FUW’s Louisa takes on Great North Swim for charities

FUW Meirionnydd administration assistant Louisa Moore is taking on a personal challenge on June 10 to raise money for the FUW’s charities - Alzheimer’s Society Cymru and The Farming Community Network (FCN) - swimming a mile in Lake Windermere, as part of the Great North Swim.

Louisa has set herself two targets - to raise £500 for Alzheimer’s Society Cymru and the Farming Community Network and to complete the course in under an hour.

She said: “I’m not an elite swimmer by any means, I completed the mile course in 2016 in 1 hour and 15 seconds and the target this year is to beat that.

“I’ve managed to complete a mile in 40 minutes in the pool during training, but we all know that open water is a completely different scenario!”

9th generation farming family highlights why farming matters

FUW member Gill Morgan, Chris Elmore MP,
Richard and Charles Morgan

A 9th generation farming family from Glamorgan have highlighted why farming matters when they welcomed Ogmore MP Chris Elmore to their farm.

Gill and Charles Morgan and their son Richard run Gellifeddgaer farm, just outside of Blackmill, Bridgend, which comprises approximately 330 acres with a further 50 acres rented.

The farm is adjacent to Mynydd-y-Gaer Common (approx. 1,000 acres) and they have common rights on the upper and lower section of Coity Wallia Common which extends to approximately 2,000 acres.   

At present the family run 900 ewes, which have now lambed, together with 40 calves which were purchased with the purpose of rearing until 16-18 months.

The farm has been in the family since the early 1700’s, firstly as a tenanted farm, but then in the mid- 1960’s  it was purchased from the Winfield Estate and has been in family ownership ever since.

Gellifeddgaer has been enrolled in environmental schemes for almost 30 years, commencing with Habitat then Tir Gofal and presently Glastir Advanced.

Shadow Brexit Secretary hears why #FairFarmFunding is crucial for survival of rural Wales

Shadow Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union Keir Starmer has heard why #FairFarmFunding and clarity of future trade deals is crucial for the survival of rural Wales and its farming communities, when he visited a beef and sheep farm in Glamorgan.

Opening the gates to Flaxland farm to show the Brexit Shadow Secretary why Wales and its rural communities need to keep the same amount of funding as it currently receives and why farmers are so worried about their export market, were FUW Glamorgan County Chairman Richard Walker and his partner Rachel Edwards.

The couple run the 120 acre holding just outside of Barry, and look after 120 breeding ewes, 3 rams, 40 lambs from last year, 150 lambs from this year and 100 cattle (consisting of 37 breeding 60 young stock).

FUW welcomes ban on misleading Vegan advert

The Farmers’ Union of Wales has welcomed a ruling by the Advertising Standards Agency (ASA) which bans an advert by vegan pressure group ‘Viva!’ on the grounds that it misled consumers.

The advert wrongly claimed that constituents of cows’ milk could be linked to cancer. However the ASA ruled that this claim could not be substantiated with scientific evidence.  The advert was placed upon buses in Bristol last September.

Dr Hazel Wright, FUW Senior Policy Officer, said: “Dairy products are known to be a nutritional and beneficial component of a healthy diet.   Unfortunately, despite high welfare, environmental and hygiene standards, the dairy sector has frustratingly been subjected to unsubstantiated and detrimental claims by a vegan pressure group.

“FUW dairy farmers will no doubt be pleased by the ASA ruling and we welcome moves which continue to weed out false and misleading claims against our industry,” added Dr Wright.

Alongside a ban on the current advert, the ASA ruling prohibits Viva! from making similar claims in the future.

FUW reminds farmers - ‘it’s ok to say’

Today marks the beginning of Mental Health Awareness Week (14-20 May), and farmers and their families across Wales are being reminded that ‘it’s ok to say’.

The Farmers’ Union of Wales is urging farmers and those living in rural areas not to hide problems from themselves, their families and friends but to talk about their personal feelings.

The FUW made a commitment at the Royal Welsh Agricultural Show in July 2017 to continue raising awareness of mental health problems in rural communities and is therefore renewing the call for those who might be suffering from mental health problems to seek help.

“The focus of this year’s Mental Health Awareness Week  is on stress and farmers across the country will be all too familiar with that. In our places of work we’ve faced some pretty low-points in the last few years. Bovine TB, price volatility and uncertainty about our future post-Brexit, this all puts a strain on our resolve and will have many feeling stressed and under immense pressure,” said Union President Glyn Roberts.

“But we must break the stigma attached to mental health, so if you’re feeling vulnerable, please open-up and speak to someone. That doesn’t just mean today or over the course of this week -, but always. Farmers and farming families need to continue talking openly about what they are experiencing and the FUW strongly encourages anyone who is worried about their own mental health or a loved-one, to seek help from the Farming Community Network, Tir Dewi, The DPJ Foundation, Mind Cymru or Call Helpline Wales,” added Glyn Roberts.
 

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