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2022-12-31-accounts

Annual Report & Accounts 2022

Connecting children with the land that sustains us all

President: The Duke of Westminster

Vice Presidents:

Trustees:

Sir Henry Aubrey-Fletcher Bt Sir Nicholas Bacon Bt Lord Boswell of Aynho DL W Butterfield Earl of Carnarvon

The Trustees who served the charity during the year were as follows:

S D Bell BA (Hons) (Chairman)

J Brown BSc (Hons) PGCE (stepped down June 2022)

J M Carr-Ellison

M A Bufton-McCoy B Phil, Cert Ed (appointed June 2022)

J Knappett B Ed NPQH J Compton (deceased Jan 2023) Lord Dear QPM

T C M Fawcett BSc (Hons)

S Fish BA (Hons) PGCE (appointed June 2022)

T. Fanshawe

W J Henderson DL

R J Frossell

M Kendall

M Gent (appointed June 2022)

W Kendall DL

K Kaur BSc(Hons) GTP (QTS) MA NPQH (appointed June 2022)

D Laing MA RIBA Hon. John Leigh-Pemberton Hon G E Lopes

G M H Mills DL (stepped down June 2022)

N. Partheeban BVM&S BSc(Hons) PGCert(DHH) PIAGrM R.Ani.Tech. FRSA MRCVS

L V Lyle MA PGCE

M Maclay DL

H R Oliver-Bellasis FRAgS Dame Fiona Reynolds DBE

A J Stafford MA (Oxon)

E P Serjeant

J Serjeant BA (Hons) ACA I N Tegner CA FRSA F Weston MA (Cantab)

Bankers:

CAF Bank Ltd. 25 Kings Hill Ave, Kings Hill, West Malling, Kent ME19

Independent Examiner:

Chief Executive:

Edmund Carr. LLP 146 New London Road, Chelmsford, Essex, CM2 0AW

J D Attenborough MA (Cantab) FRSA

Registered address:

Lawyers:

Moulsham Mill, Parkway, Chelmsford CM2 7PX Tel:01258 608363

Wrigleys Solicitors LLP 19 Cookridge Street, Leeds LS2 3AG

The Country Trust is the leading national educational charity that connects children from areas of high social and economic disadvantage with the land that sustains us all.

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Country Trust – Trustees’ Report 2022

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During the 2022 calendar year:

We connected 55,370 children with the land that sustains us all, across our Farm, Residential, Food Discovery and Farm in a Box programmes, providing 260,000 hours of engagement.

We championed the importance of first-hand experiences of food and farming

with government.

We began two new areas of work – supporting teachers to sustain the impact of our programmes and the Plant Your Pants Soil Health Campaign, and for the first time provided a significant offer for Early Years and Foundation Stage, through our EYFS Farm in a Box.

We completed the first year of our 5 Year Plan, evaluating our impact against our new Theory of Change.

Theory of Change

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Problem Inputs / activities Intermediate outcomes Long-term outcomes Overall aim
Young people who engage with the Country Trust
...have a better understanding ...are more likely to choose to
of how to interact with the spend time outdoors and in the Through food, farming and
Farm Discovery natural world around them countryside countryside experiences The
Poverty of opportunity and
Country Trust aims to
experience from an early
Food Discovery empower children to be
age negatively impacts ...are excited to use/discuss ...demonstrate a greater confident, curious and create
health, wellbeing, and the what they have learnt belief in their own agency change in their lives and the
likelihood of a successful Countryside Residentials world around them so that
they, and society, can thrive
adult life, and with it the ...feel supported and more
ability to contribute to a Farm in a Box confident to try new things ...are keener to try new things
thriving, sustainable society (online, local and national)
...are more likely to pursue
...feel more curious about the hobbies or careers related to food,
world, particularly food, farming and the countryside
farming and the countryside
...are able to imagine a wider
range of future possibilities
and are more confident
Vision working towards them
...are more able to make
connections between their
A fair, sustainable and lives and food, farming and ...are more likely to make positive
the countryside / informed choices on food,
inclusive society in which all farming and the countryside
children, irrespective
Teachers who engage with the Country Trust
of background, are able
...place greater value on ...gain confidence to offer
to thrive and achieve real-world learning experiences broader pupil-led opportunities
their potential Parents who engage with the Country Trust
...feel more curious about how ...are more likely to make
their lives connect to food, positive / informed choices on
farming and the countryside food, farming and the countryside
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Country Trust Annual Report 2022

Equality, Diversity and Inclusion

We want our team and our programmes to better the reflect the diversity of the children and the communities we serve and continue to take steps towards this.

How we support our beneficiaries

Farm Discovery Countryside Residentials Day-visits to working farms for school and Immersing children in the countryside for 2-4 community groups. These are led by our days, Coordinators organise and support a tailored Coordinators who work with host farmers and programme, including a farm visit, working with teachers/group leaders to ensure a safe visit with teachers and third party providers to ensure a appropriate sensory experiences and hands-on memorable, safe, and happy time away from home.

Day-visits to working farms for school and community groups. These are led by our Coordinators who work with host farmers and teachers/group leaders to ensure a safe visit with appropriate sensory experiences and hands-on activities.

Sustaining Impact Throughout our programmes we train teachers: formally through CPD and ITT sessions and informally through modelling and conversations. In 2022 we started a new pilot project in partnership with a large multi-academy trust, equipping teachers to take children on the seeds to supper journey.

Food Discovery Farm in a Box A Country Trust Coordinator takes a class on A box of farm-centred activities and resources a journey through food: growing vegetables, created by The Country Trust, delivered by school preparing and cooking meals, tasting produce, staff either: Local - created by a local Coordinator visiting local farms, running their own markets, with a local farm for a local school, or National - a and experiencing the joy of sharing a feast. The range of boxes funded by different partners, packed depth of the programme gives children the time to and distributed centrally to hundreds of schools. explore many aspects of food.

Core Values: We believe you grow by learning from others

We think the quality of our connections with others has an important effect on who we can be and what we can do

We are active participants in a world which inspires and sustains us

Aspirational values:

We want everyone to know that their contribution is welcome and valued

We aspire to be childcentred, no matter what our role is

We have worked hard to try and promote recruitment opportunities through a wide range of networks and are exploring when and how we can support people to join us who may not have the formal qualifications or experience that we have required in the past.

Recruitment of Trustees during 2022 resulted in a more diverse Board and we are excited about the connections, creativity and inspiration that this is unlocking.

Activities

How the Charity’s activities deliver public benefit

In setting our programme each year we have regard to the Charity Commission’s general guidance on public benefit. The Trustees always ensure that the programmes we undertake are in line with our charitable objectives and aims. Our ambitious aims are that:

We use an evaluation framework to gather feedback on all the activities we offer. We collate and analyse the feedback and this then informs our programme design. Feedback from children, teachers and parents suggests that the Trust is achieving its goal of helping to improve the life chances of the children who take part in our programmes. We are in the unique position of being able to provide programmes which support teachers to engage children with learning and support physical, emotional and social wellbeing.

We can build food knowledge and food confidence, provide access to food and farming related climate learning and enable children to discover that they can be active participants. We can create connections between pupils, farmers and the natural world. We can speak up on relevant education, agriculture and food issues, taking the lead or supporting others.

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How we work

All our programmes are designed to create moments that provoke curiosity, making learning irresistible. Children learn most deeply when they are following their natural curiosity as it places them at the centre of their learning.

Giving children time, space and the tools to understand the world around them – whether it’s in their school grounds, a farm or at the beach – allows children to discover for themselves the wonder and connectedness of life.

As so many of the children we work with have limited experiences, we ensure that new experiences are crafted carefully and consciously into our programmes, building confidence and happy memories.

Indicies of Multiple Deprivation Map (2019) Where we work across all programmes Source: mapmaker.cdrc.ac.uk/

Who we support

We work with children who experience disadvantage through:

These children may rarely travel outside their immediate community and therefore may have limited access to quality green space and the countryside.

They may have limited access to good, healthy and varied food;

They may have little or no opportunity to grow things, have contact with animals, pursue hobbies or take part in cultural or sporting activities;

They are more likely to miss out on opportunities to meet positive adult role models, to be inspired and pursue ambitions.

Poverty of opportunity and experience from an early age can negatively impact health, wellbeing and access to education. This then can affect children's ability to achieve success in adult life.

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The continuing impact of Covid

Recently published reports back up what our Coordinators are experiencing in the course of their work.

Our operating context

Early Years

Published by the First 1001 Days Movement and the Institute of Health Visiting in November 2022, the report, ‘Casting Long Shadows: The ongoing impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on babies, their families and the services that support them,’[1] finds that:

Key stage One and Two

Despite the Department for Education’s “Education Recovery Programme” implemented to counteract the impact of Covid, the National Audit Office concluded in February 2023 that: ‘the gap between disadvantaged pupils and other pupils at the end of primary school had widened since 2019.’[2]

Government statistics show that Covid 19 is likely to have had a damaging effect on school attendance. Disadvantaged pupils are more likely to miss school. The latest national statistics showed 33.6% of pupils who were eligible for free school meals were persistently absent in Autumn 2021, compared to 20.0% of pupils who were not eligible.

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Furthermore, 30.6% of pupils who receive SEND support were persistently absent in Autumn 2021, compared with 21.5% for pupils who are not identified with SEND.[3]

Teachers

In total, over seven million teacher days have been lost to stress and mental health issues in the past five years. They showed a steady increase, highlighting the pressures that the pandemic put on teaching staff.[4]

Where we work

Our Farm, Food and Residential Coordinators are located across England and North Wales delivering hands-on, real-world food and farm experiences.

Farm in a Box local remains a very useful alternative to be able to offer schools who cancel or are unable to plan visits. During 2022 we were able to increase our team slightly, but we also lost Coordinators. Our Coordinators are self-employed and our operating context continues to be impacted by budget cuts in schools, staff shortages and ill health meaning that some of our delivery team have had to seek greater financial security in employed roles elsewhere. Our Farm in a Box National Programme enables us to reach schools located in the country’s most deprived areas where we don’t yet have a presence on the ground.

  1. https://parentinfantfoundation.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/F1001D-Casting-LongShadows-FINAL-NOV-22.pdf

  2. https://www.nao.org.uk/reports/education-recovery-in-schools-in-england/

  3. https://committees.parliament.uk/committee/203/education-committee

  4. FOI request https://www.theguardian.com/education/2022/jul/31/teacher-sick-days-soar-aspoor-conditions-take-toll-on-mental-health

Activities, achievements, performance and public benefit

OUR REACH – 2022 CALENDAR YEAR

We connected 55,370 children with the land across our Farm, Farm in a Box, Residential and Food Discovery programmes.

35,147 pupils – 1,339 classes – received our Farm in a Box Local and National programmes. That’s 140,588 hours of engagement (assumes 35,147 children spent 4 hours on activities. Some will have spent longer but some teachers may not have fully utilised their Box).

20,223 children on real working farms – approximately 80,890 hours (assumes each child spends 4 hours on the farm. Includes Residential and Food Discovery children).

1,537 children took part in a Food Discovery programme – approximately 21,518 hours (programmes still slightly variable coming out of Covid so we have assumed 14 hours per child)

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Focus on: Curiosity

We want children who engage with our programmes to:

Children learn best when they can see how what they study links to real world experiences and connects with and supports their learning of other subjects.

Learning in this fashion engages and enthuses pupils, develops their natural curiosity, and motivates them to find out more.

(Maintaining Curiosity, a Survey into Science Education in Schools, Ofsted Publications 2013)

We work hard to support teachers and children to understand the vital place that food, farming and the countryside has in all our lives: it is the land that sustains us all. For many of the children we work with, the farmed landscape is a new world and a new experience. Helping children explore this world on their own terms and at their own pace is critical as it gives them ownership of their knowledge through their own curious exploration.

I loved when we dug through the soil… I learned the actual names for some insects so it was pretty cool.

Pupil, Great Yarmouth Primary Academy

An increasing number of teachers tell us that they have children in their class with sensory processing needs. These pupils can find encounters in the natural world particularly problematic. However, carefully scaffolded opportunities can support many children to overcome their fears.

I got to smell a pineapple weed, it smelled great.

Pupil, Calcot Junior School

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99%
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of teachers said they had observed all or most of their children engaging with the natural world through touching and feeling, listening, tasting, smelling and observing

I’ve never tasted honey until today. I love it! It tastes so sweet! The bees are so clever to make it and so kind to share it with us. Thank you bees!

Pupil, Bishop’s Primary School

Gave children more awe and wonder about the natural world and the importance of nature in areas they didn’t realise.

Laura Vincent, Scunthorpe CofE Primary School

Children are encouraged to ask questions to further their learning during our programmes – what do they want to find out? Who can they ask?

So, there's more than one type of apple? I love apples but didn't think they had different tastes.

James Knott CofE Primary School

How does the same seeds know to grow different types of peas? All the pea seeds in here (magazine) look the same. How do they get different?

Pupil, Banks Road Primary School

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We want children who engage with our programmes to::

Focus on: Confidence

We want children who engage with our programmes to:

Confident children believe in themselves and their abilities and ideas. Our Coordinators and host farmers consciously scaffold experiences for children so that they can build up their confidence in doing new things in small steps. This could be tasting new foods, touching a farm animal, or going pony trekking.

It’s been amazing to see the children grow in confidence trying new foods. I have loved seeing them try things for the first time and whilst I was aware of the level of deprivation in the school it has reminded me of how limited some of our children’s diet and experiences were. This has opened up their world a little bit and given the adults an opportunity to talk about new foods as well.

This desire to talk about what they have learnt and done often has a longer term effect, supporting the retention of learning, with lots of teachers mentioning that children are still talking about their experiences after the visit or session, which then naturally feeds into writing across different subject areas:

The engagement from our children was amazing and every child came back and could talk about the experience. Many children had been able to retain a lot of the new vocabulary which they had heard.

Luisa Pancisi, St James’ C of E Infants

Pupils who speak English as an additional language, or who lack confidence speaking to others, particularly benefit from these farm-centred experiences:

One child who is usually quite reserved, really came out of their shell when we were gardening as he found he was good at it. It was lovely to see him become more of a ‘leader’ and more confident at talking to his peers.

Teacher, Food Discovery end of programme evaluation, Waterside Primary Academy

Teacher, Waterside Primary School

A child who did not want to stroke the chicken went from hands in her pockets, to a little touch with a finger to a quick stroke to a continuous stroke with a big grin on her face. This was achieved by the farmer choosing the right chicken and being supportive and mindful.

Observation from Coordinator for Valley Primary Academy visit

Doing new things generates feelings of pride and independence, and can open opportunities for new hobbies and interests:

The majority of the children loved the visit. This is something that the children in my school would not normally be able to see and so the children enjoyed talking about it later that week in our lessons.

Richard Nicholls, Star Academy

I loved the horse riding and I even asked my mum if I can start a horse riding lesson there because I had so much fun.

Amelia, St Joseph’s Primary School, Yorkshire school thank you letter

Some of the shy children were very active and participated a lot. Had more confidence. Children with English as an additional language were talking more and happier.

of children said they had done 95% something for the first time

Martin Sjaz, St Cuthberts

of teachers tell us that they observed all or most of their pupils 97% excited to talk with each other about what they have done and learnt during our programmes

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Country Trust Annual Report 2022

Focus on: Connections

We want children who engage with our programmes to be more able to make connections between their lives and food, farming and the countryside.

As children explore the world around them through our programmes, they make sense of the journey of food, from farm to fork, and start to make all sorts of connections. The most fundamental of these is understanding how important farms are and over 90% of the children we have worked with say they think farms are important – a 9% higher score in comparison with a national Childwise survey asking the same question. The connections children make range from environmental to emotional to academic.

This could be ascribed to the happy memories they have built during the visit (all those new experiences which have boosted their confidence), but Coordinators also of children say try to do activities which teachers and that they want children can repeat so that they can 92% to go back to recreate the same feelings they had on the farm the farm:

We were lying on the tarp under the trees doing a listening exercise and afterwards talking about how being in the forest made us feel, the answers I expected were given including ‘relaxed, calm, peaceful, chilled, sleepy’ and then a boy said ‘alive’ which I thought was wonderful.

Coordinator session report after The Beeches Primary school visit Some of the connections children make are academic: their curiosity and the tools they have used during the day to discover things for themselves enable them to start making connections with their classroom learning:

It was really hands on and the children were able to consolidate the learning they had carried out in school.The children all said how much they had enjoyed themselves and how much they had learnt.

Learning in the ‘real-world’ supports children to make their own connections, further supporting the retention of their learning:

We were looking at tiny holes in sprigs of rosemary with magnifiers, and talking about photosynthesis. He said ‘it’s like a perfect circle, with plants giving out oxygen and taking in carbon dioxide, and animals doing it the other way round. We all depend on each other’. I could see that it was a total ‘light bulb’ moment for him.

Farmer Host, Yorkshire

Over the course of longer programmes, like Food Discovery, children can realise their own agency, and start to take learning from school and farm to their home environments:

The children have become more aware that they are in control of the food they eat, and able to make their own choices. They are now looking forward to growing their own food at home and educating their parents!

Teacher, end of programme questionnaire, Beccles Primary Academy

With all our programmes, to a greater or lesser extent, there are also opportunities for teachers to explore how food, farming and the countryside are integral to global topics like sustainability:

Many of our pupils are disadvantaged and would not engage in activities involving cooking, growing, farming etc. at home. […] The sustainability aspect of the Food Discovery programme is vital in supporting our children’s cultural capital and international responsibilities for a better future. We are starting to weave the UN sustainable goals into the curriculum, through Food Discovery these can be implemented in much more depth. The children have grown in the understanding of the importance of making sustainable changes, and their actions can have an impact both positively and negatively on the world.

Teacher, end of programme questionnaire, SS John Fisher and Thomas More Catholic Primary

Amanda Batterbee, Marshland St James Primary & Nursery School

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The idea of starting with things in a box really offered some curiosity into what we were doing – this is an element that I would try again .

Elizabeth Hill, Rossmere Academy

Sustaining Impact: Teachers

We want teachers who engage with our programmes to place greater value on real-world learning experiences and, longer term, gain the confidence to offer broader pupil-led opportunities.

Teachers play a vital role in ensuring that the work that we do in our programmes has a lasting and deep impact. Teachers see their pupils every day and can use the farm-centred experiences that we offer as a springboard for learning across the curriculum and to support their pupils’ personal development. We offer teacher training within Food Discovery but acknowledge that much of the training across our programmes is informally modelled by our Coordinators sharing knowledge, expertise and Country Trust values.

The idea of cooking in the classroom and making a big pot to split between 30 children […] making a small portion to take home proved that to do a food activity is not as tricky as you might think. Gives me more confidence to do something with food in other topic/science lessons.

of teachers who we worked with said that they intended to run more real-world learning activities

94%

It has been wonderful to allow children to flourish within structured, hands on learning. This has been an area I have rolled out to many more lessons to encourage engagement from all.

Teacher, Aylesbury Vale Academy

of teachers agree that our programmes allowed them to 91% learn something new about their pupils

Teacher, Beccles Primary

The experience allowed myself and other teachers to see the huge benefit being outside has on enhancing the children’s learning and engagement.

Teacher, Maple Court Academy

The day has clearly had a massive impact on my class. It makes such a difference when they can actually make those real life connections that bring their learning to life.

Teacher, Poplars Community Primary School visit

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94.5%
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of teachers agree that they feel more confident using the natural world in their teaching after being involved in one of our programmes

In our two school-based programmes, Food Discovery and Farm in a Box, 74% of teachers agreed that their pupils had taken the lead in their learning, further demonstrating that this style of teaching is achievable in the classroom.

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Country Trust Annual Report 2022

Case Study: Alma’s Farm Visit

Case Study: Ollie’s Farm Visit

“ “ Ollie, year 4, visited a dairy farm with his class. It wasn’t his first visit to a farm, but he said he felt nervous about being there as, “it’s different to being in school, so it’s unusual.”

Alma came on a visit to a mixed farm with her mixed year 1 and 2 class. She had never been to a farm before and was very excited to be there, although she was worried that the animals might bite.

She was pleased that she had put her own wellies on, as some people in her class had to change their shoes when they arrived at the farm and wear some from the farmer’s welly bank.

We went to look at the growing calves and had the opportunity to go and bottle feed them and touch them. Ollie was very keen to watch how they behaved and had a lot of questions about how old they were, why their tongues were so rough. We went into the milking parlour next and were able to watch the cows being milked. Ollie was fascinated and wanted to know everything:

Alma was really engaged with all the activities during the day: bottle feeding lambs, pretending to be a lamb after watching them play, looking at cows and chickens, grinding wheat to make flour, exploring a tractor, gathering different plants in a field and doing a bug hunt.

She was very keen to learn words for the new things Ollie noticed that the cows were eating she was seeing and on the while they were being milked and when class’s walk back to the bus they looked at the feed nuts he enjoyed at the end of the day she feeling and smelling them commenting, instigated a guessing word “They smell quite sweet”. game which enabled all of her The herdsman brought out a patient peers to practice some of the and friendly cow which all the children vocabulary they had learnt were allowed to take turns to stroke and used during the day like while she was eating some nuts. Ollie butterfly, froghopper, ladybird, buttercup. couldn’t get over how soft she felt.

“Why is that one not being milked? Look at that one, there’s already milk spurting out! Are they going to use that one what’s been on the floor? That won’t be clean”. When the cows had gone out, the herdsmen gave the children the opportunity to put their fingers into the suction units so they could feel what the cows felt. Ollie and his friend agreed, “It’s really gentle, the cows probably really like it.”

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Impact on teachers:

This year we have developed an online pupil feedback form automatically sent to the class teacher as soon as our Coordinators submit a session report to our database. We are really pleased at the response and to have made progress with our ambition to listen to children’s voices more.

The difference we make (analysis of 493 teacher feedback forms – a return rate of 80.8%. Pupil feedback was from 768 forms representing 2,517 pupils, a total of 15% of the children we worked with)

Impact on children:

Quality:

It was lovely to see the children building their confidence, lots were anxious about feeding/touching the animals and by the end of the trip, all children were confident doing so!

Teacher, Coates Lane

The engagement from our children was amazing and every child came back and could talk about the experience. Many children had been able to retain a lot of the new vocabulary which they had heard. It was great to hear the girls saying ‘we could be farmers too’ breaking down gender stereotypes .

Luisa Pancisi, St James’ C of E Infants

Shaun Mohan, Lache Primary

A lot of the comments were about the tasting activity which we did next to the milking area. Really making that link that the milk from the cows makes this food. One of the girls made a point of bringing ‘cows milk’ in her drinks bottle and saying that it had to go in the fridge so it doesn’t go off. Loads of amazing learning that would be so difficult to replicate in a classroom!!!

email from Peter Bradbury, Dee Banks School after a visit

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Impact on teachers:

The difference we make (To evaluate our impact we use before and after programme questionnaires and end of session feedback forms for teachers, before and after programme questionnaires using a smileyometer and open feedback for pupils, and Coordinator session reports)

Impact on children:

Quality:

A child that was particularly afraid of insects ended up looking in awe at a beetle she’d stumbled across, taking time to observe and describe it to her friends .

Coordinator session report, Moreland Primary School

Normally I wouldn’t try this, but because I’ve made it myself and tasted all the ingredients I’m definitely going to eat it! The courgette was amazing!

Reported speech from children at a cooking session, Pear Tree Community Junior School

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Impact on teachers:

Local (prepared by our Coordinators on a per school basis working with one farmer for each school) and National (ordered and delivered centrally at scale on a given theme – Discover Warburtons Wheat and Climate Action in 2021/2)

The difference we make (responses were gathered from teacher surveys, pupil feedback forms were trialled, but response rates were disappointingly low, something that we have recently found a way to improve on!)

Impact on children:

Pupils were extremely enthusiastic to learn, this includes most of our children who have English as an additional language. It encouraged them to communicate!

R Clarke St Marys Cockerton

The sensory aspects to the Farm in a Box were brilliant. All activities today really encouraged discussions and encouraged opportunities to learn new vocabulary. All the children had a really fantastic day, and experienced things for the very first time.

Georgia Knights, Hazlewood Community

Quality:

I liked the links it made for children from nature to their own lives ie farm to fork. It made them think about processes and initial to final product.

Joanne Wright, Leiston Primary School

The farm in a box resources have opened their eyes to life outside of their immediate community.

Felicity Rountree, Western Primary School

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Case Study: Nathan’s Residential

“ Nathan, year 4, was on a Residential visit to the Yorkshire Dales with his class. Most of his class hadn’t stayed away from home since before Covid, if at all, and most hadn’t ever left their urban Yorkshire town.

They had arrived the day before and were all quite tired after quite an emotional first-night away from home.

There was a 2 mile walk in the morning, including crossing a river using stepping stones. There were lots of stops to learn about the countryside they were walking in, how it was farmed, and with time learning to look out for specific plants and signs of life.

The children knew that there would be a quiz in the evening covering some of this information. Nathan was struggling a bit with both the length of the walk (as were most children), and that in the afternoon they would be doing pony trekking which he was very anxious about.

He asked his teacher several times during the walk what his horse would be like, how big it would be, whether he would like it. After lunch, when we arrived at the pony trekking centre, Nathan waited nervously by the horse

he had been matched with for someone to help him on. With some assistance he mounted the horse and once he felt stable, he beamed and said, “I can feel the horse’s heart beating!”.

As they went on their short trek, he learnt he was very good at controlling his pony, “I’m so good at stopping him”, and he was very proud of himself and grew in confidence over the afternoon.

All the children were very keen to exchange their pony experiences once they had dismounted, comparing how old their ponies were and discovering that they were all younger than the ponies.

They visited a trout farm after they had been pony trekking, and Nathan touched a massive trout which he said felt cold and slippery, and which amazed him.

They spent some time exploring a purpose built dry stone wall, climbing stiles and crawling through holes, and they all were absorbed by this experience.

The overall experience for Nathan, and his class, was success in lots of gentle, achievable challenges in a new environment away from home.

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Countryside Discovery Residentials

The difference we make (analysis of feedback from 6 residentials and 3 run as a series of day visits)

Impact on children:

Impact on teachers:

Quality:

I found out that plants can be edible. Not all of them, but most of them. They can cure illnesses, heal you, and help you feel better.

Suffolk Residential, Post-visit pupil feedback

Memories for life. A great understanding of what is effectively an hour from their front doors.

Yorkshire Post-visit Teacher evaluation

I’m going to be a hairdresser but in one of these little villages. I want to get away from all the lights and the noise. My town is too stressful. I love it here, this is where I belong, I know it.

St Clare’s Pupil, Yorkshire Residential

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Country Trust Annual Report 2022

Plant Your Pants – our soil campaign

New developments

Under the ‘Diversification’ pillar of our 5 Year Plan we developed and launched two new programmes in 2022 and we brought out a new evolution of Farm in a Box.

Farm in a Bag

Having seen how Farm in a Box increased children’s curiosity, confidence and connection and increased the impact of a subsequent farm visit, we wanted to see whether we could develop a lower cost, re-useable, pre-visit activity that would still have significant impact. With funding from two Farming in Protected Landscapes funds (Lincolnshire Wolds AONB and Norfolk Broads AONB) we piloted Farm in a Bag. A re-useable bag of primarily sensory activities plus a short video, given to the teacher at the pre visit for use before the actual farm visit. Initial feedback is very encouraging and we are gradually accessing funding to equip more of our Coordinators with a set of bags.

Sustaining impact with Reach 2 Multi-Academy Trust

A brand-new programme of support just becoming available to teachers across 60 Reach2 academies with the aim of equipping and supporting teachers to take children on the ‘seeds to supper’ journey, one of the MAT’s ’11 before 11’ promises for all their pupils.

Our aim is to then have a suite of resources to offer more widely, enabling teachers to sustain the impact of food and farm centred activities.

We wanted to find a way to enable children to make that first fundamental connection with the land that sustains us – getting their hands in the soil and discovering the life within it.

Plus we will be asking children to track their findings online and build up a picture of soil across the country. We are running the programme with scientists, teachers, parents and children involved at every stage.

Over time, we hope to build a nationwide understanding of the vital importance of soil and the role each of us can play in making our soil healthy.

That’s why we are asking families, schools, nurseries and farmers across the UK to bury a pair of cotton pants for a few months, and together, explore the world beneath our feet.

Burying pants is a technique that’s been used by scientists the world over to engage people in the science of soil health. The healthier the soil, the more disintegrated the cotton pants will be once they are dug up.

It’s a way that children can discover the life, both visible and invisible, in any patch of earth - from planters to parks, gardens, schools and farms. Our aim is to spark connection and curiosity along the way, guiding people how to look for signs of life, understand what it means and why it matters to each of us.

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Country Trust Annual Report 2022

Food and Farm Education for all

Our policy work

The Country Trust is speaking up to ensure food, farming and countryside opportunities and experiences are available to ALL children, especially persistently disadvantaged children.

We know these opportunities offer the right balance of emotional, physical, social and educational development that benefit children and are vitally important for the future of British agriculture and for people and the planet to thrive. We are calling for:

Support for farmers

Over the past year we have been working hard to ensure as many farmers as possible are financially rewarded for opening their farms for educational visits. And we have had some success.

As well as ensuring there is adequate support from government for farmers, we are pushing for better and more food and agriculture education. An important part of this is backing the ‘Eat and Learn’ recommendations in the National Food Strategy.

We are asking Government to work across departments to ensure we achieve the much-needed shift in food culture to create a sustainable, resilient food system that supports people to live healthy lives. We believe this starts with first-hand experience of farming and food production.

Our ambition is to establish food, farming, and countryside opportunities as part of a fair education for all children, ensuring no child’s future is limited by their socio-economic background. That’s why we support the call for a Nature Premium, a government funded, statutory requirement for schools to take children regularly into nature.

And it’s why we play an active role in the Fair Education Alliance. We have introduced Kim McGowan Smith to both the Food Education Network and the Fair Education Alliance and think her work on food literacy provides an excellent framework to work with.

Speaking out...

Through our efforts, Educational Access Payments (ED1) were added to Mid-Tier Countryside Stewardship agreements. Our challenge continues to be to ensure such payments continue when the new Environmental Land Management scheme is rolled out in 2024 and there are at last some positive signs. We will continue to speak up to ensure this becomes a reality.

We are also backing the call for support for farms under 5 hectares on urban fringes, not least because they are so well placed to provide opportunities for children from large urban areas.

With fuel costs so high, it is more important than ever that farms that are accessible by public transport, or are within walking distance of the schools we work with, are encouraged to open their gates for educational access visits.

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39

Working in partnership

Amplifying our message and strengthening the case for support

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Country Trust Annual Report 2022

Strategic direction

Our 5 Year Plan

In 2022 we launched a new 5 Year Plan, the first year of which coincided with schools, children, farmers, supporters, government and our workforce emerging from Covid, plus the increasing ‘bite’ of the cost-of-living crisis.

The 5 pillars of the Plan are:

Next steps with our Strategic Plan

2023 is year 2 of our 5 Year Plan.

With the help of all our supporters our aim is:

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Strategic direction

Reimagining Residentials

In 2021 we laid out our plans to reimagine residentials and started to implement some of the ideas. 2022 was our first full residential season after the pandemic and it provided an opportunity to assess the changes we had made so far, for example to our Suffolk based programme, and the introduction of a parent video in Yorkshire.

We also reviewed our plans in the light of the significant impact Covid has had on the children, their families and their teachers, and were reassured to find that the reimagining we had done aligned well with the needs we were now seeing. However, the need for more time and resource to develop our plans was clear. The Ernest Cook OWL collaboration, and a small development charge to each school has freed up this time and capacity for 2023. Our plans are as follows:

Some of the above work will be shared with the OWL collaboration to be used by 10 other residential programmes across the UK who are providing residentials for disadvantaged children thanks to funding from The Ernest Cook Trust.

In addition, we are also looking at how we further support schools (and parents) who face significantly increased financial challenges.

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Fundraising

Income increased by 21.5% and expenditure increased by 44.5% in comparison to 2021 (to £1,206,639 and £1,397,117) The net outcome was as expected though actual figures were lower than budgeted. 45% of our income was unrestricted. £339,786 of income received in 2022 was deferred to 2023 because it relates to the planned delivery of activity in the spring and summer terms.

The planned deficit enabled us to begin to use our reserves (fundamentally comprised of legacy income) in support of our 5 Year Plan. Our reserves position gave us the confidence and the capacity to:

Controls

Financial management consists of monthly management accounts that are distributed to all Trustees for review.

Monthly forecasting enables Trustees to view the financial landscape ahead along with a mid-year review and detailed consideration in the third quarter prior to preparing the budget for the following year.

CEO or Trustee authorisation is required for all payments; all payments made by the Charity over £5,000 require dual authorisation with an authorised Trustee signatory. The charity had a successful Independent Examination (IE) in 2021 but is required to have an audit for 2022 as our income is over £1m.

Reserves policy

Trustees operate a RAG approach to assessing reserves with a green zone at around 3 months of operating reserves.

Based on our expenditure budget for 2023 this would indicate a reserves level of approximately £431,904. In 2022, overall reserves decreased from £772,718 to £582,240, of which unrestricted reserves decreased from £686,314 to £559,034 , as a result of a planned use of reserves for our 5 Year Plan.

Our plans will result in a deficit again in 2023, but we have mechanisms in place to reduce the deficit should our monitoring indicate any cause for concern and our intention is of course to return to at least a break-even budget.

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47

Fundraising

The Board has adopted the Charity Governance Code and is working through the seven principles to ensure good governance.

Legal and ethical fundraising remains a key objective of the Trustees, and they take their responsibilities with regard to proper fundraising practice very seriously.

They are guided by the Charity Commission’s Charity fundraising: a guide to trustee duties (CC20 updated Oct 2022) as well as the Charity Governance Code (updated 2020), and the Guidance Note from the Fundraising Regulator on New Reporting Requirements published October 2018 and updated January 2023, and the Covid fundraising guidance issued during 2021. The Country Trust is registered with the Fundraising Regulator and complies with the Code of Fundraising Practice.

In 2022, approximately 66% of our income came from charitable trusts and foundations, 19.6% from donations including companies, 8% from service users - primarily schools in the form of the balance of the cost of residential visits after our subsidy has been applied, or as a contribution from schools towards the cost of Food Discovery programmes, 6.5% from donated services and gifts in kind.

Donors to The Country Trust can be assured that:

The Charity will comply with requests issued by the Fundraising Preference Service. The Charity strives to maintain GDPR compliance and has registered with the ICO.

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48 Country Trust Annual Report 2022

Principal funding sources

As described above the Charity continues to derive most of its funding from grant making trusts, but with a growing number of companies now supporting our work. We continued to sustain a good percentage of funding within multiyear agreements.

We are very grateful indeed for the support received from all our funders, and mention here those who have given permission for their support to be acknowledged in this report:

Aldgate and Allhallows Foundation, Ardian UK and the Ardian Foundation, Britains Farm Toys, Bruno Schroder Trust, The CLA Charitable Trust, Lance Coates Charitable Trust, Ernest Cook Trust, Doves Farm, Frontier Agriculture UK, The Girdlers’ Company, WA Handley Trust, The Hiscox Foundation, A Hume Country Clothing and Outfitters, Impax Asset Management, The Joicey Trust, Sir James Knott Trust, John Lewis Golden Jubilee Trust, The Lund Trust, The Mercers’ Company, Muckle LLP Community Fund, Oxbury Bank, The Rank Foundation, Riverford Organic Foods, The Rothschild Foundation, Royal Society of Chemistry, The Shears Foundation, Soreen, The Bernard Sunley Charitable Foundation, Felix Thornley Cobbold Agricultural Trust, Tyne and Wear Community Foundation, Warburtons Ltd, Westminster Foundation, The Garfield Weston Foundation, The Wheler Foundation.

We were delighted to be able to work with two of our very generous supporters to hold two face to face fundraising events in London to introduce our work to new supporters. The Trustees would like to particularly thank those Foundations who have provided additional cost of living grants in recognition of the challenges charities and their beneficiaries are facing.

Thanks are also due to the Charity’s President and Vice Presidents for their support in identifying and making introductions to potential new funding sources.

Transport costs

Requests for transport subsidies continued to rise in 2022 from schools in the area hardest hit by Covid, and then the cost-of-living crisis. Nearly £23,000 of subsidies were given out enabling over 3,000 children to access farms.

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Structure, Governance and Management

Structure

The Country Trust was founded in 1978 and is registered with the Charity Commission under Charity Number 1122103. The Board of Trustees, President, Board of Vice Presidents, Chief Executive Officer and professional advisers are listed on page 2.

On the 23rd November 2007 the Country Trust was incorporated; it became a company limited by guarantee and not having share capital. On the 1st January 2008, the Charity commenced trading as an incorporated Charity. The Company number is 6436266 and the registered address is shown on page 1.

Governing document

The Charity is governed by the Memorandum and Articles of Association of the Country Trust Ltd.

Governing Body

The structure of the Charity consists of a Board of Trustees and a Chief Executive supported by a Senior Leadership Team. The Board of Trustees is a self-appointing body and includes a good gender balance and a range of experience.

Several Trustees have direct experience of our services either as teachers or active farmer hosts. Trustees with the relevant experience have particular responsibility for Finance and Safeguarding.

Recruitment and training of Trustees

Trustees are recruited as and when required through advertising, personal recommendation and through the recommendation of third-party advisors according to the Board’s specifications concerning eligibility, personal competence, and specialist skills. Potential candidates are invited to apply and are interviewed by the Chair and at least one other Trustee.

Successful applicants are co-opted to join the Board until their appointment is confirmed. Four new Trustees were appointed and two stepped down during the year. Five Trustees, including all our new Trustees, undertook governance training with Hempsons on Finance, Governance and Legal Duties.

One Trustee undertook an additional safeguarding related training course and two existing Trustees undertook Trustee training with Stone King.

Organisational management

The Charity’s Trustees are legally responsible for the overall management and control of the Charity. The Board of Trustees meets at least four times a year to discuss and implement strategic issues, monitor income and expenditure, monitor risk, review and approve policies and approve annual budgets.

The day to day running of the Charity is delegated to the Chief Executive, the Senior Leadership Team, staff and sessional staff, who report to the Board monthly and quarterly.

The Chief Executive reports directly to the Chair of Trustees and is responsible for the day-to-day running of the Charity. The Charity is very fortunate to be supported by a President and Vice Presidents who are an advisory, networking and fundraising resource.

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Structure, Governance and Management

Risk management

The Board of Trustees is responsible for the management of risks associated with the activities of the Charity. The Board refers to the Charity’s Risk Register at each meeting which is prepared and updated by the Chief Executive.

The top 6 major risks identified and monitored in 2022 were:

Risk Assessments are prepared by staff and self-employed sessional contractors for all activities led by the Charity. Following recommendations arising from our regular reviews of Health and Safety, the Charity now ensures that all our active host farmers have a Risk Assessment in place for Country Trust visits. These Risk Assessments are prepared, owned and managed by the host farmer but where required, support for the process, including signposting to external industry guidance, is provided by the Charity. The Charity receives the help of professional advisors for risks associated with health and safety, safeguarding and employment practice.

The Board of Trustees also has in place key controls for use by the Charity, such as formal agendas for meetings, comprehensive strategic planning and monthly management accounting, established lines of reporting, formal written policies and a review schedule, clear authorisation levels for all payments and a safeguarding policy which provides guidance for all on best safe practice for adults within an organisation working with children.

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Structure, Governance and Management

Openness and accountability

We strive to involve participants in programme design and the comprehensive feedback gathered from stakeholders during the year is constantly used to inform practice. Our annual evaluation reports are published online and publicised through social media and printed materials.

We were very pleased to make progress in listening to children’s voices through the implementation of an online pupil survey sent to teachers after each farm visit. Levels of participation are encouraging. A number of case studies were also completed by our Learning and Evaluation Lead.

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This is our Position Statement:

The Country Trust connects children with the land that sustains us all. We aim to foster an understanding of farming, food production and countryside management in all its many guises and raise awareness of the way in which we are all participants in agriculture through the food that we eat.

Country Trust visits and activities are structured to support the National Curriculum, personal development and wellbeing. Our carefully planned opportunities and experiences are designed to empower children to be curious, confident and create change in their lives and the world around them so that they and society can thrive.

We do not consider ourselves to be a charity that campaigns for or against any particular form of farming or land management. However:

Our intention is that children will be in a better position to make informed decisions, understanding that their choices matter, and may be influential in the future shape of farming and the countryside.

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Structure, Governance and Management

GDPR

We use our database to extend our compliance with the GDPR regulations – subscription to Newsletters allows for double opt in as well as providing the usual ability to unsubscribe.

Cybersecurity

The Country Trust continues to be vigilant with regard to Cybersecurity. All CT staff are required to complete annual training as part of our Cyber insurance obligations.

We continue to use the NCSC’s (National Cyber Security Centre) monitoring tools. Continued vigilance meant that there were no serious issues in 2022.

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Safeguarding

Government guidance is clear that all organisations working with children, young people, families, parents and carers have particular responsibilities. At The Country Trust we recognise that the welfare of all children is paramount and that all children, regardless of ability or culture, have equal rights of protection.

We have a duty of care when they are in our charge, and we will do everything we can to provide a safe and caring environment whilst they attend our activities.

Our policy for child safeguarding is on our website and is reviewed annually by our Board of Trustees. The Country Trust is a member of SAFEcic, an umbrella organisation providing safeguarding training, advice and standards. All staff, volunteers and Trustees undertake safeguarding training and undergo DBS checks where this is permitted for their role.

Safeguarding is reviewed at the quarterly Board meetings. There were 8 safeguarding concerns raised within 2022 including disclosures by children and parents and potential signs of neglect and abuse observed in children, and one in relation to our own practice.

All were followed through in accordance with our Policy. Trustees have continued to keep their safeguarding training up to date and keep abreast of any significant changes.

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Structure, Governance and Management

Health and Safety

Our health and safety policy can be found on our website and is reviewed every two years. Following the last review, and a review of our policy in practice undertaken by Trustees, we strengthened our practice through making it a requirement that every active farmer host has an up-to-date Risk Assessment.

Safeguarding, and Health and Safety reports of all disclosures, accidents, incidents and near misses and subsequent actions taken are brought to every Board meeting, preserving the appropriate confidentiality. Health and Safety briefings are issued to the whole team at key moments in the farming calendar (eg lambing), whenever there is a learning or update to be shared and are integrated into new programmes (eg Farm in a Box). H and S training is made available in written and video form and engagement is tracked.

Pre-visits to farms are mandatory for schools (with very limited exceptions) in order that proper planning can be undertaken including understanding the particular needs of the children.

The Trustees would like to thank everyone involved with The Country Trust – farmers, teachers, funders, our delivery team, staff, volunteers and everyone who has provided incredible support and encouragement during another challenging year.

Statement of compliance with prevailing laws and regulations

The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with the accounting policies set out in notes to the accounts and comply with the charity’s governing document, the Charities Act 2011 and Accounting and Reporting by Charities: Statement of Recommended Practice applicable to charities preparing their accounts in accordance with the Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland published in October 2019.

This report has been prepared in accordance with the provisions applicable to companies entitled to the small companies’ exemption.

Approved by the Board of Trustees on _______

Signed on its behalf by ________ Steve Bell, Chair of Trustees

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Accounts

The Country Trust

Independent Auditor's Report to the Members of The Country Trust

Opinion

We have audited the financial statements of The Country Trust (the 'charitable company') for the year ended 31 December 2022, which comprise the Statement of Financial Activities, Balance Sheet, Statement of Cash Flows, and Notes to the Financial Statements, including significant accounting policies. The financial reporting framework that has been applied in their preparation is applicable law and United Kingdom Accounting Standards, including Financial Reporting Standard 102 The Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice).

In our opinion the financial statements:

Basis for opinion

We conducted our audit in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK) (ISAs (UK)) and applicable law. Our responsibilities under those standards are further described in the auditor responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements section of our report. We are independent of the charitable company in accordance with the ethical requirements that are relevant to our audit of the financial statements in the UK, including the FRC’s Ethical Standard, and we have fulfilled our other ethical responsibilities in accordance with these requirements. We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion.

Conclusions relating to going concern

In auditing the financial statements, we have concluded that the trustees use of the going concern basis of accounting in the preparation of the financial statements is appropriate.

Based on the work we have performed, we have not identified any material uncertainties relating to events or conditions that, individually or collectively, may cast significant doubt on the charitable company's ability to continue as a going concern for a period of at least twelve months from when the original financial statements were authorised for issue.

Our responsibilities and the responsibilities of the trustees with respect to going concern are described in the relevant sections of this report.

Other information

The other information comprises the information included in the Trustees' Report, other than the financial statements and our auditor’s report thereon. The trustees are responsible for the other information contained within the Trustees' Report. Our opinion on the financial statements does not cover the other information and, except to the extent otherwise explicitly stated in our report, we do not express any form of assurance conclusion thereon. Our responsibility is to read the other information and, in doing so, consider whether the other information is materially inconsistent with the financial statements or our knowledge obtained in the course of the audit or otherwise appears to be materially misstated. If we identify such material inconsistencies or apparent material misstatements, we are required to determine whether this gives rise to a material misstatement in the financial statements themselves. If, based on the work we have performed, we conclude that there is a material misstatement of this other information, we are required to report that fact.

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63

The Country Trust

Independent Auditor's Report to the Members of The Country Trust

We have nothing to report in this regard.

Opinion on other matter prescribed by the Companies Act 2006

In our opinion, based on the work undertaken in the course of the audit:

Matters on which we are required to report by exception

In the light of our knowledge and understanding of the company and its environment obtained in the course of the audit, we have not identified material misstatements in the Trustees' Report.

We have nothing to report in respect of the following matters where the Companies Act 2006 requires us to report to you if, in our opinion:

Other matter

The prior year financial statements are unaudited because the total income in the prior year was below the audit requirement threshold.

Responsibilities of trustees

As explained more fully in the (set out on page ), the trustees (who are also the directors of the charitable company for the purposes of company law) are responsible for the preparation of the financial statements and for being satisfied that they give a true and fair view, and for such internal control as the trustees determine is necessary to enable the preparation of financial statements that are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error.

In preparing the financial statements, the trustees are responsible for assessing the charitable company's ability to continue as a going concern, disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going concern and using the going concern basis of accounting unless the trustees either intend to liquidate the charitable company or to cease operations, or have no realistic alternative but to do so.

Auditor responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements

Our objectives are to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements as a whole are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, and to issue an auditor’s report that includes our opinion. Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance, but is not a guarantee that an audit conducted in accordance with ISAs (UK) will always detect a material misstatement when it exists. Misstatements can arise from fraud or error and are considered material if, individually or in the aggregate, they could reasonably be expected to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of these financial statements.

The Country Trust

Independent Auditor's Report to the Members of The Country Trust

Irregularities, including fraud, are instances of non-compliance with laws and regulations. We design procedures in line with our responsibilities, outlined above, to detect material misstatements in respect of irregularities, including fraud. The extent to which our procedures are capable of detecting irregularities, including fraud is detailed below:

Our approach to identifying and assessing the risks of material misstatement in respect of irregularities, including fraud and non-compliance with laws and regulations, was as follows;

• The engagement partner ensured that the engagement team collectively had the appropriate competence, capabilities and skills to identify or recognise non-compliance with applicable laws and regulations.

• We focused on specific laws and regulations which we considered may have a direct material effect on the financial statements or the operations for the company, including the Companies Act 2006, Charities Act 2011, tax legislation and data protection, and employment legislation.

We assessed the susceptibility of the company’s financial statements to material misstatement, including obtaining an understanding of how fraud might occur by;

• Making enquiries of management as to where they considered there was susceptibility to fraud, their knowledge of actual, suspected and alleged fraud. • Considered the internal controls in place to mitigate the risks of fraud and non-compliance with laws and regulations.

To address the risk of fraud through management bias and override of controls, we:

• Performed analytical procedures to identify any unusual or unexpected relationships.

• Tested journal entries to identify unusual transactions.

In response to the risk of irregularities and non-compliance with laws and regulations, we designed procedures which included, but were not limited to:

• Agreeing financial statement disclosures to underlying supporting documentation.

• Reading the minutes of meetings of those charged with governance..

• Enquiring of management as to actual and potential litigation and claims.

Because of the inherent limitations of an audit, there is a risk that we will not detect all irregularities, including those leading to a material misstatement in the financial statements or non-compliance with regulation. This risk increases the more that compliance with a law or regulation is removed from the events and transactions reflected in the financial statements, as we will be less likely to become aware of instances of non-compliance. The risk is also greater regarding irregularities occurring due to fraud rather than error, as fraud involves intentional concealment, forgery, collusion, omission or misrepresentation.

As part of an audit in accordance with ISAs (UK), we exercise professional judgement and maintain professional scepticism throughout the audit. We also:

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The Country Trust

Independent Auditor's Report to the Members of The Country Trust

We communicate with those charged with governance regarding, among other matters, the planned scope and timing of the audit and significant audit findings, including any significant deficiencies in internal control that we identify during our audit.

Use of our report

This report is made solely to the charitable company's trustees, as a body, in accordance with Chapter 3 of Part 16 of the Companies Act 2006. Our audit work has been undertaken so that we might state to the charitable company's trustees those matters we are required to state to them in an auditor’s report and for no other purpose. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the charitable company and its trustees as a body, for our audit work, for this report, or for the opinions we have formed.

The Country Trust

Statement of Financial Activities for the Year Ended 31 December 2022 (Including Income and Expenditure Account and Other Comprehensive Income)

Note
Income and Endowments from:
Donations and legacies
3
Charitable activities
4
Investment income
5
Other income
Total income
Expenditure on:
Raising funds
Charitable activities
6
Total expenditure
Net (expenditure)/income
Transfers between funds
Net movement in funds
Reconciliation of funds
Total funds brought forward
Total funds carried forward
16
Unrestricted
funds
£
540,916
-
3,259
-
544,175
107,475
470,817
578,292
(34,117)
(93,163)
(127,280)
686,314
559,034
Restricted
funds
£
567,208
95,056
-
200
662,464
-
818,825
818,825
(156,361)
93,163
(63,198)
86,404
23,206
Total
2022
£
1,108,124
95,056
3,259
200
1,206,639
107,475
1,289,642
1,397,117
(190,478)
-
(190,478)
772,718
582,240
Total
2021
£
951,877
40,532
118
-
992,527
80,274
886,676
966,950
25,577
-
25,577
747,141
772,718

All of the charitable company's activities derive from continuing operations during the above two periods.

Colin Andrew Barker FCA (Senior Statutory Auditor) For and on behalf of Edmund Carr LLP, Statutory Auditor

146 New London Road Chelmsford Essex CM2 0AW

Date:.............................

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The Country Trust

(Registration number: 6436266) Balance Sheet as at 31 December 2022

Note
Fixed assets
12
Current assets
Debtors
13
Cash at bank and in hand
14
Creditors: Amounts falling due within one year
15
Net current assets
Net assets
Funds of the charitable company:
Restricted
Unrestricted funds
General funds
Total funds
16
2022
£
5,258
124,856
856,882
981,738
(404,756)
576,982
582,240
23,206
559,034
582,240
2021
£
4,938
24,988
1,016,619
1,041,607
(273,827)
767,780
772,718
86,404
686,314
772,718

These financial statements have been prepared in accordance with the special provisions relating to companies subject to the small companies regime within Part 15 of the Companies Act 2006.

The financial statements on pages 67 to 835 to 21 were approved by the trustees, and authorised for issue on .................... and signed on their behalf by:

The Country Trust

Statement of Cash Flows for the Year Ended 31 December 2022

Note
Cash flows from operating activities
Net movement in funds per SOFA
Adjustments
Depreciation
Investment income
5
Working capital adjustments
(Increase)/decrease in debtors
13
Increase in creditors
15
Increase/(decrease) in deferred income
Net cash flows from operating activities
Cash flows from investing activities
Interest receivable and similar income
5
Purchase of tangible fixed assets
12
Net cash flows from investing activities
Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents
Cash and cash equivalents at 1 January
Cash and cash equivalents at 31 December
2022
£
(190,478)
1,459
(3,259)
(192,278)
(99,868)
23,977
106,952
(161,217)
3,259
(1,779)
1,480
(159,737)
1,016,619
856,882
2021
£
25,577
1,400
(118)
26,859
4,996
9,785
(304,867)
(263,227)
118
(2,578)
(2,460)
(265,687)
1,282,306
1,016,619

All of the cash flows are derived from continuing operations during the above two periods.

......................................... S D Bell BA (Hons) Trustee

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69

The Country Trust

Notes to the Financial Statements for the Year Ended 31 December 2022

The Country Trust

Notes to the Financial Statements for the Year Ended 31 December 2022

Deferred income

1 Charitable company status

The charitable company is limited by guarantee, incorporated in England & Wales, and consequently does not have share capital. Each of the trustees is liable to contribute an amount not exceeding £1 towards the assets of the charitable company in the event of liquidation.

2 Accounting policies

Summary of significant accounting policies and key accounting estimates

The principal accounting policies applied in the preparation of these financial statements are set out below. These policies have been consistently applied to all the years presented, unless otherwise stated.

Deferred income represents grants and service fees received in respect of visits and activities taking place after the year end. It also represents unrestricted income where that income relates to future periods.

Donated services and facilities

Where services or facilities are provided to the charitable company as a donation that would normally be purchased from our suppliers, this benefit is included in the financial statements at it's fair value unless it's fair value cannot be reliably measured, then at the cost to the donor or the resale value of goods that are to be sold.

Investment income

Interest received is accounted for when the interest is credited on the Bank deposit accounts.

Charitable activities

Statement of compliance

The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with Accounting and Reporting by Charities: Statement of Recommended Practice (applicable to charities preparing their accounts in accordance with the Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (FRS 102)) (issued in October 2019) - (Charities SORP (FRS 102)), the Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (FRS 102) and the Companies Act 2006.

Basis of preparation

The Country Trust meets the definition of a public benefit entity under FRS 102. Assets and liabilities are initially recognised at historical cost or transaction value unless otherwise stated in the relevant accounting policy notes.

Going concern

The trustees consider that there are no material uncertainties about the charitable company's ability to continue as a going concern nor any significant areas of uncertainty that affect the carrying value of assets held by the charitable company.

Income from charitable activities arises from educational visits and activities where schools or other partners fund all or a proportion of the costs incurred.

Expenditure

All expenditure is accounted for on an accruals basis and includes VAT as the charity is not VAT registered. Governance costs are associated with the governance arrangements of the charity. Where expenditure is apportioned between charitable activities and support costs, this is done based on the portion that is applicable to the direct provision of educational visits and activities or the administration of the charity. In the case of staff costs, this is based on the time spent on charitable activities or administration.

Raising funds

These are costs incurred in attracting voluntary income, the management of investments and those incurred in trading activities that raise funds.

Charitable activities

Charitable activities comprise costs incurred in carrying out educational visits and activities to farms, estates and the wider countryside, and in schools.

Income and endowments

All income is recognised once the charitable company has entitlement to the income, it is probable that the income will be received and the amount of the income receivable can be measured reliably.

Donations and legacies

All donated income and grants receivable are included in income on receipt except where the donor requires that the sum is to be treated as income in future accounting periods, in which case it is deferred. Where a donor has specified that a donation should be used for a particular purpose this is treated as restricted income.

Grants receivable

Grants are recognised when the charitable company has an entitlement to the funds and any conditions linked to the grants have been met. Where performance conditions are attached to the grant and are yet to be met, the income is recognised as a liability and included on the balance sheet as deferred income to be released.

Governance costs

These include the costs attributable to the charitable company’s compliance with constitutional and statutory requirements, including audit, strategic management and trustees meetings and reimbursed expenses.

Taxation

The charitable company is considered to pass the tests set out in Paragraph 1 Schedule 6 of the Finance Act 2010 and therefore it meets the definition of a charitable company for UK corporation tax purposes. Accordingly, the charitable company is potentially exempt from taxation in respect of income or capital gains received within categories covered by Chapter 3 Part 11 of the Corporation Tax Act 2010 or Section 256 of the Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992, to the extent that such income or gains are applied exclusively to charitable purposes.

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The Country Trust

Notes to the Financial Statements for the Year Ended 31 December 2022

Tangible fixed assets

Individual fixed assets costing a significant amount are initially recorded at cost, less any subsequent accumulated depreciation and subsequent accumulated impairment losses.

Depreciation and amortisation

Depreciation is provided on tangible fixed assets so as to write off the cost or valuation, less any estimated residual value, over their expected useful economic life as follows:

Depreciation method and rate 25% reducing balance

Asset class Office equipment & software

Trade debtors

Trade and other debtors are recognised at the settlement amount due.

The Country Trust

Notes to the Financial Statements for the Year Ended 31 December 2022

Financial instruments

Classification

The charitable company only holds basic financial instruments as defined in FRS 102. The financial assets and financial liabilities of the charitable company and their measurement basis are as follows:

Financial assets - trade and other debtors are basic financial instruments and are debt instruments measured at amortised cost. Prepayments are not financial instruments.

Cash at bank - is classified as a basic financial instrument and is measured at face value.

Financial liabilities - trade creditors, accruals and other creditors are financial instruments, and are measured at amortised cost. Taxation and social security are not included in the financial instruments disclosure definition. Deferred income is not deemed to be a financial liability, as the cash settlement has already taken place and there is an obligation to deliver services rather than cash or another financial instrument.

Cash and cash equivalents

Cash and cash equivalents comprise cash on hand and call deposits, and other short-term highly liquid investments that are readily convertible to a known amount of cash and are subject to an insignificant risk of change in value.

Trade creditors

Creditors are recognised at their settlement amount.

Fund structure

Unrestricted income funds are general funds that are available for use at the trustees's discretion in furtherance of the objectives of the charitable company.

Designated funds are funds set aside by the trustees out of unrestricted funds for specific future purposes or projects. Restricted income funds are those donated or received for use in a particular area or for specific purposes, the use of which is restricted to that area or purpose.

Pensions and other post retirement obligations

The charitable company operates a defined contribution pension scheme which is a pension plan under which fixed contributions are paid into a pension fund and the charitable company has no legal or constructive obligation to pay further contributions even if the fund does not hold sufficient assets to pay all employees the benefits relating to employee service in the current and prior periods.

3 Income from donations and legacies

Donations
Charitable Trusts and grant making bodies
Donated services and gifts in kind
Donations
Legacies
Charitable Trusts and grant making bodies
Job retention scheme grant
Unrestricted
funds
£
65,056
403,810
72,050
540,916
Unrestricted
funds
£
63,695
96,000
340,368
635
500,698
Restricted
funds
£
171,826
389,382
6,000
567,208
Restricted
funds
£
49,669
-
401,510
-
451,179
Total
2022
£
236,882
793,192
78,050
1,108,124
Total
2021
£
113,364
96,000
741,878
635
951,877

Contributions to defined contribution plans are recognised in the Statement of Financial Activities when they are due. If contribution payments exceed the contribution due for service, the excess is recognised as a prepayment.

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The Country Trust

Notes to the Financial Statements for the Year Ended 31 December 2022

4 Income from charitable activities

Countryside Discovery Residential Visits
Food Discovery
Farm Visits
Countryside Discovery Residential Visits
Food Discovery
Farm Visits
5
Investment income
Interest receivable on bank deposits
Interest receivable on bank deposits
Unrestricted
funds
£
-
-
-
-
Unrestricted
funds
£
-
-
-
-
Unrestricted
funds
£
3,259
3,259
Unrestricted
funds
£
118
118
Restricted
funds
£
87,080
7,616
360
95,056
Restricted
funds
£
31,332
4,200
5,000
40,532
Restricted
funds
£
-
-
Restricted
funds
£
-
-
Total
2022
£
87,080
7,616
360
95,056
Total
2021
£
31,332
4,200
5,000
40,532
Total
2022
£
3,259
3,259
Total
2021
£
118
118

The Country Trust

Notes to the Financial Statements for the Year Ended 31 December 2022

6 Expenditure on charitable activities

6
Expenditure on charitable activities
Countryside Discovery Residential Visits
Food Discovery
Farm Visits
Farm in a Box
Countryside Discovery Residential Visits
Food Discovery
Farm Visits
Activity
undertaken
directly
£
153,327
148,363
393,213
117,922
812,825
Activity
undertaken
directly
£
87,439
75,018
419,153
581,610
Activity
support costs
£
84,474
81,739
222,637
87,967
476,817
Activity
support costs
£
45,282
39,598
220,186
305,066
2022
£
237,801
230,102
615,850
205,889
1,289,642
2021
£
132,721
114,616
639,339
886,676

The expenditure analysed above includes governance costs of £6,000 (2021 - £3,530) which relate directly to charitable activities. See note 7 for further details.

This year, £470,817 (2021: £386,412) of charitable activity expenditure was unrestricted and £818,825 (2021: £500,234) was restricted.

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Notes to the Financial Statements for the Year Ended 31 December 2022

Notes to the Financial Statements for the Year Ended 31 December 2022

The Country Trust

7 Analysis of governance and support costs

8 Net incoming/outgoing resources

The Country Trust

Net (outgoing)/incoming resources for the year include:

Support costs allocated to charitable activities

Countryside Discovery Residential Visits
Food Discovery
Farm Visits
Farm in a Box
Countryside Discovery Residential Visits
Food Discovery
Farm Visits
Governance
costs
£
1,131
1,095
2,903
871
6,000
Governance
costs
£
531
455
2,544
3,530
Staff costs
£
35,977
34,814
92,290
27,679
190,760
Staff costs
£
32,244
27,674
154,613
214,531
Administration
costs
£
47,366
45,830
127,444
59,417
280,057
Administration
costs
£
12,507
11,469
63,029
87,005
Total
2022
£
84,474
81,739
222,637
87,967
476,817
Total
2021
£
45,282
39,598
220,186
305,066

Governance costs

Governance costs
Audit fees
Audit of the financial statements
Other fees paid to auditors
Independent examiner fees
Examination of the financial statements
Other fees paid to examiners
Total
2022
£
4,000
2,000
-
-
6,000
Total
2021
£
-
-
1,600
1,930
3,530
Fees payable to auditor
Fees payable to independent examiner
Depreciation of fixed assets
2022
£
6,000
-
1,459
2021
£
-
3,530
1,401

9 Trustees remuneration and expenses

No trustees, nor any persons connected with them, have received any remuneration from the charitable company during the year.

No trustees have received any other benefits from the charity during the year.

During the year, 1 trustee was reimbursed for reasonable travel expenses of £107 (2021: no expenses reimbursed).

10 Staff costs

The aggregate payroll costs were as follows:

Staff costs during the year were:
Wages and salaries
Social security costs
Pension costs
Other staff costs
2022
£
317,724
25,716
7,201
39,550
390,191
2021
£
254,141
17,710
5,442
-
277,293

The monthly average number of persons (including senior management team) employed by the charitable company during the year expressed by head count was as follows:

Charitable activities
Support and administration
2022
No
2
9
11
2021
No
1
9
10

The average number of persons employed by the charity during the year expressed as full time equivalents was 10.2 (2021: 7.1).

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The Country Trust

Notes to the Financial Statements for the Year Ended 31 December 2022

11 (2021 - 10) of the above employees participated in the Defined Contribution Pension Schemes.

The number of employees whose emoluments fell within the following bands was:

£60,001 - £70,000 2022
No
1
2021
No
-

The total employee benefits of the key management personnel of the charitable company were £69,920 (2021 - £67,634).

11 Taxation

The charitable company is a registered charity and is therefore exempt from taxation.

12 Tangible fixed assets

Cost
At 1 January 2022
Additions
At 31 December 2022
Depreciation
At 1 January 2022
Charge for the year
At 31 December 2022
Net book value
At 31 December 2022
At 31 December 2021
Office
equipment &
software
£
12,474
1,779
14,253
7,536
1,459
8,995
5,258
4,938
Total
£
12,474
1,779
14,253
7,536
1,459
8,995
5,258
4,938

The Country Trust

Notes to the Financial Statements for the Year Ended 31 December 2022

13 Debtors

Trade debtors
Prepayments
Accrued income
14 Cash and cash equivalents
Cash at bank
15 Creditors: amounts falling due within one year
Trade creditors
Other taxation and social security
Other creditors
Accruals
Deferred income
Deferred income at 1 January 2022
Resources deferred in the period
Amounts released from previous periods
Deferred income at year end
2022
£
103,119
21,737
-
124,856
2022
£
856,882
2022
£
47,841
6,128
4,461
6,540
339,786
404,756
2022
£
232,834
339,786
(232,834)
339,786
2021
£
1,100
23,809
79
24,988
2021
£
1,016,619
2021
£
22,508
8,297
6,491
3,697
232,834
273,827
2021
£
537,701
225,061
(529,928)
232,834

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79

Notes to the Financial Statements for the Year Ended 31 December 2022

Notes to the Financial Statements for the Year Ended 31 December 2022

The Country Trust

The Country Trust

Prior year:

16 Funds

Current year:

16 Funds
Current year:
Balance at 1
January 2022
£
Unrestricted funds
General
686,314
Restricted
a) Residential
1,678
b) Food discovery
84,726
c) Farm visits
-
d) Farm in a Box
-
Total restricted
86,404
Total funds
772,718
Incoming
resources
£
544,175
139,644
90,864
297,456
134,500
662,464
1,206,639
Resources
expended
£
(578,292)
(153,328)
(148,362)
(393,213)
(123,922)
(818,825)
(1,397,117)
Transfers
£
(93,163)
12,006
(6,000)
95,757
(8,600)
93,163
-
Balance at
31 December
2022
£
559,034
-
21,228
-
1,978
23,206
582,240

The specific purposes for which the funds are to be applied are as follows:

Restricted funds:

a) Funds to subsidise the cost of Countryside Discovery Residential visits enabling disadvantaged primary age children to experience food, farming and the countryside.

Unrestricted funds
General
Designated funds
i) Risk assessment
ii) Corporate fundraiser
iii) Strategic planning and
innovation
Total unrestricted funds
Restricted
a) Residential
b) Food discovery
c) Farm visits
e) Country Trust Hampshire
Total restricted funds
Total funds
Balance at 1
January
2021
£
577,076
10,000
120,000
20,000
150,000
727,076
-
18,522
-
1,543
20,065
747,141
Incoming
resources
£
500,816
-
-
-
-
500,816
76,554
139,532
275,625
-
491,711
992,527
Resources
expended
£
(432,340)
(820)
(20,200)
(13,326)
(34,346)
(466,686)
(73,355)
(63,681)
(363,228)
-
(500,264)
(966,950)
Transfers
£
40,762
(9,180)
(99,800)
(6,674)
(115,654)
(74,892)
(1,521)
(9,647)
87,603
(1,543)
74,892
-
Balance at
31
December
2021
£
686,314
-
-
-
-
686,314
1,678
84,726
-
-
86,404
772,718

b) For teaching disadvantaged primary school children to grow & cook fresh produce, explore local farms, run playground markets & a harvest feast, and to train teachers in relevant elements of Learning Outside the Classroom. c) Funds relating to the provision of Farm and Countryside Discovery educational day visits bringing the working countryside to life for primary school children from disadvantaged areas, and now the Farm in a Box programme bringing farm centred, hands on, experiential learning into schools, groups and homes.

d) This fund is to support children and educators so that they can have a farm-centred experience without leaving their school grounds or location.

The transfers from unrestricted funds is to eliminate restricted fund negative balances. Transfers from restricted funds represent a contribution to cover central support and administration.

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81

The Country Trust

Notes to the Financial Statements for the Year Ended 31 December 2022

The Country Trust

Notes to the Financial Statements for the Year Ended 31 December 2022

17 Analysis of net assets between funds

Current year:

17 Analysis of net assets between funds
Current year:
Tangible fixed assets
Current assets
Current liabilities
Total net assets
Unrestricted
funds
£
5,258
731,299
(177,523)
559,034
Restricted
funds
£
-
250,439
(227,233)
23,206
Total funds at
31/12/2022
£
5,258
981,738
(404,756)
582,240

Prior year:

Prior year:
Tangible fixed assets
Current assets
Current liabilities
Total net assets
Unrestricted
funds
£
4,938
753,207
(71,831)
686,314
Restricted
funds
£
-
288,400
(201,996)
86,404
Total funds at
31/12/2021
£
4,938
1,041,607
(273,827)
772,718

18 Prior year Statement of Financial Activities

Note
Income and Endowments from:
Donations and legacies
3
Charitable activities
4
Investment income
5
Total income
Expenditure on:
Raising funds
Charitable activities
6
Total expenditure
Net income/(expenditure)
Transfers between funds
Net movement in funds
Reconciliation of funds
Total funds brought forward
Total funds carried forward
16
Unrestricted
£
500,698
-
118
500,816
80,274
386,412
466,686
34,130
(74,892)
(40,762)
727,076
686,314
Restricted
£
451,179
40,532
-
491,711
-
500,264
500,264
(8,553)
74,892
66,339
20,065
86,404
Total
2021
£
951,877
40,532
118
992,527
80,274
886,676
966,950
25,577
-
25,577
747,141
772,718

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83

The Country Trust

The Country Trust

Detailed Statement of Financial Activities for the Year Ended 31 December 2022

The following pages do not form part of the statutory financial statements.

Income and Endowments from:
Donations and legacies (analysed below)
Charitable activities (analysed below)
Investment income
Other income
Total income
Expenditure on:
Raising funds
Charitable activities (analysed below)
Total expenditure
Net (expenditure)/income
Net movement in funds
Reconciliation of funds
Total funds brought forward
Total funds carried forward
Total
2022
£
1,108,124
95,056
3,259
200
1,206,639
107,475
1,289,642
1,397,117
(190,478)
(190,478)
772,718
582,240
Total
2021
£
951,877
40,532
118
-
992,527
80,274
886,676
966,950
25,577
25,577
747,141
772,718

This page does not form part of the statutory financial statements.

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85

Detailed Statement of Financial Activities for the Year Ended 31 December 2022

The Country Trust

The Country Trust

Detailed Statement of Financial Activities for the Year Ended 31 December 2022

Donations and legacies
Donations and legacies
Grants, including capital grants
Donated services and facilities
Charitable activities
Countryside Discovery Residential Visits
Food Discovery
Farm Visits
Charitable activities
Programmes - Transport
Programmes - Accommodation
Expenses relating to visits and activities
Self-employed contractors
Salaries, national insurance and pensions
Staff mileage, accommodation and expenses
Volunteer mileage, accommodation and expenses
Office costs
Computer and website costs
Promotion and publicity
Insurance
Recruitment and training
Subscriptions and sundry costs
Bank charges
Legal and professional fees
Consultancy
Annual conference
Trustee expenses
Depreciation
Auditors' remuneration
Independent Examiner’s remuneration
2022
£
236,882
793,192
78,050
1,108,124
£
87,080
7,616
360
95,056
£
52,481
68,522
55,733
541,316
296,004
66,113
776
31,201
15,448
15,653
6,589
4,532
2,022
467
13
58,545
13,801
320
1,459
6,000
-
2021
£
209,364
742,513
-
951,877
£
31,332
4,200
5,000
40,532
£
22,213
24,680
107,062
402,459
197,019
30,439
543
26,426
4,859
9,673
5,193
7,490
2,582
192
36
27,456
13,323
100
1,401
-
3,530

This page does not form part of the statutory financial statements.

£ £ 1,236,995 886,676

This page does not form part of the statutory financial statements.

86 Country Trust Annual Report 2022

87

To support our work visit: www.countrytrust.org.uk Registered charity no. 1122103 Head office: Moulsham Mill, Parkway, Chelmsford, Essex. CM2 7PX President: The Duke of Westminster

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