 |
Four
generations of our family have farmed at Hall Farm, which has been our
home since the 1880's.
Brentingby is a quiet, sleepy hamlet yet it
is only two miles from the busy market town of Melton Mowbray. The area
is rich in history, with most our grassland unploughed for centuries,
overlying ancient ridge and furrow field systems, together with a Saxon
water mill site. There has been a manor house here since mediaeval times,
but the current farmhouse dates from the seventeenth century. It is
surrounded by a mix of traditional and modern farm buildings and is
adjacent to a twelfth century church, now converted to a private house.
The course of the Melton to Oakham canal, abandoned in the middle of
the nineteenth century, with the expansion of the railway network, runs
through the farm. Contemporary development in the form of the Melton
Mowbray Flood Alleviation Scheme – a flood storage scheme –
is the twenty-first century’s contribution to the landscape’s
evolution.
Mixed farms such as ours are increasingly unusual but this diverse habitat
creates advantages for wildlife. We leave field margins as rough grassland
to encourage insects and small mammal populations; these in turn support
predators including barn owls and kestrels. Other areas of land are
managed to encourage species such as skylark, yellowhammers, meadow
pipits and tree sparrows. In excess of 90 acres of our permanent pasture
is managed without fertilisers, to encourage biodiversity in the hay
meadows and on the floodplain.
The River Eye, (a Site of Special Scientific
Interest) runs through the western end of the farm and supports a large
variety of wildlife including a rich flora, dragon and damselflies,
wildfowl and other beautiful birds such as reed buntings, snipe, kingfishers
and yellow wagtails.
Without grazing, the historic field systems
will be lost, along with the species that depend upon the extensive
grazing ecosystem - as has happened on a vast scale across the country,
particularly since the 1940’s. We therefore try and work with,
not against this heritage to produce milk, meat and grain.
|