Wilding Pines Could Cost New Zealand Billions, Says Hoggard
Wilding pines are the wrong tree in the wrong place, and they need to go, says Biosecurity Minister Andrew Hoggard.
All those involved in this latest scandal of mistreatment of bobby calves redefine the meaning of the word idiot.
All those involved in this latest scandal of mistreatment of bobby calves redefine the meaning of the word idiot.
What were they thinking and how can they justify such cruelty to helpless animals? No excuse, no apology is good enough and the individuals and their companies need to take a long, close look at themselves.
It is terrible to mistreat animals, and equally bad that these individuals have damaged the reputation of New Zealand. Is this tantamount to treason? The industry does not need these people, be they farmers, transporters or whatever and they should be fast-tracked out.
They have sullied an industry that earns about $14 billion dollars a year and provides the lifeblood of the NZ economy. How dare they damage this? By far the greatest number of farmers – be they dairy or whatever – care for their animals and so they should. There is enough information out there to tell them why and what to do.
This dopey criminal action feeds the PR machine of the animal rights activists who leap with glee at this situation. They in turn add fuel to the fire by creating mischief within NZ and overseas. We saw on television one nutter saying farmers are "taking babies away from their mothers" and that people should boycott milk. If he had any respect for the facts, the words calves should replace babies and cows' mothers, but what might you expect.
There are plenty of people out there waiting to pillory the dairy industry. Fish and Game's 'dirty dairying' is a good example. Outrageous publicity is the lifeblood of many NGOs and this latest saga is a transfusion from heaven.
It was great to see Andrew Hoggard of Fed Farmers front up so promptly and professionally on Radio New Zealand's Morning Report on the Monday after the TV programme. He defused the situation with smart responses and it was a pity MPI wasn't so quick off the mark.
This episode highlights the fragility of our primary-industry economy and the need for everyone to stand as one and not break ranks and do dumb criminal things.
Technically farmers are at the front line but all those in the supply chain are a part of the game and no-one can afford to slip up.
Applications for Silver Fern Farms Co-operative's next board-appointed farmer director are open.
It's our time to shine, says Deer Industry NZ chief executive Rhys Griffiths.
New Zealand needs to have "a really mature conversation" around modern gene editing technologies and synthetic biology, says the Prime Minister's Chief Science Advisor, Dr John Roche.
A booming agriculture sector and sold-out exhibition sites are pointing to a bumper 2026 National Fieldays at Mystery Creek, Hamilton.
Wilding pines are the wrong tree in the wrong place, and they need to go, says Biosecurity Minister Andrew Hoggard.
According to new research, industry leaders have ranked world-class biodiversity as the number one priority for the 16th year in a row.