Carton of Isle of Wight being held outside briddlesford farm

New Isle of Wight Milk: A look around the facilities and all you need to know (video)

We were lucky enough last week to be invited to have a look at how the new Isle of Wight Milk was being produced. 

When you drive past Briddlesford Farm from Robin Hill, you’ve probably noticed for the last few years there’s been a new barn on the left covered with solar panels. Well, at the far end of that barn you’ll find the carefully controlled milk processing, bottling and cheese making facility.

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Isle of Wight Milk processing plant at Briddlesford Dairy Farm

We guess it’s not surprising that when you enter the building, you have to shed outer garments and shoes, swapping them for white wellies, a long frock coat and a very fetching blue hair net!

Isle of Wight Milk processing plant at Briddlesford Dairy Farm - the machines inside the plant

What was surprising was the heat that greets you when you pass through the sealed door to the milk processing and bottling area.

Huge investment
The equipment in here has been a major investment for the farm – getting on for a million quid.

On the right hand side was all of the equipment that’s needed to pasteurise, then cool the milk, which helps give it a 12 day shelf life from bottling.

Staff member at Isle of Wight Milk processing plant at Briddlesford Dairy Farm with finished milk product

The left of the room holds the bottling, capping and labeling machine (see the video below). Once crated up, they are transferred into the next room (again behind a sealed door) which is shockingly cold, made all the more notable after the warmth of the room before.  Here it waits, ready for its dispatch from the next room.

Why this is a major step forward for IW farmers
The way dairy farmers usually deal with their milk is to have a contact with a national milk processor to take it away daily, in the Island’s case, to the Mainland for processing.

The benefit for the farmer is that they know all of their milk will be bought, so they don’t need to think of it any further than when they gather the milk. The disadvantage is that they have to take the price that they’re offered.

Bottles of Isle of Wight milk

They’re under rolling 12 month contracts, meaning that if a farm wants to exit it, they have to give a full year’s notice.

Unsurprisingly, it’s a major decision to come out of their contract and go it on their own. They’re then taking all the risk of what to do with their milk from that point.

Briddlesford is leading the way by investing and starting this processing and bottling plant.

Isle of Wight Milk processing plant at Briddlesford Dairy Farm - the white wellies for staff and visitors to change into

Joining them is the Isle of Wight’s largest dairy herd. Read’s Farm (on the land underneath the Blacksmith’s Arms on Calbourne Road) has 280 head of cattle producing between 2-2.5m litres of milk a year.

As sales grow, there’s capacity at this facility for growth, so the more people that buy the milk, the more farms that can join, and the more workers that will be supported.

It’s been a very long process to get in the shops
Getting the new Isle of Wight Milk onto the shelves of the major supermarkets on the Island is a very long process – up to 18 months of meetings, discussions, inspections, integrating their computer system, etc.

Bottles of Isle of Wight milk

As of now it’s available through three of the Southern Co-op branches: Shanklin, Freshwater and Cowes. More are branches of co-op are planned, as are other large shops.

Why the £1.50 is worth it
The price of the milk is expected to be £1.50 for two litres (~4 pints). This is slightly more than milk can be bought, but the differences/ benefits here are considerable.

  1. The farmers are being paid a decent amount of money for their milk, meaning they can pay their workers a good wage.
  2. The ‘food miles’ here are tiny – in the most extreme case, twenty miles from farm to store I was told. A massive difference from milk that carted off to the Mainland to be treated, only to be shipped back to the Island’s shops, via who knows which Mainland distribution centre.