Twist & Sprout

Host : Karl Grupe

West Cornwall’s Bosavern Community Farm podcast Twist & Sprout is a gem of medium to long format interviews linking community farming to health, wellness, body and mind. Join us over lunch prepared with local ingredients or out in the local fields as we dive into the small worlds of microbes in soil or take a satellite view of large global issues such as food security. Through exploring the big issues we aim to sort out small solutions and through the multiplication of these small solutions we seek positive change.

Episodes

  1. Creating Opportunities to Break Through Working in Agriculture

    26/11/2025

    Creating Opportunities to Break Through Working in Agriculture

    In this penultimate episode, we explore career pathways and learning opportunities in sustainable agriculture and regenerative farming, with particular focus on the unique challenges and opportunities in rural Cornwall. Host Carl is joined by four guests bringing local, national, and international perspectives: Katie Kirk from Bosavern Community Farm discusses their educational programs supporting people from school age through retirement, including skills development, work experience placements, and career pathway guidance for diverse participants—from teenagers seeking first jobs to mid-career switchers pursuing quality of life changes. Luke Botterill, former Bosavern WWOOFer, shares his journey from volunteering to pursuing a professional apprenticeship at Abbey Home Farm's Organic Shop near Cirencester, illustrating how hands-on learning experiences can shape career direction in the sector. Lisa Dunne from LEAF (Linking Environment and Farming) provides insight into the wide range of specialist and well-paid salaried career paths in agriculture, moving beyond common perceptions of farm work as purely physical labor. James Whatty, Agronomist at Hutchinsons, discusses his own journey from Cornwall to university and back, retraining as an agronomist after completing an unrelated degree, and what the role entails beyond common misconceptions. The conversation addresses the economic context of rural Cornwall—a sea-bound, rurally dispersed region with a former mining economy, now facing high levels of child poverty and limited large employers. Despite challenges including housing shortages and historic "brain drain," the area offers growing opportunities in hospitality, care work, and particularly in sustainable farming and environmental sectors. Key themes explored include: The variety of motivations bringing people to this sector—from climate and biodiversity concerns to practical outdoor work preferences, disability support needs, graduate experience-building, and mid-life career changes The importance of terminology in job searching: "education & learning," "skills development," "placements," and "career pathways" can open doors beyond traditional volunteer roles WWOOFing as a pathway for both international visitors and young Cornish people to gain experience while traveling Bosavern's unique approach offering "taster modules" across horticulture, nature recovery, soil health, retail systems, healthy cookery, event management, grants and governance, and cultural exchange—helping participants identify strengths and focus career paths Real progression stories, including Bosavern's recognition through Plunkett Awards and St Just Town Council Community Award in 2022 This episode demonstrates that there is no single linear path into sustainable agriculture—whether you're a school leaver, graduate, career switcher, or someone seeking meaningful outdoor work, opportunities exist across a spectrum from hands-on practical roles to specialist professional positions. Guests: Katie Kirk, Bosavern Community Farm Luke Botterill, Abbey Home Farm Lisa Dunne, LEAF (Linking Environment and Farming) James Whatty, Agronomist, Hutchinsons Runtime: 1 hour 41 minutes Related links: LEAF (Linking Environment and Farming): [leaf.eco] Abbey Home Farm: [theorganicfarmshop.co.uk] Hutchinsons: [hlhltd.co.uk]

    1h 43m
  2. From Field to Fork

    21/11/2024

    From Field to Fork

    In Episode 5 we dig-in to the topic of veg from field to fork, without digging! Hugh Taylor, Head Grower, shares some tips on growing food, his favourite book references and some favourite seasonal recipes. We go bounding through the whys and wherefores of a Market Garden; becoming familiar with no dig tools, understanding the methods and the many benefits of minimal tillage, composting and basic crop rotations. We are joined by community volunteer Rebecca who has been attending the farm for 2-3 years and enjoys both the social connections and the learning gained from Hugh ‘muck-spreading his knowledge’. Her natural curiosity shines a light on Hugh’s drive, his stoic perspective and his unwavering enthusiasm for seasonal, sustainable veg. Together we reflect upon the importance of diversity, connection and balance in farming with nature and cultivating hope as well as food and habitats. Moving from the field to the fork, we step into the cosy, wholesome vibes of the Dog & Rabbit café in St Just to hear from their owner and menu architect, We celebrate the popularity of the all-year-round salads from Bosavern and Rosie articulates the art of creating a menu tailored to the produce available in each season, how this affects pricing and why their ethos of seasonal, sustainable food, community connections and a great ambience, really matter. Rosie emphasises how she is inspired by Bosavern and by those people we meet in life who are always reaching out to make new, positive changes. ‘Keep on going… not giving up…’ those who are always looking to make positive changes, and we hear about a Falmouth based enterprise shipping coffee sustainably to Cornwall via sailboat. We observe the beauty of small, diverse, alliances; the nimble flexibility this allows, the personal contacts and how one organisation’s constant drive for increased sustainability inspires and bolsters others.

    1h 5m
  3. How We Built a Community Farm

    29/05/2024

    How We Built a Community Farm

    Building a community farm can take one acre or fifty. It is about first understanding what and who you have to work with which can set in motion a series of events, bureaucratic structure and networks which can take an idea and make it a reality with purpose. In Episode 2 we sit down with three people instrumental in the beginning of Bosavern Community Farm - a local councillor, a founder and the head gardener. Join us as they gather to reflect on almost 15 years dedicated to turning a once somewhat abandoned land into a community farm buzzing today with a market garden, grocery shop, workshops, allotments, veg box deliveries and a work experience hub for anyone wanting to learn how to make a community farm a reality or just chip in to see things grow. We talk about coincidences, perseverance and how a challenge like a global pandemic can highlight locally the reasons for nurturing a community farm throughout all seasons and challenges. As a side note: In 2022, the Cornwall and Isles of Scilly Leadership Board acknowledged that ‘providing land and support for community growing schemes’ was a TOP priority action which everyone in Cornwall (individuals, community groups, local authorities, businesses) could and should all get behind. A full report from the University of Exeter Environmental Sustainability Institute details how these groups are tackling some of the biggest challenges of our times. The findings are available from the Sustainable Food Cornwall website together with a map showing the established community growing schemes and the smaller, new schemes sprouting up right across Cornwall!

    47 min

About

West Cornwall’s Bosavern Community Farm podcast Twist & Sprout is a gem of medium to long format interviews linking community farming to health, wellness, body and mind. Join us over lunch prepared with local ingredients or out in the local fields as we dive into the small worlds of microbes in soil or take a satellite view of large global issues such as food security. Through exploring the big issues we aim to sort out small solutions and through the multiplication of these small solutions we seek positive change.