Jump to content

Feeding up


Recommended Posts

Just been told by the farmer that we cant drive on the set-asides to get to or pheasent pens, its agood distance away from any track to start and carry bags of wheat,he said that its the stuartship what ever that is,going have to find a quad bike which wont damage the set-asides.aAny thoughts on what use used and how you would get around this????

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You will have to find another way in or negociate with your landowner to have a small portion of the margin taken out of the scheme to give you access.

 

For your info I have copied the below from DEFRA so that you will understand what it's all about.

 

People might think of arable field margins as just the edge of fields where the farmer has not cultivated a crop; that’s true, but arable field margins are also much more than that. Very often they are areas of habitat specifically created by farmers that come in a wide range of shapes and sizes and are important for species and habitats across the landscape.

 

 

Arable field margin © Morwenna Christian

 

How many are there and what do they do?

 

There are just over 100,000 hectares of arable field margins across England. Most of them have been developed since the mid-1990s when incentive payments to create them first became available. Arable field margins can be sorted into four broad categories, low input (ideal for rare plants and foraging farmland birds), winter food (for farmland birds), pollen and nectar food (for bumblebees and butterflies) and permanent grass (protecting watercourses by intercepting sediment and nutrient run-off from fields and reducing risks from spray drift).

 

Where are they?

 

They occur across much of lowland England in both arable and mixed (arable and livestock) farmland. Targeting habitat support for farmland birds, arable plants and other farmland biodiversity through Government initiatives like Environmental Stewardship has encouraged farmers and landowners to put arable field margins in place on their land. So as you travel around the countryside, look carefully at the edges of fields - you are very likely to see a strip or block of land that is growing something different to the rest of the field – this could be an arable field margin.

 

Why do they matter?

 

They are important areas in farmland because they protect ditches, rivers, streams and hedges from agricultural activity and they provide important sources of food and nesting habitat for many species, including declining birds like yellowhammer and grey partridge. Small mammals like field voles thrive in the grass arable field margins while bumblebees and butterflies make full use of the nectar and pollen from legume and flower margins, both important sources of food in a less varied landscape.

 

Arable plants make use of uncropped cultivated arable field margins at the field edge and into the field themselves, where the lack of crop plants and their inputs, allow the vulnerable and often rare arable plants to complete a lifecycle and produce seeds to germinate in another year. Arable field margins are not just for decoration, they are an integral part of the farmland ecosystem.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

Thanks for that link :good:

 

You will have to find another way in or negociate with your landowner to have a small portion of the margin taken out of the scheme to give you access.

 

For your info I have copied the below from DEFRA so that you will understand what it's all about.

 

People might think of arable field margins as just the edge of fields where the farmer has not cultivated a crop; that’s true, but arable field margins are also much more than that. Very often they are areas of habitat specifically created by farmers that come in a wide range of shapes and sizes and are important for species and habitats across the landscape.

 

 

Arable field margin © Morwenna Christian

 

How many are there and what do they do?

 

There are just over 100,000 hectares of arable field margins across England. Most of them have been developed since the mid-1990s when incentive payments to create them first became available. Arable field margins can be sorted into four broad categories, low input (ideal for rare plants and foraging farmland birds), winter food (for farmland birds), pollen and nectar food (for bumblebees and butterflies) and permanent grass (protecting watercourses by intercepting sediment and nutrient run-off from fields and reducing risks from spray drift).

 

Where are they?

 

They occur across much of lowland England in both arable and mixed (arable and livestock) farmland. Targeting habitat support for farmland birds, arable plants and other farmland biodiversity through Government initiatives like Environmental Stewardship has encouraged farmers and landowners to put arable field margins in place on their land. So as you travel around the countryside, look carefully at the edges of fields - you are very likely to see a strip or block of land that is growing something different to the rest of the field – this could be an arable field margin.

 

Why do they matter?

 

They are important areas in farmland because they protect ditches, rivers, streams and hedges from agricultural activity and they provide important sources of food and nesting habitat for many species, including declining birds like yellowhammer and grey partridge. Small mammals like field voles thrive in the grass arable field margins while bumblebees and butterflies make full use of the nectar and pollen from legume and flower margins, both important sources of food in a less varied landscape.

 

Arable plants make use of uncropped cultivated arable field margins at the field edge and into the field themselves, where the lack of crop plants and their inputs, allow the vulnerable and often rare arable plants to complete a lifecycle and produce seeds to germinate in another year. Arable field margins are not just for decoration, they are an integral part of the farmland ecosystem.

Cheers its still going to be hard to get those bags of wheat to those feeders

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...