
The person you call is the person on the tractor. No subcontractors, no sales team, no waiting until next month.

If you’ve got a paddock that’s getting away from you — long grass, ragwort coming through, hooves cutting in where they shouldn’t — I’m probably the person you want to call.
I do this full-time. It’s not a side hustle for the quiet months between something else. The kit is mine, the work is mine, and when you ring the number on this site, I’m the one who picks up.
HPM started because there was a gap. Plenty of farmers will tackle a paddock if it’s near their yard and they’ve got a slow week — but they’ll fit you in around their real work, and the kit they bring is the kit they happen to own. That’s fine if you’re lucky. It’s not fine if you’re trying to keep horses on a few acres and the field’s becoming a problem.
I run modern, well-maintained equipment that’s actually right for paddock work. Tractors sized for the job — not the heavy farm gear that compacts the ground or can’t get through a normal gateway. Toppers, harrows, rollers, sprayers, the lot. All kept in the yard, all serviced, all ready to go.
“The work I’m proudest of is the stuff nobody notices — paddocks that just look right, year after year.”
Most of what I do is repeat work. Owners ring once, like the result, and ring again the next season. That’s the bit of the business I want to keep growing — proper relationships with people who care about their land, not chasing one-off jobs across half the country.
When I’m not on a tractor I’m probably behind a camera. I shoot every job, which is partly why this site is wall-to-wall photographs — none of it is stock, all of it is mine. If you want to see what the work actually looks like, the gallery’s the place.
If you’re in Hampshire or anywhere not too far over the border — Wiltshire, West Sussex, Surrey, Berkshire, Dorset — get in touch and we’ll work out whether the trip makes sense. For most jobs it does. Quote first, then decide.

Drop me a message and I’ll come out, walk the field, and tell you honestly what’s worth doing.