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Spindle Wood Farm
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Spindle Wood Farm is an agroecological farm in the depths of South Devon, raising goats and organically fed, pasture raised chickens for meat. We make BBQ charcoal from our woods and the farm is home to our working horses aka Dartmoor Horse Loggers.
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Spindle Wood Farm

Spindle Wood Farm is an agroecological farm in the depths of South Devon, raising goats and organically fed pasture raised chickens for meat. We make BBQ charcoal from our woods and the farm is home to our working horses aka Dartmoor Horse Loggers. Our overriding aim is to farm regeneratively, to regenerate the soil and grassland, to regenerate the woodland and support the wildlife that lives here while providing ourselves and others with nutritious food and produce that is grown or made sustainably, the management benefits the livestock and the land, as well as us. We are non-certified organic. Our livestock are fed organic feed, we don't use any chemicals or unnatural fertilisers on the land, and our livestock and wildlife are thriving!

Our pasture-raised chickens have a happy, healthy and enriched life. They are moved onto fresh pasture every day where they enjoy searching for bugs, scratching about and eating grass. They are fed organic feed on top of the food they get from the pasture. They are outside in a moveable pen which has shelter so they breathe fresh air 24hrs a day and have access to both shade and sunshine. The nutrients they get from eating fresh grass and bugs mean the meat is more nutritious and fuller in flavour and texture.
If you would like to order some meat please email us at *protected email*.
To keep up to date with when we have chicken available please sign up to our mailing list via our website, where there will be the chance to pre-order fresh chicken as well as frozen.

We have a beautiful herd of Boer goats that we raise for their delicious meat. Not only do they provide us with food but they also help us to regeneratively manage our grassland. We use a method called mob grazing to keep them on small areas of grass and then move them regularly, this benefits them as they are given fresh grazing regularly, it benefits the land as it doesn't get overgrazed or trampled and it benefits wildlife as it creates a mosaic of grassland habitat as they move through the fields.

Olivia Jenkinson