Otago Regional Council to launch winter flyovers
Otago Regional Council is set to begin its annual winter farm flyovers in the next three weeks.
The deadline for farmers to apply for future winter grazing consents is just over three months away, but Otago Regional Council (ORC) is encouraging farmers to act now and apply.
ORC manager consents Joanna Gilroy says farmer engagement since new regulations came into effect in November 2022 had been “really good so far”, but to ensure consents are in place by 1 May, farmers need to begin the application process now.
To date the process has been taking ORC’s consents team five working days to get completed.
“A lot of farmers are being both pro-active and innovative and are already working on having their consents applied for and their grazing management plans in place,” Gilroy says.
She says ORC’s catchment advisors and consents and compliance teams are happy to do site visits and have sessions with catchment groups, something she says has been “very successful” to date.
“We’ve done more than 20 sessions with catchment and farmer groups and one-on-one visits, from September to December last year,” Gilroy says.
“The Council is here to help and has plenty of resources and people in place to support the farmers and their applications.”
She says the application for consent should cover multiple years, with any consents then granted for a specific duration.
“In most instances we’re encouraging farmers to apply for consent for the next three to five years,” she says.
Farmers will then need to update their management plan annually, telling ORC where they have grazed in the previous year, and where they plan to graze during the next season. They only need to apply for the consent once.
While farmers need to apply for the paddocks they’re likely to graze over the next few years, actual paddock selection and the day to day farm operation is still in the farmer’s hands.
“The process we’ve developed provides for farmers to change their plan in response to the many factors which can influence day to day management,” Gilroy says.
A world-first public-private joint venture helping farmers cut emissions is set to have the first product from its investment portfolio - a methane-reducing bolus - available for beef farmers early next year.
Donald Trump's uncompromising tariff policy is set to put New Zealand dairy exports to the US under huge pressure.
Two large milk processing plants in New Zealand are changing hands.
Sheep and beef farmers are urging the Government to do more to stop productive farmland overrun by pine trees.
Auckland’s Eventfinda Stadium saw New Zealand’s top butchers recognized at the National Butchery Awards.
According to the latest Beef + Lamb New Zealand (B+LNZ) Stock Number Survey, sheep numbers have fallen by 1% while beef cattle numbers rose by 4.4%.