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Shaking a Tail Feather: a Catch-up with Charlie

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If our passion for high-welfare, sustainable farming has rubbed off on you, or you’ve met our rare-breed Norfolk Black turkeys or Lincolnshire Buff chickens, we’d like to introduce you to our keen-as-mustard Trainee Poultry Manager, Charlie Forsyth. Read on for feisty cockerels, connecting the farm to the fork, mobile chicken houses, woodland foraging, a hectic hatchery and loving the outdoors.

“I’m originally from Hertfordshire,” said Charlie. “At college, I did a BTEC Level 3 in Countryside Management. It covered things like horticulture and land management; it was 70% practical and 30% theory. During the course, I volunteered at a country park, doing things like maintaining the grounds and talking to the public. I knew I was going to do something outdoors but it was difficult to find park-ranger jobs, especially as I didn’t drive.

“After college, friends told me about Church Farm Ardeley near Stevenage. It was a free-range, high-welfare kind of place and I interned there for a year. I planted veg, worked in the butchery and fed geese, ducks and cows. When my internship finished, I became assistant butcher and farm assistant, dividing my time 50/50. I liked seeing the whole farm-to-fork process and I’m quite passionate about it. People are often disconnected from what they eat. I enjoy eating something I know I’ve cared for. I think more customers care about this sort of thing now.

“Church Farm Ardeley only had 170 acres but everything was right in terms of animal welfare and sustainability. I learned to take care of turkeys and process them and I stayed for three years. I then went to uni but it wasn’t for me. I’m academic but there wasn’t enough practical time. I was between jobs and living in Ireland when I saw the South Ormsby job advertised.

 

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“It wasn’t where I thought I’d go but I really wanted it. I’m officially the Trainee Poultry Manager at South Ormsby Estate and I’ve been here since July 2023. It’s been challenging and stressful at times but it was a positive move. I’m a stress-head! I have autism so I do get stressed about stuff. I’m passionate and focus intensely on what I’m doing; I do a thing properly or not at all. Autism actually helps with focus but I do need structure and routine.

“Every day’s a learning day and now and again I just need patience and a moment of calm to re-focus. I’m currently getting ready for incubation and hatching. Turkey numbers are low following Christmas sales and I’m planning for the season to come. There are all sorts of jobs. I’m helping Andy to weld some gates. I’m feeding birds. I’m collecting eggs. I’m painting the hatchery.

“There’s a really exciting development coming. We’re getting three mobile houses for the chickens. They’ll be taken by tractor from place to place. With both turkeys and chickens, we’ll be grazing them on rotation like we do with the Lincoln Red cattle. The birds will get to forage in temporary paddocks out on the grazing land and roost safely on site.

“We do calculations to make sure we know the optimal space needed per bird over time. The birds will be rotated frequently; they’ll get lots of fresh, nutritious foraging, and the grazing land gets natural fertiliser and a long rest between visits. The turkey is naturally a woodland bird so ours will get to forage in our copses.

“I’ve got some admin to do but it balances out with outdoor time. The cattle team help out a lot and I’m currently learning to drive to give myself a bit more flexibility. The chicks will start to hatch soon and I’ll be checking on them three times daily. Food, water and health need to be monitored often.

“I’m very involved with the Lincolnshire Buff Poultry Society. It started with my asking Mike from the LBPS a question about breeding and it grew from there. I went to various meetings and shows with Louis from the cattle team and I’m now helping out as membership secretary. At South Ormsby Estate, we hatch more of this heritage breed than anyone else and I’m hoping it will become more popular.

charlie

“Breeds certainly have their own characters. Buff hens are quite docile but the cockerels are very feisty. I treat them like my kids. When I’m away, I worry about them. They run out whenever they see me. The majority of the Buffs – our layers, breeders, broilers and cockerels – are over at Manor Farm. Clint looks after a few in the Walled Garden.

“Overall, people find Lincolnshire Buffs friendly and easy company. We sell live pairs and trios and they’ve proved very popular with all sorts of people. Sometimes a pair will go to a small garden, sometimes five at a time go a to a big garden. Customers stay in touch, send me updates and call me for a catch-up about the Buffs. They get quite enthusiastic about having Buffs in the garden and it’s good to have that continuing relationship with them.

“We’re grateful for the support of our customers. Our high-welfare, organic approach is expensive for us relative to more intensive, lower-welfare approaches. Among other things, our birds are a minimum of 85 days old at the point of slaughter. If you haven’t tried a Lincolnshire Buff chicken yet, you really can taste the difference. The meat is stronger and gamier and darker too. This is how chicken would have tasted 100 years ago, before supermarkets. In future, we’re planning on doing fresh, dry-plucked birds so watch this space for all sorts of exciting news.

“In my down-time, I do puzzles, go for walks and take pictures. I’m with a good group of people here in the Wolds and they’ll give me a lift when I need one. I love the countryside and couldn’t live in a town. I need peace and quiet for my chaotic brain and this is the best place for me.”

 

If you’d like to join the conversation, we’d love to hear from you. Just head to our Facebook page HERE and comment beneath the latest blog post. As ever, thanks for your support.

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