The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Inspiring talk for new entrants to farming industry

Young entrants to industry hear from inspiring speakers

- NANCY NICOLSON nnicolson@thecourier.co.uk

New farmers were challenged to make their own opportunit­ies when 120 young entrants to the industry met in Perth.

The annual New Entrants to Farming gathering was inspired by a shepherdes­s who swapped city life for the countrysid­e, an entreprene­ur who created an outdoor centre on five acres of farmland and a first-generation farmer who combines beef and sheep farming with gin production.

Former agricultur­e student Jenny McKerr told the meeting how she had worked in the Scottish beef industry before she and her husband bought a small beef and sheep farm in South Lanarkshir­e four years ago.

The couple have now set up a distillery to produce a gin to drink with beef and planted an orchard to provide fruit for their gin liqueurs, as well as building up their livestock business.

Jenny said: “The advice I would give to my daughters is do it your own way, be the black sheep and don’t just follow a farming model.

“Have a plan and make it your own. Chase opportunit­ies or create them. There are so many opportunit­ies out there. Find what makes you happy and do more of it.”

Another delegate, Kirsten Williams of SAC Consulting, in Turriff, said: “It’s all about farming to suit your own environmen­t and moulding your enterprise to fit your circumstan­ces.

“There are challenges to be faced by aspiring farmers wherever you live in Scotland, but everywhere also has a value, and it’s important to consider that as well.”

The event, organised under the Scottish Government’s Farm Advisory Service (FAS) programme, also heard from Duncan McConchie, who returned to agricultur­e in Dumfries and Galloway after working in the TV industry in Yorkshire.

He built up an outdoor adventure and recreation­al centre on five acres of his family’s farm and has since moved into the wedding market.

“Where there’s a will, there’s a way,” he said. “There is a vibrant tourism market out there. We don’t have a fear of borrowing. We have total confidence in the product we have and the customers who are coming to us.”

Other speakers included social media star Hannah Jackson, “the Red Shepherdes­s”, who also came into farming as a new entrant and has since set herself up as a contract shepherdes­s.

She said she had faced many challenges along the way, but had overcome them by looking for opportunit­ies to expand her knowledge.

“Opportunit­ies are not just going to present themselves to you,” she said. “You have to go out and look for them. Think outside the box.

“If you’re passionate, confident and enthusiast­ic, it’s hard for someone to turn you away.”

 ?? Picture: Fraser Band. ?? From left: Kirsten Williams, Duncan McConchie, Hannah Jackson, Robert Ramsay, Rodney Wallace and Steven Thomson.
Picture: Fraser Band. From left: Kirsten Williams, Duncan McConchie, Hannah Jackson, Robert Ramsay, Rodney Wallace and Steven Thomson.

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