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Wednesday 8 February 2012
PERTH FARMER Ian Duncan Millar has become the most recent recipient of the prestigious Ed Rainy Brown Memorial Award.
SCOTLAND’S DRIVE to plant more trees may be unpopular with farming’s old guard – but the many potential new entrants to our farming sector might feel more open-minded to the idea after this week.
WHILE SCOTTISH farm income figures issued this week by the Scottish Government paint a picture of positive growth in Scottish farming, the ‘F-factor’ – soaring prices for feed, fuel and fertiliser – are a major concern.
SCOTLAND’S SPECIALIST beef units fared badly in the Farm Business Income figures released this week, with an alarming 14% income drop – so its high time the sector got itself organised to better represent its producers in the political arena.
HOPE WAS renewed for the Scottish sheep sector this week as the Scottish Government obtained a commitment from Europe to begin dialogue on EID ‘flexibilities’.
HUGH DUNCAN, a farmer and Highland Pony breeder from Craignetherty Farm, Netherdale, Turriff, was awarded the Queens’ Police Medal in the recent Honours List, in recognition of his long service as a special constable – only the second time in history a ‘special’ has been given the QPM.
THE POPULATION of Scotland – not just its farmers – can now go online and have their say on the European Commission’s proposals for the future of the Common Agricultural Policy.
MAN-MADE AIR pollution from as far away as North America causes Europe to lose 1.2 million tonnes of wheat a year, a new study has warned.
TWO YOUNG Scots shepherds have just returned from a trip of a lifetime to New Zealand – and will soon be regaling the National Sheep Association’s Scottish region AGM with tales of their travels.
ANY SUSPECT cases of the Schmallenberg disease found in Scotland will go straight to the country’s livestock disease gurus at the Moredun Research Institute.
ANYONE LOOKING for funding for a short term agricultural learning project is being encouraged to apply for a Moredun Scholarship Award before applications closes at the end of February.
WHEN BAA’s planned expansion of Edinburgh Airport was a very imminent threat to the Royal Highland and Agricultural Society’s Ingliston home, it formulated a ‘plan B’ – buy a chunk of the neighbouring Norton Mains farm, and move the showground lock, stock and barrel across the A8.
SCOTLAND’S FARMERS need a more flexible payment system for their future support arrangements, to mitigate the likely complicating effects of CAP reform.
AFTER MUCH talk and counter-talk, the Scottish Agricultural College and the University of the West of Scotland have officially launched their new £81 million Riverside Campus in Ayr.
THE SCOTTISH Farmer’s ‘12 days of Christmas’ competition attracted nearly 6000 entries from all over the country – and this week, we announce the winners.
TRAINEE AUCTIONEER Stuart Slesser has won a top award for being the best student in Scotland and the north of England.
SCOTLAND’S FARMERS have been urged to be on the alert following the news that a new disease – affecting both cattle and sheep – has entered the UK.
EU PLANS to compensate farmers affected by international trade deals – most pressingly the imminent agreement with South America’s beef-producing Mercosur bloc – are a “poisoned chalice” and should be rejected.
SUPERMARKETS WERE in the firing line again this week on two fronts – a call for the European Union to recognise the farm safety problems caused by supermarket price pressure, and a demand for more urgency from the UK Government in bringing in a “watchdog’” to rein in their power.
STIRLINGSHIRE FARMER John Christie and his family had a lucky escape from this massive blaze at West Carse Farm, Kippen, which ripped through his hay barn coming far too close to the farmhouse for comfort.
LAST WEEK it was the Germans making a move on the UK dairy sector – this week it is the Irish, with United Dairy Farmers, the Belfast-based dairy farmer-owned co-operative, announcing plans to expand its interests here.
FEARS OF an EU-wide ban on rat poison have proven entirely unfounded – and the MEP that stoked those fears has been taken to task for his “scaremongering”.
A NEW service to record incidents of sheep worrying by dogs has been put in place by the National Sheep Association.
FRANCE HAS held firm in its opposition to Monsanto’s genetically modified MON 810 maize – and the agri-chemical multinational has admitted defeat.
RESEARCH INTO the risk of E.coli O157 in the countryside has revealed that some areas have a higher prevalence of the disease – including Grampian, where the risk of falling ill was four times higher than a comparable area in North Wales.
A SECOND Lanarkshire gamekeeper has been convicted of possessing the banned pesticide carbofuran.
FARMERS HAVE only a few months left before the old tax allowances on capital expenditure are removed – so if a big plant or machinery purchase is needed, now is the time to make it.
PLANS TO increase the international reach of the Scottish Agricultural College have taken a step forward with the signing of a ‘Memorandum of Understanding’ between it and Brazil’s agricultural research corporation, EMBRAPA.
Will Defra fight for Scotland in the CAP reform negotiation?