25 years on - where are they now?
To celebrate 25 years of the Hugh Williams Memorial Scholarship, Ravensdown caught up with past recipients to see where their careers have taken them, and what the future holds for the industry.
Nutrient budgets are being created as part of nutrient management services offered by Ravensdown, as farmers grapple with their changing regulatory obligations.
An actual nutrient budget (ANB) is the formal document used to assist with compliance and is typically historic – reflecting actual nutrients applied. A Ravensdown ANB is an auditable document increasingly demanded by regional councils.
This differs from the predictive nutrient budgets (PNB) that help farmers plan ahead for their fertiliser requirements based on soil testing data and Overseer modelling from certified advisors. PNBs are typically produced as part of a process to create a fertiliser plan and help farmers optimise nutrient application.
Not all nutrient budgets are created equal. The lasting importance and potential complexity of an actual nutrient budget means that the amount of time spent by trained staff is in a different league from the kind of forecasting nutrient budget that helps identify how much of what fertiliser will need to go where.
In both cases, Ravensdown is well positioned to help because we’ve got the tools and the trained people. We’ve got the largest number of certified nutrient management advisors in New Zealand. We often have the farm’s soil test data trends, fertiliser plans and application history all under one umbrella and our staff understand the local regulatory requirements.
Because an ANB is time consuming, we are introducing a user-pays system for ANBs.
Charges to recover the cost of time spent on all ANBs will be recovered from only those shareholders who need one. The hours spent and therefore the actual cost of the ANB will depend on the complexity and size of the farm and the relevant regulatory requirements.
However, there will be no change in how PNBs are resourced and paid for. These are simply the kind of documents our clients expect our team to produce when working on their fertiliser plan and there are no plans to charge for this.
Ravensdown can also help with nutrient budgets produced for resource consent purposes through our environmental consultancy.
• Bryan Inch is general manager customer relationships at Ravensdown.
Fieldays 2025 opens this week with organisers saying the theme, 'Your Place', highlights the impact the event has on agriculture both in the Southern Hemisphere and across the globe.
Sam Carter, assistant manager for T&G's Pakowhai Sector, has been named the Hawke's Bay 2025 Young Grower of the Year.
The CEO of Apples and Pears NZ, Karen Morrish, says the strategic focus of her organisation is to improve grower returns.
A significant breakthrough in understanding facial eczema (FE) in livestock brings New Zealand closer to reducing the disease’s devastating impact on farmers, animals, and rural communities.
Farmer co-operative LIC has closed its satellite-backed pasture measurement platform – Space.
OPINION: The case of four Canterbury high country stations facing costly and complex consent hearing processes highlights the dilemma facing the farming sector as the country transitions into a replacement for the Resource Management Act (RMA).
OPINION: The Free Speech Union is taking this one too far.
OPINION: New national data from The Drug Detection Agency (TDDA), a leading workplace drug tester, shows methamphetamine (meth) use is…