• steeznson@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    My dad’s family used to have a dairy farm. There was one point in time, like 100 years ago, where they rivalled Wiseman’s for distribution in Scotland. However my uncle took it over in the late 70s and gradually made bad decisions with regards to running it. I think it was ok for a while because the long standing managers were on top of everything but when they retired everything became more chaotic. My poor uncle probably should have gone into academia as opposed to business since he’s neurodivergent* and not particularly practically minded but his brothers had left to start careers in other professions, so I think he felt the mantle had fallen to him.

    From what I can tell it was kind of inertia that completely killed the business. With supermarkets charging less and less for milk, the old way of operating a dairy farm as a regular business is not really viable. Successful farmers these days don’t just do produce; they do open days and sell “country experiences” to punters who crave some kind of rural nostalgia. You pretty much have to be half farm and half events agency providing organised fun to school/office groups or families.

    *From what I understand, they didn’t really have the vocabulary to recognise this in the 70s. Family thought he was bright but eccentric.

    • jabjoe@feddit.uk
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      21 hours ago

      Agreed, but the problem is butter is really nice. We want something as good, or better, that doesn’t use so much land and water create so much CO2 (well CO2e).

      • Jerkface (any/all)@lemmy.ca
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        6 hours ago

        We already have butter free of animal products that tastes and functions just the same. It’s probably in your supermarket, no Bill Gates required. You don’t use it because you don’t particularly care about committing cruelty and violence to vulnerable individuals living in atrocity. I don’t use it because it’s still not good for you.

        • MouldyCat@feddit.uk
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          3 hours ago

          This really depends on where you live. I didn’t realise how spoilt I was living in Berlin until I moved away. Vegan butter that is as good as actual butter is widely available there, at about the same price - albeit unsalted.

          I’m now in France, where big supermarkets often have a whole row of fridges dedicated to butter, and I’ve not as yet even seen one place selling any kind of modern vegan butter. I think it was the same story in Spain too, although I wasn’t staying in large cities there.

          I’ve tried a range of different vegan butters while I’ve been at home in the UK and they all just taste like margarine. France I can understand, as they have a big dairy culture (no pun intended - that would be too cheesy), but I’m at a loss to explain why the good stuff isn’t widely available in the UK as the demand is there.

        • jabjoe@feddit.uk
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          3 hours ago

          Have used it actually, but it’s not as good. Also we know some dairy farming families and they aren’t torturing their herd. Though you are right, I don’t really care about the fate of them. As long as their isn’t real sadistic cruelty. In that instance, I worry more about what it says about the people.

          I’m far more interested in the environmental impact. I can’t seam to digest meat substitutes (even when they are meant to be coeliac safe). We make a point of restraining our beef consumption due to the environmental impact, as it’s the worse meat impact wise. I’d jump on lab meat and milk.

  • Fedegenerate@lemmynsfw.com
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    21 hours ago

    There isn’t a worker shortage, there’s a compensation benefit shortage.

    You offer six figure, part-time contracts and the applications will come flooding in. Offer enough to get the number of applicants you want.

    • tetris11@feddit.uk
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      23 hours ago

      Farmers and field-hands never have been a rich bunch, most of them literally just get by.

      Field-hands have traditionally been undocumented workers willing to work for cheap with free room and board. They work dusk till dawn, have dinner with the farmer, and sleep in the farmers basement or unused shack. The farmer pays them under the table with cash, and they leave after harvest is done a few weeks later.

      Many parts of southern Germany still operate on cheap summer workers from Bulgaria.

      It’s not a compensation issue, it’s a lack of migrants issue due to the UK’s new found sense of xenophobia.

  • StinkyFingerItchyBum@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    Dairy Farmers: “We can’t find anyone who wants to work hard and try, but fail to survive on these unsurvivable compensation levels”.

  • Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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    2 days ago

    Sure I like cheese as much as the next person but its hardly critical to food security.

    If you are struggling to find staff, then answer this: Why would I want to work for you?

    • HumanPenguin@feddit.uk
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      2 days ago

      If milk disappears. You will wake up to us old tea drinking zombies trying to eat brains.

      Just a warning.

      Tea with real milk is still one of the most popular drinks in the UK. Just not for youngsters.

      Milk alternatives are still low sales compared to real milk. Even as popular as they have grown.

      Edit: I’ll add. We actually import the majority of cheese from Ireland. We do make our own. But milk is the main product of UK diaries. As it is still cheaper to transport shorter distance then any secondary dairy products. Cheese butter etc. so supermarkets tend to stay as local as possible for such short storage projects.

      • saqib-abbas153@kbin.life
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        1 day ago

        If milk disappears. You will wake up to us old tea drinking zombies trying to eat brains.

        Just a warning.

        Tea with real milk is still one of the most popular drinks in the UK. Just not for youngsters.

        Milk alternatives are still low sales compared to real milk. Even as popular as they have grown.

        Edit: I’ll add. We actually import the majority of cheese from Ireland. We do make our own. But milk is the main product of UK diaries. As it is still cheaper to transport shorter minecraft 1.21 download apk distance then any secondary dairy products. Cheese butter etc. so supermarkets tend to stay as local as possible for such short storage projects.

        Ça ressemble à un souci matériel sur la manette, possiblement lié au module sans fil. Un test sur une autre console pourrait confirmer.

      • Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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        2 days ago

        Sure alternatives are less popular but if cows milk goes up in price then it makes alternatives more appealing.

        I don’t see running out being a likely risk tbh.

        • HumanPenguin@feddit.uk
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          2 days ago

          Agreed. Running out wise.

          But the taste of the alternatives is simply not milk. Many find alternatives unpleasent. So their will always be a demand.

          But yeah that demand is currently artificially high due to low pricing by supermarkets/delivery competition.

          The whole thing is making things hard for dairy farms. Not just staffing that is more to do with the pricing.

          But the whole supermarkets avoiding uK providers for cheese etc.

            • HumanPenguin@feddit.uk
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              1 day ago

              Simple lack of a regular supply is a food security issue.

              It has to be replaced and ensuring the alternative exist is an issue that takes land and effort.

              At a time when farms harvest have failed. Alternatives also have issues.

              Stop looking for reasons not to care.

              You clearly lack any understanding of food supply.

              It takes 4 to 6 months to grow a new crop. Not to mention free growing land is hardly available.

              Add to that a couple of years to expand current production facilities. No a huge source of current protine is in no way instantly replaceable with plant milk.

              Historically yes taste has negative affects on citizens health. Look at WW2 war history of trying to force replace products in the past. You cannot force folks to consume things they dislike health is lost historically. Even in a war setting it has issues.

              It takes huge time and investment and yes societies health is seriously effected by refusal to accept the replacement.

              Your attitude seems childish in many ways. Based entirely on your own perceived importance of a high Y used product. With no understating of what is involved in actually replacing such products. Or what happens to non milked cows if dairly farms fail.

              I have no issue with blaming those responsible. But yes any lose of a hugely used food source is a seriose issue.

  • CompactFlax@discuss.tchncs.de
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    2 days ago

    Are they complaining they can’t find people to work a split shift, milking and feeding? Automated milking parlours are a thing. Automated feed, water. Just check on them daily.

    But nobody wants a zero hour contract with an average of 1hr a day to do that, so is that what they’re complaining about?