"The last year has been an experience we could have done without."
For North Otago farmers Kerry and Rosie Dwyer, the discovery of Mycoplasma bovis on their Maheno property led to a harrowing ordeal.
For more than a decade, the couple ran a successful calf-rearing business, buying 4-day-old calves, rearing them to over 100kg and then selling them to other farmers. That came crashing down last winter.
The Ministry for Primary Industries arrived on their property on July 28. By September 14, all their calves were dead.
When they received the positive test, the Dwyers voluntarily sent 400 animals to slaughter, Mr Dwyer loading them on to the truck himself. MPI did not want them killed, but the couple felt they had no other choice.