A lot of farmers don't come into town as much and there's a lot less tourists as well," she said.She was considering selling up if the situation did not improve."I might have to move on I think I don't know what I should do," she said."A lot of people meet in here, especially the older men."They have a catch up on a Saturday morning and during the week as well."One of those older men Frank Ovens, a former dairy farmer, told the ABC about how the crisis in the Middle East was "slowing everything down" in his town."People, they don't spend the same, they don't come into town so therefore the town tends to die back, shops shut," he said."People just aren't spending the money because they haven't got it."