Clarkson’s Farm season four is expected to hit Amazon Prime Video in 2025
Amazon Prime’s hit documentary series Clarkson’s Farm looks like its in for a rough ride when it comes to season four.
And that’s according to none other than the breakout star of the critically-acclaimed series, Kaleb Cooper.
Cooper will once again be front and centre of the fourth outing of the Prime Video show after being promoted to farm manager in season three.
Looking after 500 acres of arable land (think crops) for his boss Jeremy Clarkson, it has given the Top Gear man the time to focus on what is becoming a growing passion for him – alternative farming, which for season four is widely expected to include running a nearby £1 million pub.
Other stars from season three have already confirmed they are returning once again, with Cooper himself previously giving hints at what we can expect from season four.
It comes after Diddly Squat Farm was hit by disaster in June.
Sharing a picture of sodden farmland from a helicopter, Clarkson wrote: “It’s going to be a rough year.
“All that seed sowed, drowned with the constant rain.”
Well, going by the latest update from Cooper, things seemingly haven’t got any better in the month since.
Posting to his Instagram Stories, the 26-year-old hinted at what is to come in the fourth outing of the show – and it doesn’t sound promising.
“I can sense this being an interesting and difficult season,” he wrote.
“We really don’t need this rain in July after the winter we had [facepalm emoji].”
Cooper is known for his passion for farming – and equally, his passion when it comes to things going wrong preventing him from doing his job.
In June, he shared a picture from his tractor seat of a flooded tractor path. Sarcastically captioning it, he wrote: “Great year we have had.”
The first three seasons of Clarkson’s Farm have shone a light on the perils of the farming industry, which very much includes a successful year being put down to whether the weather has been kind or not.
It’s a huge reason why Jeremy himself pushed alternative farming in the third season due to worries over the arable land being a write off.
We’re talking his honey (or ‘bee juice’ as he brands it); jams made from berries on his land; Hawkstone Lager made from his barley; and even growing mushrooms.
Clarkson has hinted at other forms of alternative income for season four, which ranges from walking sticks to running a pub.