FARM British farmers must dig for victory once again - UK Daily Mail

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I almost put this on my off and on again "Let Them Eat Bugs" thread but this is slightly different and another sign I've been looking for. I figured that the UK and even US governments would really be starting to panic and take food shortages seriously (as opposed to an opportunity) when the public was asked to grow Victory Gardens. Bit Agra hates people who really and seriously garden because it takes money out of their coffers and governments often dislike it in "good times" because it lessens their control over their populations.

This one isn't quite a call for personal victory gardens, but I read the UK Daily Mail mostly for a combination of a good laugh and to see what the propaganda of the week is (in the UK it is legal for the government to plant stories) and here we go, note the WORDING of the Title - as in Farmers You need to DIG FOR VICTORY...

(note some of his ideas are basically very good, but this "editorial" is also full of tag lines I only highlighted a few...such as things being the fault of the EU and Putin, not horrible Big Agra policies pushed by lots of UK governments for decades).

Feel free to add other stories along this line to this thread...

British farmers must dig for victory once again: Our island is blessed with good soil and plentiful rainfall – which is why, as food prices soar, we should remember the history lesson that self-sufficiency is vital, writes JAMIE BLACKETT
  • Britain needs to take control of food security, says author of a rural life book
  • Government advisers have relied on global economy to provide what we need
  • But the looming cost-of-living crisis and Russia’s war is about to change that
  • We must become more self-sufficient, to ensure we are less dependent
By JAMIE BLACKETT FOR THE DAILY MAIL

PUBLISHED: 23:05, 14 March 2022 | UPDATED: 23:19, 14 March 202


British shoppers are used to cheap food and plenty of it.

We expect to walk into any supermarket nationwide and see produce from all over the planet, whatever the season.

But the downside of the globalisation of food supply is that our domestic farming industry has been allowed to run down.

While we produce most of our grains, meat and dairy, in all, British farming accounts for only about half of the food on our plates.
As a result, agriculture in the UK has become almost unviable for many farmers.

Yet the events of recent weeks are a belated wake-up call.

For too long, government advisers have relied on the global economy to provide what we need, complacently assuming we don’t have to worry about ‘food security’ — the ability to grow or source what the population needs.

But the looming cost-of-living crisis, exacerbated by Russia’s terrifying war on Ukraine, is about to change that.
And those short-sighted, naive policymakers are being exposed for their lack of foresight.
Britain urgently needs to take back control of its food security. We must become more self-sufficient, to ensure we are less dependent on other countries — especially potential enemies — to fill our larders. Pictured:  Combine harvesting

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Britain urgently needs to take back control of its food security. We must become more self-sufficient, to ensure we are less dependent on other countries — especially potential enemies — to fill our larders. Pictured: Combine harvesting


Britain urgently needs to take back control of its food security.

We must become more self-sufficient, to ensure we are less dependent on other countries — especially potential enemies — to fill our larders.

Ukraine and Russia, for example, export up to 35 per cent of the world’s grain (wheat, maize, etc) and the conflict is expected to hit quantities and prices hard.

Already there are reports of some farmers deciding to grow wheat on land scheduled to lie fallow because demand is expected to soar — although for most that is not an option because of government mandates.

Ireland’s agriculture minister, Charlie McConalogue, is even asking farmers to grow more crops to offset food supply issues.

Restoring the agricultural sector so we can produce more of what we eat must become a priority in Britain — and we can draw on the lessons of history to do it.


Before the outbreak of World War II in September 1939, Britain was importing nearly 70 per cent of its food.

Within months this had fallen dramatically, as domestic production was ramped up. By 1945, our dependence on food imports had halved.
Restoring the agricultural sector so we can produce more of what we eat must become a priority in Britain — and we can draw on the lessons of history to do it



Restoring the agricultural sector so we can produce more of what we eat must become a priority in Britain — and we can draw on the lessons of history to do it

No land went to waste. Public parks became allotments and the Tower Of London lawns were sown with seed.
Even the Royal Family grew onions in place of bushes and shrubs in their palace gardens.

On farms, Land Girls were drafted in to help farmers — more than 80,000 of them by 1944.


Every Sunday, 3.5million Britons tuned in to listen to gardener Cecil Henry Middleton offer tips on the BBC’s new Home Service (now Radio 4), while ‘Doctor Carrot’ and ‘Potato Pete’ encouraged children to get involved, too.

By the end of the war, there were nearly 1.4 million allotments in Britain, producing 1.3million tons of food as part of the war effort.

Granted, we no longer have a command economy, where farms were a resource under the instruction of the Ministry of Agriculture.

But we can still ‘dig for victory’.

There is no quick fix but there are many things we can do to start putting agriculture back on its feet — and many of these measures are also of great benefit to the environment.

We must play to the natural strengths of our countryside.

This island is blessed with good soil and plentiful rainfall, which makes it one of the best places on earth for growing grass.
In recent years there has been a misguided drift to planting conifers on land naturally suited to pasture, or turning it over to produce grain for animal fodder.

Yet grass is the perfect crop for fattening beef cattle and sheep, as well as for dairy cows.
It is madness to grow grain and feed that to cattle.
By the end of the war, there were nearly 1.4 million allotments in Britain, producing 1.3million tons of food as part of the war effort. Pictured: Dig On for Victory: C.H. Middleton's All-Year-Round Gardening Guide from 1945

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Every Sunday, 3.5million Britons tuned in to listen to gardener Cecil Henry Middleton offer tips on the BBC’s new Home Service (now Radio 4), while ‘Doctor Carrot’ and ‘Potato Pete’ encouraged children to get involved, too. Pictured: Dig On for Victory: Mr Middleton's All-Year-Round Gardening Guide from 1945

Far better to let them graze, which makes for healthier animals and better meat, and drastically reduces the demand for artificial fertilisers — one of the chief causes of greenhouse gases in agriculture.

We must break our reliance on nitrogen-based fertiliser, not least because 30 per cent of the world’s supply comes from Russia.

Sanctions against Moscow mean we are turning Russian ships away from our ports, and rightly so.


But even before the invasion of Ukraine, we were in crisis.

By last autumn, nitrogen fertiliser cost £700 a ton, up from £285 a ton six months earlier.

That increase was largely orchestrated by Vladimir Putin, who can control gas supplies to the West (natural gas is essential for making nitrogen fertilisers).[It is all Russia's fault - Melodi]
Arable glory: A waving grain crop at sunset

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Arable glory: A waving grain crop at sunset

With gas prices soaring, the UK’s two largest nitrogen fertiliser factories were temporarily forced to cease production.
One by-product, you may remember, was that carbon dioxide for the fizzy drinks industry was suddenly in short supply.

The Government stepped in with a subsidy — but that should have been a klaxon warning to us all.

When another country can suppress everything from our wheat to our lemonade, we have ceded far too much control.
Nitrogen fertiliser is now £950 a ton.

Farming incomes in the UK have been falling steadily, as successive governments have taken farmers for granted.
In turn, that has meant a lack of investment in machinery and soil fertility.

For many farmers, it is a simple question of cashflow: already in debt, they are reluctant to borrow in order to grow more.

As a result, they are badly placed to absorb sudden costs such as the steep rise in diesel prices this month.

On my farm in southwest Scotland, for instance, we grow 50 acres of potatoes.


To produce just one acre requires 250 litres of diesel for the tractors.
Diesel prices have more than doubled and the inevitable result will be that potatoes cost more.
By the end of the war, there were nearly 1.4 million allotments in Britain, producing 1.3million tons of food as part of the war effort. Pictured: A WW2 poster begs for harvest help

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By the end of the war, there were nearly 1.4 million allotments in Britain, producing 1.3million tons of food as part of the war effort. Pictured: A WW2 poster begs for harvest help

Supermarkets won’t want to sacrifice their profits, so consumers and farmers will bear the brunt.

Good government policies are needed. In the short term, we have to scrap the ‘greening’ measures by which land is left to lie fallow for a year at a time. [Even though this is agricultural best practice since Roman times - not a "green" agenda, especially if you can't get fertilizer - and/or you grow beans and peas. Melodi]

In my experience, it has little real benefit for wildlife anyway.

We must also stop kowtowing to the environmental lobby, with too much good land devoted to forestry that is literally fruitless.

More of the wheat we grow has to be for human consumption. We need to focus much more on fruit and vegetables.

And we need to integrate livestock farming with arable cropping to harness the natural fertility of animal manure.
And we all need to reassess our diets.

A crucial tip is to relearn about the seasons.

We have forgotten the natural cycles of the year because it has become so easy to buy asparagus and strawberries in January, or apples in May.
And we need to integrate livestock farming with arable cropping to harness the natural fertility of animal manure

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And we need to integrate livestock farming with arable cropping to harness the natural fertility of animal manure
British farmers are producing far less fruit than we used to because, following our entry into the European Economic Community in the 1970s, we cut down many of our orchards.[Also blame the EU! - Melodi]

Replacing these will take decades but there is no better time to start than now.

Above all, we need to start attracting more young people into the industry.

The average age of a British farmer is 59, and even for those born into farming it is not an attractive prospect.
But you don’t have to be a farmer to contribute.

Anyone with an allotment — there are some 330,000 in England alone — or a back garden should consider growing some of their own food at least.
Good garden crops rely on getting the soil right, which means packing the earth with organic matter. Pictured: Combine harvester unloading wheat

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Good garden crops rely on getting the soil right, which means packing the earth with organic matter. Pictured: Combine harvester unloading wheat

Good garden crops rely on getting the soil right, which means packing the earth with organic matter.

My advice to home growers is to rely on animal manures rather than artificial fertilisers.
This should be a national effort.

The food we grow is Britain’s most vital resource. It is our first line of national defence.

We have been overconfident about this for far too long — and now it is time to take both farming and the origins of the food we eat seriously once more.
  • Jamie Blackett is the author of Red Rag To A Bull, Rural Life In An Urban Age (Quiller).
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Truth in advertising the UK Daily Mail is an only slightly more upscale version of the National Enquirer and like the Enquirer they sometimes break real stories. They also are often used (in my opinion) to spread the "word" from certain interests groups including the UK government to the "class" of people the yuppies, Civil Servants, and Toffs THINK read the Daily Mail. Which would be similar to the American "Deploables," Older Folks, and the Gossip Happy "unwashed" masses.

This makes them a great place to look for both government-planted articles and even just "feelers" on certain topics to see how (they think) certain parts of the population will react to certain ideas.

Sometimes they backfire spectacularly, like the one that would "train" welfare recipients for a whole day or two and send them out to knock on doors to "inspect" the contents of a homeowner's refrigerator and then "suggest" how they could "make better food choices."

Other times, like this one, they use editorials (called Opinion Pieces here) to push or prepare the public for possible moves and or actions the government (or the big corporations) plan to try and take anyway.

They've been pushing the "Meat is bad for you" and "Let them eat bugs" at least since around the year 2000 and just because they follow with an article on "How to grill the perfect Summer Steak" doesn't mean there isn't an over-all decades long trend there because there is.

Printing the other types of "Working Class" aimed articles like cooking your best steak give them great cover when the paper is accused of having agendas (beyond saying wanting to have BREXIT which they took as an official editorial stance as any paper can do).

Another way to ferret out serious government-planted "stories" and "trends" is when the same topic comes up in nearly every major UK news outlet over the period of about three days to a week.
 

Griz3752

Retired, practising Curmudgeon
Considering the US Fed Govt seems to prefer Corporate Farms over the family farm, I wonder how this might work in the US and, at what cost/profit margin to the corp farms?

If such a program follows the margins allowed for weapon builders, a 5 lb bag of carrots could be $100.00.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Considering the US Fed Govt seems to prefer Corporate Farms over the family farm, I wonder how this might work in the US and, at what cost/profit margin to the corp farms?

If such a program follows the margins allowed for weapon builders, a 5 lb bag of carrots could be $100.00.
You will know the government and/or "Big Elite Groups" are in a panic about when they start pushing individuals to "Grow Victory Gardens" and when there are moved in Congress or the Department of Agriculture to mandate farmers grow certain crops for domestic consumption.

There will also be a push to have massive monetary compensation to farmers (many of whom now ARE big Agra companies sadly) to do this.

Another thing to look for after encouraging the public to grow "Victory" gardens will be food rationing either official (you get our State/Federal ration book) or unofficial - stores will be "encouraged" to use your past buying practices (easy to find out now using banking or card information) to "limit" what you buy.

Many stores will just have signs saying things like: "Limit one carton of eggs per customer." We are already starting to see some of that in Ireland already (not with eggs but other imported products).
 

ShadowMan

Designated Grumpy Old Fart
The writing is on the wall around the world that GLOBALIZATION is a huge FAILURE!! Being THAT dependent upon each other is a huge FAILURE. It's NOT trustworthy. It won't stop wars. Simply....it doesn't work.
 
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Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
Melodi,

Most governments seem to view their populations as impediments to globalization and A Better World. They want to GET RID of us, not sustain us. Waiting for encouragement toward self sustainment from the current "leaders" is like waiting for Godot.

Don't let that stop you from teaching it and preaching it though - new Victory Gardens probably best be guerrilla gardens however.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
This...we have to learn to eat seasonally again.
Yep, that was part of (in my opinion) the good part of the article, all in all, it is a very mixed bag but I think the main reason it was in there was to prepare the UK population for things like food shortages, lack of choice, skyrocketing prices and other things.

Next, I'm expecting to see more articles (just like after 9/11) about how "healthy" food rationing was and how it might be a good idea for the UK government to "start rationing" again..oh and "here are some cool recipes your grandma made with bread crumbs from the National Loaf..."

But then, I was in England just after 9/11, and White Cliffs of Dover and We'll Meet Again were the number one and two songs on the radio...Brits do war nostalgia really well and the government knows this.
 

Old Gray Mare

TB Fanatic
Another thing I've noticed in the UK has been quietly and steadily rebuilding their canal system. If things go sideways the canals would be a sustainable option for moving tons of food and supplies about economically.

The UK has revived the skills and infrastructure to support those canals and those that use them. They also have the on shore technology to maintain and expand them.
 
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anna43

Veteran Member
I will plant my garden again as I have since the 1960's. I'll have to find someone else to till it, but I will plant, care for the garden and I will can/freeze/dehydrate/store the harvest -- and Lord willing will live to use the fruits of the garden and plant again another year.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Melodi, and soon the Brits will be seeing propaganda messages to the Great Unwashed saying, “Mustn’t Grumble” like during WWII. V
There is already a certain amount of "Keep Calm and Carry On" which was also popular right after 9/11. It never totally goes away but I am watching the messages which is why I really jumped on the "Farming for Victory" because "Victory" was one of my "key" words.
 

vessie

Has No Life - Lives on TB
There is already a certain amount of "Keep Calm and Carry On" which was also popular right after 9/11. It never totally goes away but I am watching the messages which is why I really jumped on the "Farming for Victory" because "Victory" was one of my "key" words.
I’ll be watching very closely how the Brit .gov starts approaching all this, to see what really is bubbling up from the collective unconscious over there which is always a precog for me to see what might be coming down the pike.

There is always ‘leakage in the language’ per ‘Statement Analysis’ V
 

Bolerpuller

Contributing Member
I've watched war time farm and loved it. There are several books on victory gardening but I'm not sure which is best?
Can anyone recomend one over another?
 

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
i agree with the OP but I would not title it The British Farmer needs to dig deeper, because they are asking ANY CITIZEN who has any allotment of land, to help grow at least some Of your own food!
 

vessie

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I find it really interesting that they used the word Dig instead of Grow.

To me, this indicates what they really may be ‘picking up’ as a precognition from the collective unconscious or maybe leakage in the language from some sort of high up .gov meetings. V
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
I find it really interesting that they used the word Dig instead of Grow.

To me, this indicates what they really may be ‘picking up’ as a precognition from the collective unconscious or maybe leakage in the language from some sort of high up .gov meetings. V
It was called Digging for Victory in WWII and in British English you "dig a garden" so maybe or maybe just the traditional language again the nostalgia factor.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
If one has not been gardening, one must dig a garden before one can plant a garden. So it makes perfect sense that non-gardeners would be asked to dig a garden.

Both my mother and myself dug more than one garden with nothing more than a shovel and a rake. If middle-aged and even somewhat elderly women can do it, younger women certainly can! And it's amazing how strong the average 12-year-old boy can be, or at least used to be before poor food started causing them to grow mushels instead of muscles!
 

anna43

Veteran Member
A spading fork, rake, shovel and a hoe were how most home gardens were how prepared and worked through the 1950's. That's how my dh and I gardened in our first years of gardening. I think even at my age, I could plant a garden that way digging one row at a time. Of course, my garden area has been in production since 1980 so it would not be difficult to dig compared to digging up sod.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Ok I wasn't quite clear, and Americans will say:

"I plan to grow a garden this year."

A Brit will say:

"I plan to dig a garden this year."

Sometimes: "I plan to put in a garden this year."

Brits and Irish also grow gardens but you hear the "dig a garden" a lot" probably because people in the old days knew they had to do that first if they hadn't had a garden for a few years or in a new home.
 

AlaskaSue

North to the Future
A spading fork, rake, shovel and a hoe were how most home gardens were how prepared and worked through the 1950's. That's how my dh and I gardened in our first years of gardening. I think even at my age, I could plant a garden that way digging one row at a time. Of course, my garden area has been in production since 1980 so it would not be difficult to dig compared to digging up sod.

Sounds good, and I’ll just add the part about the dynamite and blasting caps needed for some of us (kinda kidding but not really…)! ;) And while I completely love Kodiak Island (they don’t call it The Rock for nothing), I’m glad I don’t have to garden there. But one of our members does, and she does an amazing job of it!

I love my raised beds and container gardens and look with a bit of envy on people who can grow in normal beds. Alas, a glacier was just here a short bit ago and my soil has boulders instead of dirt :) But I do grow a lot where I’m able, including herbs for flavor and medicinals, which I am learning. Someone here recently mentioned a tea garden and while I already use my own herbs and flowers in tea…that just sounds like a lovely idea ~
 
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lonestar09

Veteran Member
You will know the government and/or "Big Elite Groups" are in a panic about when they start pushing individuals to "Grow Victory Gardens" and when there are moved in Congress or the Department of Agriculture to mandate farmers grow certain crops for domestic consumption.

There will also be a push to have massive monetary compensation to farmers (many of whom now ARE big Agra companies sadly) to do this.

Another thing to look for after encouraging the public to grow "Victory" gardens will be food rationing either official (you get our State/Federal ration book) or unofficial - stores will be "encouraged" to use your past buying practices (easy to find out now using banking or card information) to "limit" what you buy.

Many stores will just have signs saying things like: "Limit one carton of eggs per customer." We are already starting to see some of that in Ireland already (not with eggs but other imported products).
Didn't England still have food rationing going on into the mid 1950's from WW2?
 

lonestar09

Veteran Member
I've watched war time farm and loved it. There are several books on victory gardening but I'm not sure which is best?
Can anyone recomend one over another?
I would recommend a book about gardening in your state, gives you the best information on conditions there. Also check with the agriculture extension service in your area for local advice. Might even check if they have a master gardener program in your state.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Didn't England still have food rationing going on into the mid 1950's from WW2?

Yes, they did; in America, they dropped it like a hot potato as soon as the war ended - in the UK the government tried to keep it up for nearly a decade until it was obvious the public just wasn't going to stand for it anymore and would vote for any party-ready to end it.
 

anna43

Veteran Member
There is an out-of-print book "Survival Gardening" by John A. Freeman copywrite 1982-83 that is quite interesting. It is based on enough nutrition to live on and has charts etc. I wouldn't follow what he recommends 100%, but it is an excellent source of information regarding nutrition and what to plant. It includes a chapter on herbs.
 
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