Being a bit of a Radio 4 Farming Today listener, I have 'tried to follow' the new Countryside Stewardship Scheme and Environmental Land Management Scheme (E.L.M.S). To be fair to the Beeb, they did promote all this with a positive attitude and a tongue in cheek hope for the smaller British Family Farm. They quoted DEFRA on what is defined as a Farm? The answer I think was, "Forty acres supporting two full time wages". So the Beeb interviewed a few full time farmers who operate way below this DEFRA defined threshold and who draw nothing from the public purse.
I decided, in my wisdom, to have a go at signing up to the Countryside Stewardship and ELMS, based on what I had gleaned from Farming Today. In other words, to become a farmer, with my three small fields all under 1 hectare. I had an on-line interview/support talk with ADAS (Agricultural Development Advisory Service) which was very helpful and positive. I now had to fill in some forms and applications before the dead lines of June 30th & July 31st. (Much more in depth than this yarn). Unfortunately I struggled trying to complete these on-line forms as nothing seemed to apply? The lady at ADAS said to stay with it as there is much more in the pipeline to come.
Then Farming Today announced that the Government were to carry on with the old EEC 5 Hectare Rule with the new ELMS /Countryside Stewardship ..... "Here come the new boss, same as the old boss" (The Who - Wont get fooled again).
R4 Farming Today were not too impressed with this announcement and had a spokeswoman on from a countryside workers cooperative that represented smaller self sustained farmers.
All this is still on-going, but I did send my letter in, or 'Snotto-gram' as I prefer to call it because I do not think that these new schemes are going anywhere, in fact they are dead in the water before they have hatched. From my own perspective, my fields contain everything that these scheme are intended to help. Public footpath/right of way, styles, 2500 foot of dry stone wall, trees, water course, rare wild life, meadow and arable.
The problem as I now see all this is that, land owners, tenants, under 5 hectares will not benefit anything from these schemes yet the public who have the right to cross our land will think that they are paying us directly through their taxes to keep us, possibly creating a kind of arrogance?
Anybody else out there in Accidental Smallholder Land aware of all this ELMS / Countryside Stewardship (and other schemes) ?