The Mourne Mountain Fires
Martha Kearney visits the Mourne Mountains in County Down to discover how the landscape has been affected by recurrent fires - and what’s being done to restore it.
The Mourne Mountains in County Down are home to Northern Ireland’s highest and most dramatic peaks - a landscape often shrouded in cloud and rain. Yet in recent years thousands of fires have broken out across the range, the majority believed to have been started deliberately. Dry weather and hotter summers linked to climate change have made conditions even more hazardous, alongside the degradation of peat bogs and increased soil erosion.
Martha Kearney visits County Down to hear how local people have been affected, including farmer Sam McConnell and mountain rescue volunteers Neville Watson and Alwynne Shannon. She also discovers what is being done to mitigate the devastation, meeting lead ranger James Fisher and wildfire recovery ranger Linus Voksepp from the National Trust to learn about their vital restoration work.
Producer: Eliza Lomas
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- Thu 19 Feb 202615:00BBC Radio 4
- Sat 21 Feb 202606:07BBC Radio 4
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Open Country
Countryside magazine featuring the people and wildlife that shape the landscape of Britain

