Chrisfnvs
Field Bee
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2011
- Messages
- 621
- Reaction score
- 0
- Location
- hampshire
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 150
I would suggest there are far more possibility's in farming for those leaving agricultural collage in this country than in bee farming as there are far more farms which have a wide range of positions available, no one would suggest someone leaving collage would go straight out and buy a farm, that is just not going to happen, unless they win the lottery that is, as mention a wide range of positions are available to start with and then work their way up or become a tenant farmer, not such possibility`s in bee farming i would suggest, i would further suggest bee farmers are in a unusual position in that mostly we place are equipment (expensive hives) on other peoples land which makes it hard to obtain insurance cover unless you are lucky enough to find a farmer that will add you to their cover, something i have not been able to find so far, as for mechanics i would suggest they would have a much better business plan available to them as they could forecast the income much more accurately than bee farmers as their income could be calculated over a 12 month period with some degree of accuracy making a business loan more viable, chasing honey is hard work with no guarantee of a crop at the end of the season,which is only 6 months long, unless you sell queens, nuc`s and make hives which will spreed the rick a little, i think the BFA could do more in terms of getting better deals from the manufacturers for the newly qualified and a better relationship the the NFU to give access to sites, i am not knocking the scheme i just feel it was rolled out before any support being put in place.
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