cluray wrote: » Honestly how are you ever going to agree with thousands of farmers around the country if their reps from 7 representative groups go and endorse a deal only for them to fail to back it! Form another rep group to negotiate, then when u don't like what they get, go again and form another group, where does it end. Saving rural Ireland me h*le, more like screwing rural Ireland.
CloughCasey1 wrote: » MII wouldnt even sit in the same room as the farming reps. They along with Bord Bia used Creed as a puppet to push their agenda. I'm assuming MII and Bord Bia hatched a plan to give the farmers 3.50 and the extra 8c for 2 weeks and then back to 3.40 to cover the difference. If MII and the factories even came with a 3.70 floor this morning for 60 days along with the agreed bonus structure it would have given everyone breathing space. Do you think the big 3 are worried about the smaller processors closing down??? They are only delighted as they would be in with a buy out offer like a shot and any of the plants in question would be opened and re-branded in no time.
Good loser wrote: » That's hogwash if ever I heard it. Creed is an honourable man doing his best in a difficult situation. On radio this morning the farmer Rep that went to BJ Duff complimented him for his work over the weekend.
Never wrestle with pigs wrote: » Lol, you are jokeing right?
Water John wrote: » No one believes the margin isn't there in the retail price.
yosemitesam1 wrote: How many people on here have ever actually gone out and tried to get a product on a shelf and claim market share. It's not very easy at a small scale let alone trying to shift volume in a weak/flooded market
yosemitesam1 wrote: The problem is that far too many people have no idea of business outside the farm gate and greatly overestimate selling price and underestimate costs of doing business. The average retail price of beef is under €9/kg.
kerry cow wrote: » you should try calve a cow in the middle of the night , rare the cow and calf , carry the calf to 30 months and sell it at a loss . now tell me again how much larry losted last year , how many millon? , the poor fellow .
kerry cow wrote: » it's coming soon that farmers will stop rearing cattle , stop making fat cats out of the merc pilots . what are farmers to do . farm for a loss . maybe the ifa , creed and Teagasc , bord bia etc need to come clean . tell the farmers there's no money in beef , get out before he go broke . and the ifa can close shop . Teagasc can go back into there cave . bord bia won't be required any longer , thank God , talk about making a JOB for ones self , and creed show be voted out by the good people of cork .
yosemitesam1 wrote: » The problem is that far too many people have no idea of business outside the farm gate and greatly overestimate selling price and underestimate costs of doing business. The average retail price of beef is under €9/kg. How many people on here have ever actually gone out and tried to get a product on a shelf and claim market share. It's not very easy at a small scale let alone trying to shift volume in a weak/flooded market
yosemitesam1 wrote: » It's no one's divine right to earn a living doing whatever they want. Duck or dive... There was a great opportunity to look for a real alternative by looking for support for biodiversity/extensive systems. But everyone's too busy blaming the factories and retailers for their problems to use their heads and realise beef is in a very bad place at the minute and is unlikely to improve soon
handlemaster wrote: » https://www.irishtimes.com/news/politics/one-third-of-irish-farms-at-risk-in-no-deal-brexit-says-study-1.4020111?mode=amp As if you wanted proof alot of farmers should simply be doing some other type of work. The farming business is a loss maker. Sell trh land and invest else where
Robson99 wrote: » Maybe a couple of weeks boycotting the marts now instead of the factory gates. Factories have nothing much left in feed lots and would gave to pay for cattle through the gate
wrangler wrote: » Headline on the Irish Times No deal Brexit puts a third of farmers at risk They needn't worry, protestors will have them frigged before then
Keepgrowing wrote: » While I agree it can’t be done, how will the current protesters sell their weanlings.
Wanderer78 wrote: » sell land, you mad are mental! they aint making no more of it!
foundation10 wrote: » No show by minister at ploughing today, he says Dail business needs to be done instead!
High bike wrote: » busy clearing out his office before the Dail resumes and he gets his P45
High bike wrote: » foundation10 wrote: » No show by minister at ploughing today, he says Dail business needs to be done instead! busy clearing out his office before the Dail resumes and he gets his P45