tv The Travel Show BBC News November 12, 2022 10:30am-11:01am GMT
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the newport folk festival you played guitar and you sang and it is extraordinary to see how music has brought you back to life. yes. you didn't rehearse — you stood up and played guitar. i had to figure out what i did and i couldn't sing, i had become an alto and i could not sing the song and i thought people would feel... but i liked the guitar part of that song and it was very well received, to my delight. as they discussed her career, she said she felt classic albums like blue had not received the recognition they deserve. at the time, no, it took a lot of flak if anything. you know, people thought it was too intimate. it was almost like
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dylan going electric. it upset the male singer song writers — they thought, do we have to hear our souls? it made people nervous. it took this generation, they seem to be able to face those emotions more easily than my generation. the interview took place in her california living room where, during her recovery, she hosted regularjoni jams with fellow musicians. it was the end of that discussion, sir elton made a proposal. one day i want to sit in this room but with some recording equipment and make an album in this room. like johnny cash, and he was on his deathbed and you are not going to be on your deathbed but i think you should make an album in this room as it is magical. every corner of this room isjoni mitchell. the only time we have recorded in this room
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was when i was about on the balcony. # ice cream castles in the air...# if sir elton gets his way, it would bejoni mitchell's first new music since 2007. for now, fans would simply be overjoyed to see the star back in good health. you can watch that interview on apple tv from 5pm today. now it's time for a look at the weather with louise lear. hello there. it really is shaping up to be quite a nice saturday out there. lots of sunshine around for many. let's take a look at bradford from just a few hours ago. we did see some early morning low cloud and mist in some places, but that's breaking up quite nicely. we could be chasing a little bit of fairweather cloud around favoured spots through the midlands and running up into northeast england. and at the same time rain will gradually continue to retreat
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north and west across the northern and western isles. lighter winds as well in comparison to yesterday. it's going to feel very mild out there. temperatures ranging between 11 and 17 or 18 celsius as a high. tomorrow, remembrance sunday could once again start off with some low clouds, some mist and fog around. slow to ease away from eastern england, the best of the sunshine further west and by the middle of the afternoon, we'll see cloud and rain gradually starting to make its presence felt into northern ireland. top temperatures, though, 12 to 18 celsius. take care.
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hello, this is bbc news. the headlines... ukrainians celebrate into the night as russia withdraws thousands of soldiers from the city of kherson after months of occupation. in the us, both parties are neck and neck to control the senate, after former astronaut and democrat mark kelly is re—elected in arizona. former uk health secretary matt hancock has said he is looking for forgiveness on tv show i'm a celebrity get me out of here. new zealand have beaten england to win the women's rugby world cup in front of a capacity crowd in auckland. now on bbc news, the travel show. visually impaired lucy edwards
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continues to make her way to the maasai mara for �*the great migration�*, said to be one of nature's most spectacular events. good girl, straight on. oh, i want you two to come so badly, but i don't want you to be eaten by lions. a lion and a buffalo? yes, he wanted to hunt. kenya has been at warfor decades. its enemy? the poachers who prey on its precious wildlife. impossible route in and impossible route out. ol pejeta conservancy's canine unit are just one of the many groups across africa taking up the fight against poaching. this illegal trade has threatened the very existence of animals like these.
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at the endangered species enclosure at ol pejeta, will and i have been brought to meet mother and daughter, najin and fatu, the last surviving two northern white rhinos on earth. and here, it's very soft, on their ears. here. who's this? this is najin. hello, najin! hello, sweetheart. good girl. 0k, there you go. and then at the back here, it's rough, you can touch at the back here. oh, yeah! at least you are able to lay your hands on what is the last of a being on the planet. it is sad and i hope it doesn't happen again to another species. and why are they so rare, james? um, it's basically poaching, which has just been driven
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by human greed and greed in different forms — greed for power, greed for their medicinal aspects. someone who has been made to believe, traditionally, that if they drink a rhino horn, it's a cure for cancer. they can pay any amount to get a small piece of rhino horn. but that's not true! on the black market, a kilo of rhino horn is now selling for something more than us$60,000. you can imagine a rhino, that is a lot of money and it's a lot of business and that's why still poaching becomes a serious problem. i kind of want to show you a footprint of a rhino.
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right here, we have one. it's humbling to meet najin and fatu, but frustrating not be able to see them. althouthames is teaching me some age—old rhino tracking techniques that rely on other sensors. but he told me to expect to get my hands dirty — very dirty. rhinos are very hygienic in nature. they drop their poop in a collective place, we call it a midden. it's pretty fresh. much of rhinos' poop is semi—digested grass. it feels like soil back at home. yeah. i guess it's fertiliser. 0h, now it is smelling a bit doggy. and so there are all rhinos dropping their poop together. oh, you're... there is the smell! it doesn't smell that bad. itjust smells of, like, off grass, you know? the reason why we value these middens is especially when you're doing patrols as rangers, the rangers will use this as a parameter. yes. but lots of rhinos use it to communicate. they poop out different smells at different stages. a young one is different
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from a mature rhino, a female is different from a male. the canine unit who protect the animals here are made up of armed rangers and highly trained dogs. each of these brave pooches has a special ability, from picking up the scent of a poacher to detecting ammunition, and even attacking potential suspects so they can be detained. and their target today...is me. the canine unit raise funds for their work by allowing tourists to take part in their dogs' training. sarah's going to smell my scent and go, "that's her" and track my footsteps. ok, let's go. we're hiding now. 0k, we're hiding — we're hiding from sarah.
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this swab is like a scent magnet. yeah, hopefully she doesn't see me and shejust... yeah, we're testing her! sarah the dog can get everything she needs to know to find me from a quick sniff of a swab rubbed over my footprint. so scared! i don't know was she's gonna do when she finds me! i mean, she's got her harness on and she's in work mode, and i know more than anyone that a dog in work mode is so focused, just like my guide dog girl is. humans live in a world of sight, whereas man's best friend lives in a world of smell and can follow the scent across the plains. they're coming...gosh! good girl!
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there you go! you found me! well done! clever girl! you're just so amazing! does she look happy with herself? she probably does! all in a day's work, hey, honey? before i left ol pejeta for the maasai mara, james and will wanted to introduce me to another type of rhino. meet baraka, the blind rhino. this is baraka. oh, i can hear him! in the local language, baraka means blessed. blessed. yes. 0h, he sounds sweet. is he eating his little leaves? black rhinos are nervous in temperament, which can make them really aggressive and hard to get close to on safari. but this one is an exception to the rule and happily lets visitors feed him.
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meet �*baraka the blind'. he lost his right eye to a fight with another rhino. did he lose that first, the right eye? yeah, his right eye first. same as me, yeah. and then the left eye got a disease, cataracts, and the attempts to treat the cataracts were futile. ijust — i really... i really feel for him, you know, having to get around in this enclosure and learning his way about. and the same with the cataract — that must be so confusing for him when he was first going blind. was he... was he upset in any way, could you tell that he was upset? yeah, he was very upset. he was the age of one to 14, he was roaming free out in the wild and i think him becoming blind at the age of 14, he had to learn how to do things in that state. 0k, yeah. it was really hard, it was really hard. i know for us sometimes we have people to help us. we have dogs to help us in our movement and, you know, the caretakers had
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to step in, which was not easy because he was still aggressive. so he was very defensive in himself. so i'm really happy for what he's made of himself and being able to still be here. yeah, it's so hard. i just, yeah. . .i understand. i have a really rare genetic condition and i had a cataract too that eventually, in my last remaining eye, just like baraka, it kind of, like, made my vision go and eventually that got, you know, it detached my retina at the back. sorry. it's ok, it's ok. it's completely fine. but, honestly, when you call baraka a blessing, it is a blessing. it is a blessing to be blind, because it means he's meant to teach people a lesson. he's meant to — he's meant to be here to get people to understand that you shouldn't be poaching these beautiful animals. i'm sorry.
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it's hard. it's taking an emotional toll on you, realising the journey that baraka has been through. james, is he happy? he is a happy rhino. i think the munching itself, you can tell. we are near the waterfalls. what can you see? i can see a camel, just close... a camel?! yeah, just a camel! laughs there's a cameljust close to us. how many humps? one hump — one hump, one hump, yes. and there's a carjust close to you — there's a toy carjust close to you. a toy car! so it's a playground for children. thomson's falls is a huge tourist attraction and there's
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a viewing platform where you can check out the 7am—high waterfall. but that's not going to cut it for me. what's this — is this stairs? yes, these are stairs. lovely. are they uneven, will? yeah. 0h, 0k. um... i'm a bit afraid that i'm going to fall, so i'm just going to give you this tag for your arm. itjust helps me balance a lot more so i can use the cane and hold on to you then. instead, will and i are going to hike down to the bottom of the ravine... i'll get you to hold onto it. ..so i can get to really experience the falls. normal amount, cool. then... yep. ..bring your leg there. there, yep. so, what you're going to do first — we'll pass through here, we can go slowly. this is the nastiest... the nastiest, yeah. ..of all of them. 0k. so let me hold you. yeah. wow! well done, will. well done.
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you're welcome. thank you so much. you're welcome. and you were using my cane, weren't you? laughs it's the toughest! it is! it's the toughest thing i've ever done! the ability to just think negatively about my blindness, i used to think, oh, well, going to a different country is just a really expensive way of basically being in my back garden, and i didn't appreciate what else you could get from an experience. all you keep having to tell yourself is, you know, i'm getting to the waterfall, i'm getting to the waterfall. and now i can feel it on my face, it'sjust the best thing ever — that i've ever experienced. so, the waterfall is about 7k metres going down. 0k. it is 70 feet deep. and i'm guessing at the bottom of the waterfall, it's, like, really harsh, like, white water. yes, it has, like, foam.
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of the great migration. betweenjune to september each year over 1.5 million wildebeest make the 300—mile round trip from the serengeti in tanzania to the maasai mara here in kenya in search of fresh grass. that's if they can get past the lions, the hyenas and cheetahs laying in wait for them. they then have to tackle the steep—sided rivers that cross the migration route.
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most of these rivers are teaming with nile crocodiles that can grow up to 20 feet in length. the river crossings are pure natural theatre, and they're what the 300,000 tourists who visit here each year come to experience. but the crossings are extremely rare to see, so let's just hope i have some beginner's luck. as will and i arrive at the gates of the maasai mara national reserve, i get to meet some entrepreneurial maasai women. can you — can you tell me what you're selling? i can't see you. this giraffe? highlander... so, basically...
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i don't think i've ever been so overwhelmed in my whole entire life. so overwhelmed in my i don't know what these are. so overwhelmed in my i don't know what... so overwhelmed in my i mean, they're giraffes. so overwhelmed in my once they found out i love giraffes, i got about 70 giraffes, but i wasn't allowed to feel them. so, um... i will treasure these forever on my mantelpiece. gerald and lenny! the maasai are a kenyan tribe, and framed across the country, so much so, that their shield and spears can be seen on the nationalflag. traditionally, maasai life has been built around their cattle, but that way of life has come under threat in an ever modernising world. but with more and more tourists coming to kenya for the great migration,
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the maasai are diversifying into tourism and opening some of their villages so visitors can experience their traditional way of life. ooh, yeah! the women of the village have decided if i can't see them with my eyes, then they will give me the chance to wear their traditional dress, which is great for me, as it's really tactile. did you make this? singing. we like guests. even our father say, the guests, they are best and they are blessed. yeah. and actually, they go to see the big five. they say they want to see the big six. you know, the maasai, they're the big six. 0h, right! yeah, because... five animals and then you guys.
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and then us. the best time to go on a game drive is either last thing at night orfirst thing in the morning. will believes if we are to have any chance in catching a river crossing, we will have to be out in the vehicle before dawn. so tonight we are staying at a place called sala's camp, deep in the maasai mara on the banks of the sand river. oh, what is that?! but it's very overwhelming. every little sound, i'm like... what is that? i can hear it. gasps that sounds so close! after finding out i was being kept awake half the night by a baboon and a leopard having an argument, it was time
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to head out to try and find an elusive river crossing. but it didn't take long before i got a reminder ofjust how deadly this journey is for the wildebeest. what's that noise? so, the noise is a kill. 0k. so the noises that you hear is the vultures trying to remove the meat off the bones. then they are eating the intestines. are these birds dangerous, will? it's dangerous when you are dead. laughs this is the feasting season for the predators. yeah. oh, i can hear the wildebeest to the left of me! for most of the year,
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the maasai mara is quiet and calm with bush wilderness that goes on for miles. but during the migration, it's a totally different story. can you hear the sounds of the wildebeest? it's everywhere, isn't it? 3d sound! yes. something you can't get anywhere else. it's just beautiful. i love it and i've got my little figure here. do they look like this, will? yes, they look like this. so, their legs looks like hyena. they have very weak legs. when god was creating the wildebeest, he was the last animal to be created. a wildebeest is made with different types of animals. so on the top is like a horse. on the horns, they look like a cow horn. yeah. then they have the beards like a goat. they do? like a goat! around you, how many
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wildebeests would you say there were? i think we have the herd is about 50,000 or maybe 100,000 just close to us. gasps as there's so many wildebeest around the area our camp is in, this is a good sign that a crossing is about to happen. the ones who are moaning at the leaders, those are the leaders, they are the ones who are moaning because now it's early in the morning, it's only the leaders who are going to make it, who have to go. but following a herd of wildebeest is not easy... until will spots some shadowy figures at the edge of the river. so the leader has just called for them to cross. yes. and now they're making noise. they're communicating, saying, there is nothing — there's no crocs, there are no hippos. this is a case of right place
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and right time for both us and the wildebeest. can you hear them in the water? yeah, ican! and, yes, thousands and thousands crossing right now. maybe the lions and crocs were already full, because this time, it seems that the herd reached the other side of the river and fresh grass unscathed. i may have taken the long way round on this safari, tuning each of my senses into a world so different from my own. but now, i'm getting to experience one of nature's marvels. something i'd never thought i'd be doing when i first lost my eyesight. so this is the eighth wonder of the world.
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later that evening, i wanted to end my safari in the traditional way — with a sundowner — where you enjoy a drink watching the sunset against the beautiful african sky. not a very blind friendly experience, let's face it. but then, kenya had other plans. would you like a drink? laughs can i have a g&t, please, will? yes! enjoy! it knew that i wanted rain because i can't see the sun. and all the animals are happy! yeah, all the animals are happy, and so is this blind girl! yeah! cheers! this is my blind girl sundown! this has been one of the most amazing things i have ever done. and now i can well and truly say this is how a blind girl goes on safari.
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hello there. it really is shaping up to be quite a nice saturday out there. lots of sunshine around for many. let's take a look at bradford from just a few hours ago. we did see some early morning low cloud and mist in some places, but that's breaking up quite nicely. we could be chasing a little bit of fairweather cloud around favoured spots through the midlands and running up into northeast england. and at the same time rain will gradually continue to retreat north and west across the northern and western isles. lighter winds as well in comparison to yesterday. it's going to feel very mild out there. temperatures ranging between 11 and 17 or 18 celsius as a high. tomorrow, remembrance sunday
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could once again start off with some low clouds, some mist and fog around. slow to ease away from eastern england, the best of the sunshine further west and by the middle of the afternoon, we'll see cloud and rain gradually starting to make its presence felt into northern ireland. top temperatures, though, 12 to 18 celsius. take care.
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this is bbc news — these are the latest headlines in the uk and around the world. ukrainians celebrate into the night as russia withdraws thousands of soldiers from the city of kherson after months of occupation. in the us, the democrats have taken a step closer to retaining control of the senate, as mark kelly is re—elected in arizona. former uk health secretary matt hancock has said he is looking for forgiveness on tv show i'm a celebrity get me out of here. what i'm really looking for is a bit of forgiveness. that is what i am really looking for. fih of forgiveness. that is what i am really looking for.— really looking for. oh my god, i nearly cried _ really looking for. oh my god, i nearly cried then. _ new zealand have beaten england to win the women's rugby world cup in front of a capacity crowd in auckland.
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