The dual theme of my A to Z Challenge this year is the world of Commodities and Poetry Forms so the juxtaposition of these two themes may throw up some strange poems – could be a Heroic Ode to Heating Oil or will it merit a Haiku or a Haibun – whichever, I will be endeavouring to bring you interesting facts about commodities that may change the way you think about the stuff we variously depend on…
By commodity I mean certain items that are of both sufficient value/volume to be traded in special markets and are generally volatile enough to attract traders in “Futures” which are a way of hedging bets in the trading world of stocks, shares and commodities.
The A to Z Challenge runs throughout April and will consist of 26 posts – there are only a couple of letters for which I couldn’t find commodities but plenty of poetry forms to carry the day!
Worldwide Trade – 893 billion U.S. dollars in 2021
Life begins with ‘mother’s milk’ – if you are lucky – if you lost your mother in childbirth or your mother is unable breast feed or is driven by outdated mores not to breastfeed – then you will likely depend on ‘formula’ milk which has been sourced from other animals – most frequently cows. If your country does not produce sufficient milk for the production of dried milk, then your formula will contain milk-powder that has been imported from some other part of the world. Powdered because it is easier and cheaper to transport than the fresh liquid. Some parts of the world are unfamiliar with fresh milk and all their milk has been processed into UHT (Utra High Temperature treatment), or else they re-constitute milk from dried powder but both this and UHT milk are not the same in terms of quality – powdered milk often lacking the fat element of fresh and UHT having an aftertaste…
If you think of milk only of a dewy glass of fresh milk straight from the fridge (and already you have made a choice between Full-fat, Semi-skimmed and Skimmed), then you are forgetting all the ‘Preserved Milk’ products – for that is what all the various yoghurts, butters and cheeses in the world are – forms of preserved milk. Preservation means treating something so that it will last longer without spoiling. For example, in rural Ireland in the 18th-19th centuries, a reasonably prosperous family might keep a milk-cow as well as grow potatoes, and in the Summer, they would churn the higher yield of milk into butter. The byproduct – buttermilk, was dunk fresh or allowed to ferment slightly and consumed with last seasons potatoes. The butter was wrapped in the leaves of the Butterbur plant which are suitably large, and then buried in the peat bog where the anaerobic and acid conditions perfectly preserved the butter. Come Winter and the family consumed new season potatoes with butter dug up from the bog. This was a surprisingly heathy diet since potatoes are very rich in vitamin C whilst milk products have a good balance of protein , fat and carbohydrate and are a very important source of essential nutrients, including calcium, riboflavin, phosphorous, vitamins A and B12, potassium, magnesium, zinc, and iodine. So the preservation of milk, by freeze drying it to a powder or turning it into a secondary product like yoghurt or cheese is a huge part of the journey of milk on the international market.
I work in a Gelato (Ice Cream) factory and as we soon upscale to much bigger capacity equipment – we face the choice of whether to stick with fresh whole-milk (meaning a tanker sized refrigerated tank on the outside of the factory) or go with powdered milk (a vast reserve of palleted powder, reconstituted with water and probably coconut oil added). Our Italian gelato consultant tells us that in taste tests, most no-one can tell the difference but that people (the ones who read the ingredients) like to see Whole Milk (in bold because it is a notifiable allergen!) Previously I had a small frozen yoghurt shop and I made my own mix of plain yoghurt, milk and sugar and I also sold Boba Tea. Boba Tea was not big in Britain back then and so it survived the 2008 Chinese dried milk scandal and is now slowly gaining traction. The real scandal was that some 54,000 babies got sick and four died due to formula made with Chinese dried milk powder contaminated with Melamine (read the full story here) but the damage to the reputation of Chinese agricultural products was enormous and the Boba Tea mixes which were largely powdered milk in particular, causing the collapse of Boba Tea shops across much of Europe though not in the UK where Boba Tea was in its infancy. This is not the sort of thing tat is supposed to happen in the world of soft commodities – as I write, it has just been announced that following the latest safety scandal regarding Boeing aircraft, in which a door plug came off one whilst in flight, the senior management have been axed because they suppressed any whistleblowing over safety concerns by workers and middle management. When the episode occurred, Boeing shares took a nosedive and the change of management will not immediately restore the value of those shares. These things happen in the world of stocks and shares and the nearest equivalent in soft commodities is a bad harvest which as we saw with Frost Futures, can even be hedged against – but a crisis of confidence due to criminality at worst, negligence at best as happened with Chinese milk – is not supposed to happen – commodities are supposed to be what those in the heady world of high finance buy to ameliorate the vicissitudes of their portfolios…
Who are the exporters of Milk and who are the great importers?
And here are the places that produce milk…
And lastly – here are the top milk processing companies in the world – see if you can spot one you know…
And so to today’s poetry form and the poetry form I have chosen is Martian Poetry. The Martian Poets were a small group of poets who were reacting against the somewhat dour and sometimes pessimistic poetry of the post-war group known as The Movement which included Philip Larkin, Kingsley Amis, Donald Davie, D. J. Enright, John Wain, Elizabeth Jennings, Thom Gunn and Robert Conquest. The Martian Poets were named for a poem by Craig Raine (whom I met once) called A Martian Writes a Postcard Home. Other Martian Poets included Christopher Reid, Oliver Reynolds and John Hall Wheelock and the nature of the poetry “drew inspiration from surrealism, metaphysical poetry of John Donne, Andrew Marvell, etc., nonsense poetry of Lewis Carroll and Edward Lear, and Anglo-Saxon riddles.” My poem below is a homage to Craig Raine’s original Martian poem…
Martian Report 11011/101 Milk
Where does milk come from?
I asked my host’s sprout No.2
Zoe identifying as she/her
100¹ solar rotations
Tesco! She replied
No silly! Cows!
Mark – sprout No.1
identifying as he/him
110² solar rotations
supplementary identity brother
Dad! What’s a cow?
Asked Zoe
We will take our Martian friend
to a farm this weekend
and you shall see cows!
Host and pod senior
11100³ solar rotations
identifying as he/him
supplemental identity – Father
Cows – it turns out
are breast-feeders
on four legs
unlike the host identifying
as she/her
supplementary identity – Mother
who walks on two legs
– cows are enslaved
and farms are prisons
enclosures of grass
which is a brush
for brushing up sunlight
and converting the energy
so cows can make milk
and – as it turns out – meat
Zoe imbibes a lot of milk
she made that weird expression
I cannot fathom the meaning of
when the cow breast
was pointed out
It’s dirty! She said
she ran off to look at
some cow progeny
that were being loaded
into a transporter
– diesel class/lorry
Why haven’t they got breasts
Zoe asked the prison superintendent
They identify as he/him
she was told
and we don’t need them
so we are selling them…
Why make the cows
have them then?
asked Mark
If the cows don’t have babies
they won’t make milk
for you to drink!
What happens to
those boys? Asked Mark
They will be fattened up
and go to market
said the superintendent
Go to market for what?
asked Mark
Why to be eaten!
Zoe made a high-pitched noise
and ran away shouting
I’m never going to drink milk again
or eat meat!
Now look what you’ve done!
Said Mother…
¹ 4 Years old
² 6 Years old
³ 28 Years old
© Andrew Wilson, 2024
Thank you for this introduction to Martian Poetry and all the interesting poetic games, exercises, and information at Language is a virus.
It has been the site I have used most for referencing poetry forms during this challenge Maria…
This (like all your A to Z posts) is interesting. I found your superscripts in the poem confusing. I recognised the binary numbers, but then they appeared to be raised to powers. Just me, being easily confused?
No they were references to the decimal numbers for those who don’t read binary…
Yes, I discovered that later.
I like the image of grass being a brush to brush up sunlight.
https://nydamprintsblackandwhite.blogspot.com/2024/04/magical-botany-m.html
Trying to think like a Martian unlocks some different metaphors Anne…
Ahhh, my journey with milk. Whole milk growing up, including several years where it came straight from the dairy a walk away from our house. Age 19, it upset my stomach so I stopped drinking it. Maybe ten years later, I tried Lactaid milk and could at least use that on my cereal, until I stopped eating breakfast, lol. Yogurt came next, flavored ones left quickly due to the sugars, I settled for vanilla with me adding the fruit. When I got a frother for my cappuccino, whole milk entered the house again.
https://dbmcnicol.com/a-afterthought/
I still use cow’s milk in tea or coffee (though I drink very little of either) but recently I started using Coconut Milk for cereals and occasionally I have a whole glass of that – delicious…
This is beautifully executed, Andrew! 🩷🩷
Thanks, Sanaa. It was great fun to do and I think hits the spot for a Martian poem…
A new form for me, Andrew, but I do remember Craig Raine’s ‘A Martian Writes a Postcard Home’ – I think I used it once in a lesson when I was still teaching. Maybe we should use it in a Meeting the Bar prompt. I smiled at ‘Zoe identifying as she/her’ – we’re not too far from the future – and the sprouts not knowing where milk comes from. I’m so relieved that my grandson knows where food comes from – I made sure by giving him a book on the subject!
I met him once or twice when I was designing a magazine called Vole but I wasn’t into poetry back then – I think it’s a suitable homage… Yes it might make a good prompt…
Explaining our weird way of eating would seem strange to anyone who had not grown up with it… Love all the facts and i recognized a lot from what you describe about milk, butter and cheese with Swedish tradition (indeed Arla was formed as a merger between Danish and Swedish interests, and the name Arla is archaic Swedih meaning early)
Adopting a Martian POV makes you see things differently…
Certainly an interesting form, Andrew. Here in the US, we will likely soon have few food/factory regulations in place when the new administration comes in. I’ve never been much of a milk drinker.
Best not to drink it much as an adult Merril and especially if it becomes unregulated. Here, Brexit was going to free us from the dastardly over-regulation of the EU except that if you wanted to sell your products in the EU – you had to stick to the standards AND have them inspected so no gains whatsoever. Most decent manufacturers won’t change their standards but there will of course be a few rotten apples… Glad you enjoyed the poem – it was fun to write!
Tesco! Life is simple for children 😁
Fabulous poem!
Just so, Shaun, thanks!
This is a very interesting post. I enjoyed the information you shared very much. The poem is very clever and perfectly describes how modern children view the world. Brilliant!
Thanks, Robbie! The whole A2Z Challenge proved a lot more fun this year than I was afraid it might not – I included the poems to leave the posts in case they proved too dry but in the event there were fascinating facts to be found about all the commodities. It was the most work of any of the years I have participated though! I shared it in OLN in the hope of the dVerse Poets exploring the posts a bit more – there being 26 different poetry forms covered – glad you enjoyed this one…
You really had fun with this one, Andrew. I enjoyed all the information and your delightful poem.
We grew up on buffalo milk. I still have milk, never had any health issues with it. Tea and coffee are almost always black. Not much of a cereal eater.🙂
Thank you so much, Punam, another one of 26 forms I tried in April and you are right – this one was probably the most fun…