Forward this email | View in web browser
Loddon Mallee Ag News
 
Thursday, 10 December 2020
In this edition:
Coronavirus (COVID-19) update
Together we can keep our town covidsafe

Update: COVIDSafe Summer restrictions

COVIDSafe Summer restrictions came into effect at 11.59pm on Sunday 6 December 2020 and are now in place across Victoria until at least the end of January 2021. See the Premier’s statement or visit coronavirus.vic.gov.au for more details.

Victorian Border Crossing Permit

A permit system remains in place for anyone wishing to enter Victoria from South Australia. For more information and to apply for a Victorian Border Crossing Permit visit coronavirus.vic.gov.au.

COVIDSafe Plans are required for all Victorian businesses

It is mandatory for every Victorian business to have a COVIDSafe Plan.

To ensure compliance, random spot checks are underway.

Your COVIDSafe Plan must set out:

  • your actions to help prevent the introduction of coronavirus (COVID-19) in your workplace
  • the level of face covering or personal protective equipment (PPE) required for your workforce
  • how you will prepare for, and respond to, a suspected or confirmed case of coronavirus (COVID-19) in your workplace
  • this plan must demonstrate how you will meet all the requirements set out by the Victorian Government.

Businesses must review and update their COVIDSafe Plans routinely, especially when restrictions or public health advice changes. Organisations with multiple worksites must complete a COVIDSafe Plan for each worksite.

You can stay up to date with restrictions and public health advice at coronavirus.vic.gov.au

Latest news
Having a bushfire plan for your horses is essential
horses in burnt paddock

All farm and household fire planning needs to include your pets and larger animals, to ensure both people and animals are as safe as possible during an emergency.

Agriculture Victoria Veterinary Officer Lee Manning said having a clear fire plan will help horse owners to establish their priorities and give them time to practice their plan, especially if it includes floating horses to a safer location before high risk days.

“Owners should prepare a ‘safer’ area for horses – this area should be as large as possible with minimum pasture and vegetation length and secure boundary fencing. Ideally include a dam or secure water source not reliant on electric pumps,” Dr Manning said.

“Internal gates can be opened for more space but horses need to be taught they can move through freely so they can escape even when highly stressed.”

“On high fire danger days move horses to your ‘safer’ area and take all gear off them, so they are free to move if you aren’t home during an emergency. Rugs get tangled, halters get hot and burn and fly veils may melt so being naked gives your horse the best chance of survival.”

If you plan to leave early with your horses be aware that they take extra time. Ideally leave in the morning before a fire event is unfolding. Arrange now where you could go to – do not assume the Pony Club or Showgrounds will be open or safe.

“It is not feasible to evacuate horses with little notice, so have contingency plans that all members of the house know and have practiced.”

Horses ‘flight’ instinct will be to run away from the danger of fire, and if cornered their ‘fight’ instinct will have them gallop through flames if necessary.

“Unfortunately, this ‘fight’ instinct will also have them gallop through you if you try to be with them, so please leave them free to run and survive alone.”

After a fire check all horses for burns, smoke inhalation, eye irritation and leg injuries. First aid for equine burns is very similar to people – hose them with clean, cool water for at least ten minutes and call a veterinarian immediately for advice.

Please consult your local CFA for local fire behaviour and weather patterns and develop your household fire plan and trigger points for actioning it with your animals included.

Further information can be found at horses and livestock in emergencies and assessing horses after bushfires.

Improving livestock biosecurity in Victoria

Victoria’s livestock industries will be supported with grants from the Victorian Government to further strengthen the state’s biosecurity and to prevent and manage pests and diseases.

Minister for Agriculture Jaclyn Symes recently announced 25 projects worth $9.5 million have been successful under the 2020 Livestock Biosecurity Funds Grant Program.

The grants fund projects that provide innovative solutions, use emerging technologies and tackle livestock biosecurity issues, needs or gaps for the industries.

The grants are administered from the four livestock compensation funds – cattle, sheep and goat, swine and honeybee industries.

The grants include funding for the Victorian Farmers Federation to conduct a producer-led biosecurity extension program funded by both the cattle and sheep and goat compensation funds, for the Livestock Saleyards Association of Victoria to complete the ‘Managing Transit Stock in Saleyards’ project and for HiveKeepers to complete the ‘Smart Sentinel Beehives Pilot Program’.

Government projects funded include the continuation of the National Livestock Identification System for both sheep and cattle, Significant Disease Investigation programs, animal disease investigation courses and abattoir-based pig health surveillance and prevention of anthrax.

Other grant recipients include La Trobe University, CSIRO Health and Biosecurity, Agrinous, Victorian Apiarists’ Association and the Victorian Recreational Beekeepers Association, all delivering projects to support biosecurity in Victoria.

Changes to legislation last year through the Primary Industries Legislation Amendment Act 2019 has meant that more money is now available for programs administered from 2020.

For more information, visit agriculture.vic.gov.au/livestockbiosecurityfunds.

Watch the latest Very Fast Break
the very fast break - grey clouds over paddock

Welcome to the Very Fast Break seasonal climate update video clips. We are partnering with the GRDC to bring you these short summaries.

Click here to watch the latest video.

Check out our first podcast, My Raingauge is Busted, the history of "The Break", part of the Ag VicTalk pilot podcast series. Available here.

If you have comments, questions or feedback address them to Dale Grey at the.break@agriculture.vic.gov.au

The Very Fast Break is produced by Agriculture Victoria as a part of the GRDC (Southern Region) Using Seasonal Forecasts Partnership Project.

Harvest – make it a testing time for managing herbicide resistance

This harvest is an opportune time for southern region grain growers to collect weed seeds for herbicide resistance testing.

Determining the status of herbicide resistance provides growers with valuable information on the effectiveness of herbicides on target weeds, potentially preventing the wasteful use of ineffective herbicides and reducing the spread of herbicide resistance.

Grains Research and Development Corporation (GRDC) Crop Protection Manager – South, Ruth Peek, said results from testing will help inform growers’ integrated weed management strategies ahead of the 2021 cropping season and beyond.

“Herbicide resistance surveys conducted across the southern cropping region have shown that resistance is increasing,” Mrs Peek said.

“It is a costly problem for growers for whom management of weeds and herbicide resistance now requires a year-round, multi-tactic approach.”

Mrs Peek said at this time of the year, testing weed seeds for herbicide resistance enables growers to obtain a better understanding of the status of herbicide resistance within their paddocks – especially those paddocks where there is a lengthy history of herbicide use and herbicide survivors have been allowed to set seed.

Herbicide resistance researcher Peter Boutsalis, from the University of Adelaide and Plant Science Consulting, said collection of samples of weed seeds (for testing levels of resistance) can occur during and even after harvest or cutting crops for fodder. After harvest, weed seed heads are still present in paddocks.

Dr Boutsalis said contaminated grain or header screenings can also be sent for testing as commercial testing services can separate weed seeds from other material.

The method of sampling employed will depend on the resistance situation of each paddock.

“If resistance is widespread, seeds should be collected following a ‘W’ shaped area every 10 – 20 metres across the suspected paddock or problem area,” Dr Boutsalis said. “Alternatively, collect seeds from suspect areas.

“It is important that growers and advisers do not bias the samples by collecting seeds from a small number of plants – they should instead aim to collect a similar number of seeds from each plant.

“Basically, sample areas in the paddock of concern.”

If the seeds are not completely dry, they should be sent in paper envelopes to avoid rotting in plastic packaging.

If growers wish to have annual ryegrass seed tested, about one cup equivalent of clean ryegrass (about 50 seed heads) is required.

“Where there are lots of ryegrass individuals in the paddock, don’t collect from only a few, but try to collect one seed head per plant,” Dr Boutsalis advised.

“For species with larger seeds such as wild oats, brome, barley grass and wild radish, an ice-cream container full is sufficient – this is equivalent to an A4 sized envelope full of seeds.”

Dr Boutsalis said it is important to provide sufficient seed to represent the area of interest: “Sending more seed is better than not enough.”

If a paddock contains more than one suspect area, samples from each area should be tested separately because resistance can vary across a paddock.

In the past, testing three or four herbicides of differing modes of action was common, however, with a greater choice of pre-emergence herbicides, the average number of herbicides chosen for testing is now five to six.

A long-term GRDC program monitoring herbicide resistance in significant weed species has revealed increasing rates of resistance to a wide range of herbicides.

Dr Boutsalis and researchers from the University of Adelaide collected ryegrass seed from 325 randomly selected paddocks across parts of the southern growing region between October and December 2019. These were grown in pots and sprayed with herbicides at label rates in May and June 2020.

Dr Boutsalis said herbicide resistance had clearly increased over the program’s 2009, 2014 and 2019 surveys.

The increasing rates of resistance were not restricted to any one herbicide group or region, and as strains with a specific resistance evolved, they quickly established themselves in the local area.

Dr Boutsalis said identifying and keeping herbicide-resistant weeds at manageable levels is essential for the long-term viability of chemical actives such as glyphosate in Australian cropping systems.

“If the weeds grow through to flowering their pollen can disperse resistance genes over a wide area. Resistance genes are also spread in seeds via contaminated machinery, grain and livestock,” he said.

“Undetected resistance on one farm can lead to that strain getting established, which creates a problem for surrounding paddocks.

“Growers who are aware of their resistance problems know to focus on tactics such as harvest weed seed control and double-knock spraying. If they control every glyphosate survivor with alternative tactics over the next two seasons, they should be able to significantly reduce weed populations.”

Weed seeds collected at harvest time can be sent for testing over summer and reporting in early autumn. Weed seed resistance testing services are available via:

More information on herbicide resistance and weed management is available via the GRDC’s Integrated Weed Management Manual at https://grdc.com.au/IWMM and the GRDC-supported WeedSmart resource centre at http://www.weedsmart.org.au.

WeedSmart is the ‘single industry’ multi-channel platform for information on combating cropping weeds and herbicide resistance in Australia.

Avian influenza – changes to Control Area near Kerang
map - changes to control area near kerang

The avian influenza Restricted Area near Kerang has now been removed and the Control Area has been contracted to ensure a staged progression towards eradication of this outbreak. Bird owners should continue to follow good biosecurity practices and monitor for signs of disease.

Remember that permits are still required to move poultry, poultry products or equipment into, out of or within this Control Area.

Further details and more information on keeping your birds disease free can be found at www.agriculture.vic.gov.au/avianflu

Are you a podcast listener? Take our survey!
man working with headphones in

Here at Agriculture Victoria we are interested in getting feedback about your interests and preferences to help us improve our podcasts.

While we know they are a great medium, we are interested in how you listen to them and what you like about them. This will help us improve our approach in the future.

We are seeking your thoughts with this short survey. It won’t take any longer than five minutes and will help us in creating new podcasts.

Complete the survey here: https://bit.ly/39hlrrO

Victoria’s on-farm Internet of Things trial
Do you want to invest in digital technology for your farm?

Do you want to invest in digital technology for your farm?

A trial to test Internet of Things (IoT) technology on sheep, dairy, horticulture and cropping farms is underway in Victoria.

As part of the trial, grants of up to $25,000 are available to help farmers in Loddon Shire, Buloke Shire, Moira Shire and the City of Greater Shepparton invest in IoT technology and get down to the nitty-gritty of works and what doesn’t on their farms. Network connectivity will also be provided to farmers taking part in the trial.

For more information call Agriculture Victoria Industry Technology Coordinator:

  • Loddon Shire – Mark Sloan on 0463 833 668
  • Greater Shepparton and  Moira Shire – Andy Clark on 0436 804 656
  • Buloke Shire – Mark Gould on 0448 086 059

Or visit agriculture.vic.gov.au/digitalag

Feeding Cool Cows – become a Partner Farm
Feeding Cool Cows

Do your cows eat less in hot weather? Do hot weather events affect your milk production? Do you want to understand how to reduce the negative effects of hot weather?  If your answer is ‘yes’, then it’s not too late to become a Partner Farm in the Feeding Cool Cows project.

Feeding Cool Cows – a DairyFeedbase project – is working to provide strategies to help dairy farmers reduce the negative impacts of hot weather on milk production and farm profit.

The changing climate is one of the biggest challenges for the Australian dairy industry and the goal of the Feeding Cool Cows program is to support dairy farms to become more resilient and ensure summer feeding strategies are cost-effective.

The project aims to understand how the severity of hot weather affects milk responses to different feed components, and how cow genetics interact with nutrition – using information from farms located all over Australia.

To find out more about Feeding Cool Cows and becoming a Partner Farm go to https://dairyfeedbase.com.au/2020/10/29/fccpartnerfarms/

Applications for the summer program are closing soon. If you’re interested in joining Feeding Cool Cows for this summer or in 2021, contact Josie Garner at josie.garner@agriculture.vic.gov.au

Feeding Cool Cows is a DairyFeedbase project supported by Agriculture Victoria, Dairy Australia and the Gardiner Foundation.

Attention GMID irrigators

Irrigators who received a Farm Irrigation Survey in the mail are urged to complete and return it ASAP.

The data collected will inform an historical record of changes in the use of land and water across the GMID.

Plus...those who return the survey will go in the draw for some mouth-watering Christmas hampers!

What's on?

Details about Agriculture Victoria events can now be found in one spot on our website. Log on to agriculture.vic.gov.au/events to find out what's on.

invitation to women in dairy
Women in dairy – resilience planning session

Friday 11 December, 11 am -12 pm.

Register here.

This interactive session will be presented by Stephanie Schmidt, a Clinical Psychologist and farmer in the eastern agricultural area of South Australia.

Stephanie lives with her husband and three young sons on their sheep and cropping farm at Worlds End.

During this session, participants will learn a simple strategy to flexibly adapt and respond to challenging situations, while also considering what is most important to them.

Participants will learn tools to respond to difficult thoughts and feelings in a different and more helpful way.

This session will give you time out to settle 2020 and provide clarity moving into 2021.

This planning session will be followed with an online review session on 12 February 2021 at 12 pm.

Weed management after fire: supporting native species recovery
Weed management after fire webinar series

After bushfire, our ecosystems are at their most vulnerable to weed invasion.

Help us support indigenous flora and fauna by managing weeds in bushfire affected areas.

This webinar series focuses on sharing practical knowledge so everyone can contribute to bushfire recovery.

Register for these online webinars and learn how you can help indigenous species through weed management: https://tinyurl.com/WeedsAfterFire

Webinar: Wednesday 16 December  Weed identification and recording after fire

Learn about identification of environmental weeds, some of the latest technology and tools to assist with identification, and where to put records of what is spreading where.

Partners in Wellbeing Hotline
mental health support
 

Free, confidential wellbeing and mental health support is now available to business owners, their employees and family members as part of the Wellbeing and Mental Health Support program.

The Partners in Wellbeing hotline provides one-to-one support to improve wellbeing, as well as free access to business advisers and financial counsellors.

Call 1300 375 330 from 9 am to 10 pm weekdays.

Subscribe to Loddon Mallee Ag News

Enjoying the Loddon Mallee Ag News? Then why not forward to a friend or subscribe yourself.

It's easy – simply click this link.

Contacting Agriculture Victoria

Call 136 186 from anywhere in Australia for the cost of a local call (except for mobiles and public telephones).

If you are deaf, or have a hearing or speech impairment contact the National Relay Service on 133 677 or www.relayservice.gov.au

All contact points can be found at: agriculture.vic.gov.au/about-us/contact-us

Don't forget to check out Agriculture Victoria's social media sites for up-to-date information and news.

 

 

'Like' our Agriculture Victoria Facebook page.

 

Follow us on Twitter @VicGovAg

 

Subscribe to the Agriculture Victoria YouTube channel. 

 
 

Privacy | Email: deb.banks@ecodev.vic.gov.au

 
Unsubscribe
 
 

If you would like to subscribe, visit agriculture.vic.gov.au/about-us/media-centre

This newsletter is distributed by the Department of Jobs, Precincts and Regions.