From dry to damp: getting your pastures ready
New Zealand farmers know that pastoral fortunes can shift rapidly once summer’s extreme dryness gives way to cooler, wetter autumn conditions.
HOW MUCH grass is going to grow on your farm next week?
While you might have a figure in mind, and the ability to factor the weather forecast into that mental calculation, a new online service promises to provide a reliable reference prediction.
At a district level, the Pasture Growth Forecaster (www.pasturegrowthforecaster.co.nz) is free thanks to funding from Beef + Lamb New Zealand and DairyNZ.
By registering for the service users get an e-mail every Sunday predicting what the typical dryland dairy or sheep and beef farm in the district will grow in the coming week. Go online and the free forecast extends to a fortnight. For a $9.95/month subscription, a forecast tailored to a 5km square is available, taking account of the water holding capacity of the five main soil-types in that square.
Besides the week-to-view and fortnight forecasts, there’s a prediction for season-long pasture growth, showing the range from production in the best years, to the worst.
Rezare systems, with the help of farm management company Farmax, built the programs that generate the forecasts which are administered by Farmax to provide the service.
“We see this as an awareness generation tool,” Farmax general manger Gavin McEwan told Rural News. “You’ll look at it and get an indicative measure of pasture growth for the region of your farm, but there’s no substitute for getting out there and actually measuring growth.”
Beef + Lamb New Zealand chief executive, Dr Scott Champion says while nothing about the weather is ever certain, the tool “pulls together the best information available to forecast grass growth”.
That should give greater confidence around decisions such as feed allocation, grazing rounds, or stock ratios, he says.
“Knowing when you are likely to have more or less feed than usual is going to be a key benefit of using this tool.”
Some BLNZ and Farmax project farms trialled the forecaster over the past year.
“They’ve found significant benefit in being able to calculate pasture growth on their own farms, supporting timing decisions around destocking or buying in animals to use the available feed,” says Champion.
There are 44 districts at the free service level.
Each district forecast is built up from the mean of the 5km square forecasts that are available by subscription.
McEwan acknowledges there may be big discrepancies between the predictions and what farms actually grow, particularly as the dairy model, at this stage, is dryland regardless of location.
However, the predictions should provide benchmarks which can be used to derive forecast figures “tweaked” according to the particular farm and management inputs such as irrigation and nitrogen fertiliser.
Federated Farmers supports a review of the current genetic technology legislation but insists that a farmer’s right to either choose or reject it must be protected.
New Zealand’s top business leaders are urging the US Administration to review “unjustified and discriminatory tariffs” imposed on Kiwi exporters.
New tariffs imposed by President Donald Trump signal an uncertain future, but New Zealand farmers know how to adapt to changing conditions, says Auriga Martin, chief executive of Farm Focus.
A global trade war beckons, which is bad news for a small open economy like New Zealand, warns Mark Smith ASB senior economist.
Carterton's Awakare Farm has long stood as a place where family, tradition and innovation intersect.
Fonterra says the US continues to be an important market for New Zealand dairy and the co-op.