Saltar al reproductorSaltar al contenido principal
We provide you with the best and latest movies. Follow us to watch good movies for free. Thank you. Movies Top Channel
https://t.me/MoviesTopFans
Please add us to the group. So we can connect fans like you together. And we will provide many good movies for your entertainment.
https://t.me/MoviesTopFans
#movies
#movie
#film
#films
#cinema
#indiefilm
#filmlover
#cinephile
#moviebuff
#moviereviews
Transcripción
00:00We're three best mates who love hanging out together normally on the farm, but now we're
00:09off to explore our glorious British coastline. Look at that. This is otherworldy. The views
00:17are unrivaled. However, with over 11,000 miles of it, we are dividing and conquering. I've never
00:26been this close to a deer. Well, that was astonishing. This is a fish we just caught.
00:32With our small but trusty crews. There's Ali. I'm not the only one that's nervous.
00:38Haven't run through, you're a little bit nervous. That's a thing. We'll be sharing our adventures
00:43with each other. Hey, Helen. Hey, Jules. I think you can imagine where I am. She's actually riding away.
00:50We'll also be meeting the brilliant locals who know all the secrets. You can walk back 2,000 years of
01:02British history within this mine. What's the water like? And showing you the most incredible experiences
01:08to be had. Woo! Right on your doorstep. How far actually is this from my house? Because this is
01:15ridiculous. So pack a bag and come join us on our coastal adventures. What noise does stags, Nate?
01:24You roar. Go on. I'm not roaring for you.
01:26So far on my coastal adventure, I've visited my beloved North Cumbrian coast. But now I'm getting
01:39the chance to discover the South Cumbrian coast. Look at this. You have to commit to get into these
01:47beaches because some of them are pretty remote. But when you get here, adventure awaits.
01:53With over 300 beaches, I'm spoiled for choice in this part of the country. And this bay here is
02:00perhaps one of the most popular tourist destinations in the whole of the UK. St Ives Bay. Welcome to
02:09Cornwall. I'm in Somerset, which is somewhere that I have been to before, performing with the JLS
02:16boys in Western Supermere. This is called St Audrey's Bay and it is stunning to say the least. Red cliffs,
02:22dramatic rock formations. It's unlike anywhere that I've ever seen. And I'm wondering actually,
02:28what other surprises Somerset has in store?
02:36I'm ready to be surprised too, JP. There are three peninsulas to explore here on the South Cumbrian coast.
02:44Stretches of land almost completely surrounded by water, joined to the mainland by just a narrow link.
02:52And my starting point is the Cartmel Peninsula, which extends proudly into Morecambe Bay.
02:58The Cumbrian coastline is a part of the world that I know particularly well,
03:02and I'm very proud of. So today, I'm going to make the most of this glorious weather
03:06and explore it from a different perspective.
03:12Hello, you must be Roger.
03:14Hello.
03:15Good to see you. I'm Helen.
03:16Hello, Helen. How are you doing?
03:17I'm very good. I've got to say, you look very cool and you get up by your... What is this?
03:22Well, it's called a gyroplane or a gyrocopter. So it's great fun. So it's kind of like a cross between
03:29an aeroplane and a helicopter. And how high does it go?
03:32Oh, we're going to go anywhere between 500 and 1,000 feet. So we're going to be relatively low,
03:37so you can see things in detail. And where are we going?
03:40It's such a lovely day and the Furnace Peninsula is so beautiful.
03:43It's not easy to get to by road, is it? Yeah.
03:45This is a remarkable way to do it. It's a great way to see the countryside and you're out in the open.
03:51The open cockpit is a wonderful dimension. It's a wonderful added dimension.
03:56Everything about this is saying fun. You're saying fun. This is saying fun.
04:00I'm rather ancient and I've been flying for 54 years now. So over 10,000 hours of flying.
04:06That's everything. Aeroplanes, helicopters, gyrocopters. They are fantastic machines.
04:11I think we should get going. I think we should too. Okay. So you just step in there like that.
04:16That's it. It's like a romper suit, isn't it? For a baby. There we go.
04:20Right, we're in. We're zipped in. There we go. Yeah. Hello.
04:28Roger is one of the most experienced gyrocopter pilots in Europe. The model he flies has an open
04:36cockpit, which sounds a little bit scary, even for an adrenaline junkie like me. It's fitted with dual
04:43controls so everyone can have a go. And I get to live out a childhood dream. You know when people say,
04:49if you could have one superpower, what would it be? Mine is always for fly. Really? Yeah.
04:54Well, what an ideal afternoon to do it. You may need to tuck your hair in. Oh. So that's it.
05:00Don't worry about that. I'm going to pull your hair out. I need to buy some more.
05:04I'm a girl. We can do that, Roger. Oh, is that right? Can you get some for me?
05:08I'm trying to hold on to my hair today, too, on what is a blustery day on Cornwall's wild North
05:28Atlantic coast in Porthtown. And I'm chasing the wind as I'm dusting off my old kite buggy,
05:34which is a bit like a go-kart pulled along by a large kite.
05:39So I'm counting on some gusty weather to get me moving.
05:4525 years ago, when I lived in Wales, I was out on it all the time. These days,
05:50I live in land, so it's been a while since she's had a spin.
05:56Now, when I chucked this in the back of the car, it felt like a good idea.
05:59What I'd fail to appreciate was trying to remember how to put the whole thing together.
06:11OK, let's go.
06:17All right, James, do us a favour. Can you chuck that on my head, please?
06:22Great.
06:22Riding a kite buggy is a bit like patting your head and rubbing your tummy at the same time.
06:33You have to control the kite with your hands, then steer the buggy with your feet.
06:39Forgot how tricky it was to coordinate everything.
06:53Ha-ha! Yeah, come on!
07:08Hooray! Ha-ha-ha! Woo!
07:09Ha, ha, ha.
07:11Woo!
07:22Well, I have to say, that was so much fun.
07:26Little bit rusty, yes?
07:28Right.
07:30I think it's time for a pint.
07:34Giddy up, come on then.
07:35Whoa!
07:36Ah, ha, ha!
07:39I'm in the West Country too.
07:44So if you're buying jewels, I think the local drink
07:46round these parts is scrumpy.
07:50This is Burnham-on-Sea, a town on the Somerset coast
07:54overlooking the Bristol Channel.
07:56And it's giving me proper British summer holiday vibes.
08:00How you doing?
08:01Ha, ha, ha, you having fun?
08:09Due to the vastly variable tidal range here, the water can go out up to a mile and a half,
08:16exposing soft wet sand, then sticky mud flats.
08:20So if you set off down the beach for a paddle, you might find yourself stuck in the mud.
08:25And with the shore so far away, some people even get caught out in their cars.
08:29Here in Burnham in particular, at low tide, you can get fast moving currents.
08:34The good thing is there are eyes watching at all times, looking out for people's safety
08:38and just to prove it, I'm going to go over this line, which is prohibited.
08:43Now, I do have permission to do this.
08:51This is a beach safety announcement.
08:54For your own safety, return to the top of the jetty immediately.
09:00Well, there you go.
09:00Now, if I was in trouble, that would be a job well done.
09:05The tide can rush in at six miles an hour.
09:08So if you do get stuck, it becomes dangerous quite quickly.
09:11That's where Barb comes in.
09:14The Burnham Area Rescue Boat.
09:17And I'm joining them to find out how they've become an essential part of the emergency service here in Somerset.
09:25Coming up, I'm back in the saddle in Cumbria.
09:28Everything about this is making my heart sing.
09:32I'll be staying firmly out of the water down in Cornwall.
09:36Cue the music.
09:37We need a bigger boat, John.
09:39And in Somerset, I'm getting a behind-the-scenes look at the work of a harbour master.
09:44She's on board, and she's ready to pilot this boat into the channel.
09:49Down at the most southerly part of Cumbria, on the Cartmel Peninsula.
10:03Left foot over, into there.
10:06Gyrocopter pilot Roger is getting me prepped for the ultimate guided tour.
10:11So that slots in there, like that.
10:14Of my home county.
10:15From up here, I'll see the contours and curves of a landscape I've known all my life, in a whole new way.
10:22Gents, I know we're all showing off about our modes of transport, but top that.
10:29I'm about to explore the Furnace Peninsula.
10:32On a day like today?
10:36Yes, please.
10:37That is so cool.
10:39What a day, and what a mode of transport.
10:46It's about to go, it's about to kick off.
10:48Oh, my Lord, we're really nice to travel in here.
10:56Look at the door over to me.
10:57Oh, look at that.
11:03Oh, my Lord.
11:06Oh, good gosh.
11:08I mean, I didn't really entertain the idea that this time is going to be scary.
11:23I keep hearing this happening because I'm like, what are we doing?
11:27This is wild.
11:31We're hugging the coast, flying west towards the Levin Viaduct, which dates back to 1848.
11:37I've been over it as a rail passenger, but I've never seen it like this.
11:42That is unbelievable.
11:53Many rivers slice into the Bay here.
11:55I can see their deep estuaries and the muddy sand flats exposed at low tide.
12:00It's a dramatic Cumbrian coastline, where rivers and geology combine to shape peninsulas stretching into Morecambe Bay.
12:08This makes me proud to be British.
12:18I'm not thinking about that.
12:20It's an eater.
12:20I've been in a lot of airfams.
12:26That is the smoothest landing I've ever had.
12:29Oh, my word.
12:30I mean, it's really hard to not say.
12:32That is just unbelievable.
12:36Right.
12:37Okay.
12:38With the ignition key, you can turn it to the off position.
12:42with a lot of aircraft that is the smoothest landing i've ever had oh my word i mean it's
12:49really hard enough to say that's just unbelievable right okay with the ignition key you can you can
12:54turn it to the off the opposition really absolute what a star you are what a star come on don't leave
13:02me hanging roger oh well done oh my word so what do you think of gyrocopters then
13:12i want one good for you i actually felt quite emotional it was um it was remarkable i love
13:24the countryside i love an adrenaline rush and you get all of those things and it's a silly little
13:28thing but ever since i was a little girl i always used to think oh if i could be anything i'd be a
13:33bird and i felt like a bird and it was just it was it made me feel really proud to be from this part of
13:42the world it made me feel really proud to live on this little island and it's a total privilege
13:49to get the chance to showcase it and celebrate it with you and i hope you come here and get as excited
13:54about it as as we have from one peninsula to another i'm in cornwall
14:11this time on the south coast visiting the roseland peninsula and i'm sure i'm right in saying we all
14:19associate this county with seafood the sector makes a profit of 170 million pounds each year
14:26and employs about 8 000 people in the region this is some more's one of my favorite parts of the
14:35cornish coast but here they're trying something new with their shellfish in particular scallops they've
14:41come up with a thing called disco scallops morning hey rachel great to see you really good to meet
14:54you now i'm intrigued disco scallops sounds kind of funky it absolutely is what are you doing well it's
15:01effectively scallops swimming into pots because they're attracted to lights rather than more traditional
15:06methods of catching them where did the idea come from then to try and attract them with with something as
15:11simple as light so originally fishery scientists are working with fishermen trying to increase
15:16catches of crab and lobster right and they tried experimenting they put lights in the pots and when
15:21the fishermen were hauling up the pots there was no extra crab and lobster in there but suddenly they
15:26were pulling up loads of scallops so it was a completely like eureka moment rachel is passionate
15:31about making the way we catch and eat fish more sustainable and this is her latest venture
15:37it certainly ticks the environmentally friendly box as this method does away with the damages of scallop
15:43dredging where metal frame nets are dragged along the seabed by boat i wonder what would happen if
15:49you introduced music i mean i really want to know i'm stepping aboard with john who's been fishing here
15:58in st moore's since the 1970s hey john hi jules nice to meet you hey nice to see you john he's one of 130
16:05fishermen now reaping the rewards of this world first technology which has taken off in france
16:11norway and ireland too right then so we'll catch you later and i can't wait to see what we haul in today
16:25sticking in the southwest here in bernamon sea in somerset i'm not only finding out how life-saving
16:31rescues are made on this stretch of the coast but i'm also getting to try something that's long been
16:37on my bucket list firstly can i just say this is super cool hovercrafts were my favorite thing growing
16:46up and this is my childhood dreams literally come to fruition excellent really good to show them to
16:51you well tell us all about barb what is it yeah so we were formed as the burnham area rescue boat yeah 30
16:56years ago and since then we've moved from boats to hovercraft these are unique vehicles that allow
17:03us to get out across the mud flats rescuing animals vehicles missing people as well occasionally and
17:10they are perfect for the changeable environment we have here i have one question yeah am i allowed
17:17to go out on one we would love to get you out on the craft and uh sign you up as a crew member for the day
17:23all right all right you push your head through here we go wonderful there's a lot of kit to get on
17:32in here it is yes you should just clip in like that yeah it looks good that's it all right i'm now a bar
17:37pilot i'm not quiet ah mr gill oh message from jb where is he oh he's got some sort of uniform on
17:47guess what i've got 120 horsepower at the back and 27 horsepower on the front of this thing
17:57see that and we
18:00but how many times mate it's not all about size because he said 120 odd horsepower at the back and
18:06pointed at a lovely man who just sort of smiled and nodded if that guy is the equivalent of
18:10over 100 horsepower he is impressive no weeping just respect jb
18:21all right here we go
18:22the spray really doesn't kick up in you in the face it's beautiful protective thing on
18:36that's the end of the emergency
18:37that's the end of the day
18:46with the tide out you can see the ghostly remains of the ss nornin a shipwreck which has been here since
18:531897. during a gale of high seas snow and sleet she was driven into the mudflats all crew were rescued
19:01by the burnham lifeboat but the boat could not be saved
19:07so although i'm enjoying the ride this wreck serves as an important reminder of just how dangerous
19:13these shores are
19:18amazing that was epic now a day like today it's a very very nice day the sun is shining
19:27it seems like it's relatively quiet but it's not always like that is it
19:32no we we fly any time of night or day and so we can fly in um three o'clock in the morning when it's
19:38pitch black howling gales um snowing raining sleep whichever whatever the weather conditions are
19:45but obviously when it's nice warm sunny days that's when most of the tourists are here so that's when we're
19:50we're at our busiest it can be something simple as someone's gone out they've just stuck up to the
19:56knees or they've just got exhausted because what they seem to forget here that the tide can go out
20:01about a mile and a half the more you go out the more muddier it is the more it's like a sinking sand
20:10graham and david have been volunteering for barb for 23 years collectively and it's not just people
20:16they rescue we had an incident yesterday where a dog got stuck in the mud fortunately in this case
20:21the dog walker phone 999 asked for the coast guard i've got ourselves and the coast guard out to deal
20:28with it and retrieving the dog safely it's great to know that volunteers like david and graham are
20:35keeping these beautiful shores safe for tourists and their four-legged friends to enjoy for years to come
20:41coming up i'm blown away by the distances heavy horses can handle on hoof hang on annie hang on we rode
20:55down from the isle of sky it's probably about 500 miles you know you could sing a proclaimers song over
21:00it in cornwall i'm raising a glass to the catch of the day well here's to you and here's to another good
21:06catch come again tomorrow and i've seen a lot on this coastal adventure but somerset is still full
21:15of firsts for me i've never been in a lighthouse before why not many people are this is cool isn't it
21:21the lake district is known for quaint lakeside villages and towering fells which are often
21:37bustling with tourists so it might be surprising to know that there's also a section of coastline
21:44that falls within the national park here one that is quiet and unspoiled
21:49and sourcroft beach where i am today greets you with a golden stretch of sand and stunning views
21:56over the irish sea towards the isle of man it is so remote and that means that there aren't hordes
22:03of people here you are allowed to ride horses here and there's a lady who brings a very special breed
22:09of horse here i've long wanted to try it and today is the day
22:17hello you must be annie oh hello nice to meet you nice to meet you and who is this this is drummer
22:24he's a suffolk punch and he's one of about 20 horses at cumbrian heavy horses that we take people
22:31riding on my granddad used to breed clydesdales no way yeah are you from the north of cumbria
22:36yeah so that is clydesdale country isn't it clydesdales i think i think they're one of the best
22:42suffolk and the clydesdales these big powerful horses were once the muscle behind farming forestry
22:49and mining pulling heavy loads of machinery long before tractors came along it's a long time since
22:56i've been on a horse and i've never been on a horse this size it's a weird it's a funny feeling
23:02it's like i hope it's like riding a bike
23:20annie i am so happy right now that everything about this is making my heart sing it is glorious isn't it
23:27how did you end up here annie because that is not a cumbrian accent i'm from cambridge originally
23:35and then i moved to scotland i was an outdoor instructor and a nurse and i ended up deciding
23:42to buy these beautiful big horses but the trouble with the highlands is it's so expensive to get
23:48everything there and then we were able to relocate here so we rode down in 2006 to chapels farm which is
23:56just down the road hang on annie hang on we rode down from the isle of sky how far away from here
24:03is the isle of sky it's it's probably about 500 miles you know you could sing a proclaimer's song
24:07over it hang on right so you rode these horses down to the promised land of cumbria
24:13got here and the streets are paved with gold look at this i'm so lucky i live four or five miles from
24:20this and i have the hills we've got everything i'm so glad you said that because i keep saying
24:27what i love about this part of the coast is you can see mountains and hills and sea yeah and that's
24:33special isn't it it is it doesn't get any better than this
24:52as a breed these suffolk bunches are pretty special but very rare aren't they they really are
24:57so in the entire country i think there's 500 and of those maybe 300 mares therefore they only maybe
25:05have 40 folds a year as machines replaced horses in agriculture and other industries their numbers
25:13declined today suffolk punches are classed as critically endangered and clydesdales are at risk
25:21thankfully annie is a breeder of these rare horses helping to bring them back from the brink
25:27as a teenager i fell off a few times and i got the fear and i hurt things and i didn't want to do it
25:34again and now i'm an adult you don't do things that often just for you just because just because it
25:40makes you happy maybe you should you know maybe this is your reminder to just do something that makes
25:47you smile like my face is hurting from grinning i'd really like to canter off into the sunset now but i
25:55think john has got different ideas jump is that and let's go for a drink all right bud
26:01well maybe not quite like riding a bike then i'll leave it to annie to show you how it's really done
26:14annie clearly loves what she does and throughout this coastal adventure people from all over the country
26:22just like her have been kind enough to show us the incredible things that take place around our shores
26:28every day
26:31i just love this bit of coastline
26:34and here in st moore's on the south coast of cornwall local fisherman john is showing me how
26:40the tradition of scallop fishing has been turned on its head by an innovative and unusual discovery
26:45so this is the first one then that may or may not have some scallops oh goodness me that's that's a
26:56haul look at the amount of scallops in there so there's there's a good amount of scallops yeah
27:04gosh the eyes are all the way along that upper end like the frill yeah there's a frill top and bottom
27:10and i have been told there is 200 eyes on them that is one half of the equation that's brought
27:16about this new technique the eyes and then the light hanging in the pot and it well it's it's
27:23obviously working john it does work my missus always tells me that to be to catch fish you've
27:28just got to be a bit smarter than the fish
27:30well i'd say you've mastered that oh i don't know no she wouldn't agree with you this technology is a
27:39game changer not only does it bring in a great catch it's also far kinder to underwater habitats
27:46than traditional scallop dredging and because there's hardly any bycatch meaning other species
27:52aren't harmed when scooped up by mistake fish populations stay much more stable
27:56nice hall of scallops there's a kind of law of nature about catching what you can reasonably
28:05get in a fair and honest way and being a small man in a small boat you just take a little bit yeah
28:10you can feed your family and that's that's as good as you know that's that's what you want to do yeah
28:20in case you needed it our healthy hitchhiker here
28:23is proof of disco scallops green credentials i'll let you take it he will give you a bite
28:28he will i'll let you i'll let you take care of that yeah there you go cue the music
28:35we need we need a bigger boat john
28:43well you too i know you both love your seafood and i'm in cornwall we've been fishing for scallops
28:49and we're just recessing these pots on a glorious day just look at that and we're heading in for
28:54lunch i'll tell you what jules knows exactly how to make my mouth water because i adore scallops talk about
29:01jealous
29:20hey rachel oh my goodness good haul impressive i said he is a wizard well i think the disco lights are
29:27working aren't they certainly do right then you gotta cook them we've got a barbie fired up so come
29:32and me excellent
29:38it's rather romantic isn't it the day's catch cooked up on the quayside absolutely the butter's bubbling
29:44the garlic's beginning to sizzle doesn't get much fresher it's all in the presentation
29:50okay here we go cheers here we go right
30:03so good so succulent there's a there's a real sort of tender texture there isn't there well here's to
30:09you and here's to another good catch come again tomorrow don't mind if i do john don't mind if i do
30:20it's not all sunset suppers on the quayside some of us have work to do jewels
30:30the bristol channel where i'm exploring is a bustling commercial water highway imported goods
30:36like cars and wheat massive cargo for construction projects and huge cruise ships all make their way
30:43through here today i'm at the port of bridgewater in somerset meeting someone whose work is guided
30:50entirely by the fast moving tides hey jessica hi uh nice to meet you jb lovely to meet you this is
30:57your domain this is my domain or part of the domain yeah this is the port of bridgewater
31:04this is captain jessica tyson boat pilot and harbour master so what does your role actually entail
31:11essentially pilots are really um we're kind of local advice and knowledge so the vessels come in we
31:19watch them we monitor to them to see that they're making the time and also to make sure that they're
31:24not off track okay because essentially if they came too far south they would end up possibly going
31:29aground oh gosh salt island salt island bridgewater pilots bridgewater pilots
31:34uh we're just going to make our way down so i'll be uh coming out to you shortly
31:43as harbour master jessica is responsible for the safe navigation of boats here
31:49sometimes that means she has to take control and maneuver the vessels herself all whilst working
31:54against the tide times right now there is a window of only 20 minutes to get the next boat safely through
32:00this channel of water before the tide goes out again so we'll leave the small talk till later
32:07it's one hand for yourself one hand for the boat jessica is about to move a barge that has been
32:11carrying massive materials to nearby hinkley point c the 35 billion pound nuclear power station under
32:18construction here in somerset okay so this is your time this is my time i'm listening
32:25all right all right there she is she's going up she's on board
32:37she's ready to pilot this boat into the channel
32:43it's very clear that jessica takes her job incredibly seriously
32:48and today actually she's covering a number of different jobs because she's not just the
32:53arbor master she's also acting as a pilot as well on board that vessel
33:00using her pilot boat to pull it along jessica is guiding the barge back to its berth
33:04further down the river ready to pick up its next load with her local knowledge of this area and 37
33:12years professional experience on the water jessica makes quick work of this delicate procedure
33:17there we go simple as that
33:23so how did all this start well i went um i went away to see i had the back end of the 80s and
33:32unfortunately the royal navy didn't take away women in sea at that point so i joined the merchant navy
33:36i've had a lovely career at sea during 18 and a half years and then i ended up coming ashore because i
33:41ended up having children and you have to then try and find try places to find transferable skill sets
33:49so i've then now had to step up into the role of being um the harbour master rather than the deputy
33:53so certainly i have to remember everything my dad was in the royal navy i didn't go away to sea because
34:00of that i went away really because we ended up down in a cornish port and i ended up going for a trip with
34:05a local pilot and i went that's love that i need to go and try that have some of that and so i felt
34:13very very fortunate over the years you know i've basically been in a job that i absolutely loved
34:20i think it's worth saying that globally fewer than two percent of people working in the maritime
34:25industry are women i've had the most amazing experiences i mean i've been able to see all
34:32walkers out in the wild you know swimming alongside a massive great tanker that i was on amazing and
34:38this actually is quite a good environment for making us remember to be grounded really
34:43just like jessica everyone i've met on this coastal adventure has helped remind me to take a moment
34:49and appreciate what we have right here on our doorstep
34:53coming up on cornwall's atlantic coast i'm beachcombing for art supplies that's a winner
35:03looks like a baguette but who knows what it will become cumbria's relaxing and restorative powers
35:09are working their magic how do you feel after a few days here leaning into this you just feel your
35:14shoulders relaxing and after all that action i'm having a moment of calm in somerset just listening to the
35:22waves and the wind absolutely fantastic
35:37from cumbria to cornwall here on the county's north coast it's a surface paradise
35:43all thanks to the consistent swell of the choppy atlantic ocean
35:47portth town where i am today is a former copper mining village on this stretch of coastline
35:56and here the crashing waves don't just bring in surfers
36:01now when i knew i was coming to cornwall i was really keen if possible to meet
36:04somebody whose work was directly inspired by the sea
36:14lovely to see you you too so there you are yeah probably red-handed yeah yeah hunting hunting for
36:21driftwood yep julia is an artist who creates sculptures out of driftwood and other foraged
36:28items from the beach like boys and fishing gear how long have you been at it for as a business 18
36:35years but i started making things out of driftwood when i moved here 30 odd years ago so it was a
36:41hobby that became a hobby that became a business yeah a true vocation yeah but i guess the truth is
36:47the wood you collect could have come from almost anywhere not just around the coast but around the
36:51world around the world i mean america ireland yeah yeah it's amazing if you do your homework you'd be
36:57amazed i think and i guess the point is the form of what you find kind of helps dictate the end
37:02result yeah absolutely yeah yeah because i love furniture making in a way i'm a bit of a slave to
37:07kind of straight lines and and hardwood but actually i love the kind of liberation that you must feel
37:12in allowing the raw material to kind of describe what the end product is going to be and what it's
37:18going to look like yeah yeah that's the fun in it and you know there are no rules so you can just
37:23make it as you go along so what particularly are you looking for because there's all sorts of stuff
37:26around but i guess you have to be quite selective the stuff that's washed in is mostly this kind of
37:31branch that i make chandeliers so this is ideal but you know you you don't know what you're going to
37:36find every day's different sort of thing i guess that's the joy of beach caming isn't it yeah
37:41the fast-moving currents at the atlantic mean there's always something to pick up on cornwall's coast
37:46ah aha now then that's a winner looks like a baguette but who knows what it will become
37:56shall we let's julia is taking me to her workshop to show me how these pieces of wood smoothed by rock
38:04sand and sea salt on their own coastal adventure this is gold yep and the workshop
38:10can be transformed into something magical
38:17oh this little oasis look at this wow world of sheds
38:23i think we've got about 10 in total can't have too many oh no definitely not
38:28wow so this is where it all happens the workshop is packed with handmade furniture and decorative
38:40items including this so this is the chandelier working on now yeah that's that's really really
38:46clever made one and sold it and then somebody wanted another one and then they've just been
38:51the most popular thing really if i were to buy that one when it's finished what would i be paying 470 pounds
38:59i don't think that's a lot of money for something that unique thank you there you go i have two
39:05one for helen and one for jb okay
39:09well seeing as it's my final stop on this adventure a partying gift seems somewhat fitting don't say i'm not good to you
39:21i'll believe it when i see it jules after soaring in the sky over these sands and galloping along them
39:29in the saddle i'm slowing down and taking a moment to soak it all in here at my final stop sile croft
39:36beach on the havard peninsula in south cumbria you know like you're ready for action ready for
39:42swimming i'm ready to go for a cold swim once the tide comes in are you locals are you holidaying we've
39:48got a caravan on the side oh right yeah we're not from here but we try and come as often as we can
39:57are you swimming as well no i'm not brave enough it's a pretty special place isn't it really love it
40:04the views the landscape it's unspoiled because it's not very busy and how do you feel after a few days
40:11here leaning into this oh you just feel your shoulders relaxing good well long way enjoy happy
40:17swimming nice to meet you bye guys bye and after my time on the south cumbrian coast i can feel my
40:26shoulders relaxing too i'm well jealous helen sounds nice and chilled i'm in the west country
40:36and here on the somerset coast i've already seen racing tides rescue crews and sinking sands
40:45roger head yeah and so here i was hoping that harbour master jessica would have a slightly more
40:51relaxing job for me here at burnam on sea this is burnam on sea low lighthouse all right having my
40:59glamorous assistant there you go that's fabulous we'll get this set up unless you've got very long
41:06roads which i don't
41:11and it's unlike any other lighthouse i've seen before it sits on stilts to accommodate the tide
41:17occupying the perfect location where the bristle channel meets the river parrot to safely guide boats
41:23through the fast tides and narrow underwater channels i've never been in a lighthouse before no not
41:30many people have but it's a it's a nice experience this is cool isn't it it is this quirky structure
41:38has become a local icon adorning postcards of the area although it dates back to 1832
41:45and is grade 2 heritage listed it's still active today in we come all right welcome to burnam on sea
41:54so in the good old days there would have been oil lamps these three lights are the more modern led
42:01so we have green and white and red and we give ships a guidance for a preferred route this allows
42:09them to know where they are it's part of jessica's job to make sure the lighthouse is operating correctly
42:16but i think i know the real reason why she comes here here we go
42:26it's very refreshing it is it's very cool peaceful it is quite peaceful just listening to the waves and
42:32the wind absolutely fantastic i bet you must want to come up here to get away from all the drama and
42:39there's always little things you know you've got these wonderful patterns that the tide leads every
42:43time and then if it's blowing you also get a lot of sand patterns which is really rather beautiful
42:54when i started this adventure i never expected the british coast to be so stunning so varied and so
43:01awe-inspiring we really are blessed to have all this so close to our doorsteps
43:15so
43:31the
43:39the
43:43the
43:45the
43:49the
43:51the
43:53the
Sé la primera persona en añadir un comentario
Añade tu comentario

Recomendada