clarkson's farm

Jeremy Clarkson’s Cotswolds town ‘hit by mass exodus’ as locals blame ‘Clarkson’s Farm’

Locals in a star-studded Cotswolds village are departing en masse due to what’s being dubbed the ‘Jeremy Clarkson effect’, according to reports. WalesOnline recently visited Clarkson’s Farm, where we saw hundreds of people waiting to get a selfie by the Clarkson’s Farm shop

A massive surge in visitors triggered by the popular Amazon programme, combined with a shortage of educational facilities and an invasion of affluent London purchasers, is prompting a mass departure from Chipping Norton in Oxfordshire. The series has recently concluded its latest season and speculation is rife about what will come next.

Clarkson also owns a pub called The Farmer’s Dog, which recently celebrated its first anniversary.

Max Boneham one of the directors at a local estate agency feels locals are getting priced out of Chipping Norton

The picturesque Cotswolds settlement, situated merely six minutes by car from Clarkson’s Diddly Squat Farm, has transformed into a tourist hotspot following the arrival of celebrities including Jeremy Clarkson, David Cameron and Jamie Oliver.

However, for sale boards now dominate its charming stone-built roads as residents abandon the locality in droves.

Max Boneham, a director at local estate agency Mark David in Chipping Norton, confirmed properties for sale had doubled compared to two years previously.

“We have twice as many properties on the market now as two years ago.

“At the start of this year, January, February, March time it was alright and suddenly it changed.

“There’s lots of for sale signs.”

Removal specialist Harry Winchester, 25, has been operating throughout the Oxfordshire region for six years.

He reports the removals industry has experienced unprecedented demand over the last six months – and attributes this directly to Clarkson’s Farm.

He said: “In the last six months we have had more business in Chipping Norton. That doesn’t necessarily mean there is a massive increase in people coming or going but as a company we have been here more in the last six months than we would usually be.

“I imagine the people are leaving because of Clarkson’s Farm.

“Clarkson is not really my cup of tea. I liked him when he did TopGear but I can’t see why people would be moving to be closer to his establishment, I could see why people would want to get away from it though.

“Chipping Norton has always been a very quiet town and I would say it’s quite close knit and nice town community vibes going on.

“And now it’s getting flooded with tourists that are coming and clogging up the roads.

“When you have got more people you need bigger roads and traffic systems and if they’re not being put in place and the tourists are coming then it makes it very difficult for the person that lives here.”

“Clarkson’s Farm is just a nuisance for them.”

Locksmith Nathan Hunt, 36, has spent his entire life living in Chipping Norton.

He remarked: “I’ve lived in Chipping Norton pretty much forever and it’s certainly got a lot more tourists.”

Mr Hunt, from Gills Locksmiths, explained: “There are lots of holiday lets now – which for our business is fantastic. At least 40% of our work is in holiday lets. But I can see why people get fed up and sell up. “.

He claimed the surge in short-term rental properties was driving up costs. “If you have a nice little cottage in the centre of town you can sell it for way over the odds because someone will do it up and rent it out as a holiday let.

“People realise that their house that five years ago was worth ÂŁ250,000 they can now get ÂŁ350,000 for it because they can sell it as a lovely holiday let.”

However, for Mr Hunt, relocating isn’t a consideration: “I don’t think we would move out of Chippy.

“I think the trouble is if we moved out to a village we could potentially buy a much bigger, nicer house cheaper but we would probably then price ourselves out of Chippy, we could never afford to move back.”

Yet he echoed the concerns of others regarding local services: “Infrastructure in general, we don’t have a police station here anymore, there’s no ambulance service, there is no A&E, the hospital is massive, but most of it is empty.

“I think there is frustration of a lack of basic infrastructure in the town.”

Educational provision represents another concern driving residents away from the area.

“When people come to the Cotswolds, they’re not coming here for the schools,” said Mr Boneham.

“There are no great schools around here. These people are moving for reasons like they want to move closer to the good schools.”

Mr Winchester added: “There’s only one primary school in the catchment area and it’s difficult to get a spot there.

“My clients send their young girl to private school. They said there is an issue in the area with people coming in and houses being built and no facilities being built along with them.

“So if you can afford to send your children to private school then send them to private school but from what I gathered they struggled finding them a normal school so maybe they have bitten the bullet and sent them to private school.

“I know some friends that moved to Chipping Norton and went to school in Banbury half an hour away.”

Mr Boneham also blamed wealthy London buyers pricing locals out of the village.

He said: “I think people who grew up in the area can’t afford it because of the London metropoles.

“No one from Chipping Norton lives in Chipping Norton.

“There are lots of trendy pubs around here and it’s not that far from London.

“Those trendy Londoners will buy up those little cottages and they go ‘it’s nice here I didn’t realise it was so nice.’

“If people from London are selling a property they had for 20 years, a three-bed town house for a million and come here looking for a cottage for half a million, they don’t have to worry about a mortgage and their salaries are much higher.

“They come in armed with more cash. That’s pushing the locals out.

“There’s tourists too, Jeremy Clarkson comes and distracts us.

“If you’re American you come here and go to Diddly Squat Farm but there’s nothing there. They come and sit there in their car and buy some honey.”

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