No exhibition is complete without booth babes, apparently. Khortytsya Horilka (in Ukrainian, Vodka in Russian) is one of the better brands in Ukraine. These young women were working the Khortytsya brand, preparing some traditional dish for free lunch giveaway. I think it was buckwheat kasha (porridge) which is eaten here like we eat potatoes or rice in North America. They did not look particularly happy, either with their work or with themselves, I am not sure which. Maybe both.
They knew why they were there and why they were dressed the way they were. Not much to be proud of but sex sells alcohol. (And alcohol sells sex - "Krombacher beer - helping ugly people get laid since 1516").
Funny but if those same girls wearing equally revealing clothes of their own choosing (likely less mid-rift and more cleavage though) were walking down Khreshchatik with their friends or boyfriends, they would be happy and confident. And they would look a lot sexier than they did "selling" vodka.
Showing posts with label Agro 2011. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Agro 2011. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 7, 2011
Agro 2011 - Food and Drink Dispays
There were more than a dozen Oblasts (provinces) with very elaborate booths at the show, displaying all the different brands of food and beverages produced there. Not sure what purpose it served other that bragging rights. It was not a consumer show so it wouldn't increase market share or anything. But the displays were impressive. There are hundreds of brands of sausage and cheese in Ukraine and dozens of brands of beer and vodka. This is a carry over from Soviet times when every little town had a processing plant. Even now anyone with cows or pigs wants to build a processing plant and run a store to sell direct..
When Tanya was managing the government procurement contracts between the collective farms and the processors in P'yatikhatski Raion in the last years of the USSR and the first few years of independence, there were 28 collective farms, four bread factories, four milk factories and three meat factories (they were called factories).
Agro 2011 - Seeding and tillage
As RB pointed out, it is easy to take teh boy from the farm but hard to take the farm from the boy. I know I have a few rural or rural at heart readers so these pictures are for them. Just a few more pictures folks and then on with the show. The next two Agro-2011 will be more interesting. Promise.
The tillage equipment was mostly disks and cultivators. Only one plow that I saw. I hate plows, having seen what they do to the soil. Don't like disks much either. Same reason. Turns the trash under instead of leaving it on top to hold moisture and control weeds. Seeding equipment ranged from the ancient to the ultra modern. There was an end-wheel press drill that was much like the ones used on state and collective farms for decades. And modern air seeders with complex multi openers and all sorts of electronic controls and monitors.
The tillage equipment was mostly disks and cultivators. Only one plow that I saw. I hate plows, having seen what they do to the soil. Don't like disks much either. Same reason. Turns the trash under instead of leaving it on top to hold moisture and control weeds. Seeding equipment ranged from the ancient to the ultra modern. There was an end-wheel press drill that was much like the ones used on state and collective farms for decades. And modern air seeders with complex multi openers and all sorts of electronic controls and monitors.
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| My grandfather used a similar model with steel wheels in the 1920's. |
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| Crop duster. |
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| Corn planter for the small farmer |
Monday, June 6, 2011
Agro 2011 - Combines and Tractors
I am always happy when Ukraine does things for itself, instead of importing. Like make farm machinery. (Now all my Saskatchewan buddies will be mad. Sask, and Canada, exports a pile of machinery to Ukraine every year). There were all kinds of Ukraine mfrd combines this year, along with the usual John Deere, New Holland and Caterpillar. Combines made in Bila Tserkva, Kherson, Slavutych and Kharkiv, along with other made in Russia and Belarus. Krasnoyarsk combines are now made in Ukraine at Bila Tserkva. Not sure if there are other Russian brands built here or if they are local brands.
Lots of tractors too, built in Ukraine, along with Russian and the well known Belarus tractors. Many small makes from China along with lots of equipment for small farms. Nice to see stuff that is for the little guys too.
Lots of tractors too, built in Ukraine, along with Russian and the well known Belarus tractors. Many small makes from China along with lots of equipment for small farms. Nice to see stuff that is for the little guys too.
Agro 2011 - Livestock
Twelve years ago there were several hundred cattle and other livestock on display at the show. There was no judging per se. The cattle were there to advertise the various (at that time government-owned) genetics farms and AI centres. Almost all of them have been privatized one way or another.
The Main Selection Centre of Ukraine at Pereyaslav-Khmelnitsky was once flagship of the Ukraine SSR Genetics Farms and AI Centres. Under Director (the late) Irina Volenko the farm had several hundred beef cattle of five breeds and one of the best Holstein breeding herds. At one time they had a bull-stud in partnership with Semex Canada. (You would love to hear the Semex version of events, I am sure) MSCU sold semen all over Ukraine; ran dairy and beef production schools, AI schools, ET schools, kept dairy and beef bull production records for Ukraine. I was there so often from 1997 to 2005 that the professional staff were like family.
MSCU was one of three Ukrainian partners in the 1999-2002 Beef Forage Development Project funded by CIDA, implemented by Saskatchewan Trade and Export Partnership (STEP). My Tanya was a student in the first three week beef and forage school we taught at MSCU.
MSCU is still government owned but does virtually nothing. It exists in name only. The beef cattle are all gone. the dairy cattle sold and the facilities leased. All my friends are gone to new jobs. Irina's daughter Svitlana started a genetics company and imports dairy semen from an American company. She employs several of my friends. My friend Volodya started his own genetics company and imports dairy and beef semen from another American company. Both are doing well. Both companies had booths at the show.
There were maybe six farms with beef cattle at the show, to promote themselves. There really is no market for beef bulls in the sense we would understand in North America. There are only about 50,000 beef cattle in Ukraine and most of those are on (highly subsidized) purebred farms.
The Main Selection Centre of Ukraine at Pereyaslav-Khmelnitsky was once flagship of the Ukraine SSR Genetics Farms and AI Centres. Under Director (the late) Irina Volenko the farm had several hundred beef cattle of five breeds and one of the best Holstein breeding herds. At one time they had a bull-stud in partnership with Semex Canada. (You would love to hear the Semex version of events, I am sure) MSCU sold semen all over Ukraine; ran dairy and beef production schools, AI schools, ET schools, kept dairy and beef bull production records for Ukraine. I was there so often from 1997 to 2005 that the professional staff were like family.
MSCU was one of three Ukrainian partners in the 1999-2002 Beef Forage Development Project funded by CIDA, implemented by Saskatchewan Trade and Export Partnership (STEP). My Tanya was a student in the first three week beef and forage school we taught at MSCU.
MSCU is still government owned but does virtually nothing. It exists in name only. The beef cattle are all gone. the dairy cattle sold and the facilities leased. All my friends are gone to new jobs. Irina's daughter Svitlana started a genetics company and imports dairy semen from an American company. She employs several of my friends. My friend Volodya started his own genetics company and imports dairy and beef semen from another American company. Both are doing well. Both companies had booths at the show.
There were maybe six farms with beef cattle at the show, to promote themselves. There really is no market for beef bulls in the sense we would understand in North America. There are only about 50,000 beef cattle in Ukraine and most of those are on (highly subsidized) purebred farms.
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| Charolais Bull (or Polissia breed; don't ask) |
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| Sign promoting one farm's cattle |
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| Limousin bull from France |
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| Young Limousin bulls |
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| Charolais bulls |
Agro 2011 - Location
If I don't do my own blog before I start on the backlog of other people's that need reading, I will be another day without anything posted.
The Agro 2011 show that Tanya and I attended last week was held in a new exhibition park in Kyiv. It was just off the Metro so easy to reach by public transport but there were still cars parked everywhere for blocks around. Kyiv now has three exhibition parks, one older one and two new ones. The old one, which is quite far from public transportation, is where the show was last time I attended about three years ago. That exhibition park is rumoured to now belong to the son of President Yanukovich, which is quite possible.
For many years, even in Soviet times, the show was held about 30 km from Kyiv by the village of Alexandrivka near Boryspil. I attended twice at that location. Not the best as after heavy rains it was 6" deep in water in many places. However several years back, the location suddenly had new owners who wanted exorbitant fees for allowing the fair to continue there.
It was moved to Kyiv to the old exhibition grounds. All the investment that many companies had put into the old location in terms of permanent structures were simply lost. The Kyiv location was better for machinery and worse for cattle. Cattle numbers dropped considerably at the show. This year it was moved again to this new place - three huge halls plus outdoor space. Again great for machinery bad for livestock but easy to get to for city dwellers.
The Agro 2011 show that Tanya and I attended last week was held in a new exhibition park in Kyiv. It was just off the Metro so easy to reach by public transport but there were still cars parked everywhere for blocks around. Kyiv now has three exhibition parks, one older one and two new ones. The old one, which is quite far from public transportation, is where the show was last time I attended about three years ago. That exhibition park is rumoured to now belong to the son of President Yanukovich, which is quite possible.
For many years, even in Soviet times, the show was held about 30 km from Kyiv by the village of Alexandrivka near Boryspil. I attended twice at that location. Not the best as after heavy rains it was 6" deep in water in many places. However several years back, the location suddenly had new owners who wanted exorbitant fees for allowing the fair to continue there.
It was moved to Kyiv to the old exhibition grounds. All the investment that many companies had put into the old location in terms of permanent structures were simply lost. The Kyiv location was better for machinery and worse for cattle. Cattle numbers dropped considerably at the show. This year it was moved again to this new place - three huge halls plus outdoor space. Again great for machinery bad for livestock but easy to get to for city dwellers.
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| With this picture and the one below, you can get an idea of the facility |
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| Click on this to enlarge |
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| Inside one of the halls. The others were crowded so it was easier to take a panorama picture here. |
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