fbpx
Print this page
Monday, 27 April 2015 10:39

Farmers no drones on UAV uptake

Written by 
Parrot AR.Drone 2.0 in flight. Photo by Halftermeyer (Wikimedia commons) Parrot AR.Drone 2.0 in flight. Photo by Halftermeyer (Wikimedia commons)

Farmers are among the fastest business people seeing the advantages of UAV technology, says Warren Eade of GeoSystems NZ. (UAV stands for unmanned aerial vehicle, or ‘drone’).

“Farmers are dealing with large scale areas and traditional methodology such as a 4WD or motorbike searching around a farm takes a lot longer,” he told Rural News. “[Data we can collect] in the space of a one-hour flight could have taken them several weeks to collect manually.”

Eade will be one of several speakers on UAVs at the upcoming MobileTECH conference in Auckland on April 29-30. He will speak about finding the right UAV amid the hundreds of designs and thousands of applications.

Those hundreds of UAVs fall into two categories: fixed wing or plane type versus multi rotor or helicopter type, he explains. 

“Within those categories there are multiple UAVs and there is no such thing as a utopian aircraft, one that does absolutely everything. They have their pluses and minuses in size, weight, ease of flight, civil aviation regulations, payloads, etc. You need to do some homework.”

Some bigger corporate farms may be interested in buying UAVs but most other farmers would use services provided by people in the industry.  His address will pitch to farmers and different agencies that have not yet made the plunge into UAV technology and are unsure what they need to consider, whether buying or using UAV services.

“Size, speed, ease of launch, portability, software are the sort of factors that come into the decision-making process on which one to buy and which one to use,” he explains. “Hopefully it will shed some light on the mysteries behind the purchasing decisions.”

UAVs can cost as little as $500, or upwards of $30,000, according to MobileTECH organisers.

Learn more

MobileTech 2015 is a major technology event focusing on UAVs, robotics and automation for primary industry businesses in Australia and New Zealand. 

Presentations will look at the evolution of UAVs and insights into the future of this technology. Leading innovations in aircraft, operating systems and human-machine interfaces will be on display and demonstrated. 

There will also be case studies highlighting UAVs now used used in farming, horticulture and forestry. 

www.mobiletech.events

More like this

The sky is the limit at Felton Road

Felton Road Wines is using an electric drone sprayer to apply organic fungicides and monitor crops, cutting emissions and transforming management.

Drones, AI making cattle counting a dream

PGG Wrightson has launched a new stock-counting service using drones and Artificial Intelligence (AI), which it says removes all the hassle for farmers, while achieving 99.9% accuracy.

Featured

Fencing excellence celebrated

The Fencing Contractors Association of New Zealand (FCANZ) celebrated the best of the best at the 2025 Fencing Industry Awards, providing the opportunity to honour both rising talent and industry stalwarts.

B+LNZ launches AI assistant for farmers

Beef + Lamb New Zealand has launched an AI-powered digital assistant to help farmers using the B+LNZ Knowledge Hub to create tailored answers and resources for their farming businesses.

National

Machinery & Products

Tech might take time

Agritech Unleashed – a one-day event held recently at Mystery Creek, near Hamilton – focused on technology as an ‘enabler’…

John Deere acquires GUSS Automation

John Deere has announced the full acquisition of GUSS Automation, LLC, a globally recognised leader in supervised high-value crop autonomy,…

Fencing excellence celebrated

The Fencing Contractors Association of New Zealand (FCANZ) celebrated the best of the best at the 2025 Fencing Industry Awards,…