Land of milk, honey, and lots of money

DO you remember when you were a kid? First milk was good for you. Then it was bad. Then we were all singing: “Stop and think and always drink a pint of milk a day.”

Then we had low-fat milk and then those weird things like soy milk (bad idea that tastes even worse) started creeping in.

More recently we have real low-fat, A2, more omega-3, full cream, no cream, no lactose and, in the end, no idea.

When we were little tackers we drank low-fat milk for years, long before anyone ever thought of it.

Because after the milko filled the billy for us each morning, the old girl would boil it, hiving the cream from the top and into a bowl.

Scalded cream was another name for “so fat you can feel your arteries harden”. But they didn’t. So we happily drank on and got stuck into the cream – if the old man ever left us any – to go on our apricot jam in thick lashings on very thick slices of bread.

And that gets the Whacker to the point.

You may have read or heard about a proposal for Australians to buy cars online now our car manufacturers are all but memories.

Critics say the program just won’t work, because there are – give or take a Mini – 66 car brands already fighting for 1.1 million car sales here each year.

Like you, I just can’t believe one in every 22 of us needs a new car every year. No one I know around here gets a new car sooner than 200,000km or five years. But I digress.

If car buyers think they’ve got problems, they’ve probably never tried to buy big-ticket farm machinery.

Not even I can keep track of all the new models, the advances in engineering technology and the rapid emergence of computer technology to actually run the machines.

That all has to be combined with latest research on no-till farming, for example, where we are now being told we do actually have to break the ground up because of no-till’s compaction – the good old dig and delve.

So we have no-till, sort of, with exceptions every 10 or 15 or so years when all the paddocks need some severe delving.

And that all explains why most of us stick to the one colour in the machinery shed. Not because it’s the best but because at least we can understand it.

So when we run into colleagues at field days, machinery demos or the machinery dealer’s showroom, we can all happily whinge and whine about what our machines of the day don’t do.

Of course no one lets on that we have to whine about the same thing because if we swapped colours and systems we would not be able to carry on as much. Because we would have no idea what we were talking about.

Spooky, hey?

With that kind of stunted outlook and lack of knowledge we could almost be – you knew it was coming – politicians.

So we just moan and groan but at least, when we finally sit down in the cabin, we know exactly what we are doing.

Which would be exactly what the dealers tell us and the satellites overhead confirm.

Have to go now, though, as I can see a low-loader coming up the road with a shiny new toy on the back.

If I had more time, I would go into my real complaint with this. But I haven’t, so if we bump into each other in the near future, be warned – don’t get me started on the price.

Digital Editions


  • Ricegrowers backs review

    Ricegrowers backs review

    The Ricegrowers’ Association has welcomed the start of a 12‑week consultation on the Murray–Darling Basin Plan Review. RGA president Peter Herrmann said industry would take…

More News

  • Big crop predicted for almonds

    Big crop predicted for almonds

    The almond harvest is underway and 2026 could produce Australia’s largest almond crop. Nationally it’s estimated that almost 167 thousand tonnes will be harvested this year. That’s a seven per…

  • The calm before the storm

    The calm before the storm

    We appear to be bogged down in a rut, with the commissioning of our new plant. I was super frustrated a couple of months ago – at the spanner throwing,…

  • Backpacking paves the way to leadership

    Backpacking paves the way to leadership

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 531373 SUNRAYSIA’s summer harvest attracts travellers on working holidays from all over the world, particularly Europe. These workers perform a vital service for regional…

  • Warm weather set to continue

    Warm weather set to continue

    BARLEY prices are supported as drought speculation builds, with growers holding onto grain for livestock feed. The Bureau of Meteorology January drought statement showed below-average rainfall for much of Victoria…

  • Growers warn of fallout from visa cuts

    Growers warn of fallout from visa cuts

    UNPICKED crops, decimated rural communities and higher supermarket prices are among the consequences that could unfold if One Nation’s anti-immigration policy were to be implemented, farmers and experts have warned.…

  • Grape harvest underway

    Grape harvest underway

    Harvest has begun with our first loads of Chardonnay and Pinot Grigio. Reports of lower yields following the ongoing heat are common, although with the worldwide oversupply of wine, this…

  • Grant strengthens cattle and red meat industry

    Grant strengthens cattle and red meat industry

    Purchase this photo from Pic Store: 528596 Meat and Livestock Australia (MLA) in partnership with industry peak bodies, has secured a grant from the National Foundation for Australia-China Relations to…

  • Safety a priority

    Safety a priority

    EVERY farmer deserves to come home safely at the end of the day. That is the message at the heart of a new statewide campaign urging Victorian farmers to see…

  • Golden opportunity for future

    Golden opportunity for future

    THE Victorian Farmers Federation has called on the State Government to make strategic investments in agriculture, saying smarter policy and targeted funding in seven priority areas could supercharge the industry…

  • New initiative for soil diseases

    New initiative for soil diseases

    THE Grains Research and Development Corporation has recently launched a new initiative aimed at addressing economic strain from soilborne crop diseases. The Soil-Borne Disease Initiative is a five-year program that…