Kaleb Cooper fumes 'what is going on' as he shares Diddly Squat farming frustration

Kaleb Cooper has taken to Instagram to share a clip of himself inside his tractor ready for another day of farming in Oxfordshire.

However, an exasperated Cooper vented his frustration as he revealed he'd been stopped from tending to the fields in Diddly Squat due to persistent rain.

Like much of the country, Chipping Norton has been graced with grey skies and downpours - and the Met Office forecast predicts it won't get any better for Cooper for the rest of the week.

Wrapped up in a beanie and waterproof coat, Cooper shared his frustration with his 2.2 million followers.

"Guess what?" Cooper began. "It's raining again. And it's cold today. What is going on with this weather?"

Cooper shook his head as the video drew to a close - and he isn't the only member of the Diddly Squat team left annoyed by the current circumstances at the farm.

Jeremy Clarkson and Kaleb Cooper

Jeremy Clarkson also took a pop at the torrential downpour that has been barraging his Oxfordshire farm of late in his latest column.

Writing in the Times, the 63-year-old shared his damning thoughts on new blockbuster Dune 2 and Netflix series 3 Body problem, revealing he had time to watch them because "it’s been raining a lot so I couldn’t do any farmering".

Meanwhile, further north, fellow farmer and TV personality Reuben Owen was supported by fans when he shared a similar experience.

The Our Yokrshire Farm star took to TikTok last month to admit he was "sick" of the weather conditions alongside a clip of the sodden yet jaw-dropping views he gets to see while working hard on his farm in the Dales.

Elsewhere, it isn't just the weather which is making farming life difficult at the moment at Diddly Squat.

In an interview with the Times, Clarkson revealed the harrowing toll his foray into pig farming has had.

Clarkson delved into the details of the disaster as he said: "I reckoned the pigs would provide something that’s sadly lacking in farming today: a bit of genuine happiness.

"Instead, it was almost unbelievably sad. I’ve never seen Lisa so upset. The film crew looked shell-shocked.

"We had a catastrophically high level of deaths and I was desperately worried we were doing something wrong, but it turned out we weren’t.

"It was just that pigs are bad mothers — the Sandy and Black particularly so. That’s why it’s a rare breed."

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Kaleb Cooper

Clarkson and Cooper will both be back on screens soon when the third season of Clarkson's Farm arrives on Amazon Prime Video in May.

And there's even better news for fans too as a fourth season has already been greenlit by Amazon.