Shannon Airport bales out local farmers...

Fodder worth €40,000 made available as silage is cut on 300 acre site

Shannon Airport permitted contractors to harvest its landbank, which is expected to yield 1,000 bales for silage.  Photograph: Arthur Ellis/Press22
Shannon Airport permitted contractors to harvest its landbank, which is expected to yield 1,000 bales for silage. Photograph: Arthur Ellis/Press22

Farmers in Co Clare affected by the ongoing fodder shortage received a boost yesterday when Shannon Airport permitted contractors to harvest its landbank, yielding 1,000 bales for silage.

The airport normally only cuts the grass on its 300-acre site every three years, but management agreed to move the harvest forward by two years following a request from the Irish Farmers’ Association.

The airport did not charge for the grass, but farmers will have to pay about €12.50 a bale to cover contractor costs. The average price of a bale is €40.

Farmers across the State have been experiencing a shortage of fodder in recent weeks as supplies have run out following a poor harvest after a wet summer and autumn. This resulted in farmers being unable to save enough feed to get their herds through the winter months.

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Minister for Agriculture Simon Coveney said this week that a fodder crisis of this scale had not been seen in living memory.

Kieran Woods, a farmer from Newmarket-on-Fergus in Co Clare, was present at Shannon yesterday for the harvest and said he was doing his best to cope with the shortage.

“I have a very small amount [of fodder] myself and it’s very scarce in many places,” he said. “While some areas are worse off than others, the airport has really done us a turn here.

“My own will last another week I’d say and hopefully what I get here in the airport will last another week. I’ll hopefully be OK after that if the weather holds. I should be cutting grass myself in June, all going well.”

Clare IFA chairman Andrew Dundas said he had been inundated with calls from farmers seeking a share of the Shannon harvest.

“The demand is phenomenal and quickly surpassed what’s available, which highlights how critical it is out there,” he said.