ke
  • 1987

    Angus Davison, our founder and now ‘Eccentric Chairman’ begins growing strawberries as a degree thesis project on one hectare of rented land in Herefordshire, UK. Sleeping in the field.

  • 1988

    He plants another 2ha. A week before his final exams. Rabbits ate the plants.

  • 1989

    “I shouldn’t stop what you’re doing until you’ve found something better”. Timely wise words from Grandfather. Much parental advice too. Maybe growing strawberries can be a career, not just a way of funding winter travel.

  • 1990

    The Berlin Wall falls. So we plant in Hungary for the adventure.

  • 1991

    We import the first multibay polythene tunnels in the UK from Spain and tentatively put them up, with expectations from British manufacturers that they will blow down.

  • 1992

    They didn’t. But they did need strengthening, widening, raising, and making accessible by tractors. Neighbours ask for some.

  • 1993

    After surprise bankruptcy of a contract factory we re-employ the seven staff and begin manufacturing our first Haygrove polytunnels in a cow shed three days later. (Thanks Marty).

  • 1996

    We begin Haygrove Development, a not-for-profit social business to support projects in less advantaged places.

  • 1997

    We plant the first dwarf rootstock cherries and the first organic berries under tunnels in the UK. Cherries were then an industry in severe decline; organic berries didn’t exist.

  • 1998

    We move our tunnel manufacturing to Poland in partnership with Leszek Sawicki, a star who rose over seven years through the ranks from fruit picking to packhouse managing.

  • 2000

    We begin exporting tunnels to Kenya. After very heavy rain ruined their crops.

  • 2001

    We plant cherries with John Jones in Kington, at altitude, on a beautiful farm on the Welsh border. More follow with Richard Hammond.

  • 2002

    With customer request we extend our growing to the southern hemispehere by setting up Haygrove Heaven in Hermanas, South Africa with Sean Tager, a star picker who rose fast over four years. We nervously plant 1ha. In 15 years this would become 250ha, employing thousands in three locations with different climates. They are named Haygrove Eden, Haygrove Earth and Haygrove Amajuba. All beautiful places with wonderful people.

  • 2003

    We join with Nick and Kathy Evans, forming Haygrove Sidlesham. The best raspberry results in the world, until Nick decides to go sailing instead in 2018.

  • 2004

    We set up Gambia-is-Good in Gambia; a country then, with 92% of its population in subsistence agriculture. ‘GIG’ was a not-for-profit fairtrade social business, connecting mainly female growers to local hotels, restaurants and emerging supermarkets, with lorries and vans collecting a large range of produce. Andrew Hunt wins a World Business & Development Award in 2008 from Kofi Annan. Now sadly stopped as the need became replaced locally by competition. They call this development success.

  • 2005

    Haygrove USA begins. It's never been easy in the USA.

  • 2006

    Mark Woodhead and Alan Bissett forge Haygrove Australia. Oscar Chavez began Haygrove Mexico and Pablo Vial opened Haygrove Chile.

  • 2007

    The Bright Futures social upliftment programme started, offering the chance to pickers to become business partners, with five years of training and preparation. Now 41 are on the programme.

  • 2008

    We are the first, to begin producing raspberries on scale in substrate systems. This development changed the industry over the next decade as tunnels had done some years before.

  • 2009

    Mark Pritchett gets going with tunnel sales across Southern Africa, later we buy Haygrove Panorama farm.

  • 2009

    Haygrove Small Beginnings is started in South Africa. A micropropagation TC lab in partnership with the much published Brenda Vermaak.

  • 2010

    To bring better tunnels to the home gardener, we begin selling Garden Tunnels.

  • 2013

    We begin Ross Community Garden in the UK with Tim Shelley for disadvantaged people. This is followed by a further two and a plan for more.

  • 2014

    Angus' mother Cilla plants vine grapes commercially. So we start Haygrove Evolution with Simon Day, who has 30 years experience in wine and cider making. Half of the business is making international award winning wine branded as ‘Sixteen Ridges’ and cider branded ‘Once Upon a Tree’. The other half is selling high quality home grown UK and imported vines to other growers, advising, and contract making wine and cider for them.

  • 2015

    Working with Driscolls, the world's leading berry business, we buy their 100ha farming activity in Portugal and market the fruit through them. We call it Haygrove Blue Sky.

  • 2016

    Haygrove Africa Trading PTY is created, a specialist group of blueberry growers in southern and eastern Africa. We carefully select businesses already excellent in their current crops and because all of them do, or intend to do, remarkable work in sustainability. We supply plants, agronomy and harvest assistance, QA and sales are through Driscoll of Europe.

  • 2017

    Haygrove China is excitedly, and again cautiously, launched with 20ha of blueberry farming in Yunnan Province and sales of Growing Systems. We love the cultural interest in China and feel welcomed.

  • 2018

    Haygrove Tree of Life is formed in Australia as an exclusive global horticultural distributor to some coir factories in Sri Lanka, India and Malaysia. We were sad to cease this entry into an important expanding allied industry in 2020, after learning that, as with many supplies of nature, to be 100% reliable is challenging. To be successful in coir it seems you really need to own a coconut plantation…..

  • 2019

    China is going well. We begin a second blueberry farm nearby. Growing Systems sell to an increasing number of crops there.

  • 2020

    The first Covid year – challenging. Our first year as fully carbon neutral. We purchase carbon offsets for our expected carbon production over the next 5 years. This is for all our scope 1 and 2 carbon globally, as is normal, but voluntarily add scope 3 for all our air freighting of fruit from South Africa. We haven’t particularly promoted this carbon neutral action to customers we just wanted to sleep at night knowing we’re doing great things socially for thousands in South Africa, but we don’t want this to be at an environmental cost.

  • 2021

    We start a cherry farm in China.

  • 2022

    We offer our carbon calculator ‘Hortiplanet’ to other growers – it’s well received for practicality. Driscoll decide to buy Haygrove Africa Trading Pty – our blueberry grower group. This wasn’t our plan, but we respect that South Africa is now on the global blueberry map and Driscoll are long time partners.