Railway Walks with Julia Bradbury
Railway Walks with Julia Bradbury is a TV show on BBC4. The long-running program has been available since 2016. A total of 6 episodes have been broadcast, most recently in December 2016.
Last broadcast:06/12/2016 at 19:30
Last episode
30:00
Railway Walks with Julia Bradbury
Expired
Julia Bradbury has her backpack on again and is out exploring the great outdoors. In this series, all of Julia's walks follow the old tracks, the overgrown cuttings and the ancient viaducts of Britain's lost rail empire.
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30:00
Expired
Julia Bradbury has her backpack on again and is out exploring the great outdoors. But in this series, all of Julia's walks follow the old tracks, the overgrown cuttings and the ancient viaducts of Britain's lost rail empire.November 2016
30:00
Expired
Julia Bradbury has her backpack on to explore the great outdoors. Julia's walks follow the old tracks, overgrown cuttings and ancient viaducts of Britain's lost rail empire, visiting disused lines across England, Scotland and Wales. Through stunning landscapes and urban backstreets, each contrasting walk has a unique story...June 2016
30:00
Expired
Julia Bradbury's first walking foray into Scotland has a very distinct flavour to it - whisky! The Speyside Way is one of Scotland's great walking routes, and between the villages of Craigellachie and Ballindaloch it follows the route of the railway that once served a remote area and a world-famous drinks industry. 30:00
Expired
Tin and copper once made the area around Redruth the richest patch of land in the country. They inspired great engineering feats and pioneering tramways, the forebears of the rail empire. Julia Bradbury has her work cut out as she crosses an entire county, winding past Cornwall's crumbling engine houses and following a rai... 30:00
Expired
Julia walks along the stunning Mawddach estuary in north Wales. The area between Dolgellau and the coastal resort of Barmouth is one of the least visited parts of Snowdonia, but in the 1860s it received a great rush of holidaymakers, taking advantage of the new railway that connected the valley to the cities of England.