A farm that boasts woodland, sporting assets and 1800 acres of land has hit the market for £7.5m.
Crow Hall Farm, in Northumberland, is a 'first-class livestock farm' according to GSC Grays, who are marketing the property for sale.
According to the sales brochure, the farm has "significant natural capital, commercial woodland and sporting assets".
Lying in the Tyne Valley between Bardon Mill and Haydon Bridge, Crow Hall Farm includes the natural capital resource of Muckle Moss, one of only nine National Nature Reserves in the North East and borders the southern boundary of the Northumberland National Park.
The Crow Hall Farm sale includes:
- Fully equipped livestock unit
- Traditional four-bedroom farmhouse dating back to 1770 with superb south-facing views
- Farm manager’s bungalow with three bedrooms
- Agricultural worker’s cottage with three bedrooms in cabin style
- Extensive livestock buildings capable of housing up to 200 head of cattle and 2000 ewes
- Considerable Natural Capital
- Shooting grounds
- Commercial and amenity woodland
The farm is being offered as a whole or in two lots: the low ground and Whitshields Farm farmstead at £4.750,000, and the high ground including some livestock buildings at Seldom Seen Farm at £2.750,000.
The 1,070 acres of high ground is Grade 5, with large areas of moss, rough and hill grazing but also some rotational grass and woodlands while the low ground is Grade 3 and 4 and mainly down to grass, with some woodland and accounts for just over 700 acres.
There is a range of good-quality modern livestock buildings and handling facilities for both cattle and sheep, with a large main yard, silage clamps and a slurry lagoon.
John Coleman, head of farm sales at GSC Grays, said: “For the past eight years this fully equipped livestock farm has been managed by Victoria Furlong, the 2017 Countryfile, Young Farmer of the Year Award Winner, and she has been responsible for a significant modernisation programme.
"Some of this work was in identifying the need to improve cattle handling facilities but also includes systematic improvement of the pasture, a significant amount of woodland management and repair and replacement of boundary walls and fences.”
Muckle Moss, like Lindisfarne and the Farne Islands, supports important Northumberland bird life and preserves a unique landscape which includes a floating peat bog and rare sphagnum mosses created by glacial retreat.
There are also two actively managed peat bogs and all of the High Ground lies within a UNESCO World Heritage Site on the frontier of the Roman Empire along Hadrian’s Wall.
The whole farm is in a Higher Tier Countryside Stewardship Scheme with grant assistance for walling and tree planting.
There are thirty-two commercial and amenity woodland plantations on the farm planted to provide shelter and cover for game extending in total to around 170.25 acres (68.90 ha) and are subject to a Woodland Management Plan.
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