This week from Íæż½ã½ã editor Olivia Midgley
Following the Brian May documentary broadcast on BBC last week, Íæż½ã½ã looks at the impact of the programme on the farming sector.
Alan Carter farms in partnership with his parents, Paul and Christine, on a 162 hectare (400-acre), 400-cow dairy unit at Constantine, Cornwall, with 130 milking cows, supplying Saputo. Alan, also a Parish Councillor, and his wife Sarah, have two children, Ross and Dana
Programme met with dismay and disappointment as industry condemns 'one-sided' view
BBC documentary 'Brian May: The Badgers, the Íæż½ã½ã and Me' has been blasted by farming groups as ‘irresponsible, inaccurate and unacceptable’
Reports of 'hasty rewrites' after screening failed to reveal farm had faced three instances of bTB reinfection following filming
James farms Dairy Shorthorns east of Kendal, Cumbria, with his parents Kathleen and Henry, wife Michelle and sons Robert and Chris. The fifth generation to farm at Strickley, he is also vice-chair of the Nature Friendly Farming Network
Groups launch legal challenges saying Government has broken manifesto promises to end badger cull
Rock legend says content will will turn cattle farming practices ‘upside down'
Rural Affairs Secretary Huw Irranca-Davies said he wanted the board to be represented 'largely' by farmers, with a farmer also set to be named its chair