mf240 wrote: » Get rid of it alltogether. Let the market dictate the price and let those of us who can hack it rise to the top. Let the complainers and whingers either up their game or fall back on the social welfare system and not be sitting on land that should be farmed. Let the pen pushers in the department be redeployed to build the reputation of this island and scrutinise every morsel that is imported.
bob charles wrote: » As I always said I would love to see SFP gone, but my business would also be gone with it even though I dont claim SFP, beef farming would be finished over night as its such a subsidized system as it currently stands. beef would have to be near €6 to make it pay for everyone in the line
Timmaay wrote: » Have a f*&ker of a heifer at the minute that is almost impossible to milk! She calved a week or so early, has tiny teats so the clusters wont stay on her, and she kicks non stop, so between the two of theses its taken me 10mins or so last few days to milk anything from her! Kicking bar isn't ideal at all with her, she wasn't too bad with it yesterday, but went mental this morning with it on and went down in the parlour, I had some job taking off the bar then as she couldnt getup with it on. Used a rope around the outside leg across the rump bar then, helped abit but she still kicks like crazy with the other leg. Driving me fecking mental, worst heifer I've had in a long time for poor temperament! Any other suggestions to help keep her calm!
Juniorhurler wrote: » Nobody wants the likes of you to give up your sfp delaval. You earn it by working. It is the ones who earned it ten years ago and do nothing but submit maps now are the problem.
delaval wrote: » Vice grip high and tight on tail if not burgers you will miss a start or another problem looking after her. The thoughts of milking her will eventually put you off milking, seriously vice grip let me know how it goes
Manoffeeling wrote: » That could be you when you hit 50 and the chaps all gone, and you sick to the hole of lambing ewes with that German virus thing or maybe you bought a hard calving bull and can't face anymore, or maybe bad sowing and harvest conditions. Yeah maybe when you get enough hardship you might say to yourself, "I'll have more out of it if I lodge the maps and spend nothing". No point in being a busy fool.
farmerjack wrote: » +1 on the vice grips only job, clamp it on leave her for a minute and then attach the cluster, it's saving me a lot of hassle this year.
mf240 wrote: » I can see your point but take any other business model, say a small hardware shop in a local town. The owner has worked hard all his life and wants to retire, now he can sell it, lease it or give it to a son or daughter. If he was able to fill in a form that meant he could recieve an income because he worked hard 20 years ago he could just leave the shop there as a hobby and open for a couple of hours a day. This would mean that new blood would be kept out and the shop would be unproductive(ring any bells?)
whelan1 wrote: » lovely day here, hope i dont shoot myself in the foot by saying spring is here
whelan1 wrote: » was looking at the farming weather there, its looking good:D
whitebriar wrote: » Certainly great drying in the next 7 days with a strong very cold ese wind. No growth though with harsh night frosts inland especially from midweek onwards and daytime temps in the East and midlands only about 5c at best by then. Soil temps will take a severe knocking.
Chiliroses wrote: » It will be great to get some dry weather for a change, this rain is tough on sheep!
bbam wrote: » Feck the sheep, it's tough on me !
whelan1 wrote: » badly needed here to dry out the land a bit