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Jeremy Clarkson Reveals Filming of Clarkson’s Farm Is Paused Due to Bad Weather and Bovine TB at Diddly Squat in Oxfordshire

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By Gift Badewo

Things have gone unusually quiet at Diddly Squat Farm.

Not the peaceful, birds-chirping kind of quiet.

The frustrating kind.

The kind where mud sticks to your boots, tractors sink, and cameras are packed away because there’s simply nothing to film.

Jeremy Clarkson has revealed that filming for the sixth season of Clarkson’s Farm has been halted.

And this time, it’s not because of a squabble with the local council or a planning row.

It’s the weather. Relentless, uncooperative, pouring-without-mercy weather.

Writing in his Sunday Times column, Clarkson explained that it hasn’t stopped raining since the start of the year.

No planting. No proper field work. No progress.

For a show that thrives on the chaos and unpredictability of farming, this is a different kind of problem — stagnation.

No Farming, No Filming

Clarkson, 65, made it clear that it’s not just the TV crew waiting around.

Farming operations themselves have ground to a halt.

When the soil is waterlogged, tractors can’t move without destroying the fields.

Crops can’t go in. Plans get delayed.

And as if rain wasn’t enough, there’s another blow hanging over the farm — bovine tuberculosis.

Back in October 2025, Clarkson shared the devastating news that Diddly Squat had been hit by a TB outbreak among the cattle.

The disease forced the culling of the farm’s first-ever pregnant cow, a moment that deeply affected Clarkson and his team.

He stressed that bovine TB doesn’t affect humans, but for farmers, it can be financially and emotionally crushing.

Since then, the herd has effectively been under restrictions. No movement. No trading.

No normal rhythm of farm life. Combine that with endless rain, and you have a farm — and a TV production — stuck in limbo.

From Top Gear to Tractor Troubles

Clarkson has been a household name since joining Top Gear in 1988, long before he ever considered becoming a farmer.

But since launching Clarkson’s Farm on Prime Video, he’s reshaped his public image.

What started as a celebrity hobby project in 2019 quickly turned into something more serious.

The show didn’t just entertain; it exposed the brutal economics and bureaucracy facing British farmers.

Viewers saw failed crops, lambing disasters, battles with planning authorities, and razor-thin margins.

Now, as season five prepares to hit screens this spring, fans had been looking ahead to season six, which was already confirmed to be in development.

But thanks to mud and TB, the timeline may stretch further than expected.

Storms, Wind Power and a Sharp Swipe

Clarkson’s frustration hasn’t been limited to his own fields.

Britain was battered by powerful storms throughout January, including Storms Goretti, Ingrid and Chandra.

Gusts reportedly reached 123mph in parts of Cornwall.

Flooding cut off roads in Somerset. The Met Office issued rare red “danger to life” warnings.

Amid all this chaos, Laura Tobin, a meteorologist on Good Morning Britain, shared what she described as “good news.”

According to analysis by energy think tank Ember, the storms led to record wind power generation — 10.6 terawatt-hours in January 2026, surpassing the previous high set in December 2023.

The surge in wind energy reportedly cut gas costs by £164 million.

Clarkson wasn’t impressed.

He fired back on X with a sarcastic remark suggesting that if freezing storms are the solution to global warming, then perhaps everyone should “freeze.”

His comment sparked a wave of responses from followers, many questioning whether consumers would actually see lower bills.

The moment captured a familiar dynamic: Clarkson the farmer, knee-deep in mud, versus policymakers and analysts celebrating energy milestones while fields remain flooded.

Brexit, Farming and Political Sparks

The weather drama comes against a wider backdrop of political debate about British farming.

Clarkson recently posted a video for the campaign group No Farmers, No Food, urging the next Parliament to prioritise agriculture.

He argued that farmers are encouraged to diversify, only to face resistance from local authorities when they try.

When one social media user blamed Brexit for the struggles of British farms, arguing that the loss of EU subsidies had weakened the sector, Clarkson bluntly dismissed the claim, telling them they lacked a grasp of reality.

The exchange triggered heated debate online, with some fans even suggesting he should become agricultural minister.

It’s a reflection of how Clarkson’s Farm has shifted public conversations around food security, supply chains, and rural economics.

The Bigger Picture Behind the Cameras

Beyond the entertainment, Clarkson’s farm troubles mirror wider issues in UK agriculture.

Extreme weather events have become more frequent.

Flooding delays planting. Drought ruins yields. Disease outbreaks add financial risk.

Wind turbines may generate record power, but farmers still rely on workable soil, predictable seasons, and healthy livestock.

For viewers, the appeal of the show lies in its honesty. Clarkson doesn’t present farming as idyllic countryside romance.

It’s mud, paperwork, sleepless nights, and financial gambles.

Right now, it’s also a waiting game.

What’s Next?

Season five of Clarkson’s Farm is still expected to land on Prime Video this spring, so fans won’t be left empty-handed.

As for season six, filming will likely resume once the land dries out and TB restrictions ease.

Farming is seasonal by nature, so lost months can’t simply be replaced.

The production team may have to adapt timelines, focus on different aspects of the farm, or document the recovery process itself.

Given Clarkson’s track record, adversity often makes for compelling television.

Mud, disease, bureaucracy — it’s exactly the sort of chaos that has made the show resonate.

For now, though, Diddly Squat remains stuck between storms and restrictions, with cameras waiting for the ground — and circumstances — to shift.

Summary

Filming for the sixth season of Clarkson’s Farm has been temporarily halted due to relentless rainfall and ongoing bovine TB restrictions at Diddly Squat Farm.

Jeremy Clarkson revealed that farming activities themselves have stalled, leaving little for cameras to capture.

The pause comes as Britain experienced record-breaking storms that boosted wind energy production, sparking a public spat between Clarkson and meteorologist Laura Tobin over whether the weather truly delivered “good news.”

Meanwhile, Clarkson continues to weigh in on political debates about farming policy and Brexit.

Season five is still expected to arrive this spring, but fans may face a longer wait for season six as the farm battles both nature and disease.

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About Gift Badewo

A performance driven and goal oriented young lady with excellent verbal and non-verbal communication skills. She is experienced in creative writing, editing, proofreading, and administration. Gift is also skilled in Customer Service and Relationship Management, Project Management, Human Resource Management, Team work, and Leadership with a Master's degree in Communication and Language Arts (Applied Communication).