Discover Landhill...

Set in the beautiful rural heart of Lancashire


Welcome to the Old Farm

Land Hill Storage has grown from Land Hill Farm. Until recently we bred pigs on the site and grew crops on the land, including barley to feed the pigs and Hay to feed horses.

We take great pride in being a small family run farm business and we have been well established in the community of Hambleton for over fifty years.

Mary and Edward moved here in 1965 and produced milk on a small area of land. In the 1970s, wanting to expand the enterprise but not having the land available to do it, they tried pig production.

Things went well and the pig enterprise expanded, dairy production ended. Beef cattle replaced the dairy cows and crops were grown including barley and potatoes, as land became available to increase the size of the farm. The nineties saw the specialisation of the farm with pig production dominating.
This remained the way until early 2019 when due to circumstances the decision was made to end livestock production.

Land Hill Storage is conceived! Mary and Edward children were brought up In this safe and secure environment and we feel that you can store your property here with confidence In the world today environmental issues have a very high profile and at Land Hill Storage we believe “rightly so”.

In the last two years we have created two acres of new woodland with the help of the “Woodland Trust”, and we are reinvigorating our ponds to improve habitats for wildlife. We only purchase our electricity from renewable sources and have fitted a charging point for electric vehicles.

In spring 2023 we have had 12 kw of solar P.V. panels installed on the southern aspect of our storage unit roofs, this investment will help provide our energy needs in the future and reduce our carbon footprint.

We currently offer space to a local bee keeper to keep hives and produce local
honey.

 


Storing our Caravan with John was a breeze! He's incredibly helpful, always on hand and the spot we have is perfectly secure over the winter months


JOSH QUARRIE