
Shear success! NZ's longest running speed shearing event returns
The annual Te Puna Speed Shear will take place this Saturday.
The annual Te Puna Speed Shear will take place this Saturday.
Buyers 'did not hold back' in their bidding, says auctioneer.
Farmer says he’s not just farming sheep any more, he’s “trying to farm worms”.
'In the future, I would like to have one of the biggest studs in New Zealand.'
The farm grows, processes and sells beef, lamb and farm produce directly to the public.
Two roaming dogs recently mauled 18 sheep in Kaikohe - what action has the council taken?
Tourism has been left off a top-six list of industries to drive Hawke's Bay's economy.
'Old exhibitors have not come back in, and younger ones are not coming through.'
Matangi is normally known for its Angus beef.
Rabobank finds improved sentiment largely attributable to improved commodity pricing.
A new report points to tangible ways farmers could reduce beef herds’ carbon footprint.
Decline in lamb crop is slightly greater than Beef + Lamb NZ's original forecast in June.
Govt says measures will protect productive farmland and allow sustainable forestry growth.
Disappointment as Kāinga Ora opts for synthetic over wool carpet.
Charcoal-like product is made from smouldering woody offcuts in large kilns.
Sponsored content: All you wanted to know (but were afraid to ask) about fly strike.
Ewan McGregor, a 79-year-old historian, says he's got "a few books in me yet".
Hardy Froneman of Hoof Trim, Hawke’s Bay, specialises in the Dutch five-step method.
Sponsored content: “It’s awesome. The generosity of all farmers, once again, is so good.”
Animal rescued from owners in Belgium is now so wooly it is ‘in pain’.
Five questions to get to know rural New Zealand a little better.
Sponsored content: Weaning and nutrition are important when managing calf health.
MindHive Global uses artificial intelligence to grade cowhide.
'They still need us': the Northland Federated Farmers president is calm about tariffs.
Drought speculation for Hawke's Bay is premature, but the Bay is vulnerable, Niwa says.
OPINION: Finn Ross & James Robbie say irreversible damage happening to rural communities.
Hickford is a professor of animal breeding and genetics at Lincoln University.
The decision 30 years ago to breed a sheep requiring little drenching was a game-changer.
There's a lot to buying a ram, including what to name them.