No regrets choosing cows over boardroom
Winning the 2025 New Zealand Share Farmers of the Year still hasn't sunk in for Thomas and Fiona Langford.
What began as a work experience while at university changed Bay of Plenty farm manager Chihiro Hanyuda's life.
The 27-year old Japanese-born is in her third season farming and is now farm manager for Peter Overdevest and Tania Akehurst on their 148ha Galatea farm, milking 379 cows.
Earlier this month, she was rewarded for her great start in dairying when she scooped the 2023 Bay of Plenty Dairy Manager of the Year title. The win came with $7,795 in prizes plus three merit awards.
Hanyuda says she didn't know anything about the industry until work experience on a dairy farm while studying for a Bachelor of Science, majoring in Animal Science, minor in Ecology.
"I got hooked in - the lifestyle, the job and the cows. Every morning I wake up feeling excited to go to work."
She told Dairy News that her motivation to grow as a dairy farmer is helping her advance.
"I kept asking myself if I could keep learning where I was. When the answer was no, I looked for another job to expand my opportunities for the future," she says.
Future farming goals include farm ownership and showcasing New Zealand farming to Japan.
"I want to show how great the farming life here is to Japanese people.
"I'm proud of myself for climbing the ladder relatively fast for someone who came to New Zealand alone just a few years ago and didn't know anything about farming.
"There have been obstacles for me to overcome and I'm sure there will be many more, but I'm glad I've never given up and kept trying and holding on to every opportunity."
Hanyuda is passionate about new technologies and innovative ways of farming.
"I always think about how to farm more easily and improve production at the same time.
"While regulations and the climate are changing, our farming system needs to be adaptable to all sorts of possible scenarios."
She would love to be involved in decision-making for environmental regulations and laws.
"I would love to assist farmers and government officials to understand each other's point of view."
Uneducated comments on social media frustrate Hanyuda, who would like to see farmers educate themselves more on the environment.
"I see these comments and I get a feeling that most haven't even read the regulations or understand them properly.
"Instead of blindly disagreeing, we should broaden our knowledge and think how we can individually improve the situation."
She also believes farmers need to admit that they affect the environment in one way or another.
"Then, each one of us needs to think about how we can minimise the risk of altering the environment for the future.
"For example, some farmers focus on reducing their herd sizes but improve the genetics in their herd to maintain their productions.
"Some people may try different pastures, like plantain, to reduce nitrate oxide release into the atmosphere.
"Some may build compost barns to reduce nitrate leaching into the ground and to the waterway."
NZPork has appointed Auckland-based Paul Bucknell as its new chair.
The Government claims to have delivered on its election promise to protect productive farmland from emissions trading scheme (ETS) but red meat farmers aren’t happy.
Foot and Mouth Disease outbreaks could have a detrimental impact on any country's rural sector, as seen in the United Kingdom's 2000 outbreak that saw the compulsory slaughter of over six million animals.
The Ministry for the Environment is joining as a national award sponsor in the Ballance Farm Environment Awards (BFEA from next year).
Kiwis are wasting less of their food than they were two years ago, and this has been enough to push New Zealand’s total household food waste bill lower, the 2025 Rabobank KiwiHarvest Food Waste survey has found.
OPINION: Sir Lockwood Smith has clearly and succinctly defined what academic freedom is all about, the boundaries around it and the responsibility that goes with this privilege.