An Interview with Food Tank

We have really fallen behind with the blogging recently and as such it has been quite a while since we have shared much on the blog about life here on the farm at Blue Sky.  So, I thought you might be interested to read a little interview that we were approached to do last week by an organisation called Food Tank.

We first came across Food Tank when we were researching how to get involved with the International Year of Family Farming, which we wrote about here.  Food Tank’s mission is to “build a global community for safe, healthy, nourished eaters. They spotlight environmentally, socially, and economically sustainable ways of alleviating hunger, obesity, and poverty and create networks of people, organizations, and content to push for food system change.”  The great thing about Food Tank is that they also aim to “highlight hope and success in agriculture. They feature innovative ideas that are already working on the ground, in cities, in kitchens, in fields and in laboratories.”  Check out the Food Tank website, sign up for their newsletter and you will hear stories from all over the globe about all sorts of food system issues and emerging developments in sustainable agriculture.

Food Tank are huge advocates for family farming and we are only just beginning to think about ways ourselves to be more sustainable farmers to ensure Blue Sky Produce is profitable and still here for many future generations of farmers in the family to come.  We were quite excited to be approached by Food Tank to feature in an upcoming article relating to the International Year of Family Farming.

Below is a transcript of our interview – we have no idea if it will ever make it into print, so wanted to record it here for our own records.  If nothing else, hopefully it gives you a bit of an insight into what we do here at Blue Sky.

Blue Sky Produce

Blue Sky Produce

“Dear Jess,

 My name is Maeve, and I am a research intern with Food Tank: The Food Think Tank. Food Tank highlights environmentally and socially sustainable ways of alleviating hunger and poverty through our website, research, and publications. We have a weekly newsletter that reaches 100,000 subscribers and our work is regularly cited in major press.

 If possible, Food Tank would like to feature you and your family’s important work as family farmers in an upcoming article relating to the International Year of Family Farming.

 I’ve put together some questions for you below, and would greatly appreciate it if you would be willing to respond to them at your earliest convenience. Or, if it is easier, I’m happy to find a time to interview you via telephone or Skype.

Q1. On your blog, you talk about the road trip around Australia that you and your family were undertaking when you were offered the chance to become farmers in Far North Queensland. How did this opportunity come about?

Matt’s family owns and manages a number of other farms and had decided that they needed to diversify into fruit farming.  They knew that we had left the city behind and were looking to begin the next challenge in our lives, preferably in a rural community closer to where we grew up.  So as it happened, a suitable orchard come on the market during our travels so they gave us a call to see if we would be interested in managing it.  A pretty big change for a travel agent and an accountant!! 

Q2. What does a typical day for the Fealy family involve?

Here at Blue Sky Produce, we grow mangoes, avocados, passion fruit and limes as well as have a large onsite contract packing shed, so a typical day really depends on the time of the year.  We have two distinct periods of the year.  ‘During Season’ and ‘Off Season’.  

We are currently in the ‘Off Season’ which means a typical day starts with the alarm set at 6am, but it is rarely required with a newborn baby and 3 other young children in the house!  Matt then heads out on the quad to do some watering before breakfast.  Jess organises breakfast, school lunches and getting the three big kids off on the bus.  Once the chaos of the morning disappears round the corner on the bus at 8am – Matt gets the workers started for the day (we have one full time farm hand, Charlie, and 1 or 2 transient staff for larger jobs) on anything from weeding, pruning, mulching, replanting, soil preparation the list goes on.  

When the workers are all tasked, Matt is in the tractor spraying and fertilising or meeting with agronomists, bug spotters, soil experts or trying to attend as many local best farming practice forums offered in the region to learn as much a new farmer can!  Jess moves between running a home, cleaning the workers quarters, taking care of pays and superannuation and general book work for the farm, with usually a few runs into town for anything from ‘O’ rings to tractor parts.  The work day ends when the sun goes down, with a cold beer and usually a family walk around the farm to tend to the chooks, ducks, dogs, guinea pigs, guinea fowls and peacocks.  The night times are for reading industry email materials, researching best practice and blogging/facebooking!  We usually try to squeeze in a week or two away from the farm during this time.

During the Season (November to April) it is all about the mangoes and the avocados. Matt is in the packing shed by 5am prepping machinery, making orders for the boxes, stickers and labels required for the day.  We usually have a team of up to 30 workers during the season which requires considerable more rostering, paperwork and management for Jess.  The workers will generally start at 7am and finish in the shed at 7pm. At which stage Matt and Charlie will normally still have 1 or 2 hours to go to finish things up.  During the season we will also have a picking crew out in the orchard operating simultaneously to the shed and all the crops require more watering, spraying and fertilising than ever before.  During the season it is VERY busy!!

Q3. What has been the highlight of your experience as family farmers so far?

We both love that we are carrying forward the efforts of Matt’s grandparents who were pioneer farmers in this region.  It is very satisfying to know that our hard work is helping to keep at least one more aussie family farm running and contributing to the economy in a rural community.  A highlight for Matt is that farming requires such a broad spectrum of skills – one day you’re repairing a wiring harness on the tractor, the next you’re stripping down a chainsaw, the day after that you’re pouring over soil and leaf analysis – a good thing for someone who gets bored easily!!  For Jess, the highlight has absolutely been the time at home with Matt & the kids, enjoying the space, sunsets, ducklings, puppies and sharing this with our extended family who are mostly nearby.  Oh, and surviving our first ‘Season’ without any major or costly mishaps was a pretty good feeling too!!

Q4. Are there many other family farmers in your community? How have you found the community reception and support?

The majority of farms in our district are family owned and operated.  In the short nine months we have been here, we haven’t had a lot of time to get to know too many other farmers.  However, our immediate farming neighbours have all introduced themselves and have been very supportive of a new, young family joining the farming community.  

Q5. It’s been a big year for you and your family! What are your plans for the next twelve months on the farm?

Ha!  First and foremost, hope we don’t go broke and be evicted from the family Christmas table!!!!

The farm was a ‘doer upper’ so we have a lot of hard work ahead of us to bring it back to its former glory.  Our major plans for the next twelve months include planting 2,000 new avocado trees as well as preparing 30 acres of virgin soil for our own mulch hay.  We are passionate about trying to farm sustainably and will be implementing in our orchard better integrated pest management (IPM) practices by promoting the populations of beneficial insects.  We’re also really excited that we have been accepted in this years Northern Gulf Resource Management Group (NGRMG) Efficient Farming Program.  The program brings together a team of irrigation, pest, crop nutrition and property mapping specialists to work one-on-one with farmers.  We believe that as the ‘new kids on the block’ this program will fast track our knowledge of up to date, relevant and sustainable farming practices.  Lots going on but we can’t wait!

We feel highly unqualified really to be lending our voice to the effort to advocate for Family Farming, having only been farmers ourselves for just under a year.  We feel a little undeserving of the interview and know that there are so many more farmers out there with generations of experience under their belts who would be much better to speak to than us!  But, we have to start somewhere to try to make a difference and so we will contribute our bit where we can!

Now if we could ask you all to do the same and please take a minute to jump online and sign the petition here in support of the 2014 International Year of Family Farming.

 

Categories: About Us, Blue Sky Produce, Every Family Needs A Farmer | Tags: , , , , , , | 9 Comments

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9 thoughts on “An Interview with Food Tank

  1. Inspiring, Jess & Matt! You may be ‘newbie’ farmers, but your enthusiasm, and your goals, are inspiring. While it was a hard decision to stop the travel, I see the decision to take on the farm as a marvellous (if very hard work) continuation of living your lives as a journey, not a destination.

  2. Murray Morris

    Here, here totally agree with redroveroz

  3. Well done guys. You certainly put in the hard work all round with your farm. Good luck. I love reading all your posts on everything. Take care. Xo

  4. Carla

    Great article and great answers to those questions guys!! Well done!!!

    • Are We There Yet?

      Thanks Carla! It was actually hard to try to get out what we wanted to say!!

  5. That was a great post Jess and a great insight into how hard farmers actually work. It’s not all tea scones as some might think! I’m seriously behind in blogging too – haven’t posted in weeks!!

  6. Missed this one somehow…but great interview and I think you guys have a lot to offer the farming community. Enjoying watching your journey unfold.

  7. Pingback: In the Media – Blue Sky Produce | 'Are We There Yet?'

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