Friesland Farm

Friesland Farm Friesland Farm, Friesland Farm Flowers, British grown cut flowers grown.

Friesland Farm is mainly a DIY livery yard, but as I am here all day we also grow our own veg and fruit & herbs, keep chickens, ducks & geese for eggs, and raise livestock for meat on a small scale.

Finally! The government have released plans for a civilian awareness campaign as well as the military home defence excer...
14/07/2026

Finally! The government have released plans for a civilian awareness campaign as well as the military home defence excercise.
It will cover everything I have always said about being prepared and resilient and don’t forget you heard it here first 😂😂🤪

The UK will hold its largest home defence exercise in decades next ...

Up early this morning just as everyone who was watching the match was going back to bed to get a couple of hours in befo...
06/07/2026

Up early this morning just as everyone who was watching the match was going back to bed to get a couple of hours in before work lol.
Firstly I wanted to get all the honesty cut for drying along with a few other things.

Then to harvest a few bits of fruit before the sun came round. The apricot tree produced just a tiny fraction of last years harvest but I didn’t expect much else really. Last year I got many, many kilos 🤪 and they were duly processed or given away.
The thing with a bumper harvest is to make the most of it and that way in a poor year you still have plenty from last year 😊

Berries have been coming thick and fast again this year, the thornless gooseberry is always a good producer and well worth adding to your fruit garden.

We went away on holiday and while you were sweltering in the heat we were in Iceland at 9c 😊 I am very glad I missed tha...
03/07/2026

We went away on holiday and while you were sweltering in the heat we were in Iceland at 9c 😊 I am very glad I missed that heatwave. The garden has gone beserk, Shelley & Co spent most of their time watering just to keep it all alive and did a fabulous job!
I have jumped straight back in and needed to get some of the veg picked so I pulled all the bigger beetroot, some carrots, peas, broccoli (that has sprouted 🙄) courgettes and I pulled all the onions to start curing them. Some of them have gone to seed (produced flower heads) they are still useable but they won’t store well so will be used or chopped for freezing/drying first.

The weather is always an issue but I feel it is getting more serious a lot faster than anticipated! This is not going away and so I have been looking at ways to cope with the heat in the garden over the next few years.

I believe we should all be looking at a long term plan to minimise moisture loss in the soil and create as much shade as we need going forward. More on that subject another time.

06/06/2026

The orchids are here 😊
They’ve wandered further up the drive than I’ve ever seen them, quietly appearing where they please.

It’s one of the reasons we stop mowing after a certain point, though keeping John away from the mower is a battle of its own.

In our urge to tidy everything, humans so often erase the very beauty we’re trying to protect!

04/06/2026

Every now and again I read something that makes me really mad and I need to say something out loud 😂

White Eggs V Brown Eggs, don’t be fooled by corporate spin!

You may have seen the supermarkets announcing that white eggs are “more sustainable” and part of their journey to net zero.

Supermarkets work on a huge industrial scale, so they look for tiny efficiency tweaks they can roll out across millions of birds. White‑egg‑laying hens eat slightly less feed, so across their system it gives them a small carbon saving. That’s the whole story behind the switch.

But here’s the bit the marketing doesn’t mention:

Changing the shell colour doesn’t change the system.

Their eggs still rely on:

• imported feed
• centralised packing
• long transport chains
• plastic packaging
• high flock turnover
• and a carbon footprint that comes from the entire industrial model

So yes — white eggs might make their spreadsheets look a little greener.
But it’s not the sustainability leap the adverts make it sound like.

On small regenerative farms, the picture is completely different.

Brown, white or any other colour eggs come from hens who:

• forage, scratch, and fertilise the soil
• live in small, calm flocks
• stay longer, not replaced for efficiency
• produce manure that feeds land
• require almost no external inputs
• and travel about 20 metres from the hen to the gate

No lorries.
No warehouses.
No packaging factories.
No carbon accounting tricks.
Just proper local eggs from a system that actually regenerates the land.

So while supermarkets are busy rebranding shell colour as sustainability, small local egg producers will keep doing what they have always done — producing real, low‑input, regenerative food for the community.

End of rant 🤪

Address

Shilton, ,///replenish. Opponent. Mutual
Burford
OX184AW

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 8am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 8am - 5pm
Saturday 8am - 5pm
Sunday 9am - 12pm

Telephone

+441993844245

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