Fencing smarts from the Emerald Isle
While a leading New Zealand brand seems to have a stranglehold on the local electric fencing market, a company from the Green Isle seems to be making significant inroads, particularly in the Northern Hemisphere.
Police in the Waitematā North district are urging landowners to ensure their fences are secure after several complaints about wandering stock.
In the past four weeks, Police have received 36 complaints of wandering stock on the roads, ranging from a couple of miniature ponies on the road to more than 30 cows on the loose.
Areas of concern include Helensville, Wellsford, Dairy Flat, and Stillwater.
Waitematā North area prevention manager, Senior Sergeant Roger Small says one of the main causes for stock getting onto roads is inadequate fencing.
“This time of the year sees the slowest grass growth and I suspect some farmers are getting short on grass, which will be contributing to animals pushing through fences to the long grass on roadsides,” he says.
“We are reminding farmers to keep road boundary fences in good condition and for landowners to be extra vigilant around stock management and supervision.”
Small says that with each incident there is the potential for serious injury if a motorist is involved.
“Police are very appreciative of motorists taking the time to notify authorities of potential risks and in many cases, making efforts to usher stock back into paddocks before accidents occur.”
He says wandering stock pose a danger for road users, particularly at night when animals are hard to see.
“If a vehicle hits a large animal at speed it could end in tragedy.
“To avoid this it is important for land owners to ensure the integrity of their fences and farm gates, particularly in areas where stock are grazing paddocks next to roadside.”
Animals wandering onto roads is covered under several acts, which include the Animal Management Bylaw 2015, Impounding Act 1955, the Animals Law Reform Act 1989 and the Transit New Zealand Act 1989, though liability depends on the circumstances of each incident.
North Otago farmer Jane Smith is standing for the Ravensdown South Island director seat.
"Unwelcome" is how the chief executive of the Horticulture Export Authority (HEA), Simon Hegarty, describes the 15% tariff that the US has imposed on primary exports to that country.
Fertiliser co-operative Ballance has written down $88 million - the full value of its Kapuni urea plant in Taranaki - from its balance sheet in the face of a looming gas shortage.
The Government and horticulture sector have unveiled a new roadmap with an aim to double horticulture farmgate returns by 2035.
Canterbury farmers and the Police Association say they are frustrated by proposed cuts to rural policing in the region.
The strain and pressure of weeks of repairing their flood-damaged properties is starting to tell on farmers and orchardists in the Tasman district.