They were into bison in a big way and now they're out. In a market of oversupply and depressed meat and animal prices, the Quasts are among the first to throw in the towel completely - selling more than 450 animals in a dispersal sale March 18.
"We didn't sell out because we were forced to," Dennis says. "It was a decision we made that it was going nowhere. It was bleeding us to death. I've gone two years with no income and you can't continue that."
Much has been made of value added, yet the gamble is very high in any new specialty industry!
Why have the Canadian and US governments allowed such concentration in the food processing/marketing industries?
In the end by allowing these monopolies to be created, how can the result be anything but lower prices, no matter how integrated farmers become with the value chain?
What can the end result be other than concentration of food production in a few peoples hands as well, if the food producer wants to survive?
Farmers have huge production risk, now we must take on all the marketing risk as well?
"We didn't sell out because we were forced to," Dennis says. "It was a decision we made that it was going nowhere. It was bleeding us to death. I've gone two years with no income and you can't continue that."
Much has been made of value added, yet the gamble is very high in any new specialty industry!
Why have the Canadian and US governments allowed such concentration in the food processing/marketing industries?
In the end by allowing these monopolies to be created, how can the result be anything but lower prices, no matter how integrated farmers become with the value chain?
What can the end result be other than concentration of food production in a few peoples hands as well, if the food producer wants to survive?
Farmers have huge production risk, now we must take on all the marketing risk as well?
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