Future Proofing Vegetable Production – Project kickoff

We have successfully completed the first milestone in the new and important Future Proofing Vegetable Production project.

Project Team Establishment Meeting

Two project establishment meetings were held, one in Levin at Te Takere and one in Gisborne at Gisborne District Council. At both there was a strong presence of growers and regional council representatives.

The Levin meeting also brought together science support providers from Landcare Research, Plant and Food Research and Groundtruth, and other stakeholders including the Foundation for Arable Research, Ballance AgriNutrients and Potatoes New Zealand.

Levin project establishment meeting

The strong engagement and commitment from all parties to collaborate highlights the importance of the project’s aims; reducing nitrate losses from intensive vegetable production.

Visit to Woodhaven Gardens and site of proposed wetland to reduce nitrates and sediment in drainage water

A presentation by Groundtruth at the Levin meeting showed their work in the Wairarapa, aimed at reducing surface water nitrates by installing wetlands. This helped raise interest and potential for use in Arawhata.

We also presented the Future Proofing Vegetable Production project in Gisborne as part of a Council meeting outlining to growers the requirements of Farm Environment Plans.

Good grower attendance at Gisborne meeting introducing Farm Environment Plans for horticulture and cropping

Follow-up “grower only” meetings were held in Levin and Gisborne to further work through project ambitions and activities and to enable growers to ask direct questions and give unconstrained opinion. Both meetings were very positive and confirmed engagement and a desire to genuinely review farm practices. The need to have good practices that can realistically be applied within the many operational constraints that growers face was reinforced. There are many operations to complete and often very tight weather and crop development windows in which to act.  

Arawhata workshop on common pool resource management

The concept of common pool resource management was introduced at the establishment meetings. Using Elinor Ostrom principles, it involves all stakeholders taking responsibility and determining how to collaboratively manage the resource fairly and sustainably. In the context of this project the common resource could be contributions to the catchment’s nitrate load.

A second Levin meeting readdressed the topic and considered two potential management approaches.

  1. Pooling nitrate leaching allocations and managing them to maintain the overall catchment losses to be within targets.
    This approach acknowledges that some places may more easily limit nitrate losses and their savings could be transferred to help another area where losses are higher. It would in effect be a “cap and trade” model. Fresh vegetable growers did not think there would be great scope for this as their operations are too similar. However, they did note that within any individual property there are still areas where no nitrates are applied and cut and carry cropping may provide a net benefit.
  2. Intercepting and removing nitrate from drainage water.
    Surface water can be passed through wetlands and anaerobic zones to both absorb nitrates and to convert nitrate to N2 gas. Subsurface drainage flows can be intercepted and treated through high carbon woodchip bioreactors to convert nitrate to N2 gas. In both cases the N2 is harmlessly released to atmosphere. Levin growers support trials of both approaches. Three wetland sites were offered, and planning is underway for their design and development. A woodchip bioreactor site was offered and subject to further research will be used as a trial.

A key of common pool resource management is understanding that resource. Growers are keen to establish baselines, not only of grower good practice, but of the ecosystem. That includes developing our understanding of nitrates in surface water as they move through the catchment, and if possible, improving our knowledge of nitrates in drainage and ground water.

Grower Good Practice Survey completed Levin and Gisborne

The Good Practice Survey has covered most of the cropped area in each region.  In both regions, it was resolved to base the survey on information farmers are required for farm environment plans. While the two councils have adopted different templates, there is considerable similarity.

The survey used was based very strongly on the Fertiliser Association’s Code of Practice for Nutrient Management.

Growers note the management practices do not apply solely to nitrates. Both growers and councils have expressed interest in extending the project’s breadth to consider phosphate and sediment management.

Groups and farmers supported to build capacity and capability

To date the focus has been on establishing the project, ensuring common understanding of its aims and objectives and readying for work starting over the spring and summer period.

Nitrate test strips to assess available soil nitrate have been distributed to project farms in Levin and Gisborne and farmers have been trying them out. All the required resources for farmers to undertake testing themselves have been brought together as a “Test Kit” containing test strips, extract solution, test tubes and soil sieves. We will be running workshops as required to ensure appropriate sampling strategies, sample processing and nitrate calculations are understood and test results are valid.

Each farmer is being encouraged to undertake some form of trial comparing a “new” management practice with current practice. A number of sites have been identified.

Woodhaven Gardens in Levin has made a 4 ha site available for any trials the group wishes to run and other growers wish to collaborate. In Gisborne, growers are also keen to participate, and we are working through which catchments and operations provide best opportunities to effectively reduce nitrate impacts.

A number of potential trials are being evaluated. Common to many is using the Nitrate QuickTest to assess available soil nitrate and modify fertiliser prescriptions. Others include assessing new fertiliser products that are designed to minimise losses, reducing base application rates, and testing biological products that are showing increased growth and reduced leaching in pastoral systems.

We will help growers design the trials, support trial establishment and monitoring and help with harvest and data analysis. Our aim is to increase the knowledge of successful farm trialling which will have legacy benefits when farmers have other questions they want to test or when reviewing information given to them by sales people.

Horizons Regional Council and Massey University have appointed a PhD candidate to undertake a study in the Arawhata Catchment in parallel with our project. The working title of the research is, “The capacity of grower management to reduce nitrogen losses to Lake Horowhenua”. The intent is for the PhD research to independently monitor the effectiveness of the different management strategies trialled.

Sites for nitrate mitigation trials identified

In both regions, farmers are keen to include testing of waterways that pass through farmed areas. We have obtained quick test strips for nitrates in drainage water. These are ten times more sensitive than those used for the soil nitrate testing. At present, we are identifying sub-catchments and drainage networks that can be monitored and developing protocols for data collection. We are planning to follow key drains from above cropped areas, monitoring above and below each farm and at regional monitoring sites where available. Both Councils have indicated support for this initiative.

As noted, three potential wetland sites and one woodchip bioreactor site have been identified and these are being evaluated. Landcare Research will be involved in bioreactor design.

A visit to two potential wetland sites in the Arawhata Catchment was made with Horizons’ Wetland coordinator and plans are being developed.

Inspecting a site for wetland establishment

We are keeping in communication with Massey University’s researchers investigating a bioreactor in sand country in Bulls.

We are also involved with a Queensland group testing different bioreactor designs in a range of environments and aim to increase our collaboration as our own work progresses. They have a planned study group and tour of sites in November.  

 

 

Trials and Extension Role Available

With an increased work load, we’re looking for a self-motivated person to  join us. You’ll be curious about transforming agricultural practices, keen on technology and pragmatic. You’ll enjoy working with growers, researchers and tech folk. 

We’re not quite sure what to call the job: coordinator, advisor, officer? We know it offers diverse activities and needs excellent communication skills and practical knowledge of horticulture and technology. For the right person, this is a role with considerable potential to grow.

Your role will be to help run trials and extension activities and be part of identifying opportunities to improve economic and environmental performance in horticultural production.

We’ve just started new projects.

Our “Future Proofing Vegetable Production” project has a significant element of on-farm monitoring and field trials to help assess the realistic approaches fresh vegetable growers can take to reducing the loss of nitrates.  It includes using new techniques to monitor soil nitrate levels, running on-farm trials to test new approaches, calibrating fertiliser application and irrigation equipment and testing new nitrate mitigation techniques.

Our “Smart tools to improve Orchard Drainage” project is using high accuracy GPS to map and model orchard drainage, and control land shaping equipment to ensure surface water can flow off during heavy rain events.

The LandWISE MicroFarm has just been land levelled and we are monitoring the effect of that, while we wait for a new series of cropping trials over coming years. In the past we’ve tried manipulating peas, changing bean planting arrangements, and mapping onions from satellites, UAVs and tractors. Now we’ve got a list of public and private trials in waiting.

Previous LandWISE projects include precision mapping vineyards to increase juice quality,

testing a small autonomous weeding robot,

the impact of banding fertiliser rather than broadcasting it, and how changing irrigation nozzles can affect application uniformity.

We prepared guidelines and calculators to calibrate fertiliser spreaders,led work on soil quality, novel crop canopy assessment technologies and tested satellite-augmented GPS positioning.

And of course, we helped introduce RTK-GPS and Autosteer, pioneered strip tillage and worked to prevent wind erosion and improve soil resilience by adopting minimum tillage techniques.

If you think this is the job for you, please send us your CV and a letter explaining why you’re the perfect candidate. Applications close very soon on Thursday 20th September 2018. We look forward to hearing from you!

Job Description here>

Email a query

 

Fit for Purpose Accuracy

SBAS GPS for Horticultural Farm Management

This project is investigating potential improvements in GNSS positioning accuracy using satellite based augmentation (SBAS) in various farming environments in NZ.

Put simply, SBAS is a system with a network of known land-based control points that provides correction signals to GPS units via satellite. The US equivalent is WAAS, the European equivalent is EGNOS.

The project focuses on testing the SBAS Technology, comparing it with commercial systems currently available (at different levels of accuracy). Through insights gained from growers, the economic benefit SBAS could bring are being assessed.

Vegetable growers view RTK-GPS as the Gold Standard and use it where precise positioning has value. Uncorrected signals are suitable for some applications but sub-metre is preferred. Handheld devices are often tried and generally rejected after disappointment, losing potential benefits of better management if better location data were available.

High accuracy RTK-GPS on both tractor and implement keeps weeders in correct position

Apple growers appear slower to adopt GPS technologies because they identify a gap between very expensive and unwarranted RTK-GPS and cheap inadequate alternatives.  Part of the reason is trouble getting good signals when working in large trees. The SBAS technology offers fit-for-purpose guidance and logging that could change the way growers use positioning technologies to enhance management and profitability.

A number of growers have tried SBAS technologies for both static point location and kinematic guidance. Static location is beneficial for recording points of interest such as diseased plants, weeds and harvest bin location. Kinematic guidance allows growers to track operations such as spraying, ensuring no missed or double ups.

We tested a few systems at the MicroFarm. Rings at RTK-GPS points, blue and white lines are runs using our Arrow100 with SBAS , yellow line is a Bad Elf with SBAS and the green line a smartphone GPS.The project is one of a number being funded under a joint Australia/New Zealand government initiative through the Australian CRC for Spatial Information and LINZ.

The team supporting LandWISE in this project includes

Smart tools to improve orchard drainage

Inadequate orchard drainage, highlighted during the 2017 autumn harvest period, is an extreme expression of a common problem that can occur anytime of the year. Muddy conditions increase disease, increase labour costs and hazards and increase storage fruit rots. Despite numerous attempts to rectify puddles and mud, the problem remains.  

LandWISE has joined with New Zealand Apples and Pears Inc in a project which has gained support from the MPI Sustainable Farming Fund.  Over the next three years, this project will draw on experience from other sectors and access to new precision agriculture technologies to address the problem through precision surface drainage, particularly in established orchards where it is especially difficult.

Orchard inspections have shown infrastructural factors are limiting surface drainage on at least 25% of the inspected orchard blocks. The microtopography in orchards creates ponding areas that stay wetter for longer. When sprayers and other traffic pass through, the surface is damage and soil smeared. This further reduces natural drainage and the problem spreads.

This project will adapt and pilot use of precision technologies to survey, design and implement surface drainage plans that minimise ponding risk and reduce these negative impacts. These will be supported by guidelines for wheel track management to provide a secure base for harvest traffic. This will become even more critical as the industry automation with picking platforms and robotic harvesters.

As well as designing effective drainage, we will determine the degree of compaction on orchard blocks and assess root development under the permanent wheel tracks.  We will develop ways to restore a good working surface in the inter-row that has strength to carry traffic without unduly compromising root development.

For more information, contact Rachel Kilmister Rachel Kilmister Rachel at applesandpears.nz or Dan Bloomer at LandWISE.org.nz

    

Future Proofing Vegetable Production

Future proofing vegetable production requires ongoing rapid change in farm practice to meet cost pressures and increasingly stringent demands from regulators and markets for enhanced environmental performance and water quality. 

It will not be easy but with support from the MPI Sustainable Farming Fund, industry and regional councils, we’re about to start the journey.

LandWISE is partnering with growers and our funders to develop and test new production and nitrogen mitigation techniques.  The project draws on and supplements recent and current research to develop new generation good management practices. 

We have four main areas of focus:

    1. precise nutrient prescription (how much is required)

    Test strip used to determine available N in a soil sample
  1. precise application (is it going where it is needed when it is needed)

    Ensuring the prescribed rate of fertiliser is applied
  2. maximising retention (ensuring leaching is minimised)
  3. recapturing nitrates that move beyond the root zone (constructed wetlands and wood-chip bioreactors)

    Installing a wood-chip bioreactor (Lincoln Agritech image)

We will draw on previous LandWISE work including  On-Farm Fertiliser Calibration, Arawhata Sediment and Drainage, and other projects including current research on quick tests for soil nitrate, fluxmeter monitoring of leaching and the use of wood-chip bioreactors to strip nitrate from drainage water.

The research side will be supported with considerable extension and training. We are aware that numerous computer based decision support tools have been developed, but we have identified that many growers need considerable support and upskilling to have the knowledge, skills and experience to effectively use them. 

To stay in touch about this project, subscribe to our newsletter for updates!

This project is funded by the Ministry of Primary Industries Sustainable Farming Fund, Horizons Regional Council, Gisborne District Council, Ballance AgriNutrients, Vegetable Growers and LandWISE.

               
    

Notice of Annual General Meeting 2018

2018 Annual General Meeting

Notice to Members

The Annual General Meeting of LandWISE Inc. will be held during the 2018 Annual Conference “Technologies for Timely Actions”

When: 2:30 PM on Wednesday 23 May 2018
Where:  Havelock North Function Centre

Business

  • Minutes of Previous AGM
  • Annual accounts
  • Subscriptions
  • Constitution changes completed
  • Retiring Board members – Mark Burgess, Simon Wilcox
  • Board Elections – Analeise Murahidy and Simon Wilcox nominated
  • Activity reports
  • General Business

Minutes of 2017

2017 Minutes available here

Revised 2017 Constitution available here

Financial

  • Annual accounts will be presented at the AGM
  •  Subscriptions – recommendation of the Board

Retiring Board Members

Simon Wilcox (three year term completed) is retiring by rotation, but offers himself for re-election

Mark Burgess has retired from University of Auckland and is stepping down from the Board

Board Elections

The remaining Board members are:

  • John Evans – farmer/grower (arable) CHAIR
  • John van der Linden –  farmer/grower (viticulture)
  • Oliver Knowles – Precision Ag Extension (support industries)

Two positions are vacant.

For re-election

  • Simon Wilcox  – farmer/grower (vegetables)
    • nominated John van der Linden, seconded by John Evans

A new nomination has been received

  • Analeise Murahidy – University of Auckland (research)
    • nominated Mark Burgess, seconded by John van der Linden
Brief Bio.Analeise Murahidy

Business Development Manager – Environment
Auckland UniServices Ltd.

Analeise has been working within the Higher Education Sector for over 15 years’ in various business development, contract management, and operation management roles. Analeise is currently working at UniServices and is responsible for the client engagement and business development strategy within the Environment and Industries portfolio with a focus on AgriTech, CleanTech and Climate Change. Prior to joining UniServices, she worked at Imperial College London in both the Medical and Natural Science Faculties in research and business administration roles.

General business

If you wish to make comment or have items added to the AGM Agenda, please contact Dan@landwise.org.nz

LandWISE 2018: Technologies for Timely Actions

In 2018, our sixteenth conference addresses the topic of “Technologies for Timely Actions”. We are delighted that LandWISE 2018 is officially part of Techweek, a festival amplifying New Zealand innovation that’s good for the world.

The intention behind Techweek is simple – New Zealand’s technology and innovation sectors are growing rapidly, and Techweek fosters that growth by providing a week-long opportunity for connection and cross-pollination.

Registration

Registrations for LandWISE 2018 are open and you can book your place via the Techweek link. LandWISE members can also contact our Conference Admin if required.

Programme

The draft programme will be released soon. Members will receive regular updates, but for now pur 23-24 May in your diary.  Then come along, listen, discuss:

  • How can managers and other decision makers get the information they need, process it, and decide what to do?
  • What is the information they need?
  • What tools help them make sense of it?
  • What’s available (or coming) to make it as easy and reliable as possible to do the right thing, in the right place at the right time?

It’s not just robots and computers : the quick Nitrate test promises rapid determination of available N while standing in the paddock – considerable help when deciding “do I put more now or can I hold off?” Combine that with smart crop zoning (that does involve computing) and maybe we can lift quality and reduce impacts.

We look forward to once again greeting delegates at the LandWISE Conference in Havelock North on 23-24 May 2018.

How to stay in touch

If you’re not already a subscriber, click here for the free e-newsletter. Remember too, members get conference discounts so click here to join.

2018 Technical Session: Implementing new technologies to manage crop health

The Technical Session is an opportunity for lead farmers, researchers and technologists to workshop a topic, hearing from different perspectives and seeking opportunities for collaboration.

Looking for answers – LandWISE 2015

In May 2018, the topic is “Implementing new technologies to manage crop health”. The day will start with presentations from lead farmers followed by presentations from research and tech perspectives. There will be much discussion, connections will be made and links forged.

The Technical Sessions are “by application” events with numbers limited to ensure good dialogue and quality discussion.  If you would like to be part of the 2018 Technical sessions, contact us and explain why you need to be there! (See below)

Programme:

Scoping research and farm technology needs and creating networks of people.

  • 60 second introductions (all)
  • Lead presentations
  • Defining future farm problems and challenges
  • Discussion of key issues

From an earlier event:

“LandWISE was one of the best forums I’ve participated in. The sense of goodwill and teamwork was extraordinary” Professor David Lamb, University of New England, Australia

Your investment for this event:

  • 2018 Conference Attendees:  $75+GST
  • Others: $150+GST

Apply and pre-register here>

LandWISE 2018 Conference Speakers

We are absolutely delighted at the calibre of speakers coming together for LandWISE 2018 – Technologies for Timely Actions. They have a wide range of backgrounds, work in a range of different sectors looking at a wide range of different things. 

We’ve put information about the speakers on our discussion (blog) posts. Here, they are presented as a list with links so you can follow as you please.

We are grateful for the support of AGMARDT, McCain Foods and Heinz-Watties for helping bring our international speakers to New Zealand.

Invited Overseas Speakers

Dan Drost – Utah State University, USA

Will Bignell – DroneAg, Tasmania

Michael Nichols – Redbank Farming, Tasmania

Sarah Pethybridge – Cornell University, USA

Invited Local Speakers

Dan Bloomer – LandWISE

Tim Herman – NZ Apples and Pears

Wade Riley – GPS Control Systems

Mark Bart – Metris

Dan Clark – Eagle Technologies

Bruce Searle – Plant & Food Research

Matt Norris – Plant & Food Research

Aldrin Rivas – Lincoln AgriTech

Taylor Welsh – Plant & Food

Matthew Warner and Nicholas Woon – Acuris Systems

Matty Blomfield – Hectre

Armin Werner – Lincoln AgriTech

Shane Wood – Vinea

 

 

LandWISE OnionsNZ Project on TV

We invite you to watch telly. Here’s a link to Rural Delivery, broadcast on Saturday 21 April.

At the end of January, we had a visit from director Kirsty Cooper and camera and sound operator Richard Williams of Showdown Productions.

Why did they come?

They were filming for Rural Delivery and wanted to discuss the Onions New Zealand MPI Sustainable Farming Fund project we have been doing with Plant & Food Research. Now drawing to a close, the three year project has investigated ways to map crop variability at field scale and where variability originates.

The story began four years ago when we had a crop of onions at the MicroFarm. To get a good look at the crop LandWISE Manager, Dan Bloomer climbed up the irrigator.

“The view when you get 7m up in the air and look down is very different to what you see walking around, and I saw massive variability throughout the crop,” he said.

Wide variation within the area new to onions does not follow artificial rain or topographic drainage patterns.

“I could understand some of it but a lot more I couldn’t explain. A colleague was playing around with imaging and smart phones and he made an application where we could drive up and down the rows and map the percentage canopy cover.  I talked about it with  Onions NZ Research Manager Jane Adams who thought it would be quite useful and could lead to greater understanding of variability in onion crops.”

We then partnered with Plant and Food Research with support from Onions New Zealand and the Sustainable Farming Fund to do a project aimed at studying that variability.

Bruce Searle, crop scientist with Plant & Food Research, designed a research approach to get the data we needed to make some practical applications. 

“We wanted to figure out where the variability comes from and how much of it is something that a grower can control.  So we looked at the different factors that might influence variability and worked through the contribution of each to the overall variability,” he says.

“A lot of it comes down to individual plants growing at different rates – something that the grower can’t do a lot about.  However, factors that influence getting good crop establishment are critical to reducing variability, and once the crop is up you can look at poor performing areas within in the crop.   The tool that Dan has been working on captures that information so that you can map the field and make some decisions.”

Bruce showing Richard the Quick Test for Soil Nitrate

We have done items with Showdown Productions before and have enormous respect for their work. You can see the result of the onion interviews on Rural Delivery, TVNZ1.

 

Promoting sustainable production