(WACO) – Farmers and ranchers
from across Texas will be headed to Corpus Christi to help Texas
Farm Bureau ring in its 75th anniversary during the organization’s
annual convention Dec. 6-8 at the American Bank Center.
"Seventy-five years is by no
means a small feat for any organization,” said Kenneth Dierschke,
president of the state’s largest general farm organization. “What
began as a vision all those years ago has grown into a grassroots
organization unlike any other that will remain a vital voice for us
as we look toward our next 75 years.”
While celebrations are
definitely in store to mark this historic occasion for the Texas
Farm Bureau, 2008 has been anything but the banner year for many
farmers and ranchers in the state.
“While some of our farm-raised
products saw some of the best prices ever in our industry, our
farmers and ranchers were also paying record prices for everything
they need to grow a crop or tend their livestock,” Dierschke noted.
“Fuel, fertilizer and feed prices were easily twice what they were
last year—in some cases, they were more than 10 times what we paid
just five years ago. And while prices may have soared for many of
our crops, many were less than half their peak when it came time for
most of us to bring in our harvests.”
As if a rollercoaster economy
weren’t bad enough, Texas farmers and ranchers also bore the brunt
of several natural disasters in 2008, ranging from the tempest
deluges and tidal surges of Hurricanes Dolly, Gustav and Ike to some
of the driest times on record for some parts of Central and South
Texas.
“Texas farmers and ranchers
have no doubt been through another difficult year," Dierschke said.
"But our strength lies in numbers during these difficult times, and
we will lay our road to recovery when we come together as an
organization in Corpus Christi."
Dierschke said the policy
developed at the annual meeting is unique in that it is not an
endorsement of decisions already made, but the beginning of the
state’s largest farm organization’s game plan for the coming year.
With the state legislature set to convene in 2009, the business of
policy will be an utmost priority, he said.
Registration for the state
convention, along with TFB Member Services exhibits, begins at 10
a.m. on Saturday, Dec. 6. Other Saturday events will include the
Miss TFB and Talent Find Contests, as well as the Free Enterprise
Speech Contests. Events Sunday, Dec. 7, begin with a 10:30 a.m.
devotional, followed by member recognition awards, Pioneer Award
presentations and the naming of the 2008 Outstanding Young Farmer
and Rancher. The 75th anniversary Celebration kicks off
at 6:30 p.m. Sunday, featuring entertainment by Chris Story and
Southern Edge and musings by humorist Bryan Townsend. The meeting
concludes Monday, Dec. 8, with the organization’s annual business
session.
For more information, visit
the Texas Farm Bureau website at
www.txfb.org