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Irish Independent - Farming
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2018-12-04
Eye in the sky technology set to replace farm inspections
TB proposals will ‘stigmatise’ farmers and devalue stock
Production cuts needed to get beef prices back on track — ICSA
Department officials wash their hands of factories’ dirty sheep row
Live exporters target lift in shipments to North Africa
Food waste figures damaging our ‘green’ farming image
Laois farmers escalate their protests against Eirgrid project
Demands grow for new animal health probe in west Limerick
New year hike in relief milking costs for farmers
Whether it’s your time or money, give what you can this Christmas
‘I was told the queen was coming to tea’
Fertiliser deadline extension has paid impressive dividends
Why we need a radical and new approach to winter milk
Revamped diet going is down a treat with the cows and our balance sheet
Mayo lamb producer groups have stood the test of time
Bird damage main threat to what looks to be exceptional winter crops
Don’t get caught offside by planning laws’ fine detail
EU trade deal carve-up on quotas ‘dangerous’ for farmers, warns Carthy
It’s time for us to ditch the ‘moaning farmer’
Carbon-neutral targets up the ante on agriculture
UK’S BREXIT LABOUR FEAR
Image and embrace change
Bayer cutting 12,000 jobs and exiting animal health business
Horse sector faces labour crisis
SCHEME PROVIDING THE PERFECT SPRINGBOARD FOR HORSE ENTHUSIASTS
Shortage of supply drives prices upward
More slippage as confidence drains from the market
IN THE KNOW
Grim outlook as factories turn screw
Chain reaction
Casting the net wider in quest for optimum ewe productivity
Charolais season ends on a high
Busy weekend of society shows
Pedigree sale turns into a real ‘cracker’
The fuel-consumption-friendly hi-tech Case IH model was a double winner at the 2019 Tractor of the Year awards, writes
Take the plunge in Wicklow
Coastal holding guided at €7,000/ac
Farm fetches €825,000 in tit-for-tat Tipp auction battle
On the right track for €1.75m
Josephine adds leader award to MACRA haul
Ignore history and the past will come back to haunt us
Music with Eddie Rowley
ALL OVER EUROPE,THERE SEEMS TO BE FAILURE OF HISTORICAL MEMORY AND A FAILURE TO RECOGNISE SIGNS OF DANGER, THE KIND THAT WENT UNRECOGNISED IN THE 1920S AND 1930S
‘What happens if we end up with a milk lake after all this expansion?’
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Irish Independent - Farming - 2018-11-27
Irish Independent - Farming - 2018-12-11