Over the Farmer's Gate

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Authors: Roger Evans

To all of my family

I’M A DAIRY FARMER and I live and farm in a particularly beautiful part of the country. People often say how lucky I am to live around here and that I probably take it for granted.

A day never passes when I don’t appreciate what I have around me, and in some ways this book offers an opportunity to share how and where I live and what I see about me. I see myself as a privileged spectator, observing what goes on among the people, wildlife, the animals I live and work with and a countryside that I cherish.

I work long hours, often on repetitive work and watching wildlife is often a welcome distraction. I’ve got this mobile hide that I use as a vantage point. It’s very unobtrusive; birds and animals have become used to seeing it about, it’s got glass all around, it’s green so it blends in and it’s called a tractor.

It’s a life and death struggle for the wildlife out there. You can watch something flourish but there’s usually a predator lurking in the background. When I see an aggressive species gaining the upper hand I long to intervene, to provide some balance. Balance is a theme I will return to often.

And then there are the people. Sometimes I use the tractor to creep up on them as well. The people around here have changed beyond belief as more seek to live in this sort of area.

There was a time, when driving the tractor through the village, that if I saw a stranger I would slow down and stare at them. These days I can see lots of people I don’t know but they all seem to know each other and they’re staring at me.

Thirty or forty years ago, there were a couple of farms within the village and the movement of stock and farm vehicles within the village was an everyday occurrence. The farms are gone now, and the buildings have become homes.

I kept a flock of sheep for many years and their summer grazing was the other side of the village, and we had to bring them home regularly for shearing and dipping. Farming life is full of ironies and sheep are particularly adept at irony. They used to graze a succession of fields, the furthest parts of which were nearly a mile away from the roadside gate. The sheep would be in what an auctioneer would describe as ‘flock ages’, meaning that at one end of the scale you would have the young fit ewes you had bought the previous autumn – yearling ewes – and at the other end you would have the old granny ewes.

Sheep are a bit like humans: the young ones could go drinking and dancing all night, the old ones are getting a bit broad in the beam, starting to lose their teeth, and are definitely unfit. The irony was that when you went to fetch the flock home, the yearling ewes all seemed to be close to the road while the old ewes would be at the other end of their range.

I would put the dog around, very gently, but the effect was always the same, a breakneck gallop to the road, the old ewes trying to keep up with their lambs, who thought all this was great fun. When you opened the gate, the yearling ewes would be off down the road.

Eventually, out through the gate would come the granny ewes, puffing and blowing. There was nothing cruel about this, but if you’re 65 you shouldn’t go jogging with 18-year-olds.

By the time we would get to the village some of the old ewes would be starting to struggle. Just when you had about 10 cars behind you, some of them would flop down in the road for a rest.

This would present a dilemma, but there were sanctuaries you could use. We used to pop half a dozen into the school playground, a couple in the phone box and local people would recognise whose they were and know that you’d be back with the van to pick them up later. These days the RSPCA would be there long before you could get back with the van.

The sheep have long gone. I kept the land on for a few years and used to graze my in-calf heifers there. I used to walk them there in the spring and back in the autumn. When you are taking heifers through the village, past an open plan garden, and they’ve been shut in a building all winter and there’s a nice bite of grass on somebody’s lawn, they can take a bit of getting off and back on to the road. The heifer that’s gone into the greenhouse can take a bit longer.

I used to know the names of all the children who attended the village school and names of all the young mums who took them there. I don’t any more. Times change. There was a time when I used to take 15 children to swimming class in a Morris Oxford, with three in the boot, and only two were mine. I don’t do that any more either.

AT LONG last, a friend has come to set some mole traps in the garden. I’ve tried to catch them with little success (well, none really) and my grandsons complain that the molehills spoil the
football and that cricket is completely out of the question.

We’ve now caught one, but there are three new areas of mole activity. The dog tries to help by digging for them but this doesn’t help the sporting activity and as far as I know, he’s less successful than me.

Next time I buy a lawnmower I will have one with a blade on the front like a bulldozer to level the molehills.

Round here they are called ‘unts’ (moles, that is) and a molehill is called an unty tump.

THERE has been a lot of publicity recently about farmers being subsidised with what is called a single farm payment. The publicity centred on the fact that the money was due at the end of last year but the Government, for a variety of reasons, had failed to pay it out until recently. Without labouring the late-payment problem, the publicity it generated did flag up the subsidy issue and, as a farmer, I was on the end of quite a lot of teasing about receiving hand-outs, particularly from people involved in other businesses. Most of the teasing was thinly veiled sarcasm; I’m quite good at sarcasm myself but resisted the temptation, because deep down I would prefer not to receive this money. I would rather receive adequate returns from the market place, but I don’t.

Historically, money was directed towards the production of food, resulting in the food mountains that have long gone and now exist only in the minds of some politicians.

We are now paid to look after the countryside and the environment, which we do, and I hope that something of my own caring and responsibility comes across in this book. The reality is that few farm businesses would survive without this money. My milk at the moment is worth about 17½p a litre. Ten years ago it was worth 25p. Ironically, milk prices are under huge pressure at
the moment and are likely to go down even further.

We produce broiler chicken here as well as milk. I love to see a new batch of chicks running about on nice, clean sawdust. When they are ready to go you can hardly walk between them. I would like to be able to reduce stocking density but if I did we couldn’t compete with imports. A friend of mine criticises the way we rear our poultry yet enthuses about being able to buy a ready-cooked chicken for £3.

I have to go to London on the train about once a month and there’s a farm we pass that hasn’t been ‘farmed’ for several years. To start with, it looked like several fields of dead grass and weeds; now it’s all briars and thorn bushes. Soon it will be an impassable eyesore. I don’t think the public want that.

In the pub one night, a local garage owner was waxing eloquent about farmers’ payments. I kept my own counsel but couldn’t help thinking that if I could have for my milk what I was getting 10 years ago, and he was charging for his petrol what he was getting 10 years ago and all the other products I buy were at the same level, he could have my single farm payment with pleasure.

WE’VE GOT quite a lot of cats about this farm. There are two that are sort of house cats that live in a utility room. We can call on these two if we get any unwelcome furry visitors with long tails in the house, which old farmhouses often do.

And there are the other cats. I don’t know how many there are, they seem to come and go. Two years ago, there were 22. We give them milk every day, so that’s when I count them.

I prefer to think of them as feral cats because farm assurance seems to think I should care for them. You can’t touch them because they never come near enough. I suspect that if you did, you could lose some fingers.

There’s a beautiful grey, half-grown kitten that lives up with the young calves. I give it food and milk every day because I would like to tame it, catch it and give it to my granddaughter for a pet. Most of them are ginger, a legacy of a ferocious ginger tomcat that used to visit here at one time. If you met him in a doorway he would snarl at you and it would be a question of who had the bottle to keep going. I don’t like the ginger cats because they remind me of him.

We’ve got a couple of tabby cats. One is very old with a bent ear but she’s always working away. We’ve got four or five nice black ones as well. What we haven’t got are rats. We used to have a lot of wrens about but I suspect the cats have had them as well.

Then there are the dogs. If not on farming duties, the dogs busy themselves keeping the cats busy. We have a bearded collie who was brought to work the cattle and he can do the whole thing, the outrun, the fetch and the pen, but only with cats. He spends his day working with the cats. The cats, for their part, being fiercely independent, take very little notice of him. So when he thinks he’s got a couple cornered up in a ‘pen’, it’s only because that’s where those particular cats have decided to go. Sometimes he is joined by Mert our border collie and when I hear prolonged barking and I go to investigate, it is always because a new cat or a new kitten has turned up.

It has always intrigued me that the dogs can differentiate between new cats and their regular cats. At night, the corgi lives in the kitchen, the bearded collie runs loose (I wouldn’t be that bothered if he ran away) and the border collie is chained up. Dogs are a bit like young boys, leave them to their own devices and they will get up to mischief.

The border collie lives in what used to be a henhouse situated in what used to be a walled kitchen garden. He has a nice long chain so he can go into the henhouse or quite a way outside. In
the summer, wet or dry, he sleeps outside. Last week, I tidied up his shed and gave him a thick wad of nice clean straw to sleep on. Next morning, when it was still very dark, I went to release him to come with me to fetch the cows. He had made himself a cosy nest in the straw and at first glance in the torchlight he looked a lot bigger than usual.

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