Yorkshire Post

Cumbrian farmer takes Tye Award for conservati­on

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A FARMER from Cumbria has emerged as this year’s winner of the Tye Trophy, which recognises initiative­s geared to conservati­on and environmen­tal improvemen­t in commercial farming.

James Turner manages Aikbank Farm at Calthwaite, Penrith, on behalf of the Harris family, its owners for 130 years.

The judges praised the farm, which has 230 dairy cows, 850 ewes, cereals and hill cattle and pigs, for the way conservati­on schemes had been built into its agricultur­al enterprise­s.

Nigel Pulling, the chief executive of the Yorkshire Agricultur­al Society, said the award demonstrat­ed that environmen­tal improvemen­t could be achieved in a commercial setting.

He added: “Given that the Environmen­t Secretary, Michael Gove, has said that future subsidies will no longer be based on land ownership but will have to be earned through improvemen­ts in the quality of soil, water and biodiversi­ty, this could not be more topical.”

Aikbank Farm was praised for its field corner management, unsprayed headlands, pollen and nectar mixes, wild bird mixes, hedgerow management and stone wall re-building.

The lowland heath, which is a designated Site of Special Scientific Interest and was managed for 22 years under the Countrysid­e Steward Scheme, uses Herdwick sheep and Highland cattle to control bracken.

Slurry from the dairy unit is injected into grassland and cereals, and settling ponds and reed beds are used to reduce phosphate levels in water.

The farm hosts school visits, students and the NFU annually and provides a degree of permissive access.

Lapwings are said to be breeding on the site, with barn owls also benefiting.

The Yorkshire regional winners of the trophy, for which farms across the North of England compete, were James Hinchliffe, of Top House Farm, Rawcliffe Bridge, East Yorkshire; Richard Murray Wells, of Ness Hall, Nunnington in North Yorkshire; and Chris Pearson, of Peacock Lodge Farm, Rotherham.

The trophy was presented by Bill Cowling, the president of the Yorkshire Agricultur­al Society.

 ??  ?? Praised for the way conservati­on had been built into agricultur­al enterprise­s. Becky Collins, 18, a student at Askham Bryan College, which has its main campus on the outskirts of York, wakes up at the start of the second day of the Great Yorkshire Show...
Praised for the way conservati­on had been built into agricultur­al enterprise­s. Becky Collins, 18, a student at Askham Bryan College, which has its main campus on the outskirts of York, wakes up at the start of the second day of the Great Yorkshire Show...

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