Fungi, fitness and formal IDs
How the humble mushroom is halting a big housing development; keeping kids cooped up indoors; and why landowners are being advised to declare what they own.
It's a real David and Goliath story - a High Court judge ruled that the Countryside Council for Wales was right to designate land on the banks of two major reservoirs near Cardiff as a Site of Special Scientific Interest.
Now, those mushrooms could stop a major housing development from going ahead.
A new gym was opened in Swansea last week, but it's a gym with a difference - it's for children. We ask what's happened to playing in the great outdoors?
Owners of land in Wales are being urged to take advantage of a voluntary land registration scheme. Wales has one of the lowest proportions of registered land in the UK, with around 45% of the total land in Wales still unregistered.
Land Registry, the government department responsible for registering land ownership in Wales and England, is recommending that farmers and landowners voluntarily register their land.
Land Registry says it will help prevent disputes, and assist landowners to formally identify what they own.
Country Focus - Sunday 28 January at 7.32am (repeated 6.32pm Tuesday 30 January)
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