High dairy payouts fuel record milk production across NZ
Many farmers around the country are taking advantage of the high dairy payout to get maximum production out of their cows.
One of the country’s top agricultural consultants, James Allen, is planning to do a major study on what the role of the agricultural consultant may look like in the future.
Allen has been awarded a prestigious Nuffield Scholarship, which means for the next 12 months he’ll be able to research his chosen topic as well as undertaking a series of overseas visits aimed at widening his knowledge of agriculture. Allen is one of four New Zealanders selected as Nuffield Scholars this year.
Nuffield Farming Scholarships Trust is a charity organisation whose aim is to bring positive change to agriculture through the development of its future leaders. Scholars head overseas to learn from others and helping them share their brilliant ideas when they return home.
Allen is the chief executive of AgFirst and also chair of National Fieldays. He says the reason for choosing as his topic the future role of ag consultants is that there’s a huge amount of information available to farmers on the internet and from the data they collect on their own farms.
“But the role of the farm consultant has never been greater and nor has the need because there is some sort of disconnect going on there about information verses the application of that information,” Allen told Rural News.
“I want to look at exemplars – companies who are the best in the world at undertaking agricultural consultancy around the world. As part of that I will be spending time in Europe, the USA and UK.”
Allen says as well as studying the topic of his choice he’ll also be participating in a number of tours for all the Nuffield Scholars who come from all around the world. The first of these is in March when the New Zealanders attend the global scholars conference in Vancouver in March. He says this will provide an opportunity to learn and share ideas.
He will then go on a four week study tour to four countries and see a range of agriculture issues. At this stage, the final arrangements still have to be worked out but the likely countries they will visit are Kenya, England, Spain and Italy.
Allen says he feels very privileged to obtain a Nuffield scholarship and hopes to have his personal research paper completed in about a year.
Applications have now opened for the 2026 Meat Industry Association scholarships.
Bank of New Zealand (BNZ) says it is backing aspiring dairy farmers through a new initiative designed to make the first step to farm ownership or sharemilking easier.
OPINION: While farmers are busy and diligently doing their best to deal with unwanted gasses, the opponents of farming - namely the Greens and their mates - are busy polluting the atmosphere with tirades of hot air about what farmers supposedly aren't doing.
OPINION: For close to eight years now, I have found myself talking about methane quite a lot.
The Royal A&P Show of New Zealand, hosted by the Canterbury A&P Association, is back next month, bigger and better after the uncertainty of last year.
Claims that farmers are polluters of waterways and aquifers and 'don't care' still ring out from environmental groups and individuals. The phrase 'dirty dairying' continues to surface from time to time. But as reporter Peter Burke points out, quite the opposite is the case. He says, quietly and behind the scenes, farmers are embracing new ideas and technologies to make their farms sustainable, resilient, environmentally friendly and profitable.