Dairy Exporter November 2020

Page 48

SPECIAL REPORT | SOUTHERN DAIRY HUB

How much mud is too much?

A

Words and photos by: Karen Trebilcock

lmost all southern dairy farmers will have to apply for resource consent to winter under the 2020 National Policy Statement (NPS) for Freshwater Management. Speaking at the Southern Dairy Hub’s October 8 field day, Environment Southland principal land sustainability officer Karl Erikson described it not as a ban on wintering but as a requirement for consent. “A lot of the new rules under the NPS, if not all of them, will not be able to be met by farmers in Southland,” he said. Although he would not guarantee farmers would be granted a consent to winter, a “fair look” would be given at the mitigations farmers were putting in place. “We really don’t know how the process is going to work.” Farmers would also have to work under regional councils’ rules, which for Southlanders was Environment Southland’s Water and Land Plan. “Whichever one has the most stringent rule, either the NPS or the regional council plan, that is the one you have to adhere to.” Behind the Environment Southland officer was a winter crop paddock with the crop eaten but still to go green with new grass. In the gateway were deep ruts from tractor tyres. In the past week the paddock had been covered by snow, as had much of Southland, followed by surface flooding days later, which made some tracks on the hub impassable with water over the tops of the fence posts.

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Making the most of a dry day, those at the Southern Dairy Hub’s field day in October were able to walk around most of the farm.

Another paddock still had 30t of fodder beet in it ready to be lifted and stored, but the wet conditions had meant the lifter couldn’t get near it let alone a tractor to spread grass seed. Under the NPS, winter crop paddocks must be back in grass by November 1. At the same time as the field day, more than 100 tractors drove through Gore, an hour away, in protest at the NPS, with farmers declaring they would be united in ignoring the new regulations. Hub general manager Louise Cook said the decision had been made not to use the lower terraces of the farm for winter cropping in the future. “We had 60mm of rain on Sunday, and

when these paddocks flood there is flow over them and we don’t want to lose our soils. “It will mean we will be going round our crop paddocks on the top terraces more than we would like, which will be a problem with compacted soils, but it’s a trade-off which we will have to accept.” Sowing next winter’s crop paddocks would include trial work comparing direct drill only, strip tillage or conventional sowing. “We won’t just be looking at the cost and the tonnage of feed grown, it will also be about how well the cows do eating it, how much mud they make,” she said. “We’re taking the risks so other farmers

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


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Adaptability saves the day

3min
pages 1, 10

LIC flies fresh semen to South Island

3min
page 80

Vet Voice - Toxic mastitis: Saving cows takes time

5min
pages 70-71

Rallying to the cause

6min
pages 74-75

Sexed semen - Precious cargo

5min
pages 68-69

Pasture management hacks for dry weather

5min
pages 78-79

Collar-ing technology

8min
pages 64-67

DairyNZ - Strategies to meet the nitrogen cap

3min
page 63

Negative messages unhelpful

2min
page 62

Deep dive gems on N-use efficiency

6min
pages 60-61

Native seaweed could reduce GHG emissions

3min
page 49

How much mud is too much?

2min
page 48

Fodder beet: Acidosis hazard with lactating cows

9min
pages 54-57

Cycling to fewer bobbies

15min
pages 34-39

Testing systems for change

6min
pages 45-47

Diversification - A station for life

9min
pages 30-33

Cutting the sediment flow

10min
pages 40-44

Farm workers - Competing for talent

2min
pages 28-29

Global Dairy - Season shines for Victoria’s dairy farmers

7min
pages 21-23

Red Meat Profit Partnership - What has it achieved?

9min
pages 14-17

DairyNZ slashes university scholarship scheme

3min
page 20

DBOY - Barns lift performance, cut N and P losses

9min
pages 24-27

Gaye Coates takes responsibility to do the right thing

3min
page 13

Shiralee Seerden is worried about the impact of neighbouring pines

3min
page 12

Trish Rankin and family are moving on, but where to?

2min
page 11
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