• Episode 37 - A Broad Church
    Jun 22 2026

    🏞️ More Than Words – Stage 37: A Broad Church 🏞️
    From Norfolk’s flatlands to its theological, agricultural, and occasionally explosive history, this stage is basically a guided tour of a county that wakes up every morning and chooses eccentricity.
    Featuring:
    🧀 The Full Fondue — the only triathlon you’ll ever need
    🌴 Sharm el‑Sheikh backroads — walking laps like a tourist trapped in a screensaver
    🍺 Little Fransham — a pub named after football teams and a font that predates most modern plumbing
    🛕 Wendling — medieval monks, WWII bombers, and turkey sheds; the Norfolk Circle of Life
    🦌 Dereham — deer in the name, miracles in the well, poets having a full emotional reboot
    ⛪ Hockering — medieval church, RAF bomb stores, and trees attempting a coup d’état
    💰 Honingham — Boudicca’s emergency savings account, still unclaimed
    🚜 Easton — agricultural Glastonbury: prize bulls, neon slushies, and tractor choreography
    🐄 Bawburgh — barefoot saint, miraculous oxen, and a church wall that said “nope”
    📜 Little Melton — medieval gossip murals and the only Norfolk school the Luftwaffe actually hit
    🌉 Cringleford — a bridge that’s carried queens, rebels, and now people furious about cul‑de‑sacs
    📚 Norwich — medieval literary influencer energy; Julian of Norwich walked so Partridge could run
    It’s travel with saints, rebels, bombers, hoards, miraculous livestock, agricultural festivals, and a bridge that’s seen more drama than most capital cities. Equal parts historic, eccentric, and quietly unhinged.

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    49 mins
  • Episode 36 - Coast of Living Crisis
    Jun 15 2026

    🐳 More Than Words – Stage 36: Coast of Living Crisis 🐳
    From whale-powered bone mills to a medieval pedlar who dreamed his way to a pot of gold, because Norfolk’s tourism strategy is apparently “flat horizons, Viking place names, and a surprising amount of whale fat.”
    Featuring:
    🌊 Sutton Bridge: three attempts at crossing the same river
    🦅 A man who shot wildfowl for sport, then had a change of heart so dramatic it needed a seatbelt
    🐳 Whale carcasses hauled upriver to become fertiliser — remote location chosen specifically so the smell was someone else’s problem
    ✈️ RAF Narborough: once Britain’s largest airfield, later a barn
    💀 King’s Lynn: Hanseatic powerhouse, medieval port, and the town that produced two men who signed a king’s death warrant
    🏺 The man who found Tutankhamun
    🍺 A village that: lost its last pub, formed a committee, and got it back — rural Norfolk draws the line at not being able to walk for a pint
    It’s travel with dyed pigeons, medieval barns, RAF ghosts, whale mills, and landscapes so flat they could double as spirit levels. Equal parts scenic, surreal, and agriculturally stern.

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    41 mins
  • Episode 35 - Only Fens
    Jun 8 2026

    🌾 More Than Words – Episode 35: Only Fens 🌾
    From Pennine reservoir punishment to Fenland flatness so extreme it questions the Earth’s curvature, Episode 35 is what happens when geography gives up halfway through.
    Featuring:
    🐕 Dexter: convinced all dogs are beatable (situationally incorrect)
    💈 Barber trips: now classified as endurance sport
    🥧 Tebay Services: farm shop or organised financial ambush
    🌧️ Keswick: outdoor shops with a town attached
    🌾 The Fens: land on loan from the sea
    🐑 Ropsley: sheep-washing infrastructure, peak innovation
    👑 Threekingham: three kings, or just one bloke called Tric
    ⚓ Matthew Flinders: mapped Australia, missed all the credit
    💣 Holbeach: dog walking, but with live bombing practice
    📏 A17: straight, bleak, and morally opposed to corners
    It’s travel with windburn, medieval admin, lost treasure, aggressive flatness, and a landscape held together by pumps and optimism.

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    41 mins
  • Episode 34 - Angels and Demons
    Jun 1 2026

    🌗 More Than Words – Episode 34: Angels and Demons 🌗
    From haunted halls to cold medieval service stations, episode 34 is what happens when English history quietly loses the plot.
    Featuring:
    🏚️ Clifton Hall: ghosts, stains, and a man who repossessed himself
    ⚰️ Wilford gazebo: scenic views, optional corpses
    🍖 Captain Deane: butcher → cannibal → Russian navy → retiree
    📬 Gamston: cc’d into a 12th-century papal email chain
    📏 Fosse Way: Roman road, still aggressively straight
    🔥 Bingham: surgeon arsonist, then 30 years in a shed
    🧙 Bottesford: witchcraft, sorcery, and England’s bleakest bake-off
    🎭 Laurel & Hardy: Christmas in a Vale pub, obviously
    🐝 Grantham: Newton, Thatcher, and a pub that can sting you
    🥶 Cold Harbour: medieval Travelodge, but worse
    It’s travel with ghosts, cannibals, witch trials, economic policy, and a final stop that legally counts as shelter. Equal parts historic, unhinged, and mildly frostbitten.

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    42 mins
  • Episode 33 - The Goat and The Bat
    May 25 2026

    🦇 More Than Words – Stage 33: The Goat and The Bat 🐐
    From antique museums that open less often than Halley’s Comet to a village that inspired Batman by pretending to be mad — welcome to the Midlands, where the history is deep, the yew trees are older than most religions, and Derby casually invented the factory and the jet engine like it was nothing.
    Featuring:
    🕰️ Beamhurst Museum: open less days than a Leap Year February
    ☔️Samuel Johnson and the world’s most intense apology
    🌲 A 1,400‑year‑old yew with added Robin Hood
    💃 Mr Darcy’s brooding corridor, and aristocrats quietly combusting over the children’s mirror ball
    👻 A ghost that acts live a livestock alarm clock
    🛠️ Derby: essentially showing off
    🦆 A canal jacuzzi for ducks
    🦇 Gotham: the original one — no skyscrapers, no Bat‑Signal, just medieval villagers gaslighting a king
    It’s travel with antique hoards, biscuit‑scented market squares, stately homes having identity crises, canals that burble ominously, and a finale in the village that accidentally birthed Gotham City. Equal parts historic, heroic, and mildly unhinged.

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    47 mins
  • Episode 32 - Staff and Nonsense
    May 18 2026

    🛶 More Than Words – Episode 32: Staff and Nonsense 🛶
    From Cheshire hamlets with population‑of‑a‑pub‑quiz energy to canals that hold 200‑year grudges, Episode 32 is where the walk leaves leafy respectability behind and dives head‑first into industrial heritage, cosmic eavesdropping, escaped Tudor bears, and Stoke‑on‑Trent’s six‑town identity crisis. It’s England at its most gloriously peculiar.
    Featuring: 


    ✈️ Manchester Airport Mile: fitness, but with the ambience of a long‑haul layover and the glamour of a short‑stay car park
    👑 King of Tonga at Yeoman Hey: the royal visit Greater Manchester didn’t expect and still can’t explain
    📡 A 25‑metre radio telescope casually parked in a field like it wandered off from Jodrell Bank
    🪵 Beating the Bounds: medieval admin that involved walking in circles and hitting things with sticks


    🚪 The Wardle Canal: Britain’s shortest canal, built purely out of spite and paperwork


    💦 A waterway breach that left narrowboats looking like confused herons


    🔥 Nantwich’s Great Fire: 150 buildings lost, four bears escaped, Tudor chaos achieved
    🏡 Shavington: where every field is either a housing estate or a planning application in waiting

    
🏭 Stoke‑on‑Trent: six towns in a trench coat


    It’s travel with cosmic telescopes, petty waterways, escaped bears, industrial swagger, and a city that built the world’s tableware and now sells the nostalgia back to you with pride.

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    42 mins
  • Episode 31 - The Long and Winding Road
    May 11 2026

    🌿 More Than Words – Episode 31: The Long And Winding Road 🌿
    From Alpine sporting delusions to quiet Cheshire villages casually hiding Vikings, ghosts, and one extremely questionable medieval wedding — Stage 31 confirms that England’s countryside has been weird for a very long time.
    Featuring:
    🎿 Skiing: the traditional British activity of falling over abroad
    🥌 Curling: sweeping ice while pretending this is normal behaviour
    🎸 Liverpool: ships, songs, and a modest global cultural footprint
    🧼 Port Sunlight: Victorian soap money accidentally inventing urban planning
    ⚔️ Brunanburh: the battle that may have created England (location still TBD)
    ✈️ Hooton: aristocrats, RAF pilots, and eventually Vauxhall Astras
    📜 Backford: chained Bibles and a three-year-old groom bribed with fruit
    ⛪ Tilstone Fearnall: rotating a church so one admiral liked the view
    👻 Duddon: headless housekeeper still haunting the customer service desk
    🐎 Calveley: medieval knight, massive horses, minimal follow-up questions
    It’s travel with Viking admin, soap-baron philanthropy, Civil War ghosts, battlefield guesswork, and several centuries of Britain quietly making very odd decisions.

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    45 mins
  • Episode 30 - Keepin' It Rhyl
    May 4 2026

    🌊 More Than Words – Episode 30: Keepin’ It Rhyl 🌊
    From Victorian seaside optimism to modern coastal existentialism, Episode 30 drifts down the North Wales coast before sidling into England like the ferry timetable absolutely meant to do that.
    Featuring:
    🐐 Llandudno goats: lockdown hedge-eating anarchists with global fame
    🚋 Great Orme Tramway: Victorian engineering that refuses to die
    🐅 Welsh Mountain Zoo: exotic animals reconsidering life choices in North Wales weather
    🏰 Gwrych Castle: built for ghosts, got Ant & Dec instead
    🌊 Towyn: when the Irish Sea popped round unannounced
    🎢 Rhyl: Britain’s seaside Time Lord
    🧱 Offa’s Dyke: history’s longest passive-aggressive garden fence
    🐿️ Formby red squirrels: Britain’s fluffiest Cold War
    It’s travel with Victorian resorts, celebrity castles, catastrophic seaside economics, and wildlife that absolutely did not consent to the North Wales microclimate.

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    40 mins