The Telfit Farm Project
The Telfit Farm Project
Telfit farm is a unique, 650 acre hill farm in the Yorkshire Dales.
Our project is to demonstrate how regenerative farming principles can be used to farm real, healthy food and can restore natural systems and our planets health.
Many of the methods we utilise at Telfit have stemmed from studying how our ancestors farmed to produce food with little to no inputs or technology.
Telfit is blessed with remarkable levels of natural capital and biodiversity that we are building on, with significant numbers of Curlew, English Partridge, Cuckoos and many other rare species.
We hope to demonstrate how these methods can be used nationwide to transform farming.
We are enacting, on a whole farm scale, regenerative agricultural and ecological principles designed to restore natural systems and sequester carbon.
We utilise natural inputs and mob grazing to mimic the natural cycles of species in the wild. As well as a rigorous focus on introducing maximum levels of diversity into our farm habitat.
We are also engaged farm wide in diverse and varied habitat restoration project to reawaken our ecosystem and create the conditions required for natural systems to kick in.
these systems engage the restorative power of nature and allow all species to flourish on the farm
Regenerative principles and ancestral knowledge of farming offer a unique opportunity to produce food as well as harness the powers of nature.
Across the farm we are engaging in a huge number of projects to create unique and varied habitats across the farm.
They include:
To do this we have planted/are planting:
Farming globally is one of the biggest drivers of climate change there is.
Conventional farming methods through fertiliser usage and ploughing release vast amounts of carbon into the atmosphere.
Regenerative farming changes all that.
Through implementing methods to improve soil health such as mob grazing we can sequester vast amounts of carbon in our soils as well as in the trees we plant.
As a byproduct this carbon also helps us increase our water holding capacity on the farm by up to 20,000 litres an acre, reducing flooding downstream and increasing our farm resilience to drought.