Bbc news now ,the wheat shortage

glasshouse

Member
Location
lothians
On now
IMG_1270.jpeg
 
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Two Tone

Member
Mixed Farmer
OMG!
What a load of Rubbish!
So the wheat that has been harvested so far this year is not good enough quality.
Meaning they are having to import it from Germany and Canada.
Hopefully regenerative farming will get yields to recover.

FFS!
How many times do we see something on the Beeb we actually know something about and it is is not only wrong, but the truth is completely the reverse?
 
So we'll import what we need, and tick the relevant boxes for winter bird seed, trees, BNG and carbon?

There's a slight problem with that. Most of the EU has swallowed the same Net Zero pill and is decimating its agricultural base. And we can no longer rely on Ukraine, formerly the bread basket of the eastern states. Theres' a little 'local disturbance' going on.

Perhaps China will oblige. They seem to be providing every bloody thing else.
 

DrWazzock

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lincolnshire
What people can’t seem to understand is that climate change is already reducing yields and that rather than reduce them further by all sorts of greening rubbish and regulations we should be endeavouring to maintain or increase production, maybe even reopen intervention type stores to carry us through a failed harvest and smooth out supply issues. People laugh at this but it’s ironic that through times of plenty we had such stores but now when things are more precarious we have next to nothing in reserve.
 

bluebell

Member
How much wheat in money is in a loaf of bread? I bet the packaging costs more? So my point is even if the wheat doubled in price, the amount of wheat that makes up the total retail price after everyone has had their cut is a fraction? More scaremongering same as potato cost of chrisps is marginal\\\\\\\\/
 

Bury the Trash

Member
Mixed Farmer
Not really that much mention from the miller that wheat price has more or less halved in 2 years either.
Power/fuel cost s up for production and transport out i suppose, and general costs and they haven't had the bps eitheror any other of the so name area based sub since about 1992 or whatever.
Best way is to grow it yourself and mill mix your own that's the only way about one of the last remain Pig farms around here survived ,oh well actually they had the sub as well over their fair sized land area which would also grow wheat luckily.
all the small land acreage ones (Pigs) stopped about 25 yrs ago or so,.
Sheep /cattle feed uses more barley still quite dear though i concede,that and imported bits and bobs....
 
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yoki

Member
maybe even reopen intervention type stores to carry us through a failed harvest and smooth out supply issues.
It's a sound idea.

But firstly, it would need a different name given the abomination that our previous "intervention" turned in to.

Secondly, public sector now seems incapable of running anything even vaguely efficiently or competently.

Good idea for a conglomerate of grain growers and millers surely?

If they could agree!
 

texelburger

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Herefordshire
OMG!
What a load of Rubbish!
So the wheat that has been harvested so far this year is not good enough quality.
Meaning they are having to import it from Germany and Canada.
Hopefully regenerative farming will get yields to recover.

FFS!
How many times do we see something on the Beeb we actually know something about and it is is not only wrong, but the truth is completely the reverse?
And the imported won't be traceable back to farm of origin and will be unassured 😡😡
 

Two Tone

Member
Mixed Farmer
How much wheat in money is in a loaf of bread? I bet the packaging costs more? So my point is even if the wheat doubled in price, the amount of wheat that makes up the total retail price after everyone has had their cut is a fraction? More scaremongering same as potato cost of chrisps is marginal\\\\\\\\/
With wheat at about £200/tonne, about 8p/loaf.

The most expensive bit of a loaf of bread is the energy needed to bake it.
 

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Fields to Fork Festival 2025 offers discounted tickets for the farming community.

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The Fields to Fork Festival celebrating country life, good food and backing British farming is due to take over Whitebottom Farm, Manchester, on 3rd & 4th May 2025!

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Alexander McLaren, Founder of Fields to Fork Festival says “British produce and rural culture has never needed the spotlight more than it does today. This festival is our way of celebrating everything that makes...
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