A Field Guide to the Brecks
This week, in the final episode of the series, Timo talks to Landscape Partnership founder, and Suffolk County Council’s Natural Environment Manager, Nick Dickson, and current Project Manager of the Landscape Partnership, Nicole Wade. In this episode, they explore three different places in the Brecks: * the Great Eastern Pingo Trail across Thompson Common, a Norfolk Wildlife Trust reserve distinctive for hundreds of ice age pingo ponds * Warren Lodge, outside of Thetford, where rabbits were historically farmed – even supplying fur to Catherine of Aragon * the Anglo-Saxon village in the Country Park at West Stow. Timo, Nick and Nicole discuss: * the many opportunities for learning and getting to know the Brecks, whether it’s unusual geology, rare species, the very long human history, or the planes that fly into the airbases! * how the poor soil in the Brecks has dictated what can and can’t be done here and created an unusual history of humanindustry in the area * the pingo ponds of the Brecks, why they’re here and why they matter * why are the pines that criss-cross farmland in the Brecks so twisted? * stories of rabbit farming in the Tudor Brecks and why rabbits are still essential to the landscape today * why isn’t the Brecks a designated landscape? And should it be? * the impact of volunteers in the Brecks and for the Landscape Partnership itself * how is the Landscape Partnership creating experiences for people to connect with and learn about the landscape? * how much we can learn from error in “trial and error”? * Nick’s background and how it influenced the development of the Landscape Partnership * Nicole’s background and her vision for the Landscape Partnership as a long-term, self-sustaining entity. You can find out more about the Partnership at www.brecks.org [http://www.brecks.org]. This is the final episode in series 1 - we will be taking a short break but will bring you series 2 very soon – thank you for listening!
14 episodios
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