New Federated Farmers meat and wool chair praises predecessor
Newly elected Federated Farmers meat and wool group chair Richard Dawkins says he will continue the great work done his predecessor Toby Williams.
Northland dairy farmers are still “amazingly upbeat” despite the drought declaration, says Northland Rural Support Trust secretary/coordinator Julie Jonkers.
“But we want to be there because we know if it goes on longer it will be harder to maintain that resilience,” she says.
She was pleased to see a timely drought declaration.
“We discovered when we did our reviews that if you wait until you’re in a desperate situation it is a lot harder to react quickly,” she says.
“It does not mean we haven’t been doing anything leading up to it; the rural sector groups and the rural support trusts have all been out there making sure things are in place.
“But for the Rural Support Trust the drought declaration means we are able to act that much more quickly.”
Dairy farmers are coming out of a period of low payout.
“They don’t have the reserves they would have after several good seasons or even several average seasons,” Jonkers explained.
“It must be the same for farmers in other areas, like Hawkes Bay. They are all in the same boat. We try to more quickly get packages in place.”
One young couple she spoke to said they were hoping to pay off debt this season, but they have had to use reserves to buy in feed. But they were still upbeat.
The Rural Support Trust is starting weekly teleconferences to keep ahead of the situation so if things get worse they are front-footing it.
The Northland trust has 10 drought barbecues coming up from February 20-28.
There has not been a big reaction to the drought declaration.
“It is not as if there is suddenly monetary help – the only thing that will help is rain – significant rain for a period of time,” she says.
But with the declaration she knows that the banks, service industries and other service providers will give what assistance they can. With some contracts the drought clause can be invoked which gives them a little leeway so they can better talk with the contractor.
“Those sorts of things help. Other than that there is the underlying support we hopefully can give – one-on-one support; people are bit overwhelmed.”
Drought declaration “is not a magic bullet” says Jonkers.
“But it allows us hopefully to do some extra work. It is the signal that we recognise it is not just a normal dry summer in Northland, that it is over and above a normal dry summer.
“It is this jolly south-westerly wind which just keeps blowing – even at night-time. It is drying out so quickly.”
If farmers are unclear about anything they should give the Rural Support Trust a ring “because hopefully we will have that information at our fingertips,” she says.
It is also setting up a feed register with Federated Farmers.
A brilliant result and great news for growers and regional economies. That's how horticulture sector leaders are describing the news that sector exports for the year ended June 30 will reach $8.4 billion - an increase of 19% on last year and is forecast to hit close to $10 billion in 2029.
Funding is proving crucial for predator control despite a broken model reliant on the goodwill of volunteers.
A major milestone on New Zealand's unique journey to eradicate Mycoplasma bovis could come before the end of this year.
We're working through it, and we'll get to it.
The debate around New Zealand's future in the Paris Agreement is heating up.
A technical lab manager for Apata, Phoebe Scherer, has won the Bay of Plenty 2025 Young Grower regional title.