Farmers' Markets
Charlotte Hollins knows she faces a battle. The 23-year-old British farmer
and her 21-year-old brother Ben are fighting to save the farm from developers
that their father worked on since he was 14. {{U}}(46) {{/U}}
"You don't often get a day off. Supermarkets put a lot of pressure on
farmers to keep prices down. With fewer people working on farms it can be
isolating, "she said. " There is a high rate of suicide and farming will never
make you rich!"
Oliver Robinson, 25, grew up on a farm in
Yorkshire. {{U}}(47) {{/U}} "I'm sure dad hoped I'd stay, "he said. "I
guess it's a nice, straightforward life, but it doesn't appeal. For young,
ambitious people, farm life would be a hard world. "For Robinson, farming
doesn't offer much "in terms of money or lifestyle. "Hollins agrees that
economics stops people from pursuing farming rewards: "providing for a vital
human need, while working outdoors with nature. "
Farming is a
big political issue in the UK. {{U}}(48) {{/U}} The 2001 foot and mouth
crisis closed thousands of farms, stopped meat exports, and raised public
consciousness of troubles in UK farming.
Jamie Oliver's 2005
campaign to get children to eat healthily also highlighted the issue. This
national concern spells (带来) hope for farmers competing with powerful
supermarkets. {{U}}(49) {{/U}}
"I started going to
Farmers' Markets in direct defiance (蔑视)of the big supermarkets. {{U}}(50)
{{/U}} It's terrible, "said Londoner Michael Samson.
A. But
he never considered staying on his father and grandfather's land.
B. While most people buy food from the big supermarkets, hundreds of
independent Farmers' Markets are becoming popular.
C. While
confident they will succeed, she lists farming's many challenges.
D. Young people prefer to live in cities.
E. I seriously
objected to the super-sizing of everything what exactly do they put on our
apples to make them so big and red7
F. "Buy British" campaigns
urge(鼓励)consumers not to buy cheaper imported foods.