The Southland Times

Weather a curse and a blessing

- GERARD HUTCHING

While the northern North Island has been suffering from extreme weather, farmers in North Canterbury have celebrated the arrival of plentiful autumn rain. Federated Farmers meat and fibre North Canterbury spokesman Dan Hodgen said after three years of drought, the region was recovering.

‘‘You won’t hear anyone here grizzling, that’s for sure. It’s a welcome change, in the context of the last three years the amount of rain we’re receiving is huge.’’

Since March more than 200 millimetre­s had fallen, with 50mm alone on Wednesday and more expected in the next few days. Creeks had finally started to flow.

‘‘The grass is growing so we go into winter with plenty of feed. It’s just the right time of the year to get the rain,’’ Hodgen said.

In the Bay of Plenty, Coromandel and Hauraki Plains, milk is being sent to Fonterra’s Waikato plants now that the Edgecumbe factory is still out of commission.

A few farms which still cannot be accessed following Cyclone Debbie are having to dump milk into effluent ponds.

Fonterra’s head of farm source in the Bay of Plenty, Lisa Payne, said milk had been shifted out of the Edgecumbe site.

‘‘A number of Fonterra staff have returned to the [Edgecumbe] site over the past two days and are making solid progress with the cleaning and recovery effort. It will still be a number of days before we consider returning the site to full operations,’’ Payne said.

She described it as ‘‘business as usual’’ with milk collection. Although it was nearing the end of the season, fine weather in March had boosted production.

Fonterra’s local Farm Source store remains closed due to the flooding, but the milk processing site had been on raised ground on the opposite side to the town, which bore the brunt of the flooding.

Around Edgecumbe a number of kiwifruit orchards have been flooded but only a ‘‘handful’’ have been severely affected, according to NZ Kiwifruit Growers (NZKGI).

Since the rainfall that accompanie­d Cyclone Debbie, NZKGI has provided support where necessary, particular­ly with pumping water off orchards.

NZKGI chief executive Nikki Johnson said rain and flooding had affected the harvesting of a small number of orchards, but picking had been occurring in breaks between the rain. She noted that although it was harvest time, not all kiwifruit in the affected areas were ready for picking.

The growers organisati­on would be guided by previous experience with flooding following Cyclone Bola and in 2005.

 ??  ?? Farmer Mark Zino moves sheep on his drought-stricken Hawarden, North Canterbury, farm last year.
Farmer Mark Zino moves sheep on his drought-stricken Hawarden, North Canterbury, farm last year.

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