Have you ever been a farmer? Do you make your observations thru experience, or imagination,?.
Have you ever been a farmer? Do you make your observations thru experience, or imagination,?.
Not really a crisis......
Given we export 70% of our beef it’s all about the dollar.....running cattle on country that that isn’t sustainable year on year you need a lot of luck on your side.
Farmer friends of mine say it risk v reward......
Not according to the RFDS. Life on the land has always been risk V reward. It takes a special person to stick it out. [edit] The RFDS saved my Mother, and my Brothers life 63 years ago, in Ilfracombe, during a difficult birth. Mum died on the 8th of May, this year, aged 91. A thank you card has been sent to RFDS, relating that story. The overriding memory of my time out west as a kid is the smell of rotting sheep, during the big drought during the 50's. And then is the memory of the major floods, when we almost ran out of food, Dad saddled the horse and packhorse and rode across a couple of flooded creeks, plus a flooded river, all night to get food for us. There is more, but you get the drift.
Royal Flying Doctor Service warns rural mental health services in 'crisis' - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
It is very difficult to compare from memory. Whether it will be as bad or worse will ultimately depend on how long it lasts.
I can only speak about the local situation. The river (Talbragar) is the lowest I have ever seen it, my dam is the lowest I have ever seen it. The problem is not only that there has been no substantial rain since January, but that February, March, and April, and to some extent May, were abnormally hot as well as dry and often with strong, dry winds.
I think this one has come on a lot quicker than the millennial drought.
It is quite variable though. A few weeks ago I drove to Molong and was perturbed by how bad the country looked - then I drove back to Dubbo through Yeoval rather than the Mitchell Hwy, and was horrified by how much worse it looked along there. There is still a fair bit of water in the major dams, so at the moment irrigators are OK - but getting worried!
The irrigators I just worked for during the last couple of months are very worried. Their allocation comes from Copeton Dam, which is at extremely low level now, and unlikely to release anything before some substantial inflow comes in.
They only put in about 80 ha of wheat (good years, usually about 450 ha irrigated, and 1000 or so dryland), and only had enough stored water to irrigate about 3/4 of it. If no follow-up rain, that will result in a total loss. No summer harvest (the window for planting the seed varieties they have on hand, is shrinking rapidly), means no employment for the people they usually hire during that harvest, also no machinery/vehicle upgrades, so less work for those dealerships and workshops in town. The knock-on effects of a bad season are huge in regional towns. Increasing unemployment, with all the associated problems that brings, as well as increased family breakdowns, domestic violence, suicides, etc. None of that fixed by "unsuccessful" farmers leaving the land.
They're old dairy farms and I'd guess that they're on the market because on their own they're not large enough to be financially viable.
I'd guess that the reference to cattle cf dairy is to fattening or agisting store stock, not breeding.
Edit: yes, I grew up on a farm.