fbpx
Print this page
Tuesday, 09 March 2021 15:55

Bay's roller coaster ride with drought

Written by  Peter Burke
Lochie MacGillivray says Hawke's Bay needs more rain in the next couple of weeks or there is a risk of the region slipping back into drought. Lochie MacGillivray says Hawke's Bay needs more rain in the next couple of weeks or there is a risk of the region slipping back into drought.

Lochie MacGillivray says Hawke's Bay needs more rain in the next couple of weeks or there is a risk of the region slipping back into drought conditions.

A leading farm advisor in the region, MacGillivray told Rural News that the area had some good rain a couple of weeks ago and this varied between 10 and 100mm – with more in the north and less in the south around Waipukurau. He says that gave farmers a nice reprieve because up until then things were starting to look serious.

MacGillivray says at that point, the Rural Advisory Group (RAG), of which he is member, had met and they were going to start communicating to farmers to be aware of potential problems and to start planning mitigation measures.

“So, the rain we had was a relief to everybody but we do need follow-up rain within the next fortnight or things will start to deteriorate.”

MacGillivray says, since last year’s drought, there was some rain in November, which resulted in a good spike for pastures and they have come back. But he says some of the renovated pastures are taking a bit of a hit with native pastures creeping in quite quickly.

“But through January there was little rain and we received 15% of normal rainfall – that’s when we started to worry again,” he told Rural News.

MacGillivray says the good news is that the November rains resulted in quite a feed surplus and the contractors were flat out making hay, baleage and silage. He says feed reserves are right up where they’d want them to be.

“So we are not in the same situation as we were last year.”

MacGillivray believes the supplements made in November will be quite good quality, which is also good. But he says the pastures in the region, at the moment, are average at best and some has got a bit rank without much base to it.

MacGillivray says if there is more rain within the next few weeks, there is a chance that some of the grass underneath this rank pasture will come away.

But adds one final warning, that if this happens, facial eczema may appear and farmers should be aware of this.

More like this

Marlborough drought declaration welcomed

Marlborough Federated Farmers has got some real concern about the mental wellbeing of farmers and their families in the region because of the drought and there’s a lot of pressure starting to build.

Drought classification welcome news - Feds

Federated Farmers Marlborough Province says it welcomes the announcement yesterday that current dry weather in the top of the South Island would be classified as a medium-scale adverse event.

Featured

Editorial: War's over

OPINION: In recent years farmers have been crying foul of unworkable and expensive regulations.

NZ-EU FTA enters into force

Trade Minister Todd McClay says Kiwi exporters will be $100 million better off today as the NZ-EU Free Trade Agreement (FTA) comes into force.

National

Food recall system at work

The New Zealand Food Safety (NZFS) has started issuing annual reports, a new initiative to share information on consumer-level recalls…

Machinery & Products

Factory clocks up 60 years

There can't be many heavy metal fans who haven’t heard of Basildon, situated about 40km east of London and originally…

PM opens new Power Farming facility

Morrinsville based Power Farming Group has launched a flagship New Zealand facility in partnership with global construction manufacturer JCB Construction.