Browse content similar to 07/03/2014. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!
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Hello. Welcome to Friday's Look BBC's | :00:00. | :00:00. | |
Hello. Welcome to Friday's Look North. Tonight, is there a crisis in | :00:00. | :00:00. | |
social care in Yorkshire? Wd investigate the disturbing case of a | :00:07. | :00:10. | |
man with dementia who hasn't been able to have a bath for mord than a | :00:11. | :00:20. | |
year. They do not bother about us. That is my opinion. You get to | :00:21. | :00:26. | |
certain age and just written off. We'll ask how many other people are | :00:27. | :00:29. | |
facing similar problems. Also tonight. 300 jobs under thrdat in | :00:30. | :00:34. | |
Bradford, as greetings cards manufacturer Hallmark sends most of | :00:35. | :00:37. | |
its production overseas. 75 years of The Dalesman. We find out what makes | :00:38. | :00:41. | |
Yorkshire's parish magazine so special. And in sport, compdting for | :00:42. | :00:48. | |
Paralympic glory. The former Doncaster soldier who's fought his | :00:49. | :00:56. | |
way back from terrible injuries And it was a bit chilly out there this | :00:57. | :00:59. | |
afternoon, but we all enjoydd some beautiful spring sunshine. H will be | :01:00. | :01:05. | |
back the details of the weekend weather and the high pressure that | :01:06. | :01:06. | |
will be building next week. Good evening and welcome to Friday's | :01:07. | :01:31. | |
Look North. Our top story tonight, the case of a disabled man who | :01:32. | :01:35. | |
hasn't been able to bath for over a year because of a crisis in social | :01:36. | :01:38. | |
care services. Francis Whittingham has vascular dementia. 18 months | :01:39. | :01:41. | |
ago, Calderdale Council agrded that his bathroom needed adapting to fit | :01:42. | :01:44. | |
his needs. But so far nothing has been done. And Age UK believes that | :01:45. | :01:48. | |
there are hundreds of thous`nds of people in a similar situation. We'll | :01:49. | :01:52. | |
hear from them in a moment, but first Cathy Killick reports. At 72 | :01:53. | :01:54. | |
and suffering from vascular disease, life has become difficult for | :01:55. | :01:56. | |
Francis Whittingham. He has lost the use of one arm and cannot lhft his | :01:57. | :01:59. | |
legs easily any more. The stairlift has been a godsend but he h`s been | :02:00. | :02:02. | |
waiting for bathroom adaptations. It has meant he has not had a bath or | :02:03. | :02:08. | |
shower for over a year. I nded to wash properly. Not just arotnd my | :02:09. | :02:16. | |
face and arms. I need to be physically wet. And I find that I | :02:17. | :02:22. | |
can't, it is as simple as that. Francis is entitled to have as | :02:23. | :02:26. | |
bathroom of the, and Calderdale Council agreed to fund it months | :02:27. | :02:30. | |
ago, but since then nothing has been done. His wife, Carol, has watched | :02:31. | :02:35. | |
her husband struggle with great sadness and resentment, that a | :02:36. | :02:40. | |
social system they both paid into is now letting them down. A sickly | :02:41. | :02:45. | |
nothing has happened. I havd contacted the case worker on a | :02:46. | :02:49. | |
bigger basis, and she does `ll she can but at the end of the d`y, have | :02:50. | :02:52. | |
the money is not there to do the other nation, what can she do? `` | :02:53. | :02:59. | |
the adaptation. In a statemdnt, Calderdale Council said. | :03:00. | :03:14. | |
There must be hundreds of thousands of people in the same predicament as | :03:15. | :03:23. | |
I am. And the problem is, I am 2, I am an old fellow. They are not | :03:24. | :03:29. | |
bothered about us. That is ly opinion. You get to a certahn age | :03:30. | :03:34. | |
and you're just written off. You would think that a bath or shower is | :03:35. | :03:38. | |
a basic need, but because not having one is not life`threatening, the | :03:39. | :03:42. | |
council sees it as a low prhority. Even so, it hopes to alter the | :03:43. | :03:50. | |
couple's bathroom by this Jtne, a year and a half after it was first | :03:51. | :03:56. | |
requested. Well, Ruth Isden is from the charity, Age UK. She sahd | :03:57. | :03:59. | |
stories like Francis' are bdcoming all too familiar. Unfortunately | :04:00. | :04:04. | |
stories like these are becoling too common. We have a serious crisis in | :04:05. | :04:09. | |
the social care system. Funding has increasingly been cut from local | :04:10. | :04:13. | |
authority budgets, forcing them to raise eligibility criteria, meaning | :04:14. | :04:17. | |
that less people get the help that they need, and this is having a | :04:18. | :04:24. | |
serious impact on older people. It's as like something from the Victorian | :04:25. | :04:28. | |
era, not 21st`century Britahn. What should councils do to get their | :04:29. | :04:32. | |
priorities right? What we are talking about today is a picture | :04:33. | :04:38. | |
well by local authorities are not allocated the funding they need to | :04:39. | :04:42. | |
provide the support they want to provide. In recent years, local | :04:43. | :04:46. | |
authority spending on social care has decreased I700 and ?50 lillion, | :04:47. | :04:52. | |
and that this is time the ntmber of people needing their support and | :04:53. | :04:57. | |
care is growing. `` has decreased by ?750 million. The ultimate solution | :04:58. | :05:03. | |
is that the Government needs to make better investment in social care. | :05:04. | :05:08. | |
The council is stuck between a rock and a hard place. How can wd get it | :05:09. | :05:12. | |
so that people like France's get help, and soon? The care bill is | :05:13. | :05:19. | |
going to introduce important changes, and it is going through | :05:20. | :05:23. | |
Parliament now, but unless the Government invests in the social | :05:24. | :05:28. | |
care system, it will not deliver the kind of changes that people in this | :05:29. | :05:31. | |
sort of situation desperately need to see. Next tonight, anothdr jobs | :05:32. | :05:39. | |
blow for Bradford. 300 people are to be sacked by | :05:40. | :05:43. | |
greetings card makers Hallm`rk. The company says it's cheaper to buy in | :05:44. | :05:47. | |
cards from other parts of the UK and the Far East. The firm's | :05:48. | :05:49. | |
distribution arm will still remain in the city. Unions have sahd the | :05:50. | :05:53. | |
move is devastating. Ian Whhte reports. They have been makhng | :05:54. | :05:57. | |
greeting cards and Bradford for 30 years, but now, Hallmark saxs it is | :05:58. | :06:01. | |
cheaper to buy them in from other manufacturers in the UK and the far | :06:02. | :06:06. | |
east. That means 300 jobs whll go at Lane complex. The news has caught | :06:07. | :06:12. | |
unions by surprise. it is devastating, the numbdrs | :06:13. | :06:15. | |
involved, and the people in the wider community and their f`milies. | :06:16. | :06:19. | |
It comes at the end of a very sad week for West Yorkshire, with the | :06:20. | :06:24. | |
announcement on Monday that Kodak would be closing a factory hn | :06:25. | :06:30. | |
please. the jobs will go bdfore Christmas this year. | :06:31. | :06:33. | |
Staff were told the news in meetings yesterday. Not happy, as yot | :06:34. | :06:40. | |
kanamycin. The people and they have all got partners and familids that | :06:41. | :06:44. | |
work there. It is very bad. It is a blow for Bradford. It is bad news | :06:45. | :06:51. | |
for the area. It is a shame. nobody at the company was availabld for | :06:52. | :06:55. | |
interview but in a statement, they said they regretted the job losses | :06:56. | :06:58. | |
but that it was important that the company moved forward for the future | :06:59. | :07:06. | |
to secure 700 jobs here in the city. Bradford Council says it will liaise | :07:07. | :07:09. | |
with the company to try to help those who lose their jobs to find | :07:10. | :07:18. | |
work elsewhere. Later on Look North. 150 years on, remembering the | :07:19. | :07:20. | |
devastating Sheffield flood that claimed more than 200 lives. The | :07:21. | :07:31. | |
Liberal Democrats' Spring conference has got under way in York. @round | :07:32. | :07:35. | |
2,000 delegates are expected at the venue over the next three d`ys. The | :07:36. | :07:39. | |
last time the conference was held in Yorkshire, there were large protests | :07:40. | :07:41. | |
which brought Sheffield to ` standstill. Well, our polithcal | :07:42. | :07:44. | |
editor, Len Tingle, is in York for us. And Len, the organisers and | :07:45. | :07:48. | |
police will be hoping for a more peaceful event. Absolutely. As you | :07:49. | :07:53. | |
say, last time the Liberal Democrats came to Yorkshire, it was a few | :07:54. | :07:58. | |
months after the coalition government had been formed, and the | :07:59. | :08:02. | |
austerities programme had khcked in, so the conference was besieged by | :08:03. | :08:04. | |
protesters in Sheffield. Thhs time, as Nick Clegg arrives for the | :08:05. | :08:10. | |
conference in York, he's hoping there will be more attention on what | :08:11. | :08:13. | |
is happening inside the Barbican Centre than out on the stredts, but | :08:14. | :08:17. | |
it might not be that way because, tomorrow, there was going to be a | :08:18. | :08:21. | |
big TUC march in York. We don't know how many people are going to be | :08:22. | :08:27. | |
coming but protesters were big bust in from all over Yorkshire, and the | :08:28. | :08:31. | |
council suggest that it could be so big, they are going to open up the | :08:32. | :08:35. | |
famous bridge that has been close, controversially, for so long in | :08:36. | :08:40. | |
York, and there have been so many problems with traffic, but the | :08:41. | :08:42. | |
council believes that march will cause so much traffic congestion, | :08:43. | :08:51. | |
they are going to open it for just one day. You have been spending the | :08:52. | :08:58. | |
day with Nick Clegg. Yes, hd says that we have been seeing signs of | :08:59. | :09:01. | |
recovery, as far as he's concerned, so there will be no more return to | :09:02. | :09:06. | |
that kind of disruption that we saw in Sheffield. I spoke to hil in an | :09:07. | :09:15. | |
interview that will be run on the Sunday Politics programme. H said | :09:16. | :09:25. | |
what we had been doing would be bad for the British economy, but the | :09:26. | :09:28. | |
decisions we have taken havd been vindicated, they have been taken to | :09:29. | :09:33. | |
the right reasons, the economy is growing, with more people in | :09:34. | :09:39. | |
employment than ever before. The conference goes on tomorrow and | :09:40. | :09:44. | |
Sunday. I will be reporting for Look North and we'll have a spechal | :09:45. | :09:49. | |
programme of the Sunday Polhtics from York on Sunday. In othdr news | :09:50. | :09:57. | |
now, and the Unison trade union has reached an agreement with the | :09:58. | :10:00. | |
Yorkshire Ambulance Service ` meaning its members won't now take | :10:01. | :10:03. | |
industrial action. But membdrs of another union, Unite, are on strike | :10:04. | :10:07. | |
as we speak. It's all part of an ongoing dispute over shift patterns | :10:08. | :10:09. | |
and meal breaks. Unite clails patient safety could be put at risk. | :10:10. | :10:13. | |
Managers say they have taken steps to maintain safe and effecthve | :10:14. | :10:16. | |
services. There'll be anothdr strike on Monday. Hospitals in Leeds are | :10:17. | :10:21. | |
stepping up their appeal for ?2 million to help fund a new Brain | :10:22. | :10:24. | |
Research Centre for Yorkshire. It'll be spent on research into illnesses | :10:25. | :10:29. | |
like dementia, epilepsy and MS. Patients will be able to take part | :10:30. | :10:33. | |
in trials of new treatments. The aim is to attract some of the world s | :10:34. | :10:39. | |
best scientists. Neurologic`l conditions are a big problel for | :10:40. | :10:43. | |
this region. For example, wd have significant increases likelx to | :10:44. | :10:49. | |
occur, in terms of the numbdrs of people ageing beyond 65, and that | :10:50. | :10:53. | |
will increase by about 50% hn the next few decades, so there will | :10:54. | :10:59. | |
potentially be a lot of casds of chronic neurological condithons Now | :11:00. | :11:08. | |
we have an update on a storx about a 1953 silk wedding dress that has | :11:09. | :11:11. | |
been reunited with its formdr owner after staff at the Leeds ch`rity | :11:12. | :11:16. | |
shop appeal to them to get hn touch. Gordon and Peggy Dickinson bought | :11:17. | :11:20. | |
the white `` bought the dress for their wedding in 1953, and Gordon | :11:21. | :11:27. | |
donated it in 2011, but staff at the Sue Ryder shop wanted to know more | :11:28. | :11:30. | |
about the garment and spent weeks trying to find Gordon. At that time, | :11:31. | :11:36. | |
women did not always get drdssed in white, because you had to ghve up | :11:37. | :11:41. | |
clothing coupons for a whitd wedding dress. And woman would say, I am not | :11:42. | :11:54. | |
going to spent my coupons on a wedding dress, I am going to get | :11:55. | :11:56. | |
something that I can get whdre out of, as well. `` get wear out of A | :11:57. | :12:12. | |
ceremony has been held todax to mark the 150th anniversary of thd Great | :12:13. | :12:15. | |
Sheffield Flood. More than 240 people died when the Dale Dxke Dam | :12:16. | :12:18. | |
burst, causing devastation down the Loxley and Don Valleys and beyond. | :12:19. | :12:21. | |
Several events are planned this weekend as people remember ` tragedy | :12:22. | :12:25. | |
which still shapes the city today. Silence for those 250 souls who died | :12:26. | :12:28. | |
in the tragedy. A quiet momdnt of remembrance for one of the lost | :12:29. | :12:31. | |
violent disasters in peacethme history. 150 years ago, Sheffield | :12:32. | :12:39. | |
was a rapidly expanding citx. The population had reached almost | :12:40. | :12:43. | |
200,000, and that meant building new reservoirs so that everyone had | :12:44. | :12:47. | |
water to drink, and there is still a string of them along the west side | :12:48. | :12:50. | |
of the city today, and although it looks like a beautiful scend now, | :12:51. | :12:57. | |
the newly reconstructed damn at Dale Dyke Dam collapsed, sending a | :12:58. | :13:02. | |
cascading torrent of water with unimaginable velocity all the way | :13:03. | :13:09. | |
down the Locksley Valley. At least 240 people perished, probably more, | :13:10. | :13:13. | |
through Hillsborough and thd lower Don Valley, the water did not | :13:14. | :13:18. | |
discriminate, sweeping away whole families. Bodies were recovdred as | :13:19. | :13:30. | |
far away as Connors pro. `` Conisborough. Local histori`n | :13:31. | :13:36. | |
Malcolm is a descendant of the man who burned the first crack hn the | :13:37. | :13:42. | |
dam wall, and raised the al`rm. It was something like 12 of thdir | :13:43. | :13:46. | |
family, and they were all vdry in one big lot in Loxley Georgha. Some | :13:47. | :13:54. | |
of them were never found. `` churchyard. Some flood victhms | :13:55. | :14:01. | |
light`year, silent witnesses to the destruction. `` lie here. This | :14:02. | :14:07. | |
weekend, the people of this city are urged to remember them. Before seven | :14:08. | :14:14. | |
o'clock, this romantic novel's in line for a top award. It's written | :14:15. | :14:17. | |
by Jessica Blair, and we'll be meeting her in a moment. But beware | :14:18. | :14:22. | |
` there's a trick in the tale. And a big weekend for Blades fans ` can | :14:23. | :14:26. | |
they make it through to the FA Cup semifinal? Can they make it? I think | :14:27. | :14:41. | |
they can. The opening ceremony of the Paralympics has been taking | :14:42. | :14:46. | |
place in Sochi this afternoon. On Sunday Mick Brennan, from Bhrcotes, | :14:47. | :14:49. | |
near Doncaster, will take to the snow. The former soldier lost both | :14:50. | :14:53. | |
his legs in a suicide bomb `ttack in Iraq ten years ago. He says he'll | :14:54. | :14:57. | |
always be grateful to skiing for helping get his life back on track. | :14:58. | :15:04. | |
Mick Brennan has been fighthng his way back to fitness, not just from | :15:05. | :15:08. | |
the injury suffered in Iraq, when he lost both his legs, but frol those | :15:09. | :15:11. | |
sustained from skiing, the latest, broken wrist which meant a race | :15:12. | :15:15. | |
against time to make selecthon for Sochi. But he has made it. H have | :15:16. | :15:22. | |
lost nine months on snow colpared to everyone else in the world, whether | :15:23. | :15:27. | |
it be on snow or working in the gym, so I am a long way behind btt I have | :15:28. | :15:31. | |
got the determination and I will give it my best shot. Deterlination | :15:32. | :15:37. | |
has never been in short supply for the 34`year`old former sergdant from | :15:38. | :15:42. | |
Doncaster. This was the momdnt his colleagues in Iraq learned he had | :15:43. | :15:46. | |
been blown up by a suicide bomber, back in 2004. At the time up until | :15:47. | :15:52. | |
getting the injury, it was the best time I have had in my life, and the | :15:53. | :15:57. | |
tour of duty I did in Iraq, with bomb disposal, it was fantastic and | :15:58. | :16:02. | |
you do not think it is going to happen to yourself, but touchwood, I | :16:03. | :16:06. | |
am lucky, I am still here. H have got my prosthetic legs on. Lots of | :16:07. | :16:12. | |
people get valentines cards on the 14th of February, I got a ndw pair | :16:13. | :16:20. | |
of legs. Mick Brennan users are high`technology sitting ski that has | :16:21. | :16:22. | |
been built using cutting`edge military technology. It has helped | :16:23. | :16:27. | |
him win several medals. Havhng managed to qualify for Sochh, what | :16:28. | :16:35. | |
is he hoping for? I would bd hoping for top 15 in the giant slalom and | :16:36. | :16:40. | |
the super G. Before I was injured I was getting top ten placings on a | :16:41. | :16:49. | |
regular basis. So getting to the top ten is like a podium to me, anyway. | :16:50. | :16:55. | |
He has already set his sights on the next Winter Olympics in Korda in | :16:56. | :17:03. | |
2018. Just over a week after they were handed a six`point dedtction | :17:04. | :17:06. | |
for going into administration, the Bradford Bulls could be back up to | :17:07. | :17:10. | |
zero this evening. Having bdaten London and Wakefield, they're | :17:11. | :17:13. | |
looking to register their third win of the season, away to Hull FC. Loan | :17:14. | :17:16. | |
signings Greg Burke and Lial Sutcliffe are in line to pl`y. There | :17:17. | :17:21. | |
will be regular updates on that game on BBC Radio Leeds, but the | :17:22. | :17:24. | |
commentary comes from Hudersfield where the Giants are taking on the | :17:25. | :17:27. | |
Leeds Rhinos. With just eight teams left in this season's FA Cup, isn't | :17:28. | :17:32. | |
it great to be able to say that one of them is ours? Bramall Lane will | :17:33. | :17:35. | |
be bouncing again on Sunday lunchtime when Sheffield Unhted play | :17:36. | :17:37. | |
their quarterfinal against Charlton. If they win, they'll be heading for | :17:38. | :17:41. | |
Wembley, because that's where the semi`finals will be played. Paul | :17:42. | :17:51. | |
Ogden reports. To be a blinds fan at the moment, it is better th`n it has | :17:52. | :18:03. | |
been `` to be a `` Blades f`n. It has come as a shock. We are doing | :18:04. | :18:08. | |
very well at the moment, at the quarterfinal, maybe getting to | :18:09. | :18:18. | |
Wembley, it is good at the loment. The Blades have risen from rock | :18:19. | :18:22. | |
bottom of League One to 10th in the table since the appointment of Nigel | :18:23. | :18:25. | |
Clough. They have beaten Aston Villa and problem of the Premier League | :18:26. | :18:29. | |
and Championship side, Notthngham Forest. Their chance of becoming the | :18:30. | :18:35. | |
first Yorkshire team to beat reach the FA Cup semifinals since Barnsley | :18:36. | :18:41. | |
in 2008 is for real. People think that when we should just be reserved | :18:42. | :18:45. | |
for the final, but as a plaxer, as an opportunity to play at, H think | :18:46. | :18:51. | |
if we get 40,000 tickets for Wembley, we would be queueing | :18:52. | :18:58. | |
halfway around Sheffield for them. I think it is highly unlikely that a | :18:59. | :19:04. | |
team from League One can win the cup, because the other team could be | :19:05. | :19:10. | |
Premiership quality. Today, Nigel Clough has been confirmed as manager | :19:11. | :19:16. | |
of the month off every. March could be the one that books the Blades a | :19:17. | :19:20. | |
trip to Wembley at least once before the end of this season. | :19:21. | :19:26. | |
I hope you enjoyed your book. It was not as interesting as your sport. | :19:27. | :19:35. | |
Now, I don't know about you, Harry, but I love a bit of a romance in my | :19:36. | :19:40. | |
life. And one person who knows more than many how to create rom`ntic | :19:41. | :19:43. | |
plot lines, is the Yorkshird author Jessica Blair ` who, at 90, is on | :19:44. | :19:47. | |
the verge of being crowned "the Queen of Romance". Well Jessica | :19:48. | :19:53. | |
Blair is in real life, Bill Spence ` a former RAF veteran. He ` or she ` | :19:54. | :20:04. | |
has already written 35 Westdrns and 24 romantic novels. And now he's | :20:05. | :20:08. | |
been short listed for a top literary award. Why Jessica? One I wrote the | :20:09. | :20:13. | |
first Jessica book, it went under my name, and the publishers sahd. We | :20:14. | :20:19. | |
want to publish this under the name of Jessica Blair. And you do not say | :20:20. | :20:25. | |
no to royalties. And as that because there was this gender stereotype | :20:26. | :20:30. | |
that meant perhaps cannot write romance? I think that is thd reason. | :20:31. | :20:35. | |
There are not many men writhng this type of work. The word" rom`nce , | :20:36. | :20:47. | |
yes, it is great, but these books, immediately, that conjures tp fluffy | :20:48. | :20:55. | |
dovey and all that sort of thing, but these books are about | :20:56. | :21:01. | |
relationships. Which is the best one that you have written under the | :21:02. | :21:05. | |
Jessica Blair title? Is there one that stands out? No, I have a very | :21:06. | :21:17. | |
special feeling for the first one. It was based on a lot of research. I | :21:18. | :21:24. | |
researched whaling and did ` nonfiction book which came out in | :21:25. | :21:29. | |
1980 on the history of it, `nd that led me to do these. Before xou where | :21:30. | :21:34. | |
a writer, tell us about your past, and the military. Before yot wrote. | :21:35. | :21:41. | |
When I left school I was gohng to be a teacher but the war was on. And we | :21:42. | :21:47. | |
could only do that teaching course if we did some military trahning. | :21:48. | :21:52. | |
And I chose to do, I chose to go to the air force. Whilst I was still | :21:53. | :21:59. | |
finishing my college course. As soon as I finished that I was into the | :22:00. | :22:03. | |
RAF, I was off to Canada and finish my training in Canada, then I came | :22:04. | :22:07. | |
back and did more training, then went into Bomber Command and I was | :22:08. | :22:15. | |
an airman on Lancaster bombdrs and bid 36 operations. `` did. We have a | :22:16. | :22:27. | |
raunchy novel for you now. Do you know what I love about The Dalesman | :22:28. | :22:31. | |
magazine apart from its content of course? You can fit it into your | :22:32. | :22:34. | |
pocket! Very handy indeed H`rry Well the small but perfectlx formed | :22:35. | :22:37. | |
magazine celebrates a speci`l landmark next month. As Harry's been | :22:38. | :22:39. | |
finding out. For 75 years, The Dalesman, to quote | :22:40. | :22:57. | |
the great Alan Bennett, has been Yorkshire's parish magazine. It is | :22:58. | :23:03. | |
easy to see why. Look at th`t landscape. I bet it has not changed | :23:04. | :23:06. | |
in hundreds of years. And I tell you something, neither has this, the | :23:07. | :23:12. | |
original The Dalesman magazhne, first published in 1939, and would | :23:13. | :23:19. | |
you believe it, the opening article was by JB Priestley. Let's have a | :23:20. | :23:23. | |
bit of nostalgia, shall we? There have only been a handful of editors | :23:24. | :23:29. | |
of The Dalesman, and they wdre not so much born in the county but | :23:30. | :23:33. | |
crafted, like Yorkshire stone. None more so than Bill Mitchell. This is | :23:34. | :23:38. | |
crap, where it all began. And memories of the early days of just | :23:39. | :23:41. | |
getting to a story come flooding back the bill. In the early days, I | :23:42. | :23:48. | |
did not have a car. I would drop to the head of the dale by bus. I got a | :23:49. | :23:53. | |
lift back to Grassington by thumbing a left on a lorry, and I stood on | :23:54. | :24:03. | |
the footplate of this lorry, the cab was full of men, the back w`s full | :24:04. | :24:07. | |
of manure, so it was occasions like that that you remembered whdn you | :24:08. | :24:11. | |
look back on your days as a journalist. The new editor has | :24:12. | :24:16. | |
challenges ahead. Once, 60,000 people brought the magazine every | :24:17. | :24:24. | |
month, but times have changdd. JB Peasley wrote in the first ddition, | :24:25. | :24:27. | |
that we should look after the Yorkshire Dales, and campaign to | :24:28. | :24:34. | |
keep it as amazing as it is. So be do have that role. It is thd role of | :24:35. | :24:43. | |
the magazine, that remains one of celebrating Yorkshire. Let's not | :24:44. | :24:45. | |
forget the special ingredient of Yorkshire Dales humour. One of my | :24:46. | :24:50. | |
favourite was the old man who was dying in his red cottage who said | :24:51. | :24:55. | |
his wife, I think I am dying, can you like me a candle for thd last | :24:56. | :25:00. | |
hours? And she says, you know the price of candles. And she wdnt out | :25:01. | :25:03. | |
of the room and came back in again, and said, all right, I will write | :25:04. | :25:09. | |
you a candle, but if you fedl yourself going, blow it out That is | :25:10. | :25:19. | |
romantic, right there. I bet it was cracking up there today, absolutely | :25:20. | :25:25. | |
beautiful. Let's look at sole photos. The cloud breaking tp at | :25:26. | :25:38. | |
Robin Hood 's Bay. The second, the cloud breaking up nicely at Utley | :25:39. | :25:42. | |
Reservoir. And look at thesd do did he pedal? He did, he was exhausted. | :25:43. | :25:53. | |
I bet you got the direction, go this way, because that was the w`y that | :25:54. | :25:59. | |
the wind was blowing. The nhght it is going to be quite grey bx the end | :26:00. | :26:01. | |
of some patchy rain perhaps later on | :26:02. | :26:09. | |
Sunday, and then next week, high pressure building from the cell I | :26:10. | :26:16. | |
can't promise sunshine but H can promise some settled, high cloud. We | :26:17. | :26:20. | |
have seen increasing amount of sunshine today. That takes ts into | :26:21. | :26:25. | |
this evening, with clear skhes and a breeze. We are looking at the frost. | :26:26. | :26:31. | |
Temperatures plummeting, thdrefore more cloud pushes up from the cell. | :26:32. | :26:40. | |
`` from the South. It will be a chilling night to come. The time of | :26:41. | :26:43. | |
sunrise. It will be a great start to the | :26:44. | :26:54. | |
Beacon. And damp as well, whth some drizzle expected over the hhlls `` | :26:55. | :26:58. | |
to the weekend. By tomorrow afternoon, it will be brighter, with | :26:59. | :27:03. | |
some pleasant spells of sunshine. The breeze, fresh from the South, so | :27:04. | :27:10. | |
a breezy datacom, but temperatures getting up to 14 Celsius, that's 55 | :27:11. | :27:21. | |
Fahrenheit. High`pressure, for the first time since the beginnhng of | :27:22. | :27:26. | |
December. It will be dry, and if we get any decent breaks in thd cloud, | :27:27. | :27:29. | |
it will be frosty at night, and where we do get the sunshind, it | :27:30. | :27:37. | |
will be quite mild. And will you be doing with a bit of training this | :27:38. | :27:42. | |
weekend, Harry? Just a little bit, I have peaked now. That's all from | :27:43. | :27:47. | |
weekend, Harry? Just a little bit, I have peaked now. That's all from us. | :27:48. | :27:48. | |
Enjoy your weekend. Goodbye. | :27:49. | :27:50. |