The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Sheep farmer extols the virtues of planting trees

Andrew Barbour says the benefits are many

- nancy nicolson farming editor nnicolson@thecourier.co.uk

A national campaign to encourage sheep farmers to grow more trees has won the backing of a Perthshire producer who claims almost every extensive sheep farm in Scotland would benefit from more forestry.

Pitlochry farmer Andrew Barbour hosted a National Sheep Associatio­n (NSA) gathering on his land at Mains of Fincastle as part of the organisati­on’s initiative to highlight the benefits of integratin­g sheep and trees.

He said forestry offered financial and animal husbandry benefits and insisted he would not want to farm somewhere that did not have woodland shelter of some kind.

Mr Barbour farms 400 Texel crosses and 50 suckler cows on 540 hectares of land at 1,000ft or above and told visitors that 10% of the farm was devoted to woodland.

The shelter belts are made up of pine and larch and the commercial plantation­s are largely Douglas fir, sitka spruce and Scots pine.

“Agricultur­e has always been the primary objective but every previous generation here has planted shelter belts or woodland on the poorer land where there is access for lorries,” he said.

“Timber is very important to us financiall­y. It’s like a source of extra working capital that you can draw on periodical­ly.

“It makes sense to diversify and spread your risk. It doesn’t need to affect stocking rates.

“But I wouldn’t want to turn over the whole farm to woodland.

“That would be concentrat­ing all your eggs in one basket.

“This is a mixed cattle and sheep farm and the primary objective of the woodland is to provide shelter for stock as there can be fierce weather here, even in summer.

“The cattle are woodland-edge animals and as soon as there’s a drop of rain they head for the trees.

“They’re happy in there and a happy animal produces a good calf.

“Sheep don’t go near the trees when the weather is fine.”

Mr Barbour said the proximity of shelter belts had enabled him to change his flock from Blackfaces to Texels because the woods acted like sheds in winter.

“The benefits of forestry to farming can translate into pounds and pence saved,” he added.

“In the hard winter of 1947 when snow and storms killed half the UK’s sheep flock, my uncle didn’t lose a single sheep here because there were establishe­d woods and shelter belts.”

Mr Barbour said the tree and sheep enterprise­s generated similar annual returns of around £129 per hectare for his business.

“It’s difficult to make meaningful comparison­s because margins are different and we keep the best land for agricultur­e, which will remain the case.

“But the two businesses work well together and we are involved in tree care or planting every year which fits in around farm work.”

 ??  ?? From left: George Milne of the NSA, from St Andrews, Andrew Barbour, Jonnie Hall of NFUS, John Cameron of the NSA, from Elie, Rena Douglas of the NSA, from Coupar, Hamish Waugh of the NSA, from Langholm and Jo O’Hara, head of the Forestry Commission...
From left: George Milne of the NSA, from St Andrews, Andrew Barbour, Jonnie Hall of NFUS, John Cameron of the NSA, from Elie, Rena Douglas of the NSA, from Coupar, Hamish Waugh of the NSA, from Langholm and Jo O’Hara, head of the Forestry Commission...

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