JR
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Courtney French
Special to the Star
LONDON– A group of dairy farmers are putting single's ads on milk cartons in the hopes of finding Mr. or Mrs. Right in the far-flung countryside of Wales.
"My family thinks I'm nuts," says 30-year-old farmer Iwan Jones, who hasn't had a date in a year. "My friends think it's hilarious – but everyone's taking it with a light-hearted attitude."
Three men and two women appear in the ads, which feature a photo with the heading, "Fancy a farmer?" The address for a dating website, pishynwales.com., is also on the stickers.
Since the ads appeared this month, the site has received 2,500 hits, or about 10 times the usual daily traffic, says Aran Jones, who runs the non-profit operation.
The ads are also a way of highlighting the low points of a farmer's hard-scrabble existence. Farmers say they often feel isolated among the rolling hills.
"It's a beautiful environment, but in terms of actually trying to meet somebody it's not particularly easy – especially when you have to wake up at 5 o'clock in the morning to milk cows," says the co-operative's director Richard Kerr, who is happily married.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Well, it beats having to "date" that special Holstein.
Special to the Star
LONDON– A group of dairy farmers are putting single's ads on milk cartons in the hopes of finding Mr. or Mrs. Right in the far-flung countryside of Wales.
"My family thinks I'm nuts," says 30-year-old farmer Iwan Jones, who hasn't had a date in a year. "My friends think it's hilarious – but everyone's taking it with a light-hearted attitude."
Three men and two women appear in the ads, which feature a photo with the heading, "Fancy a farmer?" The address for a dating website, pishynwales.com., is also on the stickers.
Since the ads appeared this month, the site has received 2,500 hits, or about 10 times the usual daily traffic, says Aran Jones, who runs the non-profit operation.
The ads are also a way of highlighting the low points of a farmer's hard-scrabble existence. Farmers say they often feel isolated among the rolling hills.
"It's a beautiful environment, but in terms of actually trying to meet somebody it's not particularly easy – especially when you have to wake up at 5 o'clock in the morning to milk cows," says the co-operative's director Richard Kerr, who is happily married.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Well, it beats having to "date" that special Holstein.