Normally it is difficult to hear or read bad news about Uruguay. It is a country that has offered nothing but stability and peace in recent decades to its citizens and to many Latin Americans and Europeans who have chosen to live or
Uruguay is sometimes described as “one big farm”. It’s a country, albeit a small one, where cattle outnumber people by four to one and farming is the most important part of the economy. Like their fathers and grandfathers before them, Roque and Lindenberg
In his report for the FLH (Falklands Land Holdings) board meeting on June 7, General Manager John Ferguson predicted that, by the end of the financial year on 30 June, FLH will have sent 20,792 sheep and 118 cattle to FIMCo in 2022/23.
New generation opens up markets with japonica rice and wine LA CORONILLA, Uruguay — Shigenao Tamura was 22 in 1995, fresh out of Hiroshima University with a degree in agronomy. He had never left Japan but was keen to learn about farming practices