Mountaineering, Lizzie Le Blond, Sport and science
Chris Harding and guests discuss the history of alpine sports, women runners and climbers, and the neuroscience that shows us the health benefits of running and walking.
Overcoming grief, historian Rachel Hewitt's new book mixes recent personal history and her experiences of fell running and lockdown with her research into the pioneering mountain climber known as Lizzie Le Blond (1860 – 1934). In 1907, Le Blond set up the Ladies' Alpine Club and over her lifetime made 20 first ascents of different peaks. Chris Harding is joined by Rachel Hewitt, Dr Ben Anderson from Keele University, and science writer Caroline Williams to discuss alpine sports, running, risk and research into health and fitness ahead of Mental Health Awareness Week.
Producer: Julian Siddle
Rachel Hewitt and Ben Anderson were both chosen as BBC/AHRC New Generation Thinkers in the scheme which turns research into radio.
Rachel's book In Her Nature How Women Break Boundaries in the Great Outdoors : A Past, Present and Personal Story is out now.
You can hear more from Dr Ben Anderson in an episode called Simplify your life - ideas from 20th-century radicals https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000d826
Caroline Williams is the author of Move ! The new science of body over mind.
You might be interested in other Free Thinking discussions all available as Arts & Ideas podcasts, on BBC Sounds and the programme website:
Running https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b087yrll
Tacita Dean, Mountains, John Tyndall https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0b3fkt3
Radio 3 has a series of programmes exploring different music for Mental Health including special episodes of the Classical Mixtape
Last on
More episodes
Previous
Next
Broadcast
- Wed 10 May 202322:00BBC Radio 3
Featured in...
![]()
Women in the world—Free Thinking
Free thinking explores women's lives and issues.
![]()
Green Thinking—Free Thinking
New thinking on the environment





