We made it!
After having our farm up for sale for nearly two years (Agricultural Planning Restriction on the house made it difficult to find a buyer) we finally got a good offer with the proviso that the deal was done within 6 weeks. Downinsizing from a very large
six bedroom farmhouse and all the accompanying junk has not been fun, but we managed it and not only that we have managed to find a house where not only can we get three vehicles on the drive (his work van - he is a builder as well as having been a farmer)
my little Smart car and the Ssang Yyong tow vehicle) but also room for our Coachman 545. We moved last Friday and got Ms. Vanda Coachman onto the new drive on Sunday. We are still surrounded by unpacked boxes and the debris of packing boxes, bubble wrap
and paper, but we are IN. We had lots of very large furniture but luckily the new owners of the house were only too happy to buy this from us, but alas several items that came with us are still too big for a normal place. Its not been pleasant, but with
a bit of luck our two weeks away in July are still on track, although I have'nt done anything about booking sites yet. We always go for CL's and are really not too fussy about where we go so as we GO. More time for the caravan and less time spent looking
after 10 acres of pasture, a huge garden and house.
Comments
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Congratulations on the move.
I'm interested in Agricultural Planning Restrictions. How strict are these? What types of 'agriculture' are acceptable?
I'm thinking of stables, solar energy farm, wild flowers etc.
What actually happens if you never quite get around to 'planting the crops' or buying the animals?
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Congratulations on the move.
I'm interested in Agricultural Planning Restrictions. How strict are these? What types of 'agriculture' are acceptable?
I'm thinking of stables, solar energy farm, wild flowers etc.
What actually happens if you never quite get around to 'planting the crops' or buying the animals?
When we bought the piece of land nearly 30 years ago we put up a shed to house 4000 free range hens and then applied for planning permission for a house, which was turned down because we were outside the village planning guidelines. We then applied to get a house under the Agricultural Occupancy Restriction, which we got after two years of living in a caravan on the site to prove the need, This limited the OCCUPANCY of the dwelling to someone who is or has recently retired from Agriculture, horticulture or forestry. Horses do not meet the restriction as they are classed as domestic animals (not entering the food chain) Solar farms would not be included. In theory (and I have seen it happen) if you then fail to meet the restriction the local council can make you demolish the house at your own expense....... We gave up with the hens 4 years ago after it became unprofitable - we sold our eggs to Sainsburys under their Freedom Foods Woodland Eggs label - eggs leaving us at 95p a dozen for the largest size and ending up in Saindbury at £4.50+ a dozen. Once the busines had gone, we were OK as in theory we were then "retired" from farming. However, AOC places are difficult if not impossible to get mortgages for, even with a profitable business and it knocks the value of the house by anything up to 30%. We put the farm up for sale with a view to getting the restriction lifted, something involving land agents and the local authority which makes herding cats look easy. A potential purchaser does not have to prove to us that they can meet the restriction, it is up to them and their Solicitors to explain it all to them fully. Luckily our purchasers are going to be farming sheep in a very small way and were basically cash, having sold one barn conversion. We spent two months waiting for them to sell their other barn conversion and then the six week thing kicked in. Luckily we had a small chain of 5 buyers/purchasers with 4 properties. Everyone was keen and all the Solicitors involved were excellent. However, it is not something I wish to repeat in a very long time.
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Thanks for that Enks, very interesting.
I wonder what would happen if you bought a house that has been there for years and has an Agricultural Restriction in place but never got around to doing the agriculture?
I wonder what exactly the planners would do?
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Good for you Enks! Glad things worked out for you, no doubt stressful, but I am sure you will be able to find a lovely CL to chill on for a couple of weeks. The ins and outs of your AOC were interesting as well.
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Thanks for that Enks, very interesting.
I wonder what would happen if you bought a house that has been there for years and has an Agricultural Restriction in place but never got around to doing the agriculture?
I wonder what exactly the planners would do?
As you can get the AOC without proving in a very extensive way that you are actually an agricultural business, it would be extremely difficult. This is why we spent 2 years living in a large mobile home (with three small children) so that they could see
the accounts. Then there were various reports that we had to get prepared. However, agriculture has changed beyond all recognition since we did all this back in 1989 and what was a profitable (and hugely enjoyable) back then turned into a financial money
pit in 2012, hence we closed the doors. We were very sad to do this as we were one of the first free-range eggs units in the whole of the UK to gain Freedom Foods Accreditation0 -
Yes, very sad that you had to give up such a worthwhile occupation, Enks.
My point about the Ag Restriction though is.......if you bought a house and land that's been there for years and has such a restriction - who do you have to tell about your agricultural ambitions to enable you to buy it? And what happens if, after you move
in, you never quite get around to doing anything agricultural?0 -
IanH - As far as I am aware you don't have to prove to anyone at the time of purchase that you will be continuing in Agriculture. However, if you need any kind of mortgage you will certainly struggle to find one, and you should be aware that if you are breaking the terms of the restriction you could potentially find that the council could come after you and make you demolish the house at your own expense if you don't meet it. In reality this would be unlikely as in all the 25years we lived in our house no-one from the council ever came round and asked to see either the books or the livestock. As I said before an AOC can knock the value of the property, although when we were in the Cotswolds last year (lovely little CL just outside Stow on the Wold) the owners said they had a similar restriction and in places like that it did'nt knock the value at all. Leaving the farm is a huge change of lifestyle for us, but keeping chickens meant going away was difficult - you could never go away at Christmas and at certain points in a flock's life you would never dream of leaving them. More time spent in the van and now that we are getting our heads around a house that is about half the size (its still big - 4 bedrooms - one of which has been "adopted" for OH's hobby of building RC aeroplanes) we are looking forward to the next phase of our lives. IanH if you are thinking about buying a property with an AOC then get some really good legal advice, because remember you may have to sell it on at some point.
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A few years ago a 76 year old farmer acquaintance in the Yorks Dales, (third generation on same farm), having recovered from losing his entire flock to foot and mouth, wanted to retire from his 200 acre sheep farm and his son, d-in-law, and 2 kids to take over. They applied for planning permission to convert a barn to housing so that his son could live on the farm instead of a rented flat 11 miles away.
The planning people refused but offered him a grant towards the cost of conversion to holiday flats.
The sheep have been sold, meadows are weedy, hedges overgrown, fallen trees are left, stone walling is unrepaired, machinery lies rusting and gates are falling off.
That'll keep the visitors coming.
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How very sad. Farming today (not agri-business, which is a very different kind of beast) is a sad thing these days. Some people do it for the love NOT the money. We would still be there had we been able to keep our heads above water, but subsidsing the
supermarkets was something we were not prepared to do.0