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Thousands when rescue workers reach some of the worst affected areas more than 800 are known to have been killed on the island of soon the West say the county's police and crime commissioner has told B.B.C. Radio Lincolnshire today that he wants to drop a new strategy to do with lead theft as our churches for churches and one building in villages near Grantham have been targeted in the past week and churches are under attack but since the Vikings I mean it's for the things we thought we dealt with and it tends to be travelling criminals people are coming from far away they reckon area and then come in and talk and the and it's awful I mean it has the heart out of some very small tight knit communities officers investigating the incident say they are ling than Lincoln to his P.C.C. Margarines says he'll now be organizing meetings with heritage groups and church official I'll be pulling together a range of partners to actually look at adding a county wide strategy for how weight prevent this in the future we're part of the National World crime network remolding them and we'll be pulling together leading figures to try and say well what what should we do with the Lincolnshire community to make sure we can protect ourselves from less the billionaire law must has agreed to stand down as chairman of the electric car maker Tesla to avoid prosecution over tweets which my slate investors but he and the car company will now pay fines of $20000000.00. It's the final day of the gravity fields festival in Grantham with another day of arts and alchemy promised in the town and surrounding areas one of the closing features at the home of the festival's inspiration surprising Newton is how to make an apple pie from scratch physicist Harry Cliff has made it all comes from Carl Sagan who did this big television series in the eighty's called Cosmos So it's we're going to go right down into the nitty gritty of what Apple pie is really made from and you know if you're really going to make an apple pie from scratch you've got to create a universe you gotta learn how to make a start a fuse different chemical elements together you've got to make a planet evolve life there's going to be a grand history of the universe but through the lens of an apple pie and the singles matches are underway at the Ryder Cup in Paris Europe have gone into the final day with a $106.00 lead over the United States B.B.C. Weather cloudy and cool the south to noon the maybe the odd shower and highs of 14 Celsius and tonight is looking clear and chilly with rain dying away and leaving us with a full Celsius. Dave plus a D.V.C. Radio can show. Good afternoon welcome to poaching from B.B.C. Radio Lincolnshire our weekly look at the week just gone and some of the highlights and we've got some big names on the show between now and 3 o'clock musician Rick Wakeman astronauts haven't Sherman Craig cashews name may not immediately ring a bell but he's been in several sick homes and written even more. So with strictly one thing that you may want to call in and comment on is the story that we ran chairing the week about the police in Lincolnshire. It seems that potentially to try and balance the book while we would like to see more police out there on the beach they're going to have to lose about $140.00 members of staff we'll come to that a little later now how's this for a discovery a relic from the 12th century has been rediscovered at Lincoln cathedral it's a seal matrix which would have been used to give documents a seal of approval Well this week Nabhan prior went to the cathedral to meet fern Dawson who found the artifact so we're looking at the 12th century chap the seal of Lincoln beetle also got the cell Christie as well and the Vickers coral seal softly connected to the GK told me about the discovery of this very rare seal the. Well it was a very interesting day actually we were looking for corrections for US dollars and we happened to come across about smart replicas seals so I thought I would catalog them no matter what they are and they just happened to be at the bottom of that box clearly not replicas they were the real deal OK So replicas even though you coin yet they are Victorian so in themselves they have quite a lot of value in terms of these was history but these were the style find goodness OK you. Just explain in your reaction when you looked at them What did you think. It was a sort of a makeshift boats ready we saw that would obviously got something that was really unusual at that point they hadn't actually been identified so it was just a case of holding on to them and cataloging them put in the right conditions as well and then making sure we get the experts in to actually tell us what we found so what was it did it feel different it was a different way to different material what was different to. The rest of the electrolyte cop is sort of really wax so these are the only metal objects that are in the SEALs box because we have a new replica of the chapter seal seen one very very similar and thought This actually looks like the older version of that So what did you do to get to get it checked out so we went to some local experts so we had Dr Leslie Milner who came in to have a look at our collections as well as the curator from the British Museum and immediately based at that as well we found we found some amazing objects very rare in themselves and how just how ROV. The chap seal is the 2nd SEAL known known to be in existence is currently the only seal to be held by its original Cathedral the 2nd seal is actually in the British Museum that's from Chichester So this is. One of a kind really I could muster OK And why did so few survive that mainly because they were actually melted down after use so you could avoid forgery so in the case of this one it used to have a Lipan the top but that's actually being chipped off so it can't be used again and I can just see the loop is missing there and looking to the side here in wax than it is that the see all that would be produced by this yes it is interesting OK talk to the other items that you have here and their significance and importance so we have a 13th century because coral seal so this is one of the earliest cathedral communities so it is the people who lead worship in that singing is the quiet essentially this is actually predates the because coal becoming a legal company which That's only happened in 1441 so this is actually not so is a bit of a shock to find it so this was in the same box it was in the same box yes as look I do want to find a box like this would make it what this is this is a real rare opportunity of museums you don't normally open a box and find these kind of treasures site the cathedral is full of goodness OK and here is this what you say was protected in this for the smallest seal this is actually a personal stock or seal so this was owned by a gentleman called John and that was the case that it got put in probably by the Victorians rather than during the 12 inch or 14th century for that one again so we're looking at the items here on display which is rather nice you got a mirror behind so that people can actually see the back of the sale as well yes said the chap to seal the back of the House actually quite important it has a new yellow design on it which is really it's a highly skilled craft worthy. Being and then enameled with black so which show up quite nicely how long of the been sitting in this box then of with RIP. Yes we believe only 30 is so not a lot of you know yes it was a couple pox that helps age it but that we believe there are probably taken out of the strong way but one point and put into a box and forgotten because I said we didn't think we actually had the 12th century seal already that turned out to be the copy they sent out to be the original Yeah so you have a copy that you thought was the original Yes Yes So my goodness so scaring people inauguration they have to hold this unfortunate they were holding the Victorian one not the original. How special is this for you amazing I say mazing experience and it's it's been an absolute pleasure though to be able to to share what we found I mean that's that's the key to this if they if they came out of the box and only got identified this wouldn't be half as much of a story how many more boxes if you got to go through it. So far with found about 300 objects that were not going to pad the unusual finds but nothing quite as unusual as this no this is talking them all so far but you just never know how. Amazing that spin laughed undiscovered for so long but fortunately it's risen to the surface as I say Ferdaus and after making cathedral chatting to Melvin Pryor in just a few minutes Rick Wakeman. Classic song. Legendary. I'm Tim Rogers and I'm really looking forward to bringing a new country music. Join me for 2 hours of my kind of country date on the B.B.C. Radio Lincolnshire. I wait. 65. Tanks to any one sure bull story and start your message with the. Takes the challenge the just and in most situations. The notice on the B.B.C. You don't you don't you can a slow shallow cool way to criticize a review. We've That's. If you'd like to contact the program and comment on any of the stories you're hearing maybe for the 1st time the contact details 1000 double 65949 that's a telephone number Mary's picking up on that one you can text one simple 3 star a message with Ellen or e-mailed they don't see at B.B.C. Don't go don't you. Well following the hugely successful piano Paul trades tour last year in support of the album of the same name Rick Wakeman will return this or some with a new show based on the follow up released in titled piano want to see the 26 day tour will feature even more classic tracks which have been given Rick's unique piano treatment and will travel to towns and cities not previously visited in 2017 who can the green talk to him about the inclusion of the chief originally recorded by Queen brother Mays one of my closest friends and I knew very very well how much Bohemian Rhapsody meant to him Freddie wrote it I knew Freddie but I don't like to look back I know that broad doesn't like a lot of things that have happened to baby Rusty a lot of versions that have been done he's not came out so I spoke to process of Brian I've done a version of the human Rhapsody of the piano with some strings to grey when Sounds interesting and I said Can I send it to you to listen to it and I said because quite honestly if you say you don't like it or you don't think it is any good I'll take it off the album because I wouldn't want to do anything that would would offend the peace or offend you and he said well he said I would never tell you to take something off there but I'd love to hear it so I sent a turban he was a robot almost immediately the neighbor I said I love this he said Freddie would have a dog this is a solo is if I may say one thing he said there's a little part towards the end he said where I could hear some beautiful classical flamenco guitar perhaps. What you think and I'll listen to it I want you know he's right and I said you know I'll do that I'll get somebody to do it he said no you want your semi the track or not do it. And I said you said no one else is going to do this send it to me so I sent it and he did this most wonderful cameo performance . Of the he raps at the end. Like classical for like a guitar and it's very interesting if you listen to the track now without the guitar it sounds so wrong it was so clever so there were a lot of things that just developed and came to baby because of that Rick Wakeman chatting to Carla green I look forward to hearing that track sounds really interesting what he's done with some other popular tunes in terms of that tour the nearest venues afraid are a little way away if you're in the south of the county you might want to make your way to King's Lynn cone exchange on Friday the 5th of October or Scunthorpe Bartz hall if you're in the north on Saturday the 13th of October. Followed. Closely cuts alone. Sleeves think Corrected stance caught on my own you might have heard us talking about this on B.B.C. Radio Lincolnshire a few weeks ago and this is about the drill hole in Lincoln which has started to offer audiences the chance to see shows for as little as they like. That's to try and encourage bigger audiences the drill hole is running a series of plays where people can pay what they feel is right at the end of the show organizers say they don't think lose money because it'll mean more people will come along. Yes there was. These performers that Lincoln still hold definitely had the appearance. And now the theater is trying a new way for the audience to show their appreciation hey will you decide. Instead of a fixed price the ticket is initially free and then people say how much they want afterwards it's an idea that these things here was like Greg and the forces out there are saying why is different things and the quote you like is or all of it really is always easily worth the money you always pay because you know you know it's going to be good anything you come here for is going to be good but what how much you pay will decide it's a bit like voting is. A Fink is quite good because that is not overpriced or ridiculously cheap so are it's all for the the it's not the 1st time the pay what you decide has been run in the U.K. The drill hole is running 6 shows with this kind of pricing so is the chief executive Chris Kirk was convinced it won't lose the money I'm confident the people will want to deny it and people will have a good time doing this there's always a risk you could lose some money but actually the gamble for us with any of this type of work is actually booking it in the 1st place because of the nature of the style of work so actually I think we don't make very much money return on anyway so I'd rather have doubled the number of people coming to see the work donating the same amount of money nothing good comes from I was the audience for the 1st show to native $400.00 pounds about 5 pounds a head but crucially this it was over half full which is bigger than normal for this kind of production so did the audience think it was worth parting with their hard earned cash I didn't know what I was going to see it wasn't even know what to expect but I did find it funny and yet enjoyable will enjoy a book and we have the idea you can pay what you can afford and what you think may be service. We thought it was straight from the fringes really. And everything looked at. Par for the course you know. What an interesting idea that is and from what we've just heard it's working at the drill hole in Lincoln This is from B.B.C. Radio. 4.9 F.M. One o 4.7 in Grantham world so. This is. From Swindon. On a final bill the Wonderland on Friday College Green was live at the gravity fields festival in ground summit one of the gas was the former astronaut Helen Sharman part of the conversation was about the menu on the Russian spacecraft and then what did you do with the residue you it wouldn't be quite Heston Blumenthal's which is what simply can't do it I think and this was a very very traditional Russian and Russian space food so we had some cabbage soup and dried cabbage soup in space and that we could add water to and we have also shared the B 2 soup that was actually quite nice such a classic Bush and the things I particularly liked we had chewed it like toothpaste see squeeze toothpaste as a toothpaste tube in the same way that you squeeze cream cheese out of the cream cheese to be in the space and they had. Made some cream cheese with bits of pineapple in it which was some source we can do but it's quite nice What else did we have tins of food actually so tins of things like meat and potatoes or fish in a kind of spicy tomato sauce I was quite nice I quite enjoyed the space food relatively speaking but to be quite honest it's fuel and that's how we you know we ate as fuel as much as the actual food for itself you mentioned roughage and digestive digestion and of course I have a question from somebody he wants to know about going to the toilet in space whether it's any different to what is life Earth or Africa on the ground or you each is different in that time the toilet itself is different but actually I mean I . Hope it's this isn't to imply credit on the right but you actually have to force things out of your body so were as much you normally might go to the loo and just relax your muscles a bit and that's all you need to do actually you have to squeeze a bit more in space but apart from that here the toilet itself was set up so that everything's collected a new leaf kind of flush but we use a flow of air to make sure that everything that comes out of our bodies is taken up in this flow of air and to start fixing off places but it also goes into the toilet and then he's collected and recycled and there's a really way of recycling still the same same tortoise they have an essential space station but they recycle the contents of the toilet the liquids are recycled into water and water that can be used for drinking or more commonly we use it for our experiments or you can then pass an electric current through the water and separate the water's constituents of hydrogen oxygen from each other so you can actually get oxygen gas that you can breeze from water you collected from your toilet so I think it's all quite you know quite absolute mazing there and there but it was a recycling what's what otherwise could be complete waste things remarkable radios knaves is fascinating I mean you mentioned meeting your colleagues who had been there for 6. Mom how how long were you on the myth base station Helen or recently there for 6608 days in space all together 2 days on the Soyuz and then 6 days on May or. Were all my all my work really all my experiments everything had to be done in those 6 days and then I came back to earth with those 2 people who'd been up there for 6 months and I left my crew that the crew that had launched with I left them behind on the space station and then they continued their mission of the next pretty much 5 months or so and then the next 2 arrived and so yeah we kind of have this this constantly alternating crew and the Russians at that time have been offering a seat to a foreign cosmonaut and I was fortunate enough to be one of those foreigners who got to go for what was only a few days but for for us it was just an amazing amazing few days Alan to be able to tell the story as well and bring that back to the U.K. I find I think if not more important than the spaceflight itself and I this is an interesting question and it may apply to you even though you were there for just a short a time but if you had any problems before you went to space when you retire and would you felt differently about them I think what it does is it said if I'm even for a short time you realize that what you've got around you in space I know I'm very fortunate had a space station it was quite comfortable when it was warm it was even easier to warm it provided me with a shelter and I had food and water and I felt safe so I had all the basic things that any living organism really needs when you know when you're back on Earth you don't see individual people. Case you see the effects of people things in long straight lines like the wakes of ships or condensation trails from aircraft but you don't see individual people and I think that's what you realize that you miss those individual people actually when you fly over parts of the earth where you know people it's the people those individuals that you think about it. Don't think about all the stuff that you've left behind it really is so unimportant really it's to people it's our friends no family that in the end of the most important and I think that's what I've been left with for my space time more than anything else was it beautiful looking at the. Inspiringly enticingly beautiful every astronaut loves looking out how long they've been in space we all love just looking out the window and it's cool just blue that we all seen photographs from space but it really is a beautiful beautiful deep deep blue these the clouds are so bright actually that the ice look at them for very long because the sun when it's reflected from them back out into space to us in the space station and the desert the colors are just amazing and of course the other way that the stars and they are also also you know that just so many come agreement talking to former astronaut Helen Sharman that was really very interesting question put by Carl if you had problems before you went out there did you feel different about them when you came back and we we had a I guess. A sigh is same kind of reaction I saw some really poor bits of china when I had the chance to get China and if you have a severe illness suddenly things that you thought more problems are no longer huge problems they're there ever they're not as big interesting question here. The same. Street. The bring. The bits. Of news news. Let the be. The BE. Wow. Wow. Radio Lincolnshire It's 22 well it's that time again you're fat yellow sugar back on our screens this week in The Apprentice and there's some local interest in the series this year in the new batch of ambitious entrepreneurs seeking to demonstrate their commercial inside a business sense and aiming to stay out of the firing line is a Lincolnshire woman who describes herself as a mom. This is kind of deja. I would class us out as a mom which is basically been a mama beautiful beast and entrepreneur that. I would like to myself Queen Bee I am beyond say because she's passed she's dying she's got children she's a mom I. Got callouses enough. That While tell you employees of colleagues or team members something really great about themselves tell them what they've done wrong and. And I said they were great it was with my 20 plus employees it was with my kids it's what with partners what I'm very positive people call me Mrs Mike spectacular someone about glass half full and I can't stand people that glass half and my children need to go to private school I need private healthcare because I'm a bad guy. That you know should also be a great this is this a humble hash tag stay home for you there's another quite check coming I want to go quick I. Welcome peaches cleaning business is based in born and should be battling 48250000 pound investment on the program of the chance to go into business with Lord Sugar the series starts on Wednesday October 3rd That's this Wednesday at 9 pm on B.B.C. One television for The Beach Boys. feet call is one of the night now in case you missed it earlier the pirate go team missed getting to their final port of call by about 5 minutes the treasure was hiding today Donnington where I make carriage met Van spike we never had his beautiful wife Mana which was the gold was about 40 we missed it by as it turned out about a good 10 minutes and it's the most beautifully in chanting is Elizabeth and is Emma van spike and she's the owner hey is this Elizabeth and well it was renovated in 6980 S in the restoration period yes but that's been something on the site for a long time is even in the Doomsday books it's incredibly pretty This is the joy of pirate gold that we come and share these extraordinarily pretty places and we standing in what looks like a music room surrounded by chairs everyone all your guests on are currently having their lunch and they're in a near the kitchen we've seen that they're eating away but what's been happening this weekend. We've had somebody up from near them in the area and pits away who's been doing. In a sense music and early music and introducing people to both the instruments and how they played authentically at that time which includes dancing so they've been dancing to. The atmosphere while they're having their luggage is very happy they're trying to move each other and this is just like a retreat yes it is so this is one of the guests that we have this weekend but last weekend we had 7 Jewish people who came up to celebrate one of their main face and they came with the Torah and they were blowing the horn and praying and doing all things so that was beautiful Next weekend we have a group of Down Syndrome people with their carers they want to be taken around the gardens shown the animals and will probably do a spot of watercolor painting maybe cos painting if they really get into it and this is your home as you told me earlier walls were chatting in the kitchen and you open it up to people to guess you sort of sharing your home does that help towards its upkeep and all that you must have just loads with talks and things to do with this my using old building Yes definitely that's a lot of fixing and patching that has to go on continually it's listed so you can't do any big changes but a lot of renovation which is lovely as we sort of get back you feel very you know proud that you've now got a another room or whatever it is to do things like cream cheese yes and I do occasions so people will come hair not many but they'll come here to celebrate a 50th wedding anniversary we had recently we've had 50th birthday parties here but the round table coming for in the evening mail so it's just occasions you know from time to time but it's the relaxation and people can sit outside all they can just enjoy the downstairs Yes it's very beautiful and there's in the kitchen. Cost on range cooker with a Cast Lead next to it is just such a beautiful beautiful place thank you so much for inviting us here today the pirate gold. Is interesting never heard of this place why if you go online you can search for White's Manor looks lovely out of the form. Of sustenance a life. That tragic for. 500 pretty. Good. Giving you 500 quid a new field a church. Goodness. The beach your time. Is not negotiable it is. Really to the brink with Scott still back tomorrow at 6 baby sea radio. Genesys father you follow me so you have heard these headlines before Office is a breaking point a degradation of standards letting the public down just some of the concerns raised this week after it was revealed Lincolnshire police could let more than 140 staff go as it looks to balance its books up to 60 frontline police officers could go as well as half of the forces P.C.'s and back stuff back office staff as well report out today says the force needs to make savings of 10000000 pounds over the next couple of years the Bishop of Lincoln the Right Reverend Christopher Larson has added his voice to the concerns about the future funding of Lincolnshire police he spoke to Sue Taylor on Chewstick Well I want to offer support to the Chief Constable and to those responsible for the policing of Lincolnshire because I think we have been placed in a very challenging position where they've got to make cuts having made cuts already a couple of years ago which would cut almost 10 percent of their of their stars and I'm concerned the impact of that not only on the officers themselves having to work longer hours but also on the pieces presence in the community. I was brought up as a child too I was told by my parents that if they're ever in trouble you can always talk to a police officer they were safe people they were visible within the community and I think we're in danger of having the police just around when there's a real emergency and not just around to make friends with and feel part integrated part of the life of our of our community there's more pressure on them we've got the pressures of terrorism and pressures of modern slavery we're asking them to do more and we're giving them fewer resources to do it with as the bishop I have responsibility not just the people who go to the churches of Lincolnshire but also for the whole community and I feel that those of us who have responsibilities as of leaders of linkages should support each other in this I have a concern about the quality of life in Lincolnshire and we need to pin a very sparsely populated county we do need our police not to be spread so thin Leigh that we never actually see them is there anything you can do to help with this well I think there's a magic wand I don't have the power to actually change the government expenditure policies but I do think the House of Lords is nice of Commons and now in recess but when we return after the party conferences just something I'd like to either ask a question about in the chamber or put a written question down to find out what exactly is going on how this is sustainable because it sounds to me as if you're setting up a situation in which the chief constable will not be able safely to do his job and protect the people of Lincolnshire with the resources that he has what do you see the way forward as now when I do think that in this area and as a NOTS of areas of life in in Lincolnshire the health service the schools there's not enough attention paid to the fact that we are so sparsely populated that we have a big geographical area with a relatively small population and that does produce a whole series of problems we are meant to be we are told we are the 5th or 6th richest nation in the world. And I am bewildered really why we can't actually resource our public services better. Do you think the public needs to worry about this I want to respond swiftly to the statement from the chief constable because he'd be very brave and transparent by doing this and I think we want to have the conversation now when mobilize the cells so that Lincolnshire is not just forgotten and I'm sure this is an issue in other parts of England as well is not forgotten by those who hold the purse strings in London. Because Lincoln show we were unique county in the fact we such a huge County and throughout the day we've been hearing about what a tricky County it is to cover as well for suppose any organization you all the same moment you trying to help or a large rubble county like that yes we've got to have trying to increase our numbers of clergy and that's a financial challenge for us and to be providing a similar level of service at a time of greater challenge for the police with fewer resources is really quite a stretch and I think it's on the Bishop of Lincoln the Right Reverend Christopher mouse and talking to Sue Taylor on Tuesday afternoon if you got a comment you can you can call us on our way 1000 double 65949 text 81 triple 3 or e-mail Dave dot Bussy at B.B.C. Don't go don't you Kate. Let's. Go. Live. Good song. Trouble maker now in the 2nd hour of coaching from B.B.C. Radio we're going to the actor and comedy writer Craig Cash Flow The former Strictly Dancing star now some even. Want to lead a nonsense from his recycling to be here that during the week you'll get another chance to approaching his from B.B.C. Radio Lincolnshire coming up to the news. In Sydney. B.B.C. Radio Lincolnshire. Live B.B.C. News at 2 o'clock.

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