NZ Dairy Exporter August 2021

Page 12

MILKING PLATFORM WEST COAST

New Dairy Exporter columnist Richard Reynolds (back) with his family, Christina, Iris and Tavis from Punakaiki

Reflecting on a great SIDE NZ Dairy Exporter welcomes a new columnist from the West Coast, Richard Reynolds.

H

i, I am Richard Reynolds, and along with my partner Christina and two children, farm on the West Coast just below Punakaiki - home of the Pancake Rocks. Our farm is between the beach and the Paparoa Ranges. After attending the South Island Dairy Event (SIDE) I have been given the honour of contributing to NZ Dairy Exporter. This is helped by knowing Anne Lee for years when I used to be dairy chair for Federated Farmers on the West Coast and being rung to find how Westland was going. I did comment to Anne that after the sale to Yilli that she hasn’t rung me since, so she told me to do this column. Fortunately where I farm we have not been affected by the flooding. It has been a major event to farmers that are affected, mainly along the Buller river but also a few on other rivers. The clean-up will be ongoing and couldn’t have come at a worse time. Our hearts go out to those affected both onfarm and in town. SIDE came at just the right time for 12

me, I was feeling in a bit of a hole and conferences are an excellent reason to have to go and see people. I enjoyed catching up with friends and colleagues that I had not seen for years. There was a really relaxed feel to the event which was hosted by Julia Jones, one of my heroes as she swears on stage and gets invited back. The biggest highlight had to go to Logan Williams who among other things has invented wool plastic and handed around very sharp knives for everyone to look at.

“. . . conferences are an excellent reason to have to go and see people.”

This presenter was epic and you must look him up on the Internet. He has all the self-belief and confidence of my 11-year-old son. He was out there doing it,

changing the world one hard working idea at a time. It is so refreshing to see people with boundless energy and self-belief. This got me thinking about what dairy will look like in 10-20 years time, because things are going to be different. This year we have seen that change can come very quickly with immigration changes leading the labour shortages and with the Zero Carbon Bill. One of the changes that I have made for the last three years is to use homebred yearling bulls over all my cows at the end of artificial insemination (AI). There were a few reasons for the change. It happened at the start of M Bovis when a closed herd became a more important idea. We also had a few safety problems with the bulls that we used. I had to rescue a worker from a paddock and I had a toe-to-toe with a bull in the backyard, as witnessed by my partner. She was not too keen on bulls after that. Our neighbour had also been attacked by a bull that year, so there were some real concerns on that front. I also got a bit tired of buying bulls from stock agents, being promised something quite different from what turned up and still having to pay large sums for them. This one was really grating. So, the results have been very pleasing. I have learnt to use crossbred to Friesian types that are well grown, if you look at a yearling and 2-year-old bulls side by side there is not a lot of height difference. For my 350 cow herd I use 10 bulls instead of eight to make up for their lower servicing ability. After using them I sell them to the freezing works before April and depending on the schedule aim to average $1000 a head. I haven’t managed the averaging but with dropping the Jersey cross looking ones and selecting earlier born calves I think it is achievable. My in-calf rates have not changed sitting around 5% empty for a once a day herd after four weeks AI. Also by only taking the stock through one winter as calves, you greatly reduce the wintering cost and also reduce the greenhouse gas (GHG) production. This is an issue that beef farmers are going to have to look at and maybe with all our industry good bodies working together, we could solve our issues around GHG and bobby calves in one go.

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


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Articles inside

The Dairy Exporter in 1971

3min
pages 106-108

Tech comes to the farm

6min
pages 102-103

Running away from grief

6min
pages 100-101

Whakapapa win inspires finalist

5min
pages 96-97

Nitrogen system trial drawing to a close

2min
pages 98-99

Vet Voice: Diagnosing your down cow

5min
pages 91-93

Oyster season in beef land

12min
pages 86-90

Bobby calves an emotive but profitable product

6min
pages 84-85

Big idea leads to native plantings

4min
pages 82-83

What dung beetles do

3min
page 79

Combating milk fever with diet changes

5min
pages 70-72

Fortify supplement with P

2min
pages 74-75

Don’t let cows go hypo

1min
page 73

Cows energised on winter diets

4min
pages 68-69

Efficiency from amazing maize

9min
pages 62-65

Feeding the cow and the rumen

5min
pages 66-67

Transition management

5min
pages 60-61

Feed tactics win the profit battle

9min
pages 56-59

An alternative pasture solution

7min
pages 52-55

All hail hay bale grazing

7min
pages 46-49

Torunui farm on emissions reduction path

9min
pages 42-45

Fodder beet pulling nitrogen out of the soil

7min
pages 50-51

Sustainable farming sparks excitement

12min
pages 34-38

SIDE: Cost control and the five ‘nahs’

5min
pages 39-41

Focus on your workers during busy times

2min
page 33

Resilience shines over West Coast flooded waters

6min
pages 30-32

‘Pure magic’ making raw milk cheese

9min
pages 26-29

Sustainable sourcing the trend for dairying

2min
pages 23-24

The opportunity of alternative proteins

9min
pages 14-17

Ireland has developed a Grass-Fed Standard. What are the ramifications for NZ?

2min
page 22

How Brazil combined intensive land use with rainforest protection

7min
pages 18-21

Richard Reynolds reflects on a great SIDE conference

3min
pages 12-13

Trish Rankin ponders why farming is so hard right now

3min
page 11

Say G’day to NZ Dairy Exporter’s new contributor Hamish Hammond

3min
page 10

China’s demand for dairy speeds up

4min
page 25
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