Ukrainian raid on Russian border region injures eight civilians – governor

An intrusion by a Ukrainian saboteur group into Russia’s Belgorod Region on Monday has left at least eight civilians wounded, local governor Vyacheslav Gladkov has said.

The official visited hospitals to check up on the inured, according to a video address posted to his Telegram channel. No civilians were killed during the incursion, he noted.

Earlier in the day, the governor placed “anti-terrorism operation” regulations on the area over the incident, providing additional power to law enforcement and restricting certain civil liberties. The police can now check documents and vehicles based solely on suspicion, ban traffic in designated areas, restrict telecom services, allow servicemen partaking in the operation to enter private properties freely, and so on. Gladkov did not provide any estimates on how long the special regime would be in effect.

The incident was acknowledged by Moscow, with Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov stating earlier in the day that the Russian military, the National Guard, border patrol agents and Federal Security Service (FSB) “are taking all the necessary measures to destroy the enemy.”

Peskov also claimed that the attack had largely political goals as it was due to the aftermath of the fall of the Donbass stronghold of Artyomovsk, known as Bakhmut in Ukraine, which was recently fully liberated by Russia’s forces. The claim of the city’s capture has been disputed by Kiev.

The incursion has also been confirmed by Ukraine, with a spokesman for Ukraine’s Directorate of Intelligence, Andrey Yusov, claiming it was staged exclusively by Russian collaborationist units fighting for Kiev, namely the so-called legion ‘Freedom of Russia’ and the Russian Volunteer Corps (RDK).

The raid appears to resemble a similar incursion into Russia’s Bryansk Region in early March. The attack left two Russian civilians dead, and the RDK claimed responsibility for it. At the time, Kiev tried to distance itself from the incident, insisting it was not behind the raid. However, RDK members themselves alleged that Ukrainian authorities had directly “signed off” on the raid.

Source: Russia Today

Drone-bombs hit Russian border region – governor

Ukrainian forces targeted several settlements in Belgorod Region, Russia with drones carrying explosives on Monday night, according to Governor Vyacheslav Gladkov.

The region had been placed under “anti-terrorism operation” regulations in the wake of a raid by a Ukrainian saboteur group.

Late in the evening, several improvised explosive devices were dropped on civilian houses in the town Grayvoron, which is located 7km from the Ukrainian border, Gladkov confirmed on Telegram. Two houses caught fire, but there were no casualties, the official added.

Grayvoron is the administrative center of the district that had been targeted in a Ukrainian intrusion earlier in the day.

A similar attack happened in the settlement of Borisovka, 25 kilometers further away from the border, where at least two bombs were dropped from drones on an administrative building, Gladkov said shortly after midnight. Several hours later, yet another drone attacked a civilian house in the same village.

A group of saboteurs crossed from Ukraine into Belgorod Region earlier on Monday, forcing the governor to introduce “anti-terrorism operation” regulations and provide additional power to law enforcement to deal with the threat. At least eight civilians were wounded during the intrusion.

Source: Russia Today

Ukrainian clubs attack FC Barcelona over greetings to Russian fans

FC Shakhtar Donetsk has demanded that FC Barcelona apologize after two of its players recorded a video message thanking Russian fans for their support. Despite its Donbass roots, FC Shakhtar relocated to Lviv in western Ukraine in 2014 and has since embraced the nationalism of its new home city.

Barcelona’s Alejandro Balde and Sergi Roberto recently recorded a short video message thanking fans in Russia for their support this season. The video, which was recorded in Spanish, was posted to Telegram with Russian subtitles by the Russian network that broadcasts La Liga games.

“A big hello to all Barcelona fans in Russia! See you soon!” Balde said.

Shakhtar Donetsk Director Sergey Palkin was furious. “We hope FC Barcelona realizes that their support for a country like Russia is completely unacceptable at this time,” he said in a statement on Monday. “We expect the club to admit its mistake and avoid similar situations in the future.”

“The whole world united to support Ukraine and the Ukrainian people and condemned the invasion,” he wrote. “And then we see the players of one of the world’s top clubs, Barcelona, address the Russians, expressing their gratitude and support to them. We consider this an intolerable and simply immoral act.”

Neither Balde or Roberto mentioned the Russian state or Russian military in the video. Nevertheless, Ukrainian clubs FC Desna and Dynamo Kiev have also joined in the condemnation, with Dynamo calling the video the “disgrace of the day.”

Since its foundation in the 1930s, Shakhtar Donetsk has been the pride of the city of Donetsk, and all of the club’s head coaches have spoken Russian, except for its current coach, Igor Jovicevic. FC Shakhtar left Donetsk in 2014 and relocated to Lviv, and then to Kiev, and the word ‘Donetsk’ is now almost completely absent from the club’s social media profiles and promotional materials.

On its social media accounts, Shakhtar Donetsk regularly condemns Russia and praises the same Ukrainian military that spent eight years shelling the civilian population of Donetsk after the team relocated to Lviv.

Source: Russia Today

Spain says containing wildfire as conditions improve

Spanish authorities said that firefighters and soldiers were managing to contain a blaze in the country’s west that has forced hundreds of people to evacuate from nearby villages.

“Today, we’re hoping to strike a blow against this fire… It’s a very intense task,” said civil protection coordinator Nieves Villar, adding that conditions had improved as the high wind-speeds of recent days dropped back.

That prompted regional forest fire prevention and extinction services to declare the situation “stabilised” by late Saturday evening.

“The situation with the forest fire in Pinofranqueado is better than yesterday and the change in the weather conditions can help as the hours go by,” regional government leader Guillermo Fernandez Vara said in a post to social media.

Winds are only expected to finally calm on Sunday, when there is the possibility of light rain.

Local authorities have blamed arson for the wildfire that broke out Wednesday near the village of Pinofranqueado in the sparsely populated region of Extremadura bordering Portugal.

The flames have ravaged some 3,500 hectares of forest and scrubland and forced the evacuation of around 700 people from several villages, the regional government said.

Data from Europe’s Copernicus satellite system showed as much as 12,000 hectares had been affected by the blaze across the affected province of Caceras.

Villar said 600 firefighters had been deployed overall, including Portuguese colleagues. Backing them are 14 water-bombing aircraft, the regional agriculture ministry said.

Fernandez Vara lashed out Friday against the “bastards” who had set the fires that caused “irreversible damages that take decades to recover, if they ever recover”.

The strong winds of up to 60 kilometres an hour had made controlling the flames “extremely difficult”, he added.

But he expressed hope that more clement weather conditions in the hours ahead would make it easier to douse the fire.

Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez cancelled his participation on Friday at a rally in Extremadura ahead of regional elections on May 28 because of the blaze.

Spain, which is experiencing long-term drought after three years of below-average rainfall, has already experienced multiple wildfires this year.

The drought was made worse by an unusually early heatwave at the end of April that brought exceptionally high temperatures normally seen only in summer.

Temperatures hit 38.8 degrees Celsius in the southern city of Granada on April 27, the highest ever recorded in mainland Spain during that month.

In 2022, a particularly bad year for wildfires in Europe, Spain was the continent’s worst-hit country.

Nearly 500 blazes destroyed more than 300,000 hectares, according to the European Forest Fire Information System.

Scientists say human-induced climate change is making extreme weather events including heatwaves and droughts more frequent and more intense. They increase the risk of fires, which emit climate heating greenhouse gases.

Source: Nam News Network (NNN)

Georgia’s Diplomatic Balancing Act Is Getting Harder To Pull Off

Since the launch of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine last year, Georgia's government has tried to walk a thin line: to maintain its strong ties to the West while at the same time avoiding the wrath of a Russia on the warpath.

Now, the balancing act is facing its greatest challenge yet.

On May 10, Russia unexpectedly announced that it would restore direct flights to Georgia -- after suspending them in 2019 -- and cancel visa requirements for Georgians visiting Russia. Over a week later, on May 19, the first flight arrived from Moscow to Tbilisi's airport on Russia's Azimuth Airlines. Passengers on the inaugural flight, including some prominent Georgian pro-Russian activists as well as ordinary tourists, were greeted by a media scrum and hundreds of protesters.

The government of the ruling Georgian Dream party, which has faced accusations of appeasing Russia and failing to sufficiently support Ukraine, has argued the resumption of direct flights will boost tourism revenues and make life easier for Georgians who need to travel to Russia. It has sought to allay Western concerns by emphasizing that economic ties with Russia don't contradict the spirit of its relationship to the West and that they shouldn't affect the country's bid to join the European Union.

But it hasn't convinced Brussels.

"We regret Georgia's decisions to restart flights to and from Russia," EU spokesman Peter Stano said in a May 16 press briefing. The move "raises concerns about Georgia's EU path and Georgia's commitment to align with the EU decisions in foreign policy" that it had already undertaken when it signed an Association Agreement with the body in 2014, Stano added.

Georgian officials have complained that they are facing a double standard compared to other Western-friendly countries that still have direct flights to and from Russia, including Armenia, Azerbaijan, Turkey, and Israel. Moscow unilaterally canceled direct flights to Georgia in 2019 in retaliation against anti-Russian protests that year. At the time, the EU and U.S. criticized Russia for the move.

Now, criticism of Georgia for accepting the flights amounts to a "demand that Russia sanction Georgia again," in the words of parliamentary speaker Shalva Papuashvili.

Georgian officials have argued they are only allowing unsanctioned airlines to carry out the flights and so they are not violating Western sanctions. But EU officials say that misses the point, and that the situation has changed since 2019: the EU banned all flights to and from Russia in response to the war in Ukraine and expects its partner countries to do the same.

"Each country in the EU accession process, or aspiring to become part of it, is expected to progressively align with our foreign policy decisions and actions," Stano told RFE/RL in e-mailed comments. "In the case of countries with a clear [EU] perspective, we expect real concrete actions."

Georgia applied for EU candidate status shortly after the start of the Ukraine war in February 2022, along with Ukraine and Moldova. While those two latter countries were awarded candidate status in June 2022, Georgia was instead given an EU "perspective" and a list of reforms it should implement. This fall, the EU will decide, based on its perception of the progress Georgia has made on those reforms, whether to award it candidate status.

Asked about the perception of double standards, Stano said Georgia itself had asked for higher standards. "Armenia is not aspiring for EU membership, but Georgia is and wants to get candidate status from the EU -- well, for that they have to show how they stand up for EU values and principles," he said.

Taken alone, accepting Russia's offer on flights and visas might not have been seen as alarming, but it comes as the Georgian government is already under heavy scrutiny for other anti-Western moves, said one Western diplomat in Tbilisi who requested anonymity so as to be able to speak more frankly. Most significantly, the government recently proposed a bill that would designate media and organizations taking funding from abroad as "foreign agents," against the strong objections from Washington and Brussels. It backed down only after large protests against the bills.

"The international community sees this as not an isolated case but within the overall context," the diplomat said. "There are legitimate concerns about Georgia's foreign policy orientation, and when you are looking for signs about that orientation, this is a bad sign."

Georgian officials have publicly downplayed the foreign policy implications of the move and instead focused on the economic benefits, claiming the resumption of flights could bring in up to $400 million a year to the country's tourism-reliant economy.

Officials from the Georgian Dream party appear to be motivated by mainly domestic political concerns, said Vano Abramashvili, an analyst and head of the Peace Program at the Tbilisi-based NGO Caucasian House. "Economically, Georgian Dream is happy to accept all kinds of money and whatever benefits they can get. Economic growth is part of their narrative, and [their] argument is that 'we prosper because we're at peace,'" Abramashvili told RFE/RL.

The government is also hedging its bets geopolitically because it thinks that "if Russia is not winning in Ukraine, at least it is not losing. They genuinely believe this," he said.

Georgians have mixed views on the resumption of the flights. A poll by the U.S.-based International Republican Institute conducted in March, when the possibility of restoring flights had already been mooted publicly, found 48 percent in favor and 46 percent opposed.

When Georgian Airways, the country's flag carrier, announced on May 16 that it would start operating flights to Russia, it was met with anger on social media and protests outside its Tbilisi offices. The company hit back with a combative Facebook post defending the company's patriotic bona fides and accusing its critics of taking "foreign grants."

If other countries "have the right to fly to Russia and are not included in the list of sanctioned countries, then I ask, what did little Georgia and its small airline do?" asked Tamaz Gaiashvili, the chairman of Georgian Airways, in a separate statement to the press.

Russia's motivations for its gesture remain murky. After the initial announcement was made on May 10, there was no official comment by any senior officials for several days. Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova was asked at a May 17 press briefing about its implications for Georgia-Russia relations and she demurred: "Our principled approach is to consistently ease the conditions for communication and contacts between residents of Russia and Georgia, in spite of the lack of diplomatic relations," she said. The decision to restore flights "is consistent with this logic," she added.

Russian state media, though, ran enthusiastic stories touting the move as a step toward rapprochement between the two countries, which have not had diplomatic relations since the 2008 war over Georgia's breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

The Russian government has been seeking to bolster support for the war in the face of waning public support, and one important narrative is that Western attempts to isolate Russia have failed.

"I don't like that Georgia has stepped forward to give [Russian President Vladimir] Putin this lifeline," the Western diplomat noted.

Georgian officials themselves have given mixed assessments of Russia's possible motivations. Georgian Dream head Irakli Kobakhidze said Russia's move amounts to a reward for what he called a "pragmatic" policy vis-a-vis Russia and the Ukraine war. Other officials have complained that the timing appeared to be aimed at spoiling Georgia's EU aspirations.

"With this step, Russia is attempting to harm Georgia's European integration path by projecting the image that Georgia is closely cooperating with Russia," Nikoloz Samkharadze, chairman of the Georgian parliament's foreign affairs committee, told local media.

The resumption of visa-free travel and direct flights was made in recognition of the fact that "Georgia's course toward Russia is as rational and as constructive as possible, taking into account Georgia's close ties with the West," Nikolai Silaev, a foreign policy analyst at the Moscow State Institute of International Relations, told RFE/RL. It is "a strong signal that Russia intends to normalize relations with Tbilisi."

To Georgia's Western partners, the prospect of improved ties with Russia is alarming.

Tbilisi "should be very careful about welcoming what looks to be attempts by Russia to normalize relations with Georgia," U.S. Ambassador to Georgia Kelly Degnan said at a security conference in the country's capital on May 18.

"I think an important question is, why now? Why is Putin now making these concessions and these offers to Georgia? What is the price that Georgia is going to have to pay for direct flights?" Degnan said. "These are very important questions, because we all know Putin does not give anything without extracting a price."

Source: Radio Free Europe/ Radio Liberty

First ‘Growing Organics’ farm walk set for Laois

The first in a series of 'Growing Organics' farm walks takes place on the farm of Jason Stanley, Errill, Co. Laois, on the 2nd of June 2023. Marianne Mulhall, Specialised Organic Advisor, previews Jason's farming system and the upcoming open day in this article.

Jason Stanley farms in Castleflemming, Errill, Co. Laois. He converted to organic farming in 2011 and full organic status was achieved in May 2013. The farm, which is 78ha, comprises of a mix of tillage and sheep production - split 50:50 between both enterprises.

The sheep enterprise consists of 400 March-lambing ewes. The stocking rate on the farm is 11.25 ewes/ha. All ewes are housed mid/late November in two large straw-bedded sheds and let out to grass as they lamb. The main breeds of sheep on the farm are Belclare x New Zealand Suffolk. The rams used are Belclare and Charollais.

The rams are introduced to the flock around the 10th of October and left with them for six weeks. Ewes are lambed indoors and let out to grass as they lamb. Lambs are grazed on mulrispecies grasses, white clover and red clover grass swards. They are mostly finished off grass with Jason commenting: “The red clover grass is excellent for lamb weight gains. The MSS is also an excellent forage for the lambs and particularly in a dry period it is the only grass that continues to grow".

The target weights for slaughter are 38-44kg and the first batch are usually ready in July. Jason is a member of the Laois/Offaly Producers Group. All finished lambs are sold to ICM in Camolin, Co. Wexford. The later lambs are finished on forage crops of fodder rape, along with red clover silage, oats and potatoes.

Ewes are fed for eigth weeks prior to lambing and the diet consists of red clover silage, oats and beans and is tailored to single/twin/triplet bearing ewes. This total mixed ration (TMR) is fed with a diet feeder, which Jason has found to be a huge benefit in terms of “creating a more efficient diet for the ewes, saving on feeding time and helps in terms of safety as there is no need to enter pens with feed and risk being knocked over”.

Jason makes red clover and MSS silage and also buys in red clover silage from another organic farmer to meet his winter feeding requirement, along with the oats, beans and the forage crop that are all grown on the farm. No concentrate feed is purchased for his flock. All the straw used for bedding is produced on the farm and is a very valuable source of fertiliser for the farm along with organic Dairy Sludge from Glanbia, which is imported and spread in April and May each year. Slurry is also imported, if available, to maintain soil fertility on the farm.

Table 1 – Planned Land Use Details 2023

Land Use Hectares Use

Spring barley 12 Organic seed barley for Boortmalt

Spring oats 18 Flahavans and feed

Spring beans 1.6 Feed

Forage rape 8 Grazing for lambs

MSS Ley 18.4 Grazing and silage

Grass / red clover 7 Grazing and silage

Grass 13 Grazing and silage

TOTAL 78

Health

With regards to flock health, faecal analyses are taken to assess the level and identify the type of internal parasites - if present. If necessary, an appropriate anthelminthic is used.

The withdrawal periods are doubled and sometimes trebled, so care is needed with applications for future slaughter dates. Mostly Jason finds that he only needs to dose in a very wet year and he gives only cobalt to the lambs. He gets permission from his Organic Body to vaccinate against clostridial diseases each year, as this has been identified in consultation with the vet as a health risk for his flock. Otherwise Jason is very happy that there is very little veterinary interventions required. He also finds that using the TMR feeding system has significantly decreased the incidence of prolapse in the flock.

What's happening at the farm walk?

The organic farm walk will be opened with a welcome address from Minister Pippa Hackett, Minister of State for Land Use and Biodiversity and Stan Lalor, Director of KT, Teagasc.

Following on from that you will have the opportunity to listen to a number of talks on various topics such as:

Finances;

Growing an organic forage crop - Dr. Frank Campion, Teagasc BETTER Sheep Programme;

Soil health - Cathal Somers, Teagasc ASSAP Advisor, Kilkenny;

Water quality - Fiona Doolan, Teagasc ASSAP Advisor, Kildare;

Health & Safety - Francis Bligh, Teagasc Safety Specialist;

Future organic markets - Emmett Doyle, Bord Bia;

Growing tillage crops organically - Martin Bourke, Teagasc Organic Tillage Specialist;

Multispecies swards - Dr. Philip Creighton, Teagasc Sheep Enterprise Leader, Athenry.

Source: EMM/ The Agriculture and Food Development Authority

Ex-Soviet state threatens to leave Russian-led military alliance

There is a very real possibility of Armenia leaving the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said in Yerevan on Monday.

“I wouldn’t say that this issue is off the agenda,” Pashinyan told reporters. “I cannot rule out that Armenia may de jure withdraw from the CSTO or freeze its membership.”

He added that this might happen only if Yerevan officially establishes that the CSTO has abandoned Armenia, and further membership might become a security liability.

The government is currently discussing whether Armenia will participate in the upcoming CSTO military exercises in Kyrgyzstan, and if so, in what format and to what extent, Pashinyan said.

Established in 1992, the CSTO currently includes Russia, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan – all former republics of the Soviet Union.

Since the visit by then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in September 2022, Pashinyan has begun to blame the alliance for not deterring Azerbaijan – another ex-Soviet republic – from moving against the ethnic Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh in 2022, as well as engaging in border skirmishes with its Caucasus neighbor.

On Monday, he also claimed Armenia had lost opportunities to buy weapons and military equipment from other countries due to its membership in the CSTO.

At the same press conference, Pashinyan said he was ready to recognize Azerbaijan’s claim to Nagorno-Karabakh if “international guarantees” were provided for ethnic Armenians in the region, and if Baku would withdraw from several areas of Armenia proper that its troops have seized.

It was unclear what the prime minister meant by international guarantees. Russia negotiated the ceasefire and deployed peacekeepers to Nagorno-Karabakh in 2020, after Azeri forces cut the only road between the region and Armenia proper. In January of this year, Yerevan solicited an EU monitoring mission, which was criticized by Moscow.

“The CSTO has demonstrated its effectiveness in various situations” and “has serious potential for further development,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Monday, in response to Pashinyan’s press conference. Russia will “certainly continue the dialogue with our Armenian friends,” he added.

Source: Ru

Update 159 – IAEA Director General Statement on Situation in Ukraine

Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant (ZNPP) lost all external power for several hours this morning, underlining the extremely precarious nuclear safety and security situation at the facility and the urgent need to protect it and prevent an accident, Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said today.

It was the seventh time Europe’s largest nuclear power plant (NPP) was completely disconnected from the national electricity grid since the military conflict in Ukraine began 15 months ago, once again forcing it to rely on emergency diesel generators for the power it needs for reactor cooling and other essential nuclear safety and security functions, Director General Grossi said.

The ZNPP’s only remaining external 750 kilovolt (kV) power line was cut around 05:30am local time and re-connected after more than five hours, according to IAEA experts present at the plant.

“This morning’s loss of all off-site power demonstrates the highly vulnerable nuclear safety and security situation at the Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant. As I’ve said repeatedly, this simply can’t go on. We’re playing with fire. We must act now to avoid the very real danger of a nuclear accident in Europe, with its associated consequences for the public and the environment,” Director General Grossi said.

“I’m continuing to engage in intense negotiations with all the involved parties to secure the protection of the Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant. I will not stop until this has been achieved,” he said.

The Director General said he aimed to secure agreement on a set of principles to protect the ZNPP during the armed conflict, covering also the availability and security of external power supplies at all times.

The seven indispensable pillars for nuclear safety and security outlined by the Director General early during the conflict also stress the need for secure off-site power supplies from the grid for nuclear sites.

The ZNPP does not have any operational back-up power lines since the last functioning 330 kV power line was damaged on the right bank of the Dnipro River on 1 March. This back-up power line has still not been repaired, meaning that when the 750 kV line is lost the plant immediately depends on its diesel generators which are its last line of defence for electricity supplies, Director General Grossi said.

“For more than two and a half months, this major nuclear power plant has only had one functioning external power line. This is an unprecedented and uniquely risky situation. Defence-in-depth – which is fundamental to nuclear safety – has been severely undermined at the ZNPP,” he said.

Director General Grossi called for stepped-up efforts to restore the ZNPP’s back-up power lines and reiterated the need for the IAEA team at the site to gain access to the nearby Zaporizhzhya Thermal Power Plant (ZTPP), which has yet to be granted despite assurances by Russian state nuclear company Rosatom. The ZTPP operates its 330 kV open switchyard, through which back-up power has in the past been provided to the ZNPP.

Initially after this morning’s off-site power cut, all the ZNPP’s 20 diesel generators started operating, but 12 of them were later switched off. This left eight running, which is sufficient to operate all systems safely. The IAEA experts at the site were informed that there is enough diesel fuel for 23 days. After the 750 kV line was restored, the diesel generators were gradually turned off.

Five of the ZNPP’s six reactors were already in a cold shutdown state before today’s power outage, and preparations were under way to transfer also Unit 5 from hot to cold shutdown. Following the restoration of off-site power, Unit 5 is being returned to hot shutdown.

Elsewhere in the country today, a team of IAEA experts at the South Ukraine NPP said an emergency shutdown had occurred at one of its three reactor units. Plant management informed the IAEA team that the automatic shutdown took place due to grid disturbance or instability. The SUNPP still has off-site power available.

Source: EMM/ Homeland Security News Wire

Agritourism 2023 – “Agritourism for Sustainable Agriculture”

Teagasc Rural Development together with the Irish Self Catering Federation hosted an Agritourism conference at Teagasc, Ashtown today, Monday, 22 May to highlight opportunities for farm families in developing an on-farm tourism business.

Setting up-on farm holiday accommodation, in the form of bed and breakfast or self-catering cottages is a popular choice for diversification. There are now many other choices of accommodation such as glamping, pods, shepherds huts and yurts. There are opportunities for farmers to complement existing accommodation providers by developing complementary activity businesses such as kayaking, fishing boats, gillie services, cycling, heritage talks, walking tours, artisan food shops etc. This conference called “Agritourism 2023” provided a guide to rural dwellers on diversification opportunities in agri-tourism.

Minister Pippa Hackett said at the conference that “Agritourism can play an important part in building resilience within rural Ireland. Agritourism has a long-term sustainable future in Ireland that delivers a high-quality, authentic visitor experience and also helps support the future of family farms and the wider rural economy. The Agritourism 2023 conference is an excellent networking event which will help rural entrepreneurs on their journey towards developing an agritourism project in our iconic landscape which will help in bringing together urban and rural communities”

At the conference Barry Caslin, Teagasc, Rural Development Specialist said; “Rural Tourism is a perfect way to stimulate real impetus into encouraging footfall out of the towns and cities. There is such diversity in rural Ireland’s visitor activities and attractions, as well as in our specialist farm food producers, all of which make a very compelling case to venture out of the city boundaries. Over the past few years, fantastic diversified farm and rural businesses have opened up to visitors. There is a genuine focus on providing a great experience and developing unique local features and skills. This conference provides important guidance which complements the resurgent interest in Irish food, heritage and holidays”

Máire Ní Mhurchú, Chair of Irish Self Catering Federation “A holiday is quite an expense for people so they want, and demand, better than they have at home. Tourists are looking for locally loved places off the beaten path. They want the personal experience of living in close proximity to the family farm and being a part of the experience. For some regions, tourism is a fundamental part of the local economy. Today’s visitor demands high-end fixtures and fittings and luxuries ranging from hot tubs to pizza ovens, but they are willing to dig deep for that experience”

Source: EMM/ The Agriculture and Food Development Authority