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How a tech billionaire couple saved a Devon village, starting with its boozer

How a tech billionaire couple saved a Devon village, starting with its boozer

Telegraph26-06-2025
Two clock-off-early tradesmen nurse pints of Guinness at the bar while a miniature dachshund vents its small-dog fury at a larger mutt sat under a nearby table. 'Quiet, Pebbles,' its lager-sipping owner implores. ' Shhhhh.'
It's a scene that could be playing out at any pub in the land on this Friday afternoon, but The Farmers Arms is not just any pub; it's Visit England's Pub of the Year – some accolade for the middle-of-nowhere North Devon village that it calls home.
But Woolfardisworthy – or Woolsery, for short – is not your average village.
While others of its ilk have faded in that familiar way, drained of brawn and brain by a lack of rural opportunities, Woolsery (population: 1,100) has avoided a similar fate thanks to a Silicon Valley tech bro.
In an unlikely turn of events, Michael Birch and his wife Xochi, the multimillionaire founders of the social networking site Bebo, used some of their considerable fortune to buy up failing local businesses – including the then-closed Farmers Arms and village shop – to prevent Woolsery from folding in on itself.
That might sound like an odd pet project for two San Francisco-dwelling tech entrepreneurs, but Birch was guided by a sense of duty, matters of the heart.
His great-grandparents built the shop, his grandmother was born above it, and he spent many merry summers knocking around Woolsery as a kid before hitting the big time during the dotcom boom.
'It's a Netflix story,' coos Steve Manzanero, who's drinking in the pub with his wife Sarah Roots.
They know a thing about reality shows, having moved to Woolsery from Basingstoke after taking part in BBC's Escape to the Country. The Farmers Arms helped seal the deal.
'We fell in love with the place,' says Mazanero, who is launching 'carbon-neutral' holiday accommodation in the village.
'I haven't seen Michael yet, but I'd love to have a pint with him.'
'Woolsery is a bit special,' adds Roots, a teaching assistant who won't be the first person to tell me as much. 'It's the best village I've lived in,' adds Tracey Renton, another regular, originally from Darlington, but who's lived all over. 'It's just magical.'
Woolsery certainly has an air of exclusivity about it. In contrast to its rugged rural surrounds, the village looks neat and manicured.
The shop is upmarket, there's a gourmet chippy and a boutique hotel scattered across several smartly renovated buildings. It's a model village.
The Farmers Arms itself is a far cry from the spit-and-sawdust rural boozers of old, with its craft cocktails and à la carte food, served in the high-beamed restaurant out back.
All these businesses, plus an under-construction hotel and restaurant in the Georgian manor opposite, are part of The Collective, a hospitality group set up by the Birches to breathe new life into Woolsery. It employs 62 people, most of them from the village.
'You've got to take your hat off to them, they've done something pretty special,' says Simon Odell, one of the Guinness-sipping tradesmen at the bar. Odell lives in the neighbouring village, Buckland Brewer, which, he says, offers a stark contrast to booming Woolsery.
'When I moved there, there was a pub, a butcher, a village shop, a Post Office,' he recalls. 'Now the pub's applying for a change of usage – all we'll have left is the shop. Not everywhere can have a tech millionaire to invest in it.'
Odell, who runs Odell Building and Restorations, says he feels welcome at The Farmers Arms in mortar-splashed overalls, despite the pub's polished appearance and its £75-a-head five-course tasting menu (regular pub dishes, albeit with a gourmet touch, are available).
His colleague, James Pearce, agrees. He grew up in one-pub Woolsery and remembers what The Farmers Arms was like before.
'It wasn't very welcoming,' he says. 'The landlord was grumpy and some locals liked to scrap. It went downhill. Then the roof collapsed and suddenly there was no pub.'
Inevitably, there are those who hark back to the days when rural pubs like The Farmers Arms were innocent of modern trends. In a darkened nook, one local scoffs at 'the millionaire done good who came to buy the village'.
It raises an obvious question: what do we want tech bros to do with their wonga? Fly the missus to space, colonise Mars or save one of Britain's many closed pubs?
Others wish the beer was better – and cheaper. 'They've done a great job with the renovation – you can't fault that – and the staff are great, but they need to up their beer game,' says farmer, Zen Butler. '£6 for an ale – it's priced some out.'
The Farmers Arms – a pub named after folk like Butler – is not, he suggests, what you might call a drinker's pub. He's right, of course – it's much more than that.
A short walk uphill from the inn, along winding lanes lined with hedges, is 150-acre Birch Farm, which is also part of The Collective, and supplies much of the food served at the pub.
Like Woolsery, Birch Farm goes against the grain. Literally so – you'll find no fields of wheat here. In contrast to the green parcels of land smothering the surrounding hills like a patchwork quilt, Birch Farm is a colourful mosaic of wildflower meadows, fledgling trees and vegetable gardens.
A cacophony of birdsong greets me, courtesy of skylarks, blackbirds, bull finches, swallows. 'It was silent when we got here,' says Josh Sparkes, who manages the farm. 'But they came back.'
Sparkes are his team are transforming the former arable and cattle farm into a 'climate-resistant perennial food system' that feeds nature as well as people.
Among the wildflowers are chestnut trees, apple trees, hazelnuts and edible perennials such as sea kale and mashua, a potato-like tuber native to South America. Rare-breed pigs and sheep, which will be served at the pub, roam nearby.
'The input is zero; no fertilisers, no pesticides,' says Sparkes. 'We brought beetles back to eat the slugs. It's about working with nature.'
Sparkes doesn't consider what he's doing rewilding. 'Rewilding pushes people out,' he says. 'We just want people to have good access to food that protects biodiversity.
Traditional farming has got maybe 40 years left [before the soil is depleted]. We want to prove to other farmers that this can be profitable.'
Back in Woolsery, chef Toby Neal is certainly grateful for the ingredients coming down from the farm. 'Not many chefs get to have the things that I get,' he says, as the orders fly in. 'It's unique.'
The tasting menu is certainly like nothing I've eaten before. Each dish is garnished with edible flowers and leaves that pop with unfamiliar but welcome flavours.
The whiteface Dartmoor hogget with morel and asparagus is sensational. And this, in tiny, middle-of-nowhere Woolsery.
For waitress Sophie Buckley, who grew up here, the pub's unlikely revival has stopped her from being part of the rural brain drain.
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The woman who made Katie Price: Terminally ill mother Amy whose been her daughter's constant support, her damning verdict on Peter Andre and her fears for Princess
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The woman who made Katie Price: Terminally ill mother Amy whose been her daughter's constant support, her damning verdict on Peter Andre and her fears for Princess

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Daily Mail​

time22 minutes ago

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Secrets of the A-list from the editor who saw it all: Truth about the curse of Hello! and what really goes on at Hollywood weddings
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Daily Mail​

time22 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Secrets of the A-list from the editor who saw it all: Truth about the curse of Hello! and what really goes on at Hollywood weddings

From splashing millions on exclusive interviews with A-listers to scoring the inside scoop on Hollywood weddings, as editor-in-chief of Hello! Magazine, Rosie Nixon was given access to the celebrity world like no other. From 2008 to 2023, Rosie, who lives in Surrey, spent her 15-year tenure chronicling the lives of the A-list elite - a role shrouded in the utmost of secrecy. During her time in the role, unconstrained by the bounds of a typical 9 to 5, Rosie found herself with unparalleled access into 'countless' weddings of A-listers, from the likes of Robbie Williams to Peaches Geldof and Jack Osbourne. She also enjoyed the odd brush with royalty, attending Sam Branson and Isabella Calthorpe's wedding in 2013 - which, significantly, also boasted Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie on the guest list. 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And if that wasn't enough, Rosie was then forced to consider ordering a no-fly zone above the property after rival press outlets were heard arriving via helicopter. Rosie joined Hello! Magazine in 2008 - and had 'never before' experienced such access to the high society world and its connections. In the Sunday Times piece, she writes: 'I had never before paid celebrities for exclusives and was shocked when one former Hello! editor told me, 'It's like Monopoly money here." 'Deals could regularly reach six figures for a period of time when we were selling hundreds of thousands of copies per week... Some celebrities may brag they received an eye-watering sum to their friends, but I know the truth.' Rosie also discussed the famed 'curse of Hello!' - referring to the theory that celebrity couples who have the magazine covering their wedding were more likely to split. The shortest marriage was reality TV star Kim Kardashian, who divorced basketball player Kris Humphries after 72 days. Other ill-fated cover stars include Westlife's Brian McFadden and Kerry Katona, as well as Boyzone's Ronan Keating and wife Yvonne. Telling the truth about the 'curse' once and for all, Rosie shared that such a theory has never been backed up by data - or the fact that, unlike most, all these couples deal with the pressure of being in the public eye. Just one of the lavish ceremonies covered by Hello! included Peaches Geldof's wedding to musician Thomas Cohen in September 2012 at her father Sir Bob Geldof's estate in Kent. With the likes of Jools Holland performing, Rosie found it 'hard to believe' that Peaches chose to join the Hello! team to look through the wedding pages of the upcoming spread on her wedding night itself. Tragically, 19 months later, Peaches was found dead from a heroin overdose at the age of 25. Rosie found herself in another surreal situation just one month later on Jack Osbourne's wedding day in October that year. Again trying to dodge the world's paparazzi, Rosie said she ended up ferrying the entire Osbourne family around on a golf buggy at the Hawaii hotel complex. At one point, Rosie even found herself being yelled at by Ozzy Osbourne after they accidentally stood by the wrong side of the hotel - and found themselves next to the rubbish heap. When news of Ozzy's death was announced in July, Rosie's tribute was one that spoke of their personal relationship. She wrote on her Instagram account: 'I'll never forget the few days I spent in the bosom of the Osbourne family back in 2012. We were in Hawaii for Jack Osbourne's wedding to Lisa Stelly, I was in my former role as editor. 'Ozzy's humour kept us all highly entertained - most of it unpublishable, of course - that's a story for another day. And I'll never forget Sharon's kindness. 'Ozzy had zero of the demands that typically accompany rock stars. He made me feel like part of the family. I'm sending love to Sharon, Aimee, Jack, Kelly and all of his family at this time. 'Rest in Rock'n'Roll - a legend of our times.' Life at the helm of Hello! was clearly not for the faint-hearted - as Rosie immediately followed up the exclusive coverage of Robbie's wedding with a red-eye flight and preparation of a 35-page spread, selling 500,000 copies. Rosie shared a personal tribute to Ozzy following his death last month Much of the time was spent in financial negotiations with rival magazines - including the battle for coverage of Wayne and Coleen Rooney's 2008 wedding, where they lost out to OK! Magazine. Other coverage included the royal wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton in 2011, followed by that of Meghan Markle and Prince Harry in 2018. In 2022, Rosie was at the WellChild Awards in London when news broke at 6.30pm that Queen Elizabeth II had died. What followed was a whole night of work, leading to a 116-page issue of the magazine. Rosie, who recently celebrated turning 50, lives in Surrey with her husband Callum and their two sons. She now hosts retreats to 'reinvent midlife' and is editor of The Column magazine at the Corinthia Hotel in London. Last year, Rosie wrote about her experience with perimenopause in a piece for the Telegraph, revealing how she managed her symptoms even without HRT. After experiencing symptoms such as bouts of insomnia, hot flushes, overwhelming feelings of anxiety and brain fog, it was Gabby Logan who was first to point out she could be perimenopausal. 'At the time, I was the editor-in-chief of Hello! magazine, a position I had held for many years,' Rosie wrote. 'I had even spearheaded the Menopause Workplace Pledge campaign with the charity Wellbeing of Women, to see women suffering with menopause symptoms better supported by employers. 'I hugged Gabby, and had a private cry – another thing happening regularly – because I finally felt validated.' Even today, having stepped down from her role at Hello! last year after experiencing burnout, Rosie remains close to some of the celebrities she once covered during her time at the magazine. In recent months, she's attended events alongside the likes of Spencer Matthews, Dame Joan Collins and Dame Kelly Holmes. Following her time at the magazine, Rosie has released her new novel Bad Influencer - inspired by the time she spent brushing shoulders with celebrities. Speaking about her time at Hello! on her Instagram account, Rosie called it 'one of the most fun and fabulous chapters of my working life'. She added: 'And I'll always look back fondly on the experiences I had and the treasured friendships made. 'I decided to reflect on this time to publicise my new novel Bad Influence which is set in the celebrity influencer world and although all fictional (honest!) I realised I'd lived the research.' Rosie Nixon's new novel, Bad Influence, is out now.

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