenerational projects.

    Credits

    Music: Audionautix

    Produced by Pommy Harmar

    Links

    Reconnecting Twerton - www.bathcityfoundation.org/reconnecting-twerton

    Bath City FC Foundation - www.bathcityfoundation.org/

    Cotswolds National Landscape - www.cotswolds-nl.org.uk/

    Black Families in Education Support Group - www.educationequals.org.uk/

    Forget-Me-Not Dementia Club - https://www.forgetmenotfamiliarfriendscic.com/

    Bath College Prince's Trust Team Programme

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    46 mins
  • Hedgelaying, Scything and Dry Stone Walling!
    Aug 2 2024

    This month we head out into the countryside to find out about the many traditional and ancient skills using only hand tools and age-old techniques, including scything, hedge laying and dry stone walling.

    Local expert Mike Reed tells us all about hedgelaying, why it's done and what is different about the North Somerset style.

    We head up to Lyncombe Hill Fields and meet Maurice Tennenhaus leading a team of scythers. Presenter Pommy Harmar gets a lesson in scything from scything maestro Dave Pegler.

    Robin Morley leads the Cotswold Wardens Dry Stone Walling team and we hear from him and from the oldest drystone waller in the group Robin Oldland.

    Many new words are learnt in all three crafts!

    Credits

    Music: Audionautix

    Produced by Pommy Harmar

    Links

    Mike Reid Hedgelayer - https://www.instagram.com/mikereedhedgelaying/

    Avon Needs Trees volunteering - www.avonneedstrees.org.uk/volunteering/

    Chew Valley Plants Trees - www.chewvalleyplantstrees.co.uk/

    Community Farm, Chew Valley Lake - www.thecommunityfarm.co.uk/

    Natural England - www.gov.uk/government/organisations/natural-england

    Friends of Lyncombe Hill Fields - www.friendsoflyncombehillfields.co.uk/

    Green Scythe Fair - www.greenfair.org.uk/

    The Scythe Association - www.scytheassociation.org/

    Cotswold National Landscape - www.cotswolds-nl.org.uk/

    Cotswold Voluntary Wardens - www.cotswolds-nl.org.uk/looking-after/volunteering/

    Dry Stone Walling Association - www.dswa.org.uk/

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    40 mins
  • Full Steam Ahead!
    Jul 4 2024

    Join Dan Merrett (Manager) and Lucy Bartlett (Community Projects Officer) from Bathscape as they transport presenter Pommy Harmar by electric bike along two disused railway tracks across the Bathscape.

    We start in Saltford on the Bristol to Bath Railway Path, which follows the route of the Midland Railway Mangotsfield and Bath branch line, which was closed during the Beeching Axe of the 1960s.

    We meet Colin Maggs, a railway historian and the author of more than 100 books about British Railways. He was awarded an MBE in 1993 for services to railway history and an honorary MA from the University of Bath in 1995. He is joined by Mike Beale, Secretary Bath Railway Society who' can trace back four generations of railway workers in his family.

    We explore the two tunnels which form part of the Dorset and Somerset Line and meet Karl Baxter a runner competing in the gruelling ultramarathon 200 mile race called simply 'The Tunnel'. Every year around 45 men and women try to run backwards and forwards through the dark mile-long tunnel 200 times. In 2024, only 7 completed the race within the mandatory 55 hours.

    Credits

    Music: Audionautix

    Produced by Pommy Harmar

    Links

    Bath Railway Society - www.bathrailwaysociety.co.uk

    The Railway and Historical Railway Society - Dorset and Somerset line 150th Anniversary Commemoriative Walk with Mike Beale

    The Tunnel - 200 mile Ultramarathon Race in Combe Down Tunnel

    Tucking Mill Resevoir - Visitor information

    Sustrans - Bristol to Bath Railway Path

    Sustrans - Two Tunnels Circuit

    Two Tunnels Greenway - www.twotunnels.org.uk

    Bath and North East Somerset Council - Linear Park

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    49 mins
  • Bath City Farm
    Jun 7 2024

    This month's episode celebrates Bath CIty Farm.

    Situated on a beautiful 37-acre site with stunning views over the city, Bath City Farm is a working farm, that’s also a much loved visitor attraction.

    On the site there is a community cafe and farm shop, farm animals, children’s playground, woodland and nature trails. Entrance is free however donations are very welcome.

    In this episode you will meet a varitety of farm animals with livestock coordinator Ella Holmes.

    And on the way we will talk to:

    Sarah Davies, Programme Lead for Mental Health

    Brendan Tate-Wistreich, Director

    Amy Nelson, Roots to Work Coordinator

    Sarah Prettejohns, Cafe Lead Roots to Work

    Luke Roberts, Horticultural Assistant

    Credits

    Music: Audionautix

    Produced by Pommy Harmar

    Links

    Bath City Farm - www.bathcityfarm.org.uk

    Bathscape - www.bathscape.co.uk

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    41 mins
  • Birding in Bath
    May 5 2024

    This episode is published on International Dawn Chorus Day which takes place on the first Sunday of May every year and this year it’s Sunday May 5th. It is a worldwide celebration of nature's greatest symphony and in this show we want to celebrate birds in general, the birds of Bath and their incredible songs. One of the main reasons that birds like to sing at dawn is that it’s quieter then, the air is usually very still and birdsong has been shown to carry 20 times further at dawn.

    Remember you don't have to head out to a nature reserve, you can always just open your window - and listen.

    The episode starts off very early one morning just behind Sydney gardens with expert bird listener Lucy Starling who was keen to find out whether a pair of sedge warblers had returned to nest in Bathampton meadows.

    Ed Drewitt is a local naturalist, author, tour leader, birder, photographer, public speaker, bird ringer, zoologist, feather expert and he’s currently studying for a PhD based on researching Peregrines for the last 24 years. He talks about what the dawn chorus means to him and describes the life of a peregrine falcon and the Peregrine Project in Bath.

    The episode finishes with a walk organised by the Cotswolds Wardens with expert birder Marika Kovacs.

    Credits

    Music: Audionautix

    Dawn Chorus audio kindly recorded by Ed Drewitt

    Produced by Pommy Harmar

    Links

    RSPB - dawn chorus - www.rspb.org.uk/whats-happening/news/the-dawn-chorus-all-you-need-to-know-about-natures-big-show

    Bath Peregrine Project nest site webcam - www.hawkandowltrust.org/live-cameras/bath-peregrines

    Cotswold Warden Walks - www.cotswolds-nl.org.uk/visiting-and-exploring/guided-walks

    Ed Drewitt - www.eddrewitt.co.uk

    Bath Natural History Society - www.bathnats.org.uk

    Bathscape - www.bathscape.co.uk



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    40 mins
  • Bath Goes Gardening
    Apr 4 2024

    This month, as spring gets properly into its stride, we go gardening.

    We start with Carol Stone, one of the volunteers from Alice Park Community Garden down below Larkhall on the London Road. If you have always wanted to know how to stop slugs and aphids munching your beans, well - listen in..

    Marion Harney, Professor of Buildings and Landscape Conservation at University of Bath takes us around Sydney Gardens, the only Georgian Pleasure Gardens left in the UK and tells us how the Georgians liked to have fun.

    Amie Cook, Community Ecologist for the Team Wilder Ecological Advisory Service gives advice on how to encourage wildlife into your back garden. This is a service offered by Avon Wildlife Trust via site visits, video calls or workshops.

    Cat Baker, ecologist and manager of WIld About Bath takes us around a wild garden overlooking Horsecombe Vale, tells us what she loves about gardening and gives tips on composting.

    Credits

    Music: Audionautix

    Produced by Pommy Harmar

    Links

    Alice Park Community Garden: www.facebook.com/aliceparkcommunitygarden/?locale=en_GB

    Team Wilder Ecological Advisory Service, Avon Wildlife Trust: www.avonwildlifetrust.org.uk/team-wilder-ecological-advisory-service

    Wild About Bath: www.wildaboutbath.org

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    42 mins
  • Geology of Bath
    Mar 1 2024

    In this episode we take a deep dive underneath the city of Bath and discover the geology that underpins it.

    Professor Maurice Tucker from the Bath Geological Society tells us about the father of Geology, William Smith

    Mike Williams is a landscape historian and ecologist and he talks about the affect of the landscape on settlement and biodiversity. He also shows us petrification in action!

    Finally in our feature we go underground! Simon Hart, Managing Director and Owner of Hartham Park Stone Mine takes us down the mine where we meet a 16 ton chainsaw and see 200 year old graffiti.

    Credits

    Music: Audionautix

    Produced by Pommy Harmar

    Links

    Bath Geological Society -www.bathgeolsoc.org.uk

    Hartham Park Stone Mine - https://www.lovellstonegroup.com/quarry/hartham-park-bath-stone

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    43 mins
  • Bath in Film
    Feb 12 2024

    For this episode you will need to grab your popcorn, dim the lights and settle down for a magical journey to the heart of the filmmaking industry in the historic city of Bath.

    Rachel Bowers from the Bath Film Office describes the process for bringing upwards of two hundred actors and crew into the heart of the city to film.

    Charlie McCLoud gives us his very own ‘Life in the day of an Extra’.

    Plus the Holburne Museum's Chief Operating Officer Emma Morris tells us the inside story of working in a building which famously doubled as Lady Danbury’s grand estate in the hit series Bridgerton

    Links

    Bath Film Office - www.bathfilmoffice.co.uk

    Holburne Museum - www.holburne.org

    Credits

    Music: Richard Frohlich Media and the Texas Radio Theatre Company.

    A short melody of Luigi Boccherini's minuet from his String Quintet in E, Op.13, No.6. Played by Howard Geisel

    Produced by Pommy Harmar

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    32 mins