A few years ago my now 18 year old son would sit watching 'Harry's Farm' with me. I'm pleased to say he is now on a 2 year working break in Australia on a huge farm....and he's loving it.
@sishabadab6570Ай бұрын
Aussie is having its problems as well..
@malcolmcoram2857Ай бұрын
Thanks Harry, I am not a farmer, or even related to a farmer, but I find your videos informative and very interesting. Thankyou very, very much.
@stevenkelby2169Ай бұрын
You do eat food though? ☺ 🍻
@colinsandford4500Ай бұрын
I was having a conversation with one of my neighbours ten days ago he said he had planted some wheat and was thinking it might have been an expensive mistake. We also discussed your previous video on justifying keeping the combine. He said he had done that exercise but came unstuck this year as the window for harvest was small and his contractor could not get to him in time. He was rescued by another neighbour who lent him his combine.
@stuartrobertson4714Ай бұрын
That's the thing my uncle was say we had a combine and guy up road didn't we was combining whilst he was waiting wasn't a fancy combine but got us buy some times we helped out around about
@anthonypaterson7066Ай бұрын
Hi Harry. Very interesting. The more I watch Harrys Farm the more I realise why my parents abandoned farming in the 60's. hope the weather treats you to a break.
@lionelmarytravels6003Ай бұрын
Thanks for the update Harry. Where we live on the Wiltshire/Hampshire border, I measured 208 mm in September. The first 12 days gave 69 and the last 12 days delivered 139 mm. We had a fairly dry time the middle of the month. I've kept rainfall records since 1982, but I've never known such a wet September.
@Grover91Ай бұрын
I'm up by basingstoke. 183mm and we have a chalk bed right under the clay. That dry week did absolutely nothing to dry the soil. Already the ground floods like it did at the END of winter in March when we have a heavy downfall. I can see this autumn/winter being an absolute nightmare.
@Dragonson575Ай бұрын
It's not worth anything, but you farmers have my sympathy.
@JustMe-bx8guАй бұрын
Might be due to the Tonga volcano eruption in 2022. 58,000 olympic size pools of water went up. Increasing the total of water vapour by 5%. Has to come down at some point.
@EdLeslie-h4wАй бұрын
Yet another interesting lesson for us non farmers. Thanks H.
@brianlever3767Ай бұрын
Great Harry thanks for update stay positive
@philipkimber6302Ай бұрын
Fascinating video which i can relate to as a 'past farmer'. We need these sort of videos on mainstream tv to help public understand the critical situation farmers are in and why they are always 'moaning'. High importing will be a disaster before long?
@iainsmart8614Ай бұрын
Thanks Harry. I live my farming life through you're channel and it does make me want to be a farmer! so, good luck with the weather. And thanks again.
@Rugbyman269Ай бұрын
Also watch px farms and , it's a farming life for me, equally informative.
@danielmarshall4587Ай бұрын
ALWAYS a great insight cheers Harry.
@nicka-j418Ай бұрын
Impressed to hear Harry on " Wake up to Money" (Radio Five) explaining the problems farming because of the poor weather. Clear explanations: a true promoter.
@GuyChapmanАй бұрын
I love the honesty of your videos. Open book, show the receipts. Clarkson gets the glory, but I give you the kudos.
@gyrene_asea4133Ай бұрын
Agreed. Harry shows his integrity whilst engaged in the age-old (losing/winning?) struggle to make the land produce for us.
@EleanorPetersonАй бұрын
Time to start growing rice, Harry!💦🌾
@TheByardАй бұрын
Then you need ducks to clean the paddy, watched a livestock truck unloading ducks the other day, they were loaded in four floors. Thousands of em.
@javelinXH992Ай бұрын
Joking aside, we may actually need to start thinking about changing what we grow and how we do it. If East Anglia does go under, let’s just accept it and grow rice. Maybe even have fish in there too!😮I really am joking there….. It doesn’t matter what the cause of climate change is, the weather in the UK is different from what it was. That affects what we can grow. Scientists have shown it, Met people have shown it, farmers complain about it. Can we look at asking farmers what they can best grow on their land and helping them do it with a suitable subsidy system? The market does that to an extent, but it generally forces farmers to grow one from a hard core of certain crops and put whole fields to that crop. Doesn’t help though when the weather is variable and the fields have patchy subtypes across them. What does Harry think would grow best on his land? Should we break up some fields a bit to take best advantages of the soil and water conditions across them? It comes down to how can we help farmers grow stuff that will grow. Not forcing them to grow crops that are no longer best suited because that’s what the market demands. There are crops suitable for every soil type and every climate type. Maybe we should broaden our horizons on what we expect farmers to do. I can’t help feeling half the problem is we expect farmers to grow a, b and c, when they may be better off growing x, y and z. It’s not a farming problem, it’s a consumer expectation and demand problem.
@lksf9820Ай бұрын
@@javelinXH992 farmers are being asked to grow different things, that's what this new scheme is all about.
@TheLaualampАй бұрын
@@javelinXH992 Yea i mean some places in estonia(!) have started to grow grapes for wine production. The climate estimate just a couple of years ago was 2050 the earliest it would be possible but here we are.
@javelinXH992Ай бұрын
@@lksf9820 Yeah, I know, but I was thinking about types of food crops we haven’t traditionally grown. That includes ones we used to grow but have forgotten about. As long as it is farmer and crop scientist led, rather than politician and activist led, then we may find something useful. As they say, When life hands you lemons make lemonade. Don’t think we can grow lemons though.
@antonylane2837Ай бұрын
Not a great advert for a contractor with that particular type of drill... I admire your combine harvester independence, your contract sprayer is good, but perhaps master of your own drill type and timing may well be worth a thought. I well remember a Cotswold grain farmer from 40 plus years back... Boys land; Winter Barley... drilled pretty early... His clay land Winter Wheat..continuous... Yes, in those days we could burn the stuble... Sadly today farming is turning into a rich man's hobby... and l suspect the Labour government quess that too. No surprises for guessing my farming days are but a memory. All that said; a very informative and candid report as ever, thank you Harry.
@chamteleboy21 күн бұрын
Dear Harry, Please do a summing up of the Budget.
@tims9434Ай бұрын
No farmers. No food.
@IverKnackerovАй бұрын
except what we import....
@djstucАй бұрын
@@IverKnackerov from farmers.
@SWR112Ай бұрын
@@IverKnackerovDid he say just the U.K. ? But his point stands they are very important the world over and often bear the brunt of climate change and extreme weather patterns we seem to be seeing a lot more common. Harry plays dice on both sides understands how his farm is effected by change while driving a 1974 Lamborghini on road trips and long may both continue 😂
@pilsortangleАй бұрын
@@tims9434 Metcalfe is taking Government money NOT to produce arable crops in 2024/25 so that slogan only partially applies to him.
@MrSuperGАй бұрын
Grow your own backwards places
@philiptyson4000Ай бұрын
Your delivery and engagement makes it interesting even for someone that knows nothing about it!
@davidcollingwood1262Ай бұрын
Thanks Harry. Very interesting and informative video 🚜🚜
@chrisroper5877Ай бұрын
love the up dates an insight to farming is brilliant
@Birko64Ай бұрын
What a washout this year. Up here in NW we had 200% of average over September. The local farm near here usually grows oil seed rape but I see they did maize this year and only harvested on last day of September. The weather in Europe has been even worse - just seen more catastrophic floods in the Balkans. Doesn't bode well for food prices.
@Chex_B29 күн бұрын
Thank you Harry!
@glendakirby5579Ай бұрын
Love your tales on the Farm Harry, and for letting us back seat farmers tell you how to run your farm, I'm sure it must give you great amusement.
@rotorhead5006Ай бұрын
We need a third channel - Harry's Trowel. 🙂 Here's hoping we get a bit more of a Spring & Summer next year, Harry. Spent the summer season in SW Ireland and I think I'm now amphibious!!!
@lksf9820Ай бұрын
Why, is he taking up bricklaying?
@kidfromtheseventiesАй бұрын
PX farms is another good KZbin channel.
@michaeltorpy336618 күн бұрын
Hi Harry ģreetings from Thailand we farm rice here in Thailand and crop is down this year due to too much rain
@aaronswanson6719Ай бұрын
Thanks for update, Harry. Good luck 👍🏻
@irvenrathburn9421Ай бұрын
I hope the weather gets better Harry,
@ianmontgomery7534Ай бұрын
Maybe grow rice!!
@AndrewWoof1Ай бұрын
At least you have got some in. My heavy land is all pudding like. No chance, shortly, of getting it in. Waiting for the RPA to OK my herbal ley, fingers crossed.
@SimonWaters-w1yАй бұрын
Blimey Harry, you need to come down to East Sussex and see what we’ve had to contend with, absolute bog!! The pain being we have to wait for another year to get it right! If only we dried out like you do, anyway, that’s the joy of farming!
@billkeaveney1526Ай бұрын
Thanks Harry, farming brings something new every day.
@stevewells5450Ай бұрын
Another very informative video harry hope your wheat crop gets established on the fields apart from that last 1 you described as a mess.maybe hold that 1 out for a spring barley crop in March like so many farmers have done due to last autumn's insane drilling conditions. All the best and look forward to your next post
@greengreenie55Ай бұрын
I enjoy these videos, informative and interesting for a townie surrounded by farm land.
@samwilson2300Ай бұрын
Your lucky we still have 500 acres of spring beans to combine in South Northants!
@justinquinn5780Ай бұрын
What are they looking like Sam ?
@samwilson2300Ай бұрын
@@justinquinn5780 they are a very good crop and are still ok atm. But the combine gets bunged up unloading them!
@brettski663Ай бұрын
We use the same drill and mostly clay soil and it looks mostly the same as yours I have neck ache from only looking behind 👍
@harrysfarmvidsАй бұрын
It's been a painful season, now busy applying slug pellets on the drilled areas we couldn't roll. It seemed a lot easier a few years ago, or is my memory playing tricks on me?!
@brettski663Ай бұрын
@@harrysfarmvids can’t wait to just look through the front window 😂
@j.r8213Ай бұрын
71mm for us in the northeast of Ireland 50mm of fell in one day Thursday 26th we were in or close to a grass drought ground conditions even after 50mm are very good but it has been cold, cold all year only odd days that were warm no hot days worth talking about.
@TT_1221Ай бұрын
I'm a bit surprised too by the deluge of rainfall in Harry's charts. (200mm). I'm in South of Ireland and according to the meteorological service: September 2024 was the second driest month of the year so far - behind June - and the 14th driest September since 1941. Provisional gridded rainfall data suggests September 2024 averaged at 63.6 mm compared to the rainfall amount for June 2024 - 20.8 mm.
@The-skillschoolАй бұрын
Fantastic information as always. Wishing you guys all the best.
@steveNCB7754Ай бұрын
Still, it could be worse, we could have mandated a policy to take perfectly good farmland out of production, in order to grow non-food crops! Err, hang on a minute ... 🤨
@ArthurDentZaphodBeebАй бұрын
Perfectly good farmland? Half of what Harry farmed was junk land that only was viable with ridiculous taxpayer subsidies. And now, to add insult to injury, taxpayers paying him to take the crappiest land back out of production. It's insanity.
@zerofull6936Ай бұрын
Bottom Folly might be better in grass. There was much good in mixed farming with smaller fields.
@sandman8920Ай бұрын
Definitely
@pj6073Ай бұрын
We have 2 roughly 10 acre fields split by a hedge. One side is is heavy clay like most of the farm and you step over to the other side and it's immediately the rockiest ground you've ever seen. It's been in arable rotation for years as we've always battled the rocks, buts it's name is sanfoin close which would suggest it was historically a meadow, so last year I turned it back to grass!
@EamonnMulready-k6qАй бұрын
Thanks Harry.....very informative as usual
@muds1970Ай бұрын
Great to hear you on Wake Up To Money this morning Harry. You should be their go to Farming expert. Next topic, food security!
@redjacc7581Ай бұрын
no sun, and no bl00dy Stanley!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@thetessellater9163Ай бұрын
Bedfordshire had not just the wettest September on record, but the highest rainfall of any month on record !!
@glennlingard7851Ай бұрын
We are the opposite here for rainfall Harry here in Wisconsin, last rain we had was ten days ago but only 1/4 inch, no rain in the forecast either, normally wet by now!
@TexProfVHАй бұрын
In central Texas, we got a rain 2 weeks ago and that was the first in two months. No rain in the future. Waiting to plant.
@lamarzimmermanmennonitefar5269Ай бұрын
Ny is a bit damp. Not causing a problem yet
@SWR112Ай бұрын
The closest I get to this is just gardening and I mean my garden looks like something out gardeners world it’s stunning. When I started out it was a huge learning curve, hit and miss but now down to a fine art where I know what I’m doing month by month and what I want done say by end of October putting in my bulbs for next spring. I would hope Charlie and Harry sit in December drink in hand happy f the work done for next year. I’m the same I love my garden but enjoy putting into winter mode o leave till March because all the good work and prep was done in October.
@royed31Ай бұрын
Always interesting , shame not more often like Harry Garage
@ReenaMountainLifeАй бұрын
Your passion for gardening is evident in every video. 🌺
@johncourtneidgeАй бұрын
Lovely again. I repeat the AG Street book again.
@johnsim3722Ай бұрын
I've only ever served beer to young farmers, so have no experience of farming. But I've noticed in my own garden how slow the raspberries were to ripen that they were rotten before being ready, and yield was low too. That's in Ayrshire, west central Scotland. It looked to me that farmers weren't able to do much silage either (a lot of farms are cattle around here). I get the impression that it's not been a good year, which makes the previous government's policies look even more daft. We need food security and we need to ensure that farming pays.
@petesmittАй бұрын
Ayrshire is part of the lowland south of Scotland..
@johnsim3722Ай бұрын
@@petesmitt Many descriptions are used, but lowland is only typically used when considering whisky. Central for the populated strip through Scotland, and west would include Ayrshire. Ayrshire does stretch quite southern. Therefore, my use of west central Scotland is accurate. It should be - I live there.
@petesmittАй бұрын
@@johnsim3722 I have family from Irvine; any further south than Ayrshire and you are in the borderlands..
@johnsim3722Ай бұрын
@@petesmitt You could ask them if they consider themselves to live in the west of Scotland or the south of Scotland.
@petesmittАй бұрын
@@johnsim3722 South west; their forebears used to do border raids across into England..
@grahamkellandАй бұрын
He should come to Devon and see the different soil types,medium loam in field culm measures solid yellow or blue clay with 8 inch of peat the other side of the hedge only suitable for grass! Or sandy red soil only a field apart.
@jamesfordjhfcontractingltd1627Ай бұрын
You can’t beat the plough
@tonysargent7787Ай бұрын
Another great video has always harry mrs m and Charlie 👍
@ja205424 күн бұрын
Ooo Harry’s on the radio!
@sizzleanburn7439Ай бұрын
Great update. Have you considered putting down some gypsum for the worst clay field?
@petesmittАй бұрын
Yep; 1/2 kg per sq metre..
@RovinmanАй бұрын
SO ! We need to Import Millions of tons of stuff that we used to grow ourselves ! Crazy ! Where's it going to come from ? Not from Ukraine or Russia that's for certain ! Europe will be desperately trying to feed itself ! Do we NOT have any knowlegeable Farmer / Scientists in the Government any more ? Don't get me wrong, I LOVE the countryside, I thought that was what the hedgerows were for , to keep all the small animals in a place where we could keep an EYE on them ? Best of LUCK to you Harry ! Stay DRY ! Stu xx
@MIEJ4Ай бұрын
Why don’t you think stuff will come from Ukraine?
@RovinmanАй бұрын
@@MIEJ4 Because they're trying to get it out to the Middle East, and Russia has just destroyed another grain carrier ! Russia has obviously stopped it's grain deal agreement with Ukraine ! Hopefully any more grain carriers from Ukraine, will stick to NATO territorial waters ! Stu xx
@RobertBrown-qt8dpАй бұрын
5 million tonnes per month from Ukraine at the moment.
@RovinmanАй бұрын
@@RobertBrown-qt8dp Why can't we grow our own , ....... apart from the weather !
@davetaylor4741Ай бұрын
Being English and from farming stock, I know what 200mm of rain can do to a farm crop. But now after 26 years in Australia I see 200mm of rain in a month and think, is that all. We can get 200mm in half an hour. Some places get that day in day out for weeks. But they aren't growing wheat.
@stever2168Ай бұрын
Fascinating and insightful as always. Disgraceful that our governments past and present pursue policies that drive ever-growing imports at such a scale and shameful that such perspective seems absent from mainstream media. Environmental responsibility is very important, but there's not much less responsible than shipping food half way around the world having been grown and transported with who knows what level of environmental disregard and consequence. I could watch Harry talk about farming for an hour a day. I hope the minority of disrespectful comments don't dishearten - it's fine to disagree and question, but there's no need to be a dick about it. What's in Harry's bank account is irrelevant - the farm is not a charity, it needs to pay its way and he is transparent about both the very marginal nature of farming as a stand-alone business and the impact of issues and policy on the wider farming community. The thing that most consistently strikes me is how bloody stressful it must be to be a farmer who relies solely on farming to support their family these days - it boggles my mind that we've arrived at a place where an occupation so fundamental to life in this country has become almost unviable at a personal level. If I was a conspiracy theorist I'd think the people setting policy are motivated to make farming a purely corporate enterprise... Good thing I'm not... 🙂
@kip879027 күн бұрын
Harry it’s probably time to build some lakes and water management as per Netherlands.
@3stevieb1Ай бұрын
I thoroughly enjoy these update even being a tech but farming is the UK lifeline that has poor coverage (aka countryside on BBC etc is useless). Maybe with these weather patterns we will have to grow rice!
@Louisa93ableАй бұрын
Have the traditional means of improving heavy clay soils been improved upon? If not why not use them?
@MalcolmPowderАй бұрын
Is it at all possible to use nematodes to control slugs at this scale? I had literally thousands of slugs in my garden this year, if you went out at night, you could point the torch anywhere and you'd see a slug. One treatment with Nemaslug and 10 days later, they were all gone, and from the on I saw only a handful. I was blown away. I imagine it's uneconomical on a farm though.
@tiredrichАй бұрын
If this rain carries on, that garage might start looking emptier! eek
@EleanorPetersonАй бұрын
Harry's Marina.⛵👀
@TwinPotManАй бұрын
I don't think the farm is his main source of income so the cars are safe
@FirkinnelАй бұрын
Is commercial hemp a viable option Harry ? Fields of the stuff in Tarragona.
@TheJmebeАй бұрын
Would be interesting to see an explanation of the geology that creates diverse soil types alongside each other.
@DonaldFraser-c9vАй бұрын
The weather is the one thing we have little or no control over and it can make or break a farmers year.
@royfontaine5526Ай бұрын
No control over? 😂
@nephos100Ай бұрын
You mean geoengineering, Stratospheric Aerosol Injection, Albedo Enhancement, Solar Radiation Management, Carbon Dioxide Removal, HAARP, NEXRAD, Hurricane Manipulation, Operation Popeye, Atmospheric High pressure Zone Management, Rain Cloud Dispersal and on and on.
@davidb9059Ай бұрын
I really like Harrys' , ' Harry's Farm ' . Thanks.
@RobinMcKinlayАй бұрын
Does scattering slug pellets not run a serious risk of decimating wildlife, (birds, badgers, hedgehogs etc) that may ingest poisoned gastropods?
@joetacchino4470Ай бұрын
Harry, as a civil engineer, all I want to do watching your videos is suggest drains to add! LOL. I'm sure it's not nearly that easy, but is there any way to add drainage to a few key spots that seem to always get flooded on your farm?
@localheroEdАй бұрын
I might be wrong but the issue is the clay. Drains might keep the clay a bit less wet but it’ll still be clay. The question is what can I grow on clay?
@gileswardle76Ай бұрын
Land drainage isn't very effective in clay soil soils, due to capillarity. Gravity is insufficient to remove the water from the capillary suction of the micro-pores in clay soil. Try holding a wet clump of clay soil in the air, it stays wet the same as clay soil around a land drain.
@grahamkellandАй бұрын
Mole drainage would help drain surface water away a lot quicker allowing top soil to soon dry out.
@gileswardle76Ай бұрын
@@grahamkelland mole drainage is a form of land drainage. For surface drainage you'd need perforated pipe in a trench with a gravel backfill to the surface. Typically this would be augmented with mole-lines perpendicular to the drains. All very expensive, with absolutely no return on the investment.
@grahamkellandАй бұрын
@@gileswardle76 you can mole drain into field side ditches and sleave the out falls a short distance, very cost effective way draining surface water for a few years. I suggest you refer to Andrew Ward's videos where he explains in detail.
@gmurrayfАй бұрын
The crazy thing about OSR is that it is a crop we can easily grow but we've placed regulations on it which render it ungrowable! Its hard enough fighting the weather, but to tie a hand behind our backs at the same time is just bonkers!
@stephenclark2058Ай бұрын
My home farm was on lime stone brash , and the local farmers would say it needed a shower of rain every day , and a shower of s--t on Sundays . And that was just about right .🤔🙂
@matthewc4094Ай бұрын
Great video. I know that you can control slugs in a garden by putting bran down - it desiccates slugs from the inside and kills them. An organic solution and a material that absorbs rainwater also. Would this work on a farm I wonder?
@MrSamsmithmardАй бұрын
Lovely Fendt
@MACIORKAplАй бұрын
Hi Harry, I know it is very expensive idea, but isn't there any tech which could drain the excessive water from the field? Some kind of pipes which you could lay deep under soil? UK farming was struggling with this problem for centuries, so I guess there must be some either good old solution or maybe some recent invention to tackle this
@leehayes70Ай бұрын
Crazy what the governments are doing to us and the farmers. Just bonkers.
@glendakirby5579Ай бұрын
It's just one method of population control, weather patterns can be controlled too, all that is required is financial incentive, and people will do incredible things to their neighbours. Delve into situations like the Lynmouth flood disaster in the 1950's, it was no accident, it was an experiment. More recently Boscastle is highly suspect, occuring 50 years to the day after Lynmouth,but at least there was no human loss, as there was in Lynmouth,which was known as Operation Cumulus,and a government operation, all those years ago, so ruining crops is a simple matter today, and suits WEF policy of population control, and eating bugs. Perhaps Harry should ignore the crop and concentrate on growing the slugs.
@bradwalker2287Ай бұрын
Seems to me the rows are set for the longer stretch of the fields regardless of the slope of the fields. If rows were set for drainage of gravity feed would the water not better shed off the fields to the green field dividers thereby drying quicker?
@mikeholland5474Ай бұрын
Could you use a plough and one pass system to get the last/toughest of your land planted!
@richardmosley4549Ай бұрын
Thanks Harry. What with a trip to Lamborghini on Sunday and a Farm today - what a start to the week!! I really feel for all our farmers, but chin up Harry - as soon as the weather perks up I'm sure our politicians will conjure up some new nonsense to screw up our food supply even further....!
@glendakirby5579Ай бұрын
HAARP will do that for them.
@jeremycarr6915Ай бұрын
Makes farming like a detective novel- where when and why? I'm over in Oxfordshire (non farmer) but with poor soil so everything is a learning curve- many thanks. One pint: quality of the video- are you using an oldish video/camera?
@TheLRiderАй бұрын
Wetter warmer Winters, heard that anywhere recently?Farming is first in the firing line with weather like that.
@bobstride6838Ай бұрын
I’m guessing but, back in the day would previous farmers have planted different crops in the heavier soils, I’m thinking of root crops?
@andrewj7994Ай бұрын
I am amazed the UK could grow 19 million tonnes of wheat, Australia only grows 25 million tonnes and Canada 30 million tonnes. UK has great soils, problem is so does the old Eastern block.
@petesmittАй бұрын
UK generally grows soft wheat, so not suitable for bread.
@andrewj7994Ай бұрын
@@petesmitt and Australia grows?
@hairyneilАй бұрын
@1:14 that map explains a lot! I've been thinking it's been really mild and dry recently but I'm in Striing not Swindon :D
@BionicRustyАй бұрын
Last Tuesday (I think it was), when it rained constantly all day, I placed a straight walled jar out at 9:00am. At 8:00pm, it had collected 42mm of rain water. Given that it was raining hardest earlier in the day, (From 4:00am), there could easily have been 50-60mm between 4:00am and 8:00pm.
@justincummins166Ай бұрын
Shame i can't send you pictures of Wheat crops looking like here in NSW Australia in my area, cracking looking crops with full heads.
@geraldbeard856Ай бұрын
would a different type of drill be any better in soggy conditions.........back in the old days seed corn was broadcast on the surface with a fertiliser spreader and harrowed in. something you haven't mentioned is part of the reason the drill clogged up was all the straw you chopped is on the surface and that was some of the reason the drill clogged up
@MrRawMonkeyАй бұрын
I live close to a proposed massive solar farm, which are taking over much of the countryside in my area.
@nafovikingАй бұрын
Damn.. Just watched the weather forcast. Will kirk hit your farm? Looks grim.. We will get it here in the middle of Norway. Bummer
@AndyA1234Ай бұрын
More global heat leads to more energy in the system. Weather phenomenons are just a way of equilibrating that energy from areas of high energy to areas of low energy. Heat energy is dissipated by evaporation of water leading to more cloud hence more rain. Heating up land mass results in heated air which cause updrafts to cause areas of low pressure which drives winds to equilibrate high/low pressure gradients.
@michaelhaw8265Ай бұрын
hi harry, enjoy your in-depth look at farming, your wet fields have they got land drains, or is it possible to mole plough the land.
@Cybot7Ай бұрын
Informative as always although do the slug pellets have any effect on the wildlife that eat the dead slugs? Somewhat concerning if they do
@SubjectiveFunnyАй бұрын
Why not drill small deep holes into the clay and fill it with gravel, at least in the major problem areas? You would probably need hundreds of holes but at least it would give it a chance to drain.
@joshuuaaaa440Ай бұрын
Dream job being a farmer but doesn’t seem to be any easy way in these days , wish the government would support farms
@royfontaine5526Ай бұрын
😂
@lamarzimmermanmennonitefar5269Ай бұрын
Terrible idea. Free market would be better
@johnhyde8892Ай бұрын
Hi Harry, have you ever looked at growing beans for baked beans in the future.
@openbabel25 күн бұрын
Why cant you? Put in a micro reservoir in the farm to collect the excess rain to be used in the dry summer months? can you experiment with micro hydro schemes in the expectation that global warming will create lots more water? The sloped top field for set aside seems to be ideal for red clover chickery hemp and leagues? Will putting in ditches to drain the rain soaked top fields make a difference ? Clarkson seems to think buying a very fast tractor and scrapping with a drill will improve his productivity ?
@generaldefamation20 күн бұрын
Could we have your views on the recent budget please Mr Metcalfe?
@ewanstewart8011Ай бұрын
The weather is pretty terrible here and according to the forecast it’s going to get substantially colder for the rest of the week 🥶🏴👍🏻
@michaelgallagher7082Ай бұрын
No farmers no food .. the government needs to listen to the farmers and stop interfering.
@jainger8132Ай бұрын
It seems to be farmers but no food. I haven't seen anything grown for human consumption.
@lamarzimmermanmennonitefar5269Ай бұрын
What the story on the glysophate alternatives? Are they the same chemical family? Something entirely new? Any safety studies, concerns?
@mattfeltham8132Ай бұрын
Lots of American farmers use "Drainage Tile" on farms i.e. Underground drainage. Any reason we dont use this in the UK? or do we? i haven't seen it as yet (Not a farmer just watch you tube vids)
@joshbacon824121 күн бұрын
Why are these changes to inheritance tax rules being introduced, where from April 2026 combined business and agricultural assets worth more than £1m would be taxed at 20%?