now on bbc news, the travel show: city kids on the high seas. ready to tack in three, two, one. it makes you just feel so powerful and strong. but it also makes you feel free. it has real, tangible benefits for the students that do it. it was pretty rough conditions, like 20 knots, wind against tide. let s keep behind, let s keep behind. the weather was crazy. right? and is the ambulance on the way, is it? the coastguard apparently lost contact with it. so when my parents first found out i was sailing, they were like, what s sailing? you re just on a boat. but once i qualified and now i m a sailing instructor, they realise that i m actually getting somewhere. it s not what they expected. the main reason why i do this whole programme is that it has real, tangible benefits for the students that do it. i ll probably use the helm one. sometimes it s hard for me to articulate myself. and when you re a boat with different people, you have to kind of communicate. if not, it can g
to mark your comeback after eight months out for this man! ivan toney scores in his first match back for brentford after serving a ban for breaching gambling regulations. it s sunday january 21. our main story: investigations are continuing into the deaths of four members of the same family at a house in norfolk. detectives have confirmed they re not looking for anyone else in connection with the incident. norfolk police has referred itself to the independent watchdog, saying it did not respond to a 999 call from the property. greg mckenzie reports. 45 year old mr koschinski seen in this photo was found dead at the property near norwich on friday morning. the two young girls who died at the same house are believed to be his daughters. police say a fourth person, a woman aged 36, who also died, had been visiting, but did not live there. police have revealed at 6am on friday morning, a man called 999 from the property, but officers were not deployed. an hour later, a member of
so when my parents first found out i was sailing, they were like, what s sailing? you re just on a boat. but once i qualified and now i m a sailing instructor, they realise that i m actually getting somewhere. it s not what they expected. the main reason why i do this whole programme is that it has real, tangible benefits for the students that do it. i ll probably use the helm one. sometimes it s hard for me to articulate myself. and when you re a boat with different people, you have to kind of communicate. if not, it can go wrong. so it kind of helped me grow my communication skills. are you nervous? yes. don t be. screams and laughter what the hell? the students who originally started the programme, they became a lot more into racing, in particular. we went on ebay. we bought initially a 22 foot boat from a back garden of a farm in birmingham. we did that, did it up, realised it wasn t very good so then looked again, and this time, we found a really classic racing yacht.
city kids on the high seas. ready to tack in three, two, one. it makes you just feel so powerful and strong. but it also makes you feel free. it has real, tangible benefits for the students that do it. it was pretty rough conditions, like 20 knots, wind against tide. let s keep behind, let s keep behind. the weather was crazy. right? and is the ambulance on the way, is it? the coastguard apparently lost contact with it. so when my parents first found out i was sailing, they were like, what s sailing? you re just on a boat. but once i qualified and now i m a sailing instructor, they realise that i m actually getting somewhere. it s not what they expected. the main reason why i do this whole programme is that it has real, tangible benefits for the students that do it. i ll probably use the helm one. sometimes it s hard for me to articulate myself. and when you re a boat with different people, you have to kind of communicate. if not, it can go wrong. so it kind of helped me g
Theres a community that know that environment. Better than anybody else, i you know, listen to them. I used to go out to sea with me grandad. I think the first time i ever went out trawling i was only seven. I used to sit on his chart table in the wheelhouse, drink his irn bru we didnt believe it at first off whitby. Within weeks, it had crept along the coast and it was happening to us. And it was like, my god, whats happening here . It was frightening. Yeah oh its all come out. Something is not quite right. We used to see a lot younger crab to throw back for the following years fishery, but we arent seeing thatjust now. Theres enough catch for today, but you are always thinking ahead to the future, you always want to see plenty of stock, small stock, it is getting fed, you throw it back, you know you will catch it when it is right. But it isnt there, it isnt there to throw back. Its taken about two thirds of our crab catches away over the last 8 9 months. It is a big hit, especially i