Dairy Exporter November 2021

Page 77

STOCK MINDA

Sharing the technology Words by: Karen Trebilcock

W

riting cow numbers on pieces of paper will soon be a thing of the past on New Zealand dairy farms. Cow collars and other wearables are now passing cows’ heat information to MINDA with more events such as health alerts and pregnancy diagnosis set to follow in the next few months. LIC chief executive Wayne McNee says the company wants to maximise the value farmers get from investing in technology. “The goal is in the future that MINDA will connect with everything.” In mid-October LIC developed a new application in MINDA for heats detected by Afimilk, Datamars, Cow Manager and GEA CowScout cow wearables to be automatically uploaded. Allflex cow collars are already connected to MINDA through the Protrack drafting gate. “Some other drafting gates have work-arounds they use for the information to be shared between applications,” he says.

Either formal contracts and commercial agreements, such as with CRV, or data sharing between the different companies are used or will be. “Our approach is we want to work with everyone, so all farmers, whatever system they buy, can use it to enter information into MINDA.” The MINDA app is already well used on farms, he says, with more users of it than there are dairy farms. “It means there are a lot of farm staff who have it on their phones and are entering calving information and other events directly into MINDA as events happen.” Entering cow tag numbers from the yellow notebook at a later date is becoming a thing of the past. LIC is also looking at further connecting the Datamate, which AB technicians use to record matings onfarm, to MINDA so farmers would no longer have to write tag numbers in mating books. Instead a cow wearable will detect a heat, the cow will be drafted automatically without farmer intervention and the cow’s number will be in the Datamate ready for the technician.

Wayne McNee, LIC chief executive.

“The less people who have to read cow tags and write down numbers the better the information that is going into MINDA,” he says. But it is not just cows which are the focus but all farming activities with agreements sought from dairy, fertiliser and even finance companies for data sharing and use in LIC’s subsidiary Agrigate. “There is a lot of potential for information sharing that will make it easier for farmers in the future.”

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Ascot Park Hotel, 5-6 April 2022 Dairy Exporter | www.nzfarmlife.co.nz

| November 2021

77


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Keep the water flowing

5min
pages 86-88

The Dairy Exporter in November 1971

3min
pages 90-92

Want to save time milking?

2min
page 89

Former Lincoln student making a buzz from honey

6min
pages 80-81

Kieran McCahon hears the call of the land

6min
pages 82-83

LUDF: Cows approve of milking blend

6min
pages 84-85

Mastitis: Somatic cell counts - How low can you go?

6min
pages 74-75

Tools for timing effluent application

8min
pages 68-71

System in-line to cut methane

7min
pages 64-66

Soil carbon: Blame it on the worms

6min
pages 72-73

Wagyu: Calf contracts come with semen straws

3min
page 76

Winning with tetraploids

4min
pages 62-63

Soil Carbon: The promise in biochar

2min
page 67

MINDA: Sharing the technology

2min
page 77

Collaborating on forages

6min
pages 60-61

Endophytes key to ryegrass success

5min
pages 56-57

Lipids: Catching them in the rye

5min
pages 58-59

Treating the pasture right at Canvastown

6min
pages 52-53

Trevor Ellett: A ryegrass pioneer

3min
pages 54-55

Why do more on emissions?

3min
pages 44-45

Strong growth in sheep dairy

3min
pages 42-43

US tests of NZ-developed ryegrass

5min
pages 49-51

Saving on summer nitrogen

2min
page 41

Realising the ownership goal

8min
pages 38-40

Market View: Milk price silly season continues 12

3min
pages 20-21

Dispensers get farm fresh milk close to customers

4min
pages 30-33

Making the most of a Treaty settlement

7min
pages 22-24

Phil Edmonds reckons it’s time for banks to go back to the land

9min
pages 14-17

Mark Chamberlain detects change with a difference

3min
page 13

Global Dairy: US Cheesemakers on the march

5min
pages 18-19

At a wet Punakaiki, risk is real for the Reynolds family

3min
page 11

Hamish Hammond transitions to once-a-day milking

3min
page 12
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