Farmers need to shed the image of being overworked and underpaid

kiwi pom

Member
Location
canterbury NZ
Kate Miller: I Will Not Thank a Farmer
March 8, 2019 12:39 PM


Thank-You-Sign.jpg

A photo of a thank you sign at a Mexican restaurant.
© Kate Miller

TAGS: Marketing, Overseas
December 18, 2014
By AgWeb Guest Editor
AgWeb

Note: The opinions expressed in this commentary are those of Kate Miller, and do not necessarily represent the views of Drovers or Farm Journal.

I was dining alone at my favorite local Mexican restaurant. I was covered in mud because it hasn’t stopped raining in Arkansas since October. I was freezing because the heater quit working in the tractor mysteriously, and I misplaced the bungee cord that closes the farm truck door. As I was scrolling through social media, I could identify with the numerous posts from ranchers I saw who begrudgingly were fighting the elements, be it blizzards and record setting temperatures or this never-ending monsoon and mud in the south. There were multiple posts about “thanking a farmer.” After spending months, tied to a tractor and sick calves and worrying about weather, I could identify with wholly that sentiment.




Having finished my beef fajitas, I noticed a sign the owner had placed at the register. It read: “Please accept our sincere thanks for letting us serve you. We greatly appreciate the fact you have chosen to do business with us. And in return, we pledge our continuing efforts to offer you the best service possible”

It struck a nerve.

The owner of this establishment did not demand that I thank him for his efforts to produce this dinner. He thanked me for choosing to do business with him.

In my mind, I scrolled through the Twitter feed I had witnessed. For how long have we as the ag community demanded that our customers thank us? When was the last time we thanked them? Are we operating from a place of entitlement, where we believe that our professions are somehow sacrosanct in the scheme of the economic ecosystem?

But wait, we toil in the hot summer sun and the cold winter snow—every single day. Yes, but so do the oil derrick hands in Odessa, Texas. But we cannot skip a day because living beings rely on us. Yes, doctors face the same challenge. We work 24/7 and never get a day off—no one just gives me a salary! Yes, so do most entrepreneurs. Yes, but we are underpaid! Said everyone the whole world over.

Even within the industry, other segments of our own business do not take to the Twittersphere and demand praise and thanks. When was the last time you saw any one who worked in a plant demand to be thanked for the 12-hour shift on the debone line?

What is abjectly worse is that by our own admissions we feel that we farmers and ranchers are the most important members of the value chain—we criticize packers for their margins. We pay the vet bill, eventually. We mock consumers for their ignorance and again for the demands they make upon us. And then we turn around and have the audacity to ask everyone to thank us?

When was the last time we showed any appreciation to anyone who chose to do business with us? When was the last time we thanked a feeder or a packer or a distributor or a grocer?

By our own standards--if we are going to thank the farmer, we need to thank the pen rider who doctors sick cattle in heat and blizzards, right? We need to thank the veterinarian who amassed six-figure student loans to answer your call at 2 am because you can’t get one pulled. We need to thank the immigrant who feeds his family by spending 6 days a week surrounded by death, cutting the jugular of 1000 head a day. We need to thank the USDA inspector who earned a master’s degree to work in below freezing temperatures, who worries if another government shutdown will impede her salary.

We need to thank the line supervisor who can speak broken Spanish and Swahili and Burmese to make sure the job gets done right. What about thanking those same production line workers who do the same repetitive cut day after day after day? We need to thank the blast freezer fork lift operator who works alone at sub-zero every day of the year. We need to thank the truck driver who misses his son’s first t-ball game on a run to Amarillo. We need to thank the sales manager who takes the cussing from a chef and loses his bonus because of a rotten injection site lesion in a round because a rancher ignored Beef Quality Assurance (BQA). We need to thank the sales rep whose paycheck depends on the yield of brisket from week to week. We need to thank every single person who touches our product once it leaves our farms. We need to thank them for the work they do that makes our livelihood possible.

But mostly, we need to thank our customers. We need to thank the people who buy our product, who put their faith in the chain and decide to buy beef to serve their families. We need to thank a chef for serving beef in their restaurants. Instead of asking them to thank us for arguably doing our job, we need to thank them for giving the product we raise value. Without the customer putting beef in their shopping cart or without someone choosing as steak on a restaurant menu, we would cease to exist.

But the reality is as well without the pen rider, the vet, the packer, the line worker, the truck driver, the salesman, the marketer, the grocer---we would cease to exist as well. Cattlemen are a link in the chain, and some of us can argue that we are the endangered species in the ecosystem. (But anyone trying to hire an experienced meat cutter or a driver might argue differently.) The best way to preserve our way of life, the best way to ensure that cattle remain in our pastures is to make sure that beef remains on tables of consumers.

Everything else is noise. Everything else is shouting into the void. We can disagree on Checkoffs. We can disagree on Country of Origin Labeling. We can disagree on BQA. But at the end of the day—without the consumer—none of that matters.

I urge those of you who use social media to interface with the world at large to stop demanding that consumers heap thanks upon you. Instead take a moment to listen to their questions, to answer them without condescension or reproach, and then thank them for the opportunity to tell your story. Then thank them for their patronage, ask them how you can help them have a better beef experience and be a representative of your commodity. Check your entitlement. Start a dialogue. You never know, you might find that by extending grace to the community that supports you---you’ll find the appreciation that you seek.

Bio: Kate Miller is the managing partner for IMB Cattle Company, a third-generation ranch in Southern Arkansas which just celebrated its 51st anniversary. With over ten years in protein marketing including domestic and export sales, Kate continues to try and bridge the ever-widening gap between production agriculturalist, the food production industry and consumers.

That's very good(y)
Probably wont go down well on here though:unsure:
 
Location
Devon
He’s spot on - moaning never gets anyone anywhere

It’ make our industry look like spoilt kids who can’t get their own way

Henson is out of touch with reality on most farms across the UK and so I hate to say it but so are you Clive.

If grain fell to say £60t instead of the current £170t+ and you only income was from arable farming and not the many other non farming businesses that you have I don't think you would be anywhere near as chirpy as you currently are..
 

Clive

Staff Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lichfield
Henson is out of touch with reality on most farms across the UK and so I hate to say it but so are you Clive.

If grain fell to say £60t instead of the current £170t+ and you only income was from arable farming and not the many other non farming businesses that you have I don't think you would be anywhere near as chirpy as you currently are..

I’m not sure you know me well enough to judge if I’m out of touch or not ? We have never met, you have never visited my farm as far as I’m aware ? And you know nothing of how I spend my day

For what it’s worth I’ve actively run a farm fior 25 years now, I’ve lost money and I’ve made money farming, grown good crops and bad ones. Fought with wet years and dry years . I’ve done thousands of tractor hours and covered 100”s of thousabds of acres of various conbinable and root crops on just about every type of farm machine that exists .

The 21 years before that I grew up on a dairy / beef farm. Milked cows, fed beef, cut grass

Today I get to see other sides of our industry working with machinery and input manufacturers / service providers and even politicians

I’m not sure many have the experience of farming and ruinnng a farm that I do by the tender age of 46 I’ve probabaly only got another 40yrs farming left in me yet so still plenty of learning to do yet ......... but whatever

What good to you think moaning does ?
 
Last edited:
Location
Devon
I’m not sure you know me well enough to judge if I’m out of touch or not ? We have never met, you have never visited my farm as far as I’m aware ? And you know nothing of how I spend my day

What good to you think moaning does ?

Im not having a go at you and fair play for being able to run so many non AG businesses but for the vast majority of farmers it would be impossible to diversify like you and Henson have done!

As for the moaning, what do you want farmers to do? say things are great when they are not?? beef cattle are down in value in real terms by £240 head on 12 months ago, Sheep are down in value by £45 head in real terms on 12 months ago, egg prices have collapsed whilst feed prices have risen and you really want farmers to portray that things are great??
 

Clive

Staff Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lichfield
Im not having a go at you and fair play for being able to run so many non AG businesses but for the vast majority of farmers it would be impossible to diversify like you and Henson have done!

As for the moaning, what do you want farmers to do? say things are great when they are not?? beef cattle are down in value in real terms by £240 head on 12 months ago, Sheep are down in value by £45 head in real terms on 12 months ago, egg prices have collapsed whilst feed prices have risen and you really want farmers to portray that things are great??

My 6yr lad told me this morning ....

“Nothing is impossible daddy if you really want to do iit”.


You see life is mostly all about attitude !

Moaning is not an attitude that gets anyone anywhere
 
Location
Devon
My 6yr lad told me this morning ....

“Nothing is impossible daddy if you really want to do iit”.


You see life is mostly all about attitude !

Moaning is not an attitude that gets anyone anywhere

Nothing is impossible.

But things are tough going in many sectors in AG at the moment so its only natural for farmers to be down beat.

Its very easy to say farmers shouldn't be when you are not depending on or don't need the AG income from your farm to live on like is the case with Henson and yourself.

As an aside Arable farming was not affected anywhere near as bad as other sectors from last summers drought and certainly prices have not dropped for grain like they have for beef/sheep and eggs.

If arable prices crashed to say £60t but your rent/ inputs were the same or higher than when grain was £180t and your only income was from grain sales things wouldn't look anywhere near as rosy and there is no way you would be sending out positive vibes Clive.
 

Clive

Staff Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lichfield
Nothing is impossible.

But things are tough going in many sectors in AG at the moment so its only natural for farmers to be down beat.

Its very easy to say farmers shouldn't be when you are not depending on or don't need the AG income from your farm to live on like is the case with Henson and yourself.

As an aside Arable farming was not affected anywhere near as bad as other sectors from last summers drought and certainly prices have not dropped for grain like they have for beef/sheep and eggs.

If arable prices crashed to say £60t but your rent/ inputs were the same or higher than when grain was £180t and your only income was from grain sales things wouldn't look anywhere near as rosy and there is no way you would be sending out positive vibes Clive.

I certainly do need the ag income from my farm

And I don’t think my contract farm customers would be very impressed if I didn’t provide it for them either

Different sectors are up / down all the time - but long ago I believe milk was rather good at a time when grain wasn’t quite so ? Up horn down corn is nothing new ! Maybe you should consider the Stable price insurance being discussed on other threads here ?
 

mixed breed

Member
Mixed Farmer
I have my ups and downs but I'd like to think I don't moan too much and I hope it stays that way as time goes on.

A chap not far away has made a career of moaning and wastes no time in telling anyone who will listen how hard it is for him, the long hours, the harsh weather, the poor returns, the cow who sh1ts on him every milking time, no days off, no company pension etc etc etc

It's sad how folk can spend their life doing something they hate so much because "it's a way of life" or "they're born into it"
 

milkloss

Member
Livestock Farmer
Location
East Sussex
I have my ups and downs but I'd like to think I don't moan too much and I hope it stays that way as time goes on.

A chap not far away has made a career of moaning and wastes no time in telling anyone who will listen how hard it is for him, the long hours, the harsh weather, the poor returns, the cow who sh1ts on him every milking time, no days off, no company pension etc etc etc

It's sad how folk can spend their life doing something they hate so much because "it's a way of life" or "they're born into it"

Sometimes it’s hard to feel it’s another day in paradise when your knocking bills to one side when you’d rather not.
 

Kiwi Pete

Member
Livestock Farmer
He’s spot on - moaning never gets anyone anywhere

It’ make our industry look like spoilt kids who can’t get their own way
Work on your natural capital, rather than away from it

little point moaning how dear everything is but spending anyway

little point making work for yourself

I dunno, my soils are poor but improving, and it does alright.. but again the work I do is for natural capital gain - I think you and I are much alike, Clive
 

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