Home
Entry
Form
Selection
Criteria & How to Enter
Award
Background
Sponsors
2010 Winners
2010 Runners-Up
2009
Winners
2009
Runners Up
2008
Winners & their Reports
2008
Runners-Up & their Reports
2007
Winners & their Reports
2007
Runners-up& their Reports
2006
Winners & their Reports
2006
Runners-up & their Reports
2005
Winners & their Reports
2005
Runners-up & their Reports
2004
Winners and their Reports
2004
Runners-up & their Reports
2003
Winners & their Reports
2003
Runners-up & their Reports
2002
Winners & their Reports
2002
Finalists & their Reports
2001
Winners & their Reports
2001
Finalists & their Reports
2000
Winners & their Reports
State
Contacts
Latest
Award News
Privacy
Statement
For
further information contact:
Edwina
Clowes,
RIRDC
Rural Women's Award National Coordinator.
Phone:
07 5445 7282
Mobile:
0417 727 544
clowesedwina@bigpond.com
©
2010 RIRDC
|
|
Victoria
- Marilyn
Lanyon
|
2004 Victorian Winner -
Marilyn Lanyon
Simply Tomatoes
Marilyn Lanyon is the principal
of ‘Simply Tomatoes’ a value adding horticultural enterprise, borne out
of adverse marketing conditions and consequent price collapse for processed
tomatoes.
Marilyn’s vision is for the
men and women of the processing tomato industry to work together to remain
viable and to seek out value adding opportunities, so that their future
is not solely dependant on one buyer or one major company.
Her project involved a second
overseas marketing trip to pursue potential market contacts visited whilst
abroad in 2001, as part of the Women in Horticulture SE Asia Market visit.
The focus of the second trip, with the assistance of her export advisor,
centred on how to conduct business overseas and secure orders for Simply
Tomatoes.
Marilyn conducted a number
of in store tastings and met with a numerous buyers in Denmark, the Netherlands,
Hong Kong and the USA, talking at length with them concerning their needs
and issues with and acceptance of product. Major issues facing the enterprise
currently include demand management, lean packaging and distribution, international
labeling and product acceptance. The discussions proved helpful in further
identifying the needs of the export market.
The trip has proven successful
with one order involving distribution into 14 countries throughout Europe
now secured, and negotiations for a second order into the USA in the pipeline.
Simply Tomatoes is now exporting into 19 overseas destinations in total.
In addition, media exposure,
guest speaking opportunities and market events have all helped to rapidly
increase the domestic market for Simply Tomatoes, with the enterprise now
boasting over 150 stockists across Australia.
Simply Tomatoes has also
been used as a case study for Austrade, Dynamic Small Business, a Globalisation
Positioning Symposium for Horticulture and will be showcased at the upcoming
National Farmers Market Conference.
Marilyn is now working on
an extension of her product range, but this time utilizing a by product,
the discarded vinegar and converting it into a vingarette.
Marilyn says over the past
12 months, she has grown enormously in confidence, through media and guest
speaking opportunities, with her knowledge and expertise also increasing
through attending a number of relevant workshops. She hopes that she will
be an encouragement and a conduit to other rural women seeking to establish
their own value adding businesses and turning their ideas into reality.
|
|
Tasmania - Diane Rae
|
2004 Tasmanian Winner - Diane Rae
Sheep Dairying in Europe
and New Zealand
Diane Rae is one of a handful
of sheep milk and cheese producers that make up the Australian industry.
She is responsible for establishing
Tasmania’s only organic sheep dairy and cheesery and her product has been
recognized by a number of Awards including the 2003 Tasmanian Fine Food
Award’s Minister for Primary Industries Award for Best Organic Product.
Diane’s vision is to lead
and encourage by example other rural women to recognize sheep dairying
as a viable agricultural enterprise and one with a huge potential, with
demand already outstripping domestic supply of cheese milk and cheese products
by a ratio of five to one.
The sheep dairying industry
in Australia is only 20 years old and still in its infancy and lacking
critical knowledge in genetics, pasture management, infrastructure expertise
(housing & equipment), milk processing and cheese production, needed
to more the industry forward.
Diane’s project involved
travel to Europe, the United Kingdom and to New Zealand, to visit with
sheep dairy farmers and processors, and learn from their expertise and
experience. She traveled to England and Ireland, Southern France, Italy,
Spain and Sardinia, visiting a wide range of sheep dairying farms and factories,
and seeking out information on dairy sheep management, milking machinery
& infrastructure, shed design, lamb rearing techniques, cheese manufacture
and selling and marketing options.
What she found were some
stark differences in the sheep dairying industries and operations between
the countries. Italy and Sardinia proved to have an extremely well established
and integrated industry with efficient farms, large sheds and state of
the art milking equipment and adequate infrastructure to allow for specialist
cheese making and farmer cooperatives. In contrast in France while she
found their cheese making to be far more innovative she also found conditions
in some regions to be quite rudimentary and subsistent. England also boasted
a well established and integrated sheep milking and cheese making industry
with over 40 registered producers, involved in the full range of activities
from milking only to milking and processing products, to milking, processing
and selling product on farm. In contrast Ireland proved a very basic industry
with only three producers and no cooperative cheese processing factory.
All European countries shed
their milking sheep for at least part of the year, for either protection
from the elements or as an intensive farming exercise, with a large variation
in housing facilities and feeding and watering infrastructure between countries.
European countries also employ
several breeds that are true dairy animals bred for their quantity of milk,
as compared to Australia’s one commercially available dairy breed, the
East Friesland and comprising of an extremely small gene pool.
Diane gained substantial
new knowledge in dairy sheep management as a result of the study tour,
particularly in the areas of sheep management in a fully housed situation
and extending to feed mix rations, ventilation and health management.
In terms of cheese making
techniques, the trip also provided her with new experiences in the finishing
off of cheeses, for enhancing flavour and for presentation, which she has
since incorporated into her own cheese making.
These new learning’s Diane
believes has given her a better understanding of the challenges the Australian
industry faces and a realization that they are similar to those faced by
other industries worldwide, learning’s that she is eager to share with
the rest of the Australian industry and with other rural women.
Diane however believes that
for the Australian industry to move forward will require a number of major
resolutions, including the establishment of a sheep cheese manufacture
teaching facility and the release of the Awassi breed to the Australian
industry as a second dairy sheep breed and as a cross against the current
East Friesland.
|
South Australia - Jeanette
Long |
2004 South Australian Winner - Jeanette
Long Women Embracing Agriculture
Together
Jeanette Long is a business
and training consultant delivering training across rural South Australia,
as well as partner in two family farming operations.
Her vision is to empower
women grain growers, to achieve change, by skills development through participation
in strategic learning groups and to grow their leadership skills in a safe,
family friendly environment within their region.
The pilot group called WEAT-Women
Embracing Agriculture Together, was established with the objective of providing
professional training for rural women in their regional areas at times
which suited their family and work commitments. Training was based on a
skills analysis and designed to fill specific gaps in knowledge as determined
on an individual and subsequently group basis. The group once formed would
provide a network for support and an opportunity for women to keep abreast
of changes within their industry.
Jeanette’s ambition on a
personal level was for professional training in leadership skills through
a formal mentoring process and accreditation as a deliverer of the Myer
Briggs Personality Type indicator.
A group of 15 women from
across the Yorke Peninsula in South Australia came together for seven workshops
over a six month period. Strategic areas of interest covered in the workshops
included business benchmarking, price risk management, succession and strategic
planning, leadership skills, human resource management and mentoring. During
the course of the workshops the group met with a number of industry representatives
including executives from Australia Grain Marketing, AWB Ltd, ABB Grain
Ltd, Ezigrain and NAB.
The pilot proved very successful
and the 15 women who participated have grown in confidence, strengthened
networks and developed new skills in grain marketing and a greater understanding
of supply chain issues and business financial benchmarking. The women have
each completed a skills audit and are now better placed to identify their
future individual training needs.
Jeanette’s confidence in her
own leadership skills has grown to the point where she has left paid employment
and has begun working in her own consultancy business. She has also gained
new skills in dealing with the media, in mentoring and in public speaking and
has subsequently spoken at a number of high profile functions and events.
In addition new career opportunities
have since opened up to her, including being appointed the Independent
Chair of the Inland Fisheries Management Committee for PIRSA and National
Project Manager for the Partners In Grain Project.
|
|
Northern Territory - Lee
Berryman
|
2004 Northern Territory Winner - Lee
Berryman Harvesting and Post
Harvest Treatment of Bamboo Shoots
Lee Berryman, with husband
Phil Vivian are the Northern Territory’s largest commercial bamboo growers
and suppliers of fresh bamboo shoots.
Bamboo is a new commercial
crop for the Northern Territory with a small, but growing number of producers.
The Territory environment and distance pose unique challenges for harvesting
and packaging, quality assurance and marketing, and with most research
to date focused on temperate climates there is little data currently available
of benefit for Territory growers to benchmark against.
Lee’s proposed activity involved
visiting a range of commercial bamboo farms to observe and document harvesting
techniques, post harvest treatment and packaging and transportation of
bamboo.
These new learning’s Lee
proposed to apply best practice on their own farm, documenting changes
made to existing practices and reasons, to then follow up the consignment
from farm to markets to observe changes to the quality of product offered
to consumers.
Farm visits to commercial
properties in Queensland and northern NSW were undertaken between January
and February 2005 but due to the extremely short length of the 2004/2005
season market visits did not eventuate, nor did other management activities
planned for that season, including application of best practice and monitoring
of a consignment of bamboo shoots.
The 2004/2005 season was
an extremely difficult season brought about by a late and dry NT wet season,
resulting in poor bamboo quantity and quality, most growing areas coming
on to market at the same time, resulting in an oversupply on the market
and an early drop in prices.
Major findings from the visits
to other commercial bamboo shoot producers can be summarized as:
• There is little easily
identifiable ‘best practice’ in harvesting techniques, post harvest treatment,
packaging or transportation, with wide variances resulting from individual
preferences and circumstances.
• Further comparisons of
overall returns from heavily thinned plants (the most common practice)
and plants with little or no thinning may indicate that current practice
is not the most economic option.
• There is little data to
demonstrate ‘real’ economic returns from bamboo shoot production, and it
may be that growers are accepting lifestyle alternatives over long term
economic viability.
• Value adding, alternate
uses and other options are being explored by most growers.
The major conclusion to come
out of Lee’s project is that while NT bamboo shoot production often has
an early season niche, growers need to carefully evaluate whether bamboo
products from the Territory can overcome the challenges of distance from
large markets and the transport costs involved, to enable them to compete
with other more suitable growing regions and to achieve longer term sustainable
returns.
As a direct result of the
visits, Lee and Phil are now actively exploring nursery and ornamental
bamboo production and supplies. They are also adapting management techniques
and reducing plant thinning and will more closely watch market pricing
of bamboo shoot to assess actual returns against required returns, given
the costs of harvest and transport.
For Lee the opportunity to
visit a wide range of growers and discuss issues related to bamboo shoot
production and handling has been an extremely valuable one, providing her with
information and contacts difficult to gain other than through face to face
contact and information and contacts that she will share across the Territory
industry.
|
|
New South Wales - Rebecca
Arnott
|
2004 New South Wales
Winner - Rebecca Arnott
Beef Branding in Australia
Rebecca Arnott is
currently National Brand Manager for the Australian Agricultural Company’s
branded beef products.
With beef consumption, until
recently, within Australia declining, the advent of branded beef complete
with a stringent set of standards, underpinned by Ausmeat and Meat Standards
Australia, has helped turn consumption around and has helped the major
pastoral companies and producer groups value add their product and retain
greater control of the value chain.
Rebecca’s vision is to be
part of a true beef industry supply chain alliance where all players are
working towards the common goal of increasing red meat consumption, through
consistent quality and quantity branded product.
Her project was to investigate
the branded beef market, in the retail and food service sectors, in the
United Kingdom, United States and Japan. Key areas of investigation included
supply chain management, product differentiation, packaging, labeling and
presentation, in supermarkets, butcher shops, hotels and restaurants.
The study tour Rebecca proposed
would provide her with a greater understanding of Australia’s biggest beef
export markets and the importance of branded beef within those markets,
with the expectation of identifying new opportunities for Australian branded
product, along with new contacts, knowledge and expertise.
Rebecca met with numerous
people involved in the red meat industries in Japan, the US and UK, including
retailers and wholesalers and food service industry executives, along with
customers and chefs and Meat and Livestock Australia overseas managers.
She also attended and supported customers at a major food trade show whilst
in Japan.
In Australia branded beef
product has proved very popular in the food service and restaurant sector
but has been slow to take off with consumers in the retail sector, including
the major supermarkets. However in the US, UK and Japan Rebecca found quite
the contrary situation, with branded beef occupying substantial shelf space
in retail outlets, but little evidence of branded product in the food service
sector.
She also found some innovative
marketing tools and points of difference employed overseas.
In the UK for example she
found some supermarkets promoting the farm and point of origin of beef
with a picture of the farm and comments by the producer or a recognized
chef, while in the US, recognized sporting heroes were used to brand and
differentiate product. She also found the packaging and presentation
of beef particularly in the US and Japan to be excellent, with the capacity
for domestic beef in Japan to be scanned back from supermarket to point
of origin to ascertain the background of the cattle.
While it’s too early to quantify
the impact of Rebecca’s study tour on the Australian industry, the most
immediate and direct implication has been the development and promotion
of a specialty steak section featuring branded beef in Coles supermarket,
in collaboration with MLA. Rebecca’s study tour was critical to providing
the necessary information on product differentiation, packaging and labeling,
point of sale material and value adding strategies to orchestrate this.
The Award has given Rebecca a much broader
understanding of Australia’s key trading partners and their branded beef product
and of the issues and opportunities facing the Australian industry as it
embraces branded product.
|
|
Queensland - Claudine Ward
|
2004 Queensland Winner -
Claudine Ward
Stories of Women
in the Gulf of Carpentaria Gill Net Fishery.
“Do you go out of the boats
too luv?” is a question all too familiar to Claudine Ward, an active master
fisherman in the Gulf of Carpentaria Gill Net Fishery, for the past thirty
years.
Claudine is a successful
commercial fisherman in her own right, playing an active role in the management
of the family’s three vessels and five entitlements and a driving force
within the industry, having been instrumental in developing both the Gulf
of Carpentaria’s Commercial Fishermen’s Code of Conduct and Environmental
Management Plan.
Claudine’s vision is to promote
the important role women play in the fishing industry both in the Gulf
and beyond and to have them recognized as partners and business operators
in their own right.
Her project was to produce
a publication on the history of women involved in the Gulf commercial fishing
industry, so that this unique story is told and available for future generations.
The project involved eliciting
stories directly from as many women fishers in the Gulf as practically
possible, to document the early history of commercial fishing in the region
and to compile a cross section of anecdotal history of women in the commercial
gillnet fishery. The result she proposed would be a quality publication
that would provide an insight into the women and their stories of how they
coped with conditions and seasons during the various stages of the fisheries
history.
Claudine sent out a questionnaire
to all the fishing entitlements currently fishing in the Gulf of Carpentaria
Gillnet Fishery and to those retired fisher women that could be contacted.
The response to the questionnaire
was astounding, and once contact had been made and based on these initial
responses Claudine was able to establish a timeline from the earliest days
of gulf fishing to the present time.
The publication, not surprisingly
against the title “Do You Go Out of the Boats Too Luv? has now gone to
print with a first print run of 1000 books.
Claudine believes the most
obvious impact has been on the women themselves involved in the publication,
in the self esteem it has returned them, seeing their lives and their stories
in print, and the potential to nurture and encourage younger women into
the industry. She says the book has also changed her perspective
on how she views women and their involvement and importance to the fishing
industry.
On a personal note the Award
has given Claudine the opportunity to travel to other areas of the Australian
fishing industry to address like minded groups on the subjects of women
in the fishing industry and environmental management within the industry.
Since the launch of the book, women involved in the prawn fishery have
approached her to gather together their stories with a view to producing
a similar publication.
As Claudine sees it, there
is little monetary gain achieved from her publication, but the loss of
history if these stories were not told would be priceless.
|
|
Western Australia
- Diane Morrison
|
2004 Western Australian Winner - Diane Morrison
Aquaculture Project:-Wahroonga
Station
Diana Morrison lives in one
of the remotest parts of Australia, in the Gascoyne region of Western Australia,
which is close to 1,000 kilometres north of Perth.
Diana is partner in a pastoral
operation Wahroonga Station, which produces fine merino wool, beef cattle
and rangeland meat goats.
But the Rangelands and the
pastoral industries susceptibility to drought and the economic implications
of drought on the region and the social fabric of the community, has driven
Diana to seek out viable and realistic alternate enterprises for the region.
The Gascoyne Artesian Basin
Rehabilitation Project, a joint initiative between the Federal and State
governments and pastoral leaseholders, to cap and control the once free
flowing bores of the region, has effectively revolutionized water,
land and stock management in the region and paved the way for alternate
new industries, including aquaculture and more specifically ornamental
fish production.
The global ornamental fish
industry is estimated to be worth as much as US$5 billion, yet the majority
of ornamental fish are currently imported into Australia, including fancy
gold fish from China and SE Asia and guppies from Sri Lanka and Singapore.
Diana’s project involved
two fact finding missions, one domestically to New South Wales and Queensland
and one overseas to Singapore, coupled with extensive trial work on farm,
to resolve some of the major issues facing the production of ornamental
fish in saline artesian water.
The study tour to Queensland
and NSW involved meetings with a number of industry leaders, wholesalers
and importers, proved fruitful in providing Diana with a greater insight
into the Australian industry and some valuable new contacts, while the
tour to Singapore to attend Aquarama 2005, put fish breeding on the world
stage, highlighting the latest research into the nutrition, breeding, animal
welfare and best practice management of numerous fish species.
Trial research work back
at Wahroonga Station has proved both revealing and promising. The major
research involved investigating the ability of egg laying ornamental goldfish
and other ornamental species to spawn successfully in low saline artesian
water. The concern being that saline water could cause a process of reverse
osmosis through the egg wall resulting in the death of the embryo.
The trial started with live
bearers or fish producing live young and proved these species able to breed
prolifically and in commercial numbers. The trial continued with egg laying
fancy goldfish and showed the species able to grow to sexual maturity,
with a hormone induced spawning moderately successful and resulting in
the small number of eggs retrieved showing no signs of impairment due to
water quality. The trial then moved on to further egg laying species including
the Australian and New Guinea rainbow fish with the species producing numbers
sufficient to become the basis of a commercial industry. The trial concluded
with the Catfish species which produced eggs that subsequently failed to
be fertilized and the Guppies species which resulted in sufficient production
for commercial potential.
In addition a small grass
trial was undertaken, using perennial grasses currently used as a stock
fodder crop in Queensland and Western Australia, to test for the effective
use of waste water from aqua tanks. The grasses grew prolifically and set
seed with no obvious signs of salt stress.
While it is too early to
confirm from trial results a viable new industry for the rangelands, the
research at Wahroonga Station as a result of the Award have conclusively
proven that some egg laying ornamental fish species capable of producing
in commercial numbers of viable larva in saline artesian water.
With the help of a grant
secured through the Gascoyne Murchison Strategy, Diana has since set up
commercial facilities including a tunnel house, tanks and plumbing and
an aeration system, to allow her to move into commercial production. She
anticipates that full production levels will enable her to produce 48,000
juveniles and a gross income of $80,000 p.a.
The Award has helped Diana develop new skills
and launch a new business, along with bringing her community recognition and a
self confidence from her achievements.
|
|