 |  |  |  |  | PROGRAMME INFO |  |  | |
 |  |  | From Shetland to the Scilly Isles, Open Country travels the UK in search of the stories, the people and the wildlife that make our countryside such a vibrant place. Each week we visit a new area to hear how local people are growing the crops, protecting the environment, maintaining the traditions and cooking the food that makes their corner of rural Britain unique.
Email: [email protected]
Postal address: Open Country, BBC Radio 4, Birmingham, B5 7QQ.
|  |  |  |  | LISTEN AGAIN  |  |  | |
|
|
 |  | PRESENTERS |  |  | |
 |  |  |  | More about Helen Mark |  |  |  |  |  |  | More about Richard Uridge |  |  |  | |
|  |  |  |  |  | PROGRAMME DETAILS |  |  | |
 |  | Sefton Coast
|  |
Helen Mark travels to the Sefton Coast, which runs from Liverpool in the south to Southport on the western side of Lancashire. Miles of golden beaches stretch as far as the eye can see. Vikings settled here and the names Crosby, Rimmer, Formby bear testament to this. The area is flat and has always suffered periodic flooding and erosion. For centuries the efforts of man and nature have created a series of shifting offshore sandbanks and coastal dunes. Today the area is home to internationally important wildlife and has an interesting historical heritage.
Sefton Coast
Helen meets local historian Dr Reginald Yorke on the sand-dunes at Formby. The dunes have a rich history of human activity and it's the site of Britain's (possibly the world's) first lifeboat station. Liverpool Bay was a dangerous place for early craft to navigate and the siting of a lifeboat offered a chance of saving stricken mariners. The lifeboat was an open rowing boat manned by local volunteers clad in oilskins. Many local families spent their lives in the dunes manning the lifeboat. The station closed in 1916, but the foundations still remain. Formby Civic Society
A pine forest comes grows down to the beach. Rob Wolstenholme and Lynne Collins, from English Natures, take Helen round Ainsdale Dunes Nature Reserve. The wide open sandy nature of the area, with its patchwork of dunes and slacks (indented valley areas), has created habitat for important niche species, including the red squirrel. One reason the squirrels have a stronghold here is the pine forest itself, which was planted by local estate owners a century ago to provide cover for game. The more common grey squirrel is also present and this foreign invader has a faster breeding cycle and a less specialised diet - which is why it has ousted reds elsewhere. The greys also carry a disease called Parapox which is fatal to reds. Luckily the pine forests on the coast are hemmed in by open agricultural land which provides a natural barrier from incoming greys (they don't like travelling across open ground). Helen plants a new tree, part of a scheme to keep the reds with a good supply of food.
English Nature
 |  | James and Elizabeth Peet
|  |
In Banks Village, near Southport, Helen pays a visit to James and Elizabeth Peet, who are potting the locally-caught brown shrimps. Potted shrimps are a traditional local dish which can be served as a starter, or just for a snack on hot buttered toast. It evolved in the days before refrigeration as a way to preserve the catch and, even today, the tiny shrimps are all shelled by hand. James' father and grandfather were shrimpers, but he became an engineer. But the lure of the sea was too much and he joined the family as they trawled the beaches. Now he and Elizabeth have the perfect partnership, each with their role - Elizabeth pots up the shrimps with a meticulous eye for measurement, and James prepares the spicy butter which seals the pot. He tells Helen the main ingredient is mace but, as for the rest of the recipe, well, that's a closely-guarded secret
James Peet
Helen's last stop is the longest overland pier in Great Britain at Southport, 3,600ft (1,098m) long, it's being restored and you can now walk down the whole of its length and gaze out over the acres of shiny mudflats. It's of course a haven for birdlife, especially over-wintering visitors from Iceland and Greenland. Alan Bale, Woodlands and Habitats Officer for Sefton Coast and Countryside Service, explains how there's a plentiful supply of food for birds, including the tiny mud snail Hydrobia and a huge cockle bed. He points out how the different bird calls help to pinpoint which birds are where and Helen's astonished to find that away in the distance are indeed tens of thousands of birds on the beach.
Bird watching at Southport Southport Pier
The BBC is not responsible for external websites |  |  |  RELATED LINKS BBC Holiday Category BBC Countryfile
 |  | |
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | Audio Help |  |  | |  |  | PREVIOUS PROGRAMMES |  |  |  |  | Current Week Last Week The A44 Aberdeenshire Aberdeenshire, River Don Aberfan Alderley Edge, Cheshire Ancient buildings Anglesey Applecross Peninsula Aran Islands Armistice Day, Somerset & Sussex Auxiliary Units Bardsey Island Batsford Park Estate, Glos Berkshire Berwyn Mountains Birdsong Blackwater Estuary, Essex Blaenafon The Blean, Kent Bosworth Field Brecon Beacons Buckinghamshire Butterflies By Brook Valley The Cairngorms Caithness Cambridgeshire Carmarthenshire Cheddar Gorge Cherwell Valley Cheshire: Harrop Valley Chesil Bank Clee Hills, Shropshire Climbers Corfe Castle Cornwall Cornwall: Cape Cornwall Cornwall: Padstow Lifeboat Cornwall: Roseland Peninsula Cotswold Cotswold Way County Clare, Ireland Cranbourne Chase Cumbria: Eden Valley Cumbria: Coniston Water Cumbria: Sellafield Cumbria Daingean in Glengarry Dee Estuary Derbyshire Devon & Somerset: Grand Western Canal Donegal Dorset Dorset: Cranborne Chase Dorsetman Dowsing Dunalastair Durham Durham: Witton Park East Anglian Churches Eden Valley in Cumbria Eigg Eire: Co. Mayo Eire: Skibbereen Eire: West Cork Elan Valley, Wales Eshott, Norhumberland Essex Essex: coastal Exmoor, churches Falkirk Farne Islands, Part 1 Farne Islands, Part 2 Fenn's, Whixall & Bettisfield Mosses National Nature Reserve The Fens Fife Flanders Forster Country Glencoe Mountains Glencoe Gloucestershire Goa Goodwin Sands Gower Peninsula, June 2006 Gower Peninsula, October 2005 Grouse shooting Guernsey Hadrian's Wall 2003 Hadrian's Wall 2004 Hambledon Cricket Club Hampshire: Odium Hampshire: Selborne Hardcastle Crags Heart of Wales Railway Hebden Bridge Herefordshire Hertfordshire Hidden Treasures High Weald, Sussex Holy Island Ilmington Isle of Gigha 2004 Isle of Gigha, 2005 Isle of Man - Seas Isle of Man Isle of Wight, 2003 Isle of Wight, 2005 Izak Walton Kent: Dover Kent: Dungeness Peninsular Kent: North Kielder Water Kinver Edge Kingham, Oxfordshire Lake District Leicestershire: Bosworth Field Leicestershire: death rituals Lincolshire farming Lincolnshire Lincolnshire Loch Morar Looe Island Ludlow Lunar Influence Don McCullin Richard Mabey Marsden, West Yorkshire Mary Towneley Loop Mersea Island Mersey Marshes Metal Detectingg Mid-Wales Morecambe Bay Moel Findeg, North Wales Morecombe Sands Nant Gwrtheyrn National Forest New Forest Newton Dee, nr Aberdeen Norfolk Broads Norfolk: Thetford Forest Norfolk: North Norfolk coast North Devon Combes Northants: Sulgrave Manor Northants: Underground Northern Ireland: Belfast Northern Ireland: Border Counties Northern Ireland: Moneypenny's Lock Northern Ireland: Sperrin Mountains Northern Ireland: Strangford Lough Northern Ireland: Toomebridge North Norfolk Coast Northumberland, part 1 Northumberland, part 2 North Wessex Downs North Yorkshire North Yorkshire Moors North Yorkshire Moors Railway Nottinghamshire Nottinghamshire: Sherwood Forest Oak Trees Offa's Dyke Orford Ness Orkneys Out Skerries, Shetland Outward Bound Oxfordshire Peak District Peak District Pembrokeshire Coast Pentland Hills Perthshire Poachers Pony Club River Severn Romney Marsh Rutland Water Scilly Scotland: Abernethy Forest Scotland: Loch Morar Scotland: Shetland Scotland: Strathclyde Scotland: What value the countryside? Scottish Borders Sefton Coast Self-sufficient communities Severn Valley Railway Shropshire: Ellesmere Shropshire: Much Wenlock Shropshire and Wales, Newport Skegness Skomer Island Snowdon Snowdonia National Park Somerset Levels Somerset Levels Somerset: Montacute House Somerset writers South Downs South Somerset: watermills Southwold Spurn Peninsular Start Bay Stour Valley Survival Sussex Sutherland, Scotland Tamar Valley Thornham Estate, Suffolk Thurstonland Cricket Club Twyford Down Tyntesfield, North Somerset Village Life Terry Waite Wales Wales: Flatholm Island Wales: Nant Gwrtheyrn Wales: Snowdonia Warwickshire: rare breeds Wayoh Reservoir Wenlock Edge West Sussex West Yorks: Calder Valley Weston Common, Surrey Wild boar Wiltshire Wiltshire: Savernake Forest Women's Institute Wroxeter Yorkshire Dales, June 2002 Yorkshire Dales, 1 July 2006 Yorkshire Dales, 8 July 2006 Z to Z Britain Open Country looks back 2003
|  |  |  |  | MESSAGE BOARDS |  |  |  |  | Join the discussion: The Learning Curve Pick of the Week Questions, Questions Woman's Hour Word of Mouth |  |  |  |  | RELATED PROGRAMMES |  |  |  |  | Excess Baggage Changing Places Similar programmes this week on Radio 4
|  |  |
|