Planning battles, Saxon skeletons, public transport woes and a fox-hunting fallout – this month’s podcast covers 1,300 years of rural life, and why the next few weeks could shape the next 30.
Editor’s Letter: Not Quite Pumpkin Season
Laura reflects on the month’s sudden turn from drought to downpour, the return of green fields, and feels a quiet mourning for al fresco breakfasts and picky teas. Plus, she urges attention on the Dorset Plan:
“It’s the blueprint for how Dorset looks, lives and grows for the next couple of decades – and we’ve got just a few weeks to shape it.”
Sherry Jespersen: What the Dorset Local Plan Really Means
Former chair of North Dorset’s planning committee, Cllr Sherry Jespersen, joins Laura to explain why the Dorset Local Plan is not just a boring bureaucratic document – it’s the most important planning consultation in decades.
“The government gives the numbers, but it’s not Dorset Council building the houses. There’s a mismatch between ambition and reality – and it’s residents who live with the consequences.”
Sherry breaks down how planning actually works, what people get wrong on social media, and why now is the time to speak up – whether you’re worried about infrastructure, affordability, school places or transport.
Dorset Insider: Roads to Nowhere
This month our anonymous parish councillor takes a razor-sharp look at Dorset Council’s Local Transport Plan – a document full of admirable goals … and almost no money:
“If you’ve ever cycled in competition with a tractor on a country lane, you’ll understand why people drive. In rural Dorset, the car is still a necessity – and public transport doesn’t cut it.”
6,000 Saxons and a Shallow Grave
In Iwerne Minster, archaeologists have uncovered one of Dorset’s largest Anglo-Saxon cemeteries – 6,000 burials from a period spanning 300 years.
Courtenay Hitchcock joins lead archaeologist Richard McConnell on site, where the discoveries are helping to reveal the lives (and curious deaths) of our early Christian ancestors.
“There’s one grave where a second body was squeezed in – and they had to remove the first one’s head to make space.”
The Grumbler: Foxhounds and False History
This month’s anonymous opinion piece is from a local historian who took issue with the hound parade commentary at the Gillingham & Shaftesbury Show – and its one-sided sermon on fox hunting.
“The implication was that the rural economy will collapse without hunting, and that every spectator supports it. I wasn’t convinced.”
This episode is based on articles from September’s BV, available to read for free here . News, people, places – and beautiful Dorset photography, every single month.
The BV – named Best Regional Publication in the UK (ACE Awards) and Regional News Site of the Year (Press Gazette). Always worth your ears.