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How one arable farmer is gearing up to face future land management challenges

A new project is looking at how to make farms more resilient and better equipped to deal with environmental and policy challenges as well as producing food. Marianne Curtis spoke to one of the farmers taking part.

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How one arable farmer is gearing up to face future land management challenges

A new project is looking at how to make farms more resilient and better equipped to deal with environmental and policy challenges as well as producing food. Marianne Curtis spoke to one of the farmers taking part.

Managing land rather than simply farming it is the direction of travel indicated by policies such as the Environmental Land Management scheme.

While work is ongoing through pilot trials to better define this concept and how it can be applied in practice, few doubt that it will account for an increasing proportion of farm income as BPS is wound down.

Soil health, biodiversity, carbon footprint and sustainability will become the new commodities. In the same way that wheat yield is a measure of success, numbers of a particular bird species or soil health measurements could ultimately influence farm income.

Sustainable

It is with this direction of travel in mind that out of 18 applicants, four farmers were selected to take part in the three-year Resilient and Ready programme, set up by LEAF and Corteva Agriscience.

Simon Parker, marketing manager at Corteva says: "The reason we are launching this is to gain a good view between LEAF and Corteva about what it takes to undertake a sustainable farming system on farm.

"We were looking for people who had not started to put such a system in place but were looking into it and had made tentative steps. People who were looking to change what they are doing and what we can do as Corteva to support them and how well our products fit into a sustainable system.

"We want to follow those people through that process so other farms can see what hurdles there are to come, how much it costs, the economic implications - how quickly the outlay is made back.

"We are also thinking about Government policy; how farms can adapt and change and get the most out of the policy changes and environmental schemes. And whether if farmers need to change their farm structure, how this will change the way crops are grown, for example use of cover crops and different rotations."

Access

The Resilient and Ready programme focuses on providing farmers with access to the best technical insight in to their businesses coupled with the training to enable them to turn theory into commercial application, explains LEAF demonstration and innovation manager Alice Midmer.

One of the farmers taking part is Nick Down who has managed the farming enterprise of the 3,200-hectare Yattendon Estate in Berkshire, since 2017 on behalf of Velcourt.

The site includes 2,000ha of combinable crops which are established in a min-till system.

He says: "I think the whole industry, not just this farm, is at a crossroads. The Agriculture Bill points towards farming in a sustainable and responsible way and the core LEAF principles sat at the heart of what we wanted to achieve - how we produce crops and manage our land in a more sustainable way, pushing our standards higher and recognising this with the LEAF Marque.

"We also want to have the ability to engage with the public more and to promote what we are doing."

Despite Covid-19, the programme is now underway. The ELMs trials on the farm began at the end of April and will look at potential ways of measuring biodiversity, says Ms Midmer.

"We will look at what measurements and metrics we can collect around sustainability and soil health."

Mr Down's farm has also been surveyed to determine what species are present and the programme will look at how he can enhance these.

"We are in the process of looking at mid-tier stewardship, so biodiversity mapping ties in well. There is a push to be bolder in how we approach our mid-tier application, aiming higher for better results."

Soil health

In terms of soil health, Mr Down says soils on the estate are challenging.

"This means anything we do needs to be quite specific. I think the last nine months [in terms of weather] have shown us the need to be more resilient in how we manage our soils. We want to build on what we are doing rather than reinventing the wheel.

"The soils have a high stone content and are very abrasive. Whatever you do to them can be detrimental as well as positive. The soil testing [in the programme] goes well over and above standard soil testing," he says.

"We have been looking at the Healthy Soils analysis with Ian Robertson at Sustainable Soil Management. This explores not only physical and chemical properties but also the biological properties and soil health. This work also gives us a greater understanding of soil carbon and how what we do affects it."

Measuring and monitoring is done using the LEAF sustainability review and guidance is given by sustainability consultant Andy Guy on the strengths and weaknesses of the business from an integrated farm management point of view and where there is room for improvement.

Mr Down says: "It is not that different from what we are doing. We are tailoring it to be more specific to our farm and production methods. What we have not been doing is sharing knowledge and we are probably not shouting about what we are doing enough."

He also believes it is important to quantify what the farm is doing and is looking at phone apps such as an owl survey app for recording owl sightings and directions of movement.

"It is crucial that we learn what does and does not work and using simple technology will allow us to record this. It also allows us to work with local monitoring groups who can feed information all back into one place."

Future

For future measurement, a LEAF sustainability review will be conducted every year, as well as soil testing. Other areas such as AHDB benchmarking and carbon footprint measurement will also be considered, says Ms Midmer.

With food standards not seeming to be uppermost in politicians' minds, Mr Down believes a more open minded approach to crop production is needed.

"Some of our land is quite marginal and we need to be open minded and look at taking some land out of production under a stewardship agreement. But also looking to increase yields with less inputs on the better land is still very much at the front of our minds.

"We need to be doing more with the tools we have and using inputs more wisely."

Farm facts: Yattendon Estate, Berkshire

Size: 3,247 hectares

Cropping: 1,988ha arable with 118ha contract farming

  • Cereals

Group 1 winter milling wheat, including Warburtons contract: 9.43t/ha five-year average yield

Winter barley 8.95t/ha: five-year average yield

Spring barley 6.67t/ha: five-year average yield

  • Break crops

Gave up OSR after 2019 harvest

Now growing winter and spring linseed, spring oats, maize, red clover and ryegrass and fallow all depending on soil type and location

145ha permanent pasture, 130ha Christmas trees, 880ha woodland

Soils: Andover and Upton Series Chalk Loam, Carstens Silty Clay Loams and Maxsted Sandy loams - up to 30% stone content

Staff: Farm foreman and three full-time operators, three casual staff for harvest

Management structure: Yattendon Estate Farming Business managed under a Velcourt management agreement, reporting directly to the Estate Board

DEUTZ AGROPLUS 95

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JOHN DEERE 6195R

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