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Catch up on the latest news from across the county with Abby Hook.

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00:00 (upbeat music)
00:02 - Good evening and welcome to Kentonite live on KMTV.
00:26 I'm Abbey Hook.
00:27 Here are your top stories on Friday the 21st of July.
00:31 Just getting worse.
00:33 Pressure on Kent County Council to repair potholes
00:36 admits budget difficulties.
00:38 - The last few years has been absolutely dreadful.
00:42 - Dover delays in the coming days.
00:44 Lorry's queue at the port
00:45 has 20,000 people expected to travel.
00:49 - Dover is saying that they've got more people
00:51 traveling across the channel
00:53 than they've had since about 2018, 2019.
00:57 - Championship chaos.
00:59 Fire at Lyddon Track ahead of Rallycross race weekend.
01:03 And a new way to have your five a day.
01:06 Sitting born business changing the game with fruity crisps.
01:10 - Always a battle, you know, crisps versus fruit.
01:13 And I thought you married the two together,
01:16 we might have something that maybe children want to eat.
01:18 (upbeat music)
01:21 (dramatic music)
01:24 - But first tonight, more than usual
01:30 and taking longer to repair.
01:32 Kent County Council are grappling
01:33 with a five-fold increase in pothole reports
01:36 whilst trying to balance their books.
01:38 The government has supported the authority
01:40 with millions of pounds for a pothole blitz.
01:42 But as Gabriel Morris reports,
01:44 locals now believe this is a safety concern.
01:49 - Scarring our roads and having the power to kill our cars.
01:53 And some say each year they are even getting worse.
01:58 Nowhere more so in Kent than Tenterton.
02:00 - I've been living here for 44 years
02:02 and what I've noticed over the last 44 years,
02:05 gradually it's been getting worse and worse.
02:07 And I think the last few years,
02:09 it's been absolutely dreadful.
02:11 - They're very, very dangerous at the moment.
02:13 There's so many of them.
02:14 While you're trying to avoid the potholes,
02:16 you're not concentrating on the road.
02:18 - It is actually really rough on the roads.
02:20 I've had a few burst tires on my car.
02:22 I've only been back for a few months here.
02:24 - When we were driving here,
02:25 I was already complaining to him about the English roads.
02:28 So they are much worse
02:30 compared to the roads in the Netherlands.
02:32 - The County Council say they have seen a five-fold increase
02:35 in the number of pothole reports.
02:37 That's 26,000 in the three months to April.
02:41 - I would say that we are getting where we need to be
02:46 from what was an extremely difficult position
02:49 at the end of the winter.
02:51 - Kent County Council is having to tighten their spending.
02:54 They say their highways are in a phase of managed decline.
02:58 For the council to repair a pothole,
03:00 it needs to be deeper than 10 centimetres.
03:04 But locals say roads in this town
03:06 are starting to become covered in shallow potholes.
03:10 Now, these potholes might not be the biggest on Kent's roads.
03:13 They're probably not gonna pop any tyres.
03:16 They have been reported,
03:17 but Kent County Council says they're not gonna be able
03:19 to get out until autumn to replace them,
03:22 which locals worry they are just gonna get bigger and bigger
03:24 and then start popping tyres.
03:26 - The solution seems to be this,
03:28 what I call this patch and dash approach,
03:30 which is the KCC comes and fills them temporarily.
03:33 Sometimes that solution lasts just a few weeks.
03:36 I mean, in the end,
03:36 we've got to get a really solid grip on road maintenance
03:40 and properly resurface all these roads.
03:43 And that's the challenge for KCC,
03:45 but a particular challenge for the government
03:47 to fund this properly.
03:48 Our road network is an absolutely vital strategic resource
03:52 and we cannot afford to just give up
03:55 and put it into so-called managed decline.
03:57 - A local authority here has received
03:59 six million pounds from central government.
04:03 And a spokesperson for Kent County Council says
04:05 highway teams have worked tirelessly to respond to them
04:09 and are carrying out prevention work.
04:12 They go on to say the extra funding has allowed them
04:14 to appoint a further six contractors.
04:17 These potholes should be fixed by autumn,
04:20 but then comes the wet and freezing weather,
04:23 prime condition for potholes to form,
04:26 a misery for motorists
04:28 and a financial challenge for the County Council.
04:30 Gabriel Morris for KMTV in Tenterton.
04:33 - Now, beach goers have been warned to stay away
04:36 from St. Mary's Bay after a dead whale washed up on the shore.
04:40 Now, this isn't the first time that we have seen whales
04:43 on the Kent coast or around the UK for that matter.
04:46 Cameron Noble joins me in the studio now
04:48 with a bit more detail.
04:49 Cameron, this is a really distressing story
04:52 and some distressing images.
04:53 What can you tell us about this?
04:54 - Yes, that's right, Abby.
04:55 So yesterday, the large aquatic animal,
04:58 which is thought to be about 30 feet long,
05:00 was identified as a common mink whale.
05:02 That was by the coast guard yesterday.
05:04 However, we found out earlier this afternoon
05:07 that the National History Museum's
05:08 claiming it as a humpback.
05:09 So we're not too sure what kind of whale this is.
05:13 In a statement, His Majesty's Coast Guard said,
05:15 "The Romney Marsh Coast Guard Rescue Team
05:17 "was tasked with an object floating on the water edge
05:20 "at St. Mary's Bay.
05:22 "Once the object had been located,
05:23 "it was confirmed as a deceased whale."
05:26 Now, they continue to say that in the meantime,
05:28 it is strongly advised to not venture out to the animal
05:32 due to the deep mud between the animal and the shoreline.
05:36 Now, as you've already said,
05:38 this isn't the first time we've seen this.
05:40 Back in May, a sperm whale washed up
05:42 onto a North Wales beach, and then just three days ago,
05:46 there was 55 pilot whales found dead
05:48 off of the coast in Scotland.
05:50 Obviously, this is some shocking news,
05:52 but looking back towards Kent,
05:54 we've seen quite a few whales, actually,
05:56 over the past few years.
05:57 And if we look back to October 2018,
05:59 and I'm sure many of our viewers can remember Benny,
06:01 the beluga whale, which was found
06:03 swimming around Gravesend and in the River Thames.
06:06 But the question turns to, why the sudden influx?
06:09 So, the whale's been discovered
06:11 on a part of the Kent's coastline,
06:13 which has seen multiple issues and warnings
06:15 over its water quality in recent times.
06:17 A year-long warning was announced in February
06:20 after the discovery of unsafe levels of bacteria
06:23 in the water.
06:24 Monitoring by the Environment Agency
06:26 has revealed heightened traces of an infection
06:29 called intestinal enterococci,
06:32 which is found in faecal matter.
06:33 Now, the infection can cause fever, chills, fatigue,
06:36 and nausea, and in some cases, it can be life-threatening
06:39 if it's left untreated.
06:41 Now, a spokesperson for the Environment Agency
06:44 has previously told Kent Online
06:45 that we need to continue the work with our partners
06:48 to fully investigate the reasons for the decline
06:51 in bathing water qualities at St. Mary's Bay.
06:54 - Thank you very much, Cameron,
06:55 for bringing us the details on that.
06:57 Now, 20,000 people are expected to pass through Dover
07:02 this weekend as schools across the county
07:04 and across the country break up for the summer.
07:06 Now, the Port of Dover have warned
07:08 a two-and-a-half-hour delay at peak times this summer.
07:11 Now, these pictures we should be seeing on screen now
07:14 show hundreds of lorries queuing on the A20 this morning
07:17 as DoverTAP has been put into place.
07:19 P&O Ferries is warning passengers to allow for extra time
07:22 to clear all security checks,
07:24 and that they will be put on the first available sailing
07:26 once at check-in.
07:28 Well, I spoke to Toby Howell
07:29 from the Kent Resilience Forum earlier today.
07:32 - Port of Dover have warned that there could be delays.
07:34 Tomorrow is gonna be a lot busier than today,
07:37 although today is very busy at both Dover and Eurotunnel.
07:41 So it's really check with your ferry operator in the tunnel
07:45 to see if there are delays
07:47 or when you're expected to get there.
07:49 Also check the road network on the likes of Google Maps
07:53 or National Highways and KCC Highways Twitter accounts
07:57 to see if there are any traffic delays on the way down.
08:00 But also, as I say, be prepared
08:02 that if you are in a queue, for example,
08:05 that you've got things in the car,
08:07 some water, some refreshments,
08:08 some entertainment for kids, et cetera.
08:11 So it's really a bit of common sense
08:12 that if you're gonna be sitting in a queue,
08:15 as you do if you're heading to Cornwall,
08:17 as you do if you're heading to numerous places,
08:19 there will be queues at times.
08:21 More and more people are traveling at each break.
08:23 This is gonna be the, I mean, Dover is saying
08:26 that they've got more people traveling across the channel
08:29 than they've had since about 2018, 2019.
08:33 You know, people are getting away more.
08:35 Yes, a lot more people are also holidaying in the UK,
08:38 but there is more traffic, more coach traffic.
08:42 Freight numbers are growing as well.
08:43 So there is only the limited capacity
08:46 at the Port and Eurotunnel to get out of the country.
08:50 Now, the last time we had a by-election in Kent
08:54 was way back in 2014 in Rochester.
08:57 But overnight, three by-elections across the UK
09:00 saw the Conservatives lose two seats.
09:02 Both have majorities of more than 20,000.
09:05 Well, to give us more details and explain
09:06 what this means for our governing party,
09:08 well, I'm pleased to say our political presenter,
09:10 Rob Bailey, joins me now.
09:12 Now, Rob, looking at this,
09:14 if Labour and Lib Dems can overturn a 20,000 majority,
09:18 what seats could be up for grabs in Kent?
09:20 Well, mathematically speaking, almost any of them.
09:23 That kind of a turnaround would be enough
09:25 for even the safest Kent seats
09:27 to suddenly become a bit wobbly.
09:28 But of course, the simple maths
09:30 never quite works that way.
09:32 But the interesting seats to look at,
09:35 there's a couple of trends that were quite interesting.
09:36 I mean, Labour would have been hoping
09:38 that they would take seats like Dartford
09:41 that possibly bring those kind of seats in.
09:42 So Bo might talk about that in a minute.
09:44 Those might still be more complicated.
09:46 But if you look at places like South Fannock,
09:48 where Craig McKinley has quite a narrow majority,
09:51 Dover, which went away from the Conservatives
09:53 in the local elections,
09:54 Natalie Elphick has got quite a tight majority there.
09:57 Those, any kind of swing like we're seeing
10:00 in these by-elections would mean
10:01 that there could well be changes there.
10:03 And the really interesting one,
10:04 if you were a gambling person,
10:06 Tunbridge Wells has never been anything
10:08 but Conservative since 1974.
10:10 But a swing of around 15%,
10:12 maybe just slightly less than that,
10:14 could win it for the Liberal Democrats.
10:16 And we saw that kind of swing last night
10:19 for them in the West country.
10:21 So who knows?
10:23 It really will make it a very dynamic
10:24 and very changeable situation.
10:26 - And you mentioned there, Dartford.
10:28 Now, Canton Island has been looking into Dartford.
10:30 They've got more details on their website
10:32 to definitely check out.
10:33 But for 60 years, for almost 60 years,
10:36 the votes in Dartford matched the outcome.
10:39 They were predicting it.
10:40 We can see on the screen now.
10:42 Why do you think that is?
10:43 What makes Dartford so politically savvy?
10:46 - It's an interesting one, isn't it?
10:47 I mean, maybe it's partly
10:48 because it's on the fringes of London.
10:49 So it has some of the rural kind of qualities
10:52 of a Kent seat,
10:52 but it has some of the urban qualities
10:54 of a London borough seat as well.
10:56 And maybe that means that it just makes a good
10:58 kind of little case study for the nation in some way.
11:01 But what we've learned overnight
11:02 in the Uxbridge by-election,
11:04 particularly the one that was Boris Johnson's old seat,
11:07 on the fringes of London, just like Dartford is,
11:10 and the Conservatives held it,
11:11 and they ran a campaign
11:12 that was very much anti-ultra-low-emission zone.
11:16 It was all about stop the ULEZ
11:17 and the big expansion that's due to come this August.
11:21 Now, that's been a big issue in Dartford as well.
11:23 A lot of people there are concerned about it.
11:25 We've heard Keir Starmer this afternoon
11:26 telling the Mayor of London,
11:28 "Might be time for a rethink."
11:30 And part of the reason for that
11:31 is because seats like Dartford,
11:33 which could be crucial at the next election,
11:35 they're gonna be up for grabs,
11:36 and an issue like that might be all it takes to swing it.
11:39 So Dartford will be a very interesting one
11:40 to keep an eye on.
11:41 - Thank you very much, Rob, for that analysis.
11:43 It's now time for a short break,
11:44 but we'll see you in just a few minutes.
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15:04 - Hello and welcome back to Kentonite live here on KMTV.
15:15 Now a Westgate social club has been fined 10,000 pounds
15:18 after a worker fell to his death.
15:21 Eric Town was changing flowers in hanging baskets
15:24 when he sadly slipped and fell around
15:26 three metres onto concrete.
15:27 The court heard club bosses have failed to provide
15:30 the 74 year old with correct health and safety training.
15:33 The club secretary Tracy Goddard told the court
15:35 in a statement, this club and its membership team,
15:38 membership remain deeply shocked over the tragic loss
15:41 of a man who was both a member of the club
15:43 and a great friend to its officers.
15:45 The beloved father and husband leaves behind
15:46 his childhood sweetheart Irene,
15:48 who he was married to for 52 years.
15:51 Now trains aren't running in one part of Kent again,
15:55 but not because of strikes.
15:57 A track at Whitstable station burst into flames
16:00 this morning with one eyewitness comparing it
16:02 to fireworks going off.
16:04 It happened seconds between a Ramsgate bound train
16:06 leaving the station and a London Victoria train arriving,
16:09 which did an emergency stop.
16:11 The station was cleared in less than a minute
16:13 and the Kent fire service was there a few minutes later.
16:16 It's likely the station will be closed
16:18 for a significant amount of time.
16:20 Luckily no injuries have been reported.
16:24 And now with more on another fire today
16:26 at Lydden Hill Race Circuit,
16:27 Bartholomew Hall brings us more
16:29 as well as the details on the rest of the sporting news.
16:32 First we start at Lydden Hill Race Circuit
16:44 where a huge fire broke out this morning
16:46 ahead of the UK round of the FIA World Rallycross Championship,
16:50 which was due to take place this weekend.
16:52 These pictures were taken just before 9am this morning
16:55 where five fire engines descended onto the circuit.
16:58 Kent Fire and Rescue Service says
17:00 it extinguished the flames just before 11
17:02 and that no injuries have been reported.
17:05 The World Rallycross Championship,
17:06 which is now fully electric,
17:07 last visited Lydden Hill back in 2017.
17:10 It's confirmed that the fire broke out
17:12 in the Special One Racing Team area of the paddock,
17:15 the team belonging to nine-time world champion
17:17 Sebastian Loeb, but it's not yet clear
17:19 if his car has been affected.
17:22 Next, and Kent have been away in their visit to Essex
17:25 in the County Cricket Championship this week.
17:27 Going into the third day today, Kent had quite the mission,
17:30 trailing their hosts by 247 runs with nine wickets left,
17:34 after Essex declared on 458 over eight.
17:38 We'll have all the reaction on Monday's Kent Tonight.
17:40 Meanwhile, Kent batsman Zach Crawley
17:42 has been back out today for England in the ashes
17:45 as the Aussies take to their final innings of the fourth test.
17:48 Reflecting on a record-breaking day two
17:50 for the former Tunbridge School pupil
17:52 who scored an astonishing 187,
17:54 which was the highest Ashes score from a Kent man,
17:57 here's Kent's bowling coach
17:58 and former England player Simon Cook.
18:01 We all know, certainly in our dressing room,
18:03 we back him 100%,
18:06 that he's the sort of player that can play those innings.
18:09 He takes games away from the opposition,
18:11 and certainly on a wicket like it is at Old Trafford,
18:15 good wicket, very good bowling tackling,
18:18 that Australia have got,
18:19 but he is an exceptional player in fast bowling,
18:21 and he showed that today with the skill
18:23 and high quality that he's got.
18:25 Next, and Kent's Lionesses are gearing up
18:28 with just hours left ahead of England's first game
18:30 at this year's World Cup on Saturday.
18:32 Two players to have emerged from the county
18:34 have flown to the England camp in Australia
18:36 for this year's tournament.
18:37 One of those whose stock has been on the rise recently
18:40 is striker Alicia Russo.
18:42 Joining her is Gravesend-born midfielder Laura Coombs,
18:45 who plays in the midfield for Manchester City.
18:47 She also played in the England squad
18:48 during the Arnold Clark Cup in February.
18:51 England will take on Haiti tomorrow morning
18:53 at the Brisbane Stadium. Kick-off is at 10.30.
18:56 That's it from me for now.
18:57 Thank you to Bartholomew there with the sports.
19:01 Now, sticking with it for a little while longer,
19:03 our reporter Mahima Abedin joins us live
19:06 from the annual Medway Mile in Gillingham.
19:08 Mahima, what's it like down there?
19:09 Plenty of people watching.
19:11 It's got so much busier since you've been there.
19:13 What's the atmosphere like?
19:14 Thanks, Abi. Yes, I'm here at the Medway Mile.
19:19 It's held in Medway Park this year,
19:21 and it's already starting to look so busy and very full here,
19:24 and I'm sure there'll be loads more people to come this evening.
19:27 Now, the event is a free event held for the local community here.
19:31 I've had a look around,
19:32 and it seems like it's going to be a very fun evening today,
19:35 packed with loads of things to do to keep everyone busy.
19:38 But just to tell you a little bit more about the event,
19:40 the first ever mass run was held back in 2007
19:44 as an annual countdown for the London 2012 Olympics.
19:48 But since then, it's become a date for everyone in Medway
19:51 to put into their calendars,
19:53 and you can actually see how loved this event is
19:56 by just looking around and seeing how many people have shown up,
19:58 and it's only just started.
20:00 But joining me now is the leader of Medway Council, Vince Maple.
20:04 Thank you so much for joining us, Vince.
20:06 Now, how important is it to get Medway moving?
20:09 Well, it's great to be here at Medway Park.
20:11 This is the 15th Medway Mile.
20:14 We've been doing this since 2007.
20:16 And look, from my perspective,
20:18 it's great to see the community out here.
20:20 We've got young people running already.
20:22 Later on, we'll be getting mascots running.
20:24 You'll see those from sports teams and businesses,
20:27 including the naming of the child-friendly Medway mascot.
20:30 I'm really excited about that.
20:32 And then there'll be 3,000 people participating.
20:34 What a fantastic event that is.
20:36 But alongside that, not just the run itself,
20:38 you've got over 30 different sports and activities.
20:41 People can come down and try those for free.
20:43 It's a real great heart of the Medway community event,
20:46 and I'm really pleased to be here today.
20:48 Thanks so much, Vince.
20:49 It sounds like there's a lot planned today.
20:51 It's been hosted here at Medway Park two years in a row now.
20:55 It used to be home to Rochester.
20:57 Are you planning on investing more into the event
20:59 to get it back to Rochester,
21:01 or will it continue to be here at Medway?
21:03 Look, I think we're really blessed in Medway
21:04 to have so many different venues
21:07 that could host the Medway Mile.
21:09 But here in Jullingham at Medway Park,
21:11 we host national and international sporting events.
21:14 We've got the ability to show off something
21:16 like the Olympic-sized pool.
21:17 We've got events in there happening today as well.
21:20 So when you've got a sporting event of this nature,
21:22 you want to bring people together to somewhere
21:24 they can try as much as possible.
21:26 So Rochester's great, but actually to bring people together
21:29 to try 30 different sports and activities,
21:32 this home, the home of sport in Medway, Medway Park,
21:35 that's where we are, and I'm really pleased to be here.
21:38 Thank you so much.
21:39 And lastly, I'm assuming you've attended
21:41 a lot of these annual Medway Mile Mass Runs.
21:43 What stands out to you the most
21:45 about this event in particular?
21:47 Look, the Medway Mile, as you rightfully say,
21:49 it's in everyone's calendar every year.
21:51 And part of that reason is this,
21:53 you've got people who will be desperate
21:55 to get to under four minutes,
21:57 and I won't be one of those people.
21:59 But also you have families walking it together,
22:01 maybe 30 or 40 minutes.
22:02 The ability to come together, to realise that that exercise,
22:06 that community activity, the spirit of 3,000 people
22:09 doing something at once together, that's incredible.
22:11 It's what makes me really proud to be Medway.
22:13 So if you can get down here tonight,
22:15 come down and join us for the Medway Mile.
22:18 Thank you so much for joining us, Vince.
22:21 That's all we have time for now,
22:23 but the mascots are just getting ready to run.
22:25 I can see from the corner of my eye,
22:26 they're lining up, we're about to warm up.
22:28 And I'm looking forward to seeing that.
22:31 I want to see who crosses the finish line first.
22:34 Right, Mahima, we'll leave you to it there.
22:36 Looks like a busy event to watch, all eyes on that.
22:39 Thank you so much for joining me.
22:40 Let's take a look at the weather for these runners.
22:42 Your Friday evening is looking dry, mostly cloudy,
22:52 temperatures peaking at 15 degrees.
22:55 Tomorrow morning looking cloudy, some sun in Margate,
22:58 quite a bit of wind expected, temperatures between 17 and 18.
23:02 By the afternoon, rain right across Kent,
23:04 temperatures staying around 17, the wind picking up too.
23:07 And no dry days forecasted at the start of next week.
23:10 A chance of thunderstorms on Monday and rain through to Tuesday.
23:13 And now, during the past seven years,
23:25 a woman has seen her healthy snack business in Sittingbourne
23:28 come on leaps and bounds.
23:30 It all started with fruit and vegetable crisps,
23:32 and now she sells a full range of edible teas and even pet food,
23:36 while Sophia Akin went down to meet her.
23:40 Sliced, dried and ready to go.
23:45 Today I got to see behind the scenes of a Sittingbourne healthy snack business,
23:50 from vegetable crisps, fruity teas and even a treat for your pets.
23:55 And it all started for Nim seven years ago.
23:59 I used to run a coffee shop a long time ago in London,
24:02 in Battersea, opposite a school,
24:03 and there were a lot of parents and children coming in,
24:05 and there was a real lack of healthy snacks,
24:08 and there was always a battle, you know, crisps versus fruit.
24:11 And I thought, you marry the two together,
24:14 we might have something that maybe children want to eat.
24:17 So that's where it started, in my kitchen and the garage,
24:19 and then eventually ended up with the factory here in Sittingbourne.
24:23 But after a hard time during the pandemic,
24:25 they knew they had to expand their range.
24:28 So they started offering cocktail garnishes and also edible teas,
24:32 which helps them to have a zero food waste company.
24:36 We're really huge on not having any food waste,
24:39 and we made a pledge at the end of last year,
24:41 to say by the end of 2023 we will be zero food waste.
24:45 And actually we achieved that in April this year.
24:48 So our teas are made from the small pieces that we filter out when we pack crisps,
24:52 our pet food is the same.
24:54 And also when we buy our fruit and veg, we buy class two.
24:57 So things that are rejected by the supermarket,
25:00 so wonky fruit if you like,
25:01 that helps farmers, that helps our suppliers as well.
25:04 So we don't buy, you know, beautiful looking expensive fruit either.
25:09 So all of it is to do with reducing food waste completely as much as we can.
25:14 Now each day is something different at Nim's factory,
25:17 but I was there while they were busy cutting up
25:19 100,000 slices of orange for cocktail garnishes.
25:24 Now it's very loud, very noisy in here.
25:26 That's because there are so many machines whirring away.
25:29 And they cut up 18,000 oranges a day,
25:32 and that equates to 112,000 orange slices a day.
25:37 They do it with this machine that's just behind me.
25:39 It's really smart how it works.
25:40 Actually gets rid of the tops, separates it from the slices,
25:43 puts it into separate compartments.
25:45 But those tops don't end up getting wasted.
25:47 This is a zero food waste brand.
25:49 Those then end up getting redried and repurposed,
25:52 turned into something completely new.
25:54 Their aims now are to become even more sustainable and eco-friendly.
25:59 While their products are recyclable,
26:01 they aren't as easily recyclable as you might think.
26:04 All our packaging is recyclable.
26:06 We don't put that on the packaging
26:08 because it's not recyclable in your domestic bin.
26:11 It is industrially recyclable.
26:13 Majority of the packaging still can't be crisp packaging,
26:19 if you like, trapped in the bin at home.
26:21 It's something we're working on.
26:22 And I think it's the problem with cost at the end of the day.
26:25 The industry hasn't come up with an affordable,
26:29 fully recyclable, at-home packaging
26:31 that will keep crisps fresh and crispy.
26:35 Well, if you fancy eating one of your five a day
26:37 a little differently from usual,
26:39 why don't you give these a go?
26:41 Sophia Akin for KMTV in Sittingbourne.
26:45 That's all from us. Have a lovely weekend.
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