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| Fifteen15 |
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 Fifteen15 World Chat Champion

Joined: 25 Apr 2011 Karma :    
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 Posted: 16:16 - 25 Dec 2012 Post subject: Any farmers on here? |
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I'm 20, and I'm working at Tesco part time with not as many hours as I would like, and not as much money as I would like. I won't be climbing the ladder, I'm not that type of person. Basically it's dead end. As for finding another job, I REALLY don't know what I want to do. I feel like I'll be stuck in a dead end job all my life.
My uncle has a small farm he's running alone. He's getting on 60 and he's looking for someone to train up to take over when he pops his clogs. He has no kids, so everything will go to me and my sister when he eventually drops, including the farm.
I'm thinking of going part time with him, so Tesco 3 days a week, the farm 2-3 days a week, and if I like it, I would eventually jack Tesco in.
I know it's going to be HARD work and long hours, and I know I'm going to have to change my ways big time. I'm a 'city boy', love my computers, spend a lot of time indoors etc but I spent a lot of the time when I was young on the farm and I LOVE the environment. I love the whole idea of it, so it's not just something that I have no interest in. I also know in the future it doesn't look too good for small farms, a lot are struggling and being bought out by bigger farms.
Just looking for the opinions of the wise men of BCF. This just seems like a too good a opportunity to miss because I feel like I'm in a bit of a hole atm. ____________________ "Pain is weakness leaving the body, and blood makes the grass grow faster...but I'll wear my gear anyway" |
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| mistergixer |
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 mistergixer World Chat Champion

Joined: 15 Jun 2005 Karma :   
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 Posted: 16:24 - 25 Dec 2012 Post subject: |
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No direct experience, but, if you can make a living out of it, good luck to you.
What does the farm produce? Is there something you could concentrate on and make a 'niche' product? ____________________ Space Monkey #7
Don Eladio is dead. His capos are dead. You have no one left to fight for. Fill your pockets and leave in peace. Or fight me and die!
Mistergixer's videos on YouTube |
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| The Artist |
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 The Artist Super Spammer

Joined: 06 Jan 2008 Karma :  
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| N cee thirty |
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 N cee thirty Banned

Joined: 31 Jan 2010 Karma :     
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| ocatoro |
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 ocatoro World Chat Champion

Joined: 06 Sep 2012 Karma :  
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 Posted: 21:10 - 25 Dec 2012 Post subject: |
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we used to have a farm... worst thing ever selling it.
if it's a milk farm, think about changing to sheep or something else.
we had sheep and oats on our farm and the money was ridiculous for the amount of work.
basically 3 months work through the winter when they were indoors for lambing (and a couple days in summer shearing and dipping) and we turned over 70-80grand on just lambs.
also great place to raise kids and make a life. can still do all your city boy things too without issue. ____________________ CBT - 17/09/12 * Theory - 23/10/12 * Mod1 - 05/03/13 * Mod2 - 25/03/13 * BOSH!
Current - None but shed project H100 (first bike )
Past - ER5, '93 ZZR600, '92 CB400 SF, ZZR600 (again), yellow Monster 620, Blackbird - black Monster 620ie - '96 ZZR600 |
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| delvey91 |
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 delvey91 Crazy Courier

Joined: 05 Aug 2008 Karma :  
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| Frog |
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 Frog Traffic Copper

Joined: 10 Jan 2011 Karma :   
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 Posted: 21:45 - 25 Dec 2012 Post subject: |
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As a few have mentioned, you're never away from the farm if you have animals.
How about staying on at Tesco and helping out before or after work, or at weekends? That'll give you a better idea of how you'll like it when you're shattered etc.
As Octavo and The Artist have mentioned, it's not something you go into for the money, but if you enjoy hard work and the satisfaction that comes from farming, then it could be for you.
If it is for you, working the hours outside your Tesco work shouldnt be a problem while you make your mind up.
Oh, and good luck either way  ____________________ CBT 23/09/10 - Theory 19/03/11 - Mod1 19/04/11 - Mod2 06/05/11
Bikes: CBF125 (sold 30/10/10-25/09/12) - CB400 24/06/11 (broken) - ER6-f 25/09/2012  |
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| orac |
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 orac World Chat Champion
Joined: 25 Sep 2011 Karma :   
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| andy_uk |
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 andy_uk World Chat Champion

Joined: 13 Aug 2011 Karma :   
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| woll |
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 woll World Chat Champion

Joined: 01 May 2010 Karma :   
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 Posted: 00:21 - 28 Dec 2012 Post subject: |
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Ignore the artist... He has done some work on farms not a great deal though, he liked getting sacked, liked to be late most of all liked breaking expensive equipment.
There used to be a few farmers on here. Can't recall the names besides myself and rob fzs. Although strictly speaking i'm no longer a farmer. Don't let anything put you off. If you've got good work ethic it's not as bad as people make out. Yes they can be long hours doing hard work all day. But then there can be times when you don't have much to do.
I worked on a dairy farm for 6 years. My boss was a lazy cnut. He used to spend his days playing golf, rugby, cricket or swanning about in his new cars. Don't let anybody tell you there's no money in farming. Being a self employed farm labourer I earnt enough to pay rent and bills in a 2 bed house, get pissed 5 nights a week, get high 7 days a week, ride bikes and still have money left after all that. And my boss managed to get new cars every year or two depending on when he got bored of them, have plenty of holidays and buy what ever he wanted. And he wasn't a big dairy farmer, he had around 150 beast. Around 100 milkers 20-30 dry cows and around 30 young stock/calving heifers.
On most modern farms there is barely any manual handling to be done. Just carrying the odd 25kg bag around, the odd calf and wrestling with the beast. There's now machines to do the manual stuff for you. I saw quite a few townies come to help on the farm, It wasn't the manual handling they couldnt take. It was the beasts that scared them away.
Getting a cow to do what you want can be very hard at times, can take a lot of effort and strength and sometimes just brute force and ignorance. No matter how many times it happens a cow standing on your foot hurts like mad, after all a good healthy dairy cow does weigh over half a ton. Now imagine being hit by a boxer, that is nothing compared to being kicked by a cow. I got kicked in the groin once (narrowly missed my bollocks) I had bruises and limped for a good three weeks. A friend of mine got kicked in the parlour, It snapped both bones in her arm. One thing to never forget when working around cattle is they are wild animals. No matter how soft or friendly you think they are, never and i mean never trust them. If they don't want to be somewhere or do something they will do anything to get out of it. Be that flattening you or flattening something else.
Back to the long hours. They don't have to be. When I used to run the farm for my boss. If there wasn't a lot to do (most of the summer) then I would get up at 4:30 get the cows in milk them then let them out. Once i'd let them out i'd have an hours break, then an hour for dinner and half hour before afternoon milking. Or if I was tired a few hours kip at some point. I know a lot of farmers that have very little to do in the day now because it's cheaper for them to get contractors in to do the tractor work than it is to buy the tractors and implements in the long run. So that means they only do stock work, and if it's kept on top of can be as little as an hour a day. ____________________ Current Bike- Suzuki DRZ400 SM K6
Previous bikes - Derbi Senda Xtreme50r, Honda CBR 125, Kawasaki ZZR 250, Yamaha DT125R, Suzuki Bandit 600, Gas gas ec 250, Honda CBR600FW
Damaged spleen, damaged kindey, 2 popped lungs, 2 broken ribs, broken face, broken wrist and 5 back fractures... remember kids walls hurt |
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| The Artist |
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 The Artist Super Spammer

Joined: 06 Jan 2008 Karma :  
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| woll |
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 woll World Chat Champion

Joined: 01 May 2010 Karma :   
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 Posted: 00:36 - 28 Dec 2012 Post subject: |
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Would it be possible for you to break a more expensive implement ?  ____________________ Current Bike- Suzuki DRZ400 SM K6
Previous bikes - Derbi Senda Xtreme50r, Honda CBR 125, Kawasaki ZZR 250, Yamaha DT125R, Suzuki Bandit 600, Gas gas ec 250, Honda CBR600FW
Damaged spleen, damaged kindey, 2 popped lungs, 2 broken ribs, broken face, broken wrist and 5 back fractures... remember kids walls hurt |
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| Chalky. |
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 Chalky. World Chat Champion
Joined: 30 Jun 2010 Karma :  
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 Posted: 00:47 - 28 Dec 2012 Post subject: |
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| ocatoro wrote: | if it's a milk farm...
we had sheep and oats on our farm |
A "milk farm"?
And sheep and oats? OK. That was it, juuust the sheep and oats
| woll wrote: | Ignore the artist... He has done some work on farms not a great deal though, he liked getting sacked, liked to be late most of all liked breaking expensive equipment.
There used to be a few farmers on here. Can't recall the names besides myself and rob fzs. Although strictly speaking i'm no longer a farmer. Don't let anything put you off. If you've got good work ethic it's not as bad as people make out. Yes they can be long hours doing hard work all day. But then there can be times when you don't have much to do.
I worked on a dairy farm for 6 years. My boss was a lazy cnut. He used to spend his days playing golf, rugby, cricket or swanning about in his new cars. Don't let anybody tell you there's no money in farming. Being a self employed farm labourer I earnt enough to pay rent and bills in a 2 bed house, get pissed 5 nights a week, get high 7 days a week, ride bikes and still have money left after all that. And my boss managed to get new cars every year or two depending on when he got bored of them, have plenty of holidays and buy what ever he wanted. And he wasn't a big dairy farmer, he had around 150 beast. Around 100 milkers 20-30 dry cows and around 30 young stock/calving heifers.
On most modern farms there is barely any manual handling to be done. Just carrying the odd 25kg bag around, the odd calf and wrestling with the beast. There's now machines to do the manual stuff for you. I saw quite a few townies come to help on the farm, It wasn't the manual handling they couldnt take. It was the beasts that scared them away.
Getting a cow to do what you want can be very hard at times, can take a lot of effort and strength and sometimes just brute force and ignorance. No matter how many times it happens a cow standing on your foot hurts like mad, after all a good healthy dairy cow does weigh over half a ton. Now imagine being hit by a boxer, that is nothing compared to being kicked by a cow. I got kicked in the groin once (narrowly missed my bollocks) I had bruises and limped for a good three weeks. A friend of mine got kicked in the parlour, It snapped both bones in her arm. One thing to never forget when working around cattle is they are wild animals. No matter how soft or friendly you think they are, never and i mean never trust them. If they don't want to be somewhere or do something they will do anything to get out of it. Be that flattening you or flattening something else.
Back to the long hours. They don't have to be. When I used to run the farm for my boss. If there wasn't a lot to do (most of the summer) then I would get up at 4:30 get the cows in milk them then let them out. Once i'd let them out i'd have an hours break, then an hour for dinner and half hour before afternoon milking. Or if I was tired a few hours kip at some point. I know a lot of farmers that have very little to do in the day now because it's cheaper for them to get contractors in to do the tractor work than it is to buy the tractors and implements in the long run. So that means they only do stock work, and if it's kept on top of can be as little as an hour a day. |
TL;DR
Arable FTW  |
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| woll |
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 woll World Chat Champion

Joined: 01 May 2010 Karma :   
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 Posted: 00:51 - 28 Dec 2012 Post subject: |
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Ah but mr chalky sir... I did done work for a bigggggg arable farm in cambridge for 2 months when they had 50 tractors and 20 trailers on hire off the firm I work for. Them there plant growing boys do do long hours compared to dairy.
TL,DR
Don't mind being pood on and stood on. Then Dairy FTW ____________________ Current Bike- Suzuki DRZ400 SM K6
Previous bikes - Derbi Senda Xtreme50r, Honda CBR 125, Kawasaki ZZR 250, Yamaha DT125R, Suzuki Bandit 600, Gas gas ec 250, Honda CBR600FW
Damaged spleen, damaged kindey, 2 popped lungs, 2 broken ribs, broken face, broken wrist and 5 back fractures... remember kids walls hurt |
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| Joncrete Cungle |
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 Joncrete Cungle World Chat Champion
Joined: 31 Jan 2012 Karma :   
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 Posted: 00:55 - 28 Dec 2012 Post subject: |
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| Chalky. |
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 Chalky. World Chat Champion
Joined: 30 Jun 2010 Karma :  
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| woll |
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 woll World Chat Champion

Joined: 01 May 2010 Karma :   
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 Posted: 01:14 - 28 Dec 2012 Post subject: |
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You mean june-november slog Oh and the november - june slog doing ground work, planting, spraying, fertilizing and doing maintainence on all the equipment. ____________________ Current Bike- Suzuki DRZ400 SM K6
Previous bikes - Derbi Senda Xtreme50r, Honda CBR 125, Kawasaki ZZR 250, Yamaha DT125R, Suzuki Bandit 600, Gas gas ec 250, Honda CBR600FW
Damaged spleen, damaged kindey, 2 popped lungs, 2 broken ribs, broken face, broken wrist and 5 back fractures... remember kids walls hurt |
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| Chalky. |
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 Chalky. World Chat Champion
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| Flip |
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 Flip Super Spammer

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| pits |
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 pits World Chat Champion

Joined: 22 Apr 2008 Karma :  
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 Posted: 03:38 - 28 Dec 2012 Post subject: |
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Being a farmer is easy.
First you need a boiler suit, either blue or green and black John Deere style.
Next is to talk in a manner that only other farmers can understand you.
Lastly, have loads of money but stingey as fuck  ____________________ Stinkwheel: You have no right to free speech
00:32:08 Blau Zedong: yes, i am a massive CB400 fan and collector
00:33:00 Blau Zedong: the CB400 is my favourite road bike |
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| trevor saxe-coburg-gotha |
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 trevor saxe-coburg-gotha World Chat Champion

Joined: 22 Nov 2012 Karma :   
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| N cee thirty |
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 N cee thirty Banned

Joined: 31 Jan 2010 Karma :     
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 Posted: 11:16 - 28 Dec 2012 Post subject: |
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| pits wrote: | Being a farmer is easy.
First you need a boiler suit, either blue or green and black John Deere style.
Next is to talk in a manner that only other farmers can understand you.
Lastly, have loads of money but stingey as fuck  |
mines red , but a hand-me-down so the stingey bit must be right, lol
alot of money to be made if the facilities are right, not a shitty old cubical shed you can barely get a tractor in.
hours can be long, but if you do it a way you enjoy it, or have ocd, they soon pass by, getting to do it part time would be ideal , as when it pisses down 4 days straight and everything just gets annoying, at least you can look forward to a change. ____________________ '00 Aprilia RS50 > '92 Honda CG > '99 Yamaha Fazer > '91 Yamaha RXS > '79 Suzuki X5 > 01' Honda Cg > 07' Honda Cg > 82' Kawasaki Z200 > suzuki gsxr 400 gk73a > honda vfr 400 NC30 Mod 2 Passed 09/06/2011
Jewlio Iglesias wrote: I actually did vote BNP once |
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| P.addy |
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 P.addy Red Rocket
Joined: 14 Feb 2008 Karma :  
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 Posted: 11:59 - 28 Dec 2012 Post subject: |
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Woll... if cows are mental and stuff, when it comes to milking and that... are they pretty sedate when you are doing that?
Seem like wild cunts to me  |
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| N cee thirty |
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 N cee thirty Banned

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| Visitor Q |
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 Visitor Q $25 whore

Joined: 30 Apr 2004 Karma :     
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 Posted: 14:44 - 28 Dec 2012 Post subject: |
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I just did 6 weeks on a 10,000 acre farm, with a high intensity feedlot slowly ramping up to 6000 head over the next month or so.
Several hours per day moving and processing meat cattle. Lots of work in a bail.
Loved all the stock work. Especially when they got a little bit stampedey
Would be very interested to know how easy it is to get in to farming in the UK without a farming background, as a possible fall back plan.
More farming here in Oz, or possibly some sheep fiddling in NZ first mind you
edit: And I done got a degree in Zoology, for all the utter bollocks that is worth in the current job market. ____________________ China traffic/travel bike vid - When I make a sweeping statement, please add the word 'statistically' in to the sentence before you bitch...
From September 2014 to January/February 2015 I will not be using any English, nor reading any. As such, I won't be on here. PM at will, but I won't be checking/posting unless in emergencies. Certainly not for the first couple of months. Please berate me savagely if I break that rule... |
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 13 years, 107 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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