Bay of Plenty dairy awards see repeat winners
Bay of Plenty’s top share farmers Andre and Natalie Meier are no strangers to the New Zealand Dairy Industry Awards winning circle.
The winner of the Bay of Plenty Young Fruit Grower of Year, Craig Ward (26), says from early childhood he wanted a career in horticulture.
As a primary-schooler in Katikati he may have been the only child who watched Maggies Garden Show on television. He then told his mother he wanted to own an orchard or work in horticulture.
Last week Ward, a technical manager for the Apata Group packhouse company, won the award ahead of seven other competitors from the region. He now goes on to compete with young fruitgrowers from other regions and potentially to the young horticulturalist of the year competition later in 2015.
Ward, B.Appl.Sc in horticulture from Massey University, says though he was happy with his science knowledge, he spent time before the competition honing practical skills such as pruning and tractor driving.
Local MP and former Zespri employee Todd Muller presented Ward with the winner’s cup. He told the 250 guests at the awards evening that the kiwifruit industry should do more to celebrate the way it has managed its way through the Psa crisis. This has taken phenomenal collective fortitude, he says.
“The kiwifruit industry sets the benchmark for focusing on the things that unite it rather than getting distracted by the things that could divide it. It has come through an extraordinary period to where great confidence is now being expressed about its performance.”
Muller says now the industry has recovered from Psa the time might be right to look at whether the people who work at all levels of the kiwifruit industry are being valued appropriately – whether people are being paid in a way that reflects the success of the industry.
Newly elected Federated Farmers meat and wool group chair Richard Dawkins says he will continue the great work done his predecessor Toby Williams.
Hosted by ginger dynamo Te Radar, the Fieldays Innovation Award Winners Event put the spotlight on the agricultural industry's most promising ideas.
According to DairyNZ's latest Econ Tracker update, there has been a rise in the forecast breakeven milk price for the 2025/26 season.
Despite the rain and a liberal coating of mud, engines roared, and the 50th Fieldays Tractor Pull Competition drew crowds of spectators across the four days of the annual event.
Nationwide rural wellbeing programme, Farmstrong recently celebrated its tenth birthday at Fieldays with an event attended by ambassador Sam Whitelock, Farmers Mutual Group (FMG), Farmstrong partners, and government Ministers.
Six industry organisations, including DairyNZ and the Dairy Companies Association (DCANZ) have signed an agreement with the Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) to prepare the country for a potential foot and mouth outbreak.