• The best coffee is at Don Luciano's in Masterton.
• The best local crayfish and paua diving spot is down the road from you at Ngawi.
• The best local pub is the Pukemanu.
• When travelling with your children (and if they get car sick), avoid the Pahiatua
Track, the Rimutakas and the Saddle Road if at all possible.
And since you are locals now, we may as well also let you in on some of our best-kept farming secrets:
• Pasture-based New Zealand dairy production is the most carbon efficient dairy farming system in the world. In fact, you can ship a glass of New Zealand milk to the next most efficient country (Ireland) and drink it there and it still has a lower carbon footprint than an equivalent Irish glass of milk.
• In addition, pasture-based New Zealand beef production is top dog in the global carbon efficiency stakes.
• You might have already heard that our agriculture produces around half of the country's carbon emissions, and while that sounds like a lot, the New Zealand agriculture sector produces enough food for around 50 million people or 10 times our population. The question then becomes how carbon efficient New Zealand agriculture is – and that takes us back to points 1 and 2.
• We also know to take the sustainability claims of alternative food manufacturers such as Impossible Foods (meat) and Perfect Day (dairy) with a large grain of salt. For example, New Zealand dairy has a much lower carbon footprint than Perfect Day milk on a like for like nutrition basis.
• As you rightly pointed out on Sunday, farming is in our DNA and you also noted that New Zealand farmers have that good old number 8 wire mentality. But there's another secret that you may not know about Kiwi farmers. That is, they've had to farm effectively subsidy-free since the 1980s. In this context, our farmers have had to get smart and quickly, finding efficiencies that other (subsidised) farmers globally don't even know exist.
For these reasons, local Kiwi farmers think there is a place in the future for pasture-based New Zealand meat and dairy. And with global food demand set to surge around 70 per cent by 2050, we think the world needs all the food it can get!
How about we discuss how New Zealand meat and dairy can complement alternative protein production over a beer at the Pukemanu? We'll get the first round.
Cheers
Nathan "Pollyanna" Penny
- Nathan Penny is the rural economist at ASB.