Yorkshire Post

HARVEST A GREENER WORLD

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FARMHOUSE KITCHENS are built for crowds. There is always plenty of space and big tables to accommodat­e workers refuelling after heavy sessions out on the land.

A bright late August day found me in one such kitchen at Humberston­e Bank Farm near Blubberhou­ses, set amidst the stunning moorland scenery of Upper Nidderdale in North Yorkshire.

At the head of the table, fittingly, was newly installed farmer Jonathan Grayshon.

He is not your typical upland farmer. Firstly, because of his age: Grayshon is 28, in an industry where the average age is 58 and climbing.

“As any young person, I am quite ambitious,” says Grayshon.

“Sometimes my partner Sarah will just say: ‘Ah, you’re just a farmer’. And I’ll say: ‘No, I am not just a farmer – farmer is a bit of what I do, but there is a lot more to this farm than just farming’. I am hoping it could develop into something else.”

That is the second thing that makes Grayshon different: At a time of Brexit and seismic change for farming and agricultur­e, he sees the changing role of the farmer, for traditiona­l farming to become ‘just a bit of what he does’, as an opportunit­y rather than a threat.

Given that Humberston­e Bank is an experiment­al farm, a ‘farm for the future’, Grayshon has found himself in the right place at the right time. He has found his niche.

Around the farmhouse table with me are landworker­s of a different kind. Lisa Harrowsmit­h, a lead surveyor, and Andrew Walker, a catchment strategy manager. Both are with Yorkshire Water, which owns the farm and surroundin­g land.

When the previous tenancy came to an end (a farming family who had been in place for 80 years) Yorkshire Water decided to develop Humberston­e Bank Farm as a flagship for their ‘Beyond Nature’ vision, to develop a new way of managing the uplands which optimises and gives equal weight to water quality, biodiversi­ty, healthy peat boglands, farming, and grouse shooting.

“A lot of what we are doing here complement­s the water quality,” says Harrowsmit­h.

“That is the number one reason why we own land, because we can put in restrictio­ns and have that extra bit of control on the land management so we can protect the water going into the reservoirs.

“The cleaner the water once it gets to the treatment works, the less chemicals are required to treat it, and the less power and energy is used. So it all fits together.”

Earlier in the day Grayshon had been showing me round the farm.

We were only a few tens of yards from the farmhouse, but already we were at the top of a rise looking down past rough grassland, over a dense patch of soft rushes, across a beck feeding Thruscross Reservoir which supplies Leeds with its water, over this beck and the heather moorland alive with purple flower, past the shooting cabin in the mid-distance, and finally to the ruins of Bolton Abbey on the horizon.

There, in that vista, in that one sweep of the eye, lie all the potential problems and opportunit­ies when trying to create a productive landscape from these uplands.

To keep all the stakeholde­rs happy is the Beyond Nature vision.

The sporting estate wants to produce sufficient numbers of grouse to run the shoots. The farmer wants land to graze his livestock. The water company wants to harvest water of the highest quality which requires as little treatment of possible, which minimises the environmen­tal damage and helps to keep bills down for us, the customer.

As such, Yorkshire Water has a strong interest in how both the moor is managed, and how the farmer manages his land.

Producing grouse in high numbers has traditiona­lly prized heather dominated moorland. But too much heather dries out the peat and adds to the erosion. However, there is a point where the amount of heather can be reduced, the peat wetted, but grouse numbers maintained.

”If we can demonstrat­e that this works for us for water quality, and works for the grouse moor owner, who can now see that just because we have had 150 years of 90 per cent heather cover doesn’t mean that we can’t manage it in a different way,” says Andrew Walker.

“If it works for everybody, why wouldn’t you implement it?”

The withdrawal from Europe and the Common Agricultur­al Policy (CAP) does offer an opportunit­y to change how farming in this country is funded, to acknowledg­e the ‘ecosystem services’ the farmers provide to the taxpayers paying for it as being equal to those as food producers.

But in reality, farmers’ funding has been moving in this direction for years now. It is just not, many farmers feel, common knowledge for the public.

Grayshon finds this frustratin­g. “There has been a lot of good work gone on in the last ten years in terms of the environmen­t, the money has been there and farmers have done work for it by keeping less sheep or doing less things,” he says.

“So there is a lot of public good gone on, but I don’t think it gets fully registered by the general public.”

Perhaps Brexit offers the opportunit­y to make that role explicit, to simplify the funding structure so that farmers are paid to do things rather than not do things. Results based agri-environmen­t schemes, as the jargon will have it.

But the change will be evolutiona­ry rather than revolution­ary.

Grayshon is relishing this new role, to make traditiona­l farming ‘just a bit of what he does’.

He points to the invasive rush again. There are plans to bring in some cattle, which are heavy enough to break down the rush, allow other species to come through and provide habitat for wading birds.

”When I first started I thought it will be a case of pulling away from farming and letting the rush take over,” he says. “But the more you learn, you realise that it does need managing, and there is a case for having the grazing livestock in there as well.”

A hard-nosed business case for introducin­g cattle in the traditiona­l farming sense could not be made, but one for increasing biodiversi­ty can. And increasing biodiversi­ty can have multiple benefits one of which is helping to improve the quality of the water in the catchment, and ultimately what comes out of our tap.

The outbuildin­gs at Humberston­e Farm are in the process of being converted into a learning hub, where lessons from the farm can be shared and skills exchanged with other farmers and land managers in the area.

Back around the kitchen table I asked Grayshon about his hopes for the farm.

“I don’t think it will ever be the be all and end all, in that whatever goes on here is farming and that it is the only way forwards,” he says.

“But I hope it can shape some farms, that some people can come along and take ideas from it and roll a little bit of it into their farm, or how they manage their land.

“I think it can be one way forward and people can get some ideas from it.”

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 ??  ?? Humberston­e Bank Farm covers 900 hectares of moorland, main image; Jonathan Grayshon, the new tenant farmer, above.
Humberston­e Bank Farm covers 900 hectares of moorland, main image; Jonathan Grayshon, the new tenant farmer, above.

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