23/01/26 Illegal meat, farm incomes, winter feed on the Western Isles
Increase in illegal meat smuggled into the country - farmers are concerned it will bring animal disease to the UK.
The smuggling of illegal meat is on the rise. Farmers are worried it could bring animal diseases into the UK. Europe has seen outbreaks of both African Swine Fever and Foot and Mouth, neither of which affect humans but both of which can wipe out whole farms.
Average income across all farms in England rose by 49 percent in the year from March 2024 to February 2025, with increases in all farming sectors, bar specialist pig farms and horticulture. That鈥檚 the headline from DEFRA鈥檚 newly published Farm Business Survey. So, are English farmers laughing all the way to the bank, and how do those figures sit alongside frequent reports about tough times for farmers with high costs, uncertain markets, more extreme weather events, and low confidence in new agri-environment schemes?
It's mid-winter, the hungriest time of year for livestock, so all this week we're looking at the challenges of providing winter feed, be they financial or practical. It's tough enough when farmers are able to grow or make their own forage, but in the Scottish islands, where the land鈥檚 poor and the climate鈥檚 wet, crofters rely on hay and straw being brought in by lorry from the mainland. We join a haulier as he drops off bales in the Isle of Lewis. His family has been supplying forage to the Western Isles and Skye for three generations.
Presenter = Caz Graham
Producer = Rebecca Rooney
Last on
Broadcast
- Fri 23 Jan 2026 05:45麻豆社 Radio 4
Podcast
-
Farming Today
The latest news about food, farming and the countryside