Otago Daily Times

Waimate farm manager wins NZ title

- SALLY RAE

HE used to be an informatio­n technology student in India.

Now Waimate’s Jaspal Singh is the best dairy farm manager in New Zealand, claiming the title at the Dairy Industry Awards national final in Christchur­ch at the weekend.

It was a clean sweep for the Canterbury/North Otago finalists; Will Green was named Share Farmer of the Year and Peter O’Connor won Dairy Trainee of the Year.

Mr Singh was an informatio­n technology (computer applicatio­ns) student in India and came to New Zealand to further his studies in 2014.

After completing his degree the following year, he joined the dairy industry as a farm assistant in Mossburn and is now farm manager on Mark and Carmen Hurst’s 220ha, 800cow property at Waimate.

Reflecting on the win, Mr Singh described it as a joyful occasion. He also felt a sense of relief it was over as a lot of hard work and effort had gone into it.

Asked the secret to his success, Mr Singh said he endeavoure­d to do everything ‘‘perfect’’ on the farm, especially around issues such as the environmen­t, along with livestock management and the milk that left the farm was the ‘‘best quality milk’’.

He also endeavoure­d to keep updated with regulation­s, including around the likes of intensive winter grazing.

He moved to New Zealand for a better future and speaking English was the first challenge but that was something he had worked on. The change from IT to dairy was also big. ‘‘But I had a positive attitude,’’ he said.

He had no regrets about the move, saying it had given him a new career and a happy and rewarding life. There was a great team on the farm and everybody was valued.

For the coming season, there was an opportunit­y on the same farm as a variable order sharemilke­r and his long term goal was to be a farm owner.

Head judge Gray Beagley said Mr Singh stood out as profession­al, detailed, diligent and possessed a desire to succeed with a dedication to growth.

“From the moment we entered the farm gate to the time we left, we witnessed an immaculate­ly presented farm and a polished and profession­al presentati­on which highlighte­d Jaspal’s knowledge and sense of responsibi­lity for the farms management and performanc­e.”

Mr Singh documented improvemen­t under his management on various metrics including reproducti­ve performanc­e, incidence of lame cows, somatic cell count and production figures.

He provided his team with clarity around why things were done a certain way, not just the how, with policies and procedures that ensured a consistent highqualit­y outcome, the judges said.

“Jaspal’s attentiont­odetail was incredible and he demonstrat­ed best practice across the board.”

Interview judge Rosemarie Costar said the relationsh­ip between Mr Singh and his wife Ruby was a business strength.

 ?? PHOTO: DAIRY INDUSTRY AWARDS ?? Hooked on dairying . . . Dairy trainee of the year Peter O’Connor (left), sharefarme­r of the year Will Green and farm manager of the year Jaspal Singh celebrate their successes during a function in Christchur­ch.
PHOTO: DAIRY INDUSTRY AWARDS Hooked on dairying . . . Dairy trainee of the year Peter O’Connor (left), sharefarme­r of the year Will Green and farm manager of the year Jaspal Singh celebrate their successes during a function in Christchur­ch.

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