The Rural Voice, 2001-04, Page 72GREY
County Federation of Agriculture NEWSLETTER
446 10th St., Hanover, Ontario N4N 1P9
Email: grey@ofa.on.ca Website: www.ofa.on.ca/grey 519-364-3050 or 1-800-275-9551
• The Rural Voice is provided to all Grey
County Farmers by the GCFA.
The ravages of foot and mouth disease
The foot and mouth disease that
plagues the United Kingdom and
Europe at the present time brings
back sad memories to anyone who
has experienced the devastation and
heartache of any outbreak of the
disease.
I remember only too well the
outbreak during the Winter of 1967 -
1968 in England. Sylvia and I were
relatively young farmers in England
at that time with a dairy herd of 40
cows and a pig unit of about 40 sows.
We had a young family, the eldest
four years old and the youngest just
three weeks old.
The first outbreak was reported in
Newport in South Wales and quickly
spread North into Cheshire, the
heartland of England's dairy industry.
This was the end of October 1967,
and our cows were outside day and
night. We were just getting ready to
go for the cows for afternoon
milking, (they were about a mile
from the farm on our meadow land
which they grazed on in the
daytime), when the police knocked
on the door and said that the area was
now closed and no animals were to
be moved. We asked him to go and
tell the neighbours and then to come
back in half an hour, so that we could
at least fetch the cows home, which
luckily he agreed to do. Our cows
came in for milking that night and
never went outside again until the
following May as we had no pasture
land that they could get to without
crossing a road, and no animals were
allowed on the road. It was a
nightmare.
More outbreaks were reported
every day with alarming regularity.
Many farms were infected and large
numbers of animals were slaughtered.
I remember vividly a letter in a local
newspaper from a dairy farmer, who
was chairman of the Cheshire Branch
of the National Farmers' Union, and
to the best of my recollection I quote
"It is with a heavy heart that I write
this today as I look out over my farm
68 THE RURAL VOICE
and that of my neighbours and listen
to the total silence of this once
bustling farming community. The
bulldozers have moved on further
down the road out of sight, all gone
now except for the stench of the
smoke and burning flesh that hangs
over the entire County."
The devastation that such an
outbreak can cause to the agricultural
economy is perhaps difficult to
comprehend if one has not been
involved directly with such a
calamity. One day you are tending
your animals and within hours a
phone call can confirm the presence
of foot and mouth disease on your
farm, and that "we will be along
immediately to place you under
quarantine." Within hours the entire
life on your farm is snuffed out with
one fell swoop of a humane killer.
Within moments of that phone call all
the hopes and dreams of your family
are shattered.
That year there were no family
get-togethers over Christmas for fear
of spreading the disease to the farms
of family members or bringing it
back to your own. The whole farming
community was in a kind of
suspended animation. There were no
artificial insemination (A.I.) services.
We were instructed on the method of
being your own A.I. man. The semen
would be left at the gate. It was
imperative that we retain any cattle
which were due for the barren ring, to
get them in calf once again, in
readiness to assist with the restocking
of farms once the "all clear" came.
That all clear did not come until May
1968. The farm in Newport which
suffered the first outbreak was
allowed to restock after the disease
spread North. Ironically that very
same farm was re -infested and
proved to be the last outbreak of that
epidemic.
You may think that I am blowing a
lot of hot air, and that this country is
very vigilant and it won't happen
here. Well I hope you are right, but
remember that foot and mouth
disease is no respecter of persons or
livestock pedigrees. It could happen
anywhere at any time and a Canadian
winter would be an ideal climate for
the virus to survive.
NO!! This Country cannot afford
to be complacent about this disease or
Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy
(BSE). The possible threat is really
never far away. With today's fast
road systems, and the powerful trucks
capable of travelling great distances
in a few short hours, infected animals
could be hundreds of miles away in a
matter of days.
Farmers suffer. All of the allied
industries suffer, and the country's
economy suffers. With the slaughter
policy in place vast sums are drained
from government coffers.
Sad to say, but maybe in such a
bad scenario as this, our government
would finally realize how very
important the agricultural industry
really is.0
— Submitted by Bob Brassington
1st Vice President and
OFA Regional Director Grey East
GREY COUNTY FEDERATION OF AGRICULTURE
DIRECTORS' MEETING
Thursday, April 26, 2001 -8:00 p.m.
Grey County Agricultural Services Centre meeting room (Grey Gables)
206 Toronto Street South, Markdalo
MEMBERS ARE WELCOME TO ATTEND.