App helps get best out of pasture
Ever wondered what the financial result would be if you let pasture weeds get away on you? There's now a tool to find the answer.
C-DAX HAS won a 2011 Innovators Award for the pasture meter it developed with Massey University.
The award was made in the agricultural and environmental category of the contest, run annually by Bayer New Zealand, Idealog magazine and Ideas Accelerator.
C-Dax says the pasture meter can lift the stock-carrying capacity of a dairy farm by 7%. On a farm of 126ha this gain would equate to $46,000 at a pay-out rate of $6.05 kg/MS, the company says. At least 1000 of the pasture meters are now used on farms.
"This award recognises the commercial success of the pasture meter and... the Massey team under Professor Ian Yule that developed the concept," says Greg Shearer, managing director of C-Dax.
The pasture meter accurately measures, tracks and records the amount of pasture on paddocks via GPS and data technology. "With this information the farmer can make flexible decisions about... pasture utilisation and more efficient nutrient application, and can identify feed surpluses for hay or silage," Shearer says. "Ultimately, it leads to higher farm productivity."
The pasture meter can be towed behind an ATV at up to 20km/h, making up to 200 measurements per second.
C-Dax spokesman Robert Murray, who as a Massey University student was involved in the meter's development, says nothing compares with it anywhere in the world. "We have sold units to Europe, Australia, the US and South Africa."
www.pasturemeter.co.nz
The Rural Change programme, providing free private mental health professional sessions to the rural industry, is set to continue its next chapter within Rural Support Trust from 1 July 2024.
Beef + Lamb New Zealand chief executive Sam McIvor will step down in July.
A new report shows farm employers across the dairy, sheep and beef, and arable sectors have continued to invest strongly in one of their greatest assets – their staff.
The country’s 4200 commercial fruit and vegetable growers will vote from May 14 on a new HortNZ levy.
Meat processor Alliance Group is asking farmer shareholders to inject more capital in order to remain a 100% co-operative.