Week in wildlife: harvest mice, a basking hippo and a hungry egret
The best of this week’s wildlife photographs from around the world
Continue reading...The best of this week’s wildlife photographs from around the world
Continue reading...Jurors consider a real-life manslaughter case, restaged by actors. Plus: Miriam Margolyes concludes her New Zealand tour. Here’s what to watch this evening
10pm, Channel 4
Continue reading...Past-their-peak peaches and early blackberries bring late-summer vibes to this rich pastry bake
By late summer, peaches are often past their peak for eating raw, being perhaps a little floury or shy on juice. That fading sweetness pairs beautifully with the first flush of wild blackberries, however, and this galette makes the most of that overlap: slices of peach and a handful of blackberries sit on a gently sweetened ricotta base that’s flavoured with brown sugar, orange zest and a few sprigs of thyme. The ricotta bakes into something soft and creamy that catches those juices as the fruits slump.
Continue reading...Channel that back-to-school energy via chunky footwear and crisp rugby shirts
Continue reading...Exhibition explores Bank’s former grandeur and its rebuilding under Sir Herbert Baker that began 100 years ago
A century ago the wrecking ball demolished the halls, courtyards, arches and domes of one of London’s best-loved buildings in what the architectural historian Nikolaus Pevsner would decry as “the greatest architectural crime” to befall the capital in the 20th century.
The Old Lady of Threadneedle Street (as the Bank of England was nicknamed after a satirical 1797 cartoon of William Pitt the Younger, prime minister from 1783 to 1801, wooing an old lady dressed in pound notes) has been the heart of the City since 1734.
Continue reading...Campaigners call for Paris-style parking charges amid fears big vehicles are taking up excessive public space
The number of giant cars in England’s cities has increased tenfold in recent years, according to researchers, who warn the vehicles are taking up excessive public space and posing a threat to public safety.
Analysis published by Clean Cities has found SUVs have gone from 3% to 30% of existing cars in the past two decades. In London, the number of SUVs has increased from about 80,000 in 2002 to about 800,000 in 2023.
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