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Harry Wild Renewed for Season 5 at Acorn TV
Harry Wild Renewed for Season 5 at Acorn TV

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Harry Wild Renewed for Season 5 at Acorn TV

Acorn TV continues to be wild about Harry, and has renewed the Jane Seymour-led mystery series for a fifth season — ahead of this Monday's Season 4 finale. The Harry Wild renewed was announced this evening at the 2025 ATX Television Festival in Austinm Texas, during a conversation with series star and executive producer Seymour, who plays the titular amateur detective. More from TVLine The Chi Renewed for Season 8 Hacks Renewed for Season 5 at Max Yellowjackets Renewed for Season 4 'I am honored to have the opportunity to continue to bring Harry Wild to life for another season and am excited for her to solve a new batch of layered mysteries deeply rooted in literature with my castmates,' Seymour said in a statement. 'It has been so rewarding to work with everyone on this production and I'm thrilled to embark on another season with my Acorn TV family.' In Season 5 of Harry Wild, Harry is 'back with her most sensational and thrilling ride yet, including murder mysteries in the world of whiskey-making, theatre and musical-tattoos,' the official synopsis reads, 'not to mention a gang of middle-aged lady burglars and a murder close to home.' The Season 4 finale streams this Monday, June 2, and a special will air in December. Harry Wild is created and written by David Logan, along with writer Jo Spain, and executive-produced by Logan, Spain, Seymour, Daniel March, Klaus Zimmermann, James Gibb, David McLoughlin, Catherine Mackin, Bea Tammer, Frank Seyberth and Claus Wunn. Want scoop on , or for any other TV show? Shoot an email to InsideLine@ and your question may be answered via Matt's Inside Line! Best of TVLine 'Missing' Shows, Found! Get the Latest on Ahsoka, Monarch, P-Valley, Sugar, Anansi Boys and 25+ Others Yellowjackets Mysteries: An Up-to-Date List of the Series' Biggest Questions (and Answers?) The Emmys' Most Memorable Moments: Laughter, Tears, Historical Wins, 'The Big One' and More

Ancient woodland to be restored for public use
Ancient woodland to be restored for public use

Yahoo

time27-02-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Ancient woodland to be restored for public use

A charity has begun restoring an ancient woodland after purchasing it for an undisclosed sum. The Woodland Trust has said it wanted to "create a thriving habitat" for wildlife and native British plant species to grow at Harrison Woodlands in Lincolnshire. The 483-acre (195ha) forest, near Louth, was recorded in the Domesday Book and home to a variety of wildlife. But invasive species such as rhododendron, as well as trees severely affected by ash dieback, needed to be removed. A spokesperson for the charity said the restoration project was the "second largest we have ever undertaken in England". The Woodland Trust said it had raised enough money to purchase the forest following an appeal last year but it still needed millions more to enable them to manage the site for the next 20 years. David Logan, who is the site manager at the charity, said the woodland was home to a number of rare species, including the white admiral butterfly, and one of only four known pairs of nesting ravens in Lincolnshire. By eradicating invasive species, the charity believes the restoration will encourage other tree species like native oak trees and birds such as treecreeper and great spotted woodpecker to return to the wood, Mr Logan has said. He said among the priorities would be to remove many of the conifer species, which were planted during the 1950s and 60s during a big drive for timber. "Landowners were approached by the government to take out old native trees and replace them with fast growing conifers. "Reducing the conifers onsite and the non-native trees will hopefully allow our native trees to naturally regenerate." Mr Logan said most of the work would take place over the autumn and winter following surveys during the summer. The woodland is currently closed to the public but the charity said it hoped to reopen by spring 2026. Listen to highlights from Lincolnshire on BBC Sounds, watch the latest episode of Look North or tell us about a story you think we should be covering here. Appeal to raise £3m to buy ancient woodland Ambitious woodland plans to fight climate change Planting 200,000 trees to create 'inspiring legacy' Woodland Trust

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