This Week in Farming: Biosecurity gap, OSR and best of Lamma
© Adobe Stock Welcome back to another edition of This Week in Farming. I hope your waterproofs are holding up, wherever you are.
First, here are your market prices (opens as PDF). Red diesel is up by more than a penny amid a jump in the oil price but most crop and livestock prices are flat.
Now, on with the show.
The say-do gap in farm policy
Our exclusive lead story this week reveals that illegal meat seized at the border is not being tested for animal diseases, a shocking gap in what should be a key component of our early-warning system for reportable diseases.
“Food security is national security” has been the mantra of politicians on both sides for many a year.
However, as I note in my editorial this week, the gap between what is said and what is done yawns wide as ever, but those on the front line are not to blame.
And where did I steal the “say-do gap” phrase from? It was this report from the Policy Exchange Think Tank (opens as PDF) on how the troubling phenomenon also exists in the world of defence as well.
Lamma round-up
As promised last week, if you didn’t make it to Lamma 2026, here’s our machinery team’s 10 top stories after two days picking around the exhibits:
- Stronger boom for Stoll TracLift loader
- KRM unveils 8.5m Sprinter topper
- Taylor Attachments debuts Fortis compactor
- Case IH Puma cab gets a freshen up
- Urban Offroader offers farm-spec Suzuki Carry trucks
- Kubota brings big SVL 75-3 skid-steer to the UK
- NRH adds Stocks seeder to RollX GSD
- Perry QuickClip metal fencing gets 40-year guarantee
- Rear conveyors get AgriSpread AS3000 throwing fertiliser 54m
- Compact JCB 526-60 gets swankier cab
Growth agenda
There won’t be many wheels turning this week given the weather, but agronomists are already starting to dish out early advice on how to manage some decent-looking crops of oilseed rape.
There’s a round-up of four new nitrogen management technologies that will hopefully reduce the 50% of applied fertiliser that is currently wasted.
We also look at how Norfolk contract farmer Robert Scott hopes to fight back after losing nearly 400ha of land under management, due to landowner clients shifting away from arable farming in favour of environmental schemes amid falling grain prices.
When partnerships end in acrimony
In an equal farm business partnership, one partner has the right to buy the other out in some circumstances, the Court of Appeal has ruled.
This is a departure from the normal practice of ordering the assets of a dissolved partnership to be sold on the open market with each party allowed to bid.
Farmers Weekly business editor Suzie Horne picks over the details of the case and what it means.
And in other business news this week, there’s a fresh warning on the risks of being underinsured and how to remedy the situation.
Who’s up and who’s down?
It’s been a bad week to be a hare courser in Cambridgeshire – see the video of the police disrupting a gathering of more than 50 of them.
It’s been a very good week to have a brand-new covered slurry store, so our thanks to Keith Davis, dairy manager at Lydney Park Farm, Gloucestershire, for telling deputy livestock editor Shirley Macmillan how the slurry store project got done.
Listen to the FW Podcast
Don’t forget to tune in to the Farmers Weekly Podcast, with Johann Tasker, Louise Impey and Hugh Broom.
This week the team discuss the biosecurity story, spring cropping challenges and why farming needs better leaders.
You’ll find it anywhere you get your podcasts, or listen free on the FW website.
