Showbiz

Farmer Wants A Wife Stars Share Heartbreak Stories

Farmer Wants A Wife may have built its reputation as Australia's most wholesome show, but behind the romantic sunsets and country charm lies a far more brutal r...

Farmer Wants A Wife Stars Share Heartbreak Stories
BN

Bintano News

Advertisement

may have built its reputation as Australia's most wholesome show, but behind the romantic sunsets and country charm lies a far more brutal reality.

Sitting down with Daily Mail, the farmers opened up about the hidden heartbreak of filming the hit series, revealing the most difficult part wasn't finding love - it was breaking hearts.

While viewers see contestants leave each week, the farmers say the emotional toll of sending women home knowing their decisions could crush someone's hopes was far harder than ever anticipated.

Advertisement

Farmer Jarrad admitted he completely underestimated just how difficult the experience would become.

'That's probably the hardest thing,' he said.

'I totally underestimated how difficult that would be, because you want to get to know the girls so you can make the right decision, because you're trying to find the person that you want to spend the rest of your life with.'

Advertisement

Farmer Wants A Wife may have built its reputation as Australia's most wholesome show, but behind the romantic sunsets and country charm lies a for more brutal reality. (Pictured L-R: Farmer Alex, Jarrad, Dylan, Zac and Jason)

Sitting down with Daily Mail, the farmers opened up about the hidden heartbreak of filming the hit Channel Seven series

Unlike other dating shows where the drama often takes centre stage, the farmers say the pressure comes from having limited time to make life-changing decisions.

'There's not actually a lot of time,' Jarrad explained.

Advertisement

'You've got a limited amount of dates. You're trying to spread your time out evenly to make the best decision.

'That's probably the hardest part of it all.'

The farmer admitted that he quickly realised that every conversation carried significant weight because ultimately someone would be sent home at the end of each week.'

'You've got to send someone home each week,' he said. 'It's not easy.'

Advertisement

Farmer Alex agreed, revealing the burden of rejecting women became one of the toughest parts of the journey.

'For every decision you make, you're hurting the other potential four or whatever you've got on your farm,' he said.

The farmers say the emotional toll of sending women home knowing their decisions could crush someone's hopes was far harder than ever anticipated 

Farmer Jarrad admitted he completely underestimated just how difficult the experience would become. 'That's probably the hardest thing,' he said

Advertisement

'You've got to navigate it really carefully.'

The farmers admitted that while audiences often focus on the romance, they were constantly aware that every connection they formed with one woman could unintentionally leave another disappointed.

It wasn't the only challenge they faced.

The men also revealed that dating while being followed by cameras created a whole new level of awkwardness.

Farmer Dylan confessed he was a 'nervous wreck' during the early days of filming and struggled to navigate romantic moments with a production crew watching every move.

'There's so many cameras in your face and then you're trying to talk to ladies,' he said.

'It's a horrible combination.'

'The worst bit is that if you lean in and it's not reciprocated, you look a bit silly and it's filmed.

Farmer Dylan confessed he was a 'nervous wreck' during the early days of filming 

'It's a horrible combination,' Dylan added. 'The worst bit is that if you lean in and it's not reciprocated, you look a bit silly and it's filmed

Dylan said viewers should brace themselves for some awkward moments as the season unfolds.

'I was awkward as it could get,' he laughed.

'I think there's going to be a few that come out.'

Fellow farmer Alex agreed that filming dates in public often made already nerve-wracking situations even stranger.

'There were definitely moments when we're in public and there's people of the public just around us when we're being filmed doing date things,' he said.

'It's a bit strange.'

He added: 'You try and bury it because it's a TV show, but it definitely is like, 'This is weird'.'

Advertisement