In Your Field: Alice Dyer and Adam Lockwood - 'We have never seen spinach grow so fast'

August already, although it has felt like October here for the past few weeks. July was a good month on the salads after a tough start to the season.

clock • 3 min read
In Your Field: Alice Dyer and Adam Lockwood - 'We have never seen spinach grow so fast'

We have never seen spinach grow so fast, with some crops taking just 22-23 days from drilling to harvest. Spinach struggles in the extreme heat or in cold conditions, but loves this ‘nothingy' weather we have had - mid-high teens and plenty of moisture about.

The pumpkins and squash are also loving this weather and are looking great. Good establishment and lots of flowering and fruiting leaves us hopeful we may have a bumper crop.

The only catch is the weeds are also pretty happy. Hopefully we will be in for an easy October so the crowds come out in force again to visit the pick-your-own.

Although not conducive to combining, this weather has given us the perfect conditions to get cover crops drilled and established quickly.

With the help of good neighbours, we got the winter barley in ahead of most of the rain. Adam said it was his favourite day on-farm so far, although it was missing that dusty, balmy summer night feel which typically comes with harvest.

We still have the oats to cut, but hopefully with a dry spell in the forecast, these will be safely in the shed soon.

Despite the excitement of harvest, the cereals will make a loss. It just goes to show how little hope such a small tenant farm has of turning a profit.

Obviously this farm is part of a bigger business and we are lucky to be on high grade soils with irrigation, so we have the potential to grow high-value crops, such as babyleaf or herbs, to offset this, but what chance does someone on trickier soils have?

When we took on the council farm tenancy, we recruited a land agent from Brown and Co to help us work out what we might be eligible for, having never had access to any Government grants or funding before.

We are in quite a unique situation to many farmers, who are losing the Basic Payment Scheme. Taking on the council farm's Farm Business Tenancy has opened up a lot more funding opportunities for us, and with the help of Tim, we have put together a Sustainable Farming Incentive plan.

There is nothing in it that we are not already doing, so for us it is a no-brainer, and the fact it is paid quarterly will ease cashflow.

The lack of support for new entrants in agriculture is something I bang the drum about frequently, but we are lucky to have some amazing organisations out there who are making a real difference.

In 2019, when we first started out on our own, we were very lucky to receive a scholarship from the Henry Plumb Foundation.

Meeting the late, great Lord Plumb was an honour and it gave us a real confidence boost that a team of such highly regarded businesspeople had faith in our plan.

We put the money towards accommodation on-farm, which helped to ease our staffing issues, and we found the mentorship programme invaluable.

The next round of scholarships closes at the beginning of September and I would urge any new entrants with a strong business plan, looking for some support, to look into it.

DAIRY CATTLE FOR SALE

DAIRY CATTLE FOR SALE

VIEW ADVERT
£POA

Farm-to-Farm-sales / DAIRY CATTLE FOR SALE AND WANTED

Farm-to-Farm-sales / DAIRY CATTLE FOR SALE

VIEW ADVERT
£POA

Portable Milking Machine

Portable Milking Machine

VIEW ADVERT
£POA

More on In your field

In your field: Dan Jones - "I am one of the luckiest people in the world to have a way of life I love"

In your field: Dan Jones - "I am one of the luckiest people in the world to have a way of life I love"

Dan Jones farms 650 ewes at the National Trust-owned Parc Farm, which sits on the Great Orme, a limestone headland which rises up 208 metres (682 feet) on the North Wales coast near Llandudno. His Farm Business Tenancy covers the 58 hectares (143 acres) at Parc Farm, plus 364ha (900 acres) of grazing rights on the hill

clock 11 May 2024 • 3 min read
In your field: James and Isobel Wright - "The cost of straw and diesel kills the job"

In your field: James and Isobel Wright - "The cost of straw and diesel kills the job"

James and Isobel, with their two young children, recently bought their first farm, and plan to run beef and sheep over 13.8 hectares (34 acres), renting a further 44.5ha (110 acres). James works for tech firm Breedr as a product manager. You can follow them on Twitter @jpbwfarm

clock 10 May 2024 • 2 min read
In your field: Ian Garnett - "Polish workers put our on-farm challenges into context"

In your field: Ian Garnett - "Polish workers put our on-farm challenges into context"

Ian farms in partnership with his family near Knutsford, Cheshire. They manage 700 commercial pedigree Holstein/Friesians on 445 hectares (1,100 acres). Replacements are homereared and cows are on a composite system. Ian is a representative for Sainsbury’s Dairy Development Group and sits on the AHDB Genetics Advisory Forum

clock 27 April 2024 • 3 min read