25 episodi

The latest news about food, farming and the countryside

Farming Today BBC Radio 4

    • Scienze
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The latest news about food, farming and the countryside

    06/06/24 - Illegal meat, fruit pollinators and Welsh election wishes

    06/06/24 - Illegal meat, fruit pollinators and Welsh election wishes

    The UK is vulnerable to animal diseases because of the ongoing trade in illegal meat, according to the Chartered Institute of Environmental Health. The CIEH says that a lack of proper inspections at UK borders makes it easy for criminals to bring meat in.
    We visit a couple of fruit farms in Herefordshire to find out how they encourage the insects that pollinate their crops.
    And although agriculture is devolved, so farm policy in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland won't be decided by the General Election, the budget is set by Westminster...and that's being discussed on the campaign trail across the UK.
    Presented by Charlotte Smith
    Produced for BBC Audio in Bristol by Heather Simons

    • 14 min
    05/06/24 Lough Neagh pollution; Wild fires; Farming and the general election; Bees and oil seed rape.

    05/06/24 Lough Neagh pollution; Wild fires; Farming and the general election; Bees and oil seed rape.

    The agri-food company Moy Park, which supplies chickens throughout the UK and Europe, has breached environmental laws on more than 500 occasions without facing prosecution. A BBC Spotlight investigation into water pollution uncovered the breaches at three different sites in Northern Ireland - including Lough Neagh.
    Holidaymakers and walkers in Scotland are being warned not to light camp fires. Last year, a wild-fire tore through forestry at Cannich, south of Inverness. It burned for two weeks on the surface and even more damage was caused underground, as peat burnt beneath the soil. The commercial forest is now being felled, 20 years earlier than expected, and has lost 60 percent of its value. The fire also had a serious impact on the RSPB Scotland nature reserve, at Corrimony.
    As the election campaign continues, and politicians travel around the UK to drum up support, on Farming Today we've asked our correspondents this week to explain what the agricultural sector is looking for. Agriculture is devolved, so policies are drawn up separately in Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and England. Today we discuss what farmers are looking for in England.
    We're looking at pollinators all week: over the past ten years, honey bees have become an integral part of the way the 75,000 acre Lowther Estate in Cumbria is managed, with around 500 colonies producing between 12 and 15 tonnes of Lake District honey every year. As well as its home hives, the estate also sends out around 200 bee colonies to other local landowners, which feed from and pollinate arable crops throughout the Eden Valley. Cumbria’s only producers of rapeseed oil, farmers Ben and Jannike Taylor, are accommodating some of the Lowther bees this spring.
    Presenter = Anna Hill
    Producer = Rebecca Rooney

    • 14 min
    04/06/24 - Monitoring pollinators, Oatly factory and farm saunas

    04/06/24 - Monitoring pollinators, Oatly factory and farm saunas

    The UK Pollinator Monitoring Scheme has been running for over 6 years now, with thousands of people counting insects in gardens, parks and on farms. So how are our pollinators faring?
    We visit a network of connected land in Ayrshire, designed to encourage pollinators. The network is being expanded after receiving funding from the Scottish Government. It was set up over the last decade or so, and includes farmland, council land and some unexpected leisure areas.
    And according to a recent study from the charity the Farm Safety Foundation, 95% of UK farmers under the age of 40 rank poor mental health as the biggest hidden problem facing farmers today. Farmstrong Scotland is doing what it can to help, by organising events where people can get together to discuss wellbeing. We report from one of them - on a farm in East Lothian, which has a recently opened outdoor sauna.
    Presented by Anna Hill
    Produced for BBC Audio Bristol by Heather Simons

    • 14 min
    03/06/2024: Pollinators; Election; Service to Farming Award

    03/06/2024: Pollinators; Election; Service to Farming Award

    A selection of farmers outline what they would want from the next government.
    Bees may be the best known of the UK’s pollinators, but there are many more insects involved in the process which is vital to our food production.
    And farmers celebrating decades of hard work are recognised with a long-service award.
    Presented by Charlotte Smith
    Produced by Alun Beach

    • 11 min
    31/05/2024: Beavers and flooding, Bees, Second Homes

    31/05/2024: Beavers and flooding, Bees, Second Homes

    House prices in the Lake District are likely to fall because of plans to control the number of homes being turned into holiday lets, according to the most senior planning officer at the national park authority. This is already being done in Wales where it has been causing a lot of controversy.
    A ten year study of beavers in Devon shows that they are having a positive impact on flood and drought alleviation – according to researchers at Exeter University who have been following the beavers on the river Otter, some farmers disagree with the findings.
    And a grandfather and grandson team of bee keepers rent hives to apple growers in Northern Ireland so the bees can pollinate the crop.
    Presented by Charlotte Smith
    Produced by Alun Beach

    • 14 min
    30/05/2024: Dairy, National Parks, Worms

    30/05/2024: Dairy, National Parks, Worms

    A Welsh cheesemaker which described itself as innovative and with the highest sustainability standards has announced it cannot continue in its current form. The 321 farmers who supply milk to Mona dairy on Anglesey have been reassured that an interim buyer for their milk has been found, while the dairy's owners search for new investment.
    The Campaign for National Parks and the Alliance for Welsh Designated Landscapes has produced a 10-point National Parks Action plan for the new Welsh government.
    The proposals include increased funding, an end to water pollution, improving sustainable travel links and a new National Park for North East Wales.
    Amidst fears over reduced numbers of earth worms across the UK, one farmer who supplies them to gardeners, is increasingly supplying to other farmers.
    Presented by Charlotte Smith
    Produced by Alun Beach

    • 14 min

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