Wednesday, 06 July 2016 10:55

Cattle won’t forget a scary drone

Written by  Pam Tipa
Once you chase cattle with drones they don't forget. Once you chase cattle with drones they don't forget.

If you bring a drone up slowly on cattle you can observe them, but once you chase them with drones they don't forget, says Dr Temple Grandin.

You can observe cattle with drones, and you can handle them with drones, "but you're probably going to have a bad time trying to do both," she says.

"Let's say I wanted to look at cattle with drones and I also wanted to chase cattle with drones. I would need different drones with different sounds. So they might learn that one brand of drone is ok but the other brand with a different sound is bad.

"I would want to get them used to being observed with drones first before I'd start chasing them with drones. If you just get in there and start chasing first, they are going to be afraid of all drones. You aren't going to be able to observe them; they will run away from them."

Grandin says she has seen a video of a drone flown high above cattle, then moved over and slowly lowered down. The cattle just looked up at it.

"Make sure at the beginning that your cattle don't have a scary experience with a drone because then they will be scared of all drones. The initial experience should be just observing them with it; then if I wanted to chase them I'd never use the 'good' drone I initially trained them with."

A chase drone needs to look very different from the observing drone. "I'd get another one that was the 'bad' one and I might tie a flag or ribbons or something to the back of it to make it look even more different."

More like this

The sky is the limit at Felton Road

Felton Road Wines is using an electric drone sprayer to apply organic fungicides and monitor crops, cutting emissions and transforming management.

Drones, AI making cattle counting a dream

PGG Wrightson has launched a new stock-counting service using drones and Artificial Intelligence (AI), which it says removes all the hassle for farmers, while achieving 99.9% accuracy.

Got $1.5m for a bit of spraying?

While we are seeing more and more drones being used in New Zealand agriculture, we’re some way behind the US, where in places like the Midwest, the drones are certainly bigger than Texas.

Featured

Brendan Attrill scoops national award for sustainable farming

Brendan Attrill of Caiseal Trust in Taranaki has been announced as the 2025 National Ambassador for Sustainable Farming and Growing and recipient of the Gordon Stephenson Trophy at the National Sustainability Showcase at in Wellington this evening.

National

Machinery & Products

Calf feeding boost

Advantage Plastics says it is revolutionising calf meal storage and handling, making farm life easier, safer, and more efficient this…

JD's precision essentials

Farmers across New Zealand are renowned for their productivity and efficiency, always wanting to do more with less, while getting…

» Latest Print Issues Online

The Hound

Don't hold back!

OPINION: ACT MP Mark Cameron isn’t everyone’s cup of tea, but he certainly calls it how he sees it, holding…

Sorry, not sorry

OPINION: Did former PM Jacinda Ardern get fawning reviews for her book?

» Connect with Rural News

» eNewsletter

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter