Case Study

Green Park Sheep Paul and Dianne White Kio Kio, Waikato

Scope

Get involved with people you can rely on. The build, from Qubik, through to Waikato Milking Systems, all went to plan even with the disruptions of Covid-19.

Long-time Waikato dairy farmers Paul and Dianne White were looking for an opportunity for their two sons, Brad and Kieran, to enter the farming industry.

Paul and Dianne already had their youngest son, Andrew, contract milking on the home property. They wanted to diversify from the dairy and dry stock operation as part of their family succession plan. 

The family already had a 44 aside Waikato Milking Systems plant built by dealer, Qubik, on their own dairy farm in Te Awamutu. 

“So we started to plan a Rapid Exit System for our new sheep property through Qubik again, and that led on to Waikato Milking Systems getting involved.”

Waikato Milking Systems Small Ruminants Specialist Andy Geissmann was able to lead the project to convert an existing 18 aside Herringbone cow parlour, to a 40 aside Agili Rapid Exit Sheep Milking System, the first of its kind for the company.

That involved keeping the existing building but installing new plant equipment, technology and the new milking system.

“There was a lot of learning involved as you can imagine. We had to convert the property, to make it suitable for sheep, as well as converting the shed.

The new property, now called Green Park Sheep, is stocked with 850 sheep. The animals are getting used to using the new milking plant and Paul expects the efficiency levels to lift as time goes on. 

“There’s been a lot of learning about what works and what doesn’t. With Andy’s help, we’ve been able to shave an hour off milking and we’re getting about 500 through an hour.

“I think that’s about where it will sit at the moment, using three staff at milking. In the near future, I reckon we’ll be able to do better, and get it down to just two people milking.” 

The Milking Control Unit on the parlour automatically removes the clusters to help reduce labour time and increase efficiency. 

The User Switch at each cluster uses LED lights to signal the operator when milking has started or finished.

The sheep enter the system in a single file, managed into their bails using a self-indexing gate system.

As the lead animal turns to enter the first open bail, its body triggers the gate of the neighbouring bail to open, allowing the next animal to enter. 

The process continues until all of the stalls are occupied, making it an easy and fast way to load the animals into the milking system.

The big advantage of the plant is its Rapid Exit System which maximises throughput.

The gate uses a pneumatic system, compressed air, to lift and close quickly, quietly and safely around the animals.

The Rapid Exit Gate on the Green Park Sheep plant can be operated in two sections, which gives the operator the ability to release some of the animals, while keeping others in their bails.

Paul said the milking parlour has been set up to allow the farm to expand in the future.

“We bought the property, it’s about 81 hectares, it was milking 200 cows. I think we can go up to 1200 ewes so I think the property has got a good up-side and a great future.”

Paul had some advice to offer other people thinking of switching from dairy cows to dairy sheep.

“Do your planning well first because that will take away the stress later on. There is quite a lot of advice out there around dairy sheep, which surprised us.

“Get involved with people you can rely on. The build, from Qubik, through to Waikato Milking Systems, all went to plan even with the disruptions of Covid-19.”


Overview

Plant: AGILI Sheep Rapid Exit

Plant Size: 40 Aside

Herd Size: 850 Sheep

Key Technologies

  • Milking Control Unit

  • SmartCONTROL

  • User Switch

  • Rapid Gate Exit