• Farmland scarce in Denmark’s isle kingdom By JOYCE BUPP Staff Correspondent Can you imagine a nation spreading over 400 islands’ The Kingdom of Denmark does just that, and includes a peninsula of Northern Europe and the large island of Greenland, off the North* American coast. Denmark’s cohabitation with the sea has taught its Viking descendants to ap preciate land and carefully cultivate every inch, even to the extent of growing gar dens instead of grass in yards. It’s a country grown famous for its beautiful chinas and porcelains, the product of an inventive people who lacked raw mineral wealth but made use of an abundance of clay well suited for the potter’s wheel The Danish government operates as a fairly well developed welfare state. When this reporter visited during July 1976, an average industrial worker was earning $8 hourly, then paying about 60 per cent of his wages back to the government. That whopping deduction funded a variety of social services, excellent and cheap public tran sportation, old-age benefits, clean streets, and mam tamed a low rate of crime. Petroleum at the pump cost $1.60 per gallon, ac counting for the abundance of small compact cars and “parking lots” filled with bikes at every street corner. Fuel used for farming purposes, however, was sold at about half that cost. Credit is a relatively new introduction to the Danish consumer, with- 1976 mor tgage interest rates running 14 to 15 per cent. Travel remained an inexpensive recreation, but some luxuries, including automobiles, were heavily taxed. Eight per cent of the population of Denmark was engaged in agriculture, and farm products made up a full one-third of the country’s exports. Almost half of the Individually tied in these mini-stalls, Danish Landrace sows are housed much like a herd of cattle. cropland is planted in barley. Other popular small grams are wheat, oats and rapeseed, from which tiny black seeds, resembling cabbage seeds, are pressed into oils for cooking and fine grade motor use. Danish farmers were seeking some type of relief from high inheritance taxes on their lands and cheaper loans for agriculture use. Schools showed no real in centives to encourage far ming by offering vo-ag courses in high school, but many younger farmers were more educated than their fathers had been. We were told of statistics showing that when a son took over his father’s farming operation, there was usually an 80 per cent increase in the unit’s production. Mr. and Mrs. Holger Anderson, the first family visited while “lifeseeing” in Denmark, were dairy far mers. Their very old but beautifully remodeled farmhouse attached at an angle to a haystorage area, which also attached at an angle to the “cowhouse,” forming a giant “U” shape Lancaster Farming, Saturday, February 4,1978 surrounding a cozy cob blestoned courtyard. A herd of 40 cows filled the stanchion barn, a mixture of the small Red Danish breed and more recently added Black Whites, the smaller built European strain of Holstein-Friesians. Sixty additional claves, heifers and a few young bulls were raised on the 55 owned and 25 rented acres of land. On a feeding program of sugar beets, hay, pasture. pelleted concentrate and brewers’ mash, Anderson was averaging 11,200 pounds per animal. A loose housing addition to the bam was under construction, where brewers’ mash would be available free choice to the cows. Milk was picked up daily and farmers were receiving a return of about 95 cents per gallon. As the world’s largest exporter of pork products, (Turn to Page 60) 59