Cair Vie produce stand - spray free

Cair Vie produce stand - spray free Produce stand closed due to theft in October 2022

Hi there, and just when you thought some sanity was coming back to New Zealand….What a great article and a courageous yo...
09/03/2024

Hi there, and just when you thought some sanity was coming back to New Zealand….
What a great article and a courageous young couple..

These two are the farmers of the future…

Support them

My name is Amy. My husband Hamish and I farm sheep and beef near Clinton in Southland. We use regenerative farming methods following the advice of a Dr Christine Jones. We spent months researching the options before taking the decision. Dr Jones is a leader in regenerative farming. Her methods build carbon into the soil, lower inputs, improve stock health, and are better for us and the environment.

Our motto is ‘optimising not maximising production’ and despite some pretty tough challenges and hard work, we are really happy with the decision we took and the outcomes. It is a matter of doing the homework, studying the options and figuring what is best for us and our farm.

Now we are researching a different problem. We face being taxed for our ruminant methane emissions. Hamish and I have studied the issue very thoroughly and the more we dug into it, the more deeply disturbed we became.

Finding out simple, straightforward answers to questions like how much warming our farm is causing, or how much methane all farms in New Zealand are emitting, proved difficult, even impossible. A farming friend has had his farm assessed on three separate occasions for the amount of methane (so-called CO2 equivalents) emitted and got three very different results. Are we going to be taxed for something that we have virtually no reliable data on?

Professor Dave Frame who advises the government and farming industries, and has been an IPCC participant, admits that New Zealand’s total emissions from all sheep, beef, dairy and deer ruminant methane over the last 100 years have caused some nonsensical fraction like one, one-thousandth of a degree centigrade change. In other words, an immeasurable, utterly insignificant amount per year.

It seems to tally with what a Dr William van Wijngaarden told Irish farmers recently stating that all the world’s ruminant methane over the next century would only cause 0.17th of a thousandth of a degree C change. Remember New Zealand only has 1% of the world’s ruminants. For this we are proposing slashing our sheep and beef industry by 20% - even more if the carbon price goes higher as demanded by green groups. Few people know our ruminant emissions in New Zealand are falling and have done since 2005.

You might be thinking that everyone has to play their part – the sacrifice needs to fall on every sector in the battle against global warming. If that is the case, we should compare ‘apples with apples.’ Our ruminant methane and your car emissions are both greenhouse gases – but they differ significantly. Our emissions can only occur by our using lots of CO2 – greenhouse gas - to create them.

Compared to you, we have a ‘net' position. Here is what our research showed.
According to a paper published called Phase 3 Multivariate analysis of Greenhouse Gas emissions from sheep and beef farms – April 2020 it takes up to 7 tonnes of CO2 to grow a hectare of grass on our farm. It’s called photosynthesis (if you can’t remember your college science.) Plants use CO2, sunlight, water and mineral salts.

We turn those 7 tonnes of CO2 per hectare into enough feed for 10 ewes. Those 10 ewes each emit about 20 – 22 grams of methane a day which means they produce in total 80 kgs of methane per year. It is accepted that methane is a more potent greenhouse gas than CO2 – generally regarded as 28 times stronger. If we multiply our ewe’s 80 kgs of methane by 28 we get 2,250 kgs of CO2 equivalent.

We are, therefore, using over three times more CO2 than we emit. A car owner cannot say that. Or a coal fired boiler. Or a private jet going to a climate conference. Farmers are not quite the villains we are made out to be.

Have we miscalculated? No, but we do lose some CO2 from our pasture as it respires and then dies back. We do sequester some deep into the soil, so that’s a plus. Some carbon goes out from the farm in meat and wool. Reality is we are being dealt a rotten hand by both the people who are supposed to represent us and our scientists, who are ostensibly seeking our best interests. Too many are caught up in baseless hype and chasing funding for long term projects. It is deeply disturbing and made Hamish and I sick to the pit of our stomach as we completed our research.

Now we have found the earth’s outgoing re-radiated energy can only interact with each greenhouse gas in certain, defined bands/frequencies. Methane can only operate in two narrow, weak bands where water vapour swamps it. Over New Zealand each one of our methane molecules competes with up to 8,000 water vapour molecules. We are not scientists but those who are qualified tell us to stop fretting about methane. In real life - not models - dominating water vapour renders methane ineffective.

We are told that the big overseas supermarkets are making demands of our exporters that require us to take action on methane. We know supermarkets. We tried marketing our own regen produce directly to them. They are super-bullies and will use any excuse to beat down the price. New Zealand has the lowest carbon footprint of any food producer in the world. Any alternative country’s food they buy would be defrauding their customers.

We need a government that stands up for us as food producers. We feed 40 million people. Article 2 (b) of the Paris Agreement that we signed said, clearly, that no government should take steps that “threaten food production”. Why do we rush to meet some international obligations and ignore others?

We are unique in that we use more greenhouse gas than we emit and we urgently need a government to go into to bat for us in international forums.

Amy and Hamish Bielski
Clinton

Shout out to our newest followers! Excited to have you onboard! Sarah Ongley, Sarah Morris, Zhaine Northcott
08/11/2023

Shout out to our newest followers! Excited to have you onboard!

Sarah Ongley, Sarah Morris, Zhaine Northcott

We are opening our property in Hurford for the Sustainable Backyards Tour 2023 …all are welcome. We are open from 9-3 bo...
25/10/2023

We are opening our property in Hurford for the Sustainable Backyards Tour 2023 …all are welcome. We are open from 9-3 both weekends of the Garden Festival. Come and see a work in progress…from bare farmland into a permaculture food producing 1.4 Ha haven…

Last night our stand was vandalized and the cash box ripped off with its contents...We have decided not to stock it or h...
21/10/2022

Last night our stand was vandalized and the cash box ripped off with its contents...
We have decided not to stock it or have cash on it in the immediate future as the chances of a reoccurrence are very high.
If you would like Eggs or other produce we will be selling as our land and garden become more productive then it may be best to PM us .
We will be posting pictures and info to this page....

Our Eggy TaleOur eggs are mixed size - as they come from all the hens. Our chickens are a mixture of free ranging ( olde...
31/08/2022

Our Eggy Tale

Our eggs are mixed size - as they come from all the hens.
Our chickens are a mixture of free ranging ( older chooks who are safer from hawks , running with roosters for protection) pen kept ( smaller chickens ) , where they are fed all our weeds and vegetable scraps and wander out daily, depending on the weather. All our fowl are fed supplementary grain which is NZ grown and non GMO..
We have a mix of breeds , but the leghorn chooks are prolific layers , where our wyandotte chooks are heavier birds for meat and egg production.
Our older girls lay the biggest eggs and have the run of the top paddocks and keep down any pest problems which helps to look after our sheep and fruit trees.
Our eggs are unwashed , because they keep better that way - during prolific months we store our eggs in lime water - this gives us eggs all year - in order to have glass eggs ( limed eggs ) we need unwashed specimens - we leave them unwashed in case you wish to preserve eggs as well.
We reuse egg containers as it’s better for the planet , and us - if we use your egg containers we are able to avoid increasing the price of our eggs - and we love to reuse where possible . If you have empty egg boxes please drop off your empties in the white box below the produce tray.

Thanks for buying our eggs, it helps to defray our costs.

The best time to pick up is after 10 each morning....

Clair and Alan

We are pleased to join this new community and I must say that it appears we have a pretty interesting and nice group of ...
09/07/2022

We are pleased to join this new community and I must say that it appears we have a pretty interesting and nice group of folk around us on Hurford Road.It is good to be part of that and we hope in time to meet more of you.

We have a permaculture property called Cair Vie, which is Manx for ‘Fair Winds’ and are trying to become as self sufficient as possible, at times we will produce more food than we can handle, like we did on our last property on South Road past Okato.

We have a produce stand up on Hurford Road (just in thr lay-by past 380),
At present we are starting to get too many eggs, so we will be putting fresh mixed grade cage free eggs up on the stand in recycled 1/2 dozen egg boxes for $3.

Please bring up any old boxes you have and put them in the crate underneath so we can recycle them too.

Thanks

Alan & Clair Ferguson

Our new location on Hurford Road has great eggs for sale ... $2 for 5 eggs...
04/09/2021

Our new location on Hurford Road has great eggs for sale ... $2 for 5 eggs...

Address

390 Hurford Road
Omata
4381

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