14/01/2013 Inside Out London


14/01/2013

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Hello and welcome to Inside Out South West, stories and

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investigations from where you live a. Tonight: The misery of whooping

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cough, as the South West deals with its worst outbreak in decades.

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are used to the word a vaccine on these little vials of tablets and

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it is fundamentally misleading. Also tonight: The Devon craftsmen

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who is turning back to the Victorian art of sign writing.

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get into around 60 or 70 hours, that is when it gets scary. And the

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cutting edge of culinary taste. We meet the man who thinks that

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seaweed is a delicacy. Garlic and This is inside out -- Inside Out

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The South West has been exceeding the biggest outbreak in a

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generation of whooping cough, and a government campaign is trying to

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increase rates of inoculation. But some parents are wary of

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vaccination and try to find other ways to protect their children. We

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have been investigating an alternative on offer, which experts

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say could be dangerous and to no good at all. Summer fun in Cornwall.

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But unvaccinated Ravi O'Sullivan's holiday was cut short by a whooping

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cough. I started coughing all day, it easily every 30 seconds. I had

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bad coughing fits, to the point where I was throwing up at night.

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His mother did not take him to the doctor. Instead, she consulted an

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expert with an unconventional look at how care. She was a homeopath

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and she gave him remedies. The argument about whether it is useful

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or not, I do not actually need a scientific study to tell me that it

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works, because I have seen it in action. It is an experience and

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something I know. In South Devon, Rachel Price is not fully

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vaccinated either. Her mother is trained as a homeopath, and is

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using what she believes is an effective alternative. I decided to

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get my daughter a homeopathic vaccination. I had no idea how

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inefficient it is, because she did not get whooping cough. Who knows

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whether she would have anyway, but it has got to help. Sue says she

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does not push her ideas on clients, but what are homeopathic vaccines,

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and is her own faith in them justified? A quick search of the

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internet, and we found a large number of homeopathic products

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labelled as vaccines are with the name of a child and illness. Some

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of those illnesses are potentially serious, but rare. Others are now

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making a comeback. You have to go back to the 80s to find an outbreak

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of whooping cough as bad as today's. The South West has seen an

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eightfold rise in cases this year, and in 2012, 13 babies died in the

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UK. There is also concern about the number of parents in the region

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rejecting vaccination. In Totnes, a town famous for embracing

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alternative lifestyles, three out of 10 children are not fully

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inoculated. The local health authority has launched a campaign

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to encourage uptake, but you will not find homeopathic vaccines

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featuring in it. A but this online. It is called a rubella vaccine. --

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I bought this our mind. You can get around 50 little white tablets. It

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is more appealing than a jab in your baby's ormer. But what good

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scientific evidence is there that these will protect against

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infectious diseases? The answer, shockingly, it is none. And

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homeopathy, and the active ingredient is diluted so many times,

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that the final delusion, drip onto a -- dilution, dripped onto a sugar

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pill, or have nothing left. Professor Ed Zardersnt has embedded

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-- investigated these claims, and he says that the evidence does not

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support them. Pete typical homeopathic -- and the typical

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homeopathic pill has nothing in it that will have an effect. Some

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people say that some energy will stimulate the body to heal itself.

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That is a very nice theory but it is not supported by evidence.

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it did he make of the pills that we bought? Why and of these products

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is made to protect or -- one of these products is made to protect

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against a fatal disease. This can be life threatening. A view shared

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by this leading vaccine expert. Adam Finn has seen a big rise in

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cases of children being hospitalised with one's rare

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infectious diseases. I am concerned -- where infectious diseases that

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were once a rare. I am concerned, because the use of the word of

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vaccine on these wiles of tablets is fundamentally misleading,

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because not all meet doctors, but also parents understand something

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quite clear when they used the word a vaccine. So what kind of company

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labels their projects as vaccines? This shop him London has some

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extraordinarily extinct -- distinguished customers. This

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Pharmacy boasts no less than three royal warrants, because they are

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suppliers of homeopathic products to no less than the Queen and

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Prince Charles, and they were to the late Queen Mother. And this is

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the man in charge. Tony Pinkus, a pharmacist. Filmed in 2009 claiming

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the merits of homoeopathy. As we progressively diluted and shake,

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you can improve the effectiveness of the remedy and take away the

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side effects. But you cannot win them all. The next year, Ainsworths

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was investigated by Newsnight for selling products, this time for

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malaria. An investigator body let him off, saying that he had taken

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remedial action, but that seems to have been short-lived. Selling

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unproven products is one thing, but recommending them to children --

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parents for their children as an alternative to vaccination is quite

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another. We have evidence that Mr Pinkus is prepared to do just that.

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He says that his pills are in no sense pharmaceutical drugs and he

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told us that he does not promote them as prevent its for childhood

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illnesses. But I e-mailed him, posing as an alternative Barack

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Obama parent looking for an alternative to the whooping cough -

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- but I e-mailed him, posing as an parent looking for an alternative

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to whooping cough. He said that he made sure that he gave this to his

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own children, but he also added that he could not make a claim for

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its success. Quite right. But he does not stop there. He said that

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typically, Pertussin is used in prevention, and two other remedies

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in treatment. He helpfully directed me to his website, where I can buy

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them. When I asked if my child should be vaccinated, he said it

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was a decision I had to make, but that he would use Pertussin with

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his own children. He described the vaccination as a compromise and

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said that his remedies would offset the side-effects. Experts have told

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us that there is evidence that they can do this, or that homoeopathy

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can prevent or treat any kind of infection in the way that Mr Pinkus

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suggests. To mislead people, not just in the sense of taking money

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off of them, but giving them a sense of security they should not

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have, that is fundamentally wrong. The saw is not alone. We found two

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other -- Ainsworths is not alone. We found two other companies with

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:09:56.:09:56.

the same claims. Helios claims to have an alternative to the

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vaccination for -- Homeoforce claims to have alternative to the

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vaccination for whooping cough. At this point, you might be wondering

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how any company can get away with selling products labelled as

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vaccinations which are not. It is a good question. Homeopathy is

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regulated by the Government's Medicine at watchdog, and we have

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learned that there have been complaints going on for over a year

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against Ainsworths. I showed our evidence to Totnes MP Sarah

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Wollaston, who is concerned about vaccination intake locally. I do

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not think that any product for which there is no evidence

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whatsoever that can convert any benefit should be labelled --

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labelled a vaccine. There is no excuse for that. As a result of our

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investigation, the Government medicine watchdog has taken action

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against the three companies we have highlighted, and Ainsworths has

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removed several of its products from its website. Available to

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anyone, he still wants to take a chance on the -- there are still

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plenty of these products available, available to anyone who still want

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Every where you shop, you're surrounded by signs advertising one

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brand o'er another. But there is nothing new this this. We have been

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on the trail of a man reinventing on the trail of a man reinventing

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an old Victorian craft. From Torbay to Tinseltown. David Smith's at

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work on the latest project to emerge from his Torquay studio. 100

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years ago, this job would have taken a whole bunch of skilled

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tradesmen. You have to cut the panels. Everything is done by a

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team of five or six people. I'm trying to bring it together, but

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it's just me. Dave's talents have made him one of the most sought

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after sign artists in the world. He's currently working on three

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decorated glass panels for the wall of a museum in London's Portobello

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Road. Here owner Jake Burger invites punters to evolve - with

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much happy sampling - their own recipe for gin. When we were

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putting the place together, the museum room, we wanted that to be a

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kind of modern day replica of the gin palaces of the 19th cent which

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which churned it out on an industrial basis. Now Davis the

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last person doing it. We have seen pictures of the progress from afar,

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which Dave has E mailed us, but to see the actual thing will be

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amazing. It should look spectacular and really pull the room together.

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The process starts with Dave sketching out designs for the

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finished work. This is a rough drawing and not a finished drawing.

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But the centre panel will be here and this, there would be acid-

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etched and painted in a vibrant Victorian pink colour. With gilded

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texts. There would be no cut glass here, but there would be other

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treatments. The centre panel would be silvered and gilded to

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complement the two other panels to finish off the Victorian look.

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this is the centre panel. He works with a range of grindstones, each

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capable of a different cut for a different pattern. Theer who wheel

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gives you circles. This one gives you a nice edge cut and a much

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sharper look to the cut itself. job require great precision and a

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delicate touch. I'm up to around about sort of four to five hours

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already. So if it goes right at this stage, it's not too bad. It is

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when you're into 70 hours, that is when it gets a bit more scary.

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It'll take three days of cutting before the centre panel is ready

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for its next stage. Dave's been a sign writer since leaving school.

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Ten years later he had his own business, mostly serving clients in

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and around Torquay. People would want us to make their signs for

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them. Because they were slightly different and more interesting than

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the general mundane type of signs. But to take things to the next

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level Dave had to look way beyond Torquay - to the United States,

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where he studied at the workshop of glass craftsman Rick Lawson.

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Probably the number one person to be involved with to develop reverse

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glass. Dave first put this new reverse glass technique to use in

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the early '90s on his breakthrough project at Torquay's Clocktower pub.

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The following decade saw a growing demand for his work from major

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clients on both sides of the Atlantic. One project can take

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months. He's doing the side panels now, for the Ginstitute.

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cutting now these into quarters to take up the area of the clear glass

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is going to be gilded. From there I will flood the area with distild

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water, which has a small amount of gelatine inside it and I will

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afully gold directly to that area. -- apply the gold. Most of Dave's

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work is done in mirror image on the back of the glass. The backs of the

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panels have always looked messy, you think, this guy doesn't know

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what he is doing. Once you turn them around, they give you

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different story. Then the work is revealed in all its glory. Glass

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isn't all he does. Lately, he's been dabbling in the murky world of

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:17:26.:17:30.

rock and roll. Rock star John Mayer wanted a retro look for his new

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album cover. He saw some of Dave's work and called him using the

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internet from his California home. Someone said there is this guy in

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the UK, his name is David Smith, check out his stuff. OLK let's see.

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I clicked it and it was pencil work he had done for a tattoo parlour.

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As soon as I saw it, I went, "Here we are!" The album cover Dave ended

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up designing just missed out on a nomination for this year's Grammy

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awards. Far away from Tinseltown, it's back to work on the finishing

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touches for the centre panel of the Ginstitute piece. I tend to use

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more of the old period paint, because it contains the lead which

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gives it more body than the modern paints, which doesn't contain the

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leads that you need the get the It is looking pretty complete now.

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I have this red to be blended in and then I will take it to London.

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The work won't be over all three panels are safely hanging on the

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Ginstitute walls. But before he does that he has a small delivery

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to make to one of his other London clients. Then it's across West

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London to Portobello Road, where Jake is eagerly awaiting the

:19:09.:19:19.
:19:19.:19:27.

finished glasswork. After months of sketching, cutting, polishing and

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painting the three panels are finally in place. OK I will stand

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back and look at that. Wow, that looks great. I am one satisfied

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customer. Amazing job. You truly are a master craftsman.

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There it is, hanging on the wall - indisputable truth that Dave Smith

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Here in the South West we are lucky to live in a region known for its

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great foods, from dairy farms to fish. But we have found a man who

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is convinced there is a new potential food this a abundant but

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overlooked. In fact, it's right under my feet! Rory Macphee is a

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boat builder, furniture maker and former shipping lawyer working out

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of Constantine near Falmouth. But lately it's something beneath the

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waves that's caught his interest. For many years, I thought the sea

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was a two-dimensional thing, it was a playground to put my boats on and

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earn sums Ferying people around the Mediterranean. Then I worked at

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Cornwall college and became aware that it was three-dimensional. A

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student said, Rory, what is this seaweed? I said, I don't know. Then

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I thought, why don't I know and I went and found out. From then

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seaweed has become his obsession and he's now got the first licence

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in England to harvest seaweed to eat. On a spring tide I'm down

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there at low water, having a fantastic time, picking seaweed and

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in due course selling it. Rory only picks seaweed from below the

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watermark where the plants are growing. And when it's a low

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jtidelike here at Prisk Cove, he can get to the good stuff. Oh look

:21:40.:21:50.
:21:50.:21:54.

at that baby! Lovely! That is some kelp. It's lovely. A very delicate

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taste. It is about pick and nibbling and it is a secondary test.

:22:03.:22:12.

If I fall over with gangrene tonight... Or my nose falls off, I

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will know it is the seaweed and I won't put it on the market! Armed

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only with a pair of scissors, a glass jar and a wicker basket,

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Rory's seaweed picking is very low impact. This is truly sustainable

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methods. We want to keep this going. By cutting these two leaves off

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there, two thirds of the way up, that will keep that plant alive. In

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the old days they would get a tool and chop that off at the ground. We

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don't want to do that. The same with the dulse, that is the red

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plant there. This grows on other seaweed and this dulse is growing

:22:55.:23:04.

on the serrated rack. So I just want to take a bit for my tea.

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Seaweed's always been valued in Cornwall but not as a food source.

:23:07.:23:09.

The Victorians harvested large quantities to use as fertilizer

:23:09.:23:14.

because its packed full of nutrients like nitrogen and iodine.

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But for Rory it's a delicious treat that should be gracing our plates,

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not just feeding our veg. There we go. Got you! Snip a bit of it. In

:23:31.:23:39.

she goes. I call that chef's delight. You need a pair of nice

:23:40.:23:47.

sharp scissors. Sometimes we will do a bit of a... Elevens moment.

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:23:57.:24:03.

Oh! Garlic, onion... Bit of chilli... I can see that on an

:24:03.:24:12.

avocado pear. There -- And there is a market in Cornwall for seaweed -

:24:12.:24:15.

Rory's found someone else who shares his vision. Only the most

:24:15.:24:22.

avant-garde chefs are looking at it and Mick is putting a lot of effort

:24:22.:24:32.
:24:32.:24:33.

into developing the Cornish you mammy -- unami. For the Japanese

:24:33.:24:36.

unami is the holy grail of flavour - a natural form of monosodium

:24:36.:24:39.

glutamate that comes from boiling seaweed with dried fish into a

:24:39.:24:43.

dashi or stock. You ends up with this clear liquid. We use this as a

:24:43.:24:50.

stock base for many things. For crab pasta, to nice broths with

:24:50.:24:54.

mackerel and mushrooms. The relationship with Rory that we have

:24:54.:24:57.

started is a long-term one. He has got some very good seaweed over

:24:57.:25:05.

there and we need the get more of it. -- to get more of it. Mick

:25:05.:25:09.

wants his chefs to know as much about seaweed as possible. Welcome

:25:10.:25:17.

to our beach. Welcome to our paradise. So he's brought them to

:25:17.:25:21.

the beach to meet Rory, pick some seaweed and get some ideas for how

:25:21.:25:31.
:25:31.:25:36.

to cook it. Are we cooking? While the chefs are busy picking,

:25:36.:25:46.

Rory builds a fire and smokes some seaweed ready to cook. I can see

:25:46.:25:51.

some smoke, what have you got cooking? This is a special for you,

:25:51.:26:00.

Mick. Some dulse. Which I'm smoking on a mixture of Cornish oak and

:26:00.:26:04.

Cornish apple. The colour is beautiful. Do you want to taste

:26:04.:26:13.

some? Yes. This is the one, that flavour. That is dfl that --

:26:13.:26:16.

definitely that flavour. It might not be nouveau cuisine, but Rory's

:26:16.:26:20.

got a simple campfire recipe to get Mick inspired: a smoked dulse bread

:26:20.:26:30.
:26:30.:26:32.

made out of flour, water and seaweed. There is a seven year

:26:32.:26:38.

apprenticeship to this game, mate. It's cooked on the fire in a Celtic

:26:38.:26:48.
:26:48.:26:51.

pie iron. Come on guys. What have you go. Some dull. Lots of stuff.

:26:51.:27:00.

Let's have some pepper dulse. These guys are hired. Amazing! OK,

:27:00.:27:07.

vegetarian hot dogs from Neptune's allotment, flour, water and dulse.

:27:07.:27:15.

Gorse maybe? A bit of gorse. Why not. There we are boys and girls.

:27:15.:27:21.

It is very hot. If you hold the bread board. Maybe you should put

:27:21.:27:27.

truffle oil on. For dessert I have some Caribbean tea. That is seaweed

:27:27.:27:36.

boiled for 20 minutes, with ginger, lemon, cinnamon and card Eammon.

:27:36.:27:44.

And it has been put through a sieve. Shot glass. It smells really good.

:27:44.:27:52.

It beats Lemsip. It is the best hangover cure. I think we need to

:27:52.:27:58.

be back in the kitchen. No, this is the best play, sea wood, larder,

:27:58.:28:02.

sun fire. Maybe after ietthoog bread, you have a point. Brilliant.

:28:02.:28:09.

And the sun it out. Epic day. with Mick and his team full of

:28:09.:28:12.

ideas it looks like seaweed might become a new Cornish delicacy. But

:28:12.:28:18.

for Rory, it's not all about hard work and making money. As I get

:28:18.:28:25.

older and less able to make things in my workshop, why not just be on

:28:25.:28:32.

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