9 December 2014 – loading
It can be cold, very cold in December in
Ukraine …. Snow, a deep, dark night, an industrial
area somewhere on the outskirts
of Tscherkasy belonging to a reliable partner
of our old client, assigned as a point of
transfer of goods, it is 9 December 2014.
And at last – we see the lights of some vehicles
approaching. “The truck is coming,
the truck is coming!!!” people gathered
here are calling with excitement – yes, indeed
this is our truck with our birds led by
the car which had waited eight hours for
it on the Kiev-Tscherkasy motorway – the
last PS flock who will make it into the war
zone of Donetsk.
But first, they must be loaded onto the
trucks of PPR Sugresky, our old client in Ukraine
as no European forwarding company
wanted to officially cross the “non-existent
border” between what people here call Big
Ukraine and Small Ukraine (Donetsk People’s
Republic – DPR).
Before the loading process
can start, the state security alarmed by the
customs arrives – all the boxes are searched
for weapons (this is the time of strict security
measures for the movement of people and
goods between Ukraine and DPR). After four
hours, the green light was given – the trucks
could depart for Sugresky.
10 December 2014 – arrival
They arrived next day at the farm of PPR
Sugresky; placed in cage system houses
and reared under the experienced management
of excellent poultry specialists,
they started to produce hatching eggs
picking 96%. As the price of table eggs exceeded
in manifold the price of hatching
eggs, some of the production was sold to
retailers.
The production, as in any crisis
region, was marked by a shortage of feed.
There were some weeks when the flock
was fed only on grains, but after the supply
of PS feed stabilised, the birds were back to
the technical standard in no time.
The management of Sugresky established
good relationships with both sides
of the frontlines, and to secure business
as usual, they found out who to call before
feed delivery time so no silo truck (see
photo) would be wrongly considered to
be a rocket launcher provoking artillery
fire to attack the poultry houses.
LB Lite not “light” but strong
On a product list we call them “Lite” – LOHMANN
BROWN LITE, but they should really
be called “Hard and Strong” – a little like
the people living there.
We wish our friends at PPR Sugresky
all the best in their professional activities
and private lives and honour the workers
of Sugresky who were killed by stray
bullets in 2015.
A story of excellent relationship
The story of Sugresky is a story of excellent
relationships between the old Ukrainian
franchise hatchery and LTZ, the story
of the proud people of Ukraine who first
rely on their own skills and ingenuity, and
on the periphery there were some LOHMANN
layers who demonstrated that they
can deliver under all management, environmental
and political conditions as well
as LOHMANN TIERZUCHT does.
Marek Malkowski