Mayors give government plan to ease seasonal worker shortage
Hastings District Council has given the government a plan to address the seasonal labour shortage faced by the horticulture and viticulture sectors due to Covid-19.
NESTLED ALONG the coast of northern Hawke’s Bay lies a historic pioneering farm that next month will open its grounds to support a local charity.
Waihua Station lies about 20km south of Wairoa, its eastern boundary lapped by the South Pacific.
On November 23 its 100-year-old homestead will host the Waihua Christmas Fete, a day of quality shopping and picnicking in beautiful gardens. All proceeds will go to the Hawke’s Bay and Eastland Rescue Helicopter.
Rose Haynes is the fifth generation to farm the 2000ha sheep and beef station, started in 1882 by John Glendining. Rose was raised on the farm by her parents Jill and Bob and took on its management 16 years ago.
“It hadn’t always been the plan that I would come back to the farm long-term, but I was home between overseas travels and the opportunity came about to stay,” says Haynes, who lives in the homestead with daughter Saba (9) and partner Jock Nicholls.
“Dad still comes out every day to work on the farm and has his own team of dogs. We also have two fencers.”
Having a woman at the helm is not new for Waihua: generations of strong wives and daughters have contributed to the station’s success. Haynes is the latest in that line and is clearly at home on the land.
As with all farming there have been ups and downs, but Haynes is confident they have found the right mix for Waihua. The farm runs about 600 cows each year and keeps all progeny for finishing. They buy in hoggets for winter, about 2200 arriving in May and leaving over a period of four weeks from November. They also have about 200 dairy grazers.
“We don’t have sheep over summer: it was hard on the pasture and [would have required more staff] for the extra work required,” explains Haynes.
“We have a great relationship with the works; we supply and we know what we can grow in that winter period. We have the cattle year round and have been using short horn bulls as we find they produce animals that are quieter and we can finish progeny for the works a lot earlier.”
Several flats are used for cropping, particularly maize, while larger areas of native vegetation have been retained but thinned.
A hypothesis in a major dairy research programme that bulls genetically proven to be low methane producers could pass this trait onto their lactating daughters has been proven to be incorrect.
ACT MP and Minister for Biosecurity Andrew Hoggard says he's hearing a common story about school buses, with empty seats, driving past pick-up points, while a parent follows behind in a farm ute, burning fuel and taking up time to get their children to school.
The Envrionmental Protection Authority (EPA) has welcomed the deicsion by the Environmental Law Initiative (ELI) to withdraw its appeal of the High Court's decision confirming the Authority had acted lawfully when deciding not to reassess glyphosate.
Horticulture New Zealand (HortNZ) is inviting applications for scholarships places on its 2026 Leadership Programme.
More than 640 dairy farmers and industry leaders gathered together at Rotorua's Energy Events Centre on Saturday night to celebrate the New Zealand Dairy Industry Awards where Southland couple Scott and Stacey Mackereth were named Share Farmers of the Year.
Āta Regenerative is bringing international expertise to New Zealand to help farmers respond to growing soil and water challenges, as environmental monitoring identifies declining ecosystem function and reduced water-holding capacity across farms.

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