fbpx
Print this page
Tuesday, 03 February 2015 12:05

Wait and see – but not too long!

Written by 

Be proactive in your thinking and recognise your options because the next three weeks will be crucial in planning to deal with drought.

 That’s the message to farmers in Manawatu/Rangitikei region from the local Fed Farmers’ Meat and Fibre chair Richard Morrison. He says the dry weather has come earlier than normal to his region and that’s got local farmers wondering what’s going to happen next 

Morrison says it hasn’t rained there for a long time, but most people grew a lot of grass leading up to Christmas so there has been feed on hand. It seems like a stand-off with people waiting to see if the rain is coming before planning their next move.

“It seems like the works should be flat-stick because everyone should be off-loading stock and while people are booking space the works probably aren’t as full as they might be,” he told Rural News.  “I think people are probably getting the lambs into their yards and finding they’re not as good as they hoped or thought they would be. I believe they are sending off the lambs that are ready and hoping they’re going to get a shower of rain to be able to bring the next bunch along.”

Morrison thinks lambs in the region are probably a bit lighter than what people would hope or like. 

“We have had bad droughts before and this is early – it’s not February – and people are wondering, is this just a typical dry summer or is it going to get worse and will the rain come? Everyone can remember the last three years and how challenging that was.” 

Morrison says the Rangitikei River is running low and it’s possible restrictions on irrigation could be imposed. “The soil moisture maps are out and the deficit looks pretty bad and anyone can see just how dry the grass is.” 

He says farmers should be looking closely at feed budgets and starting to develop a plan they can implement if the situation gets worse.

More like this

2015 what a year!

The end of the year is fast approaching so some end of year thoughts on a few of the significant developments of the year to wrap things up!

Ewes give landslide the slip

It was a Saturday afternoon and it had been raining for two days; Taranaki farmer Graham Fergus decided to move his ewes on a hilly paddock.

People power

When Lyn Neeson, who farms near Taumaranui, saw the Whanganui and Ohura rivers rise rapidly in June, she figured this spelled trouble for farmers downstream and she was right. 

Featured

NZEI unhappy with funding cut for teachers

Education union NZEI Te Riu Roa says that while educators will support the Government’s investment in learning support, they’re likely to be disappointed that it has been paid for by defunding expert teachers.

EU regulations unfairly threaten $200m exports

A European Union regulation ensuring that the products its citizens consume do not contribute to deforestation or forest degradation worldwide threatens $200m of New Zealand beef and leather exports.

Bionic Plus back on vet clinic shelves

A long-acting, controlled- release capsule designed to protect ewes from internal parasites during the lambing period is back on the market following a comprehensive reassessment.

National

Machinery & Products

New Holland combines crack 50 years

New Holland is celebrating the 50th anniversary of the introduction its Twin Rotor threshing and separation technology, which has evolved…

Iconic TPW Woolpress turns 50!

The company behind the iconic TPW Woolpress, which fundamentally changed the way wool is baled in Australia and New Zealand,…