Ted Waite viewing my herd over the gate at Hey Farm in 1966. I would never claim to have made a living from my pigs and cattle but we broke even and at times made a small profit. It was my driving that kept us going.
When I bought Hey Farm (£2,200 for 7 acres) you could buy any of the small farms on the tops, like Wendy's at Lower Burnt
Hill, for £50 an acre and that included the buildings. Only the larger holdings made money. The writing was on the wall in 1960 for the small holdings that previously had afforded a precarious existence to families. In the case of LBH, I delivered their groceries every week and knew exactly how they were situated. I described it at the time as poverty farming and always felt sorry for them. The farm below Wendy's was the same even though the man of the house worked, I think, at Rolls Royce. Metcalfe's (?) on the farm above had a slightly larger acreage, were nearer the road and were childless. They seemed to be doing better.
From what I can see it has all changed now and nobody is 'comfortable'. I fear that the days of the small farm on the tops as a viable business has long gone and I think Wendy would agree. It's a shame in some ways, we have lost some very skilled and independent families but in another way, if it can't support a reasonable standard of living perhaps it's good that it has gone. I am torn, I loved all those small farmers.