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IFA warns of ‘catastrophic harvest’ 21.08.08

Story: Inishowen Independent

INISHOWEN IFA chairman George O’Hagan has warned that local farmers face a catastrophic harvest unless the weather breaks very soon.
“It has been an exceptionally wet summer and farmers are experiencing a lot of pain at the moment,” Mr O’Hagan said. “Every sector is affected and it’s very depressing because there’s not a thing we can do about the weather.”
Many farmers have borrowed substantial sums to finance their operations, and unless yields are good they could find themselves in financial difficulty for years to come – or out of business altogether.
“Livestock farmers find themselves in an awful quandary,” Mr O’Hagan said. “The ground is so soft that cattle can’t stand on it without damaging the grass. Farmers have to either cut their losses and sell their livestock before they’re ready, or house them which is prohibitively expensive at this time of year.”
The outlook is equally bleak for potato farmers. “This is dangerous weather for blight but farmers can’t get into their wet field to spray the crop. Potato farmers invest up to €1,000 per acre and no business could afford to sustain such losses.”
Feedstuffs for livestock will also be severely affected. Most farmers have been unable to get their ‘second cut’ of silage, while grain crops across the country have been battered by rain and wind.
“The grain crop looked so good earlier in the summer and we were hoping for a bumper harvest to drive down grain prices that have been at historically high levels,” Mr O’Hagan concluded. “But unless there’s a big change soon, farmers will face massive feed costs this winter.”
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