We mainly produce cereals: spring and winter wheat (5-5.5 tonnes/hectare, 13.5% protein for milling), spring barley (malting), winter oats, spring oats (5-6.5 tonnes/hectare). Spring wheat is sold via direct sale to a local windmill producing Cambridgeshire grown and milled bread. Our oats are produced for a specialty gluten free market. Clover is grazed by sheep. Cover crops grown include mustard and phacelia.

In addition to cereals we have fruit trees, all apples. We grow 15 varieties (6 heritage, the rest modern). 90% of the fruit is sold retail as fresh fruit or juice through our farm shop.

Having completed our 10 year Higher Level Stewardship agreement the farm now holds a Countryside Stewardship agreement. Options include: wild bird, pollen and nectar mixtures, over-wintered stubble, margins/buffer strips on all water courses, educational access, field corners and hedge planting.

In the past we have also produced home grown field scale vegetables including organic leeks, broccoli and beetroot. Our vegetable production varies depends on marketplace opportunities.

There is no stock on the farm which allows us to use some stockfree marketing. 

In 2019 my wife Lynn and I built and opened a farm shop and cafe www.harvestbarn.co.uk which now includes a deli and education centre.

June 2014 – Stephen describes the agroforestry system at Whitehall Farm; what they planted, how and why…

May 2023 – A talk recorded at an Agricology event focusing on regenerative agriculture that was held at the Waddesdon Estate. Stephen shares some of the benefits implementing the agroforestry system has brought his business, along with steps he believes need to be taken to convince more farmers to want to give it a go...

Sustainability in practice

Agroforestry: a new approach to increasing farm production

If you want to increase farm production, consider the space 2 metres above and 1 metre below the surface. Agroforestry offers an opportunity to utilise this space.

“If you put a farmer and a forester in a field together they never make eye contact. The farmer looks at the ground and the forester looks up at the trees: the only person looking forward is the agro-forester”

I became aware of agroforestry when living in Africa and since then I have wanted to apply ideas from tropical agriculture to temperate systems. Our fen farm is blessed with soils with a 23% organic matter content. When we took over the tenancy in 2007 I was staggered to see the level of soil erosion from the winds. On a ‘fen blow’ day you can literally see the soil disappearing over the ditch – there are no hedges here! As I would rather keep our own soil than give it to my neighbour, I started to think about ways we could modify the farming systems.

Windbreaks were an obvious solution, but we also wanted to generate an income. These considerations inspired the silvo-arable system we have designed and implemented at Whitehall Farm. At 125 acres it is the largest agroforestry system in the UK. Martin Wolfe from Wakelyns Agroforestry and other experts were very helpful during the design stages.

Agroforestry provides risk management against climate change and extreme weather events. It also means we can grow a mix of perennial and annual crops. As tenants we needed to design a system that would enable us to see an economic return within the tenancy period, hence the fruit trees. We use semi-dwarf rootstock that grows to about 12 ft., creating a microclimate.

We have designed the system so there is a 27 metre row spacing between the trees, with a 3 metre pollen and nectar strip under each tree. There are 24 metre alleys for the cereals, suitable for modern farm equipment. We created a controlled traffic farming system with 12 metre tramlines between the rows. This meant we had to invest in new equipment (e.g. 6m cultivator, drill, hoe and combine. Everything is weeded using a Garford Robocop vision guided hoe with a 6 metre wide camera. 7 years ago a lawn mower was the biggest machine we had on the farm!

The trees have helped reduce wind velocity at ground level and soil erosion. We can’t quantify this at the moment but we are involved in research to measure the impacts. In terms of biodiversity we have witnessed increased species abundance and spatial distribution has improved. We took a baseline survey of the farm before the agroforestry was implemented which included a botanical and bird survey. RSPB monitoring shows a positive impact on farmland birds especially tree sparrows, reed bunting, English partridge, barn owls and little owls.

There are challenges with profitability, but this is the same for every farm. The biggest problem we face is rent increases. Our local authority landlord is facing budget cuts and the money has to be found somewhere! Rent has increased by 50% when compared to 10 years ago but our margins haven’t gone up.

For those interested in implementing an agroforestry system, think about the market you are going to produce for and the timescales involved. It is important to consider land tenure and your skills.

Most information on agroforestry is very disparate and fragmented. Here are some good places to start:

Motivations

I have always had passion for farming, for nature and for the soil. For a long time I have been concerned that we are taking more than we are giving from one of the earth’s most precious resources, the soil. I started life as an engineer, but realised that my love for farming was greater. I retrained via an HND, BSc and an MSc in soil science. I spent a number of years overseas in Africa and India, working with farmers on soil and water management.

After getting married, Lynn and I returned to the UK and worked in agriculture and advisory positions. In 2005 we purchased some farm land, followed by securing a 15 year tenancy on a farm in Cambridgeshire in 2007. Alongside my role as Director of ‘Abacus Agriculture’, providing farm management advice, I manage our farm land in partnership with Lynn, who is also a Soil Association inspector and provider of environmental management advice to other farms. In addition I have recently been appointed as ‘soil and water manager’ at Innovation for Agriculture based at Stoneleigh – in this role I am bridging the void between research and practical farming, translating messages on soil health to an industry wide audience.

Growing crops on our farm and advising other land users on how to grow crops and manage their land and resources provides me with immense satisfaction and purpose. However I have deep concerns for our future. Industrialised farming has risen to the challenge of producing more ‘output’ over the last 40 years but at what cost to the soil, water, biodiversity and landscape resources that for too long we have taken for granted? This is partly why I farm organically.

We started out wanting to farm organically because it is good for the soil, wildlife and biodiversity, but also because of the strong market demand. Whilst our production output is only 75% of where the farm was under a conventional system, our inputs are significantly reduced and our profitability greater. Moreover, our reliance on artificial inputs is significantly reduced and our stewardship of the soil on the farm is, I believe, much improved. A primary motivation for us is risk management, we want to have control over as much of the business as possible and have limited reliance on third parties. Organic enables us to do this.

 


More information

Stephen is a non-Executive director of the Agriculture & Horticulture Development Board (AHDB) and a thematic lead on agroforestry for the Horizon Europe ‘Climate Farm Demo’ project. Whitehall Farm is part of a ‘living lab’ within the Climate Farm Demo project.

He was the winner of the prestigious 2020 Steven and Gillian Bullock Award – for his pioneering work in agroforestry and demonstration of the most successful application of his Nuffield experience 10 years on.

  • View his Nuffield Scholarship report ‘Agroforestry: A new approach to increasing farm production’ here.
  • Watch a short video by True Nature Films of Stephen talking about the benefits he has reaped on his farm from agroforestry ‘Agroforestry: Farming for the Future‘:

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