He runs a sheep property...
INTERVIEW
Reporter Stevie-RayWatch it here live:
ONE on ONE with a FARMER – Stevie-Ray Rugg
ONE on ONE with a
FARMER – Stevie-Ray Rugg
What made you want to become part of
the agricultural industry in Australia and what was your biggest motivation?
The greatest motivation was getting
away from the city, as I said before my uncle was a country cop and every time
I went there- I just love the country. I love the people; I liked the fact that
you could till the soil and get some production out of it and to look after
animals, as opposed to in Sydney all I was doing was just building things and it’s
not even mine at the end of the day- I sell it to someone, I move away. So that
was the main motivation.
What is your favourite part of being
of being part of the agricultural industry in Australia and why?
I’ve gotta say, as hard as I might
want to be, It’s got to be lambs’ meet morning- it’s the greatest thrill; I’ve
got four children of my own, but there’s something special about lambs being
born.
What is your favourite type of wool
or breed of sheep and why?
Okay, I get from Merino on my
property, the property I set up for Merino; so the fences have gotta be a five
strand fence with the barb on top and that keeps Merinos in. If you go for
other types of sheep- like Warpers for example that come from South Africa and
don’t really produce any wool- they’re mainly meat sheep- they get underneath
those fences so to change from one type of sheep to another, there’s a lot of
money involved. Merinos also got the softest wool and Australia is renowned for
our good Merino wool.
What do you find most challenging about
working in the wool industry and why?
Dealing with drought and prices that
rise and fall and basically the biggest challenge- is the weather. The weather
can be helpful.
Earlier you spoke about why hot tar
has been replaced when a sheep gets cut.
What other sort of technological advances have you seen in the Industry
in your farming time or the last 60 years?
Okay, cutting a sheep is inevitable –
it’s always going to happen- out of a mob of maybe one hundred sheep, you’d
probably get two that need to be stitched. The CSIRO- another government- has
laboratories, trying different things. One of them is a protein injection,
where you actually inject the needle into the sheep and it sheds the wool all
by its self. The problem is that you’ve then gotta go into the paddock and pick
it all up. Now there’s another way of doing it, where you actually put a coat
on the sheep, at crutching time, and the coat-or the vest- holds the wool in.
Again the cost there is the cost of the vest and the cost of the labour to put
it on and the cost of the labour to put it off. So generally everybody’s
staying with shearing.
Have these advances enabled you to
produce more reliable wool quantities and or access healthier foods for your
sheep?
Not on our property because I don’t
apply any of that technology.
There is a lot of talk these days
about the impact of climate change challenges on our farmers and their
practices. What sort of effects have you
noted?
Look, I
think that the main thing in the last probably twenty to thirty years is the
farmers have accepted the fact that droughts do come, and droughts do go and
floods come, and floods go and so what they’re doing now, is they’re being a
little bit more counter-productive by getting better storage facilities on
their dams so that they don’t lose the water out of their dams and we’re
putting in crops that are more drought resistant than ever before. That’s about
the best way that a famer can worry about climate change.
What sort of things are farmers doing
to ensure that they have healthy landscapes and clean waterways?
Okay that’s another thing that in
years gone by, farmers would’ve, if they saw a tree they’d knock it down
because where a tree goes no grass grows. We’ve learnt that that’s not the way
to go. We’ve learnt that if you run, if the prevailing winds come from the
west, you run trees on the north-to-south corridors. As the wind hits those
trees, it blows down and there is a better chance of rain on the eastern side
of those. So that’s one thing that you do, apart from that there’s also
different types of tilling, instead of doing very deep tilling of the soil, we
now do short tilling of the soil, low tilling or no tilling at all. You leave
the stubble of the previous crop there and you just plant or sow another crop
directly into the tilling that’s already there.
In what ways do you work at reducing
your carbon footprint?
We probably don’t have much of a
carbon footprint, we don’t have electricity on our property- we’ve got solar
panels and that’s the only power we have. So we get a lot of our power from the
sun. I use a generator for shearing, that’s the only time.
Why do you think biosecurity in the
farming industry is so important and what are these measures?
Okay biosecurity on a farm protects
the land itself, the animals, the people that live on that farm-that work on
that farm- and the people that eat the meat that comes from the sheep. So you
have to be careful of what comes onto your property, by way of feed-so it
doesn’t introduce species of weeds etc. that can kill sheep, you control your
poisons and try to use poisons, or rather use chemicals that aren’t poison and
so we’ve evolved in that manner as well.
What government bodies do you work
with to ensure biosecurity threats are kept to a minimum?
Every farmer
in NSW pays a fee to an organisation called Rural Land Services they come out
to make sure you don’t have an noxious weeds on your property, advise you on
control of pigs and any veterinary problems with your sheep they will also give
you advice, we rely very heavily on them because we are paying them money and I
want something in return.
Thank you so much for taking time
today to speak with us so we can understand our topic better.
Thank you so much for taking time today to speak with us so we can understand our topic better.
Heres some other little snaps of his presentation
General Student
Questions – 8 Blue English
Where is
your farm located and how long have you had it for?
What role do
you play on your farm?
Do you name
your sheep?
Do you
yourself shear sheep and if so how many have you shorn?
What is the
fastest time you have seen in shearing a sheep or for you personally?
How heavy is
the biggest fleece you have had?
Is there a
limit of sheep you can run on your property?
What is the sheep to land ratio.?
Does a
shearer get paid per sheep, more or less depending on the size of the sheep, or
based on accuracy?
How often do
you have to monitor sheep?
How do wild
sheep survive?
What
percentage of sheep is killed for food?
When did
they stop using hot tar and why?
What
injuries has anyone sustained whilst shearing?
Do your
sheep live in areas of high or low rainfall?
Does this affect the quality of the wool?
Where in
Australia provides an environment for best wool production?
Why did you
stop running sheep on your property and will you restart?
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