Dairy Exporter September 2021

Page 56

Special report - Cow collars

HALTER USE

‘LIBERATING’

T

Words by: Sheryl Haitana he capability of Halter’s virtual fencing technology is only restricted by a farmers’ own limitations on how to use it, Pokoru dairy farmer Pete Morgan

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feed breaks at any time to meet the cows’ intake needs. The staff can also communicate in a chat group in the App. A staff member can be in the paddock with the cows at 11am and make a decision to increase the cows’ grass allocation, and if they want to run their decision by Pete, they quickly can, with Pete having full view of what is happening in the paddock. “It enables staff to learn so fast, they are getting to be an effective part of the team.” Staff are learning the fundamentals of how important the right grass allocation is for cows, which they can take to any future job, he says.

It enables staff to learn so fast, they are getting to be an effective part of the team

says. “The main paradigm shift is how we think. We become the limiting factor.” He now thinks first of the outcome he is after, from pasture eaten, to how people work onfarm, to environmental goals, and then works out how he uses the technology to achieve it. “To do that you have to let go of just about everything, and it’s quite liberating.” Pete and his wife Ann Bouma milk 630 cows and have always been staunch on a low-cost, simple system and have resisted investing in expensive products or technology. They’ve always used industry Apps that were available, but they have always put investment decisions through a rigorous decision process. They saw Halter as a game changer, especially as they want to step back from the daily hands on work in the near future while remaining closely connected to the management. They calculated significant payback on the investment from increased pasture utilisation, through to meeting environmental goals, improved animal health, easier logistics onfarm and improvement of people’s work/life balance. The first big win Pete says is being on track to increase pasture eaten by 1.5 tonnes/hectare this season, from better allocation which results in less wastage and reliably hitting residuals to help grow more grass. Another win is Pete and his team of five staff have been getting up at a leisurely 6am throughout calving, instead of the 4am starts of old. All staff have the Halter app on their phones, where they can see every animal live and adjust

Pete Morgan.

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


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Articles inside

Wintering: No more making mud

5min
pages 86-87

The Dairy Exporter in 1971

3min
pages 90-92

Lockdown: One day at a time

4min
page 84

Pasture: NARF responding to climate change

3min
pages 82-83

Delta virus: Lessons for living through a lockdown

3min
page 85

Sowing the seeds of farming life

6min
pages 80-81

Vet Voice: Twinning and Freemartins

4min
pages 78-79

Opportunity with bobbies

10min
pages 74-77

Taking a stand for Jerseys

4min
pages 72-73

Beetles to the rescue

2min
page 71

Water quality: Acid test for water testing

8min
pages 64-67

Water quality: Setting an example in the Sounds

7min
pages 68-70

Apps: Keeping an eye on the farm

3min
pages 62-63

Safety: Tech can avert human factors

6min
pages 60-61

Checking in on the App

5min
pages 58-59

Right to repair gets heavyweight backing

2min
page 57

Staff retention: Tech to reduce stress

3min
page 49

Agrismart: Tailor-made for farming

2min
page 48

Halter use liberating

2min
page 56

Not making the connection

5min
pages 50-51

Starlink: Skyhigh DIY broadband

2min
pages 52-53

Winter catch crops a must for maize growers

4min
pages 42-43

Putting fleximilking to the test

5min
pages 40-41

Facing up to increased climate variability

10min
pages 36-39

Multi-cultural teams - Cultural understanding

4min
page 31

Merger expands tech growth

3min
page 34

Sheep milking: Straight from the ewe

3min
page 35

150 years of dairy co-operation

3min
pages 32-33

Multi-cultural teams - Making the mix work

6min
pages 28-30

Youtuber: Dairy farm in the spotlight

6min
pages 24-27

Global Dairy: Ireland - Darker skies despite price wave

4min
pages 22-23

Market View: Wait and watch on world dairy

3min
pages 20-21

Southlander Suzanne Hanning gets a brew going to introduce herself

2min
page 11

George Moss contemplates the benefits of intergenerational links

3min
page 10

It’s head down, bum up on John and Jo Milne’s West Coast farm

3min
page 13

Time for farmers to up their game on long-term land use

13min
pages 14-19

Frances Coles has survivor guilt after the South Canterbury floods

3min
page 12
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