Dairy Exporter August 2020

Page 14

MILKING PLATFORM BAY OF PLENTY

Bridie and her dad Bernard celebrating the first day the cows were on the pad.

My beautiful feedpad Like many farmers, Covid-19 brought a range of challenges for Bridie Virbickas.

M

y wonderful 600-cow feedpad and effluent system were only about two weeks away from being finished when we went into lockdown. It had been in the making for an entire year. Luckily, last season was kind to me and I was able to manage without it. However, as of midApril, with only a week’s notice, I was to be autumn calving 70 carryovers and milking through winter. Usually, the home farm calves the carryovers in the autumn and milks them through with late calving cows and empties. The bull calves are reared and sold as yearlings along with 270 spring-born bull calves. However, the prolonged drought this summer meant the feed position of the home farm was not desirable to be milking through the winter months. My sister and brother-in-law, Heather and Kelvin Langley who contract milk the 900-cow farm, made the decision not to calve the carryovers to set the farm up better for the coming season. The options were: I calve the carryovers and winter milk or send the carryovers to the works. There was no way I was going to let that happen. 14

Two of my favourite cows were in that mob and if I was going to calve two cows, I might as well calve 70. It was also a good year to be stuck on the farm all winter, thanks to Covid, I wasn’t able to travel. The addition of 50 hectares to my milking platform at the beginning of the 19/20 season, and continuing to milk the same number of cows, meant I could stay all grass for longer. With the new feedpad and extra land, the intention was to increase cow numbers for the 20/21 season and the sudden addition of 70 carryovers in April, certainly sped that up. We have increased the herd from 560 to 690, milking through two 22-aside herringbone sheds. Transitioning from ‘thinking of drying off and chipping away at jobs over winter’ to ‘I start calving in a week and I need to build up enough feed to winter more cows than usual AND winter milk’ was a really stressful few days. The use of feed budgets and advice from my consultant Mark Dodd has been priceless and reassuring that I could make it work. It all depended on what the winter would bring. Usually my farm would not be suitable for winter milking as it gets so wet, so if the weather was crap and winter milking was

not a good idea, at least I would have given the carryovers a chance. Luckily, the growing conditions this winter so far have been amazing with growth rates consistently above 30kg DM/ ha/day through July and I have even got a bit of a tan!! This has meant I was able to be all grass until I finally needed to start using the feedpad in mid July. Having the feedpad finished and ready to roll but too much grass to be able to use it was torture.

Transitioning from ‘thinking of drying off and chipping away at jobs over winter’ to ‘I start calving in a week and I need to build up enough feed to winter more cows than usual AND winter milk’ was a really stressful few days.

The reticulated green water floodwash is amazing and keeps it looking brand new. My cows also love it. My two new members of staff, Dani and Dan are absolute troopers and have made this season super fun so far. This year has also been full of change which has made it challenging and exciting.

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


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Articles inside

Environment and animal welfare spur system change

2min
page 87

Maize silage, the ideal spring supplement

3min
page 89

Select Hereford bulls on merit

1min
page 88

The secret of MUNBV

2min
page 86

The lowdown on good silage

5min
pages 84-85

National dairy trainee winner ‘loves science

7min
pages 82-83

Proactive leadership proves a winner

5min
pages 80-81

Bone injuries: Broken shoulders in heifers

3min
pages 73-74

DairyNZ: Take care using antibiotics for clinical mastitis

2min
page 75

Mycoplasma bovis: Biosecurity a priority to combat disease

3min
pages 78-79

Milk replacers: To curd or not to curd?

6min
page 77

Great soil and water management wins awards

8min
pages 70-72

Doing what’s right’ for whole farm wins awards

13min
pages 62-66

CO Diary: GoDairy - Helping Kiwis get into dairying

3min
pages 45-46

Co-operative vs corporate governance

3min
pages 60-61

Diversity makes for better decisions

3min
page 59

Good governance structure benefits farm business

8min
pages 47-49

Spreading experience

7min
pages 57-58

Learning to govern effectively

1min
pages 50-51

Cashing-in on the culls

6min
pages 42-44

Shining through the drought

9min
pages 39-41

Covid-19 brought a range of challenges for Bridie Virbickas

3min
pages 14-15

Zanda Award: Winning Coaster champions staff training

10min
pages 36-38

Redesigning workplaces to make them attractive to new workers

2min
page 35

Using a Kanban workplace management system to run a Canterbury farm

10min
pages 28-34

Global Dairy – Brazil: Dairy farming in a land of contrasts

3min
page 21

Chloe Davidson shares the joys and challenges of relocating business and family

3min
page 12

High standards in a sensitive environment

9min
pages 24-27

Shiralee Seerden welcomes the extra business of a contract milking position

3min
page 13
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