Thanks mate! So 300mA upfront my worry was incase it tripped that it would take out every sub board? There is live stock in a cow shed
If you have an up-front delay RCD then you need
all down stream circuits to have faster and lower current double-pole RCD protection to totally avoid that problem (i.e. complete selectivity).
The requirement for double-pole isolation is a bit odd, but basically if you have a N-E fault and the RCBO trips but the N-E connection remains and any significant current flow then can trip the RCD incomer.
Some of the popular single phase consumer boards have 30mA RCBOs that are DP-switching, such as the compact Fusebox, Wylex, and Crabtree ranges, but I don't know of many for 3-phase boards.
If it is a big install, then you can get fancy adjustable MCCB style RCDs and that could be set to 500mA and a longer delay (say 0.5s) for a basic distribution board, and the sub-boards could have 300mA normal delay as incomers and then single-pole RCBOs for the final circuits. That will be mostly OK, but you still have the risk of a N-E fault tripping that local incomer (so less of a problem, but not eliminated).
Again, if going TT then you would need a lower Ra here.
However, you might have a case where the main house / supply stays on TN-S but the out-buildings are TT'd. Then your sub-boards would need the 300mA incomers and you would absolutely have to use SWA to feed them as not RCD's up front, and robust enough not to be a fire hazard themselves (assuming end of sub-main Zs for feed OCPD is met). Each board would need a couple of good rods for adequately low Ra, even under drought or frost conditions.
Even then getting total selectivity is hard. You don't get it from MCB feeding MCB/RCBO to any useful degree, you are better to look at switch-fuses (or a Ryefield board) for the incoming distribution. Or if it has to be friendlier to a non-electrician to reset, then spend the (not inconsiderable) extra on a MCCB incoming board for distribution so you can get the 'short delay' on the MCCB over-current to allow a down-stream MCB/RCBO time to clear a fault.