“robots are best thing that’s ever happened to this farm.”
BY ANDREA EMOND
MUSTHAVEN HOLSTEINS:
— Grant Mustard
Our Timeline Up to 2001 – Original tie-stall in place 2001 – 61-bed free-stall built with a parlour 2012 – Retrofitted to robot – Lely A4 robot installed 2015 – 2nd robot installed 2017 – 2nd Addition – 25 stalls added 1. Musthaven Holsteins has been in the Mustard family since 1853. 2. Time away from the farm is important to the Mustards. Chris, Grant and Craig are seen here enjoying the lake at the family’s cottage. 3. The Mustards couldn’t be happier with their robots. They installed the first in 2012 and a second three years later. 4. Grant and Rosemary with their grandchildren. In front, l to r, is Lincoln, Andy and Natalie. Rosemary is holding her newest grandson, Caleb. 5. The Mustards grow all the feed needed for the TMR and feed according to each cows’ stage of lactation. 6. The gang’s all here - Christmas 2016. In back, from l to r: Rebecca, Craig, Grant, Rosemary and Jill. In front, l to r: Lincoln, Chris with Natalie, and Andy. PHOTOS SUBMITTED.
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s the sixth generation on their family’s dairy farm in Uxbridge, Ont., brothers Chris and Craig Mustard share a few things in common. Growing up, they played on the same minor hockey and soccer teams. They took the same courses in high school and eventually went on to graduate from the University of Guelph together in 2004. The pair even got engaged – and married – the same year, standing as best man in each other’s weddings. Their sideby-side trajectories in life might be better understood by one simple yet important fact, revealed by their father, Grant, part way into our chat in midNovember: not only are Chris and Craig brothers and close friends; they are also identical twins.
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“As a parent, I have very fond memories of those times,” Grant says, looking back on a lifetime of raising two full-of-beans boys on the farm. “Though there were days my wife Rosemary would march them out to me in the barn, one in each hand, and say, ‘I need to go for a walk!’” Thankfully, there was never a shortage of work to be done and the pair never minded helping out. “We had two options,” Chris jokes, pointing them out on an open hand. “Help your mom or help your
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dad - pick one! If we weren’t at sports, we were probably out here.” Jokes aside, Grant stresses how much the boys have contributed over the years and how their drive and desire to succeed has always come from within. He’s proud to see them continue the tradition of farming on land that’s been in the Mustard family since 1853, but notes they haven’t always had cows. Up until the mid 1970s, Grant’s parents, Mac and Mona Mustard, had a mixed farm, feeding pigs, chickens and shipping cream. Then, in 1972, they purchased some Holsteins, formed a partnership and began shipping milk. But as Grant explains, his dad was never in love with the idea of milking cows. “He did it because, financially, it looked like the thing to do. People were doing well; it looked like milk was where it was at.” Being related to some deep-rooted Holstein breeders in the area, he adds, including the Phoenixes, the Snoddens and the Parishes, certainly helped too. Fast-forward to today and it’s clear that dairy farmers were exactly what the Mustard family were meant to be. Their sprawling freestall barn, built in 2001 and retrofitted in 2012, currently holds 75 milking cows, which are milked on average three times daily by two Lely A4 robots. They added the first robot in 2012, eight years after Craig and Chris came home from school to farm full-time and four years after they had completed their succession plan and purchased the farm from their dad. The second followed in 2015. Their latest expansion came earlier this year when they added a 62’ by 130’ addition to accommodate 25 more cows in the free-stall. www.ontario.holstein.ca
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When the robot idea came up, Grant supported it, but still wanted a fallback plan in case things didn’t work out. He was skeptical and though he wanted to move forward, he had one request: “don’t take the parlour out.” The three of them laugh about it, now, looking back and recalling how the parlour sat empty for a year before they finally took the whole thing out and sold it. “I don’t think it’s for everyone,” Grant says, “but for us, robots are best thing that’s ever happened to this farm.” He believes the technology gives good, keen dairymen the opportunity to be even better and says that putting in their first robot made his sons “keeners,” if they weren’t already before. After eight years with Chris and Craig home from school putting their touches to things, they had reached a point where they needed to make big changes to see improvements. And so, they put in a call to Harry Linde at Lely in Woodstock and began moving forward with a plan. Chris explains how, just six years ago, it wasn’t as easy to find farms in the area with robots that they could tour. He describes that time as the start of the “robot revolution” and remembers Linde taking them to tour farms in Oxford and Elgin County. The Mustards liked what they saw, and on March 8, 2012, they, too, joined the revolution and installed their first of two robots. It took some time for them to adjust their feeding regime and figure out how to breed for traits most suited to a robot set-up, but fairly soon after making the switch, they noticed a jump in their production. “Our BCA had always been above average,” Chris says. “But it www.ontario.holstein.ca
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jumped 60 points higher after the robots.” Today it sits at a healthy 256-270-255. Several Superior Production Awards have followed, an accolade both Chris and Craig agree would never have even been a pipe dream before. On top of all of this, the robots have allowed the family to achieve more balance in life, something Grant has been preaching to his sons since they were young. Though the farm was always the first priority, Grant and Rosemary (who grew up in town) wanted their sons to know that there was more to life than farming alone. Both boys played soccer in the summer and hockey at a high level right through high school and university and few of their friends lived on a farm. They smile, describing their creative routine for getting chores done quickly when a hockey game or soccer practice was on the line. A family cottage in Haliburton has been a welcome retreat in the summer and it’s where they head each year as soon as the last bale from first cut is in the barn. When Grant and Rosemary purchased it in 1996, Grant’s father feared it would be the end of the farm. Turns out, it’s been anything but. It’s become a special refuge away from it all – a place for making memories and spending quality time with family. Chris and Craig both proposed to their wives there and these days, it’s where the grandkids like to hang out. Chris and his wife, Jill, live on the main farm and have three young children, including a set of twins. Lincoln and Natalie are five, and their youngest, Anderson (Andy), is three. A hockey net in the alleyway and several bikes propped against the wall tell a tale of a the
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