Whanganui Chronicle

Make 2023 Year of Farmer

After a disappoint­ing showing for agricultur­e in the New Year’s Honours list, SALLY RAE explains why 2023 should be the Year of the Farmer.

- — Otago Daily Times

ISolutions require collaborat­ion — carrots, not canes — and regulation­s must be achievable, and involve proper consultati­on, proposals not solely dreamed up by city-based bureaucrat­s who have never set their squeaky-clean feet on a rural property and do not know a Hereford from a hogget.

n Chinese astrology, 2023 is the Year of the Rabbit. Probably not an animal Kiwi farming folk particular­ly want to celebrate given the damage caused by the prolific producing pest.

So perhaps New Zealand should adopt its own astrology calendar and make it the Year of the Farmer, a yearlong — and beyond — celebratio­n of our s food-producing champions.

Cast your mind over what is being served up to families in breakfast bowls and on dinner plates around the country this summer.

Cereal and fruit produced by a farmer or grower? Check. Left-over Christmas lamb sandwich? Check. Barbecue at the lake washed down with a craft beer? Check. Cream and kiwifruit-topped pavlova (if you were able to secure eggs)? Check.

And not forgetting the vegetarian and vegan diners: where do their plant-based choices come from?

Even that oat milk latte originated down on the farm.

As an aside, much plant-based “meat” is derived largely from imported pea protein, which comes with far more food miles than popping down to the local butchery, but I digress.

Let us not forget what side our bread is buttered on and how it was farming — not our previously greatly lauded tourism sector — that kept the economy ticking through the global uncertaint­y and disruption of Covid.

For me, the New Year’s Honours list was a disappoint­ment.

Not taking anything away from those fine individual­s whose contributi­on to the betterment of society was recognised, my dismay was at the lack of acknowledg­ement for those in the primary sector — the engine room of the economy.

Where were the plaudits for those who spend their days doing their best to create an environmen­tally and economical­ly sustainabl­e future for the industry?

Traditiona­lly, the lists of most unpopular profession­s have been the domain of second-hand car dealers, lawyers and journalist­s.

Farmers, in latter times, could well be forgiven for thinking they had also joined those lowly ranks.

As well as a celebratio­n of our food producers, may 2023 bring more cooperatio­n, collaborat­ion, communicat­ion and common bloody sense when it comes to the relationsh­ip between the Government and our rural sector.

In my view, 2022 was another year of angst and frustratio­n for farming folk, with more protests organised by farming advocacy group Groundswel­l New Zealand, in response to the raft of regulation­s.

Responding to the protests, Agricultur­e Minister Damien O’Connor — whose Twitter post of sitting astride his motorcycle amid pine trees after flying back from Apec in November was, in my view, ill-thought-out — said he wanted to see solutions, not slogans.

Solutions require collaborat­ion — carrots, not canes — and regulation­s must be achievable, and involve proper consultati­on, proposals not solely dreamed up by city-based bureaucrat­s who have never set their squeaky-clean feet on a rural property and do not know a Hereford from a hogget.

Some recognitio­n from the Beehive of the importance of the sector and acknowledg­ement of the hard mahi that goes on daily in the milking sheds, sheep yards, grain fields and processing plants around the country would not go astray.

Pride must be restored in being a farmer, otherwise there will be no incentive for the next generation — or even some of the current generation — to farm the land.

The urban sprawl — and a plethora of pine trees — will continue on some of the world’s best food-producing soils and New Zealand will be much the poorer for it, increasing­ly importing products from countries with far less stringent animal welfare controls.

That Kiwi staple of bacon and eggs might well become far less Kiwi — imported pork already makes up about 64 per cent of New Zealand’s consumptio­n — while the current egg shortage has been well documented.

So bugger the bunny. Let’s make 2023 the Year of the Farmer; remember synthetic is just a fancy word for plastic, so clothe your families and clad your homes in natural, sustainabl­e products, and support — and salute — your local food producers who are outstandin­g in their field year-round. Literally.

 ?? ?? Sally Rae is Otago Daily Times business and rural editor. She is a farmer’s daughter who eats meat and wears wool and knows the difference between the Hereford and a hogget.
Sally Rae is Otago Daily Times business and rural editor. She is a farmer’s daughter who eats meat and wears wool and knows the difference between the Hereford and a hogget.

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