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Jeremy Clarkson has revealed the bleak reason he's had to halt filming for the new series of his popular Prime Video hit Clarkson's Farm.
The TV star, who has been a household name since joining the panel of Top Gear in 1988, has let cameras follow the highs and lows of his farming journey since he decided to start running his Oxfordshire farm Diddly Squat in 2019.
The hit series has so far run for four seasons, with a fifth soon to hit screens later this year and a sixth already confirmed to be in development.
However, fans might be left with a longer wait for the sixth series, as Jeremy, 65, explained filming has had to be placed on hold for now.
And it's not just filming that the presenter has had to stop; he explained that there has been 'no farming' happening either at Diddly Squat due to the bad weather.
He wrote to fans in his Sunday Times column: 'There's no filming happening on the farm at the moment, or farming.
'It hasn't stopped raining since the beginning of the year, so I can't plant anything, and I can't do anything with my cows either because we are still locked down by TB.'
Jeremy revealed in October 2025 that his Diddly Squat Farm was hit by a bovine tuberculosis outbreak, forcing the cull of the farm's first-ever pregnant cow.
He took to X, formerly Twitter, to explain: 'It doesn't affect people, just our poor cows. Everyone here is absolutely devastated.'
Jeremy is yet to confirm when filming is expected to start for the Prime Video show's sixth series - but its fifth season is expected for launch in the mean time this spring.
It comes after Jeremy took a withering swipe at Good Morning Britain's resident meteorologist Laura Tobin after she shared 'good news' about the recent weather.
The Clarkson's Farm star, who often shares the impact the weather has on his Oxfordshire farm, hit back at Laura, 44, as she took to social media with the unexpected 'benefits' of 'record wind' across the UK.
Britain was battered by a series of storms through January, which caused havoc for the public with widespread high winds, rain and flooding.
But despite the tumultuous conditions, which saw the Met Office dish out rare red warnings, Laura took to X to celebrate 'good news'.
Reposting an ITV weather report which detailed how there had been 'record wind power' in January, she penned: 'Some good news from the recent windy weather.'
The report read: 'Record Wind Power. January wind power, more than any month on record, cut gas costs £164million.'
Based on analysis by think-tank Ember, the report detailed how the UK's wind turbines generated a huge 10.6 terawatt-hours of electricity in January 2026.
The milestone number exceeded the previous peak of 10.4, recorded in December 2023, due to three storms: Goretti, Ingrid and Chandra.
The storms saw Britain's fleet of turbines working at unusually high levels, reportedly delivering financial benefits to the energy system and British consumers.
Ember calculated that without the storms, a further £164million worth of additional gas would've had to have been purchased to meet demand.
But Jeremy didn't see the positive side and hit back, replying to Laura’s post: ‘So to solve global warming, it’s best if we all freeze. Excellent.’
Fans flooded the comments to agree with the former Top Gear star, with one adding: ‘Cut bills by (checks bill) nothing...’
‘Who’s it cut the cost of gas for? Because it isn’t the end user, that’s for certain,’ a second agreed, while a third penned: ‘Our bills are not going down, so where’s the good news in that?’
Elsewhere, Jeremy issued a brutal response to a fan who hit out that Brexit was to blame for struggling British farms.
'Awesome. So our bills are going down, right? Definitely won't just lead to a larger profit margin for the energy cartel,' another concluded.
In January, members of the public were caught up in the crosshairs of the storms - with Storm Goretti unleashing gusts of up to 123mph, recorded in Cornwall.
The storm also prompted heavy snowfall that saw the Met Office issue the 'danger to life' and rare red warning across the country.
While Storm Chandra caused a major incident declaration in Somerset, with flooding cutting off roads as rivers burst their banks.
Elsewhere, Jeremy issued a brutal response to a fan who hit out that Brexit was to blame for struggling British farms - as his following begged for him to be made agricultural minister.
The former Top Gear star hit out that the follower should question their 'grasp on reality' during a heated exchange on X, formerly known as Twitter.
Jeremy, 65, responded to the comments left by his fans under a video he filmed for farming campaign group No Farmers, No Food, which advocated for fair pay, sustainable practice and government policies to keep the industry stable.
Speaking in a video filmed on his phone, the TV presenter said: 'I'm Jeremy Clarkson, and in the next Parliament I'd like to see the Government prioritising farming.'
'We've been asked to diversify and when we try to do that, the local authorities tell us we can't and that needs addressing.'
One X user replied under the video: 'Please join Reform. You could be their advisor/intermediate between Farmers on Farming and what they need.'
A second disagreed: 'The former Brexit party is the reason why most farms are struggling. They lost subsidies from the EU and its now cheaper for most shops to buy from the EU then domestically.'
To which Jeremy hit back: 'Oh dear. You don't seem to have grasp of reality.'
The heated exchange fired up debate between X users about farming in Britain, with some even calling for Jeremy to be agricultural minister.
Clarkson's Farm is available to stream on Prime Video.