Our story

A family farm that fell into conservation

Matt and Lucy Tile have farmed The Bairnkine since 1997, the Tile family since 1987 — 1,100 organic acres below the Cheviot Hills, and a quiet mission to leave the land richer than they found it.

Organic since 2005 · Soil Association certified · Tripadvisor #1 in Jedburgh
Our family

The Tile family

The Tile family has farmed at The Bairnkine since 1987. Before marrying Matt, Lucy came from a town background and faced a steep learning curve — embracing life as a farmer, learning sheep husbandry, how to drive a tractor, and a great deal more. Matt came from an arable background and had to adapt farming to cattle and sheep. Together they’ve spent decades committing the farm to organic methods enhancing the landscape and environment with their conservation work.

Over the years they’ve converted two farm cottages into Wild Rose and Owl holiday cottages, developed the CL caravan site, and most recently opened the gates to visitors with Bairnkine Farm Tours. As Lucy puts it, they love sharing their farming story — and she has a wealth of it to tell.

Our purpose

We set out to farm well. We ended up farming for wildlife too.

Organic since 2005, we farm in a way that works with the land rather than against it — and somewhere along the way we accidentally fell into conservation, and thoroughly enjoy it. Every tree, hedge and pond and farming is part of leaving this place a little better than we found it.

Our farm

1,100 organic acres, worked with care

We farm 1700 breeding sheep, lambing outside from April and buy in cattle to fatten. We grow barley for the cattle, oats for the local mill, our cottages have solar panels and we draw water from our own spring. Organic since 2005, expect a few thistles and weeds about the place, we do!

40,000+
trees planted
5km+
new hedges planted
9
ponds restored and created.
45
RSPB species · 23 of conservation concern

On the land

For wildlife

Farm education

Bringing the classroom to the field

We love opening the farm up to schools, groups and curious visitors. From meeting the farmer and watching a sheepdog work, to guided nature-and-conservation walks and hands-on tree planting, it’s a chance to see where food really comes from — and how a working farm can make room for wildlife. Sessions are shaped around the group and the season.

Come and see for yourself

Stay in one of the cottages, bring the van, or come for a tour — and enjoy the farm for yourself.