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Super Dairies, Bat Bridges and Angora goats

The rural news magazine for those who live and work in the Welsh countryside. Rachael Garside finds out about ospreys and looks at the effectiveness of bat bridges.

30 minutes

Last on

Mon 18 Jun 2012 05:30

On the programme

Can bigger be better when it comes to large scale farming? The campaign against coastal conservation zones off our shores. It's official - bat bridges don't work and how curl power could be the next big thing for smallholders

The president of the National Farmer's Union claiming that the UK needs "more and bigger" super farms to keep food prices from rising too high but farming on a large scale is not without it's critics - concerns for the impact on the rural community and fears for the environmental impact. We visit a mega farm, built in Carmarthenshire, which met with controversy with animal welfare groups saying it's just wrong. It's the largest dairy farm in Wales owned by Hywel and Susan Richards - milking around 2000 cows.

It's been an anxious week for Emyr Evans, the Dyfi Osprey Project Manager for the Montgomeryshire Wildlife Trust. Our community reporter Huw Jenkins finds out how the osprey managed in the storms.

We're spinning and weaving with Mohair as Rachael Garside visits angora goats in Moelgrove, Pembrokeshire. With rising mohair and meat prices, angora goats could be the livestock of choice for the aspiring smallholder - especially if you like an animal with a bit of personality.

- according to a team of researchers at the University of Leeds the wire bridges built to guide bats safely across busy roads are simply useless. When a new road is built the government has an obligation that the development does not have a detrimental effect on populations of protected species - but are we mitigating our impacts effectively?

Broadcasts

  • Sun 17 Jun 2012 07:00
  • Mon 18 Jun 2012 05:30

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