Geoff Hearnden

Carrapitt Farm, Bridford

A working farm that has evolved over 40 years into a nature reserve, including turning ten acres of agriculturally improved rough grassland into a species-rich wet meadow.

Meadow at Carrapitt Farm, Bridford
Meadow at Carrapitt Farm, Bridford

We came to this semi derelict farm on the Eastern edge of Dartmoor in 1960, needing to make a living from farming. We realised in 1963 (after the great blizzard) that a small dairy unit was not sustainable and moved to outdoor pigs and barley. This served us well for 40 years by when much of the farm was effectively a nature reserve including 10 acres that has become a species-rich wet meadow.

In 1960 the meadow called Goodamoor was rough grassland with gorse and rushes, we ‘improved it’ which then meant ploughing, liming and reseeding helped by various subsidies. Later we used the field to carry in pig sows during the summer that resulted in mostly bare ground each autumn. When other areas became available we let Goodamoor green up which it did very effectively so that it could be cut late (in August) each year and so gradually reduce fertility. There were a few Yellow Rattle plants and these were increased first with seed collected locally and then by saving and spreading seed every year.

Wildflower meadow at Carrapitt Farm, Bridford

We noticed two flowering orchids in spring 2006, over 30 in 2008, 140 in 2010 and by 2012 there were over 300 and we stopped counting (a mixture of Southern marsh, Heath spotted, Common spotted and their various hybrids). In 2010 we had spread some bales of hay from a Dartmoor meadow and these introduced Eyebright and probably some assorted grasses. The only other introductions have been Meadow Thistle and Devils Bit Scabious. Diversity has gradually increased, Yorkshire Fog replaced by Crested Dogs Tail and Sweet Vernal grass. Birds foot trefoil (Lotus corniculatus) has also increased producing many Six spot burnet moths each spring.

The variety of plants is not immediately obvious, the majority do not have showy flowers, but the mix includes many grasses all sustaining a wide range of insects, which in turn feed birds.

The rushes provide winter shelter for certain birds. We have Snipe and until recently Lapwings. In summer it’s a home for hares, voles, grass snakes and an important feeding site for swallows and house martins.

Other "Me and my Meadow" stories

View all stories

Angela and Paul Brassley

Ilsington

The transformation of a farmed field into a nature reserve.

Shira Rüb and Richard Lemon

Lower Ashton, Devon

A former pony paddock, now with over 108 species of plants recorded

Louisiana Lush and Julian Granville

Luppitt, Blackdown Hills AONB

The ongoing transformation of two farms - 200 acres of mixed meadows, woodland and wood pasture - to what they would have been like prior to the 1970s

Nick and Sarah Smith

Bickington, Dartmoor

A Dartmoor farm’s focus on improving soil health, sequestering carbon and ensuring its future