Kaleb Cooper has become a fan favourite on Amazon Prime’s Clarkson’s Farm, but it seems the star is ready to embark on an adventure further afield – despite his fears

Clarkson’s Farm sensation Kaleb Cooper is a Chipping Norton lad through-and-through, but it appears the call of the wild might just be too strong to resist. Despite having spent his early years without venturing far from the Cotswolds – with his first taste of big city life involving revolving doors in London and a meet-up with ex-PM Rishi Sunak – Kaleb’s now hinting at grander plans.

Chatting exclusively with The Times, he confessed that the land Down Under is ‘calling’ him and even flirted with the idea of jet-setting to Ibiza. “I’ll make all the money now, hopefully have a farm, then chill out, go partying and be in Ibiza,” he shared, followed by the candid admission, “Though I can’t think of anything worse than being in a nightclub.”

Rooted deeply in Oxfordshire, where most of his kin hail from within a snug ‘ten-mile radius’ of their hometown, Kaleb lovingly ribs that his son is ‘foreign’ since he entered the world in Oxford. His roots run deep; his uncle and gran rest in local soil, where he pays his respects thrice daily.

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Venturing past this storybook slice of England feels alien to Kaleb, who to date hasn’t set foot outside Britain, hopped on a plane, or even caught a train. However, earlier this year, he bravely ‘faced his fear,’ touring the UK for his show The World According To Kaleb.

While he enjoyed the tour, calling it ‘amazing’, the pull of home was never far from his thoughts, and the prospect of distance filled him with trepidation, reports Gloucestershire Live.

Kaleb Cooper shared with his Instagram followers, as reported by The Express, “This is the furthest I’ve ever been north. Safe to say I’m hitting my fears straight on.”

He then provided an update: “So I’m on a farm and I feel better. Much better. There are some trailers and lots better. I’m at home again but in Scotland.”

In a discussion about his apprehensions with The Times, he divulged further: “If the fuel pump went in my car [while travelling], who would I go to? I get nervous then.”

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