
Episode 4
One way of getting to know Wales is to walk parts of Offa's Dyke. So the author and a friend set out across sapping moorland and up steep hills.
"You have to pay to get in. The current cost, if you're in a car, is £5.30. Pressing a note into a fleshy female palm, I deploy the lone word of conversational Welsh in my locker. 'Diolch'. Thanks. Then I push my right foot down and accelerate into the land of my fathers. I'm not reallly sure where I'm going."
Author and journalist Jasper Rees rises to the challenge of embracing his 'inner Welshness'. His grandparents on his father's side were Welsh. So it's partly in recollection of times spent at their house on a hill in Camarthen that he opts for full 'immersion'. This means learning the language and putting to paper to some of his grandparents vivid stories about Wales. It also means travelling around, setting himself various tasks - singing in choirs, sheep-shearing, coracling, coal-mining. Some tasks are accomplished with deftness, some not, in his wry travelogue, which is abridged for radio by Katrin Williams:
4. Walking parts of Offa's Dyke is another way of getting to know Wales. So
the author and a friend set out across sapping moorland and climb many a
steep hill, including Hergest Ridge and Lords Hereford's Knob. Compelling
tales are attached to these landmarks...
Reader Ben Miles.
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- Thu 11 Aug 201109:45BBC Radio 4 FM
- Fri 12 Aug 201100:30BBC Radio 4





