mercredi 29 avril 2026

Trump: King agrees Iran cannot have nuclear weapon

Starmer offers to bring Rayner back into Cabinet | Seven signs of ageing you can reverse
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Wednesday, 29 April 2026

Issue No. 430

Good morning.

The King’s trip to the US has so far been a great success. His speech to Congress yesterday prompted standing ovations, and jokes at the state dinner in the White House were well received. One moment will have made the British Government bristle, though: Donald Trump’s claim that the King supports denying Iran a nuclear weapon.

Back in Britain, Sir Keir Starmer has avoided an inquiry into whether he misled Parliament over the Lord Mandelson scandal. Tony Diver and Daniel Martin reveal that the Prime Minister hopes to revive his beleaguered premiership by extending an olive branch to Angela Rayner.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. We’re giving email readers the chance to claim four months of The Telegraph for just £1. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

‘My afternoon chasing shoplifters with undercover police’

Seven signs of ageing you can reverse, according to a longevity doctor

Plus, why owning a 4x4 is now a necessity in the Cotswolds

Email exclusive: Four months for 25p per month

Enjoy all of our award-winning coverage, from politics to international affairs.

 

Trump: King agrees Iran cannot have nuclear weapon

Donald Trump and the King both spoke at a state dinner in the White House

Hannah Furness

Hannah Furness

Royal Editor, in Washington

 

It was all going so smoothly.

Donald Trump and the King had swapped compliments, patted backs and had such an apparently mutual love-in that pundits had started calling it a “bromance” – but did the US president fall at the final hurdle?

At the state dinner in the White House last night, where Trump and the first lady rolled out the red carpet for His Majesty and the Queen, the US president gave a warm speech in praise of his guests.

Donald Trump, Melania Trump and the King and Queen arrive for the state dinner at the White House

Then he said the King supported him on Iran: “Charles agrees with me... We’re never going to let that opponent have a nuclear weapon.”

There was a sharp intake of breath from the British journalists in the room. His Majesty cannot be seen to support a political position, particularly when it puts him at odds with his own Government.

The Palace chose not to react.

The King, a little croaky from a long day in which he delivered an address to Congress, continued with his own speech as if nothing had happened. He made a few jokes – including some, unusually, at Trump’s and America’s expense.

The King is warmly applauded during his speech

Mentioning that the US president had recently said that “if it were not for the United States, European countries would be speaking German”, His Majesty added: “Dare I say that, if it wasn’t for us, you’d be speaking French...!” (“Very funny,” one of the American dinner guests was heard to say.)

The day in Washington ended with the royal couple and the Trumps still on the best of terms. The Palace will be relieved, to say the least, that there were no further crises.
Read the full story and Hannah’s analysis, exclusively available to subscribers here

Plus, sign up to the Your Royal Appointment newsletter for daily updates during the state visit

 

Starmer offers to bring Rayner back into Cabinet

Angela Rayner backed Sir Keir Starmer in a key vote yesterday after it had been suggested she would defy him

Tony Diver

Tony Diver

Political Editor

 
Daniel Martin

Daniel Martin

Deputy Political Editor

 

Sir Keir Starmer has privately offered Angela Rayner a return to the Cabinet in an attempt to head off a leadership coup, The Telegraph can reveal.

The Prime Minister extended the olive branch to his former deputy earlier this month, amid speculation that he was considering a reshuffle after the local elections.

Starmer heaved a sigh of relief last night after he dodged a Commons inquiry into his role in the Mandelson affair.

Only 15 Labour MPs voted with the Tories for an investigation by the privileges committee into whether he misled the House of Commons when he claimed the appointment of Lord Mandelson had followed “due process”.

Most of those who voted for an inquiry were serial Left-wing rebels including John McDonnell, who was shadow chancellor under Jeremy Corbyn.

He was joined by Rebecca Long Bailey, the former leadership contender, and other hard-Left figures including Richard Burgon, Nadia Whittome and Andy McDonald. One of the rebels, Emma Lewell, was considered a relatively reliable backbencher.

However, the majority of Labour MPs remained loyal and the party’s dominance in the Commons meant the Conservative motion for an inquiry was rejected by 335 to 223 – a majority of 112.

The Prime Minister will be glad to see that the rebellion was so minor and largely limited to the usual suspects.

That does not mean Starmer’s troubles are over.

After MPs return from recess next month, another batch of Mandelson files is due to be published, which could cause further headaches for No 10.

Labour sources believe that Starmer could face a leadership challenge within weeks, after a torrid fortnight with MPs openly discussing potential pacts between Rayner, Andy Burnham, Wes Streeting and Ed Miliband.

Appointing his former deputy to the Cabinet would be seen as an attempt to shore up Starmer’s premiership. With a drubbing in the local elections expected next week, it might be the Prime Minister’s only route for survival.
Read the full story here

Starmer avoids ethics inquiry after ordering MPs to back him

 

Opinion

Allison Pearson Headshot

Allison Pearson

Prime minister Angela Rayner would be a new low for Britain

If Labour turns to the gobby trade unionist following an annihilation at the polls next week, this country is finished

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Jeremy Warner</span> Headshot

Jeremy Warner

Miliband plumbs new depths in condemning BP

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Tom Tugendhat</span> Headshot

Tom Tugendhat

The brutal facts about Britain’s Armed Forces are now too alarming to ignore

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Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Your Essential Reads

Sussex Police are trying to tackle the ‘tsunami of business crime’

‘My afternoon chasing shoplifters with undercover police’

Charles Hymas, our Home Affairs Editor, joined a Sussex police operation to catch and deter shoplifters. One suspected thief was seen acting suspiciously, and plain clothes and uniformed officers were able to confront him when he lit a joint behind a store. The cannabis gave police the reason they needed to stop and search him. They found two wraps of cocaine, a pair of Nike black trainers with their security tag still on, and a balaclava, screwdrivers and a monkey wrench – all the tools you might use for a burglary. The force says its strategy has doubled detection rates.

For subscribers only

 

The 334-day eviction battle facing Britain’s landlords

Timeline for rent arrears eviction from May 1

Within days, Section 21 – currently the fastest way to evict tenants – will be banned under Labour’s Renters’ Rights Act. This will force landlords to go through the courts, where waiting times stand at a 20-year high. We take a look at how severe court backlogs and tighter red tape could leave landlords locked out of their homes for months.
Continue reading

For practical advice and tools to help you navigate these new rules, sign up to our new five-part newsletter Buy-to-let Masterclass

Plus, Why a rent freeze risks harming renters

 

The UAE may have fatally wounded the Opec oil cartel

The United Arab Emirates’ dramatic Opec exit is more than an oil story, writes Hans van Leeuwen. By breaking from the cartel, Abu Dhabi has not only accelerated Opec’s slide towards irrelevance but also rebelled against Saudi dominance. Far from uniting against Iran, the Gulf is fracturing further. As war reshapes the region, this rupture could redraw Middle Eastern power politics – and the global energy order – for years to come.

Continue reading

 

Dr Florence Comite explains how you can change your health trajectory

Seven signs of ageing you can reverse, according to a longevity doctor

We often think of ageing as wrinkles, thinning hair and an expanding waistline, writes Dr Florence Comite. However, the real story lies beneath the surface. For example, the fat around your middle may signal insulin resistance which can lead to heart disease and dementia. The good news? Some simple changes can turn things around: eat protein-rich meals, do a couple of strength workouts every week and get enough sleep. Here are the most common patterns of ageing I see in my patients, and how to reverse them.

Continue reading

 

Georgina Fuller now avoids certain routes near her home because of the dire state of the roads

Potholes make owning a 4x4 a necessity in the Cotswolds

“Lady Land Rover” drivers attract their fair share of criticism, writes Georgina Fuller. However, where I live, on the border of Oxfordshire and Warwickshire, the dismal state of the roads makes an SUV essential. In fact, the problem has become so acute, residents have renamed the region “the Potswolds”. Doing the school run in my husband’s little Mazda is no longer an option.

Continue reading

 
Nick Harding and his wife, Stephanie Davies

Nick Harding is coming to terms with his wife’s trendiness

‘The PVC trousers that told me my wife was having a midlife crisis’

When Nick Harding’s wife, Stephanie, came downstairs squeaking like a “balloon sculptor” in PVC trousers, he assumed she was having a midlife crisis. However, her revamped wardrobe – complete with new ear piercings – isn’t a crisis. It’s a rebellion against the invisibility of menopause. Nick and Stephanie give their takes.

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Seize the day

Is your red meat intake harming your heart health? Use our tool to find out

Red meat is brilliant for your muscles, brain and bones because it’s packed with protein, iron and zinc. However, eat too much and your risk of bowel cancer and high cholesterol shoots up. We’ve created a tool to check if your intake is optimal and shared the healthiest types of red meat to tuck into.

Continue reading

Below is another article I hope you’ll find helpful this morning:

 

Trend translator

The Bible hath risen

It’s hard to keep track of what’s in and what’s out when it comes to Gen Z. In today’s edition, LA Robinson, our youthful Lifestyle Writer, investigates the younger generation’s renewed interest in faith.

LA Robinson

LA Robinson

Lifestyle Writer

 

Whoever is doing the PR for the Bible deserves a raise. Sales are up in Britain – 134 per cent since 2019, according to a survey released earlier this year by the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge.

It attributed the surge to people “searching for meaning and stability in a changing world” while singling out a key demographic: young readers. The report points out: “This often takes the form of renewed curiosity, reflection, and openness to spirituality, even if not expressed through traditional church attendance.”

It’s true: if you open Instagram right now, there are 29 million posts under #bible. On TikTok, @BibleBFF does readings of the Scripture “like it’s tea” (translation: like it’s gossip. To be fair, immaculate conception is fairly brow-raising). Earlier this month, The Washington Post released a buzzed-about article titled “Why Catholicism is drawing in Gen Z men,” zeroing in on a church in New York where attractive twentysomethings are lining up out the door, there to explore their spirituality but also to find romantic partners. Anything to keep boys out of the Manosphere, if you ask me.

Russell Brand may not be the ideal poster boy, and likely spends more time in the confessional booth than in the pews, but he did give the Good Book some strong air time last week when he went viral for flipping through his copy for a whole 90 seconds live on Piers Morgan’s show, painfully trying and failing to find the correct verse. Forgive me for being unchristian, but the schadenfreude was to be savoured.

Russell Brand appeared on Piers Morgan’s show to promote his new book How to Become a Christian in 7 Days

So, who exactly is behind the Bible’s public image shift from dusty book in the back of the pews to the hottest title on everyone’s Good Reads list? Was it the Hot Priest in Fleabag? Madonna’s Like A Prayer revival at Coachella? Perhaps we should look to Zuckerberg and the tech titans, who helped engineer a social norm where we’re all hyper-connected yet have never felt more alone. Young people, resilient as they tend to be, are fighting back by finding faith.

Somewhere up in heaven, God is nodding at his balance sheet approvingly, pleased to see the Bible risen again.

Have you met any newly faithful young people? Or, are you one yourself? Let me know your thoughts here.

 

Your say

Tipping tips

Every weekday, Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, shares an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories.

Orlando writes...
There’s been much talk lately about American imports to Britain, from the politics to (potentially) those gigantic chickens. None, surely, induces as much anxiety in this awkward, gaffe-fearing land as the tipping culture.

So, thank you, Gordon Ramsay, for abetting its advance. The chef, already noted for his distinctly un-British attitude to the concept of subtlety, has introduced a 20 per cent service charge at his Lucky Cat restaurant in Bishopsgate.

Celia Walden, who has been navigating the US tipping minefield for two decades, was unimpressed with this development – as were Telegraph readers.


 

Brian Hoffmann wrote: “Just don’t go to such restaurants. In America, tipping is essentially mandatory as the staff are so badly paid. Does Ramsay not pay his staff a decent wage?”


 

Jon Lewis added: “I always thought that a tip was a personal expression of thanks for great service. If there is a low (say 10 per cent) discretionary service charge added to a bill, that still leaves a bit of room to ‘top it up’. If its already 20 per cent, which I’d regard as the height of generosity, there’s nowhere to go... except down.”


 

Another reader argued: “If the service isn’t up to much, don’t tip at all. I would say that a tip of 10 per cent, rounded to the nearest pound, is fine, given the effect of inflation on the cost of going out to eat.”


 

Adam Johnson took a different position: “Having lived in America for many years, I am happy to leave a 15 per cent tip, though not 20 per cent. The problem in Britain is that the food is very expensive in the first place, as are drinks at the bar – and the measures, especially for cocktails, are woefully small.”


 

Andrew Slater, meanwhile, noted that “tips are not expected at all in Australia – and it is a much better experience.”

What’s your take on tipping? Send your responses here and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of this newsletter.

Please confirm in your reply that you are happy to be featured and that we have your permission to use your name.

 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including The 1% Club, Cogs, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was ILLOGICAL. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Thank you for reading. Have a fulfilling day and I hope to see you tomorrow.

Chris Evans, Editor

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mardi 28 avril 2026

On the water in the Strait of Hormuz

King: Britain and US must come together | The retirees stuck between spending now and saving for later
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Britain’s most popular daily newsletter, read by more than 850,000

Tuesday, 28 April 2026

Issue No. 429

Good morning.

The closure of the Strait of Hormuz has triggered an economic crisis, but what is it actually like on the water? Adrian Blomfield, our Senior Foreign Correspondent, reports from a small boat in the strait to see how Iran is controlling the blockade.

In Washington, Hannah Furness, our Royal Editor, witnessed the warm reception given to the King and Queen by the Trumps as they landed for the state visit. Against the backdrop of souring relations between No 10 and the White House, today the King will deliver a clear message: Britain and the US must come together.

At home, Sir Keir Starmer has pleaded with Labour MPs to back him in a Commons vote taking place this afternoon on the Mandelson vetting scandal as he scrambles to save his premiership.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. We’re giving email readers the chance to claim 4 months of The Telegraph for just £1. If you’re already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

Sign up to Cables, our international affairs newsletter

The retirees stuck between spending now and saving for later

Plus, what your sleeping habits reveal about your health

Email exclusive: 4 months for 25p per month

Enjoy all of our award-winning coverage, from politics to international affairs.

 

‘Here in the Strait of Hormuz, Iran’s mosquito fleet is winning the blockade’

Speedboats skim across the water betweeen Iran and the Arabian shore

Adrian Blomfield

Adrian Blomfield

Senior Foreign Correspondent, in the Strait of Hormuz

 

Everyone these days is an expert on the Strait of Hormuz. However, it took me a day in a small boat on its narrowest stretch to grasp why reopening this vital waterway is such a challenge.

I expected emptiness, and to the north, in the Persian Gulf proper, there were indeed large cargo ships lying at anchor, where they have been stranded for weeks.

However, I soon learned that just because vessels cannot pass through the strait, it does not mean they are not moving across it – and therein lies the rub.

Due to its topography, the strait is often shrouded in haze, so we heard them before we saw them. A distant buzz of engines, then an armada of speedboats – dozens at first, then hundreds – skimming across the water between Iran and the Arabian shore. For a moment, it brought to mind the flotilla of Dunkirk.

The boats, known as Iran’s “mosquito fleet”, are mostly part of an informal fuel trade that sustains poorer coastal communities, but the traffic also provides perfect cover. Iranian boats can blend into the swarm and seed the strait with mines – the invisible weapon that has brought global shipping to a standstill.

Adrian Blomfield in the Strait of Hormuz

This dispatch is available to subscribers only.
Continue reading

 

King: Britain and US must come together

Donald Trump joins the King and Queen, alongside the first lady, in Washington

Hannah Furness

Hannah Furness

Royal Editor

 

The King will call on the United States and Britain to “come together” even when they do not agree, in a speech to Congress today.

His Majesty, who is in Washington for a four-day state visit to the US, is expected to say that the long tradition of transatlantic friendship benefits not just the two countries, but the world.

The spirit of friendship between the two countries is one of “reconciliation and renewal”, he will say, in carefully chosen words that come at a challenging time for US-UK relations.

The address, which will last about 20 minutes, will include references to Ukraine, the Middle East, Nato and the Aukus defence pact.

It is the more political of the two speeches that His Majesty will deliver in the US, written to reflect the priorities of the Government in the King’s own language, and is ostensibly about the 250th anniversary of America’s independence from Britain.

The King and Queen were welcomed upon their arrival yesterday by Donald Trump, who put on a show that was not quite all-American, but had a distinctly British flavour.

Over tea (a choice of Earl Grey and royal blend), the King, the Queen, the US president and the first lady had a conversation so animated it overran by at least a quarter of an hour.

The King and Queen enjoy afternoon tea with the US president and the first lady

Then, they spent another 20 minutes talking about bees and honey at the new White House beehives. It has been a gentle start to what may, today, be a testing visit.

The royal guests chat with their hosts about bees, honey and gardens

The King and Queen have ticked off day one of their four-day trip. The early verdict? The special relationship, on a personal level at least, remains strong.
King: Britain and US must come together

After the chaos, a cup of tea: King keeps calm and carries on with the Trumps

Today’s agenda:
• At 3.30pm (10.30am EST) Donald and Melania Trump will host a State Arrival Ceremony on the South Lawn of the White House.

• Then the King and the US president will hold a bilateral meeting while the first lady and the Queen take part in a cross-cultural educational event.

• In the evening at 6.30pm (1.30pm EST), the King will address Congress followed by a state dinner at midnight (7pm EST), during which there will be speeches from the King and the US president.

 

Opinion

Tom Harris Headshot

Tom Harris

Labour’s nuclear option may be its only one

Even Starmer’s own colleagues recognise he is simply not cut out for politics

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">James Kirkup</span> Headshot

James Kirkup

McSweeney did not get Labour into this mess – it’s Starmer’s doing

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Gareth A Davies</span> Headshot

Gareth A Davies

Fury v Joshua confirmed. People who say it’s come too late are wrong

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

The woman was rescued after soldiers saw her struggling to walk down a crater-scarred road in Donetsk

Cables

Sign up to Cables, our international affairs newsletter

We launched Cables, The Telegraph’s international affairs newsletter, at the beginning of this month, writes Jamie Johnson, our Deputy Foreign Editor.

It has already established itself as the best vantage point for taking in our coverage of Iran, Ukraine, Donald Trump and the gyrations they are causing in the world economy.

Every weekday, Cables collates and distills our latest international news and analysis for readers who know conflict, power and money are not contained by national borders.

It is a team effort. The newsletter brings together journalism from The Telegraph’s foreign, business and features desks to give you every angle of the big international stories.

When Iranian delegates arrived for peace talks in Pakistan, we told Cables readers their real motives. When Ukraine used a British drone to blow up a bridge being held by Russia, we were there.

Our journalists are on hand to bear witness and tell you what each event means, and what is coming next. They want to hear from you, too.

Sign up here

 

Essential reads

Why are self-service checkouts so loathsome? They make us feel exploited, researchers find

“Unexpected item in the bagging area”. Most of us are familiar with the misery of malfunctioning self-service checkouts, but now researchers have discovered exactly why they are so loathsome. It turns out they make us feel exploited, like unpaid labourers slaving for the supermarket. Harry Brennan, our Consumer Affairs Editor, dissects this new study.

Continue reading

 

Wendy Gregory says ‘it’s a nuisance we don’t know how long we have to live’

The retirees stuck between spending now and saving for later

Many of those approaching retirement are stuck between a rock and a hard place. They are likely to live to an old age but they may need to set aside some money to help their children and grandchildren. However, this presents a dilemma: how should they spend their money now? We are interested to hear your retirement strategies in the comments.

Continue reading

 

‘I’m a counsellor trying to fix gentle parenting and prevent children from becoming feral’

Parents are coming to my counselling practice at their wits’ end, terrified of their own toddlers, writes an anonymous counsellor. Their children are biting, punching and starting school without basic skills like toilet-training. The culprit? An obsession with “gentle parenting”. I see loving parents desperately negotiating with toddlers, terrified of the word “discipline”. However, raising children as equals is breeding a feral generation...

Continue reading

 

You should think twice about booking a summer holiday

A brewing jet fuel crisis driven by the Iran war threatens to plunge summer holidays into chaos. As Christopher Jasper, our Transport Industry Editor, reports, Lufthansa has already cut 20,000 short-haul flights while industry bosses plead for emergency government intervention. Worse still, the EU’s transport chief suggested carriers might be exempt from paying compensation, leaving stranded passengers out of pocket.

Continue reading

 

Why has car design become so generic?

In 1966, the Mini was a best-selling car. Now, models like the Jaecoo 7 are in demand

It’s not simply nostalgia; cars used to be distinctive, and even non-car lovers could distinguish a Ford from a Vauxhall. However, the evolution of lookalike SUVs (invariably painted grey) has led to a soul-sapping uniformity in car parks and on roads across the land. James Innes-Smith explores where it all went wrong for idiosyncratic car design.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

What your sleeping habits reveal about your health

There are few things in life as glorious as a nap. However, a new study suggests regularly nodding off during the day could increase your risk of death by 13 per cent, with morning nappers having a 30 per cent greater risk than afternoon snoozers. From weekend lie-ins to nighttime tipples, here are the red flags to watch out for.
Continue reading

 

Food for thought

Venison was the food of Kings. Now it’s ending up in food banks

Venison meals are served to those in need by Sussex Homeless Support

Patrick Galbraith

Patrick Galbraith

Environment Correspondent

 

Venison was once the preserve of kings, with William the Conqueror, who was very keen on his deer, threatening to have ordinary subjects’ eyes poked out if they ate “hart or hind”.

However, a millennium on, the deer scene in Britain has changed somewhat. We now have more than two million, and they are wreaking havoc in the countryside by eating woodland understory and destroying hedges.

The Country Food Trust has found something of a solution. The charity is busy turning venison into bolognese, which gets sent to food banks.

The Country Food Trust

The Country Food Trust liaises with shoots to acquire venison and other food

Jim Deans, who runs a number of food banks in Sussex, after years of being a rough sleeper himself, says “it kind of makes our menus look like a posh restaurant”.

He believes venison is adding years to Britons’ lives, stating quite simply that “if a diet is better, people last longer”.
Continue reading

 

Your say

Venerated viewpoints

Every weekday, Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, shares an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories.

Orlando writes...
Telegraph readers hold strong views on many things – including, well, views. Yes, our roll call of the greatest sights this country has to offer has prompted much discussion.

I’m afraid I’ve been watching proceedings from the fence: I don’t have an outright favourite, though Porthmeor Beach in St Ives at sunset (I've rarely been virtuous enough to see it at sunrise) and Hampstead Heath on a hazy summer afternoon can be found jostling towards the top of my list.


 

For Martin Edwards, meanwhile, it’s hard to beat “watching the sun rise from Symonds Yat Rock in the Wye Valley, as the heat burns the mist off the river. I took my wife there a couple of years back, as she had never been, and nothing had changed since my childhood. Pure magic”.


 

Lindsay Gaskell was sorry to see no mention of “Salisbury Cathedral viewed from the A36, especially when there is a fog and the spire rises above it into sunshine”.


 

Michael Cox argued: “On a clear and sunny day, the view from the beer garden of The Churchillian on Portsdown Hill – looking south over Portsea, with the Isle of Wight in the background and Hayling Island to the east – is a must-see.”

I’m all in favour of an impassioned debate on Britain’s finest beer gardens at a later date.


 

Finally, Harry Chown put in a word for “the view from the top of Sutton Bank in North Yorkshire, looking out over the sprawling Vale of York below. This was dubbed the ‘finest view in England by James Herriot’, and is still well up there for me. Google it”.

Not bad, I must say. What have we missed? Send your responses here and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of this newsletter.

Please confirm in your reply that you are happy to be featured and that we have your permission to use your name.

 

The morning quiz

Lisa Fox says the disease outbreak on her farm left her ‘living in a nightmare’

Seven llamas have been culled and 27 are in isolation following an outbreak of what at a farm in Gloucestershire?

 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including PlusWord, Sorted, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was DICTATING. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Thank you for reading. Have a fulfilling day and I hope to see you tomorrow.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. I’d love to hear what you think of this newsletter. You can email me your feedback here.

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