Wednesday, 24 January 2024 09:55

Swapping fashion for farming

Written by  Staff Reporters
Dairy farmers Amber and Fraser Carpenter with sons Oliver and Noah. Dairy farmers Amber and Fraser Carpenter with sons Oliver and Noah.

Ask Amber Carpenter about dairy farming and you'll hear the passion in her voice as she answers.

The South Auckland dairy farmer and Dairy Environment Leaders chair says the sector is incredible, thanks to the opportunities it offers and the people in it.

"Farmers always have time to help others, they share ideas and give advice, and you know people are there for you should you need them. It's great to be part of such a positive and engaging sector."

It's quite the endorsement for the sector, and there's plenty more where that came from - Amber was introduced to the sector 17 years ago and says it was love at first sight.

“The opportunities are amazing and the people are incredible. They all look after each other and the land and animals. Farmers generally put themselves last.”

Farming, Amber says, also offers a great lifestyle and the chance to be at home with the kids (she and husband Fraser have two children – Oliver, six and Noah, three).

She came into farming from a career in corporate fashion – Amber worked for Karen Walker and as a buyer for Farmers Trading Company, among other roles. In 2007 she met Fraser at a 21st and added part-time farmer to her full-time commitments.

Fast-forward to 2018. Amber was working as a national merchandising manager for Cotton On NZ and had just given birth to Oliver when she committed to farming full-time.

She and Fraser had been equal partners in the sharemilking business they started in 2015 – they’re now in their ninth season – and Amber was helping on-farm on weekends or doing the books at night when she got home from town or overseas.

“We realised we needed to make a choice – urban life following my career, or rural life following Fraser’s. It’s obvious which path we took,” she laughs.

But exchanging high heels for gumboots wasn’t easy for Amber – it was one of the hardest transitions she’s faced.

“I knew it was the right decision, but it wasn’t an easy process. I didn’t expect to mourn the loss of my old career. It was a big part of who I was, so I suppose I felt like I’d lost part of myself. I was constantly worried I wouldn’t be welcomed or be told I didn’t belong.”

The sector welcomed her, though, and she doesn’t regret the move for a minute. “I’m so grateful we followed our hearts to stay farming and bring our kids up in a rural community.”

She’s certainly made an impact across the sector. Amber was appointed chair of DairyNZ’s Dairy Environment Leaders (DEL) network in June 2023, charged with leading other environmentally minded farmers into a sustainable future. The role appealed, she says, because she’s passionate about making a difference and driving change for a better future.

“I’m aware I am filling very large shoes from the amazing work previous chairs, including Martin Bennett, Tracy Brown and Melissa Slattery, have achieved. Continuing to build on their work is important.”

The DEL group involves 400 dairy farmer members nationwide who collaborate with other dairy farmers, communities, and decision-makers to “drive positive on-farm environmental progress”. DELs also share with the wider community the great work dairy farmers have been doing nationwide, such as planting, fencing off waterways and creating wetlands to reduce nutrient losses and provide a habitat for native plants and
animals.

Bright Future

Amber and Fraser are dedicated to caring for the land – their goal is to leave the land better than they found it for future generations.

They have a plan every season to lower their environmental footprint, such as reducing nitrogen and fertiliser inputs and imported feed.

“As sharemilkers we work with what is in our control,” Amber says.

“Understanding our numbers is key, and working with farm owners who value environmental sustainability is important to us. We appreciate working with previous and current farm owners on farm environment plans and being involved in the conversations when it comes to planting and fencing off wetlands.

“I want to be a part of DEL to help us on this journey, to have the opportunity to connect with like-minded people to share ideas, hear different viewpoints, collaborate and make a positive impact, whether it is on our own farm or in the community,” she says. “All the small changes each day and each season help us make a bigger overall impact.

“Although we have many challenges ahead of us, there are also so many opportunities. I think the future of the dairy sector is exciting and bright.”

More like this

Leaders connect to plan continued tree planting

Leading farmers from around New Zealand connected to share environmental stories and inspiration and build relationships at the Dairy Environment Leaders (DEL) national forum in Wellington last month.

Planting natives for the future

Te Awamutu dairy farmers Doug, Penny, Josh and Bayley Storey have planted more than 25,000 native trees on the family farm, adding to a generations-old native forest.

Celebrating dairy farmers this International Women's Day

Siobhan O’Malley is a dairy farmer, innovator, businesswoman and community volunteer, an example of the thousands of Kiwi dairy farming women throughout New Zealand who multi-task every day to contribute positively to their communities.

Collaboration key to environmental work

Dairy Environment Leaders (DELs) chair and Hunua dairy farmer Amber Carpenter says connections help the dairy sector and research partners develop climate and water quality mitigation strategies.

Featured

State farmer opens pathway to ownership for more Kiwis

In a landmark move, the state-owned farmer Pāmu (Landcorp) is making four of its 44 dairy farms available for people wishing to take up various contracts including herd-owning, share milking, variable order share milking and contract milking.

Coming to a beach near you!

The popular Surfing for Farmers programme, which gives farmers a well-earned break from life on the farm, starts its eighth season from November 5.

MilkHub sold

Milk vat manufacturer DTS is selling its dairy automation business to MilktechNZ.

National

DairyNZ levy to increase?

Retiring chair Jim van der Poel has used his final AGM to announce the intention to increase the DairyNZ farmer…

Former Fonterra CEO dies

Former Fonterra chief executive Theo Spierings passed away in the Netherlands over the weekend.

Graduate brings passion for farming

Rhys Dawson will join Perrin Ag in 2025 as the firm’s newest graduate recruit, bringing a passion for inter-generational agribusiness…

Machinery & Products

Data connection made easier

New Holland and Case IH are introducing new advancements in their precision technology stack to make farming easier and more…

A formidable duo for tillage

The new Lemken Solitair MR series mounted drills, available in three or four metre working widths, features a 1500-litre tank, which…

When compaction is a good thing

Good silage starts by cutting the crop at the correct growth stage, followed by reducing moisture content, chopping to a consistent…

» Latest Print Issues Online

Milking It

Feed from farmers

OPINION: The country's dairy farmers will now also have a hand in providing free lunch for schools.

Brighter future

OPINION: The abrupt departure of Synlait chief executive Grant Watson could be a sign that Chinese company Bright Dairy, the…

» Connect with Dairy News

» eNewsletter

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter