Farmers_son, we might not be seeing depopulation as such but make no mistake about it, producers cannot afford land along the QEII corridor, at least not to farm anyway.
We are fighting a different battle though, seeing good farm land being paved over to accommodate the sprawl from cities and larger towns. Trouble is that these municipalities have the right to grow and where to do they go but onto farm land.
At one time producers made up less than 3% of the population and I daresay that number is moving rather quickly to less than 2%. We'll be doing another census this year so that should help tell the tale somewhat.
Agricultural development and rural development will generally be negatively correlated, so how does one fix that? How do you get urban folks interested in preserving farmland?
I agree wholeheartedly with emrald, the oil patch is no easy life and it certainly takes its toll on families. The oil patch is red hot right now, but it wasn't all that long ago that it was barely moving i.e. when it was $11/bbl.
For those of us that saw the oil bust of the 80's, one has to wonder exactly how long it will go on and how many people are going to be caught once again. It is so easy to get credit these days and many people are buying on a whim, but heaven help them if interest rates creep up. Remember when mortgages were 18%?
We are fighting a different battle though, seeing good farm land being paved over to accommodate the sprawl from cities and larger towns. Trouble is that these municipalities have the right to grow and where to do they go but onto farm land.
At one time producers made up less than 3% of the population and I daresay that number is moving rather quickly to less than 2%. We'll be doing another census this year so that should help tell the tale somewhat.
Agricultural development and rural development will generally be negatively correlated, so how does one fix that? How do you get urban folks interested in preserving farmland?
I agree wholeheartedly with emrald, the oil patch is no easy life and it certainly takes its toll on families. The oil patch is red hot right now, but it wasn't all that long ago that it was barely moving i.e. when it was $11/bbl.
For those of us that saw the oil bust of the 80's, one has to wonder exactly how long it will go on and how many people are going to be caught once again. It is so easy to get credit these days and many people are buying on a whim, but heaven help them if interest rates creep up. Remember when mortgages were 18%?
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