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The CANNA UK National Giant Vegetables Championship: Record-Breaking Giants at Malvern
Six Guinness World Records Smashed at Malvern The CANNA UK National Giant Vegetables Championship Six Guinness World Records were broken the Three Counties Autumn Show last weekend, with 132 growers battling it out for medals, including the longest sweet pepper and heaviest celeriac. Other world records included the world’s tallest runner bean plant (26 feet, two inches) and the world’s longest radish (25 feet, seven inches - there’s a lot of long thin root involved). Weird a
Martin Hesp
Oct 6, 20252 min read


The Three Counties Autumn Show: Celebrating Britain’s Harvest Season in Style
There Ought to Be More of Them… There ought to be more of them… is what my friends and I were agreeing while driving home from the Three Counties Autumn Show at Malvern last weekend. We were talking about large-scale country shows that take place at this time of the year because we hugely enjoyed our visit to the show, which is billed as the “UK’s biggest harvest season celebration”. It offers the ultimate demonstration of something this nation can do very well indeed… We are
Martin Hesp
Oct 6, 20253 min read


Wild Mushroom Foraging: Ceps, Chanterelles and the Magic of Autumn Fungi
Timing Is Everything in Mushroom Foraging Timing. So much of life is about timing. Last week we promised to dedicate this Hesp Out West feature to the wonderful fungi explosion that has been occurring here in the South West of England of late. I’d already found more edible field mushrooms than I could possibly eat, but I was hoping to find some delicious ceps before I had to file this article. And, hey-presto. Monday and Tuesday’s bright sunshine brought the blighters out.
Martin Hesp
Sep 29, 20255 min read


Mead: England’s Forgotten National Drink Making a Comeback in Devon
What Is the National Drink of England? We live in a world where symbols of national identity are important – which is why, for example, the media is forever having rows about whether fish-and-chips, roast beef or chicken tandoori represent the UK’s national dish. But what about our national drink? Scotland, of course, has whisky, while England might argue over whether beer or cider should take the crown. However, in historic terms there’s only one drink in the running, and th
Martin Hesp
Sep 23, 20256 min read


Mushroom Foraging in the UK: Field Mushrooms and Fungi After the Rain
The Wonders of Rain and West Country Fields And talking of produce from our fields, what wonders the rain has done… To the region’s fungi, I mean. After the wet stuff started falling from the skies ten days ago, field mushrooms have been popping up like… Well, mushrooms. Two days into the new rainy season there wasn’t a field mushroom in sight. I know because I went out every day looking in my favourite field where mushrooms never fail to grow. Then, on third day, there was o
Martin Hesp
Sep 17, 20253 min read


New Source of Good West Country Meat
Delivery Vans, Local Produce, and the Rise of Beacon Farms The White Van Nation – and a Thought for British Produce Delivery vans… The world is filled with them. Drive through the rural West Country today and you will see far more white vans than any other vehicle. On a journey to the Blackdown Hills this week I counted more than 20 on a 40-mile round-trip. And I thought: wouldn’t it be wonderful if those vans were filled with British products and produce rather than stuff ma
Martin Hesp
Sep 17, 20256 min read


River Adventures in the Land of the Summer People
A Sudden Shock on the Local News The thing about belting around travelling here, there and everywhere is that you can miss important things which happen back at home. For example, after one trip abroad this summer I was sitting in our living room with the local news on in the background, when I spotted a very good friend dominating the TV screen. It was Ian Macnab aboard his boat the Duchess of Cocklemoor - so I turned the sound up and was appalled to hear that this wonderfu
Martin Hesp
Sep 9, 20255 min read


Cycling the Exe Estuary Trail – A Guide to Devon’s Scenic Cycle Route
The Magic of Estuaries No one needs a newspaper article to tell them that estuaries are very, very special places. These zones where rivers meet the sea create a magical mix of fresh and salt water - a brackish blend that makes them some of the most productive and important habitats on Earth. Estuaries serve as nurseries for fish and shellfish, and are critical feeding grounds for thousands of migratory birds. But they’re more than just wildlife havens, estuaries are nature’s
Martin Hesp
Sep 2, 20257 min read


End of Summer - The Season of Fruitfulness
End of Summer - Autumn in the Air Most years since the turn of the century, my newspaper column has found itself tumbling into that mellow period which marks the end of summer, and declaring: “Autumn is in the air!” as if it’s been some totally new and unexpected sensation. Which is odd… I hardly ever write newspaper articles which herald the arrival of winter or summer. Once or twice I have written about the first hints and glories of spring, but there’s something about the
Martin Hesp
Aug 29, 20256 min read


True Start of the South West Coast Path? The Portishead to Clevedon Walk
South West Coast Path in the Spotlight The South West Coast Path has been making headlines recently, partly thanks to the now rather infamous Salt Path debacle, but also because we’ve had a glorious summer (if you’re a walker and not a farmer, that is) and increased numbers - inspired by the book or the film - have been trudging along at least some of its 630-mile length. But where should our most famous long distance trail really begin and end? Minehead or Portishead – Where
Martin Hesp
Aug 26, 20256 min read


Staying with the Iban in a Longhouse in Borneo
A Traditional Welcome on the Lemanak River After an hour (some of which was spent at high speed) we reached the long-house where we’d be staying as guests of the local Iban people. I could hear the welcoming bell before we arrived – a woman and a child came down to the river bank to greet us and we were marched ceremoniously up to climb the ancient steps cut out of a single log, which took us aloft to the entrance of the long-house. I was first in line to enter the long commu
Martin Hesp
Aug 22, 20254 min read


The Joy of Outdoor Cooking: Why Barbecuing is the UK’s Favourite Summer Ritual
Barbecues in the UK: From Heatwaves to Grilled Feasts The other day someone I know was talking about the weather and he said: “I’ll tell you how hot it is… We rolled out the barbecue for the first time this week and we’ve been grilling sausages and steaks and goodness knows what else.” This simple statement reminded me that not every UK household likes the idea of cooking over a live flame. It took this chap and his family a UK record of four officially designated heatwaves b
Martin Hesp
Aug 18, 20256 min read
Best West Country Walks for a Heatwave: Cool Hiking Routes in the South West
Favourite West Country Hikes and Weather Challenges Over the two decades I was writing a regular weekly walks article here in the West Country I was asked countless questions by readers - the most common of which was: “What’s your favourite hike?” Impossible to answer. This region has some of the best walking routes to be found anywhere in Europe, so picking just one would be like trying to name your favourite piece of music. Too many to choose from. An embarrassment of riche
Martin Hesp
Aug 15, 20255 min read


Cooling Off in a Heatwave: The West Country’s Secret Weapon – Sunken Lanes and Devon Hedgerows
Heatwaves in the UK and the West Country’s Cool Escape Heatwaves are hitting us thick and fast – indeed the UK is enjoying or enduring one this very day. Which is why I went out early this morning for the daily dog-walk. However, here in the West Country we do have a secret weapon in our armoury which helps us when the heat gets too hot. I am talking about the West Country’s most extensive icon – the myriad deep sunken lanes that wend and weave their way from one end of the r
Martin Hesp
Aug 12, 20253 min read


Devon Secret Seasides: Speke’s Mill Mouth
Speke’s Mill Mouth – Devon's Hartland Peninsula A True Secret Seaside in North Devon Speke’s Mill Mouth has the complete kit of parts necessary to be named as one of the region’s great secret seasides. You can only access it by descending a wobbly looking staircase that looms next door to a giant waterfall – and the area boasts rare butterflies, a long lost Swannery which went the same way as a saint’s chapel and a herd of wild horses. That list alone puts it firmly into our
Martin Hesp
Aug 11, 20255 min read


Devon Seacret Seasides: Whitsand Bay
Secret Seaside Near Plymouth: Whitsand Bay and Cornwall’s Forgotten Peninsula Discover Cornwall’s Hidden Coastal Gem Just Minutes from Plymouth As the 15th biggest city in England you wouldn’t think Plymouth could boast such a thing as a secret seaside – but the old maritime community knows a thing or two about the sea and, rather cleverly, keeps a beautiful stretch of coast very much to itself. It’s not that secrtet as most Plymouthians have some kind of relationship with Wh
Martin Hesp
Aug 11, 20254 min read


Cornwall's Secret Seasides: Scilly's St Martins Has Some of the Best
Discovering the Best Sand in Britain: St Martin’s, Isles of Scilly Sand is a very important topic when it comes to seasides – secret or otherwise – people often ask which beaches have the best sand, partly because the stuff comes in so many forms… The answer is simple – but you’re going to have to travel 28 miles west of Land’s End to walk barefoot in it. The beaches of St Martin’s in the Isles of Scilly have amazing white sand. It is the Rolls Royce of granular geology – the
Martin Hesp
Aug 8, 20256 min read


Secret Devon Seasides: Discovering Ness Cove via Smugglers' Tunnel, Shaldon
The Enchanting Appeal of Ness Cove, Shaldon Discover One of Devon’s Best-Kept Beach Secrets A great many secret seasides are difficult if not dangerous to reach - which is probably why they remain unknown and out of the way - but here we visit a beach that is often visited and which has, for a century or more, been celebrated among local folk and holiday-makers alike. Having said that, the Ness Cove, near Shaldon, has all the hallmarks necessary to make it a secret seaside...
Martin Hesp
Aug 6, 20255 min read


Cornwall’s Secret Seasides: Strangles Beach, Wild Goats, Rare Butterflies, and Solitude on the North Coast
Discovering Strangles: Cornwall’s Secret Seaside on the North Coast A Wild and Wondrous Hidden Beach Once upon a time I climbed the long descent down to this Secret Seaside and saw a fat naked man wobbling along in nothing but a sandal and a boot, neither of which seemed to fit him. If that sorry image puts you off reading any further, then I only mention it because it gives a clue as to the whereabouts of one of the finest secret seasides in the region. Nudist Beaches and Wa
Martin Hesp
Aug 6, 20255 min read


Devon's Seacret Seasides - Crow Point
What Is a Psammosere and Why Braunton Burrows Matters Do you know what a psammosere is? No, neither did I. What I now know is that the word psammosere is used to describe a sand dune system – and that Braunton Burrows the largest psammosere in England. If you haven’t ever been there, please go. Braunton Burrows is truly magnificent – and it boasts its own Secret Seaside. Saunton Sands: The Famous Face of North Devon’s Dunes Of course, everyone knows Saunton Sands which run so
Martin Hesp
Aug 5, 20256 min read
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