Outlook for dairy strong – ag trade envoy
New Zealand’s special agricultural trade envoy Hamish Marr believes the outlook for the dairy sector remains strong.
Sheds down, electric fences not working and breeding programmes interrupted are some of the problems facing dairy farms in the worst quake-hit areas of Culverden and Waiau.
Dairy Womens Network South Island convenor coordinator, Cathie Cotter, who is based in Invercargill, says she has been in contact with her regional convenors in Culverden.
Their farms are fine but they are taking cows from farms whose sheds are not operational, she says.
One of the biggest problems is the milk collection and the tanker getting through.
“But it is also very difficult because they are at the end of the AI, their mating,” she says.
“So the technicians and getting cows in for the AI …. it probably means that won’t be able to continue. So it is going to have a flow on effect for the next few years in their breeding programmes.
“There are all sorts of roll on effects…
“It is trying to keep their power supplies up because there is no power running through their electric fences. Cows are sneaky and they’ll start testing their fences.
“So it is trying to get the fences up and making sure they have got stock water.”
There were reports of one farmer having to dry their cows off already, but she could not confirm if that was correct.
“There are a couple of roads that have been completely destroyed that they haven’t been able to get tankers up.” That’s around Culverden and Waiau.
She says there are a number of dairy farms through Kaikoura but they don’t have an active Dairy Womens Network in Kaikoura, so she has had no information out of Kaikoura.
A number of farms that can milk have had to dispose of their milk. DairyNZ has said that cows can go without milking for number of days before detrimental effects on their health or they start to dry off.
“I think it is five or seven days that they can go without milking without having a huge effect…. But even then you’ve got mastitis and other cow health issues that start to be a problem.”
Civil Defence Emergency Management Canterbury said earlier this morning that Waiau and Rotherham appear to be the most affected farming areas. They had little information about Kaikoura farms.
Farmers should go to the Environment Canterbury website for information about stock drinking water access and milk disposal, civil defence said.
Phoebe Scherer, a technical manager from the Bay of Plenty, has won the 2025 Young Grower of the Year national title.
The Fencing Contractors Association of New Zealand (FCANZ) celebrated the best of the best at the 2025 Fencing Industry Awards, providing the opportunity to honour both rising talent and industry stalwarts.
Award-winning boutique cheese company, Cranky Goat Ltd has gone into voluntary liquidation.
As an independent review of the National Pest Management Plan for TB finds the goal of complete eradication by 2055 is still valide, feedback is being sought on how to finish the job.
Beef + Lamb New Zealand has launched an AI-powered digital assistant to help farmers using the B+LNZ Knowledge Hub to create tailored answers and resources for their farming businesses.
A tiny organism from the arid mountains of mainland Greece is facilitating a new way of growing healthier animals on farms across New Zealand.