Most weeks on the farm I truly believe there is no better job in the world.
This month, Roger Evans shares his thoughts on climate change and tells us why a dose of reality and common sense is helpful when dealing with the issues of the day.
After the dry spring and summer we saw last season it was hard to imagine we would now be paddling around in sodden fields again, but here we are.
This month, Roger Evans ponders the decline in veganism, discusses the ploughing of steep land and reminisces about headage payments and scams.
Because we had not had weather as cold as we had in the middle of the month for a while, it took a bit of adjusting to.
I am writing this with my feet up by a roaring fire, after an entire day spent thawing water pipes and troughs for the cows.
After an exceptionally mild autumn, winter is definitely here as we discovered first hand when we drove through horizontal sleet on the way up our hill to collect a snow-covered quad bike left there at a gathering a few days earlier.
And just like that December has come around yet again, somehow even faster than last year and that means one thing and one thing only: the yard is like a nonstop, revolving door of people known for their sixth sense of arriving when a kettle has just been
I have joined the NFU, which is not a phrase I ever thought I’d say.