The one lesson I’ve learned from life: Shepherdess Amanda Owen says never take no for an answer 

The one lesson I’ve learned from life: Shepherdess Amanda Owen says never take no for an answer

  • Amanda Owen is best known as star of Channel 5 TV show Our Yorkshire Farm
  • 47-year-old, who lives in North Yorkshire, was told she wasn’t smart in school
  • Decades later she is on TV and has sold over half a million copies of her books  


Amanda Owen, 47, is better known as the Yorkshire Shepherdess and lives with her husband, Clive, and their nine children on the remote Ravenseat Farm in N orth Yorkshire. She is the author of five books, including bestseller T he Yorkshire Shepherdess, and the star of Channel 5 TV show Our Yorkshire Farm.

If anyone ever says to me, ‘That’s impossible’ or ‘You can’t do it’, rather than crumble, I just get the bit between my teeth.

When I was at school in Huddersfield, my careers adviser told me I wasn’t bright enough to work with animals. Aged 14, I was one of those children who just stared out of the window, daydreaming, doing the bare minimum. But then I discovered author James Herriot’s books — about a veterinary practice in the Yorkshire Dales — and decided I wanted to work with animals. My career adviser had other ideas. ‘You’re never going to be a vet, Amanda, because you’re not smart enough,’ he told me, cruelly. But I went back to the library and found a photographic book called Hill Shepherd, by John Forder, which pictured the lives of shepherds in the Lake District and the Yorkshire Dales. Until I read that book, I had no idea it could be a vocation.

Shepherdess Amanda Owen, 47, (pictured) who lives in North Yorkshire, said a career adviser in school told her she wasn’t bright enough to work with animals

That was my epiphany, and I set my mind on making it my life (milking cows, herding sheep, driving tractors, lambing, clipping and shovelling muck) before working as a contract shepherdess — and then, since 1996, here at Ravenseat Farm with my husband Clive.

Decades later, after seeking a solitary, quiet life, the irony is not lost on me that I’ve somehow ended up in the limelight. My life as a shepherdess was featured in the ITV show The Dales in 2011, which led to Channel 5’s Our Yorkshire Farm.

So far, the books I’ve written have sold upwards of half a million copies, all because I didn’t let myself be pigeonholed and I didn’t give up.

I want exactly the same for my children. We’ve got nine, which was never the plan. I want them to climb higher, ride faster, always to challenge themselves and others. We owe it to ourselves to try things, because life is short.

Ananda (pictured) said she has sold upwards of half a million copies of her books, all because she didn't let herself be pigeonholed and didn't give up

Ananda (pictured) said she has sold upwards of half a million copies of her books, all because she didn’t let herself be pigeonholed and didn’t give up 

Celebrating The Seasons With The Yorkshire Shepherdess, by Amanda Owen (£20, Pan Macmillan), is out now.