Dairy Exporter April 2021

Page 47

BAY OF PLENTY | DAIRY TRAINEE OF THE YEAR

Bay of Plenty Dairy Trainee of the Year Dayna Rowe, with her farm dog, last years DIA awards and calves on the farm.

Towards a sustainable future WORDS BY JACKIE HARRIGAN

D

ayna Rowe is looking to the future and plans to work with her parents on their family farm to bring in new initiatives around sustainability and efficiency. The 22-year-old winner of the Bay of Plenty Dairy Trainee of the Year award won $6000 in prizes and three merit awards after coming runner-up in the same category in 2020. Growing up on the family farm in Pongakawa, Dayna spent a lot of time learning about farming and animals. She had begun studying towards a Bachelor of Arts majoring in Theatre Studies when she realised she’d rather be stomping through paddocks than treading the boards. “I am still involved in competitive dance, it gives me a chance for some female company after working with lads on the farm, but I don’t have as much time for practicing for shows.” Dayna loves the aerial form of circus performance and dance - with hoops and silks. “But I’m very passionate about farming

and I’ve discovered more and more aspects within the industry that I’m interested in.” She is currently herd manager for Grant and Ngaire Rowe on their 289ha Pongakawa farm milking 1000 cows and is looking forward to taking on the position of farm manager in June. “I am really lucky that my dad is really open-minded about us trying new things, and we talk alot about what we could do on the farm - he lets me run with my ideas.”

THE FUTURE IS GREEN

“I’m excited for the future generation of dairy farmers in New Zealand,” says Dayna. “I believe we grew up being involved in conversations where we had to think deeper regarding our environment and sustainability.” “I plan to continue to be open minded about what we can achieve and to help to encourage people to be comfortable with these conversations and to be part of the solution.” They have been talking about the opportunities for planting trees, destocking cows and learning about more regenerative agriculture.

DAIRY TRAINEE

MERIT AWARDS: Bay of Plenty DIA Most Promising Entrant Award – Rachel Billinghurst King Farm Services Ltd Farming Knowledge Award – Dayna Rowe Archway Group Ltd Community & Industry Involvement Award – Dayna Rowe I.S Dam Lining Communication & Engagement Award – Dayna Rowe DairyNZ Practical Skills Award – Georgia O’Hanlon

Dairy Exporter | www.nzfarmlife.co.nz | April 2021

Runner-up in the Dairy Trainee category was Thomas Lundman, who works on a 550-cow Whakatane property. Third place went to Quinn Morgan who is farm assistant at Otakiri, milking 570 cows.

“We have already planted the main waterways with help from the council.” “We just had to fence up the block, then a work party of 50 people turned up and helped us plant the waterway - its something we are looking to do more of - we only have about five farmers on this stream so it would be great to get them all involved.” Along with her parents she has been looking at ways to reduce their bobby calf numbers and they used sexed semen for replacement heifers for the first time last mating. “All of the females in our family think that all the calves are really cute - we don’t like sending them away.” “But by reducing the number of males calves we get and then inseminating with beef semen we can increase their value and get into the beef market. “We have even been thinking about the possibility of dropping our stocking rate and running beef animals behind the cows - it’s great to be able to spitball things and try things out with my dad.” Dayna’s biggest future farming goal is to get to a point where her parents can completely retire from the farm and hand it over to her. “I’d say that’s my dad’s goal too!” 47


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Articles inside

Getting the genetics right

2min
page 137

From dryoff to payoff

2min
page 136

Connecting farmers with the right staff

2min
page 135

Why should you hire a farm adviser?

5min
pages 132-133

Full stream ahead for Farmers’ Forum

2min
page 129

Beefing up the dairy calf crop at Kintore Farm

8min
pages 122-124

Vets Voice: Prevent toxic nitrate shock

4min
page 126

Cows stand their ground in pugging study

4min
pages 130-131

Beef and dairy need to collaborate

2min
page 125

EVOLVE at SIDE conference, Ashburton

5min
pages 127-128

CO Diary: Wintering practices improve

7min
pages 119-121

Share farmer: Ann & Scott Henderson

9min
pages 116-118

Trainee: Sophie White

2min
page 113

Trainee: Mattes Groenendijk

3min
page 103

Trainee: Sam Smithers

3min
page 93

Share farmer: John Wyatt

9min
pages 88-92

Dairy manager: Diego Raul Gomez Salinas

5min
pages 86-87

Trainee: Sydney Porter

3min
page 85

Dairy manager: Leon McDonald

5min
pages 78-79

Share farmer: Manoj Kumar & Sumit Kamboj

9min
pages 80-84

Share farmer: Sam Howard

9min
pages 72-75

Trainee: Josh Wilkinson

3min
page 67

Trainee: Tayla Flight

3min
pages 58-59

Dairy manager: Mark Rivers

6min
pages 60-61

Dairy manager: Christopher Gerard Vila

6min
pages 42-43

Dairy manager: Hayden Goodall

6min
pages 48-51

Trainee: Dayna Rowe

3min
page 47

Share farmer: Reuben and Deb Connolly

9min
pages 44-46

Share farmer: Rachael Foy

8min
pages 38-40

Trainee: Ruth Connolly

3min
page 41

Dairy manager: Stephanie Walker

5min
pages 36-37

Using KiwiSaver to buy a house isn’t an option for farm workers

13min
pages 14-19

Trainee: Emma Udell

3min
page 35

Market View: Dairy commodity prices soared in March

5min
pages 22-25

Trainee: Bella Wati

3min
page 26

Global Dairy: 3-breed crossbred cattle are improving US herds

3min
pages 20-21

Niall McKenzie boxes on with some inspiration from Rocky

3min
page 13

Anne-Marie Wells champions onfarm discussion groups

2min
page 12

Carla Staples airs her concerns about freshwater legislation

3min
page 11
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