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Channel 4 promise Eden will return, despite mass walk-out

Rachel, 29, who has been involved in Channel 4's Eden series.
Rachel, 29, who has been involved in Channel 4's Eden series.

Channel 4 bosses have promised that troubled reality show Eden will return to our screens this year but can’t say when.

The series features Perthshire woman Rachel Butterworth as part of a group trying to form a new, self-sufficient community in the Scottish wilderness.

It began in March last year, but after only a handful of episodes it was taken off the air, with producers announcing it would return in the autumn.

Since then, about a third of the participants have walked out.

Rachel, 30, is one of just five women left on the show, alongside 10 men.

Among those who left were the camp’s two doctors, a paramedic and a fisherman.

The aim of the show was to film 23 young people around the clock over the course of a year as they fend for themselves on 600 acres of fenced off estate near Lochaber, on the west coast of Scotland.

A Channel 4 spokeswoman said: “The show will be back on screens later this year and our plan is to tell the whole story of their life in the community.

“There’s no transmission date yet but we’ll keep viewers posted with news.”

The show’s Facebook page has not been updated since October, last year.

Fans are continuing to bombard site administrators with questions about the next batch of episodes.

Viewer Beverley Craine wrote: “I’ve seen the advert, but no date. If it doesn’t hurry up, surely the people taking part will be on their way home.

“We’ve only seen four episodes of last spring, what’s happened to the footage for summer, autumn and winter?”

Unlike most modern day reality shows, there are no winners or evictions.

The participants were tasked with creating a new civilisation, which involved building shelters, growing their own food and raising livestock.

Before taking part in the show, Rachel, from Coupar Angus, visited the Jungle refugee camp in Calais after leading a successful drive to gather donations of aid from local businesses.

She said that she wanted to demonstrate to viewers that a self-sufficient lifestyle is easier than most people think.

“I lived in a bell tent for five months because I had nowhere to go,” she said. “It was a really happy time. You don’t have to conform to the prescribed society… There’s more to life: wind, rain, sunshine, nature, love, tea.”