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Home / The Country

Conversion to dairy farm worked for Waikato couple

NZME. regionals
3 May, 2018 01:30 AM4 mins to read

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Jersey cattle breeders and once-a-day milking proponents Matthew and Emma Darke.

Jersey cattle breeders and once-a-day milking proponents Matthew and Emma Darke.

Converting a sheep and beef farm to dairy and going once-a-day has proven good decision-making by Jersey breeders Matthew and Emma Darke.

Ten years ago, Matthew and his parents Peter and Elizabeth moved to dairy in response to a need to diversify the family farm.

Initially building a small shed to milk 100 cows and rearing 1500 calves annually, with the plan to eventually milk 450 cows, the Darkes now milk on two farms in two herds, with each block around 260ha effective, supporting 625 cows each.

The Aria, Waikato couple took a fair bit of ribbing from their neighbours in the beginning, who found it more than interesting that not only were they converting to dairy, but with Jerseys on the once-a-day system no less.

We weren't 'proper' dairy farmers in the early days — we didn't have our beliefs and systems firmly in place, so we were prepared to try new concepts on farm.

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However, it turns out the Darkes are trailblazers in their area, with many of the local dairy farms following suit and adopting once-a-day in to their systems.

Matthew and Emma credit Malcolm Ellis of LIC with the inspiration to move to Jerseys. They're also actively involved in a once-a-day discussion group, based at Massey University, started by Colin Holmes, who sees once-a-day as the future for dairy farming in New Zealand.

"We weren't 'proper' dairy farmers in the early days — we didn't have our beliefs and systems firmly in place, so we were prepared to try new concepts on farm," says Matthew.

An average farm with average infrastructure, the new (upper) block has previously supported a crossbred herd that produced 90,000kg/MS in the year purchased, with a farm record of 103,000kg/MS.

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In 2014, the Darkes purchased the neighbouring 135ha property, increasing the total land area to 500ha.

"In our first year of operation on once-a-day, with a predominantly Jersey herd, we averaged 115,00kg/MS," says Matthew. "This season we changed it up. We split the two herds and farms into equal land and herd sizes, with 450 cows in each herd," he says.

"On the lower (original) block, the longest walk to the shed was four kilometres but that paddock was only two kilometres from the upper block's shed, so it made sense to swap them around."

In the 2016/17 season, the upper block averaged 850kg/MS per hectare, 330kg/MS per cow in 250 days from the predominantly Jersey herd. The lower block produced 750kg/MS per hectare on hillier country from a mainly crossbred herd.

Having weighed the cows, the 400kg Jerseys were averaging 330kg/MS per cow, making them the most efficient converters of feed (82.5 per cent of liveweight). At other discussion groups Matthew and Emma attended, the averages were 360kg/MS from 460kg cows, with extra feed required for maintenance.

Last season the Darkes' production totalled 406,000kg/MS, just 1 per cent off their record season.

Matthew comments on the hard spring this season, followed by five weeks without rain. "Now that it's raining, the grass is bolting," he says.

"We're currently about 2000kg/MS, or 0.5 per cent, behind last season's production but we're well into catch-up mode and we're looking at producing 400,000kg/MS."

With on-farm costs of $3.25 per MS, they're taking advantage of the once-a-day premium.

Emma and Matthew say the ideal once-a-day cow matches or beats her liveweight in production, with over 10 per cent milksolids on test.

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He comments that most good twice-a-day cows will work on once-a-day, but it's very rare for a poor twice-a-day to be successful under the once-a-day system.

Both herds are now actively mated to Jersey, with the exception of one crossbred bull (about 150 straws). The lower 10-15 per cent get a beef straw.

Emma actively mates each cow and selects bulls based on their breeding values, matching the requirements of each dam.

"We're using the elite LIC and CRV Ambreed bulls," says Emma.

The once-a-day system suits both the Darkes' lifestyle and the farm. Their system is designed to be simple and everyone is more content — the herd is in no rush to get back to the paddock and the family gets to spend more time together.

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