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Whining farmers

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    Whining farmers

    I don't want to sound ungratefull for the food you think you put on my table. I have been reading this site for awile now and it appers to me all you farmers do is whine. Get off your butts and get jobs like the rest of the world.
    You can either farm and farm right or leave. The world is changing and you must change with it.
    Farmers think they should get cheques in the mail and assisstance if the price is low for your cows and grain.
    I know you supply food but charge more or stop doing it.

    #2
    Enough

    You have a good point but I don't think you would like to pay for food what it actually costs.

    In the Seventies there was a great deal of concern about vertical integration in the food supply chain. Everyone was worried that they would be held to ransom for their daily bread. These food conglomerates soon found out that farmers produce (right or wrongly) food at below the margin that they would need to have a profitable business. Governments were lobbyied and thus we have the subsidies in Europe, USA and other more developed countries.

    Our other problem is that we are good at what we do, are willing to work for a low return because we mistakenly love our jobs and the fringe benefits that go with being your own boss.

    We groan and complain but it is no different than most workers standing around the proverbial water cooler complaining about their own daily grind. Their are very few who feel that if on an equal footing with other producers in the world, that we need a hand out to keep us going. Just be thankful that you have the safest and most nutritional food system in the world and you pay very little to keep it.
    There will be fewer producers in the future, that is a given but as numbers go down and we become less independent we will start to be able to charge more for our product so start saving now so that you can afford to eat when you are collecting your company pension.

    Happy New Year

    Comment


      #3
      Enough - were you or are you aware that what the farmer gets from your entire year's food bill is paid for by the 2nd week of January? Yes, in about 9 or 10 more days time, you will have paid the producer his/her share of your food bill.

      In the last few years, we have seen many new food safety measures implemented at producer expense so that you can have safe food to eat.

      There are very few of us who would like to stand around and wait for the cheque to come. Some of us advocate that we need to get paid what our products are worth. Some of us even go so far as to say that we need to change our ways of doing things so that we can get paid more.

      Part of the success of this forum is that we have a place to come and talk about our successes, what we've seen that has worked and yes, to even vent a little.

      We do love what we do otherwise we wouldn't be here. It would, in many cases, be much easier to sell everything and go and work at a 9 to 5 job and live our lives.

      Nobody owes anyone a living. What we do want to see is a fair price for what we do. We have to compete with countries like the U.S. and more to the point the Europeans that have subsidies. In Europe, I know that some of the excuse is that we don't want to go hungry again. Well, they haven't gone hungry in over 50 years - since the end of the war, so why are they doing what they are doing.

      We're trying to make changes out there, but like anyone else or as it is with many things - change is slow to come and there is great frustration over change.

      I encourage you to go back through some of the threads and see where we are happy at the site of newborns that survive and the hope of a newly seeded crop being "the one". Many are not in it for the money because if they were, they would be working on the oil rigs.

      I'm glad to see all contributions to the site because it helps us all.

      Comment


        #4
        Actually, something else comes to mind as well. My brother once said what you are saying right now. I asked him, as I'll ask you - how long would you go without getting a paycheque if it were through no fault of your own - i.e. you just went to collect your pay at the end of the week and it wasn't there. His response - one week.

        As I said to him, we don't have that choice in many instances - you see a bumper crop waiting to be harvested only to have it wiped out by a hailstorm just prior to your being able to harvest, or this year where there was great hope for good things as we got much needed moisture at the right time and then BSE hit, then there was a drought worse than last year and to top it all off - more grasshoppers than have ever been seen in these parts for many, many years.

        Yet, despite all of it, we can say - there is hope for next year. We tend to be extremely resilient folk and oft times we have optimism, but there are times when everything is out of our control and we can just sit by watch.

        It's not as easy as one thinks to get a job, especially if you have been farming all your life and don't have a degree. It's not an easy job market out there these days.

        Comment


          #5
          Wow! I am so impressed with the civil, intelligent, and classy responses to that first post.

          Some discussion boards would have said "That's enough!" and blown him out of the water! LOL

          Happy New Year!

          Comment


            #6
            enough: you said "I know you supply food but charge more or stop doing it." Farmers typically produce agricultural commodities which are sold into a commodity market. Charging more for our production is not a luxury that is available to us. As for "stop doing it", I believe that is a real concern. There is reason for all Albertans and Canadians to be concerned that a significant number of our beef producers will indeed "stop doing it". Did you know that:

            Alberta is the largest beef producing province in Canada. The province leads the nation in cattle and calf inventories, accounting for 5.2 million head or 39 per cent of the national total at January 1, 2003.

            Meat and poultry processing is at the heart of food processing activity in Alberta. In 2002, shipments totalled $4.8 billion (54 per cent of total food processing), a decline of 5.7 per cent from a record $5.1 billion in 2001.

            Beef was Alberta’s top agri-food export at $1.6 billion in 2002.

            Alberta agri-food industries contributed 3.9 per cent to the province's Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in 2001.

            Alberta is the second largest agricultural producer in Canada. In 2002, Alberta accounted for 23 per cent of national farm cash receipts generated from primary agriculture.

            In May, a single cow in Alberta was found to have bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) or mad cow disease. The repercussions were severe; in 2002, Canada's beef export market was worth about $4.1 billion. Following the imposition of the ban by several countries, most notably the United States, the value of these Canadian exports dropped to virtually zero.

            The single positive BSE in Canada took its toll on the Canadian economy. In June 2003 Finance Minister John Manley cut GDP predictions by one percentage point for 2003, from 3.2% to 2.2%. This week, Statistics Canada reported that the Canadian economy shrank for the first time since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. And it's probable that the economy will not regain its form until Americans again start to barbecue with Canadian beef.

            "Enough", the cattle industry and agriculture is one of Canada's major resource industries. The BSE crisis is of major economic importance to everyone, wage earner, pensioner, and yes farmer in Canada. If beef producers choose to "stop doing it", the economy of the entire country would suffer.

            Comment


              #7
              One question for "enough".

              Has the CBC forum site become so boring that you had to come here to share your understanding of Agriculture or was it just to throw darts?

              Comment


                #8
                Enough

                Every farmer in this country has major hurdles to jump every year trying to produce product to be able to sell at the end of the year.

                I for one am growing tired of these hurdles as I am sure many others are.I AM contemplating quiting and doing something else.

                I just HAVE to ask you though what you think would happen to this country if EVERY farmer in this country decided to "get off their butts and get jobs like the rest of the world?"

                Comment


                  #9
                  kato - I find comments like these can build awareness on both sides, so I like to hear them.

                  First, as producers, we need to know what non-producers are thinking and how we are being perceived.

                  Second, we as producers can give answers to non-producers that they may not have been aware of.

                  It actually creates awareness on both sides and can be quite beneficial.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Ok Enough...lets dance!

                    You know what we all do for a living. How about you tell us a bit about your self.

                    What do you do? Where do you work? Your age? Do you have kids in school?etc. Do you drive on public roads? Ever been in a hospital?

                    Come on...let us scrutinize your life.

                    If you are a purist then you should be able to show us that nothing yes nothing in your life endevors and activities and needs are subsidized by others. You pay your own way in all things. Right?

                    Comment

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