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You Gotta Make Hay While the Sun Shines
Nanaimo, Vancouver Island, Canada
While the escalating price of food is on just about everyone's mind these days, I thought I'd take the opportunity to show you where some of the costs come in.
My husband and I are small farmers here in Cedar, a small village outside of Nanaimo. While our main cash crop is high quality local hay any field crop would incur similar costs in fuel. In order to manage our small acreage we have had to invest in equipment, some new some used. The new carbon tax applies to diesel used for farm equipment as well as road vehicles. Fertilizer has escalated from about $500 per ton to over $1 000. The small hayfield in the photos easily takes three tons each spring. When jobs are too big for our farm equipment, a local person brings their equipment at $80 per hour but rates have to go up for him as well.
This year we were lucky with our timing and got the hay cut, baled and in the barn before the rain last night. Those who cut a day or so later than us believing the weather reports of no rain until Friday have soggy hay that will be of poor quality. They can't put it into their barns either because wet hay will heat up and burn the barn down.
I'm not complaining here mind you. We've chosen to farm after successful careers in the city. I just thought I'd remind you that when you look at the prices for farm products, the farmers have escalating costs as well.
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July 3, 2008 at 12:29 pm by Barbara McPherson, 259 views, 5 comments
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Comments (5)
at 12:35 on July 3rd, 2008
Barbara McPherson, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 12:54 on July 3rd, 2008
Barbara McPherson, I like this story. Thanks for the insight into the costs behind the food.
at 13:46 on July 3rd, 2008
Barbara McPherson, I like this story. It's good stuff.
It is nice to get a farmer's point of view. we are in a trasition period where a petrolium-based economy and means of production are slowly being shifted towards alternatives. I am sure that in the near future in addition to alternative fuel vehicles we will see alternative fuel industrial equipment as well as non-petrolium fertilizers. In the end, although the transistion will be difficult for some, we will have better food produced without polluting the environment that we count on to produce our food in the first place.
at 04:23 on July 4th, 2008
Barbara McPherson, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 18:18 on July 4th, 2008
What a beautiful old barn! The photo with the windmills must have been taken in Britain -- signs of the future.