Take a scenic drive ten minutes west of Masterton in the Wairarapa and you'll be greeted with a rustic sign announcing your arrival at "Spring Valley farms". Nestled deep in the Kaituna valley, it's the home of Matt and Lynley Wyeth and their two sons.
Spring Valley Enterprises farms roughly ten thousand sheep and another four thousand stock units made up of three hundred Angus breeding cows. It sits on 16 hundred hectares of hard hill country with some decent quality flat lands. It consistently rates in the top 5 per cent of performers in the red meat industry, in part this is due to their early adoption of agri-tech.
The Wyeth's employ a range of technology each with a specific, measurable outcome that allows them to make small tweaks, accumulatively, saving them money.
These include using a drone to keep fuel costs down and minimise animal disturbance to utilising a GPS system to guide seasonal crop spraying which determines the exact amount of product they need to order leading to zero waste. Some tech benefits simply save time or energy, like their investment in a conveyor which allows multiple health treatments to be administered to an animal in one stop, without the need to physically restrain them, a process that used to be exhausting and time consuming for staff.
"We want our staff to go home after work and kick the ball with their kids, if you go back to the old system where they had to bend their back most of the day drenching and vaccinating stock, it's a lot harder on them. It's investing in a bit of staff retention and kit to make life easier on the farm," Wyeth said.