Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | October 4, 2012

Safety restraints good news

Apparently new rules announced today by Associate Transport Minister Simon Bridges will see children up to the age of seven having to use a car seat.

I think this is great news. My 10 year old still sits in a half booster in my car. He doesn’t mind because he can see out the window. I don’t mind because his seatbealt is across his shoulder instead of his neck.

This from the Stuff website today:

Children up to the age of seven will have to use a car seat under new rules announced today.  Those aged between seven and eight will have to use one if it is available. Currently only passengers up to the age of five must use an appropriate child restraint and those between five and eight must use one of it’s available.    Associate Transport Minister Simon Bridges said the change was a sensible move to improve children’s safety.  “International and local research shows that in the event of a crash, young school age passengers are at considerable risk if they are only restrained by an adult seatbelt. Injury risk can be significantly reduced by having child passengers use age-appropriate restraints, such as booster seats.”  The new mandatory limit would align New Zealand with Australian requirements, he said. Child restraint regulations were recently reviewed as part of the Transport Ministry’s Action Plan for Safer Journeys. The requirement for children up to the age of seven to be in a car seat will come into effect within the next year following consultation on other impacts of the changes.   The consultation will consider whether to retain current exemptions for car seats in taxis and emergency vehicles. It will also seek feedback on large families and the difficulty of getting more than two car seats in most vehicles.

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | October 3, 2012

Big change for the Young Farmer Contest

First it was Skellerup, then WestpacTrust, Wrightson AGMARDT and The National Bank Young Farmer Contest.

There are still many old Young Farmers out there who still simply call the contest “Skellerup”!

But all good things change, improve and evolve and so the black horse has bolted and the green of The National Bank becomes the blue of ANZ.

This taken from a Young Farmers press release today:

The Ultimate Rural Challenge will now we brought to you by the colour blue, as the ANZ brand replaces The National Bank brand as the principal sponsor of the ANZ Young Farmer Contest. The news was announced at an official launch in Christchurch attended by Contest Patron Warwick Scott, Contest Officials, sponsors and past winners. ANZ has sponsored the Young Farmer Contest since 2003 through its National Bank brand. A recent decision to bring the ANZ and National Bank brands together under ANZ means that the competition title will change. But Graham Turley, Managing Director, Commercial and Agri for ANZ, pointed out that its support of the Contest would not change.

“We have been proud to be a part of this Contest for nearly a decade and we are excited that this is continuing.”

The first of the 23 District Finals took place in Christchurch on Saturday 29th September and place getters from these events will progress to one of seven Regional Finals held throughout the country from February to April.  The Grand Final will be held in Auckland from May 15th – May 18th.

For more information go to www.youngfarmercontest.co.nz

 

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | September 16, 2012

Vote for NZ!

Here’s a little something you can do to improve NZ’s international marketing.

Tim Aitken and Lucy Robertshawe from the Central Hawke’s Bay farming district of Tikokino have won the international section of the Marks & Spencer’s Farming for the Future Award (open to all suppliers to M&S outside of the UK).

(photo borrowed from the M&S website)

I have had the pleasure of interviewing Tim a couple of times for the Hawke’s Bay Regional Council and for a Kellogg’s Rural Leadership story for Young Country magazine.. the couple also entered the inaugural 2011 East Coast Ballance Farm Environment Awards.

They are now in the running for the Champion of Champions Award against farmers from Wales, Ireland, Scotland and England. This is done by public vote so Tim and Lucy are asking for your vote! Link below.. this is what the site says about them:

…They have around 600 breeding hinds on their deer farm and rear the offspring for venison meat, which is sold to M&S.  They purchased the farm in 1994 and since then have spent a lot of time and effort improving the fertility of the soil to improve productivity. They have also planted shelterbelts and enhanced wetlands on the farm. In addition, they are at the forefront of the venison industry in NZ, getting involved in research and innovation to improve farm efficiency and product quality…

Tim and Lucy had this to say in an email promoting their campaign:

“To us this is our chance to represent New Zealand. Our tilt at the World Cup. Our Olympic campaign if you will. We would love to put on a great challenge. GO THE GUMBOOTS!”

This is where you vote– they are 5th in the list of five (closes 2 October). It’s easy and you don’t have to fill in all your details!

Apparently you can also vote more than once – so get going 🙂

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | September 16, 2012

No topless princess please

Please do not click on links to see our future Queen topless. Just don’t. Make a stand.

Paparazzi relentlessly hounded Princess Diana, eventually leading to her death. Please give Prince William the strength to follow through on the privacy case against the magazine that took and published the Princess Kate topless photos.  And remember each and every one of the outlets that carries the photos and never give them permission to carry photos of the next heir (whenever that is, after all, those paparazzi are the same ones telling us she’s pregnant every other day).

Celebrities have chosen to be in the roles they are – actors, singers, politicians…. they all gain from media publicity (be it good or bad). But the Royal Family do not.  This is not Prince Harry romping naked in a Las Vegas Hotel (which was really  dumb and while I deplore the actions of the person who took the photos, really, he and his security guys should know better).

This is a man and a woman on holiday in a private place.

Maybe the lesson is simply to keep your breasts white or buy instant tan to get rid of unwanted lines.

This lady is the future Queen of this country and should be given the respect she deserves. She has done nothing wrong, she has held herself with dignity and courage since she met the love of her life and he happened to be a prince and the future King of the British Commonwealth.

Please, don’t look at any photos. Make your stand.

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | September 12, 2012

Where have you been?

Where have you been?

Where have YOU been? Where have I been?! Not on rivettingkatetaylor it seems 🙂

Life has been busy in the Taylor household – August and September are traditionally my busiest months of the year – both time and income wise – and you know what this silly tart did this year? Got another job! Starting date? Early August. Why? Because I could. But boy, it has been busy.

Roadsafe Hawke’s Bay is my new employer, via the Hawke’s Bay Regional Council.  I am based out of the Waipawa office working 10 hours a week (Monday and Tuesday). I work with stakeholders such as NZ Police, college (SADD), Epic Ministries, Land Transport, ACC…. to make our roads a safer place.

So everything I used to do in seven days, now I do in five. Today is Wednesday. I am not at golf and that’s why!

Lachlan, 10, coming first in the 10/11 year old boys age group

Sarah, 12, high fiving her mates as she comes in fourth in the Girls 12+ age group. The girl in the yellow is friend Rebecca who finished about half an hour before everyone else and wasn’t even puffing (slight exaggeration!)

Sarah and her best friend Kate, 11, who came third in the age goup below

Both Taylor children are running in interschool cross country at Flemington tomorrow and both are also busy practising for Ngati Whai – a large Maori kapa haka festival hosted by Takapau School and Te Kura Kaupapa O Takapau every year. Sarah the redhead looks right at home in the front row of the senior group and my skinny little white boy is leading the junior haka. Can’t wait to see it!

Snow on the ranges this morning and slightly less on the front lawn til the sun came up. Sun is coming and going, as is the rain. Four seasons in one day around here.

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | July 25, 2012

and the rain continues

It’s still raining. I’m not sure how much we’ve had, in millimetres, but I can tell you the ground is no longer a sponge but a large bowl ready to collect everything the sky throws at it.

The kids and I had a wander around the farm (lol it’s a lifestyle block, but still, technically, a farm!!) yesterday to look at the swollen creek, jump in the puddles and make sure all our lovely ewes were happy and dandy. Wet, but happy and dandy they were.  Hootie Hooves (naming animals is not my responsibility) had a plaintive baa for a while but was a bit happier when we walked a couple of her paddock mates around the fence from the creek back into open paddock.

The chooks are muddy underfoot and I imagine will appreciate being let out early today to forage,  the two wee pigs are still in the sty because I can just imagine what they would do to their paddock (the big pig is now in the freezer… mmm) and we have increased the number of arm loads of balage over the fence to the cattle as they now have nothing else to eat in their paddock (unless they are partial to mud).

Today I am tidying the office.  Ticking the boxes, crossing the t’s and dotting the i’s, emptying the rubbish bin and putting things where they should be instead of just moving them out of the road (my wireless mouse is under there somewhere!)

And a coffee awaits at my neighbour’s house whose family has just returned from a term of travelling in the UK and Europe. My week in Fiji pales in comparison (but still very grateful, thanks Mum!!)

Right, my concerted half an hour’s effort in the office has turned into a rushed 15 minutes if I want to enjoy my coffee.

 

 

 

 

 

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | July 24, 2012

Rain on the plain

From our regional council this morning:

Rivers Running Normally

Despite the heavy rain in parts of the region, Hawke’s Bay rivers are running normally.

Hawke’s Bay Regional Council staff have been monitoring rainfall and river levels over the last 48 hours.

The level of the Clive River/Karamu Stream is higher than normal but the river mouth is open and HBRC staff have checked it this morning.

People can check live river level data for themselves on HBRC’s website www.hbrc.govt.nz, look under Environmental Data on the home page.

The drainage system is also operating normally, with only a few blockages needing to be cleared.

The forecast is for the wet weather to continue through the week, with a heavy rain warning being issued forecasting brief heavy rain likely during Wednesday with cooler southerlies. 

HBRC advises people to take care around the rivers as water levels can rise quickly and unexpectedly due to heavier periods of rain in other parts of each catchment.  Also people should take extra care driving in wet conditions.

Having just driven back from Waipukurau (yummy, picking up fresh pork from our butcher – crap, it’s still in the boot…) I can echo those sentiments – drive to the conditions people and for goodness sake, turn your lights on!!

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | June 29, 2012

Well said Bruce

Here is the unedited version of what Bruce Wills had to say at the national conference of NZ Federated Farmers this week.

Go on, spend the next five minutes having a wee read…

 

The outlook is green for Primary Industries

Speech by Bruce Wills, President of Federated Farmers, to Federated Farmers National Conference at the Crowne Plaza, Auckland

Today, I am going to take a look at where we might be in the year 2020 and touch on some challenges ahead.

A lot can change in eight years but much can also stay the same.

In 2004, eight years ago, the Iraq war was one year old and Afghanistan was in turmoil.  Despite this petrol was under $1.10 a litre.  Meanwhile exporters faced a Kiwi dollar that was US$0.67 in January but ended 2004 at $US.71.  Some things never change.

For the year ending June 2004, our agricultural, horticultural and forestry exports came to around $18.5 billion.  In the year to March 2012, exports for the primary industries came to almost $32 billion.

That is a remarkable increase of almost 73 percent.

I heard this described as ‘insane’ and ‘awesome, and it is.  It is easy to forget just how far we have come.

On a lighter note, looking back, the biggest grossing film in New Zealand for 2004 was Shrek 2, Don Brash was Leader of the National Party, Ben Lummis won NZ Idol and Athens was busily getting ready for the 2008 Olympics…..except they were hosting it in 2004.

Our primary industries

2004 was the same year Gareth Morgan wrote the dairy industry was dicing with disaster:

“So far, the industry has simply morphed into a vehicle for generation of wealth for a class of land-owning, milk-producing suppliers whose deployment of capital is well below the potential the industry has to generate income for New Zealand.

Inefficient deployment of capital (too much on-farm, insufficient off-farm) condemns the industry to a state below its potential.

As a sheep and beef farmer much of that sounds like the wrong industry.

In 2004 dairy exports were not quite $5 billion, but today, are almost $12 billion.  A staggering 240 percent increase.  Through Fonterra’s alchemy of marketing and supply chain logistics they are now on the cusp of smashing the $20 billion revenue barrier.  Very few realise just how big or important Fonterra is as our one true world-scale corporate. Dairy alone is over a quarter of all this country’s exports.

The $20 billion revenue barrier is also corporate New Zealand’s equivalent to the four minute mile.  It makes the debate over its future, the New Zealand business story of the decade. With TAF now voted let’s hope dairy farmers unite and continue to grow this very important company.

I also say Mr Morgan got the right prescription for wrong industry because in 2004, red meat, wool and hides generated around $5.5 billion in exports.  Eight years on that has grown to $6.7 billion; a modest increase.

Explosive growth has come out of the horticultural sector when combined with wine is now a $3 billion dollar annual export.  That’s up from less than $1.5 billion recorded eight years ago when wine didn’t even factor as an export category in its own right.

While people may look at logs and say ‘what’s the value add in that’, the value of those logs has grown a full third over where they were in 2004.  That does not factor in the value add processing we do in New Zealand.

New Zealand is a trading nation so there are two things we need from governments of any colour.  That is free trade access and an understanding of what these markets need from us.

We need only refer to the rapid growth of exports with China to see what I mean.  Getting better trade access with other markets means reducing the fear those markets have of us Kiwi farmers.

This explains why we have, with our Australian counterparts in the National Farmers’ Federation, recently joined the World Farmers Organisation.

It guarantees the New Zealand farmer’s voice will be heard among international and United Nations bodies.  It also means we truly represent farmers locally, regionally, nationally and internationally.

It also provides a means for farmer to farmer diplomacy looking at the big international issues of food security, climate change and trade. It is worth noting that some $1.5bn in tariffs is paid annually by our agricultural exporters, effectively a $1.5bn reduction in farm income.

We should also note that of the 41 member countries of the WFO, only 4 are supportive of free trade. Don’t plan on DOHA being settled anytime soon!

The land and water interface

The Land & Water Forum’s second report is a major one. The emphasis is a call for national bottom lines and it is significant Federated Farmers is involved beside 65 other groups.

Federated Farmers stands for efficient resource use.  By being involved in the process we helped tighten the focus of national bottom lines around safeguarding ecological health, mana atua and human health.

In language farmers understand, we’re not here to suck the rivers dry.  We equally have an interest in looking after our indigenous fish because livestock, like us, cannot survive on fetid water. Farmers want clean water too, so do our animals, and so do our children.

The next eight years will see a growing recognition the environment is and will continue to be modified by human activity.  We have been modifying the New Zealand environment for 100’s of years.

Crucially, these bottomlines apply equally to all and I mean urban as much as rural.  While agriculture undoubtedly affects water quality, somehow, we seem to have ended up with much of the blame.  So these bottomlines will be established factoring in the current state of the waterways and the costs and time involved in achieving where we want to get to ‘as a community’.

The next few years will not be easy or painless but the Land & Water Forum process aligns thinking that we are all in this together.

As we are seeing at Lake Ellesmere and Wainono, it is possible to get the enthusiastic backing of farmers. Where things go astray it can be attributed to an expectation everything can be fixed in several years.  The environment has no respect for electoral timelines.

Farmers are practical people who like to have a careful and detailed conversation about the costs and timeframes to achieve where we want to get to as a community.

There will be pain but the ultimate goal is a sustainable farm system that has two legs; the environmental and the financial.  Without one, the other will topple.

I would suggest that Agriculture is under more environmental scrutiny than perhaps any time in its past. There is no question that over the coming years some farmers will need to lift their game.

There is also no question that the global ‘Food Security’ dilemma presents New Zealand farmers with enormous opportunities. The world is hungry and growing and we are very good at producing high quality food the world wants. Our challenge is to produce more food from a reducing land area and with a smaller environmental footprint.

Where will the ETS be in 2020?

The Emissions Trading Scheme as we know will be very different by 2020.

There are seven billion mouths to feed on our planet and this is expected to grow to over nine billion by 2050.  In 2011, the United Nations concluded that to keep pace with global population growth by 2050, developed countries will need to produce 70 percent more food.

For the developing world that figure is 100 percent and failure risks unprecedented global disorder.  The Arab Spring after all didn’t start over rising sea levels in the Gulf of Tunis, but the price of bread.

This pressure to increase food production comes at a time when the land area available for food production is in decline due to desertification and urban sprawl.

According to Landcare research ten percent of our high quality farmland has been lost to ‘lifestyle blocks’, many of which are not particularly productive.  In land terms, it is equivalent to well over 100 CraFarms or more than half the land area currently in dairy production.

In 1960, the world had 0.44 hectares in food production for every single person but by 2050, this is forecast to have fallen to 0.15 hectares.  Lazy urban planning, not one-eyed rampant environmentalism, is arguably our biggest threat.

The pressure of this global population bomb means to maintain social cohesion, the primary production of food, I think, is almost certain to come out of global treaties dealing with climate change.

To be clear, this relates to the primary production of food only.  Tertiary manufacturing and distribution will continue to be captured if countries choose to maintain emissions trading systems.

On the upside for New Zealand, the past two decades has yielded lower carbon footprints averaging 1.3 percent each year.

Continued research through the Greenhouse Gas Research Consortium locally and internationally is arguably where New Zealand will grab the high frontier and a competitive advantage.

We already have a reputation of farming excellence internationally.  We ought to be aiming to become the Palo Alto or Oxbridge of agricultural learning and research.

So let’s give science a chance

When I mention ‘green revolution,’ many will think about the Green Party.

Of course, I mean the 1960’s, when pesticides, fertiliser and new hybrid seeds combined to supercharge agriculture.  These were not New Zealand inventions but New Zealand farmers and scientists adopted and adapted them to create global leadership.

The world needs a second green revolution and New Zealand is ideally placed to lead it, provided we can overcome self-imposed limits.

That the human race is growing by two people every second creates immense opportunity for the biological economy.  We need to use all our skills and knowledge in the biological and the physical sciences to increase our production and the value of our products.

Innovation and not deprivation will be the future shaped by biological and physical sciences.  We also have lessons to learn from organics but this must be led by science rather than PR.

As William Rolleston has previously noted, ‘sustainable products will be those which underpin our reputation for safe, reliable and high quality food and backed by science using methods, which in themselves, are environmentally responsible’.

The qualitative opportunity for New Zealand comes from greater affluence as well as smaller but more numerous families.

The good news is that China and Asia are growing richer and will demand a higher protein diet.  We grow protein and fibre of the highest quality and therefore, are well positioned.

I would think this provides a sound strategic footing and hope the Opposition will come to appreciate our economy is a biological one.  Then again, if we choose to, we could easily follow Australia and Norway’s path to greater national wealth by mining the land and ocean floor. If we choose to, being the operative words here.

Parents of fewer children will prioritise their spending on quality food and fibre for their children as well as products to prolong their own quality of life.

Sciences, such as biotechnology, provide the means to multiply the value of the commodities we excel in producing. If we are to be true leaders in agriculture in leading a second Green Revolution, we mustn’t constrain ourselves to old technologies.  We should instead be prepared to consider new technologies such as genetic modification and nanotechnology but only when we can be certain it will benefit our economy and of course, our environment.

The right science ecosystem for New Zealand would allow for research and its outcomes to be commercially realised right here.

Agriculture provides the economy with its skeleton but it is up to the physical, but especially the biological sciences, to make the most of our core competitive advantage represented by land, soil, water and people.  LanzaTech being a fine example of this blended future.

So what’s ahead…?

My experience as a farmer and with the Ballance Farm Environment Awards tells me good environmental practice does lead to bottom line improvement. Building resilient, sustainable, and profitable farming systems is what we must do.

So long as we don’t trip ourselves up environmentally, there is no reason why yields and value should not rise further.  By June 2020 my crystal ball predicts that primary industry exports will well exceed $40 billion.

This would be a 25 percent increase over the next eight years but well below the 73 percent over the past eight years. The combination of an indebted local market as well as troubled European and American markets will prove strong headwinds. Thankfully Asia will support much of our new growth.

There will also be some slow down due to environmental constraints but I hope not too much.

Having recently returned from overseas I get the impression that while the rest of the world is worrying how to feed a growing population, some here talk of capping production. While the rest of the world seems focussed on growing their economies, some here talk of winding back the clock.

As a country we can’t afford to lose another 53,000 of our people across the ditch next year in their search for better jobs. We need to grasp new opportunities here.

The growth of our economy and our ability to offer more and better jobs comes from growing our businesses, not halting agriculture. A profitable and growing farming sector is the best way we can support good environmental practice.

The future for New Zealand to 2020 and beyond is exciting. Our challenge is to ensure a sensible balance between growth and the environment.

Our aspiration should be to significantly improve both.

 

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | June 29, 2012

bus bullying

I remember being mean to people on the bus, I remember people being mean to me on the bus, there are some who have been mean to my kids on the bus (and no doubt vice versa).

Here’s a nice blog, spurred by the incident with the bus monitor in the US.

Here’s a taster…

I was not a school bully, nor was I ever a regular victim of bullying. Like most children,  though, I definitely experienced isolated bullying incidents – as a  victim, as a perpetrator, and as a witness….

and further down…

It was awful and cruel, but I remember feeling at the  time like it was some sort of a game and our victim was somehow in on  it, even though many years later I realise he was not.

Thoughts?

 

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | June 22, 2012

Cheeky little fantail

A few years ago, we were walking along a track somewhere and this fantail was following us for ages, as they do.

It was a few years after my Dad had died (Lachlan was a baby when Dad died and he was a talking toddler by this time).

So the children said “oh, it must be Pop”. From that day on, any friendly fantails are Pop coming to say hi. If there is more than one, obviously Poppa (my father-in-law) or someone else like that has come to join him.

This afternoon I am bringing in the washing, thinking about my Uncle Woodie’s funeral tomorrow that I am missing (that could be a whole separate blog, but let’s just say I can’t be everywhere and do everything and will sorely miss not being there). Swoosh. A fantail perches on the washing line, flips his head left and right, toodles along the line a bit, then goes to a nearby tree. This happens several times, so I strike up a conversation, telling the bird (Pop) he should be in Dunedin for the funeral, not mucking around in Hawke’s Bay with me. And off it went. I didn’t see it again.

In a final twist today, guess the name of the song the kids sang in at school assembly today? Cheeky Little Fantail. 🙂

RIP Uncle Woodie and keep resting easy Pop.

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »

Categories