Early drought fears ease in Hawke’s Bay, but caution remains
Fears of a serious early drought in Hawke’s Bay have been allayed – for the moment at least.
Rain is the magic tonic in the farming community, says Northland based AgFirst consultant Tafi Manjala.
But without it the sentiment going into the Northland Field Days from the farming community will likely to be “cautious”, he says.
“When it is raining and things are going well people are more buoyant and positive about the future,” Manjala told Rural News.
“They feel more confident about things, they can justify to themselves why they can have some discretionary expenditure at the field days
“If we have some good rain it’s going to smooth the buying decisions.
“Whereas with no rain people will be looking for big bargains in small-cost areas rather than capital spending.”
He says the mood going into this summer was buoyant. But unless there is good rain; caution is likely on the back of summer developments.
“A lot of things have happened, we’ve got the issues around coronavirus and we have the extreme dry,” Manjala adds.
“Both factors have a resulted in a dip in our commodity prices particularly in the sheep and beef space and obviously loss of milk production from the dairy point of view.”
Dairy farmers aren’t necessarily drying off. They’re doing the stuff they do every year which is identifying which cows which won’t be in herd next season and getting rid of those.
“It is happening a bit earlier than normal and people are getting rid of more cows than what they normally would. I haven’t heard of blanket drying off.” Autumn cows are, of course, dry as they will be calving soon.
But Manjala says unless there is significant rain any spending at the field days that has been budgeted and has to happen on farm will still go ahead.
“They will be out there bargain hunting to buy the things I am referring to such as compliance expenditure that they need to happen.”
He believes that is equipment like cooling refrigeration systems or something around effluent system for a farm business.
“Those things will still go ahead regardless of the current challenges we are experiencing.”
Manjala believes that when things are going well, farmers will spend on non-essentials, knowing it is not a necessity, but they can afford it anyway.
“I think there is going to be quite a lot of caution in that space.
“There will be less of those and that’s likely to be the people who have got some other income from means other than farming.”
He says unless there is significant rain or some good news factor farmers are likely to be concentrating on the basics.
|
A landmark moment for New Zealand. That's how Prime Minister Christopher Luxon describes the conclusion of negotiations for an India-New Zealand Free Trade Agreement. Beef Progeny Test 2025: Genetic insights for NZ beef industryAt Pāmu’s Kepler Farm in Manapouri, mating has wrapped up at the across-breed Beef Progeny Test. HortNZ celebrates 20 YearsMore than 150 people turned up at Parliament recently to celebrate the 20th anniversary of Horticulture New Zealand (HortNZ). Biosecurity NZ urges vigilance for yellow-legged hornetsBiosecurity New Zealand says Kiwis should continue to keep an eye out for yellow-legged hornets (Vespa velutina) over the holiday season. Mental Health and Fitness Unite: The Push-Up Challenge comes to New ZealandThe Push-Up Challenge, an event which combines mental health and fitness, is set to launch in New Zealand in 2026. Agritechnica 2025: Claas, Fendt and Valtra claim 2026 Tractor of the Year AwardsLast month's Agritechnica event led to a wide group of manufacturers celebrating successes when the 2026 Tractor of the Year Competition winners, selected by a panel of European journalists, were announced in Hanover Germany. NationalAlliance commissions major heat pump system at Mataura, cutting coal use and emissionsAlliance Group has commissioned a new heat pump system at its Mataura processing plant in Southland.NZ meat industry seeks removal of US 15% lamb tariffMeat processors are hopeful that the additional 15% tariff on lamb exports to the US will also come off.Early drought fears ease in Hawke’s Bay, but caution remainsFears of a serious early drought in Hawke’s Bay have been allayed – for the moment at least.Consent Rollovers and $13b Savings: What the new RMA bills could meanThere was much theatre in the Beehive before the Government's new Resource Management Act (RMA) reform bills were introduced into…Rural bias?OPINION: After years of ever-worsening results from our education system, the startling results from a maths acceleration programme stood out like…Machinery & ProductsAgriSpread AS3000 Bulk Spreader: Precision spreading up to 52mManufactured in Ireland, tested and launched at Agritechnica in Germany, AgriSpread’s new AS3000 bulk spreader takes much of the technology…Agritechnica 2025: Claas, Fendt and Valtra claim 2026 Tractor of the Year AwardsLast month's Agritechnica event led to a wide group of manufacturers celebrating successes when the 2026 Tractor of the Year…New Case IH Puma series debuts with improved design & precision techCase IH used Agritechnica to reveal its new Puma series tractor, featuring what it claims is an entirely new vehicle…New Holland unveils “Il Trattore” concept at AgritechnicaCreating a great deal of enthusiasm at Agritechnica, the T5.120 ‘Il Trattore’ styling concept tractor was celebrating the legacy of…Deutz-Fahr unveils all-new 8 series tractor range at AgritechnicaAgritechnica was the launchpad for several “new” tractors, most reworks of existing models, but Deutz Fahr ‘s new 8 Series was… |