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tv   The Travel Show  BBC News  September 28, 2022 2:30am-3:00am BST

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you're watching bbc news. the headlines... the president of the european commission has said sabotage was the cause of gas leaks in two major pipelines connecting russia and europe. ursula von der leyen has warned of the "strongest possible response" if european energy insfrastructure is attacked. ukraine has accused russia of causing the leaks. officials installed by russia in four occupied regions of ukraine have reported huge majorities of votes, in self—styled referendums, in favour ofjoining russia. the us secretary of state has said the votes are a "sham" and that the west will never recognise the results. residents of florida are preparing for the arrival of hurricane ian which is expected to make landfall
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there on wednesday. the governor has already declared a state of emergency. in cuba, the hurricane caused damage to crops, and knocked out the electricity grid. now on bbc news, the travel show. this week on the travel show, i'm in tarifa, in spain, where it's definitely the windier the better as i check out the big air kitesurfing competition. oh, my god, that was so good! i loved it. we are getting artsy in southern turkey for the mardin biennial. and tick, tick, boom — we go behind the scenes at boomtown during the countdown to the opening of this year's festival in the heart of the english countryside. it's all hands on deck!
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hello, and welcome to the travel show, coming to you this week from beautiful tarifa, in southern spain. perched on the southernmost tip of continental europe, just 1a kilometres from north africa, tarifa is the gateway between these two continents. its position leaves the small spanish town open to a blasting from the winds that shape its rugged coastline. in this part of the world, there are two prevailing winds. one is the mellow, consistent poniente wind and the other one is this bad boy, the levante, which storms in from the east and batters this coastline,
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and when it does, all the best kitesurfers from around the world want to be right here. and yet while a windy beach break might not seem like your idea of a dream trip, it is for a mass influx of kitesurfers that sees the population of this once sleepy town over triple in size during the windy summer months. and this year will be bigger than ever as the world's leading kitesurfers compete to fly the highest in the world's ever big air competition, hosted right here in tarifa. the winds here can reach up to 60 knots, with the athletes expertly manipulating it to fly over 30 metres high. i have headed over to the leaderboard to see how the competition is shaping up. so the best of the best kitesurfers in the world are competing here today? 60 competitors but they are divided in five divisions.
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we have 2a men and 12 women. it is an elimination system, so they are riding in groups of two or three riders at the same time and then the winner advances to the next round. we will see in the end of the day who is going to ride for the final and take the crown. there is a reason why the wind is so consistently good here in tarifa. judge and commentator lewis explains why. here is so special because it's so close to the north of africa, what happens with the geology of the land is these mountains push up, and you've got this strong wind that it comes in, you've got to think of an hourglass where the sand rushes through the middle, that's what happens here in both directions, eitherfrom the atlantic or the mediterranean, that is why so uniquely always windy and so strong. i think we are going to see something very special, later. now that the winds are getting stronger and the competition is really heating up, i want to know how the athletes are doing.
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lorenzo, congratulations! thanks a lot. looked incredible out there, what is it like out there? the wind is pumping, it's like 30 knots and we are flying really high. it's just an unreal feeling. when i'm doing my best tricks, ijust feel like superman on the water. it's like i've got a superpower. it's great energy on the beach, the wind is super strong - and that is exactly- what we are looking for, so hopefully i continue to make it and ride in the final soon. - congratulations and good luck for the next stage. and yet the mediaeval town of tarifa and its surrounding beaches were not always home to this global influx of tourism. tarifa is a really bustling town, and that certainly wasn't always the case. in fact very few tourists came here because why would you want to sit on the beach with such a wind blowing all the time? but then in the 1980s,
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the world came to love tarifa's wind and everything changed. tell me about the first time you came to tarifa. i came through this entrance with my car full of boards and then we got stuck in one of these small street. in your car? stuck in a tiny street? it is absolutely tiny! i have come to the old town to meet michel who, in 1982, left his hometown and chased the wind to wind up in tarifa, opening the town's first ever kitesurfing school. why were you coming to tarifa? i came just searching the wind. it was a paradise for windsurfing. wind every day, long beach, sandy beach, nobody. it is perfect for us. in fact, before kitesurfing came to tarifa, there was an exodus of locals leaving the town to find work. now, tarifenos can stay in their hometown thanks to the employment opportunities which this sport
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has brought with it. so at the end we are the ones that push this town up. you did a good job. yeah, we did a good job. sometimes you think it's better not to do it because then we'd have a perfect spot for us. now it's full of people. you gave the game away, now everyone knows! always when you think that one it's too late. now i've seen the pros in action, i kind of think i should give it a go. can't be too hard, can it? it's going to be disastrous. i've met with tanja, owner of one of the 40, yes, that is 40, kitesurfing schools that line this coast. it is time to experience what this legendary wind feels like for myself. it's great! oh, oh! once we are in the water you will see that it will feel quite natural. i wouldn't bet on it, tanja.
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screams how was it for you? oh my god, that was so good! i loved it. you did really well. i loved it, it reallyjust felt like being a kid again. i couldn't come to tarifa without trying its most famous sport. but i think for now i will leave it to the professionals. now, if that has inspired you to go to a destination with plenty of sun, sea and kitesurfing, then these are the spots you should be thinking of visiting on your next trip.
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if you are new to the sport, one of the best locations to learn kitesurfing is dakhla in morocco. this flatwater lagoon surrounded by moroccan desert makes an ideal training ground. with consistent winds virtually all year round, and plenty of reasonably priced accommodation for the budding kitesurfer, then this is the perfect place to earn your stripes. feeling like you've got to grips with kitesurfing and looking to build your confidence? then cumbuco in brazil could be for you. if you are looking for a fun and social experience, with smaller waves, then this is the setting to really hone those skills. and cabarete was once a fishing and farming hamlet on the north coast of the dominican republic but today it is considered by many to have one of the best kitesurfing scenes around. with so many of the sport's top contenders flocking to the beach, a phrase has been coined by the locals, "confetti skies", to describe
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the spectacle of so many people enjoying the best wind and waves the island has to offer. still to come on the travel show... it's boom time for boomtown. we go behind the scenes at the festival. we did really well out of scrap yards and car boot sales, as you can imagine! and we hit the streets of mardin for the city's fifth biennial. it's in the middle of nowhere, but look! it's packed. so don't go away. welcome back to the programme. i am still in the tarifa area, and at baelo claudia, the roman ruins, and i am going to meet someone who is going to give me a really tasty insight into the ancient life of this area. manuel, hello. hello. so tell me, what do
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we have here? garum paste was the main export of baelo claudia, one of spain's best preserved archaeological sites, revered over 2,000 years for this fermented fish conserve, which both preserved and flavoured the food of the time. so if you were an ancient roman person you would have been very happy to find this on your table? and now the best chefs of the area are bringing back this ancient treat for modern day audiences.
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it's just a very savoury — a deep, savoury flavour. i can see why the romans would have enjoyed to have this on their food, especially if it were boiled. just how important is this resurrection?
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strategically placed in south—eastern turkey, high above the routes connecting turkey to syria and iraq, is the ancient city of mardin. due to its position, this place has lived under many different rules, from the babylonians to the persians, but we are here to check out how the mardin biennial looks to encapsulate these influences into new exciting works of art. here is a little bit of interesting info. the festival isn't centred in one place, rather it's spread about various culturally important sites around the town, so visitors are expected and encouraged to go and visit all of mardin. tonight, where we are going for the grand opening, is the german headquarters, which was used by the germans during world war i as part of their alliance with the ottoman empire.
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and so off to the opening night we go! part of the appeal of mardin is its hilltop location, meaning its buildings are built in a tiered system more commonly seen in the theatre or sports stadium. it may look pretty but you better pack your walking shoes. after upping my step count, i arrived at the intended destination. and it's packed! i didn't think it would be, because it took ages to get here, it is in the middle of nowhere, but look! i'm not the world's number one expert on the arts, but i am willing to have my mind opened. there are so many little nooks and crannies full of art, you really have to go searching. anything in here? no! chuckles a no for once. that's karl marx. what does this mean? look — come and look. that is karl marx, isn't it?
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ah, see, i did get it right — it is karl marx. but when i got talking to some of the artists, i started to understand what they were exhibiting and what it meant for the region but also, beyond that. right. what is this? what can you tell me about this exhibit? so basically, this piece is called osmoscape: echoes of the osmotic landscape. so, over the past years, i've been collecting data related to water and i've built a composition, a graphic notation score — a musical score. so i'm playing the sound and the sound correlates to the data that's being collated. and i'm manipulating it as well. a lot of the power companies are facing water crisis and they're not able to cool their systems down, so it's causing, you know, electrical disruptions. i've been specifically looking at creation mythologies - so ceramic is, you know, clay —
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like wet clay that is cooked - and is transformed into - a completely different matter. so there's a change —| like a kind of alchemy where the matter is transformed into something else. _ so that is kind of my metaphor for myself as well. _ let's change - into something else. now is the time. how important is it you have a festival of art and culture in mardin? i think it's very organicl that it's happening here because here, like, - you sit down and you go into a store, you sit down- and you have tea with somebody. all of a sudden, you're learning all of these, l like, other stories and, - you know, gossips and other information that you wouldn't . have any access to whatsoever, but it's an oral tradition. the works on display here are varied but they all tie in to the festival's main theme. a big part of the thematic is to do with globalisation as a gesture for border
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crossing and a gesture that was quite universal and was an appeal to reach out to the other across barriers of all kinds — cultural, political, linguistic. the south—eastern region in turkey is like a mix between the kurdish people and other groups as well. i mean, the geography is sort of like already a cultural melting pot. itjust makes sense. it's like asking for it in some ways, and ready to be the receptacle for that kind of occurrence. because itjust perfectly reflects the globalisation that you're looking for to, you know, thematically put out there? precisely. yeah. the biennial is a great experience but this city's rich culture is here to see all year round. from its people to its unique architecture scattered across the slopes of this ancient city, mardin itself is truly a work of art.
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this summertime saw many of europe's top festivals make their comebacks after two years of covid restrictions. we headed to the english countryside to find out how to turn a farmer's field into a temporary town full of music and theatre. you've got the kind of core team. you've then got the district kind of co—ordinated team, which is outdoor set theming. then that goes down into the street venues and smaller crews, so each one of these street venues will have its own individual crew. so they add their own bit of love and kind of detail and energy to their own little space. we've been, like, working since last week, so we've kind have been working and now it's suddenly "do this! "do that!
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"do this!" it's all hands on deck! this platform that has been based out. that's is the platform that we're working with, is it? so, these guys have done — they have probably been here for about two weeks, i'd say, and they've just — i mean, they'd have planned it for probably a couple of weeks in scrapyards and yeah, we do really well out of scrapyards and car boot sales, as you can imagine! the space we finished today probably is going to have to be a voluntary day tomorrow because i don't think it's all going to be finished by tonight. there's probably about 8,000 people on—site, i think. we start with the creative brainstorming of how the festival is going to look like in september and then, we do creative brainstorming right the way through up to december and thenjanuary, we go into kind of delivery and preplanning, preproduction and then, it takes us an eight months of the preproduction to get us to opening.
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now, it's all about delivery. now we're on the ground, just making sure that all that planning that we've done lands as it was — how it was planned to do so, and making sure we deliver the best show of the year. there's always last—minute hiccups. we've obviously got artists dropping out of the last minute, staff dropping out at the last minute, various things, travel problems, visa problems, all those sorts of things, so while it is locked, there's — it's continually changing and evolving. a lot of people want to play here because of — well, we're a bit different with all the theatrics going on, so we have a good reputation for what we deliver and how spectacular it can be. a lot of production levels are hugely impressive, so people want to play here. as we come into the final show week of the build, we have a 24—hour shift, so we have a daytime crew and a night—time crew, so we just keep it flowing through. festivals generally gets a lot of bad press about line—ups not being gender balanced or diverse enough, so it makes—
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you more and more aware of it. it's the fashion to be as bold as to try for to aim 50—50, but we've been trying to gender balance the line—up for — well, since i've been here. it has always been something that we've been striving for, but it's not about gender, either — it's about diversifying the line—up to all people. you know, we want everyone to not only feel welcome, we want to go out of our way to try and bring them in. harriet from southampton, everybody! _ cheering most of them have been waiting three years to come. they've had their tickets for three years. the gates will open, they'll run in, they'll be setting up their campsites, be meeting their neighbours. it is really exciting. but before that, we have to get the site completely signed off. thank you! welcome! ourjob is to make sure they're well behaved, of course, make sure everyone�*s happy, well hydrated — especially in this sort of weather. yeah, make sure everything's ok, man. it's great seeing all the public come in — that moment when they come in.
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cheering and whistling and when they come into the city and get lost and get so interactive with the world, like that's — you can't replace that. come back! yoga instructor! i have learned a lot in the last 15 years being here. i think that's the beauty, because we've grown. we grew at such an amazing speed. there was so much learning every year. what's important to me is to go out and feel that vibe out there. i want to see how it feels for the audience and how they're reacting. right now, it's all ramping up and everyone's getting settled in and everyone just starts exploring and chatting to characters, going through doors. all of those really unique, one—off experiences you get at boomtown that people remember, they start happening now.
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but that's all we have time for on this week's show. i'm off to watch a bit more kite surfing. but before i go, here's what's coming up next week. we have something very special for you. we'll bejoining a group of adventurers heading off on a journey of a lifetime to one of the most fascinating but inaccessible places in the world — the wreck of the titanic. we are literally 300 metres from the titanic and, you know, i was thinking, "we're not going to make it". so dojoin us then, if you can. and if you can't wait, in the meantime, check us out on social media, where you'll find a whole range of amazing travel content from the bbc. until next time, from me, christa larwood and the rest
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of the travel show team here in tarifa, it's goodbye. hello there. there's been quite an autumnal flavour to our weather story both by day and at nightjust recently. there's more sunshine and showers to come. plenty of rainbows potentially in the sky, but the wind strength will ease through wednesday, still coming from the north, so still a coolish source. now it's this weather front here that could be a key player as we go through wednesday. it's going to enhance some showers in off the north sea. it's these here, they'll gradually drift their way towards newcastle and down to hull area, some of them heavy and thundery.
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ahead of it, largely fine with some sunshine, a few scattered showers running down through perhaps the west—facing coasts of wales and south west england. we will see temperatures struggling for the time of year, still around 13—16 celsius, and some of these showers could turn heavy and thundery. now, they are likely to drift their way steadily southwards through wednesday night into the early hours of thursday morning. so still there to clear first thing on thursday. but on the whole, this little ridge of high pressure builds and quietens things down for many on thursday. so some early showers clearing south of the m4 corridor. a few showers still coming in off the north sea for northeast england, but generally fine and settling with a little more sunshine and lighter winds. temperatures will be a degree or so higher, back to where they should be really for this time of year. however, it's all change into friday. we're likely to see some pretty wet and windy weather. so, useful rain for all of us at some point on friday. ahead of it, it is going to be largely fine and dry,
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so not a bad start. if you've got plans for outside, get out and do it first thing in the morning. that rain turning into western scotland, northern ireland, northwest england as we go through lunchtime and then gradually drifting its way southeast. so probably not arriving into east anglia and southeast england until the end of the day. top temperatures of around 17 celsius. now, as we move into the weekend, that weather front could be a bit of a nuisance for some of us. it's going to continue to push its way steadily south and east. and as you can see, we trail it all the way back out into the atlantic. so for central and southern england, we could see some rain persisting for the start of the weekend, but, eventually, sunday will see somewhat drier, brighter and once again, warmer conditions returning. take care.
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welcome to bbc news, i'm david eades. our top stories. damage to russia's nordstream pipelines — the president of the european commission says it was sabotage. international condemnation as occupied regions of ukraine claim overwhelming victory in their self—styled referendums on joining russia. we will not, indeed we will never, recognise the annexation of ukrainian territory by russia. florida braces itself for the arrival of hurricane ian — after the storm system devastates cuba leaving the entire island without power. the international monetary fund warns that the uk government's planned tax cuts could increase inequality across the country.

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