|
|
|
|
|
PROGRAMME INFO |
|
|
|
|
|
From Shetland to the Scilly Isles, Open Country travels the UK in search of the stories, the people and the wildlife that make our countryside such a vibrant place. Each week we visit a new area to hear how local people are growing the crops, protecting the environment, maintaining the traditions and cooking the food that makes their corner of rural Britain unique.
Email: open.country@bbc.co.uk
Postal address: Open Country, 91热爆 Radio 4, Birmingham, B5 7QQ.
|
|
|
|
|
LISTEN AGAIN |
|
|
|
|
PRESENTERS |
|
|
|
|
|
|
More about Helen Mark |
|
|
|
|
|
|
More about Richard Uridge |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PROGRAMME DETAILS |
|
|
When you turn on the tap have you ever wondered where the water comes from? If you live in Birmingham, the answer is the Elan Valley in Wales. The valley was dammed and flooded at the turn of the last century and a pipeline carries millions of gallons of water 70 miles, all down hill, at two miles an hour to Birmingham. It is an engineering miracle and the equal of any of the great feats of water technology dreamt up by the Romans - but this visionary solution created in responce to the needs of an growing industrial city came at a price.
The people who lived in the Elan Valley 100 years ago had their lives turned upside down. Thrown off their land, many were left without compensation to find new homes wherever they could. All that seems to be forgotten as today the dam attracts 400,000 visitors a year and is considered vital to the economic lifeblood of local town Rhayader and surrounding area. It has become welcomed, and even cherished by the local population, but the idea of huge English cities drawing their water needs from the Welsh countryside and, in the process, destroying cultures and a way of life has not always been softened by the passage of time. For some the memories are too fresh and the resentment still lingers.
Keith Pybus, a retired industrialist from Birmingham is enthused by the technical marvel of the Elan Valley project and tells Richard that, at a time when Prince Albert had died of a typhus, a water-bourne disease, the problem of providing clean and safe water was a vital requirement.
Betty Davies's family farmed in the Elan Valley and remembers her father talking about the time the dam, and with it thousands of workmen, came to the valley.
The perfect choice of the engineers who built the dam becomes evident when the heavens open and Richard takes shelter in the car to talk to local historian Bryan Lawrence. He tells Richard of the local reaction to the dam and reveals that, though the valley contains millions of gallons of water for the people of Birmingham, the cottages dotted along the crest of the valley had no running water supply until a few years ago and the irony was not lost - nor forgotten by some local people. However, as these problems recede into the past and are absorbed into the pages of history, the dam and the valley it transformed have grown in the affections of the local people. They are proud and fond of its elegance and gothic charm.
The priority of the English politicians and the treatment of the local population is a theme taken up by our Aeron Jones, who farms his family farm on the banks of the Capel Celyn Lake. This man-made lake was created to provide water for the people of Liverpool. It was completed in the 1960s and created far more vociferous and violent protests than Elan. People were less deferential and accepting, Aeron tells Richard. The locals felt cheated and the anger and sense of loss still lingers - if anything it increases with time.
John Lewis Jones is 92. He lived in the valley until he left for college and work and echoes Aeron's feelings of anger. He tells Richard that the recent apology from the Liverpool councillors is too little too late and the people they should have apologised too are all dead. He says their culture and heritage were stolen from them and the anger still burns today. He says the idea of another country just coming in and doing what they wanted, despite the wishes of the local population, still rankles and makes a nonsense of democracy for the people of Wales.
Email Open Country: open.country@bbc.co.uk
The 91热爆 is not responsible for external web sites
|
|
|
RELATED LINKS
91热爆 Holiday Category
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Audio Help
|
|
|
|
|
|
PREVIOUS PROGRAMMES |
|
|
|
|
Current Week
Last Week
The A44
Aberdeenshire
Aberdeenshire, River Don
Aberfan
Alderley Edge, Cheshire
Ancient buildings
Anglesey
Applecross Peninsula
Aran Islands
Armistice Day, Somerset & Sussex
Auxiliary Units
Bardsey Island
Batsford Park Estate, Glos
Berkshire
Berwyn Mountains
Birdsong
Blackwater Estuary, Essex
Blaenafon
The Blean, Kent
Bosworth Field
Brecon Beacons
Buckinghamshire
Butterflies
By Brook Valley
The Cairngorms
Caithness
Cambridgeshire
Carmarthenshire
Cheddar Gorge
Cherwell Valley
Cheshire: Harrop Valley
Chesil Bank
Clee Hills, Shropshire
Climbers
Corfe Castle
Cornwall
Cornwall: Cape Cornwall
Cornwall: Padstow Lifeboat
Cornwall: Roseland Peninsula
Cotswold
Cotswold Way
County Clare, Ireland
Cranbourne Chase
Cumbria: Eden Valley
Cumbria: Coniston Water
Cumbria: Sellafield
Cumbria
Daingean in Glengarry
Dee Estuary
Derbyshire
Devon & Somerset: Grand Western Canal
Donegal
Dorset
Dorset: Cranborne Chase
Dorsetman
Dowsing
Dunalastair
Durham
Durham: Witton Park
East Anglian Churches
Eden Valley in Cumbria
Eigg
Eire: Co. Mayo
Eire: Skibbereen
Eire: West Cork
Elan Valley, Wales
Eshott, Norhumberland
Essex
Essex: coastal
Exmoor, churches
Falkirk
Farne Islands, Part 1
Farne Islands, Part 2
Fenn's, Whixall & Bettisfield Mosses National Nature Reserve
The Fens
Fife
Flanders
Forster Country
Glencoe Mountains
Glencoe
Gloucestershire
Goa
Goodwin Sands
Gower Peninsula, June 2006
Gower Peninsula, October 2005
Grouse shooting
Guernsey
Hadrian's Wall 2003
Hadrian's Wall 2004
Hambledon Cricket Club
Hampshire: Odium
Hampshire: Selborne
Hardcastle Crags
Heart of Wales Railway
Hebden Bridge
Herefordshire
Hertfordshire
Hidden Treasures
High Weald, Sussex
Holy Island
Ilmington
Isle of Gigha 2004
Isle of Gigha, 2005
Isle of Man - Seas
Isle of Man
Isle of Wight, 2003
Isle of Wight, 2005
Izak Walton
Kent: Dover
Kent: Dungeness Peninsular
Kent: North
Kielder Water
Kinver Edge
Kingham, Oxfordshire
Lake District
Leicestershire: Bosworth Field
Leicestershire: death rituals
Lincolshire farming
Lincolnshire
Lincolnshire
Loch Morar
Looe Island
Ludlow
Lunar Influence
Don McCullin
Richard Mabey
Marsden, West Yorkshire
Mary Towneley Loop
Mersea Island
Mersey Marshes
Metal Detectingg
Mid-Wales
Morecambe Bay
Moel Findeg, North Wales
Morecombe Sands
Nant Gwrtheyrn
National Forest
New Forest
Newton Dee, nr Aberdeen
Norfolk Broads
Norfolk: Thetford Forest
Norfolk: North Norfolk coast
North Devon Combes
Northants: Sulgrave Manor
Northants: Underground
Northern Ireland: Belfast
Northern Ireland: Border Counties
Northern Ireland: Moneypenny's Lock
Northern Ireland: Sperrin Mountains
Northern Ireland: Strangford Lough
Northern Ireland: Toomebridge
North Norfolk Coast
Northumberland, part 1
Northumberland, part 2
North Wessex Downs
North Yorkshire
North Yorkshire Moors
North Yorkshire Moors Railway
Nottinghamshire
Nottinghamshire: Sherwood Forest
Oak Trees
Offa's Dyke
Orford Ness
Orkneys
Out Skerries, Shetland
Outward Bound
Oxfordshire
Peak District
Peak District
Pembrokeshire Coast
Pentland Hills
Perthshire
Poachers
Pony Club
River Severn
Romney Marsh
Rutland Water
Scilly
Scotland: Abernethy Forest
Scotland: Loch Morar
Scotland: Shetland
Scotland: Strathclyde
Scotland: What value the countryside?
Scottish Borders
Sefton Coast
Self-sufficient communities
Severn Valley Railway
Shropshire: Ellesmere
Shropshire: Much Wenlock
Shropshire and Wales, Newport
Skegness
Skomer Island
Snowdon
Snowdonia National Park
Somerset Levels
Somerset Levels
Somerset: Montacute House
Somerset writers
South Downs
South Somerset: watermills
Southwold
Spurn Peninsular
Start Bay
Stour Valley
Survival
Sussex
Sutherland, Scotland
Tamar Valley
Thornham Estate, Suffolk
Thurstonland Cricket Club
Twyford Down
Tyntesfield, North Somerset
Village Life
Terry Waite
Wales
Wales: Flatholm Island
Wales: Nant Gwrtheyrn
Wales: Snowdonia
Warwickshire: rare breeds
Wayoh Reservoir
Wenlock Edge
West Sussex
West Yorks: Calder Valley
Weston Common, Surrey
Wild boar
Wiltshire
Wiltshire: Savernake Forest
Women's Institute
Wroxeter
Yorkshire Dales, June 2002
Yorkshire Dales, 1 July 2006
Yorkshire Dales, 8 July 2006
Z to Z Britain
Open Country looks back 2003
|
|
|
|
|
MESSAGE BOARDS |
|
|
|
|
Join the discussion: The Learning Curve Pick of the Week Questions, Questions Woman's Hour Word of Mouth |
|
|
|
|
RELATED PROGRAMMES |
|
|
|
|
Excess Baggage
Changing Places
|
|
|
Message boardsJoin the discussion:
comment about Radio 4?
Don't missWe want to hear your experiences
|