A businessman is so cheesed off he has declared war on supermarkets and banks that refuse to lend.

Cheese seller Anthony Hogan has been left with the blues and has launched a blog to chronicle what he fears could be the last six months of his business.

Blogging over the last month the 42-year-old has catalogued the troubles of a small business including incurring bad backs from carrying around produce, exhaustion, the general indifference of customers and battles with environmental health officers.

The owner of Cheezerie has given his business six more months selling homemade cheese at farmer’s markets in Brighton, Horsham and Haywards Heath before he emigrates to Turkey to live in the homeland of his wife and business partner Ayse and start a design business.

As part of his campaign, Mr Hogan has written to Prime Minister David Cameron asking him to explain whether the Big Society was just a reference to bigger portions being fed to bigger people by bigger companies.

The Royal College of Art student became a cheese seller about two years ago and has invested £20,000 into the business.

He said he became disillusioned when the recession started to bite about six months ago despite some initial success.

Mr Hogan said: “I started to realise that I could lose an awful lot of money and what if this recession runs and runs.

“I’m quite lucky in that I will be able to go and do something else but there are a lot of people we know going out of business.

“I don’t want this blog to make the public sympathetic to my business but to raise people’s awareness of where their food comes from and what sort of choice supermarkets really offer.”

Mr Hogan, of Shoreham, said ultimately the Government would have to introduce legislation to draw in the supermarkets as they do in France and that farmers’ markets alone will not save local producers.

Mr Hogan has already been promised a meeting with East Worthing and Shoreham MP Tim Loughton but he hopes that the ultimate outcome for his blog would be a TV debate with Mr Cameron over action that can be taken to curb the power of the supermarkets.

To read his blog visit www.cheesesellersblog.co.uk.

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