Edwardian Farm - Season 1 Episode 7 March 2011

Edwardian Farm - Season 1 Episode 7 March

9.70 60 minutes
Spring sees the daffodil harvest, accompanied by a rush to get the flowers off to the train station so they can be delivered to towns and cities across the country within hours of being picked. Alex and Peter Ginn go to Dartmoor for the annual pony trek, and use the occasion to purchase one of the beasts for the farm. However, before their new pony is fit for work, he needs to be trained, and the farmers hire American horse whisperer Mike Branch for the job. Meanwhile, the arrival of new lambs is followed by a pleasant surprise for Ruth in the run-up to Mother's Day. It is March and Ruth Goodman, Alex Langlands and Peter Ginn greet the long-awaited arrival of spring. It is time to bring in the daffodil harvest. During it's heyday in the early 20th century, the Tamar Valley was the largest producer of early daffodils in Britain - the result of the region's mild climate combined with the arrival of a railway, which meant produce could be delivered to towns and cities across Britain within hours of being picked. The team takes their daffodil crop to the train station and gets to grips with the workings of the Edwardian steam-powered railway system. Ruth's daughter, Eve, arrives on the train to spend Mothering Sunday on the farm - an important occasion in the Edwardian calendar. For the many daughters who worked away in service, it was the only time in the year when they could get time off to return home. Alex and Peter fertilize the potato crop - which requires 10 tonnes of well-rotted horse dung. They also go up to Dartmoor for the annual pony trek - a time when wild ponies on the moor were rounded up. They select a new pony for the farm. The pony needs training before he's fit for work and Mike Branch, a specialist trainer from Tennessee, arrives. He's following in the footsteps of American farmer John Solomon Rarey, who in the 19th century found fame and fortune in Britain with his revolutionary method of taming wild horses. Instead of 'breaking' the horse physically, he used the technique now known as 'horse whispering'. After a bumper daffodil harvest and having seen all the ewes successfully give birth to their lambs, the team are in high spirits for the celebration of Easter - which means feasting, a special church service and surprise for Ruth.

Similar

Farming For Love

2023 TV Shows

Farmen

2001 TV Shows

Clarkson's Farm

2021 TV Shows

16 Kids and Counting

2013 TV Shows

Countryfile

1988 TV Shows

La grande traversée

2017 TV Shows

Mission to Burnley

2023 TV Shows

Wartime Farm

2012 TV Shows

Meet, Marry, Murder

2020 TV Shows

Recomendation

Clarkson's Farm

2021 TV Shows

History 101

2020 TV Shows

Survivorman

2005 TV Shows

Frontline

1983 TV Shows

American Experience

1988 TV Shows

Long Way Round

2004 TV Shows

The Beatles Anthology

1995 TV Shows

The Green Planet

2022 TV Shows

Haunted

2018 TV Shows

Welcome to Wrexham

2022 TV Shows

MegaStructures

2004 TV Shows

Mountain Men

2012 TV Shows