Dairy Exporter July 2020

Page 85

RESEARCH WRAP NORTHLAND

Drought reduces profit on NARF Words by: Kim Robinson

A

round 70 farmers and rural professionals braved the heavy rain and attended the Northland Dairy Development (NDDT) June field day at the Northland Agricultural Research Farm (NARF). AgFirst consultant and NDDT Coordinator Kim Robinson presented the financial results from the 2019/20 season of the Dairying in a Variable Climate trial. She gave an overview of the challenging season, detailing the impact of the wet spring and extended drought on both production and profit. The farm grew 2t DM/ha/yr less pasture than the longterm farm average. The drop was mostly between December and April. In late March 16mm of rain boosted kikuyu growth just in time to allow the herds to continue milking for an extra month. All farms dropped production compared with the previous season. This drop ranged from 180kg MS/ha on the Pasture Only herd to 21kg MS/ha in the Palm Kernel Plus herd. Without the April kikuyu growth milk production may have been significantly lower, particularly on the Pasture Only farm. Tools used to cope with the feed shortages were discussed, including the use of once-a-day milking for four weeks in the spring when the Pasture Only herd ran out of silage during a wet September. Despite the difficult month the Pasture Only herd bounced back and there were no significant effects in mating performance. The challenge of managing the Fat Evaluation Index (FEI) was discussed on the Palm Kernel Only herd. Half of the herd had to be dried off in March in order to provide enough pasture for the remaining milkers to remain under the FEI grading level. Managing feeding for FEI levels created significant stress and was reflected in the farm manager’s worry scores.

Financial results were then presented. The alarming figure was that, despite the high milk price, profit on all farms dropped $600-$1200 per hectare compared with the previous season. For the first time in the trial the Palm Kernel Plus herd was the most profitable. The extra milk on the two palm kernel farms was produced at a marginal cost of $6.27-$6.54/kg MS, so at the milk price of $7.20/kg MS these farms were more profitable than the Pasture Only farm. If the milk price had been $6.00/kg MS the Pasture Only farm would have been the most profitable. This showed that, despite the drought, supplement use must be weighed up against the expected milk price. Palm kernel had been purchased at $300/t and Distillers Dried Grains at $560/t excluding delivery costs. Sensitivity analysis was carried out on palm kernel price and milk response to supplement. This showed that profit was more sensitive to response rate than palm kernel price. A rise in palm kernel price of $100/t dropped profit by $340-$380 per hectare, but a relatively small drop in milk response to palm kernel from 100g to 80g

Dairy Exporter | www.nzfarmlife.co.nz | July 2020

Above: After extended drought, the crowd at the latest NARF field day, Dairying in a Variable Climate had to shelter in the shed due to persistent rain! Right: Kim Robinson.

MS per kg DM dropped profit by $400 $500 per hectare. Poor milk responses can quickly strip away profits from feeding supplements. NARF consistently achieves higher responses (100g MS/kg DM) than the industry average (70-80g MS/kg DM). This is from having simple feeding decision rules based on pasture residuals. Supplements are not fed to support production levels. Detailed results are available on www. nddt.nz or email info@nddt.nz • Kim Robinson is a Whangarei-based agribusiness consultant and Northland Dairy Development Trust Coordinator. 85


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Articles inside

Subscribing to monitoring

2min
page 89

Feed additive against subclinical mastitis

2min
page 79

Spotting the Springer

5min
pages 86-87

Solving the Jigsaw of Wellness

5min
pages 82-84

App helps farmers improve in-calf rates

3min
page 88

Drought reduces profit on NARF

2min
page 85

Vet Voice: Mastering mastitis control

5min
pages 77-78

Rolling down cows safely

2min
pages 75-76

BVD test identifies infective calves

3min
pages 73-74

Balanced waterways policies but details to come

5min
pages 68-69

High-tech breeding yields genetic gain

8min
pages 70-72

Dairy farming with pride in Matakana

4min
pages 65-67

Equity partnership gains multiple awards

7min
pages 62-64

Embracing the 4 Rs of fertiliser

2min
page 57

Fertilising with irrigation

8min
pages 58-61

Faster, more accurate soil tests

4min
pages 54-56

Challenging season for organic dairy

4min
pages 52-53

Nitrogen cap a blunt instrument

5min
pages 49-51

Pasture + soils bring success

10min
pages 46-48

Beware selenium sales pitches

4min
page 39

Investment tips shared

9min
pages 32-35

Organic trace minerals improve production

15min
pages 40-45

A new veterinary book for cattle farmers

4min
pages 30-31

Testing key to metabolic problems

8min
pages 36-38

High productivity in a hidden valley

14min
pages 24-29

Global Dairy: Will UK farmers lose in US deal?

3min
pages 20-21

Are higher environmental standards critical to future exports?

12min
pages 14-17

Market View – Dairy holds its ground

2min
pages 22-23

DairyNZ: The view from the chair

6min
pages 18-19

Nialtor McKenzie finds the co-op unco-operative

3min
page 12

Carla Staples sees a good end to a tricky season

3min
page 13

Alex Lond experiences Gypsy Day with a cat

2min
page 10

Anne-Marie Wells tidies her office and goes paperless

3min
page 11
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