Farming & Dairy

Our organic farming activities extend to 1500 acres on the Chichester Plain and the South Downs.

Woodhorn Farm has been managed by the Pitts family for over 140 years, after being founded by Fred Pitts following his move here from Devon in 1882. Today, just like then, the heart of the farm is our dairy herd and we now have 250 dairy cattle producing an average of 5,500 litres of fresh, organic milk every day.

In addition to our dairy herd, the remainder of the farm – which extends to 1,500 acres of certified organic farmland across the Chichester Plain – produces a range of organic arable crops including wheat, beans, peas, oats, spring barley and maize.

Much of this is grown to maximise the amount of home-grown feed for our cows – we’re currently 96% self-sufficient – but we also sell feed and seed to other organic farms. For example, the wheat we produce goes to make organic bread, the barley to make organic beer and the oats are used for oat milk.

Across the farm, 12% of land is currently in mid-tier conservation schemes with an ambition to keep increasing this figure year-on-year.

We grow large areas of legumes such as clovers and vetches too which, along with our own composted manures from our dairy herd, provide natural fertility and humus to the soil.

We supplement this with composts, soil conditioners and topsoil from our recycling enterprise, Earth Cycle, which diverts green waste from landfill. Through a 14-week process of mulching and turning, we create rich soil and compost for use in organic systems. As well as using this on our own farmland, we also sell the soils and composts to the public and into industry.

Organic farming is also about maximising animal welfare, concentrating on the principle of prevention rather than cure. Organic means free-range and all our animals are grazed on fresh grass throughout the spring, summer and autumn period and fed home grown forage through the winter. All our feeds are, of course, GM free.

Whilst antibiotic treatments are sometimes used (the health of the animal always comes first), their use is never routine, and herbal and homeopathic remedies are preferred – we aim to ultimately become entirely antibiotic free.

As part of our work with Organic Herd, we’re also working hard to monitor and reduce the water, fuel and energy use involved in our milk production too.