Search Site   
Current News Stories
Take time to squish the peas and have a good laugh
By mid-April, sun about 70 percent of the way to summer solstice
Central State to supervise growing 
African heritage crops on farms in Ohio
Bird flu now confirmed on dairy farms in 6 states
Work begins on developing a farm labor pipeline to ease shortages
Celebration of Modern Ag planned for the National Mall
University of Illinois students attend MANRRS conference in Chicago
Biofuels manufacturers can begin claiming carbon credits in 2025
Farm Foundation names latest Young Agri-Food Leaders cohort
Ohio Farm Bureau members talk ag with state legislators
March planting report verifies less corn will be planted
   
News Articles
Search News  
   

Former Hoosier dairy farmer laments oversupply & losses

 

Dear Editor:

 

(Concerning the letter to the editor from Wayne Prichard on dairy in the May 9 Farm World), Just an amen and Hallelujah. To increase milk production prices by control production is just common sense. Why work 16-hour days seven days a week when you barely cover expenses.

The family dairy farm had production records from past years, and easy adjustment to control production. These mega dairies are producing the oversupply of milk with no controls of production, just add 1,000 more cows.

We were with Dairy Farmers of America Cooperative that was to look out for the interest of farmers. Why those leaders could not see this mess coming with no control over the mega operations.

The cooperatives sold the small dairy down the drain. They set up the Equity Program, taking a portion of milk check according to production to help operate on. Then when you quit milking, it takes 10 years to get your money back.

Our dairy was three generations for 75 years, a 70-cow dairy with excellent quality premiums. The land was rolling, ideal for dairy, lots of pasture and good hay production. We raised all feed except grain in parlor.

We were the last dairy to go down in our county. Leaving the only dairy in our area so hauling was $2 a hundred. A sad day for the community when you are left to seek income elsewhere to live and pay your taxes.

Jerry Hon

Florence, Ind.

6/14/2018