The farm and garden team have just planted almost a thousand plants on the farm to create a new hedge.
Read MoreIt has long been a policy of Biodynamic husbandry to keep cattle with horns. As well as the aesthetic value, the horns have an important function in the life of the cow.
Read MoreApproaching the halfway mark in my 2-year placement here at Old Plaw Hatch Farm, the coming of the shorter days has allowed me to reflect on what has been one hell of a ride this past year.
Read MoreThe summer is flying by and we have already started to get the first harvests off the fields like onions, potatoes and squash. The Spring was very late this year, however, Summer is not over yet.
Read MoreWe have seen a noticeable increase in insect and bird life since the hedgerow down the main track behind the shop was planted. It runs along Home Field and then Holly Field. It has been a joy to watch it grow as it has become home, food and safety to many small birds, bees, butterflies, moths, and other insects.
Read MoreA few weeks ago, Peter, Josie and I wound our way through the leafy lanes of Somerset to the River Cottage Headquarters for a day long course.
Read MoreThe milking parlour is like a bridge between the farm and the dairy. Connecting the pasture and the daily life of the herd to the bottling of milk, cheese and yoghurt making; the parlour is that transition point of receiving this gift from the land and from the cows.
Read MoreFor every bottle of cows’ milk there is a story of a cow and a calf.
Read MoreThis February, all the members of the Plaw Hatch management group took part in a 3-day Holistic Management Course. Holistic Management, like biodynamics, is about working with the whole farm organism and with, rather than against, ecosystem processes.
Read MoreLong standing customers of Plaw Hatch Farm may remember a horse called Maggie, who used to hang out in the shop.
Read MoreBack in 2018 we decided to try re-homing a couple of feral cats on the farm.
Read MoreThis year, there has been good progress with the regeneration of the site of the woodland project at Plaw Hatch.
Read MoreThis week on the farm we celebrated the lifting of avian bird flu housing measures. Watching the hens go back onto fresh pasture is a great relief after six months of restricted housing for our hens.
Read MoreGingerElla, our Oxford Sandy and Black (OSB) sow, farrowed a week earlier than her due date this month on the full moon.
Read MoreThere are times when there is so much in my head. Mostly questions. A few ideas. The answers can take a while to formulate. Sometimes there isn’t an answer and it’s an ongoing dilemma. Here’s a taste of some of my current thoughts
Read MoreHi, I’m Rhys the Apprentice Farmer at Plaw Hatch Farm.
Read MoreOne of the key aims of Biodynamic farming is education. Every year we get a number of students (age 15+) from German Waldorf schools on work experience. We have limited accommodation onsite, so if you or someone you know has a spare room locally and you are enthusiastic about encouraging the next generation of farmers, please get in touch, we’d really appreciation your support.
Read MoreSmall local abattoirs are essential for organic farmers across Sussex and Kent, but they are closing at an alarming rate. Your voice might help to make a difference.
Read MoreMichael Moon has been working as a volunteer at Plaw Hatch Farm since 2009.
Read MoreWool is a wonderful fibre but is much underused in fashion and textiles. When it is, farmers get a woeful amount per fleece. Bella, who volunteered with us earlier in the year, is hoping the work of the Fibreshed movement is starting to change this.
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Maya, Miriam and Louisa kicked the year off by attending the Oxford Real Farming Conference.