Massey Ferguson 5M Series Gains Ground in NZ’s 95–145hp Utility Tractor Market
Since its official release to the New Zealand market in July 2025, the Massey Ferguson 5M Series has steadily solidified its position.
Graeme and Kay Murphy, of Murphy Contracting in Geraldine, South Canterbury, produce around 15,000 bales every season, entrusting this task to a MF 2250 medium square baler.
Used mostly to make grass silage, and also handling straw, hay, lucerne and whole crop silage, the machine replaced a previous MF 2150 model. Now with a season under its belt, Murphy says it fills the top of the chamber better than the old machine, which helps deliver a firmer and better shaped bale.
It makes bales 800 x 875mm, such packages proving easy to stack and truck. Its output is centred on producing a quality product at around 60 bales/h, although production up to 130 bales/h has been seen in large paddocks with big crops.
A 2260mm wide pick-up lifts the crop cleanly to feed augers, which move the crop smoothly into the bale chamber.
The operator can easily adjust the bale density by using the AgCommand monitor as crop or weather conditions change, as well as keeping details of individual jobs done during the day
Murphy says the machine’s suspended tandem axles make it very stable and easier to pull over rough ground.
And it has some neat features: good working lights for late nights, and a bale ejector system that brings the last of the crop out of the chamber. Maintenance is also said to be easy, with good access to all areas that need attention.
Anyone who has made bales will know that the presentation of the crop to the baler is the key to producing a well-shaped bale and achieving high outputs. At Murphy Contracting this task falls to the twin rotor, centre delivery RK 3875 rake, operating at widths up to 6.6m, but more importantly, swathe widths of 1.2 to 1.8m depending on the crop and conditions.
Much of the raking falls to Kay who uses the machine in grass, lucerne and whole crops. It is said to be better than the old V-rake as it has no tendency to ‘rope’ the crop as did the older machine.
As you would expect from a MF man, the Murphys’ tractors are also red, including a five-year-old 185hp, MF 7495 Dyna–VT with a variable transmission; this spends its life hitched to the baler.
Murphy says the stepless transmission is ideal for baling, allowing fine adjustment of speed and 50km/h on the road between jobs. Fuel consumption is pleasing, he says -- around 18L/h.
A four-year-old, 120hp, MF 5465 Dyna-4 offers a basic and simple solution for raking, wrapping and baling, while a recently landed MF 7614 (140hp) will keep Kay busy, but in an environment more comfortable and less noisy during the October-April season.
New Zealand's diverse cheesemaking talent shone brightly last night as the New Zealand Specialist Cheesemakers Association (NZSCA) crowned the champions of the 2026 New Zealand Cheese Awards.
Tracing has indicated that the source of the first velvetleaf find of the 2025-26 crop season, in Auckland, was likely maize purchased in the Waikato region.
Fish & Game New Zealand has announced its election priorities in its Manifesto 2026.
With the forage maize harvest started in Northland and the Waikato, the Foundation for Arable Research (FAR) is telling growers of later crops, or those further south, to start checking their maize crop maturity about three weeks prior to when they think they will start silage harvesting.
Irrigation NZ is warning that the government's Resource Management Act (RMA) reform risks falling short of its objectives unless water use for food production and water storage infrastructure are clearly recognised in the goals at the top of the new system.
More than five million trays, or 18,000 tonnes, of Zespri’s RubyRed Kiwifruit will soon be available for consumers across 16 markets this season.