Finally we got on to the main subject of this episode of the podcast. A walk Stu and I did in March 2022 starting from Aldbourne taking in Liddington Castle and the abandoned village of Snap. You can follow the map and walk description in my blog on the Hidden Wiltshire wbsite.
Read MoreHidden Wiltshire Podcast Episode 39
The main topic of this edition of the Hidden Wiltshire podcast is a walk Glyn did back in 2019. You’ll find his description, route map and YouTube video including his stunning aerial images on the Hidden Wiltshire website using the link below.
Read MoreHidden Wiltshire Podcast Episode 38
The main subject in this episode was the walk my regular walking buddy Stu and I did in February 2022 starting in Lacock, their target being the Wilts & Berks Canal. Everyone knows Lacock so we didn’t dwell on that for too long. But the canal is something that many don’t know about.
Read MoreHidden Wiltshire Podcast Episode 37
Bincknoll Castle is best viewed from the air where its location can be appreciated, and Glyn has posted some drone shots in his blog. The same can be said of Broad Town White Horse where this almost childlike depiction of a horse is hidden by long grass from ground level. Again Glyn’s drone shots in the blog show it in all its simple glory.
Read MoreHidden Wiltshire Podcast Episode 36
The Hidden Wiltshire Podcast is now broadcast monthly and in this episode we pack up the recording gear and head for the hills to record the whole podcast outside. You’ll have to listen to the podcast to find out where we were, but suffice to say it wasn’t Grovely Wood!
Read MoreHidden Wiltshire Podcast Episode 35
The main feature of this episode of the podcast is an interview we did with farmer Tim Daw a few weeks ago. Tim has farmed in the Pewsey Vale for decades and is now semi-retired. (Do farmers ever retire?) But instead of buying a yacht or taking up golf, in 2014 he decided to build a long barrow which he calls a Novolithic Long Barrow.
Read MoreHidden Wiltshire Podcast Episode 34
This podcast’s main feature is the stunning landscape and history of Hippenscombe Bottom. I wrote a blog which was an amalgam of some five visits to the area which I posted on the Hidden Wiltshire website on 21 January 2022. This walk was put together at the request of David Dawson at Wiltshire Museum and we’ll be doing a guided walk with the museum there later in the year.
Read MoreHidden Wiltshire Podcast Episode 33
The main feature this week is Wiltshire’s Chalk Badges. The county’s military links are well known and long lasting. As far as we have been able to identify there are four locations where regimental badges can be found carved into chalk hillsides, albeit one is not strictly a regimental badge.
Read MoreHidden Wiltshire Podcast Episode 32
Our main subject this week is the walk that my walking buddy Stu and I did in November 2021 which was the subject of a Blog dated 26 November entitled Medieval Inglesham – Three Counties Walk. Continuing this episode’s theme of straying beyond Wiltshire this walk in the extreme north-east of the county involved brief forays into neighbouring Gloucestershire and Oxfordshire. But this was necessary in order to reach our objective.
Read MoreHidden Wiltshire Podcast Episode 31
We eventually got to the main theme of the podcast – the World War II RAF bases of Blakehill and Ramsbury. Glyn takes us on a journey through the landscape of what used to be two RAF airfields.
Read MoreHidden Wiltshire Podcast Episode 30
The main subject of this episode of the podcast is the walk Glyn and I did recently together with Hidden Wiltshire follower Bo Novak, around Old Winsley and Turleigh which took in the curiously named “The Elbow”. We recorded some audio as we walked so this podcast is a mixture of indoor and outdoor recording.
Read MoreHidden Wiltshire Podcast Episode 28
The main subject in this episode of the podcast was Whitesheet Hill near Stourhead, and the surrounding area. We discuss the myriad prehistoric monuments on Whitesheet Hill, nearby Long Knoll, and Park Hill Camp at Stourton as well as medieval Mere Castle, and memories of the Second World War by way of Zeals aerodrome and the poignant Dakota Memorial close by Whitesheet at Beech Clump. As usual in our part of the world, there are immense views everywhere, including across Dorset and Somerset.
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