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Dairy farming is dying. After 40 years, I'm done. [View all]
Outlook Perspective
Dairy farming is dying. After 40 years, Im done.
By Jim Goodman
Jim Goodman is an organic dairy farmer from Wonewoc, Wis.
December 21
After 40 years of dairy farming, I sold my herd of cows this summer. The herd had been in my family since 1904; I know all 45 cows by name. I couldnt find anyone who wanted to take over our farm who would? Dairy farming is little more than hard work and possible economic suicide.
A grass-based organic dairy farm bought my cows. I couldnt watch them go. In June, I milked them for the last time, left the barn and let the truckers load them. A cop-out on my part? Perhaps, but being able to remember them as I last saw them, in my barn, chewing their cuds and waiting for pasture, is all I have left.
My retirement was mostly voluntary. Premature, but there is some solace in having a choice. Unlike many dairy farmers, I didnt retire bankrupt. But for my wife and me, having to sell our herd was a sign of the economic death not just of rural America but also of a way of life. It is nothing short of heartbreaking to walk through our barn and know that those stalls will remain empty. Knowing that our losses reflect the greater damage inflicted on entire regions is worse.
....
As devastating as the 1980s were for farmers, todays crisis is worse. Ineffective government subsidies and insurance programs are worthless in the face of plummeting prices and oversupply (and tariffs certainly arent helping). The current glut of organic milk has caused a 30 percent decrease in the price I was paid for my milk over the past two years. The new farm bill, signed by President Trump on Thursday, provides modest relief for larger dairy farmers (it expands some subsidies, and farmers will be able to pay lower premiums to participate in a federal program that offers compensation when milk prices drop below a certain level), but farmers dont want subsidies; all we ever asked for were fair prices. So for many, this is little more than another PR stunt, and the loss of family farms will continue. This year, Wisconsin, where I live, had lost 382 dairy farms by August; last year, the number at the same point was 283. The despair is palpable; suicide is a fact of life, though many farm suicides are listed as accidents.
....
Jim Goodman is an organic dairy farmer from Wonewoc, Wis.
Dairy farming is dying. After 40 years, Im done.
By Jim Goodman
Jim Goodman is an organic dairy farmer from Wonewoc, Wis.
December 21
After 40 years of dairy farming, I sold my herd of cows this summer. The herd had been in my family since 1904; I know all 45 cows by name. I couldnt find anyone who wanted to take over our farm who would? Dairy farming is little more than hard work and possible economic suicide.
A grass-based organic dairy farm bought my cows. I couldnt watch them go. In June, I milked them for the last time, left the barn and let the truckers load them. A cop-out on my part? Perhaps, but being able to remember them as I last saw them, in my barn, chewing their cuds and waiting for pasture, is all I have left.
My retirement was mostly voluntary. Premature, but there is some solace in having a choice. Unlike many dairy farmers, I didnt retire bankrupt. But for my wife and me, having to sell our herd was a sign of the economic death not just of rural America but also of a way of life. It is nothing short of heartbreaking to walk through our barn and know that those stalls will remain empty. Knowing that our losses reflect the greater damage inflicted on entire regions is worse.
....
As devastating as the 1980s were for farmers, todays crisis is worse. Ineffective government subsidies and insurance programs are worthless in the face of plummeting prices and oversupply (and tariffs certainly arent helping). The current glut of organic milk has caused a 30 percent decrease in the price I was paid for my milk over the past two years. The new farm bill, signed by President Trump on Thursday, provides modest relief for larger dairy farmers (it expands some subsidies, and farmers will be able to pay lower premiums to participate in a federal program that offers compensation when milk prices drop below a certain level), but farmers dont want subsidies; all we ever asked for were fair prices. So for many, this is little more than another PR stunt, and the loss of family farms will continue. This year, Wisconsin, where I live, had lost 382 dairy farms by August; last year, the number at the same point was 283. The despair is palpable; suicide is a fact of life, though many farm suicides are listed as accidents.
....
Jim Goodman is an organic dairy farmer from Wonewoc, Wis.
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How ignorant. Yes, 45 cows. Husband and wife, maybe some kids and farmhands. Yes, small family farm.
DRoseDARs
Dec 2018
#9
If that was what was meant then my bad, but this wouldn't be the first time I've seen people knock
DRoseDARs
Dec 2018
#15
Yes, the # 45 was indeed an indirect slam at Trump It was not intended to be judgemental.
dameatball
Dec 2018
#17
My heart goes out to this farmer. The greed of the corporate level farming killed his farm. That $5
iluvtennis
Dec 2018
#3
I would say "nice story", but it isn't really nice, it's just very well done....
George II
Dec 2018
#8
Relevant post - and I too am sadddened by the loss of small farms. A continuatiion of the
c-rational
Dec 2018
#20
Large family farms produce about 66% of dairy products. Small family farms can't compete.
Kaleva
Dec 2018
#41
So what organic milk should I buy - I believe in voting with my $$$. Im in Madison now and had no
Kashkakat v.2.0
Dec 2018
#50