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2004
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2003
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2002
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2002
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2001
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2001
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2000
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Contacts
Latest
Award News
Privacy
Statement
For
further information contact:
Edwina
Clowes,
RIRDC
Rural
Women's
Award
National
Coordinator.
Mobile:
0417
727
544
clowesedwina@bigpond.com
©
2011
RIRDC

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New South
Wales - Lorroi Pagett
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2004 New South Wales
Runner-Up - Lorroi Pagett
Promoting
Dorpers as the Ultimate Meat Sheep Breed.
Lorroi
is a veterinarian and embryo transfer specialist by trade and one of
the
country’s most successful Dorper breeders.
Her
vision is to see Australian agricultural industries embrace the Dorper
breed as a profitable and sustainable meat sheep alternative.
With
her proposed study tour to South Africa to attend Dorper courses and
qualify
to become a Dorper judge, temporarily on hold due to personal
circumstances,
Lorroi has focused her attention on promoting the breed and educating
agriculture
on its benefits.
She
has in the past 12 months attended a number of agricultural field days
and shows, including the National Field Days at Orange where she
lectured
for three days and the Nyngan Ag Expo where her educational displays
won
the Country Energy Award for Most Educational Exhibit.
On
a personal level, the Award has been valuable in developing Lorroi’s
confidence,
leadership and public speaking skills, with the opportunity to
participate
and speak at a number of conferences including the Western Division
Young
Farmers Conference held in Broken Hill in September 2004, along with
numerous
media interviews.
Lorroi’s
last on farm production sale and National Dorper Sale saw averages
close
to triple that of the previous year. She and her husband have also in
the
past 18 months sold Dorpers into Brazil and America, with enquiry now
extending
to India, Pakistan and other Asian Countries. Her next project is to
set
up an Export Embryo Centre on farm.
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Queensland -
Dee Dunham
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2004 Queensland
Runner-Up - Dee Dunham
The Farmstead
Experience
Dee
Dunham
is Principal of Coolabine Goat Cheese Farmstead, one of only two
farmstead’s producing goat milk cheese in Queensland.
Dee
has taken out a number of prestigious awards, in recognition of the
quality
of her cheese, including the Maker of the Best Cheese at the 2003
Sydney
Royal Easter Show. In addition she has been awarded grand Champion
Nubian
Goat Breeder at the Brisbane Royal Show for five consecutive years and
Grand Champion Cheese at the 2002 Brisbane Royal Show.
She
is passionate about her goats and her cheese and in instilling in the
general
community an appreciation of rural and regional produce and the people
its supports.
Dee
has
put her Bursary towards the upgrade of cheese making equipment,
including
the pasteuriser and towards the promotion of the “Farmstead Experience’
workshop.
The
“Farmstead Experience’ workshop is a one day workshop open to the
general
community and designed to impart skills and knowledge in the art of
cheese
making and an awareness of the importance of Australian rural
industries
and rural people.
The
equipment upgrade has increased cheese production by up to 50 percent,
while the workshops held the first and third Sunday of every month
during
production, has attracted hundreds of people.
Coolabine
Goat
Cheese Farmstead is part of the slow food movement and Dee’s biggest
achievement for the year was to host the ‘Slow Food Spring Fair’ a
celebration
of rural lifestyle and slow cooked seasonal and regional produce. The
inaugural
event was a resounding success, attracting well over 1000 people, many
from the city out for the day to experience the pleasures of rural
Queensland.
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South
Australia - Laura Fell
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2004 South Australian
Runner-Up - Laura Fell
A Study into the
Poultry Industries in the United Arab Emirates
Laura
Fell
is a contract chicken meat producer and has been actively involved
in the South Australian chicken meat industry for close to fifteen
years.
Laura,
has in recent years, and as a result of two trade delegations, become
involved
in furthering trade relations between Australia and Iraq, and in
fostering
new opportunities for Australian agricultural research and extension
services
and expertise.
Laura’s
plans
to put the Bursary towards further travel into Iraq had to be abandoned
due to the rapidly deteriorating security situation in that country.
Instead
she put the Bursary towards a study tour of the poultry industries of
the
United Arab Emirates, to learn from their table egg and chicken meat
(broiler)
industries, and their management of production, animal welfare,
biosecurity
and climate conditions, in an effort to encourage the greater adoption
of Australian technologies and expertise.
She
visited two of the country’s major poultry companies, the Al Jazira
Poultry
farm and the Emirates Modern Poultry farm, where she met with senior
management
personnel and was briefed extensively on their operations.
She
subsequently visited the UAE on two further occasions in 2004, studying
in more detail a number of table egg laying facilities, breeder and
broiler
farmers, hatcheries and egg grading facilities and processing and
packing
plants.
Laura
believes
she has gained unique insights into the UAE industries and how
business is conducted in the region, along with access to high level
contacts.
Insights and contacts that she believes are already facilitating
improved
relations between the two countries and leading to the update of
Australian
technology and expertise.
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Northern
Territory - Megan Connolly
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2004 Northern
Territory Runner-Up - Megan Connolly (Hoskins)
Investigating
How
to Encourage a Shift Towards Sustainable Agricultural Practices-A Quest
for Rural Community Change.Megan
Hoskins currently works as an Entomology Research and Extension Officer
with the Northern Territory government based at Katherine.
Megan
is committed to biological farming, often described as fusion farming
or
the fusing of the best farming practices and technologies used in
organic,
biodynamic and conventional farming systems.
She
has no doubt that sustainable farming practices need to be embraced by
primary producers if the future sustainability of rural industries is
to
be assured. However to encourage the shift from proven conventional
methods
to unproven alternatives, she believes requires producers to witness
the
results of biological farming practices for themselves.
Megan’s
focus
has been on increasing her knowledge and understanding of the
principles
behind successful biological farming and becoming familiar with its
tools
and techniques, before sharing her knowledge and expertise with
producers.
She
relevant workshops:- The
Nutri Tech Solutions four part seminar series in sustainable
agriculture
was held in Adelaide in July 2004. The course was delivered in four
parts,
mineral management and microbe management, plant management and pest
management.
The take home message for Megan was that treating the symptoms does not
necessarily mean you are treating the cause and the cause is often a
nutrient
imbalance rather than a pesticide deficiency.
The
second course was the Soil Food Web Interaction and Benefits to Plant
Production,
a three week course held at the Southern Cross University at Lismore.
The
course provided detailed theoretical instruction and practical skills
in
soil biology, soil chemistry and molecular biology.
Megan
believes the courses have taught her a great deal about soil and plant
health and that the two can combine to assist in the growing of
healthier and more nutritionally balanced crops.
Since
returning
to her workplace, Megan has written an article for the local
government newsletter- the Katherine Rural Review on biological farming
and has had considerable interaction with fellow workers, industry
support
staff and primary producers, and continues to help producers monitor
pest
pressure in their crops.
Two
notable success stories include a mango grower and a legume hay
producer,
who are both starting to reap the benefits of biological farming in
terms
of reduced pesticide dependence and healthier more profitable
crops.
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Western
Australia - Wendy Newman
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2004
Western Australian Runner-Up - Wendy Newman
Best Practice in Diversification and Value Adding.
Wendy
Newman, is amongst her numerous positions, currently Chair of the
Wheatbelt
Development Commission and Honorary Chair of the Heartlands Country
Branding
Group, a community driven group established to support producers
involved
in diversification and value adding.
Wendy
has long been concerned that the current emphasis in traditional broad
acre farming, on production efficiencies, as a result of weather
dependence
and world trade, is putting enormous pressure on farmers, and forcing
them
to get big or get out.
The
ramifications she believes include, farm buyouts and a subsequent
reduction
in the number of farming families, economic imperatives overriding
environmental
and social ones, strong dependence on one industry translating to
increased
vulnerability to adverse weather and trade conditions and a culture of
exporting rather than value adding leading to reduced industry
development
and job creation opportunities.
Wendy
believes that industries and individuals developing alternate
approaches
to agriculture that address the issues of community and environmental
sustainability,
as well as diversification of their economic base, need profiling and
supporting.
Wendy
used the Bursary to examine world’s best practice in supporting
diversified
farming practices, regional branding and warehousing and distribution
models
in a rural context, along with the role rural women play in these
activities.
Her
project involved travel to regional areas, including Handorf and the
Fleurieu
Peninsula in South Australia, and Wangaratta in Victoria, to view first
hand successful regional branding and marketing processes along with
attending
the 2004 Australian Women in Agriculture National Conference. She
visited
six successful rural enterprises in total, including the Alexandria
Cheese
Company, Trout Farm, and Alpaca farm, Milawa Mustards, Bakery and Olive
Shop.
Wendy
identified as the key critical success factors to all these businesses
involved in diversification and value adding as: passion, research and
planning, common sense pragmatic approach to business, relationships,
stringent
supply chain and quality assurance control and strong market
focus.
While
the study tour did not resolve in any major way the issues confronting
rural communities, as identified above, Wendy found the tour invaluable
in expanding her networks and her exposure to other regional
enterprises
and branding initiatives.
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Tasmania -
Sandra Phythian
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2004
Tasmanian Runner-Up - Sandra Phythian
Developing Leadership
and Providing Facilitation and Mentoring for the Seafood Industry.
Sandra
as
Principal of Fisheries Business Consulting Australasia, works as a
business
consultant to the seafood industry and has been intrinsically involved
in the industry, both nationally and in Tasmania for more than a
decade.
Sandra’s
vision
is for a seafood industry that is ecologically and economically
sustainable, that promotes healthy quality products and where its
operators
take more responsibility and deal more proactively with issues critical
to the industry and its future viability.
She
used
the Bursary to undertaken higher training into coaching, communication
and diversity, people development and conflict and leadership
facilitation,
teams and training, to better equip herself as a consultant,
facilitator
and mentor to others in her industry.
Sandra
has
already used her newly acquired skills to positive effect. She recently
voluntarily designed and ran a leadership development program for the
Tasmanian
seafood industry. She is also in the development stages of a true
leadership
program for persons involved in primary industries in Tasmania and is
also
planning workshops in personal and business skills for women in primary
industries across Australia.
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Victoria -
Beverley Fisher
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2004 Victorian Runner-Up - Beverley
Fisher
Riverview Juices
Unlimited
Beverley
Fisher
is a third generation citrus grower from outside Cobram in northern
Victoria and the brains behind “Riverview Juices.”
She
instigated “Riverview Juices” in an effort to value add domestic citrus
into fresh juices and gain a competitive advantage over cheap Brazilian
imported juice.
The
company is already successfully selling juice into the local region and
at Farmers markets, and is also selling oranges into local
supermarkets.
Her vision is to grow the company ‘Riverview Juices Unlimited’ into a
new
range of value adding opportunities, including essential oils and
alcoholic
drinks, marmalades and dried fruits and to expand the number of growers
supporting the venture.
Beverley
used
the Bursary to attend and speak at a number of conferences and to
promote her products at a number of expos.
She
regards the invitation to speak at the Australian Citrus Growers Annual
Conferences in Mildura, as a major milestone in her career, as
recognition
of her achievements and commitment by her peers in her industry.
She
has
also gained valuable knowledge, skills and experience, in exhibiting
and in business management, as a result of attending the Successful
Exhibiting
at Expos Workshop at Bendigo and as a direct result pf that workshop
was
offered the opportunity to participate in the Melbourne Fine Food Show,
where she was able to promote her product to a much wider and more
sophisticated
Melbourne audience.
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