fbpx
Print this page
Wednesday, 06 November 2019 14:55

A blaze of yellow

Written by  Nigel Malthus
Thousands of hectares of southern farmland is a blaze of yellow as the annual rapeseed crop comes into bloom. Thousands of hectares of southern farmland is a blaze of yellow as the annual rapeseed crop comes into bloom.

Several thousand hectares of South Island farmland is a blaze of yellow as the annual rapeseed crop welcomes the spring.

Cropping farmer Warren Darling is one whose display regularly wows the public, since his farm straddles State Highway One just south of Timaru. 

His 120ha of rape is at “peak flower” and he expects to harvest at the end of January.

Darling has been growing the crop for about 12 years, along with wheat and barley. He is now also trying sunflowers, beans and industrial hemp, in an effort to find compatible crops to move to a four-year rotation.

He says it is not hard to grow.

“It fits the rotation for us, because we are able to use a different family of chemistry on our weed problems, that sort of thing.

“And because of our location we seem to be getting reasonably good yields as well. The return’s reasonably good with it.”

Darling doesn’t burn off the post-harvest residue but will dig it back into the soil, ready to sow in wheat about April.

He is contracted to supply Rolleston-based Pure Oil New Zealand, which produces a number of lines including cold-pressed pure virgin rapeseed oil, retailed under the Good Oil brand.

Managing director Nick Murney says his suppliers make up close to 4000ha of both high-oleic and standard rapeseed and also, latterly, sunflowers. Most growers are in South Canterbury and Southland, with some in North Canterbury. 

Rapeseed is not grown in Mid Canterbury to avoid cross-pollination problems with that district’s brassica seed producers.

Murney explains that the factory was originally built by Solid Energy to produce biofuels, which he describes as “a sunset industry before it was a sunrise”.

However, as an edible oil producer the factory is going from strength to strength and is now running at 85% capacity compared to 28% when they took it over.

Murney says the high-oleic Good Oil brand has been in the market about four years and is “going really well”. 

They have recently added a cold-pressed virgin sunflower oil under the same brand.

“And it’s not just human food; we’re in petrochemicals, stock food and in beauty products. There’s lots of different sectors that we sell our products to.”

The company makes an equine stock feed and oil-based supplements under the Leg Up brand. Meal is also sold as feed for pigs, poultry and dairy calves.

Featured

Feds back Fast-Track Approval Bill

Federated Farmers is throwing its support behind the Fast-track Approvals Bill introduced by the Coalition Government to enable a fast-track decision-making process for infrastructure and development projects.

Machinery builder in liquidation

In what appears to be a casualty of the downturn in the agricultural sector, a well-known machinery brand is now in the hands of liquidators and owing creditors $6.6 million.

Two hemispheres tied together through cows

One of New Zealand’s deepest breeder Jersey herds – known for its enduring connection through cattle with the UK’s longest reigning monarch, Queen Elizabeth II – will host its 75th anniversary celebration sale on-farm on April 22.

National

Ploughing Champs success

Sean Leslie and Casey Tilson from Middlemarch, with horses Beau and Dough, took out the Rural News Horse Plough award…

Farmers oppose work visa changes

Farmers are crying foul over changes announced by the Government this week to the Accredited Employer Work Visa (AEWV) scheme.

Machinery & Products

PM opens new Power Farming facility

Morrinsville based Power Farming Group has launched a flagship New Zealand facility in partnership with global construction manufacturer JCB Construction.

AGTEK and ARGO part ways

After 12 years of representing the Landini and McCormick brands in New Zealand, Bay of Plenty-based AGTEK and the brands’…

100 years of Farmall Tractors

Returning after an enforced break, the Wheat and Wheels Rally will take place on the Lauriston -Barhill Road, North-East of…