Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | June 14, 2013

Avery NZ’s top ag communicator

Marlborough farmer Doug Avery is willing to talk to anyone about integrating lucerne into pastoral systems to achieve a leap in productivity and profitability.

His enthusiasm and ability in communicating how he has achieved this with spectacular results on his own property have won him the 2013 Landcorp Agricultural Communicator of the Year.

Doug Avery, left, with Landcorp chairman  Bill Baylis

Doug Avery, left, with Landcorp chairman Bill Baylis

Doug is a regular speaker at farmer meetings, conferences and seminars around the country and also in Australia.

Doug owns and runs Bonaveree, the family farm at Grassmere on the dry East Coast of the South Island. Years of drought resulted in him doing things differently, successfully developing a farm management system that works in sympathy with the land, rather than battling it. The huge success of this work has attracted international acclaim, and continues to influence farmers in dry areas around the country

He has a knack of communicating clearly with humour and common sense that appeals to fellow farmers and in recent years this has diversified to regular slots on farming radio programmes and writing columns for newspapers. He also has a blog that is followed by many farmers around the country.

Doug was selected by an independent panel of judges ahead of several other very worthy recipients to receive this prestigious award, which was announced at an Awards Dinner in Hamilton last night. Doug is a former winner of the South Island Farmer of the Year (2010) and last year was named one of the winners of the inaugural Landcare Ambassador Awards (for dedication and leadership within the field of sustainable land and water management).

The Landcorp Agricultural Communicator of the Year Award is administered by the NZ Guild of Agricultural Journalists and Communicators (of which I am a member – this post is from its press release) and recognises excellence in communicating agricultural issues, events or information.

Landcorp provides a prize of $2500, which is part of a funding package of $7500 in sponsorship for the Guild. The additional funding assists with administration costs, including the Award dinner.

Doug was also presented with a new trophy, pictured above, to be presented to the winner every year with a roll call of previous winners engraved on the back.

Guild President, Jon Morgan, said Doug is a worthy recipient of this year’s award. “He is widely respected for his ability as a farmer. What separates him is his enthusiasm and willingness to talk to others about his methods and his drought-busting farm systems,” he said.

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | June 10, 2013

bulls in the rain

Black bulls everywhere this afternoon – if you were in the same paddocks as me near Norsewood!

I was taking photos at the annual Mt Mable Angus bull sale at Pukerimu – home to Kevin and Megan Friel.

It was a tad wet at times when viewing the bulls before the sale…

Mt Mable bulls rain2

Jackets and gumboots were the order of the day … the drought seems like distant history

Mt Mable bulls rain3

They don’t scare me (much) but they do give me rather a surprise at times when I stop looking through the wide angle lens and realise they are almost within touching distance!

and the auction begins :)

and the auction begins 🙂

a great crowd

a great crowd

my favourite crowd shot of the day

my favourite crowd shot of the day  (I was going to crop it but photoshop is throwing a wobbly so I have put it on in all its raw glory)

back to the bulls in a less-wet moment... this is my favourite bull shot of the day

back to the bulls in a less-wet moment… this is my favourite bull shot of the day (of course it would have been even nicer if a hadn’t replaced one of his front legs with a fence post…)

Here are more details about Mt Mable Angus 🙂

Atahua’s sale was held this morning on the other side of the mountains… and they shall continue for a few weeks yet!

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | June 6, 2013

On the Junket #2

Here I am in Wairoa, finally made the internet work (surprising, I think the 1970s decor in the motel might have put it off) and am doing a spot of news hunting, emailing, facebooking and blogging.

Better than Auckland though – last month 15 minutes cost me nigh on 20 bucks – here I get 50MB for as long as it lasts! (which considering I can’t link most of the time, it should last the entire time I am here).

Interested to see who has been goggling “kate taylor rural blogger” since I was on the Farming Show on the radio the other day, but get more from connecting to Facebook and having things to comment on that Homepaddock finds interesting!! Thanks Ele. And those searching for Keri Young, Tapanui, good luck (she’s one of my big sisters and I have only mentioned her a few times!)

Time to go and watch my seven channels. I miss My Sky. I missed something going to the loo before and I actually did reach for the remote to rewind!!

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | June 4, 2013

Well done Kereru Station

Normally there are hundreds of red four wheelers traversing the countryside at a Hawke’s Bay Farmer of the year field day , but this year we would have needed a couple of days to get around the magnificent Kereru Station.

Kereru Station’s managers Danny and Robyn Angland  have now been added to the list of who’s who in Hawke’s Bay farming circles (the station is owned by two charitable trusts).

It is a 2842ha property (2114ha effective) with six staff, 15,385 sheep and 1586 cattle.

As promised – here are some photos 🙂

FOY view talking

Danny talking on the left

FOY crowd ANZ man wide

captive audience…

FOY dogs

waiting….

FOY road stop2

another stop

FOY sheep2

Kereru Station some of the sheep on show

FOY Thomas

Best Ravensdown account manager in the country on the right….

FOY utes sheep

line up of utes see more sheep on the way around the property

FOY view crowd

great view for lots of utes (and us)


I have tried to make those panoramic ones bigger…. but…. technology is against me tonight!

I also have to say a big “YUM!” for the Silver Fern Farms produce eaten at the end of the field day…

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | June 4, 2013

on the junket

I have loved the past few weeks hobnobbing with the elite of rural New Zealand 🙂

First the Silver Fern Farms Hawke’s Bay Farmer of the Year as run by the HB A&P Society (took photos for fun) then the ANZ Young Farmer Contest in Auckland (working as photographer) then to Dairy Industry Awards in Wellington (I photograph the Hawke’s Bay Wairarapa regional winners but got to go because Thomas works for Ravensdown – thank you!) In a few weeks I am off to the Ballance Farm Environment Awards showcase in Hamilton (recent photos from the Smedley field day).

This has made me realise just how slack I have been on here this year – only the Young Farmers photos are on here!!

So – here are a few just for fun and then feel free to have a look at my flickr site for more (lots more and they DO tell a good story if I do say so myself…)

I will start a new post with photos from the Farmer of the Year field day on Kereru Station.

 

Smedley airstrip 6

View from the airstrip on Smedley… Ruahine Range out of the photo on the left and Hawke’s Bay away out to the right 🙂

Smedley airstrip cadets3

One of the Smedley cadets holding some sheep for the willing audience

Smedley trig HBRC

A friendly wave from a member of your Hawke’s Bay Regional Council land management team

Smedley airstrip Terry5

Smedley Station manager Terry Walters

Smedley damsite cadets8

Some of the Smedley cadets watching proceedings

Not a bad view from the top

Not a bad view from the top

Bruce and James

Solving the world’s problems?  BFEA East Coast chairman (and Feds president) Bruce Wills talks with 2012 East Coast winner James Hunter, now a trustee of the NZ Farm Environment Trust, which runs the awards.

 

 

 

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | May 22, 2013

busy busy

I have been told off for not writing in my blog – but hey, that means I’m too busy earning money writing for people who pay me!

Just a wee note to say I am really busy writing for people who pay me, so I will soon be back on my “Sheila’s Soapbox” to quote Jamie Mackay.

I had a giggle just now, looking at my site, which says someone did a search for Skellerup Young Farmer of the Year 2013. Good luck with that.  Trustbank Skellerup, WestpacTrust, Wrightson Agmardt, The National Bank…. now The ANZ Young Farmer Contest 2013. A few changes. At the weekend (once I’ve meet my Dominion Post deadline) I will tell you all about the Grand Final (last weekend) and even put up a post about the Farmer of the Year field day I attended a couple of weeks ago…. I”m late…  I know!

So before I go back to work, here are some pics of the winner, Tim van de Molen representing the Waikato/Bay of Plenty Young Farmers Region.

Tim studio all

In the studio with host Mark Leishman

Tim TROPHY

that trophy is heavier than it looks

Tim and magnificient 7

Tim and the “magnificient seven” or other six!!!

 

Tim and family

Tim and his family

Tim and ANZ

You have to love the pay rise (he works for ANZ!!)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | May 5, 2013

The “green thing”

I just saw this somewhere else and had to share.

It is so true, even for my generation more so than my kids. I heard someone complaining the other day about not being able to get rid of their nappies easily in summer with a fire ban on. My two were in cloth nappies (nothing like a few hours on the line with wind and sunshine and thank goodness for Napisan) for two years each (apart from nights) and we never struggled to get rid of bags of used nappies. And I tell you, it spurred on the need for toilet training!

Anyway, here is the piece… it’s called Being Green.
Checking out at the store, the young cashier suggested to the older woman, that she should bring her own grocery bags because plastic bags weren’t good for the environment.The woman apologized and explained, “We didn’t have this green thing back in my earlier days.”The young clerk responded, “That’s our problem today. Your generation did not care enough to save our environment f or future generations.”

She was right — our generation didn’t have the green thing in its day.Back then, we returned milk bottles, soda bottles and beer bottles to the store. The store sent them back to the plant to be washed and sterilized and refilled, so it could use the same bottles over and over. So they really were truely recycled.But we didn’t have the green thing back in our day.

Grocery stores bagged our groceries in brown paper bags, that we reused for numerous things, most memorable besides household garbage bags, was the use of brown paper bags as book covers for our schoolbooks. This was to ensure that public property, (the books provided for our use by the school) was not defaced by our scribblings. Then we were able to personalize our books on the brown paper bags.But too bad we didn’t do the green thing back then.We walked up stairs, because we didn’t have an escalator in every store and office building. We walked to the grocery store and didn’t climb into a 300-horsepower machine every time we had to go two blocks.But she was right. We didn’t have the green thing in our day.

Back then, we washed the baby’s diapers because we didn’t have the throwaway kind. We dried clothes on a line, not in an energy-gobbling machine burning up 220 volts — wind and solar power really did dry our clothes back in our early days. Kids got hand-me-down clothes from their brothers or sisters, not always brand-new clothing.But that young lady is right; we didn’t have the green thing back in our day.

Back then, we had one TV, or radio, in the house — not a TV in every room. And the TV had a small screen the size of a handkerchief (remember them?), not a screen the size of the state of Montana. In the kitchen, we blended and stirred by hand because we didn’t have electric machines to do everything for us. When we packaged a fragile item to send in the mail, we used wadded up old newspapers to cushion it, not Styrofoam or plastic bubble wrap. Back then, we didn’t fire up an engine and burn gasoline just to cut the lawn. We used a push mower that ran on human power. We exercised by working so we didn’t need to go to a health club to run on treadmills that operate on electricity.But she’s right; we didn’t have the green thing back then.

We drank from a fountain when we were thirsty instead of using a cup or a plastic bottle every time we had a drink of water. We refilled writing pens with ink instead of buying a new pen, and we replaced the razor blades in a razor instead of throwing away the whole razor just because the blade got dull.But we didn’t have the green thing back then.

Back then, people took the streetcar or a bus and kids rode their bikes to school or walked instead of turning their moms into a 24-hour taxi service. We had one electrical outlet in a room, not an entire bank of sockets to power a dozen appliances. And we didn’t need a computerized gadget to receive a signal beamed from satellites 23,000 miles out in space in order to find the nearest burger joint.

But isn’t it sad the current generation laments how wasteful we old folks were just because we didn’t have the green thing back then?

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | April 17, 2013

A bouquet this morning

A bouquet this morning to the milk tanker driver who just went past my house…. going very slowly as my kids were getting on the school bus!

There are many locals who could learn from this person.

We would be quick to put the boot in if the driver was doing something dumb, so I thought I would give the same credence to something good.

Well done Mr Fonterra Tanker Driver.

it has been about four years since I last “went mental” about school buses.

Back in 2009, I had this to say …

And it earned me one of my first interviews on radio’s The Farming Show…. although as people have been telling me all… the… time lately – I haven’t been asked to go on for a while so I mustn’t have anything good to say lately! (Damn, I just discovered all my links to TFS at the top of my page are kaput, probably as a result of its new website. Gutted. I don’t have copies.)

Happy to note I have not been as busy on here because my freelance business is going extremely well 🙂  I coordinated the editorial for three rural features in the DomPost this week and am about to start on a customer profile for Ravensdown and a newsletter for Nuffield NZ…

And it is raining beautiful sweet delicious rain over Takapau.

My son is annoyed because it is his first rep soccer practice after school today, but as my daughter so aptly put it… “what is more important Lachlan, soccer or the future of our whole farming industry?” Well said that girl.

Au revoir.

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | April 16, 2013

Otawhao Reunion

This is a message for the lady who phoned me from Waikato… the reunion photos are  on the Otawhao Hall’s Facebook page…. but here are some teasers!

We recently had the centenary of the first ballot farms on the Otawhao Block. It was an awesome weekend. Roll on 125th! Well, maybe the mid-winter Christmas party first? 🙂

Good food, good company, good weather (privately hoping for rain as we were (are still) in the middle of a drought)… did I say good food?!

To mention a few of the people, chairman Graeme Heald, the oldest pair – Eros Olsen and Tony James, Tony James and the Hunt boys (Simon and Peyton) cutting the cake, the cake, the Somervell siblings (on the back of the Old Truck) and the Olsen sisters… and the evening session was held at the newly refurbished Vincents at Oruawharo (the former St Vincent’s Catholic Church in Takapau – click the link for weddings).

Otawhao 1 Otawhao 2 Otawhao 3 Otawhao 4 Otawhao 5 Otawhao 6 Otawhao 7 Otawhao 8 Otawhao 9 Otawhao 10 Otawhao 11 Otawhao 12 Otawhao 13 Otawhao 14 Otawhao 15 Otawhao 16 Otawhao 17 Otawhao 18 Otawhao 19 Otawhao 20 Otawhao 22 Otawhao evening 1 Otawhao evening 2 Otawhao evening 3 Otawhao evening 4 Otawhao evening 5 Otawhao evening 6 Otawhao evening 7

Posted by: rivettingkatetaylor | April 12, 2013

Farmer of the Year +

You are just getting the press release this afternoon…. courtesy of the HB A&P Society – I have been out photographing all day and now I am off to assembly. More later 🙂

 

 

Night of Winners

Hawke’s Bay’s agribusiness community was out in force last night to celebrate a string of awards that recognise excellence in the primary industries.

350 guests packed the events centre at Showgrounds Hawke’s Bay to enjoy an evening of fine food, entertainment and celebrate with the worthy winners.

The big winners on the night were Danny & Robyn Angland, who took out the prestigious Silver Fern Farms Hawke’s Bay Farmer of the Year title for their management of the iconic Hawke’s Bay farming enterprise Kereru Station.  Danny has been Manager of the 2847ha Station since 2007.

Peter Tod, Chairman of the Silver Fern Farms HB Farmer of the Year committee said “Kereru Station is a large scale farming operation intensively managed with a high level of attention to detail, Danny has a clear focus and vision of how to integrate multiple stock classes on a variety of land types”

“The Hawke’s Bay A&P Society invites you to the field day at Kereru Station on the 9 May 2013, this is your chance to see what makes this Farmer the 2013 Silver Fern Farms Hawke’s Bay Farmer of the Year.”

Rowan Sandford a third year Lincoln University Student received the Inaugural Lawson Robinson HB A&P Society Scholarship, set up in partnership between the Hawke’s Bay A&P Society and Lawson Robinson Barristers + Solicitors to recognise outstanding academic and leadership qualities in a student currently enrolled in a land based study program.

Ponty von Dadelszen was awarded the Laurie Dowling Memorial Award for outstanding contribution to agriculture in Hawke’s Bay.

Steve & Jane Wyn-Harris were named Hawke’s Bay Farm Forester of the year, a field day will be held on their property on the 18 May 2013.

 

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