For many people working in the dairy industry, today - June 1 - means one thing: moving.
Thousands of sharemilkers will have already begun the arduous task of loading their cows into stock trucks, packing up all their equipment and belongings and shifting the family to, hopefully, greener pastures.
While it's a fairly entrenched system in New Zealand, there are concerns around the disruption it can have on families, not to mention small rural communities. Then there are issues around continuity between contractors and the farms they're working on. These are all valid concerns but the one that has reared its head this year has nothing to do with farms or family - it has to do with semantics.
Not surprisingly the semantics are emanating from the less than hallowed halls of local government. From my experience working many years covering local news, local body politicians are a distinctly odd breed and, as I've said before, most local councillors are an annoying mix of ego, hubris and lunacy.
The Otago Regional Council recently issued a media release referring to 'Gypsy Day', the common term used to describe the aforementioned day when thousands of dairy farmers take up new season contracts on different farms. You can see from the definition above how the term came into the common vernacular; travelling, itinerant, trade, nomadic, etc.