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Norfolk livestock
haulage firm to close
One of East Anglia's longest established livestock haulage firms is
closing after being run by the same family for three generations.
F W Hume and Sons of Palgrave, near Diss, will close on April 4 on the
retirement of proprietors Ronald and Richard (John) Hume.
They have been unable to find successors for the firm which was started by
their grandfather and which has carried livestock all over the UK.
Most of the drivers have found other jobs and 10 of the firm's 11 lorries
have already been sold to local customers, mostly to transport their own
livestock.
Ronald Hume, 71, who lives at Brome, near Eye, said his grandfather had
started the firm using horses and carts and had bought his first motorised
transporter, a Model T Ford, from Kerridges of Needham Market.
"We took over from our father more than 20 years ago and the business
has changed a lot since then. We have to complete so many forms whenever we
transport animals these days," he said.
"We used to move 12,000-15,000 pigs a week but we don't do so many now
because not so many are being kept."
He added: "Two or three of our customers are going out of business at
the moment because of the high price of feed."
Mr Hume said the business had been run on traditional lines, with farmers
able to contact his brother or him 24-hours a day.
The first lorries left the yard at 4am and drivers sometimes did not return
until 6pm - and then they had the task of washing down and disinfecting the
vehicles ready for the next morning.
One of the drivers has been with the firm for 40 years and others have been
employed for between 20 and 30 years.
However, Mr Hume said that the work was not attracting many new people.
"It is a dirty job and a smelly job but the drivers we have had have
been marvellous," he said.
John Hume added that the soaring cost of fuel was a consideration, although
that in itself had not prompted their decision to call it a day.
The decision to cease trading was made last October, before the price of
fuel rocketed to its current record prices.
Source: Eastern Daily Press
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