Episodes

  • 08 Rich Yates on leading Essex Wildlife Trust and the social values of nature recovery
    Jun 24 2026

    At Abbotts Hall by the Blackwater Estuary, chief executive of Essex Wildlife Trust, Rich Yates, chats about the 67 years of county wildlife action. We sit in sunshine by a pond, and hear about the Trus’s many reserves and visitor centres. And how the focus on nature has shifted from protecting and conserving to improving. This puts people at the heart of it all. The Trust relies on a dense network of 2000 volunteers to manage their 100 reserves and engage with the public.

    We talk of the timescales of conservation and nature recovery: 60+ years (so far) for Fingringhoe Wick, 24 years for saltings after coastal realignment, 15 years for Mucking waste tip to reserve, and 1-2 years for the ghost ponds of Essex to come back.

    Rich says, “The story of conservation is the story of people.”

    Rich recommends Kate Raworth’s Doughnut Economics.

    Rich’s object is a guitar plectrum.

    His heroes are local education leader Gary Horne and EA Festival organiser Joanne Ooi.

    His recommended action: go on, join a Wildlife Trust local to you.

    Website: https://www.essexwt.org.uk/

    My new book will be supporting this podcast, and will be published in March 2027. It is called "Bamboo and Butterfly: Transformative Stories for Climate and Nature Recovery."

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    44 mins
  • 07 Genevieve Christie on the cultural and environmental values of a free-festival at the coast
    Jun 18 2026

    In her home in central Suffolk, First Light Festival director Genevieve Christie chats about the reinvention of Lowestoft around the free festival held at the summer solstice. Once famed fishing town, then seaside resort, like many coastal places Lowestoft had struggled to invent a third way for contemporary times. It is the place in the UK where first light appears, and the idea of first light led to the establishment of the summer-solstice free festival on the South Beach and promenade. First Light works on the idea of place as an asset, on creating pride, on bringing all people together. Says Genevieve, “It has to be free.” Regeneration is a story with “a long arc.”

    Genevieve recommends Gardens of the British Working Class by Margeret Willes.

    And A Tonic to the Nation by Hugh Casson, Director of the 1951 Festival of Britain. Casson says, “The real achievement? It made people want things to be better, and no was taught to hate.”

    Genevieve’s recommended action: “Be interested in things be curious. Look and listen.”

    First Light Festival (20-21 June, 2026): https://firstlightlowestoft.com/

    My new book will be supporting this podcast, and will be published in March 2027. It is called "Bamboo and Butterfly: Transformative Stories for Climate and Nature Recovery."

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    43 mins
  • 06 Jacquie McGlade on hope from the Global South and the value of talk in international negotiations
    Jun 17 2026

    In our online discussion, Jacquie McGlade chats about her unique perspective on environmental harms and solutions. She’s Professor at UCL in London and Strathmore in Kenya, is former Director of the European Environment Agency, Chief Scientist at UNEP (the UN Environment Programme), and is a resident of Kenya.

    She talks of hope in the Global South, and how the young of Africa will be future world leaders to get us out of modern polycrises. The North is brittle and fearful, where hope seems so easily dashed. In the South, “Hope always springs eternal.” She talks of national addictions to fossil fuels, and how with intent countries are changing fast. Jacquie was lead negotiator at the EEA and UNEP in international negotiations for COPs. Fundamental to all agreements and progress, she says, is talk. Talk is good. COPs are like large plays, three Acts, drama, ups and downs.

    She says, “Living in a mud hut makes you endlessly happy.”

    Her hero is Sir Crispin Tickell, climate negotiator and diplomat.

    Her recommended book is Song of the Reed Warbler by Charles Massy.

    Her top action: “Take one step, it’s how all journeys begin.” And then go outside, and “take a handful of soil, and smell it.”

    My new book will be supporting this podcast, and will be published in March 2027. It is called "Bamboo and Butterfly: Transformative Stories for Climate and Nature Recovery."

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    45 mins
  • 05 Ian Collins on the wonderful life and home of Ronald Blythe
    Jun 10 2026

    In the garden at Bottengoms, on an early spring morning, biographer and art curator Ian Collins chats about the 100-year-life of Ronnie Blythe.

    We talk about how Ronnie was hyper-local to the landscapes of south Suffolk and north Essex, yet wrote in a way that told of the whole world. His life was hard. He lived in the shadow of the workhouse, and yet he found great contentment. Visitors were always charmed by the magic of his home and garden. Ronnie published most of his book aged over 60, some of the best at over 80. His was a fine life of example. Like most, though, he needed support, and this came from Christine Nash. Says Ian, “She was the sort of person who pushed you off.”

    Ian recommends Ronnie’s final book, Next To Nature; and talks of his biography of Ronnie called Blythe Spirit, winner of the New Angle Prize in 2025.

    His recommended action: try not to feel overwhelmed; savour the moment; bring joy.

    For a film short of Ian Collins talking to me at Bottengoms, see https://youtu.be/TYErZWYaCd8.

    For more on the Essex Wildlife Trust and Bottengoms, see https://www.essexwt.org.uk/bottengoms

    My new book will be supporting this podcast, and will be published in March 2027. It is called "Bamboo and Butterfly: Transformative Stories for Climate and Nature Recovery."

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    30 mins
  • 04 Rupert Read on how to activate the climate majority
    Jun 3 2026

    In his garden in the Norfolk Broads, philosopher, author and climate activist Rupert Read talks to me about climate movements and action.

    We hear of the formation of Extinction Rebellion, thrutopian ideas and transformative adaptation. And how too the declaration of climate emergencies moved thinking and local policies. We hear about the need to focus on a climate majority: the middle 60-70% of the population who know something bad is going on, but don’t know quite what to do. Thrutopia implies going through, a leaning in, the taking of good from bad.

    Rupert’s heroines are Joanna Macy and Greta Thunberg (“small people can change the whole world”, he says).

    His books include “This Civilisation is Finished”; Why Climate Breakdown Matters; The Climate Majority Project”; “Transformative Adaptation”.

    Rupert recommended action: believe this: most of us are capable of far more than we dare to imagine.

    See Rupert’s website: https://rupertread.net/

    Climate Majority Project: https://www.climatemajorityproject.com/

    My new book will be supporting this podcast, and will be published in March 2027. It is called "Bamboo and Butterfly: Transformative Stories for Climate and Nature Recovery."

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    41 mins
  • 03 Phoebe Barnard on the science of climate and need for public engagement
    Jun 3 2026

    I’m chatting online with prize-winning global change scientist and film-maker Phoebe Barnard in her borrowed home in Ireland, as the sun breaks through on her and her happy dog.

    We talk about Phoebe’s life as a climate scientist, about international negotiations and processes that bring countries together, about film making for positive stories. She describes having to leave beautiful Washington State in the US. “We work on change, after all," she says.” We talk about the need for new thinking, a new story. “We can choose” she says of taking agency and ownership.

    “Feminism is a public good mindset,” she also says. “We need to move towards more feminism and a world of greater ancient-culture influence.”

    Phoebe’s book recommendation is Robin Wall Kimmerer’s Braiding Sweetgrass.

    Her heroine and mentee: Abidemi Raji, Nigerian researcher at Cornell University.

    Her recommended action: recognise you are not alone. Join something with others, like a climate repair café and the climate majority project.

    The Climate Restorers films: https://www.theclimaterestorers.com/

    The Climate Repair Café films: https://www.climaterepaircafe.com/

    My new book will be supporting this podcast, and will be published in March 2027. It is called "Bamboo and Butterfly: Transformative Stories for Climate and Nature Recovery."

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    38 mins
  • 02 Lloyd Peck on living in the Antarctic and how it’s changed over two decades
    May 29 2026

    In his brim-full office at the British Antarctic Survey in Cambridge, I chat with Lloyd Peck just after his return from a spell at Rothera Research Station. We talk about how fast things are changing. He’s a veteran of some 800 cold water dives, often under the ice. The Antarctic is the site of enormous aquatic biodiversity, much completely unique. We talk of great sea spiders and fish with no haemoglobin; of low temperature enzymes that will help in organ donor transport. But he’s seen glaciers and ice sheets retreat two miles; he’s seen rain fall instead of snow, soaking albatross chicks; he’s seen great abundance of humpback and orca whales. He says, “I find it really wearing; it gets me down.”

    Lloyd recommends Jared Diamond’s Collapse for its warning call about care for nature. His hero is a teacher who took great interest in him.

    His recommended action: look at what you do, and choose something small to foster climate action and positive change. Do it bit by bit.

    British Antarctic Survey: https://www.bas.ac.uk/

    My new book will be supporting this podcast, and will be published in March 2027. It is called "Bamboo and Butterfly: Transformative Stories for Climate and Nature Recovery."

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    40 mins
  • 01 Anita Roy on nature writing and making good things happen in transition towns
    May 29 2026

    In a borrowed room at local Tone Dale House, author and activist Anita Roy chats to me about personal and community transformation. We are in Wellington in Somerset, winner of the national prize for best transition town, and we hear how the people did it. They created a new commons, a 65-acre woodland-orchard that all are free to use. Anita talks about the up-down down-up arc of writing and how it mirrors our own lives. She says, “I wonder what this is going to be like in 20 years; everything’s getting worse, except when I think of Fox’s Field.”

    Anita recommends two books: Wild by Jay Griffiths; and The Spell of the Sensuous by David Abram.

    Her own books include Gifts of Gravity and Light and her children’s book about death, Gravepyres; The School for the Recently Deceased. She is a writer for The Guardian’s Country Diary.

    Her recommended action: be messy, leave ecological spaces, and maybe holes are good.

    See Anita’s website: https://anitaroy.net/

    Transition Town Wellington: https://ttw.org.uk/

    My new book will be supporting this podcast, and will be published in March 2027. It’s called "Bamboo and Butterfly: Transformative Stories for Climate and Nature Recovery."

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    48 mins