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Sergei Gotsmanov

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Everything posted by Sergei Gotsmanov

  1. I am not arguing that we would win the Championship just that there would be more if a reason to support the team.
  2. We had no money then but maybe if we could have a financially controlled landing it might work.
  3. Thank you. Part of me would like to see us reassemble our loanees and have a go in the Championship. It would provide more of an incentive to support a team made up of a lot of our youth system.
  4. You can add four season tickets to that. I must have asked a dozen people - there was limited appetite to see us get beaten.
  5. Quite right. It was not that long ago that you could beat anyone in the league and all the big games were fiercely competed and you would be excited about them having a ago. But now it is simply not the case. I had to miss today and surprised myself by not being irritated. I just knew we would be beaten. Very sad but I am not sure how you can change it.
  6. Well said. What a great guy to have around the club.
  7. Disagree. He has valuable insight and the right voice for it.
  8. Iain Dowie?
  9. Frankie Bennett - tipped by the News of the World as one to watch after his goal against Chelsea! What dish could you once order on the menu of curry house Kutis that was named after an investor and ex Saints player Francis Benali
  10. Very interesting thank you. I remember Fonte saying a few years back how much they rated him.
  11. As I understand it you suggested that intensive farming has meant that hedgerows and stonewalls were being lost. I pointed out that they were built and planted for sheep and cattle but not pigs and chickens because in the 18 and 19th century when all the hedgerows and walls were built they were built for cattle and sheep but not for pigs and chickens which were generally farmyard animals. When pigs became more intensive they did move out onto the fields but no hedgerows or walls were built for them so they will not be lost. That really is me done.
  12. I don't know you Buctotim, I am sure you are very nice guy. The trouble is Google makes you think that you are a lot cleverer than you are. You will probably notice that when it comes to farming, pubs and drinks I might join a debate on here. That is because I have or have had interests in all of them. When it comes to pigs, I have a business that I run which fattens pigs through a bed and breakfast system. On that note I will leave the debate and leave you to google bed and breakfast pigs.
  13. I have invested in lots of things, some work out others don't but yes I am still involved in the drinks industry. I am genuinely embarrassed that I have wasted so much time arguing about whether a hedge was ever planted to keep a pig in. You?
  14. Yes I never thought I would be squandering time on a football forum arguing that the pig is not an animal that roams in fields! The irony is that I run a pig business.
  15. I am sorry but you seemed to be suggesting that by bringing pigs indoors that has an impact on stone walls and hedgerows numbers. It does not because the pig was always a back yard animal. That is why when farming became more intensive and they were put in small fenced pens in outdoor fields they needed the Arks you pointed out. There are still a lot of pigs outdoors because they are a different welfare standard and you get a better price for them from the supermarkets.
  16. Pigs never roamed in fields and paddocks. The pigs you show are not roaming they are 'outdoor pigs' that are widespread because you get a higher price for them because they have a higher welfare grade. Like chickens, pigs have always been farm yard animals. You are right that sheep farming would disappear without support and it is sheep farming that has most to lose from us leaving Europe not least because France is our biggest export market for lamb
  17. Still think it is a very difficult figure to reach when some farmers don't receive any subsidy.
  18. You don't keep sheep indoors unless they are lambing and apart from a very few 'super dairies' most dairy and beef cattle are outside when there is grass. Pigs and poultry have never roamed. Anyway I agree with your sentiments about preserving the countryside but I am not sure the public will be happy to pay for practices that date back to James Herriot. Our farming industry is actually very well developed because subsidies or no subsidies it has had to be to compete.
  19. What will become of the milk powder mountain then? You do actually need to differentiate between different types of farming - how do you get to 55%?
  20. I agree with your sentiments although there is also a balance to be struck between providing cheap food and preserving the countryside's aesthetics. I am afraid you cannot escape the fact that the French farming vote is as high as 15% or so I once read and that has meant that no French PM can ever support significant change to the CAP. That is not dishonest that is a fact.
  21. I agree with you I don't want to see the end of the Single Farm Payment for that reason but don't tell me that farmers don't need to thank the French farmers for shaping the CAP.
  22. Really? so how much was the EU budget in 1986 and how much was the EU budget in 2016? Would that give your numbers more context? It is well recognised how much UK farmers owe French farmers for resisting radical reform of CAP. It will be a major issue when we leave, particularly if we do a deal with the US because some have indicated that we will sell out our farmers for a trade deal.
  23. I think you will find that the French have always fiercely resisted any meaningful reform of farm subsidies. A French politician cannot get elected by doing so because of the strength of the farming vote over there. Their inheritance laws mean that a lot of French have a stake on the land.
  24. I never saw it on the main news. Just buried in the website.
  25. Here we go...Sciatica attack apparently! https://euobserver.com/tickers/142375
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