Edwardian Farm - Season 1 Episode 9 May
Season - Episode
-
1 - 1September Nov 10, 2010 -
1 - 2October Nov 17, 2010 -
1 - 3November Nov 24, 2010 -
1 - 4December Dec 01, 2010 -
1 - 5January Dec 08, 2010 -
1 - 6February Dec 15, 2010 -
1 - 7March Dec 19, 2010 -
1 - 8April Dec 24, 2010 -
1 - 9May Dec 31, 2010 -
1 - 10June Jan 06, 2011 -
1 - 11July Jan 12, 2011 -
1 - 12August Jan 19, 2011
Overview
It's May and, with Empire Day approaching, a very special boat comes to the valley. The paddle steamer Monarch is arriving: one of only three in the country that are still operational. It's the first time such a vessel has arrived at Morwellham Quay in 80 years. Back in the Edwardian period, thousands of tourists began coming to the Tamar Valley by paddle steamer every summer. The combination of reduced working hours and greater mobility encouraged a new form of tourism - day-tripping. Workers from towns and cities like Plymouth flocked to rural spots like Morwhellham Quay for festivities. Local farmers cashed in on the visitors, selling them cream teas, fresh fruit, postcards and anything else they could think of, and also used the steamers to send their produce to market. So historian Ruth Goodman and archaeologists Alex Langlands and Peter Ginn pull out all the stops to put on a party for the tourists: they've got to milk a cow who has never been milked before, take lessons in traditional clotted cream making from the instructors at a 'travelling dairy school' and learn to make a special Devon accompaniment to cream teas - the highly popular 'cut round', ie a Devonshire version of a scone. On top of that, they must harvest their strawberries to get them to market on the paddle steamer. They must also come up with more things to sell: drawings of the Tamar Valley, bouquets of flowers and ice cream - not easy to make when you don't have a freezer.

