Tuesday, 20 September 2022 10:55

Profit and environment go hand in hand for winners

Written by  Sudesh Kissun
Geoff Crawford says farming in the flood-prone Hikurangi area is a challenge. Geoff Crawford says farming in the flood-prone Hikurangi area is a challenge.

Northland farmers Geoff and Jo Crawford have a simple mantra: put as much milk in the vat in the best environmental way possible.

Dairy farmers for the past 30 years, the Crawfords have strived to balance profit with the environment.

As the Northland supreme winners of the Ballance Farm Environment Awards, the Crawfords hosted a field day at their Crane Road farm in Hikurangi this month. About 150 people turned up to hear their recipe for success.

Geoff Crawford, who started as a contractor, bought his first farm aged 22. Today the couple own three dairy farms milking a total of 1,400 cows.

They calve 60% of the calves in autumn and 40% in spring.

Almost all calves are raised and finished on the beef unit they own, alongside trading cattle that are purchases and finished.

For feed, a 50ha maize block supports the dairy farms; chicory, plantain and fescue are some of the feed grown across the dairy platform.

Jo Crawford told guests at the field day that the business means everything to them.

"It's our dream and the culmination of our life's work," she says.

She says they brought the Crane Road property 29 years ago to base their contracting business near the town.

"And over the 29 years, we have become passionate about our environment," she says. "We've done a lot of planting [along] drains and we have fenced off all bushes on the property.

"It's all part of our desire to have a sustainable environment."

Jo says it has been an amazing journey.

Geoff Crawford 2 FBTW

Geoff Crawford bought his first farm at 22.

They have taken the lessons from the Crane Road property to the other farms.

"Things like not planting flax too close to the fences and having electrical shorts," she adds.

The Crawfords have also gifted a mountain on the property to the Queen Elizabeth II Trust.

Jo says they have heard that the mountain is home to a rare centipede. "Not that we have seen it but it gives us a good feeling."

Two years ago, the Crawfords started pest control with the hope of increasing bird life and introducing kiwis to the property one day.

"We're definitely seeing more bird life on our property than what we had two years ago."

Geoff Crawford told guests that farming in the flood-prone Hikurangi region was a challenge.

Last month the area was under water again after 200mm of rain

"We had a wet winter and we saw a lot of water come and go," he says. "But we get over it, it's just resilience, having a plan and moving on."

He says the affected paddocks were already showing signs of life, with chicory and buttercup shoots visible.

"I will come in with chemicals in the coming weeks and take out the grass and weeds. Then I will sow with my chain harrow, fence them off and keepthem in production."

Judges described the Crawfords' business as "a spectacular example of balancing profit with the environment".

"Their motivation to enter the awards was to demonstrate it is possible to run a profitable corporate size operation, while being conscious of the environment."

The Crawfords says they entered the BFEA as a way of demonstrating how large-scale dairy farms can be both environmentally and financially sustainable.

More like this

'Just take the plunge'

‘Just take the plunge’ - that’s the message from Hamish and Simon Guild of High Peak Station, Canterbury to anyone considering entering the 2025 Ballance Farm Environment Awards.

Rewarding farmers who embrace sustainability

Winners of DairyNZ’s Sustainability and Stewardship awards in the Ballance Farm Environment Awards have their eyes firmly fixed on progressing a positive future for New Zealand dairy.

Otago's supreme winner

Angus Barr and Tara Dwyer of The Wandle, Lone Star Farms in Strath Taieri have been named the Regional Supreme Winners at the Otago Ballance Farm Environment Awards in Dunedin.

Featured

Case IH partners with Meet the Need

Tractor manufacturer and distributor Case IH has announced a new partnership with Meet the Need, the grassroots, farmer-led charity working to tackle food insecurity across New Zealand one meal at a time.

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.

Rockit Global appoints COO

Rockit Global has appointed Ivan Angland as its new chief operating officer as it continues its growth strategy into 2025.

National

Top ag scientist to advise PM

A highly experienced agricultural scientist with specialist knowledge of the dairy sector is the Prime Minister's new Chief Science Advisor.

Machinery & Products

Hose runner saves time and effort

Rakaia-based equipment manufacturer Pluck’s Engineering will soon start production of a new machine designed to simplify the deployment and retrieval…

» Latest Print Issues Online

Milking It

Science fiction

OPINION: Last week's announcement of Prime Minister’s new Science and Technology Advisory Council hasn’t gone down too well in the…

Bye bye Paris?

OPINION: At its recent annual general meeting, Federated Farmers’ Auckland province called for New Zealand to withdraw from the Paris…

» Connect with Dairy News

» eNewsletter

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter