Young farmers shine at regional finals
Grand Finalists have been selected, all regional finals have concluded, and the journey towards the FMG Young Farmer of the Year Grand Final is underway.
Going for the FMG Young Farmer of the Year title for a second time was incredibly hard, says this year’s title winner, Gore sheep farmer Logan Wallace.
“It becomes all-consuming and to put yourself through it a second time is incredibly tough,” Wallace told Rural News. “It’s addictive as well, though. That’s the issue.”
Wallace (28) reached the grand final in 2016 then stood back for a year before taking the plunge again.
In the interim, he says, he learned a lot about keeping calm and pacing himself, and developing his planning and leadership skills especially through involvement in the local search and rescue organisation.
His win, in the competition’s 50th anniversary year, means the title is staying in the south for the second year running, following last year’s win by Milton’s Nigel Woodhead.
Wallace, who holds a Certificate in Agriculture and a Diploma in Rural Business from Telford, runs 2300 ewes on a 290ha farm at Waipahi, about 20km east of Gore. The intensive sheep breeding and finishing property also carries 700 hoggets and 400 trading sheep.
The farm has been in the family 30 years. Wallace started running it five years ago under a trading partnership with his parents Ross and Alexa. He now leases the land from his parents, having bought their shares in the trading company a year ago.
Wallace runs the farm as a one-man operation. He has introduced Texel genetics, running Romney-Texel crosses with the twin goals of low-fuss ewes with strong mothering instincts, and lambs which quickly reach their weight targets.
Wallace is heavily involved in his local community, as a leader of Gore’s Calvin Community Church youth group, and membership of the Pomahaka Water Care group, SAR and Toastmasters. He joined Toastmasters because of Young Farmers, after “mincing” a speech in his first regional competition and knowing he needed to do something about it.
Wallace’s winning formula this year was to concentrate on his known weaknesses, particularly because of the short time he had to prepare.
The Otago-Southland regional competition was the last of the year, run in April. The week before that, Wallace and his parents had together won the Otago-Southland Ballance Farm Environment Award so he had to prepare for the national Ballance awards at the same time as preparing for the national Young Farmer of the Year.
All this while also running the farm?
“Yeah, Dad did a fair hunk of that in the last couple of months,” says Wallace.
“A lot of faith and a lot of prayer went into it too. A whole heap of support from the Calvin church.”
“It’s an amazing feeling, It’s incredibly tough but what you learn and the skills you build on, even through the district and regional levels – those skills you learn are great and the opportunities just from being involved are really cool.”
His prizes include a New Holland tractor, a Honda quad, cash, scholarships, equipment and clothing.
“Logan Wallace is an extremely deserving winner,” said Andrea Brunner from FMG.
Beef + Lamb New Zealand chief executive for the past eight years, Sam McIvor is heading for new pastures at Ospri, which runs NZ’s integrated animal disease management and traceability service.
The world's largest wool scouring facility, WoolWorks Awatoto plant in Napier, is back operating at full capacity.
A year on and the problems created by Cyclones Hale and Gabrielle has largely dropped off the radar of media and politicians.
Feeling forgotten and in a fragile space financially and mentally.
The European Union Ambassador says the new free trade agreement (FTA) between the bloc and New Zealand will bring significant benefits to both parties.
Less Wellington bureucracy and more local, on-farm common sense was the focus of recent meetings held in South Canterbury as part of the Government's National Woolshed tour program.