Dairy Exporter March 2021

Page 90

OUR STORY 50 YEARS AGO IN NZ DAIRY EXPORTER

50 years ago in the Dairy Exporter March As NZ Dairy Exporter counts down to its centenary in 2025, we look back at the issues of earlier decades. 50 Years Ago – March 1971. Cover photo: A northern herd lazily confronts man and dog across a patch of summer shade.

BRITISH PM’S ASSURANCE TO BOARD CHAIRMAN

While in Britain last month for quota negotiations, Mr F. L. Onion, CMG, Chairman of the Dairy Board, called on the Prime Minister, the Rt Hon. Edward Heath, at 10 Downing Street and in a halfhour of discussion again emphasised the vital importance to New Zealand of special arrangements for our dairy produce in the event of Britain’s entry to the EEC. “Mr Heath repeated the assurance which he had given me and the New Zealand Government last year and said he and his Ministers are continuing to press the case as presented for favourable conditions for our dairy products,” Mr Onion said. “It is likely to be July or August, or even later, before negotiations for British entry into the EEC will be concluded. This is a time of uncertainty for our pastoral industries and for New Zealand as a whole,” said Mr Onion. “We must look at the facts realistically. Demand for our products in the United Kingdom is as strong as they have ever been, while the demand in other countries is increasingly steady. “The so-called ‘butterberg’ of Europe has

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disappeared; so also has the former surplus of milk powder. The EEC has reduced its export subsidies on butter and milkfat several times in recent months, with the result that there is a general upward movement in world prices for these products.”

CHANGE IN DEMAND FOR AB BREEDS

This is the first year in which more Friesian than Jersey semen appears to have been used in the Dairy Board’s AB service, according to the Senior Research Officer of the Board’s Farm Production Division, Mr P. Shannon. He told the last meeting of the Herd Improvement Council it was estimated that Friesian accounted for 52 per cent, Jersey for 42 per cent and other breeds for 6 per cent of all semen used. The Director of Farm Production, Mr J. W. Stichbury, suggested the Board should buy equal numbers of Jersey and Friesian bulls for its sire proving scheme until the pattern of use had settled down. In the Board’s 1969-70 cow census the proportion of herds in which Jersey blood predominated was 73 per cent and in which Friesian blood dominated, 9 per

cent. The proportion of herds which were predominantly Friesian-Jersey first cross was 3 per cent.

FARMCHAIR THOUGHTS – DIFFICULTIES

While the government is becoming concerned over the welfare of the farmer, the average man in the street is completely ignorant of the difficulties being faced by a large percentage of those on the land. In spite of the alleged substandard conditions under which employees in some of our key industries have to work, other industries seem to have the utmost difficulty in persuading them to try a change of employment. This suggests that taking everything into account, these strike-plagued industries aren’t bad places to work in. Farmers independently and collectively are trying to weather the present storm by increasing efficiency, lowering costs where possible (less employed labour, marginal levels of maintenance) by exploring and where the margin dictates a change, moving into other avenues of farming, and by diversification. • Thanks to the Hocken Library, Dunedin.

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


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Articles inside

The Dairy Exporter March in 1971

5min
pages 90-92

Unlocking efficiency with Three Way Cross

2min
page 88

Lowering nitrogen without breaking the bank

2min
page 89

Teat spray equals happy cows

5min
pages 86-87

Health and safety when going off-road

5min
pages 84-85

Genetic engineering now editing

7min
pages 81-83

Feed additive promises to cut methane emissions

6min
pages 79-80

Irrigation, hunting the life for Lincoln University student Jack Taggart

6min
pages 76-78

MPI’s new chief biosecurity officer talks Mycoplasma bovis

5min
pages 74-75

exports Ways to reduce your farm’s footprint

14min
pages 68-73

Opinion: Investment in innovative food companies on rise

3min
pages 46-47

Tetraploid ryegrass, clover could lower nitrogen levels

5min
pages 36-37

South Taranaki couple find value in autumn calving

7min
pages 38-41

Northland dairy farmers breathe new life into drought pastures

7min
pages 34-35

CO Diary: How to be a good boss

3min
page 33

Southland SMASH info day supports sharemilkers

4min
pages 30-32

Growth: Cor and Christine Verwey are now multiple farm owners

11min
pages 22-27

Succession: Creating a workable farm succession plan

3min
pages 28-29

Lessons from Covid-19: Keep calm and carry on farming

8min
pages 14-17

Waikato farmers Nic and Kirsty Verhoek would welcome a bit of rain

3min
page 11

Frances Coles takes stock in autumn

3min
page 9

George Moss is confident of a bright future

3min
pages 12-13

John Milne checks out summer crops for his West Coast farm

2min
page 10
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