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Beef Plan Movement (READ OP BEFORE POSTING)

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Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,461 ✭✭✭jaymla627


    wrangler wrote: »
    I got no 15000/yr when I started farming, whinge on about IFA then, everyone else does when they know I have a point. Hopefully who ever get;s the dosh in the new CAP reform will have to pull their finger out and work for it like we did.
    Mine is a pension now alright, how long will the pension last, probably two years,
    Let's face facts, my subs are down from 40k to 25 because some farmers didn't maximise their payments, that's not right either, the Irish budget should be two billion not one point three billion.
    That mythical farmer you described lives near here and he has three kids in College......you'll do a great job on him won't you, I can assure you e isn't blowing the subs in ''coppers'' or on toyotas either. but sure why would you care

    Farming 220 rented acres here no owned land with 40k euro of sfp going back to landowners and another 40k in rent, I receive no sfp our entitlements of any kind, would you have any sympathy for myself our am I just a bit thick that I decided to choose farming as a career and wasn’t lucky enough to be farming during the reference years


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,239 ✭✭✭Willfarman


    jaymla627 wrote: »
    Farming 220 rented acres here no owned land with 40k euro of sfp going back to landowners and another 40k in rent, I receive no sfp our entitlements of any kind, would you have any sympathy for myself our am I just a bit thick that I decided to choose farming as a career and wasn’t lucky enough to farming during the reference years

    Fair play if you are making anything at that.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,461 ✭✭✭jaymla627


    Willfarman wrote: »
    Fair play if you are making anything at that.

    Dairying so have great cash-flow to be fair and have built up a nice herd of cows and followers but if I had 20k a year as a wage it would be the height of it, and when your average working week is 85 hours a week you’d want to like your cows and not be in it to get rich


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,665 ✭✭✭✭wrangler


    jaymla627 wrote: »
    Farming 220 rented acres here no owned land with 40k euro of sfp going back to landowners and another 40k in rent, I receive no sfp our entitlements of any kind, would you have any sympathy for myself our am I just a bit thick that I decided to choose farming as a career and wasn’t lucky enough to be farming during the reference years

    If you're claiming the subs in your name, I'd hope that it'd be sorted this time, I'm fully expecting to lose my entitlements,
    If the landlord is claiming them in his name I'd have no sympathy for ya


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 355 ✭✭farisfat


    The sfp should be abolished and that money put towards the homeless and under privileged.
    I think Irish agriculture would be the winner in the long run.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,292 ✭✭✭✭Nekarsulm


    Jamyla, if subs are cut or disapear, do you still have to pay the 80k, or is the agreement for 40k plus SFP?
    Are you near a rent review?
    If you have a long term lease (10 years+) are there rent review built in, or any break clauses?
    Regards, Nec.


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators, Paid Member Posts: 4,721 Mod ✭✭✭✭Siamsa Sessions


    jaymla627 wrote: »
    Farming 220 rented acres here no owned land with 40k euro of sfp going back to landowners and another 40k in rent, I receive no sfp our entitlements of any kind, would you have any sympathy for myself our am I just a bit thick that I decided to choose farming as a career and wasn’t lucky enough to be farming during the reference years

    I'm surprised the whole SFP can go directly to the landlord. Are the Dept ever sniffing around at a lad who has the land leased but still draws the entitlements?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2, Paid Member Posts: 5,465 ✭✭✭bogman_bass


    wrangler wrote: »
    Like everything it's being abused. I might be generalising but it's happening, people are generalising about retired farmers even though those in the retirement scheme had their entitlements taken off them in the last CAP REFORM.
    You should study the farms around you in the scheme

    I know of nobody scamming the system with it but I know plenty that got farming 10 years earlier than they would have without it.

    To be honest, the way it’s set up it’s pretty easy to catch the chancers


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,292 ✭✭✭✭Nekarsulm


    I'm surprised the whole SFP can go directly to the landlord. Are the Dept ever sniffing around at a lad who has the land leased but still draws the entitlements?

    If it's written into your lease, the entire value of them can go to the landlord, but the entitlements will have to be properly leased to the tenant for the term of the lease.
    Otherwise the first inspection will have both parties in serious bother.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,239 ✭✭✭Willfarman


    I rent a bit of ground beside me and he draws the sfp on it. I’ve been inspected before as has he and it seems it’s all above board. He’s getting best of both worlds but to quote a comedy sketch I seen recently “thats because he’s good at his job and I’m ****e at mine”


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  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators, Paid Member Posts: 4,721 Mod ✭✭✭✭Siamsa Sessions


    Slightly off-topic but can I ask if anyone knows if a landowner can lease the farm to a partnership and still get tax free income if their son/daughter is part of the partnership?

    I know parents can’t lease to sons/daughters directly and get tax free rent, but can they do indirectly via a partnership?

    Thanks.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,665 ✭✭✭✭wrangler


    Slightly off-topic but can I ask if anyone knows if a landowner can lease the farm to a partnership and still get tax free income if their son/daughter is part of the partnership?

    I know parents can’t lease to sons/daughters directly and get tax free rent, but can they do indirectly via a partnership?

    Thanks.

    No, you won't get the rent tax free


  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators, Paid Member Posts: 4,721 Mod ✭✭✭✭Siamsa Sessions


    Ok, thanks for that.

    Few options on the table at home now so trying to figure out what’s best.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 786 ✭✭✭Cattlepen


    K9 wrote: »
    What would be the cut off point from grass fed beef to grain fed with regards the amount of meal fed to an animal?

    There should be no meal fed in a grass fed beast. How in the name of jaysus can it be grass fed if you feed it meal? I’m not having ago at you but why would you ask how much meal you can feed a GRASS FED animal?
    GRASS GRASS GRASS. There should be no halfway house with it


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2, Paid Member Posts: 21,201 ✭✭✭✭Bass Reeves


    Cattlepen wrote: »
    There should be no meal fed in a grass fed beast. How in the name of jaysus can it be grass fed if you feed it meal? I’m not having ago at you but why would you ask how much meal you can feed a GRASS FED animal?
    GRASS GRASS GRASS. There should be no halfway house with it

    The Us one is very restrictive but even there you can feed minimum amounts. Unless some can be fed you would struggle with the seasonality of the system. As well if nothing but grass only AA and maybe HE steers and heifers would get enough fat cover. IF I buy weanlings I only feed about 1-1.5kg/day over the winter and stop about 6-8 weeks pre turnout. My stores that I finish off grass only get artion for last 6-8 weeks of 3kgs/day for early and mid summer finish. If they go out into the autumn they need 5kgs/head to finish for 8ish weeks. With winter finishing and good silage you would need 3-5kgs/day for 100+ days. As well bucket fed calves need ration until at least 12-14 weeks of age.

    It should be limited to 500kgs in last 120 days with a bonus for beef finished with less than 200kgs in last 120 days IMO. TBH there is no spec for it at present in Europe AFAIK. Winter finishing would be the issue lots of lads can do it from June to November and maybe December, But finishing cattle off grass silage over the winter would be an art in itself not impossible but would require certain technical know how. You would have to pick your cattle as well heifers and AA's would be the most suitable.

    Slava Ukrainii



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 126 ✭✭K9


    Cattlepen wrote: »
    There should be no meal fed in a grass fed beast. How in the name of jaysus can it be grass fed if you feed it meal? I’m not having ago at you but why would you ask how much meal you can feed a GRASS FED animal?
    GRASS GRASS GRASS. There should be no halfway house with it


    I was asking to enquire about the practicality of it. As bass stated going 100% wouldn’t be feasible. Between wet weather from August 2017 up to April and then the drought this summer, how would you guarantee a steady supply?
    But then how do you market it as grass beef whilst feeding meal. 100% grass fed 50% of the time?
    Who’s going to know how much meal was fed?
    Even taking Angus heifers from dairy herd would they make the required grade and with a lighter carcase would they leave any more profit?
    I’m not against the BPM but imo they seem to be coming out with half thought out ideas to try and garner support.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 5,326 ✭✭✭alps


    Cattlepen wrote: »
    There should be no meal fed in a grass fed beast. How in the name of jaysus can it be grass fed if you feed it meal? I’m not having ago at you but why would you ask how much meal you can feed a GRASS FED animal?
    GRASS GRASS GRASS. There should be no halfway house with it

    It depends on the market you are selling into. With milk in the US, as long as 95% of the diet is GMO free, the product can be considered GMO free. In the Netherlands a pretty high percentage ( think 10%) of the diet can come from conventional non organic sources and the milk can still be marketed as organic.

    Now if the only knew that we market our milk as being 95% grass fed ( on a fresh weight basis🤣) then I reckon they could get away with feeding organic fodder and conventional ration, and still market the product as Organic..


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 786 ✭✭✭Cattlepen


    The Us one is very restrictive but even there you can feed minimum amounts. Unless some can be fed you would struggle with the seasonality of the system. As well if nothing but grass only AA and maybe HE steers and heifers would get enough fat cover. IF I buy weanlings I only feed about 1-1.5kg/day over the winter and stop about 6-8 weeks pre turnout. My stores that I finish off grass only get artion for last 6-8 weeks of 3kgs/day for early and mid summer finish. If they go out into the autumn they need 5kgs/head to finish for 8ish weeks. With winter finishing and good silage you would need 3-5kgs/day for 100+ days. As well bucket fed calves need ration until at least 12-14 weeks of age.

    It should be limited to 500kgs in last 120 days with a bonus for beef finished with less than 200kgs in last 120 days IMO. TBH there is no spec for it at present in Europe AFAIK. Winter finishing would be the issue lots of lads can do it from June to November and maybe December, But finishing cattle off grass silage over the winter would be an art in itself not impossible but would require certain technical know how. You would have to pick your cattle as well heifers and AA's would be the most suitable.

    I agree with everything you’ve said and I am not having a go at k9. The point I am trying to make is that this guy that is promising €5/kg for the grass fed beef is in fairyland. It is a niche product and we would not all be able to produce it. If you dilute it down to feeding a bit of meal then it’s just a scam that won’t stand up to scrutiny. At the very least you would be open to ridicule and at worst a legal case for misleading marketing.
    Wasn’t Kerrygold banned from some US states for this reason?
    And I agree with k9 when he says the BPM have only half thought out ideas. They are dreaming if the think the monopoly will let them successfully market their own beef on a large scale. They will break them. And who has €10k to throw around on a madcap scheme like it?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2, Paid Member Posts: 21,201 ✭✭✭✭Bass Reeves


    Cattlepen wrote: »
    I agree with everything you’ve said and I am not having a go at k9. The point I am trying to make is that this guy that is promising €5/kg for the grass fed beef is in fairyland. It is a niche product and we would not all be able to produce it. If you dilute it down to feeding a bit of meal then it’s just a scam that won’t stand up to scrutiny. At the very least you would be open to ridicule and at worst a legal case for misleading marketing.
    Wasn’t Kerrygold banned from some US states for this reason?
    And I agree with k9 when he says the BPM have only half thought out ideas. They are dreaming if the think the monopoly will let them successfully market their own beef on a large scale. They will break them. And who has €10k to throw around on a madcap scheme like it?

    I agree that not every farmer can produce grass fed beef. You would need good dry land and as I said the technical ability to use early and late grazing. However is such a market could take 20-30% of the stock at a premium price it helps all the rest of the farmers. But we need a genuine product not a makey up as you go. Just to give you an example a steer killing 350kgs at 30 months eating 500kgs of ration in its lifetime will still consume about 5.5-6 ton of grass dry matter. That would be a 90% grass intake over lifetime. a steer of mine bough as a weanling killed mid summer would only consume 250-280kgs of ration in his time on the farm. So it is easy to hit the numbers in the irish system.

    Slava Ukrainii



  • Moderators, Society & Culture Moderators, Paid Member Posts: 4,721 Mod ✭✭✭✭Siamsa Sessions


    Seeing messages on WhatsApp re BPM looking for “a brand name to best describe our Irish grass fed suckled beef”

    Does this confirm the suspected focus on sucklers only?


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,665 ✭✭✭✭wrangler


    Seeing messages on WhatsApp re BPM looking for “a brand name to best describe our Irish grass fed suckled beef”

    Does this confirm the suspected focus on sucklers only?

    They're like politicians now, they're agreeing with everyone and doing nothing.
    The ego trip continues.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,497 ✭✭✭coolshannagh28


    wrangler wrote: »
    They're like politicians now, they're agreeing with everyone and doing nothing.
    The ego trip continues.

    Sounds like you have "previous" with some of these.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,730 ✭✭✭✭patsy_mccabe


    Seeing messages on WhatsApp re BPM looking for “a brand name to best describe our Irish grass fed suckled beef”

    Does this confirm the suspected focus on sucklers only?

    I've been wrecking my head to think of a name. It's the kind of thing you'd want to get right. Also, do you put a pic of cattle on the label? Prob better no to. Modern consumers prefer not to see them. A nice pic of stone walls in the West would be best.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 21,624 ✭✭✭✭Water John


    Marketing seems to have reversed on the notion of not putting animals in meat advertising. Put it out there, that's where your food comes from. Vegetarians and vegans won't be your customers any way.
    To brand it you need to firstly list the key words, pastureland, grass, outdoor, grazing, Irish, green.
    Add to the list.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,132 ✭✭✭yosemitesam1


    I agree that not every farmer can produce grass fed beef. You would need good dry land and as I said the technical ability to use early and late grazing. However is such a market could take 20-30% of the stock at a premium price it helps all the rest of the farmers. But we need a genuine product not a makey up as you go. Just to give you an example a steer killing 350kgs at 30 months eating 500kgs of ration in its lifetime will still consume about 5.5-6 ton of grass dry matter. That would be a 90% grass intake over lifetime. a steer of mine bough as a weanling killed mid summer would only consume 250-280kgs of ration in his time on the farm. So it is easy to hit the numbers in the irish system.

    Hard to see a big premium for that for such a large % of cattle. Take the US, they can produce 100% grass fed year round and could very easily adapt feedlots to the 90-95% across a lifetime if there was much of a market.
    A large enough percentage of cattle in Europe could be grass fed easy enough too, there's lots of options like cover crops or temporary grass over the summer that they could manage if there was a big premium.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,665 ✭✭✭✭wrangler


    Sounds like you have "previous" with some of these.

    Plenty of previous, Willie Penrose was the only one I had any time for, at least he'd say it as it was, the rest'd agree with everything and plenty lapped it up.
    Wouldn't like to be lobbying for anything now with the way that the health service is wasting everything.
    Can't believe the way the farmers are being taken in by the politicians at the BPM meetings, of course politicians are going to say what farmers want to hear, they're not fools


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,497 ✭✭✭coolshannagh28


    wrangler wrote: »
    Plenty of previous, Willie Penrose was the only one I had any time for, at least he'd say it as it was, the rest'd agree with everything and plenty lapped it up.
    Wouldn't like to be lobbying for anything now with the way that the health service is wasting everything.
    Can't believe the way the farmers are being taken in by the politicians at the BPM meetings, of course politicians are going to say what farmers want to hear, they're not fools

    I was more interested in the BPM principals.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,665 ✭✭✭✭wrangler


    I was more interested in the BPM principals.

    Aye, They're going to be saying what farmers want to hear too. :cool:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,665 ✭✭✭✭wrangler


    I wonder who does Corley think is working at protecting his substantial BPS payment in Brussels while he's trying to undermine them here.
    The same crowd I suppose that protected it for him in 2012.....Eaten bread and all that....wish I had what he gets


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,497 ✭✭✭coolshannagh28


    I was more interested in the BPM principals.

    Or should I have said principles.


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