It is with deep saddness that we heard that Jake Fairley died suddenly on Wednesday 28th December. What a great guy to have as our guide for our first twenty years at Hardiesmill!
Jake started his working career here at Hardiesmill in 1952 (aged 15) and it didn't end until the Covid lockdown in 2020 (aged 82), four farm-owners later. He was very much part of the farm. For the first 47 years, Jake had been mostly working with horses and then tractors, so Hardiesmill becoming a pedigree Aberdeen Angus farm was a change, but one he enjoyed and took to with great passion. He knew the characters of most of the cattle, and loved seeing and commenting on the calves each season. In the early days we had three cows, by his retirement we had over 400 head.
He loved the quad, and later the buggy, checking the cattle every day. He knew the ground, the drains, and the history of all the fields, if we had a question, Jake enjoyed telling us the stories and what we needed to know - what laughs we had. The stories he could tell of the life before tractors and the horsepower that is available today. He loved the horses, their power and he appreciated the soil they turned over with every cut of the plough. The stories of the snow over the dykes and the horses ploughing through it to clear it. The jokes of leaking wellies, sliding on the ice, watering cattle. that kept us going when things were tough and hard going. The commenting on the wild life that live here, the appreication of the seasons; a man who did not need to go away for a holiday, just looked around and appreciated what there was.
Although he retired at the start of Covid, he appeared regularly to the butchery, and either caught up with the news from Brian and Stewart, or found me or Robin to find out the latest things happening. He could never resist supervising the hay making and sileage making, even when Gus had been doing it for nearly 30 years...
Jake can take much of the credit for us heading to a more sustainable route of farming too. When the rules for having & storing crops were getting strickter and more expensive, it was obvious that the cattle were more important and that we should reduce crops and have more grass. It was Jake's knowledge that said we should only feed the grass, and that he noticed that our cattle were much happier in the fields where they were grazing poorer grass than high yeilding mixes, and that the cattle doing best were always on the drier sileage. So grass and soil became the important thing. No feed was brought in. That was in 2003, way before it was the fashion that it is today.
When Robin and I bought Hardiesmill in 2001, he and Etta moved up to Gordon, so that Etta was on a bus route. Etta, his beloved wife, had a great deal to put up with sometimes, trying to keep him in order. He adored his family, his children Fiona and Gus. They had to be involved in accolade we got for him. It was Dougie Stewart of the Fans who suggested that we talked the RHAS, to produce a medal for 60 years of service, and we all persuaded Jake to take the honour in his stride. It was a great achievement to work on one farm, four bosses, for his working life. When the Princess Royal visited, he had a wee bit of the spotlight too, as Jake was Hardiesmill.
Our two boys loved Jake. He loved seeing them grow up. Always asking what they were up to.
Our love and thoughts go to Jake's family for their loss, and we are grateful that we worked with him for a short time.