Open Country opens butter plant
When American retail giant Cosco came to audit Open Country Dairy’s new butter plant at the Waharoa site and give the green light to supply their American stores, they allowed themselves a week for the exercise.
Dairy Women's Network kicked off its online training programme today (October 31) with a webinar on Retaining the Right People.
The professional dairy industry women's group will deliver the online training programme despite limited access to high-speed internet services in many rural communities.
Chief executive Sarah Speight says as dairy women's lives were getting busier, the network needed be innovative in how it delivered training.
"The network was founded on using technology to empower dairying women. Our email forum which started in 2002 was a leading innovation at the time and is still really well-used," she says.
"Sure, there are limitations to what we can do, but our members have said they don't want limited access to broadband to stop the network delivering innovative services that suit the rural dairying lifestyle."
The network's traditional Dairy Days are a series of one-day workshops which run twice a year across the country covering a range of topics from essential business skills to on-farm practices. The virtual Dairy Day webcast is an extension of the training programme.
Speight says a pre-recorded webcast format, rather than a live webcast, minimises some of the problems experienced by slower internet speeds. The webcast could be watched anytime online, or downloaded onto DVD or as an audio file for watching off-line.
Dairy Women's Network worked with OneFarm to develop the webcast. OneFarm is a joint venture between Massey and Lincoln Universities that is supported by DairyNZ and the Government's Primary Growth partnership.
The first virtual Dairy Days webcast focuses on developing human resources skills for dairy farm employers, and will be available to DNW members from today.
Speight says while rural internet access and speed was still a challenge for many, rural New Zealanders expected the same access to online services as their urban neighbours.
In 2010 the government committed to the Rural Broadband Initiative. The initiative will bring high speed broadband to 252,000 customers, and 86% of rural households and businesses will have access to broadband peak speeds of at least 5Mbps.
Currently around 20% of rural homes and businesses have access to 5Mbps. (Source: www.med.govt.nz)
Farmlands Co-operative has announced Rachel Aldikacti will be its new chief sales officer.
From 14th - 22nd March, Cornwall Park will play host to Farm Week, seven days of activities centred on farming, agriculture and the farm's heritage on the site.
Just four months after being declared clinically dead, Kiwi axeman Kahu Woolley is back on the chopping block this weekend - literally.
DairyNZ Chair Tracy Brown has seen a lot of change since she first started out in the dairy sector, with around one-third of dairy farmers now women.
Castle Ridge Station has been named the Regional Supreme Winner at the Canterbury Ballance Farm Environment Awards.
The South Island Dairy Event has announced Jessica Findlay as the recipient of the BrightSIDE Scholarship Programme, recognising her commitment to furthering her education and future career in the New Zealand dairy industry.