Ramblings â Details, episodes & analysis
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Clare Balding and guests share inspiring conversations while walking in the great outdoors.
Fresh air and nature, wonderful views and uplifting chat, each week Clare hikes in a different part of our glorious countryside. Walking side by side is the perfect way to cover a huge range of subjects: literature, art, wildlife, nature, taking on personal or physical challenges, dealing with grief, confronting preconceptions about the kind of people who love to ramble.
The conversations are as varied as the landscapes we find ourselves in. If there's a recurring theme, it's the accepted truth that 'solvitur ambulando' - 'it is solved through walking': The sense of wellness, the benefits to mental health, easy companionship, or sometimes just the sense of solitude that being alone in nature brings.
Few things are better than going for a good walk. That's what we aim to share each week on Ramblings with Clare Balding.
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Apple Podcasts
đ¨đŚ Canada - placesAndTravel
28/06/2026#48đŹđ§ Great Britain - placesAndTravel
28/06/2026#3đŹđ§ Great Britain - societyAndCulture
28/06/2026#75đŤđˇ France - placesAndTravel
28/06/2026#89đ¨đŚ Canada - placesAndTravel
27/06/2026#38đŹđ§ Great Britain - placesAndTravel
27/06/2026#3đŹđ§ Great Britain - societyAndCulture
27/06/2026#85đŤđˇ France - placesAndTravel
27/06/2026#63đ¨đŚ Canada - placesAndTravel
26/06/2026#81đŹđ§ Great Britain - placesAndTravel
26/06/2026#5
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See allScore global : 39%
Publication history
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Amar Latif - President of the Ramblers in North Yorkshire
jeudi 1 aoÝt 2024 ⢠Duration 24:19
Clare and the âblind adventurerâ Amar Latif explore a circular route in Nidderdale, North Yorkshire. As the current President of the Ramblers, Amar is keen to promote the message that walking is for absolutely everyone, from all backgrounds and abilities.
He lost most of his vision by the time he was 18 and found it very hard to accept. He began to believe that he wouldnât be able to continue doing all the things he enjoyed but after spending a year of his university course in Canada, decided that travelling was definitely for him and went onto make a career out of it. He set up âTravelEyesâ a company specialising in tourism for blind and sighted people travelling together, including walking trips.
One of his greatest adventures was walking 220 miles from the Atlantic coast of Nicaragua across to the Pacific Ocean, crossing a shark-filled lake and scaling a 5000ft volcano.
Also on the walk are Rayyah McCaul, who is guiding Amar, and Ramblers volunteer and walk leader, Stephen Down.
The Ramblers is a charity with around 100,000 members. Established in 1935, one of their main aims is improving access to the countryside for everyone to enjoy.
Clare met Amar in Toft Gate Lime Kiln car park, at the top of Greenhow Hill, and completed a five mile circular walk.
Presenter: Clare Balding Producer: Karen Gregor
Surrey - from Oaks Park to Kingswood
jeudi 25 juillet 2024 ⢠Duration 24:19
Clare meets the founders of Walking Post on a hike from Oaks Park to Kingswood in Surrey. Walking Post is a not-for-profit website run by friends who have designed, mapped and now share multiple walking routes around London, Surrey, Kent, Essex and beyond. Every walk is accessible by public transport, something key to web-designer Lucy Maddison who doesnât own a car.
The project has expanded from a personal project into what is now a free public resource, and even though Lucy and her friend, Emily Morrison, both have âproperâ jobs they even offer monthly walks to anyone who wants to come along.
Find them at walkingpost.co.uk
Presenter: Clare Balding Producer: Karen Gregor
On the Hoof with Hannah and Chico
jeudi 21 mars 2024 ⢠Duration 24:24
Clare joins Hannah Engelkamp and her donkey, Chico, for a ramble in the Dyfi Valley a few miles east of Machynlleth in Powys.
On the way Hannah tells Clare about the extraordinary adventure she shared with Chico when they walked 1000 miles around the perimeter of Wales. She did this despite having no previous experience of donkeys, or horses, or any animals really. It took twice as long as she intended and was much harder than she ever imagined. The idea of 'carrot or stick' doesn't work, Hannah says, so the first thing she learned was when a donkey stops you just have to wait and stand and look and wait until the moment seems right to move off again.
Hannah also tells Clare about her involvement with 'Slow Ways'. Itâs a Community Interest Company whose aim is to map, improve, and promote walking routes between Britainâs towns, cities and villages.
Clare and Hannah met at Grid Ref: SH 850 027, and walked a section of a Slow Way known as âMaccar Oneâ near Chicoâs home at Dyfi Donkey Woods. Maccar One is 23 miles long and connects Machynlleth with Carno. Slow Ways are named for the first three letters of the place at either end of a route e.g. Mac for Machynlleth and Car for Carno.
Presenter: Clare Balding Producer: Karen Gregor
Ricky Ross and Lorraine Mcintosh of Deacon Blue in Fife
jeudi 12 septembre 2019 ⢠Duration 24:18
Clare Balding is joined by singers Ricky Ross and Lorraine McIntosh of the band Deacon Blue to walk one of their favourite coastal routes in Fife. Starting at Elie they walk along the beach passing through the village of St Monan's ending in the picturesque fishing town of Pittenweem. Ricky and Lorraine have been married for over thirty years and perform together as part of the band, as well as having their own careers in broadcasting and acting. They say the secret to their enduring relationship is doing things together as a couple and sharing the same interests, one of which is walking. One of their favourite areas to walk is the East Neuk in Fife reputed to have some of the driest sunniest weather in the UK because of its sheltered position between the Rivers Forth and Tay.
Producer: Maggie Ayre
Going Dutch in Dorset
jeudi 20 juin 2019 ⢠Duration 24:18
Clare Balding joins a unique family ramble in Dorset. She is walking from Osmington Mills to Weymouth with Simon Waley and his three Dutch sons-in-law. They are here, from their home in the Netherlands, for a three day hike along a stretch of the South West Coastal Path. Simon is British; he met and married a Dutch woman and moved to the Netherlands more than twenty five years ago. They have three daughters and each met a Dutch man. For the first time, Simon â a very keen walker, who regularly comes back to the UK â is bringing his three Dutch sons-in-law to experience long-distance British trekking. He says the culture of walking is very different in the Netherlands where every square inch of land has a specific purpose, there arenât many public footpaths, and agricultural land is out of bounds. When people do walk, itâs usually in huge, organised groups along a network of rural roads. Simon wants his family to experience both the freedom of British walking and the unique delight of youth-hostelling, something they havenât done before.
Producer: Karen Gregor
Going Wild in the West Country
jeudi 13 juin 2019 ⢠Duration 24:16
Clare Balding walks with sisters Georgina and Rebecca - both mothers of young children - who started a group called Go Wild Go West to help inspire other young families to get out and enjoy the outdoors. They have happy childhood memories of exploring and adventuring in nature and are concerned that children today are losing touch with the thrill of walking and playing outdoors. They take Clare on a circular route around from East Harptree in North Somerset. It's a walk designed to delight and entertain the children who build a den, climb trees and find a rope swing along the way. The children are free to roam and explore with the mums a safe distance behind.
There are more walks and ideas for days out on their Facebook page GoWildGoWest
The walk is from East Harptree Woods up Smitham Hill and down Harptree Combe
Producer: Maggie Ayre
Proud, Resilient & Native American in the UK
vendredi 7 juin 2019 ⢠Duration 24:16
Clare Balding meets a group of native American women who live and work in the UK. A sense of isolation and homesickness led them to the Rainmaker Gallery in Bristol seeking connection with other indigenous people. They now meet regularly. Clare joins them on a walk around Henley in Arden in Warwickshire and hears how despite different tribal affiliations, the common cultural and spiritual backgrounds they share bring great comfort to them thousands of miles from home. Leandra Nephin is from the Omaha tribe of Nebraska and grew up on the reservation there. Sarah Sense is a Chitimacha artist who met her husband while she was exhibiting her work at the Rainmaker Gallery in Bristol run by Joanne Prince, while Stephanie Pratt is an academic and art historian from the Dakota Crow Creek tribe. Melinda Schwakhofer is Muscogee Creek and through her artwork is attempting to reconnect with her culture from her home on Dartmoor.
The walk: Start Henley in Arden Centre ending Preston Bagot Church. Distance approximately four miles OS grid reference SP151660
Producer: Maggie Ayre
Clare gets lost in Lancashire
jeudi 30 mai 2019 ⢠Duration 24:16
Clare gets lost in the rain as she walks to meet two extraordinary sisters in their 90s. Both were code-breakers during WW2, and one invented the TV classic, Ask the Family.
Pat Davies and Jean Argles both worked in espionage during WW2. Pat helped the Royal Navy intercept German Naval Traffic at coastal stations, while Jean was a code and cipher officer based in Cairo, then Italy.
Throughout the war, their father was a Prisoner of War. He was Lt Colonel Cary Owtram who was in charge of the infamous Chungkai Japanese Prisoner of War camp. There, he found himself responsible for the wellbeing of thousands of other prisoners including those used to build the notorious Death Railway which featured in the film, Bridge on the River Kwai. Incredibly, Lt Col Cary Owtram managed to keep a secret diary which Pat and Jean have recently published: "1000 Days on The River Kwai" (scroll down to 'related links' to find out more).
Following the war, Pat worked in TV. She produced University Challenge and the Sky at Night. She also devised and produced âAsk the Familyâ. Pat and Jean grew up in the Dolphinholme area of Lancashire and have fond memories of walking, riding horses and fishing with their family. They still enjoy walking, although the routes they take are now understandably shorter than they once were.
Producer: Karen Gregor
Here Comes the Summer - Feargal Sharkey
jeudi 23 mai 2019 ⢠Duration 24:18
Clare Balding joins singer Feargal Sharkey for a river walk on the south London/Surrey border along the River Hogsmill one of just 200 chalk streams in the world. He's always been a rambler and is currently walking all of the river routes of London. He is often dismayed and pleased in equal measure at the state of our rivers as he is a passionate advocate for water health and quality. The walk is part of the London Loop and starts from Ewell West Station and ends at Kingston upon Thames passing through Old Malden.
Producer: Maggie Ayre
An Aussie Walkabout... in Norfolk
jeudi 16 mai 2019 ⢠Duration 24:12
Clare Balding goes walkabout with a group of Australian women who call themselves The Norfolk Broads. They include a Colman, of mustard fame, and one âhonorary Aussieâ, actually a Texan who once dated John Wayneâs son. Theyâve all ended up living in this eastern corner of England and have discovered fun and companionship by exploring their new home on foot. They walk a stretch of Norfolkâs Boudicca Way from Diss to Shimpling. On the way, Clare discovers what brought them here, how they've adapted to their new home, and how to pronounce local town names... Producer: Karen Gregor