Devastated Kaleb Cooper shares five-word statement as farm goes up in smoke
The Clarkson’s Farm star shared a horrifying picture of the damage.
Clarkson’s Farm star Kaleb Cooper has shared a five-word statement after a fire ripped through his barn. Taking to Instagram, the 27-year-old farm manager, who stars alongside Jeremy Clarkson in the hit Amazon Prime series, shared a devastating image of the aftermath.

He wrote: “I’m having a bad day,” before trying to make light of the situation adding: “Anyone got any straw? Lost all mine.” While the image showed smoke still billowing out of the out building, the dad-of-three has shared no further update on the fire or what has actually been damaged. Kaleb shot to fame after working on Clarkson’s Diddly Squat farm, but previously revealed that he has hopes of one day owning his own spot of agricultural land. He said: “I’m saving everything, but because it’s the Cotswolds, the prices are going through the f***ing roof.”
Meanwhile, the Prime Video show has officially been given its return date for the fifth series.The first four episodes of the new series will drop on June 3, with a further two on June 10, followed by the final two on June 17.
Taking to Instagram, Prime Video have teased the new series with a selection of behind-the-scenes snaps. The captioned the exciting post: “Clarkson’s Farm is back, and amid a government budget that sends the UK farming community into uproar, Jeremy decides some big changes are needed to make the farm run more smoothly.

“But while the farm tries to go high-tech – resulting in Kaleb’s first ever trip abroad – even bigger developments are heading for Diddly Squat that are going to prove much more of a challenge.”
It comes after Jeremy joked that the next series of Clarkson’s Farm is “a conveyor belt of misery” and he was even forced to “send the cameras away” after a string of major setbacks last October.
Writing in his column for The Sun, Jeremy recently confessed: “We finished filming the fifth series of Clarkson’s Farm this week. And I’m sure you’re hoping that when you get to see it next spring, it’ll be a comedic eight-part festival of cute animals, laughter and incomprehensible dry-stone walling.
“It isn’t, though. Because the last 12 months have been a conveyor belt of misery.”








