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Through the years, the BBC has produced 4 excellent documentary series on period farming.
These are all currently available on You Tube.
Below is a current listing of links to each of these.

"Tales From The Green Valley" 12 Episodes, 30 minutes each.
This was set in 1620 Wales. Things were pretty primitive in this era.
For discussions of this documentary, go to: https://permies.com/forums/posts/list/14066#125529













Next comes Victorian Farm" 6 Episodes, 59 minutes each.
This was set in the Victorian Era (1850-1900). 'Modern' conveniences made life a little easier.
For discussions on this documentary, go to: https://permies.com/forums/posts/list/26432#207970

EDIT by judith to add videos. EDIT by Nicole to fix videos
Apparently the long versions aren't on youtube anymore...here are shorter parts of each of the episodes. Maybe the full length ones will be back soon.







Victorian Farm Christmas





The 3rd series "Edwardian Farm" 12 Episodes, 59 minutes each.
The industrial revolution has moved onto the farm at this point in history.
For discussions on this documentary, go to: https://permies.com/forums/posts/list/26433#207972













The final listing is for "Wartime Farm" 8 Episodes, 59 minutes each.
As World War II hit England, she relied on imports for 2/3 of her food. U-Boat blockades were starving her.
Time for drastic changes in agricultural practices.
For discussions on this documentary, go to: https://permies.com/forums/posts/list/26434#207974

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CUsU5s0ofYo











Tudor Monastery Farm

I can't find episode 1 on youtube right now :(






Links to the Tudor Feast broken into 4, 15-minuite videos:
https://youtu.be/azCGi_a4b-k?list=PL72jhKwankOjhQylqI7dETpKpcSV0JcB_
https://youtu.be/4SqPulHN4Jk?list=PL72jhKwankOjhQylqI7dETpKpcSV0JcB_
https://youtu.be/OVcv9bCRh9g?list=PL72jhKwankOjhQylqI7dETpKpcSV0JcB_
https://youtu.be/OVcv9bCRh9g?list=PL72jhKwankOjhQylqI7dETpKpcSV0JcB_
COMMENTS:
 
Posts: 9002
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I've seen some of these. They document the arrival of new machines that cut down on labor as well as the introduction of new spices as the empire expanded and the advent of sugar being more than a rich person's novelty. Food preservation evolved quite a bit during the periods covered. The people in the series aren't just actors. They are immersed in the lifestyle and technology of the era for the duration. Luckily, they don't suffer through war or a cholera outbreak.
 
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John, these docs are going to keep my little mind occupied for time, I just love seeing how the 'oldie folkie lived. Tribes, and culture are just one of my thangs. My brother will also like these too. Thankyou for your time and effort.

fiona, long time medieval prarie- fairy

WARNING TO ALL FORUMERS:

you may not hear from me for a wee while
 
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That's a good outline but the BBC keeps doing these historical documentary style TV series. I've tried to outline them on the wiki page linked below.

http://tspwiki.com/index.php?title=BBC%27s_historical_gardening_TV_series
 
gardener
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I have watched three of the four listed and loved the wealth of information spread among them. They included a lot of details, sometimes in passing, that would have taken hours or days of researching in very old books to locate. I felt compelled to take notes while watching them just so I wouldn't forget all of the lovely data. I also enjoyed a lot of the <whatever> House shows done by the PBS and BBC sets. Edwardian House, Frontier House, Colonial House, 1900 House, etc. While these latter were less useful for being true documentary in nature, they give a lot of insights how average people are prone to acting when put into less modern situations. I think they also went a long way to showing just how subtle aspects of various times affected how history might have played out. Colonial House and Texas Ranch House especially showed just how the nature of how things were done affected the way people must have thought and acted. Still, if one had to choose, I would say go with the Historical Farming set if you want to get the most learning about details of the time periods.
 
Jon McBrayer
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Good find D. Logan! Made notes to add these to my article.
 
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bump....if anyone notices when the 'Victorian' or 'Edwardian' farm episodes are back on youtube full length please post here and we can re embed them.
 
gardener
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My husband and I just finished the Green Valley series - very well done and lots of good tidbits.  The roofing episodes were particularly interesting.  Thatching is one of those things that just doesn't seem like it should work, and yet obviously does!  

I also found it notable that they had a separate space for working with dairy.  The lady I learned cheesemaking from said that old time cheesemakers baked bread and made cheese in different areas - or else the bread contaminates it.  And yeasty cheese does taste grody.  They didn't explain this in the video, but they had a very nice, limewashed dairy room for dairy products, and baked bread in the house.
 
steward
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I just wanted to say, if you ever find any of the links on this page to not work, please click the "report " button, so that we can get the link fixed with an active link. Thanks!
 
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Hello,

Just wanted to voice my appreciation for this post- what an invaluable WEALTH of pricelees info,
all this is, and nobody can really put down the lowdown quite like BBC (ok, and ken burns)

you're doing great great excellent work there-  i shall pilfer this post, and present it to my online farming students,
in my teaching platforms. any of you are welcome always to pilfer any of my courses-
as if i have anything to add to your Everest of info.....

cheers really big!
im
 
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I absolutely adore Ruth, Peter, Tom, and Alex and have watched all of these.  I cannot overstate how excellent they are.  In addition to the farming documentaries they also helped build a castle in France (Search: Secrets of the Castle), ran a Victorian style pharmacy (Search: Victorian Pharmacy), taught us all about the early era of locomotion (Search: Full Steam Ahead), and did Christmas Specials for most of the Farm Seasons including a stand alone documentary for Christmas on a Tudor Estate (Search: A Tudor Feast).  Thanks to this post I also saw that there is one on the Edwardian Larder, which I am definitely watching tonight!
 
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There is also "The Edwardian Farm"  
 

I binged watched all of these plus the House series and the extras others mentioned above. Hunkered down 2 winters 3-4 years ago and couldn't get enough. Still hungry for more.
 
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I wish I could buy these in a streaming format - I love them and the YouTube version come and go.
 
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These (and some others featuring the same gang of Peter, Ruth and others), are terrific. We watched all of them a couple of years ago, and my only regret now is that I can't find any more similar shows!
 
Nicole Alderman
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Question, are all the videos showing up as embedded for people? The Edwardian Farm videos and the ones after it are just showing as code to me, but I don't know if that's my slow computer. When I copy the urls, the links work. So, I don't know what's going on here....

EDIT: I think I got it fixed. There was an extra space that messed up the code. I had to go and find new Tudor Farm videos. Sadly, there was no episode 1 to be found
 
Colin McGee
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I got an email this morning saying that a new post was here, by someone called McGregor Poirier. It seems to be missing, or perhaps was deleted?
 
Jerry Ward
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BTW several of them are now available on Amazon, most of them free to Prime members.
 
Nicole Alderman
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Colin McGee wrote:I got an email this morning saying that a new post was here, by someone called McGregor Poirier. It seems to be missing, or perhaps was deleted?



It was spam saying, "A non-title lightweight trilogy bout between Dustin Poirier and Conor McGregor is set to headline" with a suspicious link. Pretty sure boxing isn't related to historical farming
 
Colin McGee
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Thank you - I thought my wifi was falling over...

And no, not much boxing in historical farming - unless you're farming kangaroos?
 
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https://docs.google.com/document/d/1-yl_RlMomBZpZeSQifSx_zPYwC5CbxikTdhYENILwCM/edit?usp=drivesdk

They are historical shows but not all gardening.

I love studying history
 
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I love those BBC-series. I think I saw all of them. Ruth is great!

And then I saw some more. Those were like a challenge. Without having the knowledge, some 'well-known' (at least in the UK) people had to act as if they lived in the past (everything was as if it was really a different time!). This was just fun to watch, how they didn't manage to do the things ordinary people from the past had to deal with in their daily lives. It's called '24 hours in the past'.
 
Morana Revel
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https://docs.google.com/document/d/1-yl_RlMomBZpZeSQifSx_zPYwC5CbxikTdhYENILwCM/edit?usp=drivesdk

They are historical shows but not all gardening.

I love studying history
 
Jerry Ward
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Victorian, Edwardian & Tudor Monastery Farm are all available as part of Amazon Prime in the US
 
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3 months ago Tudor Farming episodes came online: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z0K20ip386w on the "All out of History" channel.
 
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[quote] [/quote] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OSxMUY_E07w&embeds_referring_euri=https%3A%2F%2Fduckduckgo.com%2F

Victorian kitchen garden 1987
I sent a postmentioning the book and a fellow bbc watcher very kindly posted the link in March this year
My system is maddeningly slow today. I hope that the link is correctly copied.

We are in the high 30s C, yet again.
Hot tea for me, in the shade.

Cool blessings to us all
M-H
 
Inge Leonora-den Ouden
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[quote=marie-helene kutek][quote] [/quote] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OSxMUY_E07w&embeds_referring_euri=https%3A%2F%2Fduckduckgo.com%2F

Victorian kitchen garden 1987
I sent a postmentioning the book and a fellow bbc watcher very kindly posted the link in March this year
My system is maddeningly slow today. I hope that the link is correctly copied.

We are in the high 30s C, yet again.
Hot tea for me, in the shade.

Cool blessings to us all
M-H[/quote]
Hi. I watched this some time ago. It was interesting. But it's strange it's called 'Victorian kitchen garden' while it is in fact a kitchen garden during the second world war. Yes the original garden was from the Victorian era, but not as a kitchen garden.
 
Jerry Ward
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These historical farming documentaries are some of the best I've ever seen.  I wish they would do some more, but I'm not sure there is another period to cover in England.
 
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