Half-terms Dates: Rooms available for Bed & Breakfast. 10th - 17th February 2017 17th - 26th February 2017 £120 for 2 people and £140 for a family of 4 including breakfast per night. ...
Half-Term Dates
Half-terms Dates: Rooms available for Bed & Breakfast. 10th - 17th February 2017 17th - 26th February 2017 £120 for 2 people and £140 for a family of 4 including breakfast per night. ...
Christmas
Christmas at Cragend Farm is very special. The lights on the trees outside and the decorations in the houses make us all feel very festive. ...
EcoAngus Wood burner at Cragend Farm with 1m log billets
We load the EcoAngus woodburner with 1m long lengths of seasoned wood and each full "burn" gives us hot water for the underfloor heating and the water for all our showers, baths and washing up! The logs are cut by Shaun and can be a different sizes for different wood burners. ...
Special Guests
We are always pleased to meet the interesting people at Cragend who come through our doors, but none more so than the delightful Cleo and Mark Butterfield who came to stay with us whilst visiting Woodhorn Archives and Northumberland. They are fabulous collectors of Vintage Clothing, and were so interesting about some old dresses and fans we told them about that are family heirl ...
Open Day
Open Day 9th June 2016 We had an excellent day of showing visitors around the newly restored farm buildings with a demonstration by ESSE chef Steve Evans. Supported by local producers, we raised money for Macmillan and Rothbury Christmas Lights. ...
2011-2016
The restoration of the weighbridge took a few years but we have finally got the building in order. Our thanks to Roger kagan and Delilah for all their help. ...
East Cottage
East Cottage is finally ready for guests as Easter and spring arrives in April 2017. New beds, sofas and furniture. The Esse 990 woodburning range is ready for heating the water and cooking the food, with a fully equipped kitchen with microwave and electric oven and ceramic hob. King size bedroom, and twin bedroom. Bathroom has a high cistern lavatory in keeping with Victorian ...
Planning Permission Granted
After 14 months we have been granted permission to change the barns into a domestic dwelling, to renovate the Farmhouse and the Stables at the rear of the barns. There are 18 conditions to fulfill from bat surveys to fixing the slate roof of the Silo Tower. We have decided to use local tradesmen as much as possible and our main builders will be Storey & Edmondson based in R ...
East Cottage
Renovation work to East Cottage We started renovating East Cottage in June 2011 and were able to move in by January 2012. Originally a farm workers cottage, it had been altered some decades ago. Originally it had a walk-in pantry, and a stove to heat water in the corner for washing and bathing purposes. Upstairs has since been divided to make three rooms rather than two. Ther ...
New Owners
Shaun and Lou Renwick and their family bought Cragend Farm in April 2011, after several months of negotiations from the Armstrong Family. The Farm consists of a Farmhouse, 2 workers cottages, a Silo, a weighbridge and many barns and outhouses and approximately 140 acres of land and river frontage. ...
We thoroughly enjoyed our visit to your fantastic farm on the Historic Houses tour on Tuesday. We both agree that it was the most interesting HHA visit we have ever done - and we have done many over the years! We had no idea of the extent of the Armstrong connection or what you have there, having visited Cragside on so many occasions in the past 50 years or so. And indeed looked down on the farm from the walks at Cragend quite recently. We particularly enjoyed ascending and descending the ladders to look at the hydraulic equipment and get an idea of how it all functioned, the beautiful and unusual buildings which had housed the cattle, and were intrigued by the contents of your "underground " loo! Peacocks and chicks, hens and a beautiful pet lamb added to the feel of the farm.
Shaun & Lou Renwick are keen to harness the farm's natural resources, using wood to heat their water, to cook with on a wood burning range, and to heat the houses on the Farm. Even if your house is not equipped to totally run on wood there are things you can do to make sure you are using the best quality wood for your fires.
Why seasoned wood?
Why use Seasoned Wood?
Seasoned wood is a definition for 'wood drying'. About 5% of the energy of the log is wasted through evaporation and heating the water vapour of damp logs.
Moisture effects the burning process with unburnt hydrocarbons going up the chimney, which can in time create 'sooting' in the chimney, with the possibility of a chimney fire, all of which requires specialist sweeping.
Drying the wood before burning reduces moisture content in the wood before it is used for burning,
Air drying is the most traditional method, and it takes time. usually over and above 2 years! The fire will use less energy to burn the log if the water content is below 20%. Therefore is can give OUT more energy in the form of heat!
Cragend Farm endeavours to provide their customers with the best seasoned wood possible.
if you would like further information on the process of burning wood please contact us and we will be happy to help.
Thank you so much Lou and Shaun for a great holiday break on your farm at Cragend last week. East Cottage was a super place to stay. Very comfortable accommodation with everything we needed for self-catering and situated next to the beautiful Cragside National Trust gardens. It was super for our dog with fields to walk across as well as a secure fenced place for her to run off lead! Such interesting history too about the farm and how you have restored the buildings, the Victorian silo and so much else of the past farming life at Cragend. We look forward to returning! J&M Nottingham.
Award Winning Accommodation