Dairy Exporter June 2021

Page 38

SYSTEMS MILKING FREQUENCY

Want to change milking frequency? Plan for it Words by: Anne Hardie

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f you are going to change your milking frequency, make a plan about how you are going to achieve that goal because there’s no greater risk than changing the frequency and doing nothing else on the farm. That was the advice from DairyNZ senior scientist, Dr Paul Edwards, at the Once-ADay (OAD) Milking Conference in Nelson. On the average New Zealand farm, about 50% of the season is spent milking cows, which is a good incentive to look at reducing the number of milkings. Nationally, about 45% of herds are milked twice a day (TAD) throughout the season, which shows it is no longer the norm, he said. More than half the herds in the country have some form of alternative milking frequency at some stage of the season. Around 14% of those farms use 3in2, 31% use OAD and 8% are full-season OAD. Regionally, Northland uses OAD the most with 25% or more of herds, while the South Island is home to 3in2 milkings and then there are farmers using a combination of milking frequencies through the season. OAD is the ultimate for flexibility

DairyNZ senior scientist, Dr Paul Edwards.

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because cows can be milked at any time through the day and he said that was hugely beneficial for improving the pool of labour. Milking at 9am meant the stayat-home parent down the road could still drop the kids off at school and pick them up again at 3pm. “There’s a lot of people out there that potentially haven’t been employed on farms before, that once we start tweaking our milking intervals we can open up that pool of labour.”

than the TAD herd though when they were dried off at the end of the season. However, the experiment was just a one-year study with 31% heifers and no carry-over effects.

VARIED MILKING TIMES

A second experiment varied the milking times for 3in2 to see whether it was the number of milkings that drove results or the timing of the milkings. The results showed no statistical difference between different milkings and

Milking at 9am meant the stay-at-home parent down the road could still drop the kids off at school and pick them up again at 3pm. HERD TESTING

When it comes to switching to OAD milking, herd testing records showed herds with lower production per cow were more likely to lift production or regain their original production compared with higher production herds that dropped production. However, Dr Edwards said the higher-production herds probably also had other changes in the shift to OAD such as removing feed from the system and he said that also had an impact. Many of the lower-producing farms were still profitable and he suggested a fifth to a quarter of herds in NZ were potentially well suited to OAD milking, while higherproducing farms might be better suited to 3in2. An experiment using farmlets on the Lincoln University Farm that compared TAD and 3in2 milkings, resulted in a 5% decrease in milksolids produced in the full season 3in2 herd, with protein more negatively affected than fat. The 3in2 herd was a quarter of a condition score higher

his conclusion was that it was possible to use more attractive 3in2 milking times. He said longer milking intervals did produce slightly less protein, but the difference was too small to matter. His key message was that there was so much variation from farm to farm that farmers needed to do their own numbers when they were considering changing their milking intervals. Even if farmers don’t want to change to OAD or 3in2, there were still options for moving milking intervals around to change the timings of the morning and afternoon milkings. If they brought the afternoon milking forward he said they needed good milking regimes in place to handle the larger morning milking. His challenge to farmers was to question whether their current milking regime was the best option for them. Understand the why, he said, then work backwards from what you want to achieve and make a plan about how to achieve it.

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


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Articles inside

Income gains from tiny spaces

1min
page 89

Four attributes of colostrum management

1min
page 88

Meal not metal

3min
pages 74-75

Off for a comfy liedown

4min
pages 72-73

Kitted out for calving

3min
pages 70-71

TO BE REGENERATIVE: verb, not noun

4min
pages 46-47

European market rebounding, but Chinese risk

3min
page 18

Editor's note

2min
page 7

50 years ago in the Dairy Exporter June

2min
pages 90-92

Generating value from dairy beef

1min
page 89

An efficient rotary system

1min
page 88

Minimum wage rise no joke

5min
pages 86-87

Conversations save lives

6min
pages 84-85

Staying strong onfarm

5min
pages 82-83

The perfect farming match

7min
pages 76-79

How resilient areNew Zealand pastures?

3min
pages 80-81

The good soil: Reducing nitrogen fertiliser

2min
page 65

Making a game plan to improve the whenua

6min
pages 66-69

The effluent efficiency experts

8min
pages 62-64

The science-based organic advocate

9min
pages 58-61

Taking grazing to the next level

6min
pages 54-57

On a ‘regen journey’

5min
pages 52-53

Aligned for the future

9min
pages 42-45

Engage but ground the practice in science

5min
pages 49-51

Once-a-day milking stigma a “thing of the past”

2min
pages 40-41

Eliminating human error

2min
page 39

Once-a-day ‘OKIE DOKIE’ for Oaklands

10min
pages 34-37

Want to change milking frequency? Plan for it

3min
page 38

Connecting on the rural business journey

4min
pages 30-31

NZ Merino embraces regenerative agriculture

4min
pages 32-33

One shot at wintering right

2min
pages 28-29

Chinese tea, with a cream twist

3min
pages 26-27

Farming with a higher purpose

8min
pages 22-25

Steady as she goes for dairy market

2min
pages 20-21

A lifetime of memories

3min
page 13

Irish margin biggest in Europe

6min
pages 14-17

Embracing change for good

2min
page 12

Younger than 50, older than 60

3min
page 11

Breaking barriers

3min
page 10
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