Island Life Magazine Ltd October/November 2010 | Page 80

country life Island Life - October/November 2010 Photo: Left - Bun pictured with his daughter Sarah June 1992. Top: Ben Symes (Father) pictured 1978 After a steady start to the agriculture adventure, Bun and Nick began picking up a few share farm contracts, and Newport and Yarmouth, which is close would have a tractor mounted sprayer to 1,000 acres. and doing 12-metre width. “We deal with a lot of businessmen “We are looking to upgrade the moved up from smaller machines to who want someone to farm the land, so sprayer so it can put much higher four-wheel drive tractors. we do it on a share farm basis, where volumes of water on to vegetable crops. we do all the work, and if there is any Everything is getting bigger, quicker running four combines. There was a big surplus from grain sales etc, we have and has more technology.” need for them because there were quite a share of that. We did it on a much a few medium sized arable farms that smaller basis in the past, but obviously looked at has GPS, so you can just set couldn’t really justify the cost of what farms are getting bigger now, and in the width and off you go. Obviously would have been between £30,000 thankfully we are doing it on bigger you have so many jets on a 24-metre and £40,000 for a new combine. So units,” he explained. boom, but with the new technology, Bun recalls: “By 1982 we were we were picking contracts for 200 to He continued: “The sprayer we have Bun reflects on the changing face of even in a field with triangles in corners, 300 acres at a time, and by 1986 we Island farming, and accepts: “There instead of overlapping, the jets only were 2,250 acres with four combines. are nowhere near as ma ny ‘dairies’ come on when needed, so there is Ironically we are doing more acreage as there used to be. At one time we never any overlap. now with just one combine. We can were doing 14 different dairies with a “You have a screen with a picture of manage about 12 acres an hour. And small trailed forage harvester. Now we the field in front of you, and as you go with the self-propelled forager we did have a self-propelled forage harvester, along, it is just like a kid colouring it in. 220 acres of grass in a day.” and now we are probably doing more It really is unbelievable, and I couldn’t In 2000 brother Nick decided he had acreage, but on fewer farms with possibly have thought such things had enough of ‘working all hours’, so bigger herds. What you are seeing is would eventually be used when I first he moved to a job with the IW Council. fewer dairy herds, but the ones that are started doing this job.” But Bun’s enthusiasm did not waver. remaining are a lot bigger. His farm was initially a 260 acre unit, “When it comes to arable, probably Meanwhile, his 30-ft header combine steers itself with ‘magic eyes’ like but it has now been expanded towards the average size when we started was miniature television screens on stalks Cowes and Newport to take in close to 250 to 300 acres. The units are much either side of the header. He smiled: 500 acres. bigger now, with a viable arable unit “That means you can let go of the He and his staff also do full farm more like 600 to 1,000 acres. With our steering wheel to roll yourself a contracts on other parts of the island, crop spraying we use a self-propelled cigarette, or whatever, and off it goes. including Great Park Farm between 24-metre sprayer, but years ago we 80 “There doesn’t seem to be any end Visit our new website - www.visitislandlife.com