A 74-year-old farmer from St Davids has spent four days travelling to London in his 55-year-old tractor, in order to join hundreds of farm workers and environmental activists who marched through the capital in support of sustainable farming.

Members of the Landworkers’ Alliance and other farming groups marched from Parliament Square, up Whitehall and past Buckingham Palace on Saturday.

They were led by Gerald Miles, a 74-year-old organic farmer who travelled to London from his Pembrokeshire farm in his tractor, Bess, that was built in 1967.

Mr Miles, who led the march along with Bess said: “We need nature in farming because we’re in a climate change crisis.”

He added that it was vital for the Government to keep its Environmental Land Management subsidy schemes (ELMs), designed to replace the EU’s common agricultural policy, as they ‘promote nature in farming’.

Milford Mercury: The march was organised by the Landworkers’ Alliance. Picture: Beresford Hodge/PAThe march was organised by the Landworkers’ Alliance. Picture: Beresford Hodge/PA (Image: Beresford Hodge/PA)

The farmer, from St Davids said that his four day journey to the capital in Bess had been leisurely.

“It was over 380 miles on A and B roads,” he said. “It’s taken me four days because I could only do 60 to 70 miles a day – she only travels 15 miles an hour.”

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The farmer, who is part of the Caerhys Organic Community Agriculture group (COCA), said he would be ‘cheating’ on his way back to south Wales by putting the tractor, which has no roof, on a trailer.

The list of demands made by those marching included a ‘right to food’ to be put into UK law, more Government support schemes for young people and marginalised groups to enter farming, and a bigger budget for agricultural support schemes with ELMs.

Milford Mercury: The demonstrators marched through the capital. Picture: Beresford Hodge/PAThe demonstrators marched through the capital. Picture: Beresford Hodge/PA (Image: Beresford Hodge/PA)

Jyoti Fernandes, Landworkers’ Alliance policy and campaigns coordinator and one of the lead organisers of the march, said: “We need the ELM scheme, which is currently under threat by the new Government, to be fully supported – and farmers given the advice and support they need to transition to a climate-friendly farming system.”

The march was organised by the Landworkers’ Alliance in collaboration with more than a dozen other food and agriculture organisations including Save British Farming, the Sustain Alliance and the Nature-Friendly Farming Network.