Editorial: Long overdue!
OPINION: The Government's latest move to make freshwater farm plans more practical and affordable is welcome, and long overdue.
Dairy farmers in Otago and Southland have taken a hit from unseasonal high winds that have demolished haybarns and generally disrupted their farming.
Stephen Crawford, Federated Farmers dairy chair in Otago, says three of his haybarns have had walls blown off. And the winds have cut his power.
"It was a pain for dairy farmers trying to milk. I have two cowsheds and when the power went out I got the generator connected and then suddenly the power came on again. It was pretty challenging."
The power cuts were typical of what happened right across Otago, he says. Some people were without power for 36 hours.
A nearby sheep farmer had his lambing pens blown across the paddocks.
"There were times when I found it hard to stand up in the paddocks because the gusts were so strong," Crawford says.
At Colac Bay, Southland, the dairy chair of that province, Graeme McKenzie, was one of the first farmers hit by the winds. They look out onto Stewart Island and there isn't much between his farm and Antarctica, he points out.
The first sign of trouble came when he was watching the rugby on television and service was disrupted by the winds.
"We had power out for 12 hours, but in the end it didn't cause too much disruption. Trees were blown down and sheds were damaged. Because of the loss of power some farmers had to delay milking."
But McKenzie says they are used to the high winds and are set up to handle them.
Likewise in North Canterbury where Cameron Henderson noted that wind two years ago blew most of his trees over so there wasn't a lot more the wind could do.
Some sheds were damaged but the power was not cut. He says the early warning from MetService gave farmers time to move irrigators to where they could save them from the wind's effects.
The 2025 game bird season is underway with Hawke’s Bay and Southland reporting the ideal weather conditions for hunters – rain and wind.
A group of meat processing companies, directors and managers have been fined a total of $1.6 million for deliberately and illegally altering exported tallow for profit.
New Zealand’s top cheeses for 2025 have been announced and family-owned, Oamaru-based Whitestone Cheese is the big winner.
Waikato farmer, and Owl Farm demonstration manager, Jo Sheridan is the 2025 Fonterra Dairy Woman of the Year.
New Zealand’s special agricultural trade envoy Hamish Marr believes the outlook for the dairy sector remains strong.
Everyone from experienced veterinarians and young professionals to the Wormwise programme and outstanding clinics have been recognised in this year’s New Zealand Veterinary Association Te Pae Kīrehe (NZVA) awards.