Although he had a rather soft mumbly voice, the presenter actually said quite clearly 19 metres tall and 30 metres wide, so it has an open structure typical of hedgerow or field oaks. All our high forest (well plantation actually) oaks are around 30 metres / 100 feet high, so it was actually a fairly short specimen due to the location.
They did say the area was 700 metres squared, a poor use of terminology when they meant 700 square metres, but they followed by saying about the area of three tennis courts.
I also despair sometimes about the poor grammar used by the BBC, even by news presenters who seem to be chosen for prettiness rather than intelligence or correct diction. A sign of the times unfortunately.
Overall I enjoyed the programme. I didn't actually learn anything new (having read several specialist books on oaks and trees), but they were addressing a wide audience with little knowledge of trees. I'd actually like to have seen a bit more about the uses of oak and found the most interesting bit the snippet on Salisbury Cathedral.
Better and more enjoyable than the majority of dumbed down crud for the masses aired on most channels. We have SKY with hundreds of programmes but I usually can't find a good one and end up searching catchup for BBC documentaries or history programmes.
I player link;
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b06fq03tGeorge McGavin is actually a distinguished entomologist and zoologist. I particularly enjoyed the programme he did called 'Afterlife; The Science of Decay', which was creepy but quite fascinating;
http://www.veoh.com/watch/v25405506fKrtK2Zh