Dairy Exporter October 2021

Page 11

MILKING PLATFORM South Otago

Lockdown: MILK WAS STILL COLLECTED From her farm near Outram, Anne-Marie Wells looks back on 10 years at the property.

A

s we come to the end of another spring, I have found myself thinking back to our first spring on this farm and how it compares 10 years on. In August 2011, we were still getting used to the farm, it was snowing, and our new cowshed was not quite finished. The old herringbone was functional if not frustrating – one set of pulsators kept failing and after a couple of weeks, the steps from the pit to the yard collapsed. It was quite demoralising milking in that shed when even from the pit, we could see the new 54-bale rotary so close to complete, but not quite ready. Then we had a big dump of snow, and while that meant work on the new shed came to a halt, stopping on the farm wasn’t an option. A bit like August 2021, although this year it was lockdown, not snow, that forced things around us to stop while life on the farm carried on. Normally during calving we feel we are missing out on all the off-farm fun, but that wasn’t the case this year.

Normally during calving we feel we are missing out on all the off-farm fun, but that wasn’t the case this year. In fact, we were grateful to be kept busy and took a lot of comfort in the fact that as an essential business we all kept our jobs, houses, and income.

In fact, we were grateful to be kept busy and took a lot of comfort in the fact that as an essential business we all kept our jobs, houses, and income. For us to be able to carry on through lockdown, we needed all the other businesses that keep us running to carry on as well. Our experience was as if there was no Dairy Exporter | www.nzfarmlife.co.nz | October 2021

difference – the milk was collected, vets were available, supplies were delivered, bobbies got away and machinery was repaired. We are very grateful for the effort from these companies to make this the case. Another advantage this August, was that the 2¼ children who were under 3 in 2011 are now three children over 9, who as it turns out, are quite good extra helpers on the farm when it’s a choice between home school or farming. I like to think we still covered a selection of subjects; PE, biology, maths … Back in 2011, our extra helpers were the amazing friends who came each milking of the first week in the new shed to help push very reluctant cows on to the new rotary platform. I remember thinking the cows would never walk on by themselves and then one day, it happened. Now it is a distant memory that it was ever like that. The end of each 2011 August day involved a late-night walk to match up cows and calves. After introducing whole-herd DNA testing a year after moving here, the end of an August day now comprises a Milo and an early night. A lot of memories have been made over the last 10 years, and things which were a big deal at the time (like the shed not being finished, cows needing pushing into the shed or spending a fortune on whole-herd DNA testing) don’t seem to matter much now. For those of you who have moved farms this season, I hope you have settled in well and that it isn’t long before you have forgotten any frustrations and are building good memories. 11


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Articles inside

Animal Health: Right pump for dosing

3min
page 89

Animal Health: More coverage, less effort

3min
page 88

Dairy breeds: From Marsden’s Shorthorns to Abondance

6min
pages 86-87

Trauma: You’re allowed to feel the pain

8min
pages 84-85

The Dairy Exporter in October 1971

2min
pages 90-92

Proving people can change

5min
pages 78-79

Managing FE - It’s not just about zinc

3min
page 77

Slick gene for cool cows

3min
page 76

Body Condition Score driving results

5min
pages 72-73

Taking the sting out of spring eczema

4min
pages 74-75

DairyNZ: Preparation for next winter starts now

4min
pages 70-71

Ballance Awards: Recognition for hard work

3min
page 69

Competing for soil health

10min
pages 38-40

Tauranga: Aiming for a healthy harbour

3min
pages 67-68

A hell of a year to catch TB

10min
pages 56-59

Treading lightly for Miraka Award

5min
pages 65-66

Leptospirosis: Infection takes toll on dairy workers

9min
pages 52-55

Research: Low nitrogen loss under maize

7min
pages 44-47

BVD: Disregarded disease could be eliminated

8min
pages 48-50

Milking sheep adapting to Kiwi ways

3min
page 37

Happy Cow: Sharing milk with the calves

5min
pages 32-33

Kellogg Report: When old dogs don’t learn new tricks

8min
pages 34-36

Market View: The cream of global milk supply

3min
pages 20-21

Suzanne Hanning reflects on the realities of wintering

3min
page 12

Niall McKenzie goes for expansion and signs off

3min
page 10

Anne-Marie Wells looks back on 10 years on the farm

3min
page 11

Global Dairy: In Shanghai, Hunter McGregor tries room temperature yogurt

5min
pages 18-19

Carla Staples looks forward to the sun shining again

3min
page 13
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