The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Egg packer praised after taking best practice title

award: Farmlay Eggs of Strichen named winner by RNAS

- Gemma Mackenzie

The largest egg packer in the north of Scotland has been named as the winner of the Royal Northern Agricultur­al Society’s good farming practice award.

The award, which is sponsored by Aberdeensh­ire Council, celebrates a farmer in the region who is showing good practice in his or her farming business.

This year’s winner is the Chapman family – Robert and Ethel and their son Iain – who run Farmlay Eggs at Wester Cockmuir Farm, near Strichen.

The runner-up award went to the Willis family’s organic dairy farming enterprise at Glasgofore­st, Kinellar.

The award’s judge – agricultur­al consultant and NFU Scotland treasurer Gerald Banks – said it was a closely fought contest.

“Both businesses showed fantastic management and fantastic attention to detail,” said Mr Banks.

“Everyone was a fantastic example of farm management.”

Presenting the awards at Wester Cockmuir, Aberdeensh­ire Council provost Bill Howatson praised both farming families.

He said: “The good farming practice awards are probably more important now than they ever were before because we are facing some challenges as we head towards Brexit.

“What we are clear about is the leadership and the inspiratio­n that both the winners are making and that contributi­on is encouragin­g.

“These exemplar businesses will be vital to shape farming in the future.”

The Chapman family’s winning business packs around four million eggs a week for Morrisons, Aldi and Lidl in Scotland. The family also supplies the Aberdeensh­ire Choice range of eggs into Tesco stores.

Just under half the eggs are produced at Wester Cockmuir, with the remainder sourced from a group of more than 20 contract producers from across Aberdeensh­ire, Moray and Kincardine.

The family recently invested £3.5 million in a new grading facility complete with five robots which has increased efficiency.

Meanwhile, William Willis milks 145 cows on an organic system at Glasgofore­st alongside his mother Anne and brother Angus.

A close focus on grass has resulted in more than half of the herd’s average 8,000-litres per cow yield being produced from forage.

 ?? Picture: Jim Irvine. ?? From left: Iain Chapman, Ethel Chapman, Provost Bill Howatson and Robert Chapman.
Picture: Jim Irvine. From left: Iain Chapman, Ethel Chapman, Provost Bill Howatson and Robert Chapman.

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