Browse content similar to 08/08/2014. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!
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Through Sunday and inch or two inches of rain, gales are possible | :00:00. | :00:00. | |
?60, ?600, it doesn't take ` lot of working out. I am going to take | :00:00. | :00:20. | |
I am going to take anyway. | :00:21. | :00:22. | |
Our bumper wheat harvest and the port that's cashing in | :00:23. | :00:25. | |
It's the new football season, with familiar names returning | :00:26. | :00:27. | |
And the giant poppy, as big as an olympic sized swimming pool. | :00:28. | :00:43. | |
The councils here cracking down on parents who take their children | :00:44. | :00:48. | |
Hundreds more families have been fined as a result. | :00:49. | :00:53. | |
The law changed and became luch stricter in September 2013. | :00:54. | :00:56. | |
Since then, children can only be taken out of school in | :00:57. | :00:59. | |
Each parent can now be fined ?60 per child. | :01:00. | :01:06. | |
If the fine is not paid within three weeks, the fine goes up to ?120 The | :01:07. | :01:09. | |
BBC asked councils in this region for the numbdr | :01:10. | :01:14. | |
In Essex, it went up from 400 a year ago to 668 in the last school year. | :01:15. | :01:22. | |
In Suffolk, it's up from 215 to 303.And | :01:23. | :01:28. | |
Essex has the most fines and the biggest increase. | :01:29. | :01:35. | |
In a moment, we'll hear from the council | :01:36. | :01:37. | |
Lynn Black is a single mothdr, recently she took eight`year`old | :01:38. | :01:50. | |
Amber at the school for four days. They went on holiday to EuroDisney. | :01:51. | :01:55. | |
Now she has been threatened with a ?60 fine. In her view, it is | :01:56. | :02:03. | |
financially and morally worth it. ?60, ?600? It doesn't take ` lot of | :02:04. | :02:08. | |
working out. I was going to take anyway. Why should my daughter not | :02:09. | :02:12. | |
be able to go on holiday because I cannot afford to take in school half | :02:13. | :02:18. | |
term? It isn't feasible for myself. I can't do it for myself, so she | :02:19. | :02:23. | |
will not miss out. I will jtst take in term time. This dilemma hs not | :02:24. | :02:29. | |
unique, with more than 660 parents find in Essex alone in the last | :02:30. | :02:35. | |
academic year. James and Dana are being taken to court for refusing to | :02:36. | :02:39. | |
pay a fine, after they took their son at the school is a memorial | :02:40. | :02:43. | |
service in America. Earlier this year, Center Parcs in Elveddn was | :02:44. | :02:48. | |
forced to pull a TV advert promoting cheap breaks during term tile. | :02:49. | :02:53. | |
Changes to regulations last year means headteachers that both primary | :02:54. | :02:58. | |
and secondary schools no longer have the power to grant up to ten days | :02:59. | :03:04. | |
extra family holiday during term time. Circumstances that extra leave | :03:05. | :03:10. | |
now have two be deemed exceptional. This school has 1200 students, its | :03:11. | :03:15. | |
headteacher has issued a sm`ll number of fines within the last | :03:16. | :03:17. | |
year, but says he does so cautiously, thinking carefully about | :03:18. | :03:23. | |
each case. The difficult onds are the ones that centre around money, | :03:24. | :03:29. | |
because you are then train to balance the proportion of the | :03:30. | :03:32. | |
child's education within amount of cash. That is hard to do if you are | :03:33. | :03:37. | |
a committed educationalist or a parent. And the ones that are about | :03:38. | :03:40. | |
family events, were we sometimes have to judge whether a famhly event | :03:41. | :03:46. | |
is an exceptional circumstance or not. Lynn says she has had ` lot of | :03:47. | :03:50. | |
support for her decision to take her daughter on holiday after h`lf term, | :03:51. | :03:53. | |
it meant they could spend qtality time together, time they otherwise | :03:54. | :04:03. | |
would not have been able to afford. Councillor Ray Gooding is | :04:04. | :04:06. | |
responsible for education in Essex, and he told me why the council was | :04:07. | :04:11. | |
so keen to force the law. I think we do need to send a message that | :04:12. | :04:16. | |
parents generally have got ` responsibility to make sure that | :04:17. | :04:19. | |
their children go to school and if they are failing on that, wd really | :04:20. | :04:24. | |
need to to be fairly strong in making sure understand the | :04:25. | :04:28. | |
ramifications of that. After all, this is the education of thdir | :04:29. | :04:31. | |
children that we are concerned about. The fact that your fhgures | :04:32. | :04:35. | |
are so much higher than othdr councils near to you, does that mean | :04:36. | :04:39. | |
you are pursuing parents more enthusiastically? We do takd a very | :04:40. | :04:45. | |
strong line on this, becausd we are concerned about the education of | :04:46. | :04:53. | |
children generally. When chhldren are taking as much as one d`y a week | :04:54. | :04:58. | |
of school for a variety of reasons, the odd things are seen as | :04:59. | :05:01. | |
extenuating circumstances, but they are looked at in the round. But one | :05:02. | :05:06. | |
person's view of exceptional circumstances may not be thd same as | :05:07. | :05:09. | |
another's. It's subjective, isn t it? I think that as a local | :05:10. | :05:15. | |
authority, we do give headtdachers fairly strong guidelines to deal | :05:16. | :05:20. | |
with this. Give me an idea. Illness of a parent or a grandparent, | :05:21. | :05:26. | |
something like that, you wotld see as exceptional? Going on holiday, | :05:27. | :05:33. | |
not exceptional? I think illness of a parent or grandparent, if it is an | :05:34. | :05:38. | |
individual event, if it is ` longer term thing in parents have problems, | :05:39. | :05:43. | |
that other services need to come into the system. Jeopardising the | :05:44. | :05:46. | |
education of the children is not something that we want to sde. Other | :05:47. | :05:51. | |
events, are fairly important, if it is the death of a very closd family | :05:52. | :05:56. | |
member, then yes, it is to be a bridesmaid, then probably no. Have | :05:57. | :06:01. | |
you overruled any headteachdrs so far? Not to my knowledge. So | :06:02. | :06:07. | |
teachers have got it right, 100 of the time? Well, we have to rely on | :06:08. | :06:16. | |
them to take a reasonable assessment of this. They are, after all, | :06:17. | :06:20. | |
professionals and they are dmployed to provide a dictation. That is what | :06:21. | :06:23. | |
we would hope that they can do. Thank you. | :06:24. | :06:26. | |
A man on trial for killing his stepdaughter after their | :06:27. | :06:28. | |
relationship came to an end has told a jury "I'm not a murderer". | :06:29. | :06:33. | |
Leanne Meecham was stabbed `t her home in Westcliffe in Febru`ry. | :06:34. | :06:36. | |
Simon Meecham, who'd previotsly been married to her mother, | :06:37. | :06:39. | |
Our chief reporter, Kim Rildy, was in court in Chelmsford. | :06:40. | :06:50. | |
42`year`old Simon Meech did not deny that he inflicted the fatal injuries | :06:51. | :06:56. | |
with a large kitchen knife that has been seen by the jury. Leanne had | :06:57. | :07:00. | |
been found slumped on the sofa at home. She had wounds to the chest | :07:01. | :07:07. | |
and throat. She died one wedk later from multiple organ failure and | :07:08. | :07:12. | |
brain injuries. When he was arrested later on the seafront, he h`d three | :07:13. | :07:17. | |
self`inflicted stab wounds. At first, he blamed Leanne these | :07:18. | :07:22. | |
injuries. When he got in to the witness box, tell us about that He | :07:23. | :07:29. | |
said that that morning, he wanted to kill himself, I was in a nest on a | :07:30. | :07:37. | |
different planet. Police had been called to disturbances at a number | :07:38. | :07:39. | |
of occasions when Leanne had been drinking heavily. He pleaded guilty | :07:40. | :07:45. | |
to common assault. Asked by the defendants, he denied being aware of | :07:46. | :07:51. | |
the knife in his hand. Did xou intend to kill Leanne or kex causes | :07:52. | :07:58. | |
of injury? No. I can't belidve what has happened. I am not a murderer, | :07:59. | :08:02. | |
it is not me. He remembered striking out with his hand and did that | :08:03. | :08:06. | |
movement. He were at the shop on Leanne's phase in her falling | :08:07. | :08:10. | |
towards him. He denied being controlling and threatening to kill | :08:11. | :08:13. | |
Leanne. The prosecutor said, you knew perfectly well what yot would | :08:14. | :08:18. | |
do without knife. You delibdrately stabbed Leanne. That was yotr plan | :08:19. | :08:22. | |
all along. You wanted to do as much damage as he possibly could. Very | :08:23. | :08:27. | |
agitated, Mr Meacham said, hf I killed him on purpose, I wotld say | :08:28. | :08:31. | |
so. Whatever sentence he got, would make no difference, he still took | :08:32. | :08:32. | |
his luck `` her life. The former Sanyo Television factory | :08:33. | :08:36. | |
in Lowestoft, which has been empty for five years, | :08:37. | :08:38. | |
has been sold for housing. 350 homes will be planned, but | :08:39. | :08:41. | |
critics claim the town needs more In its heyday, half a million | :08:42. | :08:54. | |
televisions a year were madd at and low `` Sanyo's Lowestoft factory. In | :08:55. | :09:03. | |
2009, the factory shut. Now, nearly five and a half years on, the site | :09:04. | :09:09. | |
has been sold to Waverley council around ?2.4 million. 350 holes are | :09:10. | :09:13. | |
planned, council and privatd housing. We have trouble with | :09:14. | :09:22. | |
traffic. With 350 houses, they could be 600 more cars coming down. A | :09:23. | :09:26. | |
private sector proposal to hnclude industry has been rejected. Under | :09:27. | :09:31. | |
the deal, Sanyo will clear this side of derelict buildings beford | :09:32. | :09:35. | |
development begins. There are some who believe that if the deal is a | :09:36. | :09:39. | |
missed opportunity. Yes, Lowestoft needs more housing, but thex believe | :09:40. | :09:43. | |
this site is ideal for industry too. It is staggering and ottrageous | :09:44. | :09:52. | |
that the council should turn down ?4 million of private investment that | :09:53. | :09:55. | |
buildings into the kind of buildings into the kind of | :09:56. | :09:58. | |
industrial units that we nedd to create jobs. But Waverley council | :09:59. | :10:05. | |
insists, there are many are`s of landmark to the industry elsewhere. | :10:06. | :10:10. | |
We have a housing shortage. We have 3500 people on the waiting list | :10:11. | :10:15. | |
Those people deserve us to recognise the fact that they are living in | :10:16. | :10:18. | |
conditions that perhaps we need to provide them with alternative | :10:19. | :10:23. | |
accommodation. One Sanyo employed 500 people, soon all that is left | :10:24. | :10:27. | |
will be raised to the ground. The construction of the new housing | :10:28. | :10:30. | |
could take up to ten years to complete. | :10:31. | :10:32. | |
Six people arrested yesterd`y in connection with the murddr | :10:33. | :10:34. | |
of James Attfield in Colchester have all been released on b`il. | :10:35. | :10:37. | |
The 33`year`old was found whth more than a 100 knife wounds in | :10:38. | :10:40. | |
The three men and three womdn have been bailed until Septdmber. | :10:41. | :10:47. | |
A man who was seriously burnt with a chemical in Essex may havd been | :10:48. | :10:50. | |
Police are looking for two len in connection with the incident | :10:51. | :10:54. | |
in Bramble Road in Witham jtst before 11 this morning. | :10:55. | :10:57. | |
The man's injuries are described as "life changing". | :10:58. | :11:11. | |
Still to come: We are looking ahead to the new football season `nd the | :11:12. | :11:18. | |
return of two of our club the football league. Plus one vdry big | :11:19. | :11:24. | |
poppy, made out of 60,000 slall ones. It could be a world rdcord. | :11:25. | :11:28. | |
If you have been out and about this week, you will have noticed | :11:29. | :11:31. | |
The harvest is in full`swing and it looks as if it could be a good one. | :11:32. | :11:37. | |
One of the biggest crops in this region is wheat. | :11:38. | :11:39. | |
And that means a busy time for our ports, because around a million | :11:40. | :11:42. | |
And the port which exports more wheat th`n any | :11:43. | :11:47. | |
It is a go on this family f`rm. A typical suffix seen at this time of | :11:48. | :12:05. | |
year as farmers race to beat the weather and bring the wee t`rget | :12:06. | :12:12. | |
home `` Suffolk. The averagd is 7.6 tonnes per hectare on a norlal year. | :12:13. | :12:18. | |
On our own, we try to average 9 8, close to ten. This year yield up to | :12:19. | :12:25. | |
11.5 and some are as high as 12 6 stop this year the UK is expected to | :12:26. | :12:29. | |
produce 16 million tonnes of wheat `` wheat, most will be constmed | :12:30. | :12:36. | |
here, but some will be exported This region plays a key rold. This | :12:37. | :12:44. | |
harvest head to Ipswich, thd biggest wheat exporting port in the UK. This | :12:45. | :12:50. | |
wheat is bound to Belfast, dach year up to 1 million tonnes head out of | :12:51. | :12:55. | |
here, up the river. This brought to the dominant port because it is in | :12:56. | :13:00. | |
such a fantastic area. East Anglia is a great week producing area and | :13:01. | :13:03. | |
has always been known as thd breadbasket of the UK. We are | :13:04. | :13:08. | |
excellently located on the Suffolk coast and we can put in whe`t from | :13:09. | :13:14. | |
all over the area. Our transport links that means we can bring in a | :13:15. | :13:18. | |
lot of wheat when the need to. On arrival, it is tested to make sure | :13:19. | :13:22. | |
it is up to scratch. We checked protein levels and moisture levels, | :13:23. | :13:29. | |
checking it is dry. British wheat can end up anywhere. The biggest | :13:30. | :13:34. | |
single market is Spain. The problem they have in Spain is irrig`tion | :13:35. | :13:38. | |
costs a lot of money and thdy can't grow the same rioters as we can in | :13:39. | :13:45. | |
the UK. We end up `` variethes. Much wheat goes for biscuits and bread. | :13:46. | :13:50. | |
They like to buy UK wheat bdcause they know the quality that we make | :13:51. | :13:54. | |
and they know they will havd it in two or three days. Unfortun`tely for | :13:55. | :14:00. | |
farmers, the harvest price hs low, but in Ipswich, the price is | :14:01. | :14:04. | |
encouraging foreign buyers. Traders are hoping to their best ye`r since | :14:05. | :14:05. | |
2008. All this week we've been looking | :14:06. | :14:07. | |
at how the First World War `ffected Today, the story of photogr`pher | :14:08. | :14:10. | |
Olive Edis, from Norfolk. Olive was commissioned to | :14:11. | :14:15. | |
photograph women in the war. The biggest collection | :14:16. | :14:18. | |
of her work is now in Cromer and The remnants of tanks lay everywhere | :14:19. | :14:33. | |
in shell holes. Cartridges, bombs, grenades lay strewn upon thd ground. | :14:34. | :14:40. | |
The works of Olive Edis frol her journal, she had been commissioned | :14:41. | :14:45. | |
by the National War Museum, now the Imperial War Museum, to photograph | :14:46. | :14:50. | |
women at war. Voluntary, auxiliary detachments. Women were att`ched in | :14:51. | :14:56. | |
terms of nursing and cleric`l work, drivers, they were repairing cars | :14:57. | :15:00. | |
and military vehicles. They were doing everything. Olive Edis was a | :15:01. | :15:06. | |
photographer that the great and the good wanted to sit for. Prile | :15:07. | :15:09. | |
Minister Lloyd George, writdr Thomas Hardy, and when it came to the | :15:10. | :15:14. | |
selfie, live was way ahead of her time. This is the famous coxswain of | :15:15. | :15:21. | |
Cromer, reportedly the bravdst lifeboat man who ever lived. The | :15:22. | :15:30. | |
crater of Cromer Museum owns the largest collection of her ilages. I | :15:31. | :15:37. | |
sense that everyone from fishermen and their wives, up to kings and | :15:38. | :15:41. | |
queens and all points in between, that she was someone who makes very | :15:42. | :15:47. | |
easily with all walks of life. Olive's original studio was nearby. | :15:48. | :15:52. | |
Today it is a private house, but there is an original sign and her | :15:53. | :15:55. | |
older developing Bath is a garden wonderment. She was self`tatght | :15:56. | :16:02. | |
which is very surprising. She was hugely talented and she onlx use | :16:03. | :16:07. | |
natural light, unless the lhght was so bad that it was essential that | :16:08. | :16:13. | |
she use of `` artificial light. She was fascinated by the local | :16:14. | :16:18. | |
fisherfolk and she also took portrait of soldiers after war. When | :16:19. | :16:23. | |
she went to France in 1914 with her assistant, it was not an easy ride. | :16:24. | :16:27. | |
They covered 2000 kilometres, staying where they could and | :16:28. | :16:31. | |
sometimes sleeping on plankton houses, sometimes in hotels, they | :16:32. | :16:35. | |
had a pretty hard time `` planks in houses. Today, the exhibit hs small | :16:36. | :16:43. | |
but perfectly formed. Her photographs of the aftermath of | :16:44. | :16:49. | |
conflict I a unique record of the often overlooked role of wolen in | :16:50. | :16:50. | |
the First World War. If you love football, | :16:51. | :16:52. | |
it's been a great summer. Then we had the World Cup and now | :16:53. | :16:54. | |
it's about to kick off again. After the relegation | :16:55. | :17:00. | |
and promotion battles last season, there's the return of some familiar | :17:01. | :17:02. | |
names and a bitter rivalry. With Luton and Cambridge coling up | :17:03. | :17:05. | |
and Norwich going down, there's sure to be plenty of talking | :17:06. | :17:17. | |
points over the next ten months For Norwich and Ipswich | :17:18. | :17:21. | |
in the Championship, great expectation they can challenge | :17:22. | :17:22. | |
for a place in the Premier League. Ipswich aiming for the top six, | :17:23. | :17:28. | |
many tipping Norwich to be top In the blue corner Mick McC`rthy, | :17:29. | :17:33. | |
a veteran, of 755 games in charge. After two steady years, | :17:34. | :17:38. | |
Town look ready to launch We will soon find out | :17:39. | :17:46. | |
whether we're good enough, won't we, Ipswich is entering | :17:47. | :17:57. | |
their 13th successive season in English football's second tier, | :17:58. | :18:02. | |
making them the championship's But under McCarthy, | :18:03. | :18:05. | |
who signed a new contract, there is I am optimistic every year, | :18:06. | :18:10. | |
but the last ten years has been Mick has come in, settledthd side | :18:11. | :18:16. | |
down and I think we can look Neil Adams has kept the majority | :18:17. | :18:26. | |
of last season's squad intact. Three in, | :18:27. | :18:31. | |
with two significant departtres Robert Snodgrass and ?8.5 | :18:32. | :18:35. | |
million Ricky van Wolfswinkdl. One goal | :18:36. | :18:37. | |
in 27 games proved mighty costly. After their relegation, Norwich are | :18:38. | :18:43. | |
one of the favourites to go up. Well we guarded | :18:44. | :18:47. | |
against over complacency, wd should be up there, we have the pl`yers | :18:48. | :18:51. | |
that are capable of doing that. There is no reason why we shouldn't, | :18:52. | :18:56. | |
so whether or not it brings any Three years since the last Derby, | :18:57. | :19:01. | |
they meet again in just two weeks. When it comes to it, | :19:02. | :19:08. | |
it's a massive occasion for both At the minute, everyone was | :19:09. | :19:11. | |
like a sole focus is on Wolves, Fans say, | :19:12. | :19:16. | |
you have to win that game. Actually, I would take thred or | :19:17. | :19:21. | |
four wins against somebody dlse Fulham is the first for Ipswich | :19:22. | :19:26. | |
Wolves for Norwich, Here are tomorrow's games in | :19:27. | :19:29. | |
League One. Peterborough | :19:30. | :19:35. | |
and MK Dons will be aiming to be For Joe Dunne at Colchester, he s | :19:36. | :19:38. | |
hoping his team can just improve. Flirting with relegation | :19:39. | :19:42. | |
the last couple of years has We have two improve on last year. It | :19:43. | :19:57. | |
is going to be tough. It will be a tough season. That is why it is | :19:58. | :20:01. | |
important we try and keep as many players fit as we can with ` small | :20:02. | :20:03. | |
squad that we have. Now the wait for followers of Luton | :20:04. | :20:04. | |
and Cambridge United is nearly over. After years of trouble both on | :20:05. | :20:07. | |
and off the pitch, and a period in the Conference, tomorrow they | :20:08. | :20:11. | |
return to action in the League. Both teams hungry to make up | :20:12. | :20:13. | |
for lost time. First it was Luton. Then it was | :20:14. | :20:30. | |
Cambridge cluster group turned to celebrate the end of football league | :20:31. | :20:34. | |
wilderness. Now it's down to business. You know where thd ball is | :20:35. | :20:44. | |
going! He has managed what for others tried but failed to do, take | :20:45. | :20:48. | |
Luton back to the football league. In doing so, he has helped to heal | :20:49. | :20:54. | |
the hurt. I feel this is a new Luton, the outlook from the | :20:55. | :21:00. | |
directors down is completelx different than it was two ydars ago. | :21:01. | :21:07. | |
There is a new excitement. There is a new belief. How easy has ht been | :21:08. | :21:15. | |
to bury the past? Not easy, but gradually it will become a lemory. I | :21:16. | :21:21. | |
have seen it all. I have cole down through all the leagues and we | :21:22. | :21:25. | |
finally got out of the Confdrence. That was a massive relief of the | :21:26. | :21:29. | |
club and all around it. It was a massive achievement. Now we are in | :21:30. | :21:35. | |
League 2 starting on zero points. Blair in Cambridge United, the | :21:36. | :21:38. | |
feeling is mutual, but they have had to wait 12 years `` here in | :21:39. | :21:46. | |
Cambridge. Now, they have to work out a way to stay there. We are | :21:47. | :21:55. | |
fairly confident we will do well. If we hit form after January, ` couple | :21:56. | :22:04. | |
of under our belts, we will be OK. Without that, we can't win tight | :22:05. | :22:13. | |
games. We need form. That is key. No promoted side has been relegated | :22:14. | :22:17. | |
back to the Conference sincd its inception. A crumb of comfort for | :22:18. | :22:22. | |
Cambridge and Luton, back where they think they belong. | :22:23. | :22:23. | |
After being relegated, Stevenage begin life in League Two | :22:24. | :22:25. | |
Boss Chris Wilder thinks thd league this season is wide open | :22:26. | :22:30. | |
Full previews to all the gales on the BBC Sport website. | :22:31. | :22:34. | |
There's live coverage on your local BBC Radio Station | :22:35. | :22:41. | |
Let's return now to the First World War and the one symbol | :22:42. | :22:44. | |
that represents the conflict better than any other ` the poppy. | :22:45. | :22:47. | |
At the Tower of London, they've filled | :22:48. | :22:49. | |
the moat with hundreds of thousands of ceramic poppies, one for each | :22:50. | :22:53. | |
And here in the Fens, a giant poppy made up | :22:54. | :22:59. | |
Is there a more powerful im`ge of war and peace? | :23:00. | :23:08. | |
To mark the centenary, it has been seen in services and on memorials. | :23:09. | :23:14. | |
But there has been nothing quite like this. | :23:15. | :23:17. | |
In a field on in the Fens, a red glow. | :23:18. | :23:20. | |
Thousands of poppies growing into one giant one. | :23:21. | :23:30. | |
You get the mixture of the colours, but to get it to grow, | :23:31. | :23:33. | |
we had to buy frozen seeds, we had to get it grown on to plugs. | :23:34. | :23:36. | |
It has been a lot of work, but well worth it. | :23:37. | :23:43. | |
Well two months, some of thd schoolchildren who one month or so | :23:44. | :23:48. | |
ago planted the seeds. Back today to see what they had grown into. It's | :23:49. | :23:54. | |
amazing. And you planted thdm? They look different. How? They are | :23:55. | :24:02. | |
puppies. They are read. It hs a flower that grew amongst thd graves | :24:03. | :24:07. | |
in the Great War `` they ard puppies. `` poppies. In flotnders | :24:08. | :24:26. | |
field the poppies grow. We `re the dead. There are more than 60,00 | :24:27. | :24:34. | |
poppies growing here, coverhng more than half an acre. Many werd killed | :24:35. | :24:40. | |
on each side, if you had a poppy here fit each life lost it would | :24:41. | :24:45. | |
cover about ten acres. A se` of red, seemingly going on for ever. For the | :24:46. | :24:50. | |
British Legion it is more than their motive, it belongs to all of us It | :24:51. | :24:55. | |
is almost like a rallying c`ll. People understand what it is and | :24:56. | :24:59. | |
what it is for, and what it represents and what it provhdes the | :25:00. | :25:03. | |
beneficiaries who receive the funds the donations at a given. Ttrning | :25:04. | :25:11. | |
from Green into red, in defdnce `` here, a giant poppy that sahd, we | :25:12. | :25:14. | |
are not forgotten. A large area of cloud, the legacy of | :25:15. | :25:30. | |
tropical storm Bertha. It is heading our way. The cloud is across the | :25:31. | :25:42. | |
region, but we have had somd pretty heavy torrential downpours hn the | :25:43. | :25:47. | |
western half of the region. A lot of the East estate cloudy but dry. Over | :25:48. | :25:52. | |
the next two hours, this rahn is expected to head North East. | :25:53. | :25:56. | |
Anywhere could be in for a thundery downpour before the day is out. It | :25:57. | :26:00. | |
is heading out into the North Sea, so by midnight, a lot of us look | :26:01. | :26:05. | |
dry. There is some cloud, btt some clear spells developing, too, and a | :26:06. | :26:11. | |
cooler night. Lows between 04 degrees and 16 degrees. Tomorrow, | :26:12. | :26:17. | |
not a bad day. It will be bright and breezy, with sunny spells through | :26:18. | :26:20. | |
the morning. There will be cloud in the afternoon, which could produce a | :26:21. | :26:25. | |
shower, but most places look like they will stay dry. Where wd get the | :26:26. | :26:29. | |
sunshine, temperatures around 2 Celsius. In the afternoon, there | :26:30. | :26:36. | |
will be some patchy cloud, but it does look settled and dry. Then it | :26:37. | :26:42. | |
is all change. The legacy of this storm will bring us a deepening area | :26:43. | :26:46. | |
of low pressure on Sunday. This is likely to bring us heavy rahn and | :26:47. | :26:52. | |
strong winds. As the locals out into the North Sea, that is what will | :26:53. | :26:57. | |
strengthen the winds. Later in the day, we could have gusty winds from | :26:58. | :27:04. | |
the West. To summarise: A spell of heavy rain, some strong winds and | :27:05. | :27:10. | |
some large waves on the coast on Sunday. Stay tuned to the forecast | :27:11. | :27:15. | |
because there might be changes. It's looking like an unsettled d`y. Into | :27:16. | :27:21. | |
next week, it remains unsettled with an sunshine and heavy showers, | :27:22. | :27:27. | |
it could be thundery. Karma on Tuesday, some showers around but | :27:28. | :27:34. | |
also sunshine. `` looking k`rma on Tuesday. That is it from us. | :27:35. | :27:37. | |
Goodbye. Martin Freeman presents a Gaza | :27:38. | :28:01. | |
Crisis appeal on behalf of | :28:02. | :28:02. |