The National Trust Announces MyFarm Experiment
Released on: May 04, 2011, 1:34 pm
Author:
National Trust
Industry:
Entertainment
The National Trust is looking for up to 10,000 people to take
part in a mass on-line public farming experiment where they will make
key decisions at one of the Trust's working farms at Wimpole in
Cambridgeshire.
The MyFarm experiment aims to connect thousands of
people with how food is produced by giving them a greater say in how a real working
farm is run.
The Wimpole Farm Manager, Richard Morris, will set monthly options for the 10,000
Farmers, who will debate and vote on issues including whether to grow wheat, barley or oats as part of the autumn
sowing, through to which animals to buy and rear.
For a small subscription fee, farmers will get a daily behind-the-scenes insight
into how the 1,200 acre organic farm operates, the right to make decisions on the
farm by voting regularly and a family ticket to visit the farm for a day.
The MyFarm website will include video updates, webcams, live
webchats, debates and comment and opinion from both well-known farming experts and
National Trust tenant farmers.
Results from a new survey published to mark the MyFarm launch reveal that people in
Great Britain rate their knowledge of food and farming at an average of only 4.5 out
of 10, with 75 per cent of respondents hungry to know more about how food is
produced.
Mothers, in particular, show there is a need for a new way of learning - rating the
importance of their children understanding where their food comes from at 7.5 out of
10, yet only 8 per cent felt confident that they knew enough to teach their children
all about it.
Fiona Reynolds, Director-General of the National Trust said: "MyFarm is an exciting
new project that will give thousands of families and classrooms across the country
the opportunity to experience the highs and lows and often complex decisions that
farmers face on a daily basis.
"As the country's biggest farmer - more than 80 per cent of the 250,000 hectares
of land under our care is farmed in some way - it's our role to re-connect people
with farming to promote better
understanding and greater protection for the land on which we all depend."
Richard Morris, the National Trust’s Farm Manager at Wimpole said: "MyFarm is
Farmville for real - real farming decisions with real farming consequences. By
influencing the work at Wimpole our Farmers will start to understand the effects and
implications of their own decisions. They will also witness first hand how
unplanned events can turn a profitable year on its head.
"This winter hundreds of sugar beet growers have had to plough in their crops
because of intense frost damage, resulting in a whole year of costs with no return.
What surprises the weather holds for Wimpole this year only time will tell; but it
will affect the farm’s success and the choices the Farmers can make."
With only 10,000 Farmer places available, interested parties should sign up now. More information can be found at www.my-farm.org.uk.
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About The National Trust:
The National Trust is one of the most important nature conservation charities in
Europe. The Trust is involved in the whole food chain, with 200,000 hectares of
food producing land, over 150 restaurants and tearooms, and historic kitchen
gardens, orchards and mills. The charity has community growing spaces - from
allotments to kitchen gardens - at over 50 locations around the country and is
increasing these annually. These spaces inspire the Trust's 3.8 million members,
60,000 volunteers and visitors to think and learn about food. The National Trust is
creating 1,000 new allotment plots on its land in the next three years to give local
communities the space to grow their own fruit and vegetables.
PR Contact:
Steve Field
Assistant Press Officer
The National Trust
Heelis
Kemble Drive
Swindon
Wilts
SN2 2NA
01793 817740
www.nationaltrust.org.uk
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