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Airport bales to last just days

This article is from page 18 of the 2013-04-30 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 18 JPG

CLARE farmers will need in excess of 15,000 bales of silage to see themselves through the next two weeks as the fodder crisis reaches breaking point.

More than 1,200 bales which were harvest at Shannon Airport over the weekend have already been distributed – with some farmers who asked for 20 and 30 bales being allocated just three bales each.

The IFA is hopeful to be in a position to harvest a further 600 bales from the airport later this week but this will be a difficult operation, involving grounds close to the main runway at Shannon Airport.

The mortality rate on Clare farms was last week estimated to be between 45 per cent and 60 per cent higher than normal – with a lack of quality feed the main factor. Animals deaths in Clare are understood to have reached several hundred already this year and, while no official figures are yet available, the Dead Animal Collection Service has been forced to curtail its operating hours because of the sheer scale of dead animals on Clare farms.

Clare Marts Ltd yesterday took delivery of its first shipment of hay from Kent in the UK. The Department of Agriculture has not, however, extended its Transport Subsidy to the mart – which means that the cost of transporting the feed will have to be borne by the mart and by Clare farmers.

The Department of Agriculture is also understood to be examining the possibility for shipping in boatloads of fodder from the UK directly into Foynes and Galway – which could mean a cheaper and quicker of fodder to Clare farmers.

“The bales from Shannon are brilliant, but they are just the tip of the iceberg really. I though on Friday morning that we might have been able to wrap some of it and use it next week maybe, but the demand was so great that it was all gone straight away. It was hard to cope with the calls afterward. I took in excess of 100 calls from Clare farmers on Saturday,” said Clare IFA chairman, Andrew Dundas.

“This might keep people going for a day or two. Farmers are under severe pressure at the moment. Cash is a huge issue out there and people have already ran up a massive bill. And we have a way to go in this yet. The rate of animals deaths in Clare has increased dramatically. It has already ran into the hundreds of animal, without a doubt. It is a very large amount.” Ennistymon farmer Pat O’Donoghue praised the work of the IFA in securing the Shannon Airport cutting – two years before it was due to be cut. “There was a lot of negotiations but this is great,” said Mr O’Donoghue.

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