Farming’s Boom years.

Kevtherev

Member
Location
Welshpool Powys
Evening all.
Talking to a chap today about farming changes and how we’ve seen massive progress since the 60s-70s in both crops machinery and livestock.
Farming was at its very pinnacle in the 80s-90s with some very successful farming families and that’s what made me think.
Farming’s boom years and will we see a time like that again?
Pic for attention
3A49BF06-42F2-4F78-AAE2-9FF6BDE3C2FA.jpeg
 

Laggard

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Suffolk
In the good potato years of 1976/77 my dad bought a new tractor , new potato harvester & swapped his 2 yo car without any finance . Potatoes reached £400t (£2,300 today adjusted for inflation) .

We had lots of potatoes in 1976 and my grandfather told my dad that it was once in a lifetime. I was 3 at the time, looking forward to my “ once in a lifetime”. If it could hurry up please....
 
Evening all.
Talking to a chap today about farming changes and how we’ve seen massive progress since the 60s-70s in both crops machinery and livestock.
Farming was at its very pinnacle in the 80s-90s with some very successful farming families and that’s what made me think.
Farming’s boom years and will we see a time like that again?
Pic for attention
3A49BF06-42F2-4F78-AAE2-9FF6BDE3C2FA.jpeg

MF didn’t have a lot to answer that did they?
 

DrWazzock

Member
Arable Farmer
Location
Lincolnshire
Damage limitation nowadays. How can I farm without x y z? A gradual knocking away of the props.
Emphasis changed from boosting yields to trying to retain what we’ve got and cutting costs.
All sorts of not very exciting enviro schemes.
A bit of a quandary really. Only a big external event might shake things up, probably something old fashioned and simple like more widespread drought globally.
 

yellowbelly

Member
Livestock Farmer
Location
N.Lincs
Farming’s boom years and will we see a time like that again?
I sincerely hope so but fear us older 'uns probably won't.

Looking back, from the mid 70's to the mid 80's, the farming community was at the centre of 'the perfect storm'.

Borrowing money was costing us 18% but inflation was rampant so it didn't really matter.
Before entry into the EEC corn was £18 to £20 a ton. When we went in, it was suddenly £30. Within a couple of years it was £60. Inputs hadn't caught up (they soon did). Tractors and machinery were relatively cheap. Farmers were trading good, low houred tractors in - all but one of these were bought secondhand...

28.jpg

.......we farmed every acre. No set-a-side, no 2m/6m strips, no environmental crap.
Farmers were having a good time, so us contractors were too. Every new machine we bought could earn more than we paid for it in the first year.

Happy days :love:
Feel very lucky to have started in business in that era.
 

bluebell

Member
no, back then in the 1960s till the late 1970s, farmers were important parts of the village life at all levels, not any more ? their numbers and influence has deminshed markedly over the years ? watching last nights countryfile it seems a young lady straight out of university has more power influence in the running, control of the countryside and its use , im referrring to the flooding management or lack of it ?
 

redsloe

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Cornwall
In the good potato years of 1976/77 my dad bought a new tractor , new potato harvester & swapped his 2 yo car without any finance . Potatoes reached £400t (£2,300 today adjusted for inflation) .

We did too and dad bought 3 tractors. They cost less than 4k each. I want to know what he did with the rest of it!
I don't think we can complain much about the last 10 years personally.
 

Henarar

Member
Livestock Farmer
Location
Somerset
The last 10 years have been good, fear it may be going down hill now though
We are not wanted which is fair enough I spose, everyone is going to grow what they need in their window box and up the side of their house apparently, or is it in another country where it don't do any harm cos that is a different world so it don't matter
 

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