| 28/01/06
 THE NFU in Cumbria has a new entrepreneurial county chairman
              who is determined to see the industry he loves revolutionised. 
                
                Trevor Wilson 
                
                
                  |  |  Trevor Wilson, 44, of Low Bankside Farm in Cartmel, believes
                his members have the managerial and manual skills to make a success
                of anything they put their minds to. He officially took over
              as county chairman on Monday 23 January. "What I've found is that skills based for running a farm
                can run any business successfully," said Mr Wilson who is
                a father of five and is married to Lesley. "Some of the skills I've learnt from farming can be better
                used. At the moment I'm developing some property in and around
                the Flookburgh area and I do a lot of the building work myself.
                Farmers tend to have a good aptitude for most trades. I've personally
                become quite handy at joinery and plastering. "The new skills I've developed are a lot better utilised
                in converting properties than what they would be building a non
                profit making slurry or silage pit at the moment. "Commodity production in agriculture will only bring profit
                to the best and most efficient producers. There are many factors
                in determining who is the best, size of farm, location, skills
                and even age and stage of family unit. "Diversification should not be something that is done to
                prop up non-profit making enterprises on the farm. Some of us
                will have to embrace change and Single Farm Payment will help
                us do that." During FMD, Trevor and his wife Lesley knew there was a niche
                for fast food in Flookburgh so with some close friends they purchased
                a terraced house and converted it into Flounder's fish and chip
                shop that can be found in Flookburgh Square. The Monsoon Sheep Shower was the first diversification. "I made the first two from scratch and you could tell a
                mile off that they were farmer made," added Trevor. "However, I have a friend in the village who owns an engineering
                firm and now that firm makes the showers to my design. "We are currently looking at exporting but have already
                sold models into southern Ireland and all over the UK. "A lot of larger farmers and contractors are buying the
                mobile showers which I think is a good sign for the industry
                because the showers are being shared between four farmers at
                a time and cooperation like that has to be a positive thing." A tenant farmer, Trevor, started farming at Low Bankside back
                in 1985. He currently farms beef, sheep and 60 acres of mixed
                arable crops. He has 200 beef cattle and is also wintering 1,000
                sheep for other farmers. He studied agriculture at Newton Rigg College in 1980 and spent
                a couple of years prior to that working for well-known Cark dairy
                farmer, George Lewis. Trevor has been active within the NFU since 1998 when he started
                attending Cartmel branch meetings. He was chairman of the branch
                from 1999 until 2000. He is very interested in the auction system
                and is a director of Lancaster and Kendal District Auctions. "Former Cumbria County Chairman Alistair Mackintosh will
                go down in history for setting up regular branch chairmen meetings
                and I for one think the NFU has never been as democratic as it
                is now because of this," said Trevor. "A grassroot
                member can raise an issue at a branch meeting whose chairman
                passes it on to the county chairman at the branch chairmen's
                meeting and within a couple of weeks the county chairman can
                raise that issue at NFU Council. Now that has to be a good thing. "I hope to continue Alistair's good work and aim to steer
                Cumbrian farming in the right direction."  Young
              Cumbrian farmers to quiz NFU president 
  Rural Payments Agency
              'no confidence' vote 
  NFU
		    Joins Fight To Save Cumbrian Cottage Hospitals
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