Te Puke Times

Career in farming delivers for Sophia

Couple find jersey herd well suited to hilly farm property

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Sophia Clark didn’t think she would end up a dairy farmer, but a season milking jersey cows showed her that a career in farming could deliver both a business and a lifestyle.

Sophia and her partner Aaron Mills, are 50/50 share milkers for Bernie and Gaye Hermann at Paengaroa, where they milk a herd of 550 elite jersey cows.

Sophia says the herd, which is in the top 1 per cent of herds across all breeds based on breeding worth (BW), is perfectly suited to the farm.

“We are a hilly farm, running a lower input system and milking oncea-day over summer,” she says. “Jerseys are well suited to our operation and enable us to farm the way we want to farm — not too much time spent on the tractor or too many bells and whistles — just a simple, efficient, profitable system.

“We have found jerseys to be a hardy, low maintenanc­e animal. They have good fertility, are easy calving, and with a flatter lactation curve they truck along on once-a-day without stripping condition even through a dry summer. Our simple system allows us to achieve a worklife balance.”

After graduating from Lincoln with a Bachelor of Commerce and Agricultur­e, Sophia, who is not from a farming background, went shepherdin­g before spending time overseas. Upon returning to New Zealand Sophia took a job on a dairy farm near Cambridge where she met her partner Aaron.

It was Sophia’s first taste of milking jerseys and she liked the simplicity of the system with a focus on doing the basics well and achieving profitable production.

When the couple purchased their first herd comprising crossbred and jersey animals, they experiment­ed with breed options before breeding the herd back towards jersey.

“It might be a controvers­ial opinion, but we felt that breeding cross over cross we were getting animals that had the frame of a jersey but the conformati­on of a friesian,” says Sophia.

“We wanted a uniform herd, of strong capacious animals, with good conformati­on that would get in calf easily and produce well under a low to medium input system.”

After share milking in Matamata for four years the couple had the opportunit­y to purchase their dream herd.

“It was a hard decision to make, as we were proud of the herd we had built up, but we had the opportunit­y to move up in herd size and purchase an elite group of animals, with strong indexes and over 60 years of breeding behind them.”

The investment has paid off. The couple have several animals contracted to LIC this season and have found there is lots of demand for their surplus stock.

“This season we sold almost all of our surplus calves.

“There has been a huge demand for both our surplus jerseys and also our jersey angus, and while calf sales are not our primary focus as dairy farmers, it is a nice bonus.”

The couple is busy with mating now and will AB for five weeks using LIC’S Jersey Forward Pack, followed by five weeks of short gestation Angus bulls.

They are targeting a six-week incalf rate of 78 per cent and an empty rate of under 10 per cent from their 10-week mating. The couple doesn’t use any interventi­on for the herd but says that they’ve always achieved strong submission rates from their jerseys.

“Jerseys are easy calving and even the slightly larger jersey angus calves are no problem. The benefit of that is the cows recover quickly and cycle well pre-mating as we are seeing in our herd,” says Sophia.

“We are really looking forward to getting our first season under our belts, and see what can be achieved with an elite jersey herd.”

 ??  ?? “We have found Jerseys to be a hardy, low maintenanc­e animal,” says Sophia Clark.
“We have found Jerseys to be a hardy, low maintenanc­e animal,” says Sophia Clark.
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