A true Kiwi ingenuity
The King Cobra raingun continues to have a huge following in the New Zealand market and is also exported to numerous overseas markets.
Water remains a hot topic, given the boom-and-bust cycles and the likelihood of restrictions and higher costs for the precious fluid.
Hence the appeal of Numedic’s Hydrofan nozzle: it washes dairy shed yards to high standards but uses less water than is customary.
The Rotorua company shuns conventional design, instead making a nozzle that emits a wide, fan-shaped stream whose high impact shifts muck as all get out.
The stainless steel units have a swivel at the hose tail; they are available in 32 and 38mm sizes to fit existing pipework.
Dairy News visited Waimanu Dairy Ltd at Coldstream, central Canterbury, getting insights on their water use. The farm milks 800 cows through a 54-point rotary shed from a 30m diameter collecting yard with an automated backing gate.
In a four-month trial with ECAN, the owners, Warren and Suzanne Harris and their son Robert, monitored daily usage, discovering the average daily use at the shed and collecting yard was 61.6m3 through washdown hoses in the milking shed and eight hockey style nozzles on the backing gate. It worked in part, but they still needed a twice weekly washdown of the collecting yard, taking one hour to shift the build-up the backing gate nozzles didn’t shift.
Switching to Hydrofan nozzles, and reducing the number from eight to five on the backing gate has markedly improved the efficiency of the cleaning process and cut water usage by about 12m3 per day. This saves 360m3 over a nine-month milking period.
Warren Harris says it has been an eye opener -- 20% less water used for washdown, less dirty water passing to the effluent storage system, less effluent pushed out to the travelling irrigators and a resultant cut in electricity use which at the time of the visit was yet to be quantified.
He comments, “the nozzles might be a little dearer than conventional plastic designs, but they’re proving to be durable. The swivel allows the fan to be used just like a brush and the overall result is it’s cleaner and all the time saves money”.
Two butcheries have claimed victory at the 100% New Zealand Bacon & Ham Awards for 2025.
A Taupiri farming company has been convicted and fined $52,500 in the Hamilton District Court for the unlawful discharge of dairy effluent into the environment.
The Climate Change Commission’s 2025 emissions reduction monitoring report reveals steady progress on the reduction of New Zealand’s climate pollution.
Another milestone has been reached in the fight against Mycoplasma bovis with the compensation assistance service being wound up after helping more than 1300 farmers.
The Government’s directive for state farmer Landcorp Farming (trading as Pamu) to lifts its performance is yielding results.
The move to bring bovine TB testing in-house at Ospri officially started this month, as a team of 37 skilled and experienced technicians begin work with the disease eradication agency.