Dairy Exporter September 2021

Page 90

OUR STORY 50 YEARS AGO IN NZ DAIRY EXPORTER

50 years ago in the Dairy Exporter September As NZ Dairy Exporter counts down to its centenary in 2025, we look back at the issues of earlier decades. 50 Years Ago – September 1971. CENTURY OF ACHIEVEMENT 1871 – 1971

One hundred years ago this month, New Zealand’s co-operative dairy industry was brought into being by the enterprise and courage of seven forward-looking settlers on the Otago Peninsula. The founders of the Otago Peninsula Co-operative Cheese Factory Co. Ltd, in establishing their infant company on co-operative lines, laid down principles of operation and policy which set the pattern for our dairy industry today. History indicates that the outlook of the promoters of New Zealand’s first cooperative dairy company was fair minded and generous and, above all, they were united in their determination to control their own destiny. The work of those pioneers was well and truly done. The spirit in which they established their enterprise has lived on and provided the central pulse of this industry up through the years. There is every justification for the claim that the dairy industry is a cornerstone of the New Zealand economy. In the trading year ended March 31, 1971 our export earnings from milk products set a new record of $250 million. With the value of dairy meat exports added, the total was $320 million, or close to 30 per cent of New Zealand’s total overseas exchange receipts in the past financial year.

DISCUSSION GROUP

More than 3000 NZ farmers refined their techniques and blended ideas in discussion groups where Dairy Board consulting officers were involved last year. The 90

number of groups topped 300 for the first time in 20 years after the system of regular discussions for dairy farmers was devised. The value of the scheme cannot be measured precisely but clearly it has been a vital factor in developing modern efficient farm practices. And it has a bountiful return in human terms as well in encouraging a “help your neighbour” attitude. The Board’s Director of Farm Production, Mr J. W. Stichbury, who was associated with the first discussion group at Runciman, south of Auckland, in 1951, believes that at least one third of New Zealand dairy farmers are now benefiting from the system. This is either from direct involvement as members of groups or from a “rippling effect” through the farming community.

SEX RESEARCH MAY BOOST FARMERS’ INCOMES

If scientists should ever realise a long-held dream of pre-determining sex, there is no doubt that in the human context it might raise serious ethical, not to say emotional, problems, but the possibility of such developments in the livestock world opens up vast new opportunities. The internationally known Cytogenetics Unit at the Western General Hospital, Edinburgh, may soon be publishing some work on the study of chromosomes, which determine sex as well as other physical and mental characteristics, which could mark a major advance in animal production. There are still some serious hurdles to be overcome but the field of possibilities is wide. The first advance recorded by

Cover photo: “Springfield” the Otago Peninsula farm homestead where New Zealand’s first co-operative dairy company made cheese 100 years ago. Just left of centre is the kitchen wing where the tubs of whey were heated, and the stone building which served as the original “factory” is at the rear. Built in 1865 from local stone, the homestead is roofed with Welsh slates.

the unit, directed by Professor H. John Evans, is that by using atabrine, a malarial drug, as a dye, a distinction can be made between male-determining and femaledetermining sperm. In the past, electrical, gravitational and chemical techniques have been tried – always without success. When it is achieved, the farmer will ring up his artificial insemination centre and include in the order a specification of the sex of the semen. A breeder with a herd of Ayrshire cows would put female semen from the best bulls into his best milkers, using perhaps only one-third of his herd for this and would order (for example) Charolais male semen for the lowest milkers for the production of bull calves. By this means his income from sale of calves could perhaps be doubled.

BRUCELLOSIS

Brucellosis eradication is with us, although for most of us the initial test is still around the corner. Compensation payments have been announced for factory supply herds but a decision has yet to be made on compensation to be paid on town milk reactors. Because reactors must be slaughtered within a month of test, it is obvious that those whose herds are tested early in the season will suffer a greater production loss than those whose herds are tested later. • Thanks to the Hocken Library, Dunedin.

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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