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Archive for August 7th, 2008

Ragwort Alert

Thursday, August 07th, 2008 | Author: Chris Brown

Ragwort Alert

Ragwort, is blooming at the moment, and as every horse owner and farmer knows, ragwort contains toxins which can have debilitating or fatal consequences if eaten by horses and other grazing animals.

Whilst Ragwort has its place in the countryside; it supports a wide variety of invertebrates and is a major nectar source for many insects, but it must be controlled, especially where there are horses and livestock. Therefore it is important that the dangers posed by Ragwort is circulated to reach the widest possible audience.

There is an especial, and growing, concern that some public bodies who own land, such as Local Authorities, are not taking the problem seriously and managing their land appropriately, but there really is no excuse for a Code of Practice on how to stop the spread of ragwort is available to all on DEFRA’s website.

The threat ragwort poses to animals cannot be underestimated and is something that all landowners, whether public or private, must take seriously.

If you see it growing anywhere near you, do contact the farmer or other land owner and report its presence.

Thank you!

Further information on this deadly weed may be obtained here

Category: Animal Welfare, Farming, Threats | Comments off

Farmers: Beware the Tory Fox

Thursday, August 07th, 2008 | Author: News Team

A farming supporter of Land & People recently described the difference between the Labour and Tory parties thus:

Labour is the crazed madman who runs at with a knife with the obvious intention of doing you harm. The Tory is the quietly spoken type who smiles to your face before plunging a dagger into you as soon as you turn your back!

The recent history of the farming industry would appear to bear that observation out. We’ll give you three examples to demonstrate the point.

Example One: When the debate over fox hunting raged and Labour was preparing its anti-hunting legislation, Tories the length of and breadth of Britain were telling the hunting fraternity how much they supported their cause. Yet despite Labour arguing for a ban on supposed animal welfare grounds the Tories refused to play the one card that would have seen Labour dropping their proposed anti-hunt legislation faster than the proverbial hot potato. That “card” was “ ritual slaughter.

Ritual slaughter, is an imported and barbaric practice, which requires the slitting of the throat of live un-stunned animals “ thereby consigning these unfortunate creatures to a prolonged and painful death through the slow haemorrhaging of blood. It is to the eternal shame of this country that literary millions of British animals suffer this horrific death annually for no other reason than to satisfy the theological requirements of imported religions “ such as Islam. There can be not the slightest doubt that ritual slaughter, much of it by the halal method, is the single most prolific form of animal abuse practised in Britain today. And yet, whilst Labour argued for a ban on hunting on animal welfare grounds - quoting a figure of some five thousand foxes being destroyed each year “ the two-faced treacherous Tories remained silent over the slow-death killing of up to five million cattle, sheep, lambs and chickens per annum!

So why didn’t the Tories play the ritual slaughter “card” to destroy Labour’s case for a ban on hunting?

The reason is quite simple. Not only would they have lost the financial support of a number of their key ethnic minority millionaire backers “ but they would have also lost the support of hundreds of thousands of their ethnic minority voters in communities that adhere to ritual slaughter religions!

And, as is so often the case, the Tories made all the right noises for the benefit of the hunting lobby whilst avoiding, like the proverbial plague, the one issue that would have killed Labour’s anti-hunting proposals stone dead!

Example 2: When the dairy industry was in crisis due to the miserable price being paid by the creameries, dairies and supermarkets to dairy farmers for liquid milk at the farm gate - what were the Tories doing? Once again they were busy making the “right noises” - reassuring producers that they were “on their side” and doing “everything they could” to get a better deal for dairy farmers.

Considering the quantity of hot air expended by the Tories in pledging their support it is somewhat surprising that they failed to achieve anything of note for struggling producers. But, then again, perhaps it wasn’t so surprising - considering how much money the two-faced treacherous Tory Party was receiving from its commercial backers, particularly those having an interest in keeping the price of milk low!

Example 3: Then, of course, we have the ongoing issue of cheap foreign imports undermining the British producer “ Eastern European milk and South American beef being just two products that spring singularly and powerfully to mind. Whilst the two-faced treacherous Tories continue to sweet talk producers on how they “sympathise with the plight of farmers” they continue to support both the EU legislation and unbridled free trade that is facilitating the importation of huge quantities of cheap Eastern European milk and sub-standard Brazilian beef into Britain, to undermine the very producers they claim to be supporting! Needless to say, cheap imported milk and beef being two products, amongst many, that whilst helping to eradicate the British producer, turns in handsome profits for the supermarkets so beloved of by the two-faced treacherous Tory Party!

Tories “ running with the fox whilst hunting with the pack!

Category: Farming, Threats | Leave a Comment

Beet producers deserve better

Thursday, August 07th, 2008 | Author: News Team

Over the next few months British Sugar will be processing virtually the entire British sugar beet crop to produce refined sugar for use in a multitude of industries ranging from confectionary to bio-ethanol. It is thought likely that this year British growers will produce in the region of 7.5 million tonnes of beet “ mostly in the East Midlands and East Anglia “ from which British Sugar will refine around 1 million tonnes of white sugar.

With substantially increased fuel and fertiliser costs, British producers were very unhappy with the £24/£25 per tonne price originally offered by British Sugar for their beet crop. After some persuading the National Farmers Union (NFU) recently met up with the company in an attempt to negotiate a better deal. Producers want around £30 per tonne, but despite the efforts of the NFU “ efforts that have not impressed many producers from what we understand “ the best they have been able to achieve is a revised offer that equates to around £26 per tonne. Now, whereas the big landowners and company owned combines can derive a useful profit based on this offer - due to being able to apply economies of scale - the smaller producer can’t.

By anyone’s standards £26 for a tonne of sugar beet can hardly be considered just reward. For the average beet producer it just about covers the cost of production with a little to spare “ only the “big boys” on the large private and company estates have anything to celebrate. It is certainly not the sort of price on which the average producer will make his fortune, and brings into question the long-term viability of the sugar beet industry inasmuch as the “small man”, working the family-run farm, is concerned.

Yet, according to British Sugar’s own promotional blurb, last year they bought the entire British sugar beet crop for approximately £180 million “ which suggests a price paid to producers of around £25 per tonne. That was, of course, before this year’s huge increases in both diesel and fertiliser costs.

Assuming producers are forced to accept the £26 per tonne currently on offer, then the cost to British Sugar of this year’s crop will be around £190 million. A lot of money “ but perhaps not that much considering white sugar for October delivery is currently commanding a price of £398 per tonne! This would suggest that British Sugar’s £190 million outlay will realise some £398 million in terms of refined white sugar!

Under the circumstances, Land & People is left wondering what is preventing British Sugar from upping their offer from £26 per tonne for beet to at least £28 per tonne “ if not the full £30 per tonne requested? Surely margins in the world of sugar refining can’t be that tight?

As matters stand both British Sugar and the NFU are leaving a taste in the mouths of producers “ and it isn’t a sweet one! Additionally, the NFU is again seen as leaving itself open to the accusation that it is run by and for the “big man” “ to the detriment of the many “little men” in the industry.

Land & People supports calls for a fair deal for our beet producers.

Category: Farming, Sugar beet | Leave a Comment