Grassfarmer: Your remarks about sustainability pointed out to me a very unfortunate truth. The sustainable farm is not the one that looks after its grass and resources, the sustainable farm is the one that cashes the most subsidy cheques.
While I put together my spreadsheet numbers on how many years it would take to own the provinces cow herd if a producer were actually making money as a joke those figures brought home to me the ugly fact that there are a number of large operations in this province that have been backstopped to the tune of millions of dollars through various BSE programs, set-asides and CAIS. While you are trying to make a living and take care of your cows and land these mega players are now positioned to take over even more of the primary cattle industry.
While expansion to huge numbers on an ever increasing landbase leads one into the bigger numbers / smaller margins game which doesn't attract you at all, there are people that are attracted to that very thing.
The sustainable producer is not the one who is most diversified or who looks after his farm the best. The sustainable producer is the one who is cashing those $10 million subsidy cheques. The province and the federal government has already decided you are expendable, the best you can do is manage to hang on until the mega farms buy you out.
Unless government returns to a reasonable cap on subsidies paid to mega farms, the average producer is only 10 years away from his farm sale. Whether you are making $50 a cow or $350 a cow, it will not matter when the mega producer with townships of land, thousands of cows, tens of thousands of calves steamrolls over your farm.
While I put together my spreadsheet numbers on how many years it would take to own the provinces cow herd if a producer were actually making money as a joke those figures brought home to me the ugly fact that there are a number of large operations in this province that have been backstopped to the tune of millions of dollars through various BSE programs, set-asides and CAIS. While you are trying to make a living and take care of your cows and land these mega players are now positioned to take over even more of the primary cattle industry.
While expansion to huge numbers on an ever increasing landbase leads one into the bigger numbers / smaller margins game which doesn't attract you at all, there are people that are attracted to that very thing.
The sustainable producer is not the one who is most diversified or who looks after his farm the best. The sustainable producer is the one who is cashing those $10 million subsidy cheques. The province and the federal government has already decided you are expendable, the best you can do is manage to hang on until the mega farms buy you out.
Unless government returns to a reasonable cap on subsidies paid to mega farms, the average producer is only 10 years away from his farm sale. Whether you are making $50 a cow or $350 a cow, it will not matter when the mega producer with townships of land, thousands of cows, tens of thousands of calves steamrolls over your farm.
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