I AM often asked whether it is wise to make your property available as a movie location. Is it disruptive?

When we made the original film ‘Swallows and Amazons’ in the Lake District in 1973, Mrs Ransome was insistent that every aspect was true to her husband’s book.

The producer brought her up to Cumbria to point out the locations Arthur Ransome had in mind. Bank Ground Farm above Coniston Water was used as Holly Howe where the story begins.

When I arrived to play the part of Titty Walker I felt the iconic illustrations had come to life. We ran down the field to the boatsheds and stone jetty looking for Swallow, excited about sailing off to camp on Wild Cat Island.

But for Mrs Batty, who was bringing up seven children in the farmhouse, the invasion of a 70-strong film crew and their assorted vehicles had more impact than she was led to believe. She decided that a £75 fee was not enough, padlocked her front gate and wouldn't let us back until the producer agreed to pay her £1,000. It was a lot of money, more than double the fee I received.

Brenda Colton from The News wrote: ‘When art director Simon Holland started tearing up her lino and carpet in the kitchen to get to the bare stone floor, she did get a little annoyed. Especially when he removed all the electric sockets, lights and switches, pushed all the kitchen furniture into the larder and whitewashed the newly papered walls.’ Could you cope with that?

After acting in movies as I child I went on to become a location manager for BBC Television. In 1983 we looked into making a drama series based on Arthur Ransome’s books Swallowdale and Pigeon Post but the adaptation proved too costly. The National Trust was asking for location fees of £1,000 a day to film on open moorland. Sadly the series was axed.

As a producer, I returned to make documentaries in Cumbria when there was no budget for either contributors or locations used, but we only had a crew of four and altered nothing.

My parents' farm has been used for a number of drama productions, including Arthur of the Britons, Dark Secret, House of Elliot and, more recently, The Durrells. No lino was ever pulled up and dad was thrilled when one designer installed period French windows.

We ate delicious meals from the catering wagon and appeared as film extras just for the fun of it.

In his book ‘An A-Z of Cumbria and the Lake District on Film’, David Banning profiles the amazing movies made in the North West from the French Lieutenant’s Woman to Star Wars. Read it and see how you’d feel if you owned the properties.

Nowadays an effort is made to ensure landowners are happy with any deal.

Exteriors are less disruptive than interiors. Normal business may need to be suspended, there could be a number of vehicles to park and things will look messy but filming is only temporary.

I’ve always found it great fun and believe it could be beneficial when you come to sell your property. It might prove a business asset. Bank Ground Farm now has a Swallows and Amazons tearoom and restaurant where they will be entertaining members of The Arthur Ransome Society this summer.

Book in and let your children run down to the boatsheds on the lake where they can let free their imagination.

l Sophie Neville recounts more stories in her memoir ‘The Making of Swallows and Amazons(1974)’ available from local libraries and bookshops www.sophieneville.net