THE WANGANUI Dog Trial Centre has started fundraising to enable it to hold the New Zealand championships at Mowhanga, near Taihape, in 2015. 

The Metalform Tow and Fert liquid fertiliser mixer/spreader is good for much more than spreading fertiliser, says Northland dairy farmer James Brady.

ENTRIES EXCEEDED 1000 at Edendale Vintage Machinery Club’s 26th annual Crank- Up event in late January. Edendale is mid-way between Invercargill and Gore.

Southland contractor Jason Hawker says you don’t know what you’re missing until you’ve tried a McHale baler.

Can Am and BRP are synonymous with building top-class recreational vehicles with the brand now taking market share off the established makes with their range of capable Quad bikes.

 

 

FERTILISER SPREADING speed and accuracy have risen for a Timaru dairy farm manager since he began using Tracmap, the company says.

Chris Edge, milking 830 cows on 220ha at Pleasant Point, west of Timaru, first had his whole property digitally mapped by TracMap, then six months ago began using the company’s TracLink farm fertility and nutrient management system. Traclink allows use of a computer to order fertiliser and to select the paddocks to be spread. The software interface allows the farmer to note the type of fertiliser to apply, volume, supplier, timeframe for applying it, any notes on application and the area it needs to be spread on. 

All fertilizer is applied on the Edge farm Temuka Transport, who until January 2012 relied on Edge noting the required fertiliser applications on a farm map, and leaving it in their letterbox for the truck drivers to collect. 

Now Edge nominates paddocks from a computer map, this information being sent directly to Temuka Transport’s GPS systems. 

This has greatly simplified the process, Edge says. “Our internet connection is very slow; I can submit an order in 10 minutes, or five minutes if the internet is quicker.”

Software allows farmers to overlay previously made orders as the basis of a current order and Edge says this also cuts down the time needed to order fertiliser.

“You can tell exactly where you’ve put on fertiliser in the past and you can use that for the basis for where it needs to go.”

Besides being able to highlight paddocks for fertiliser application, the farmer can use a software function that allows him to exclude areas in paddocks where he doesn’t want trucks to go.

Determining these locations is easier with Traclink than it was off a paper map says Edge. “The Google Earth map is pretty fantastic so you can work out where all the wet spots in the paddock are 99% of the time.” 

Edge hasn’t used this function fully; “We will put that to the test in late autumn when there are areas we want them to dodge out of.”

Tel. 0800 872 262

www.tracmap.co.nz

Recent publicity around quad bike and ATV accidents has brought ATVs and their riders’ safety under the spotlight again.

A VERSATILE 9-tine Jumbo Buster Ripper has slashed cultivation time by 60-90 hours for Northland farmer Sam Burke.

A NEW Zealand company's 'revolutionary' brushcutter blade that won a 2011 product-of-the-year award from the Australian Outdoor Power Equipment Association got its start chiefly through National Field Days and with crucial help from the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment.

THE SUBARU Legacy X could be seen as the answer to a question nobody was asking: a high-riding all-wheel-drive (AWD) sedan.

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